Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 267, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1934 — Page 9
MARCH 19, 193?.
ODD FELLOWS TO BE GUESTS IN TRAFALGAR Grand Officers Will Attend District Meeting of Three Counties. Indianapolis Odd Fellows will meet at the Odd Fellow building Saturday night at 6 to go by chartered busses to Trafalgar where a meeting of the Sixteenth district, which includes Marion, Morgan and Johnson counties will be held. More than 200 members are expected to make the trip. Trafalgar Rebekahs will erve a penny supper at 6:30 prior to a business session which will be called to order at 8 by Ira Rohl, Indianapolis. district deputy grand master, who will preside. Among leaders of the order who are exnected to attend are George W. Freeman, Kokomo, grand master; Ernest Barrett, grand warden; George P. Bornwasser, grand secretary; R. H. Hollywood, Harry Winterrowd and Harry Rockwood, past grand masters, all of Indianapolis. The Pickerel brothers of Trafalgar will entertain with musical selections. Marion county Odd Fellows will hold a county meeting Wednesday at Beech Grove, with King David lodge. The meeting will be called to order by A W McCord, president of the county association. Ernest Barrett. grand warden of the grand lodge of Indiana, will make the principal address. The meeting will be attended by Ira A. Rohl, district deputy giand master; George P. Bornwasser. grand secretary; Harry Winterrowd. and Harry Rockwood, past grand masters and Henry Roesener, assistant grand secretary. An Odd Fellow district meeting will be held with Bloomington lodge Saturday. The district Is composed of Brown, Monroe, Lawrence and Jackson cqunties. Mr. Hollywood will be the principal speaker. Numerous Indianapolis Odd Fellows will attend the session. HARRIS ODD FELLOWS TO INITIATE TONIGHT First Candidate This Year Will Receive Degree. Harris Lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will confer the first degree on its first candidate of 1934 at 7:30 tonight in the lodge hall, Addison and West Washington streets. The second degree will be conferred at the same time next Monday, and a neighboring Odd Fellow lodge will confer the third degree on Friday. March 30. Harris lodge has issued an invitation to all Odd Fellows to attend the exemplification of the degrees. PAST PRESIDENTS OF RELIEF CORPS ELECT Mrs. Claudie Erther Heads League of Anderson Group. Newly elected 1934 officers of the Past Presidents League of Major Robert Anderson Women's Relief Corps are: Mrs. Claudie Erther, president; Mrs. Nelle PfefTer, vicepresident; Mrs. Cora Summers, secretary, and Mrs. Mabel Teague, treasurer. Mrs. Clara Belle Botorff was appointed publicity chairman, and Mrs. Nettie V. Harmon, delegate to the Indianapolis- Council of Women. with Mrs. Bottorff as alternate.
SOUTHPORT CHAPTER WILL PRESENT PLAY Past Leaders of O. E. S. Sponsor “The Crown and the Cross.” Monthly entertainment of Southport chapter. Order of Eastern Star, will include presentation of "The Crown and the Cross” by the Past Matrons and Patrons Association of the chapter at 8 Wednesday night In Southport Masonic temple. Other Marion county Eastern Star chapters will be represented at the event. Miss Marion Lockwood is chairman of the committee in charge of arrangements. ARRANGE~OPEN MEETING Family Night Will Be Held by Modern Woodmen. Marlon camp. Modern Woodmen of America, will hold family night, an open meeting for all members and their friends, at 7:30 tomorrow at 322 East New York street. An entertainment program will be presented. Degrees to Be Conferred Millersville chapter. Order of Eastern Star, will exemplify the degrees for a class of candidates at 8 Wednesday at Millersville Masonic temple. mHIGHERm 0 JINT PRICES for W I OLD GOLD I j Scrap Jewelry ■ I J B ,o s 3s=- | V l i-ss Handling Charge* K? B INDIANA GOLD 1 1 REFINING CO. K % 140 N. Hlinois J Is This Too Good for Your Cough? Crecmulsion may be a better help than you need. It combines seven major helps in one—the best helps known to science. It is made for quick relief, for safety. Mild cougK? often yield to lesser helps. No one can tell. No one know* which factor will do most for any eertain cough. So careful people, more and more, are using Creomulsloo for any cough that starts. The cost is a little more than a single help But your druggist guarantees it. so it costs nothing if it faila to bring you quick relief. Coughs are danger signals. For safety's sake, deal with them in the best way known.—Advertisement.
