Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 287, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

INDIANA DRYS MAP CAMPAIGN FOR ELECTIONS Local Option Among Planks Adopted at Session in Farmersberg. Bv Timee Spreinl FARMERSBURG, Ind., April 11. —Platform of the Indiana AntiSaloon League for the coming elections was outlined by L. E. York, league superintendent, at the Vincennes District Methodist Conference here today. The league will demand that the next legislature enact a law granting local option relative to the sale of Intoxicating beverages, making liquor traffic liable for damages to innocent persons caused by the sale of Intoxicating liquor and restricting the sale of intoxicating liquors within certains distances of churches and schools. Mr. York severely scored the present state administration for allowing liquor sales near churches and schools. He lauded certain portions of the Illinois liquor control law. . Mr. York said: “The Illinois liquor control law provides that liquor shall not be sold within certain distances of churches and schools and that whosoever shall be Injured in person or property or means of support by means of any intoxicated person, shall have a right of action against those selling or giving the liquor to such person, and the real estate in which the liquor was sold may be charged with such damages. In addition, the Illinois law provides that citizens may decide by vote whether intoxicating liquor may be sold within certain territory.” He said that the program of the league against alcoholism is primarily educational.

HOLC COMPLETES 2,837 LOANS HERE IN MARCH $13.65 Cost Per Transaction Is Thought Low Record. The Home Owners’ Loan Corporation closed 2,837 loans for a total of $5,339,176 during March, E. Kirk McKinney, state manager, announced today. Operating at a cost per loan of $13.65, the local branch is believed to have established a record for the lowest operating cost in the United States. A total of 8,109 loans amounting to $6,339,176 have been made to date, Mr. McKinney said. He estimated that Indiana will double the number of loans next month. HIGHWAY COMMISSION RECEIVES 121 BIDS Cost of Projects $351,939 Below Estimates. The state highway commission today received 121 bids on a group of road construction projects, the low bids totaling $1,138,884, which was $351,939 below the estimates. Brand and Deal, Columbia City, submitted the low bids on two sections for resurfacing nine miles of State Road 40, between Cumberland and Greenfield. The company bid $149,792 and $145,807 on the two sections in the stretch.

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STATESMANSHIP *jand RELIGION Wallace 4. —-- —-■ - —i " - ..... ..—.4 a The fifteenth of a series about the secretary of creed of anew and greater America. agriculture

CHAPTER XV A World Ripe for Religion WITH the facts as I see them today, the American people should prepare to step forward boldly and confidently. It is true that we can have a very high standard of living if we develop a spirit and economic policy of intense nationalism such as has been followed by certain foreign countries. In such case, our importance in the world and to the world will be no greater than those countries. Spiritually, we shall have been' defeated indeed and shall have accepted a pagan nationalism as our God. ,

I well recognize the terrific complexities, both psychological ana economic, if we are to step forth resolutely into world affairs as the present time. It may be impossible politically, and I claim no expertness in that field. But from the religious point of view, I feel confident that we must expand our vision to embrace the far-off countries and must take steps to adjust our economic affairs so that we are benefiting the far-off countries at the same time that we are benefiting the rank and file of our own people. These things undoubtedly can be done. They are economically and politically possible if our hearts are right. Os course, it may be that in the process of doing these things it will be advisable to decentralize our great corporations and to have less transportation of goods rather than more. I question this, but have an open mind. In any event, the world is now ripe for a type of religion which is truly Catholic in the original sense of the term. I wish that in some way, it might be so universal >s to embrace Buddhists, Mohammedans, Jews and Protestants, as well as the so-called Catholics. It should be possible for the people in all of these religions to have a fellow feeling for those who strive for the good life in the other religions. Perhaps W’e can accept from the humanists enough toleration to give a greater catholicity of approach. an a BUT in addition to recognizing the honest seekers by whatever path they come, it is also essential to remember thp need for tremendous earnestness. Earnestness of the depth I have in mind can only come from such a contact with inner and outer reality that it produces a state of mind which can say in all honesty "Thus sayeth the Lord.” Or in more modern language, “The whole current of righteous events is in this direction. Decision is undeferable. If we decide wrongly, the time of great tribulation w'ill come upon us.” The world is one world. We have our Amoves crying aloud over the injustices of the social system, but we need in addition our Isaiahs who perceive that the Lord is Liord of all the earth and that the application of spiritual power to a system of nationalistic or class enterprises is a negation of true religion. A modern Isaiah seeing the possibilities of modern transportation and communication and observing the national barriers imposed by the nations against each other since the war would cry out against international injustices. He would go to the people of the different nations with his message and call for anew deal among nations. He would do this with vigor and immense earnestness, even though from an immediate practical point of view his message might be premature. If the Protestant reformers were living today, they would be striving not against the Catholic church nor the Protestant church, but against capitalism, communism, fascism or some other system challenging in its power. Lenin in his attack on capitalism proceeded with a logic not unlike that of Calvin. He was conditioned by capitalism in the same way as Calvin was conditioned by Catholicism. He is one of the few' man of this century w'hose earnestness deserves to rank with that of Amos or John Knox. He suffered, meditated, thought and acted. However much we may dislike such men. we must respect their power to transform society in line with their vision.