BOAST OF LIBERALITY a a a a a a a a a Monument Masons Are Cosmopolitan
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Maurice Tavel
This is the eleventh of series of histories of Marion county Masonic Blue lodges which has been appearing each Monday on The Times lodge page. Next week a history of Indianapolis lodge will be published. A 'PETITION signed by fifteen Master Masons was presented on Nov. 12, 1903, to the grand lodge of Indiana requesting dispensation for the formation of Monument lodge No. 657, Free and Accepted Masons. These fifteen signers, most of whom at the time were members of Centre lodge No. 23, thus were the real founders of what is today possibly the city’s most cosmopolitan Blue lodge. Their stated purpose in organizing such a group was to bring into being a lodge with which men of all walks of life, without regard to nationality, creed or position might affiliate so long as they were proven good men and true.” These founders were Herman Freidman, Henry J. Harris, Rabbi Meyer Messing. W. H. Phillips, Sol Trotcky, Thomas Bennis, Harry E. Jaffe, Louis Baum, W. H. Nimal, Samuel Libowitz, Isaac Beitman, Joseph Solomon and Frank F. Baker. William E. English, then most worshipful grand master of the state of Indiana, granted on Jan. 6. 1904, to the petitioners a dispensation for the federation of anew Blue lodge in the jurisdiction of Indianapolis. A charter was issued to Monument lodge on May 25, 1904, w’ith the following as charter members: Isaac Frank, Joseph Solomon, William F. Moore. Meyer Messing, Louis Baum, Samuel Libowutz. Sol Trotcky, Herman Friedman, Henry J. Harris, Isaac Beitman, Wilbur H. Phillips, Harry E. Jaffee, Thomas Eei nis, Frank F. Baker, W. H. Nimal, Simon F. Helstein, David I. Nackman, Leon W. Wolfe, William F. McChesney. Calvin X. Ewing, Jacob Dellett, James H. Nimal, R. L. Sullivan, Julius Kaminsky, Fred M. Meicre, Isadore Feibleman, Max R. Hyman, Alford s. Jeager, Benno Gundelfinger, Henry Deutsch. Louis S. Bowman, Charles W. Cook, Ben O. Mitchell, I. L. Keifer, Jacob Wchlfleld, Bernard Erdman, Paul F. Schmidt, Simon B. Fox, Willard Moyer and Julius Rohbard. At its first stated meeting held under dispensation on Feb. 11, 1904, Monument had already elected its first officers who were functioning in their respective stations when the charter was issued. They were Issac Frank, worshipful master; Joseph Solomon, senior warden; Charles A. Bates, junior warden; Meyer Messing, treasurer; Louis Baum, secretary; Harry Joffee, senior deacon; Paul F. Schmidt, junior deacon; Arthur Wolfe, senior steward; Samuel Libowitz, junior steward, and Wilbur Phillips, tyler. nan DURING the many years of its existence Monument always has manifested a uniform and great interest in the welfare of the Indiana Masonic Heme at Franklin, and has made many valuable and outstanding contributions of a permanent character to the institution. Dr. Calvin K. Ew-ing. one of the older members of the lodge, named, on his death, the Masonic home as his residuary legatee, and from this bequest the home received city and farm property valued at approximately SIOO,OOO. For many years Louis E. Goldberg. who although he has long been engaed in the clothing business in the east, has retained his membership in Monument and has forwarded annually to the home a shipment of clothing for its guests. Last year the lodge discovered that the home was no longer holding its regular weekly moving picture shows for the children and old inmates of the home because the Franklin auditorium was not supplied with modern sound equipment and silent films were no longer available. To remedy this deficiency Monument sponsored a minstrel show with a cast recruited from members and friends, and with Eph Levin, past master, acting as director. The presentation, which was offered on the stage of the Murat theater, on two successive nights raised sufficient funds to enable the ldoge to purchase and install, without cost to the home, a complete set of the most modern sound equipment. an n IN conformity with the ideals of its founders. Monument lodge has grown and developed into a large cosmopolitan organization with a membership representing all walks of life scattered to all points of the compass. A number of the members are in s he naval service of the United States, and in