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I AM convinced that we are approaching the time of establishing spiritual allegiences on a much broader base than hitherto. There are genuine seekers in all of the great religions believing in the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, in the transcendental, mythical importance, of all that this means in terms of other worldliness; while, at the same time, they believe in the fundamental necessity of embodying these inner perceptions forth in terms of the machinery of the outw'ard world. Each religion has been so defaced by the materialists and those fundamentalists who hold strictly to dry, literal, logistic, textural interpretations, that there are not many of the earnest seekers hungry not only for the inner truth, but for the seeing of that inner truth given tangible manifestation in terms of the machinery of human relationships. These people should be cherished; their hands should be strengthened. I have met some of them in nearly all of the Christian and many other faiths. They cut across churches and faiths just as they cut across nations. They are men of good will and inner perception. They long for the coming of the kingdom of heaven and they'believe in its imminence. They worship God, the Holy Ghost and the Christ Spirit under many different names. It is my faith that the origin and destiny of this country have more in common with this ultimate catholicity of w r orld religious purpose than most of us have yet been willing to admit. This is the only safe kind of nationalism I know for the United States. (Copyright, 1934, Round Table Press, Inc.; distributed by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) TOMORROW—The stage set for prophetic thunderings. FEE COLLECTIONS" UP Home Loan Bank Is Aid to County Clerk’s Office. The Home Loan bank of Marion county has been instrumental in the collection of $27,031.61 in fees and court costs in the county during the first three months of the year, it was the largest amount of fees and court costs collected by the county clerk in the last ten years.