more than one instance lodge mail sent to them has traveled around the w-orld. The lodge boasts that it keeps in touch with any and all of its members, no matter in what part of the world they may be located. A striking example of this is brought to mind in the case of John Keevers, Monument member and ensign in the United States navy, who for years was stationed in fore.gn waters on the U. S. S. Cicotte, but who never lost contact with the lodge. Monument past masters, in order of their succession to office, are Isaac Frank, David Nackman. Paul F. Schmidt, Isaac Marks, William F. Emrich, Harry Jacobs. Eph Levin, George W. Dinkle Jr., Henry Blatt. Willis W. Wolfe. Sidney Selig, Louis Haas, Edward Kappeler, Clarence W. Myers. Louis J. Franklin, Harry A. Stern. Alva Baxter. Otto Irrgang, Ernest L. Price, Samuel J. Mantel, Abe Blatt, Rudolph A. ii
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Eph Levin
Earl J. Askren
Scherer, Samuel Bremen, William R. Bess, Robert Kraft, Arthur Rose, Maurice Seiko, Otto W. Cox and Henry H. Winkler. Os these Mr. Schmidt, a charter member of the lodge, served as its treasurer from its early years to his death in 1933, when Mr. Cox succeeded to his office. Mr. Bess was the only master of Monument lodge to serve more than one term. He succeeded himself in
Two Chapters Will Meet Jointly for Degree Work
REPORTS TO BE MADE Shriners Will Hold Business Meet- - ing Followed by Social Hour. Murat Temple Shriners will hold their March stated meeting at the temple tonight, Herschell M. Tebay, potentate, announces. Reports of officers and committees will be made on projects that have been started for ritualistic and social affairs during the year. Following a business session at 7:30, there will be a social hour during which an entertainment program will be presented. Refreshments will be served. Admission will be by 1934 card. INSURANCE OFFICIAL TO ADDRESS LODGE K. of C. Will Hear State Commissioner Tonight. Harry E. McLain, Indiana insurance commissioner, will address Indianapolis council, Knights- of Columbus, tonight in the K. of C. hall 1305 North Delaware street. The council will hold its annual Easter ball Monday night, April 2, for which preparations are now under way. Joe Dux and his Indiana Vagabonds have been obtained to provide music for the event. Indianapolis council will celebrate its thirty-fifth anniversary Sunday May 20 when it will exemplify the second and third degrees on candidates. More than 250 other councils of the order will hold similar ceremonies on the same day in a nation-wide K. of C celebration. Lodge Dinner Scheduled Indianapolis lodge, I adies Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, will hold a pitch-in dinner Wednesday noon. All officers of the group will meet at 9:30.
Grand Monarch Will Be , Guest at Grotto Event
Full Form Ceremonial to Be Held March 31 at Keith's Theater. Guest of honor at the full form ceremonial of Sahara Grotto, Mystic Order Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm, will be Joseph B. Sieber, Akron, 0.. monarch of the order. The event will be held Saturday night, March 31, in Keith's theater. The program will open with dinner at the Grotto home from 5:30 to 7:30 followed by a special meeting called by Luther H. Manley, monarch of the city organization. The group will parade from the Grotto home to the theater at 7:30 and the ceremonial is scheduled to begin at 8:30. Chairmen in charge of committees making preparations for the event are Fred Hollingsworth, membership. William J. Hamilton, refreshments; Louis Sweeney, entertainment; Charles Gisler, reception; Marion Craig, publicity; Brewer Clay, band; Leon Richards, drill team, and John Sprcule, drum corps. Charles B. Forrest, master of ceremonies, will act as parade marshal. Those taking part in exemplifying the work have been rehearsing under the direction of Lee Reed
THE INDIANAPOLIS T^ißtS
Otto W. Cox
Paul F. Schmidt
office in 1929 after having served the full term in 1928. Present officers of the lodge are Maurice Tavel, worshipful master. Earle J. Askren, senior warden; Ben Domont, junior warden; Mr. Cox. treasurer; Mr. Levin, secretary; Paul Majors, senior deacon; Henry I. Berger, junior deacon; Lorens Stevens, senior steward; Robert Friedman, junior steward, and William F. Ehrhardt, tyier.
West. Side Royal Arch to Be Host Wednesday for Greenwood. Westside and Greenwood chapters, Royal Arch Masons, will hold a joint meeting to exemplify the most exceilent master degree at Westside Masonic temple, 1522 West Morris street, at 7:30 Wednesday night. Joseph Wilson, Greenwood high priest, and other officers of the visiting chapter will assist in the exemplification work. Selection of the cast from the two chapters will be under the direction of Jess N. Gray, Westside high priest. Westside officers who will participate are William Goerke, Noah A. Brown, E. C. Estell, Sidney Weber, Frank Rickets, John D. Sanford Jr., and William Thomas, Roscoe I. Barker will preside at the meeting. Light refreshments will be served following the degree work. A large attendance is anticipated not only from the chapters participating, but also from all Marion county Royal Arch chapters. CAPIforCITY UNIT TO BE LOOSE HOSTS Monument Masons Will Be Guests March 27. Monument Masonic lodge members will be guests of Capitol City lodge at 4 Tuesday, March 27, at the Masonic temple, North and Illinois streets. The lodge will open with master Mason ciegree work which will be followed by a banquet in the main dining room of the temple at 6 at which Otto W. Cox, Monument past master, will speak. Following the dinner, the Monument Supercraft Club will exemplify the master Mason degree in full form.
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Joseph B. Sieber
cast director, in anticipation of a class of candidates numbering more than one hundred.
STATE PYTHIAN LODGES FACING ACTIVEPERIOD Noblesville Lodge to Confer Esquire Rank on Class of Twenty. Various activities are scheduled for Knights of Pythias organizations throughout the state this w’eek. Arion lodge, K. of P„ and Monitor Temple, Pythian Sisters, will hold a joint meeting at Castle Hall. Belle Vieu place and West Michigan street, at 7:30 Thursday night. An unusual program will be presented. Members of the lodge committee assisting in preparations for the event are F. S. Logan, chairman; W. T. McQueen and Robert Griffin. Bernice lodge, Noblesville, will confer the rank of esquire on a class of twenty candidates Thursday night. The same class received the rank of page last w r eek. Ber-. nice lodge has received thirty petitions for degrees since Feb. 1. Mitchell lodge, Mitchell, will entertain the twenty-second K. of P. district consisting of Lawrence, Orange and Martin counties tomorrow night. The page rank will be exemplified. Guests of honor will be Harry C. Sullivan, grand chancellor, Vevay; R. R. Tash, grand vice-chancellor, Salem, and Carl R. Mitchell, grand keeper of record# and seals, Indianapolis, A joint meeting of K. of P. Districts 23 and 24 will be held tonight. The rank of page will be conferred on a class of fifty candidates, more than thirty of whom submitted their petitions to Hope ledge, Jeffersonville. The meeting will be under the joint direction of Roy Stoner, Scllersburg, and W. H. Winter, Corydon, district deputies. Guests of honor will be Mr. Sullivan. Mr. Tash and Mr. Mitchell, all of whom will make addresses. A large delegation from Louisville will rttend. BRIGHTWOOD GROUP TO BE JUNIOR ORDER HOST More Than Fifty to Be Initiated at District Meeting. Junior Order, United Mechanics of America, will hold a district meeting with Brightwood council, Twenty-fifth and Station streets Thursday night, as host. Maywood council will confer degrees on a class of more than fifty candidates. Among the guests for, the event will be Paul Ford, stgte councilor, and Itha McFarland, secretary, who will present a silk flag to the council which presents the largest number of candidates. Clarence E. Meyer, district deputy, will conduct the meeting. He will be assisted by Robert Robling, Bright-, wood council deputy. Musical entertainment will be featured. A luncheon will follow the meeting.
MASONIC RELIEF TO BE SPEAKER'S TOPIC Beech Grove Lodge to Hear Edgar 0. Burgan. Edgar O. Burgan, secretary of the Masonic relief board, will speak on “Masonic Relief” at k called meeting of Beech Grove lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, at 7:30 Thursday night, in Beech Grove Masonic temple. At the meeting the ancient charges will be read. Only master Masons are invited to attend. DR U IDS TO ENTERTAIN Public Euchre and Bunco Party Set for Tuesday. Indianapolis Grove, United Ancient Order of Druids, will entertain with a euchre and bunco party at 8:15 Tuesday night at 29 South Delaware street. The public is invited to attend. Members of the committee In charge are F. Earl Geider, Harry Stafford, W. Fred Young and W. O. Stumph. Past Ruths to Be Feted Brookside chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will observe “Ruth” night at 8 Tuesday in Brookside Masonic temple. Honored guests will be all past Ruths of the chapter. Mrs Harriet Reeve, worthy matron, and Sidney Reeve, worthy patron, will preside.
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GROUP TO CONFER SCOTTISH RITE DEGREES
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Frank A. Symmes
Annual spring convocation of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite, Valley of Indianapolis, will open at 5:30 Wednesday afternoon at the Scottish Rite cathedral; North and Meridian streets, when a class of more than fifty candidates will take the oath of fealty from Murray H. Morris. The candidates will dine at 6, and at 7:30 the fourth degree will be exemplified by Fae W. Patrick, thrice potent master of the rite. Earl F. Hites will communicate the fifth and sixth degrees at 8:30, and Mr. Patrick will ex-
VERITAS CLUB WILL BE BAZAR SPONSOR Three-Day Event Set to Open March 29. The Veritas Entertainment Club, composed of members of all groups meeting in the Brightwood Masonic temple, Adams street and Roosevelt avenue, will hold an old-fashioned bazar in the temple, March 29, 30 and 31. A variety of entertainment will be offered including contests to choose the most popular and beautiful girl, and similar efforts to choose the homeliest and “most contrary man.” Members of the committee now making preparations for the festivities are Ray Whistler, chairman; Mrs. Nellie Riffle, secretary; Charles Overstreet, treasurer; William Lyst, William Sutton, Everett Smartz, Floyd McDaniels, Mrs. Nora Everett, Mrs. Florence Mitchell, Miss Martha Caskey and Miss Henrietta Crook. FIRST MASTER WILL DIRECT LODGE AGAIN Englewood Masons to Be Led by John Bayless. John E. Bayless, 82, first master of Englewood lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, will preside when lodge confers the master Mason degree on a class of candidates Saturday night at Englewood Masonic temple, 2714 East Washington street. A dinner will precede the ceremonies at which a talk will be delivered by Otto Cox, past master of Monument lodge. Mr. Bayless has been a Mason more than fifty-three years. He is a past master of Newpoint lodge where he served three terms as worshipful master. Auxiliary to Give Banquet The Ladies Auxiliary of the Harold C. McGrew post, United Spanish War Veterans, will sponsor a banquet for the junior members cf the organization Friday night at Ft. Friendly, North Illinois street. Jumps Out of BedRheumatic Pains Vanish Quickly Pain-racked Sufferer Gets Relief With Amazing Speed Such quick relief follows the use of Nurito that the Doctor who created the prescriptionconsented to make it available to all at their rug stores. Those who have tried other things without benefit should try this famous remedy—NUßlTO—without further delay. For the agonizing pain of rheumatism, neuritis, neuralgia, sciatica; lumbago and ether torturing aches and pains the relief is quick. Strange as it may seem, this quick-acting remedy contains no opiates or narcotics. Nurito is absolutely safe. You can prove this with one package. There is no use in wasting effort with anything that doesn’t stop your pain. And if it does that you know how happy it will make you. Get a package today. If the very first two or three doses do not drive away the most intense pain, your money will be instantly refunded. Get Nurito now. At all druggists and Hang Drug Storps. NURITO for NEURITIS Pain
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Fae W. Patrick
emplify the seventh fifteen minutes later. The twelfth degree will be exemplified by Frank A. Symmes. senior warden, at 9:45. The lodge will close at 10:45. One week later, on Wednesday night, Charles P. Benedict will communicate the eighth degree with Mr. Morris exemplifying the Elu or ninth, tenth and eleventh, degrees. The thirteenth degree will be exemplified at 9:30 by Paul E. Fisher.
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PROGRAM WILL BE OFFERED BY SCOTTISH RITE Choir and Orchestra Will Be Heard Preceding Dancing. The Scottish Rite will offer entertainment and a dance Friday night at 8:15 in the Scottish Rita cathedral. North and Meridian j streets. A musical program featuring the I consistory choir, directed by Arnold F. Spencer, and the consistory orchestra. under the leadership of Frederic Barker, will be given in. the auditorium to open the festivities. Soloists on the program and their offerings will be Louis Isensee with “Can’t You Hear Me Calling. Caroline." Eddie Alexander: “The Old Spinning Wheel,” and William Condrv, “The Old Folks at Home.” j Dancing in the grand ballroom from 9:15 to midnight will bring the i program to a close. Emera Club to Meet The Emera Cmo of Prospect j chapter. Order of Eastern Star, will j hold its next meeting Frday night at ! 8 with Eleanor Need, 346 Terrace 1 avenue.