Gone, but Not Forgotten

reported to police as stolen di°' 2415 she] bv street. Apt. 10, 9iis 1 c l i, tl ii, sedan ' 3 * 851 - from in front of 2415 Shelby street. Howard Phillips. 4557 Winthrop avenue. Packard coupe, from in front of 4557 Winthrop avenue. Frank R. Thomas, 1232 North Capitol avenue Oakland coach, 42-912 from Capitol avenue and Thirteenth street. R,^ r . s^ W - 'Williamson. Sweetson. Ind., Buick sedan, from Fifteenth street and Central avenue. * L y ste r. 3317 Madison avenue. , coa , ch -. 129-834. from Davidson and Market streets. F M. Walters. 1318 Finley avenue. Oldsmobile coupe, from Pennsylvania and Walnut streets. BACK HOME AGAIN Stolen automobiles reported to police as stolen belong to: “ J. P Rvker. R R. 14, Box 155 E. WillysKnight sedan, found in alley north of Forty-sixth street between Broadway and Park avenue; in car there were sixteen sacks of flouv R - Cooper, 112 Monument place. Ford V-8 coach, found at 1315 Naomi street. Clarence Wray. Lafayette. Ind , Ford v -8 coach, found two blocks south of Longacre on Madison avenue, wrecked • D. W. Baum, 5770 Broadway, Buick sedan, found on vacant lot at 809 Elm street. & Claude Simmons. 1844 North Rural street, Chrysler roadster found at Eighteenth and Oxford streets. A D. Eidson, 722 North Gladstone avenue, Chevrolet coach found one and 2. m iles east of Arlington avenue on East Raymond street. har1 !:?, Ko hring. 882 Virginia avenue. Oldsmobile sedan, found at 100 South West street. Paul Adams. 1626 Central avenue, Chevrolet, coupe found at Rader street, and Burdsal Parkway. Bertha Graham. 1038 North West street Fprd coupe, found in front of 852 West Ninth street.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AGRARIAN BLOC ADDS SILVER TO RECOVERY PLAN $400,000,000 Farm Subsidy Involved; Roosevelt . Opposed. BY HERBERT LITTLE Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, April 11.—The battle of silver, which has been the rallying-cry of agrarian revolt for fifty years, is on again. Farm and silver state representatives, few of whom have ever been able to agree on a plan to remedy their economic ailments, are unifying their forces to slam silver into the recovery program, whether President Roosevelt wants it or not. The indications are that the President doesn't want it. In the background Senator Key Pittman, Democratic leader and an administration spokesman on foreign affairs, is awaiting an opportune time to recruit soldier bonus advocates in favor of a plan to buy silver and issue money on it to pay off the World war adjusted compensation certificates. A combination farm surplus and silver producers’ subsidy bill introduced by Representative Martin Dies, youthful and vocal agrarian Democrat from Texas, passed the house of representatives by the astounding vote of 257 to 112, in the face of Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau’s plea that the administration be left alone to work out its fiscal problems on the basis of the new gold program. The alarming thing to eastern conservatives and staunch administration supporters is that this vote represents far more than the necessary twothirds to pass the bill in the house over a presidential veto. It is also alarming to this group to recall that in January they could muster only a two-vote margin to defeat the straight-out silver-buy-ing program of Senator Burton K. Wheler of Montana. This bill, offered then as an amendment to the administration’s gold bill, would have ordered the purchase of 750,000.000 ounces of the white metal—much more than the apparent United States supply—and the issuing of money against it. Other Silver Proposals Now the threat is intensified by action of the senate agriculture and forestry committee, dominated by silver and farm senators, in directing a subcommittee to work out a bill consolidating these and other silver plans for an early report to the senate. One of these proposals is the Feisinger bill pending in the hbuse. It would order the purchase of up to 1,000,000,000 ounces of silver, and its use as a currency base, until the 1926 price level is attained. Tice price level feature, along with the silver purchase and inflation feature of the Wheeler bill, probably will be combined with the farm surplus plan which gained so many house votes. Only eleven western states produce silver, and .only two produce much, but all the western members of congress are unified in support of any plan to "rehabilitate” the metal. This in most cases involves “remonetization” which means wider use of the metal as a currency base than is called for by the present subsidiary coinage and limited supplemental issue of silver certificates. The opposition of “sound money” advocates, carrying on the victorious flag which beat down the Byran campaigns, so far has headed this off. Terms of Dies Bill The Dies bill, now before the senate agriculture committee, is a remarkable document. It contains an admitted $400,000,000 a year federal subsidy to farmers, and a novel plan for paying it. Here is how it would work; “The agricultural surplus exchange board” would be created, consisting of the President and secretaries of treasury, commerce and agriculture. Incidentally, an alleged fatal flow exists in the bill as the house passed it because it carries no appropriation, nor any authorization for an appropriation, for the board’s necessary activities. This board is directed, through the government’s foreign agencies, to negotiate sales of American farm surpluses, agreeing to take payment in silver coin or bullion at a valuation of up to 125 per cenit of the world’s market price of silver. Buying at 125 per cent would mean a discount of 20 per cent on the sales. Opponents say this is “dumping”— frequently resorted to by other countries and often criticised in this country by producers of goods which compete with foreign goods sold here at less than cost. Currency Issue Required The board would deposit the silver in the treasury, and the secretary would be directed to. issue against it currency—on the value at which the silver was accepted for farm products. At the top limit, this would mean issuance of money at 125 per cent of the world market price of silver. The currency issued would be redeemable, however, at the market price of silver. In other words, the government would take the loss resulting from the increase allowed over the world silver price in the farm sales. The bill specifies that this “premium or excess” shall not exceed $400,000,000 a year. If the full 25 per cent premium cn silver were allowed, $2,000,000,000 in silver could be taken. If the premium was only 124 per cent, twice as much silver could oe accepted. The bill specifies the life of the plan at two years, expiring Jan. 1, 1936.

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Tonight’s Radio Excursion

WEDNESDAY P M 4:00 —Songs and Shield's orchestra 'NBC WJZ 4:ls—Jack Brooks and orchestra (CBS' WABC. Ted Black's orchestra (NBC) WEAF 4:3O—F rank MerrlweU’s Adventures i NBC i WEAF. 4 45—Gordon. Dave & Bunny 'CBSi WABC. Quartet (NBCi WEAF. s:oo—Cugats orchestra 'NBC) WEAF. Westminster Choir (NBC) WJZ. s:ls—Bobbv Benson and Sunny Jim (CBS i WABC. Gene and Charlie (NBCi WBBM. s:3o—Back of the Washington News i NBCi WEAF. Irene Beasley (NBC) W'JZ. Enoch Light and orchestra (CBS) s.4s—Tito Guizar. tenor (CBS' WADC. Henry Burbig INBCI WEAF. 6:oo—Vocal and orchestra (NBC) W'EAF 6:ls—Just Plain Bill (CBSi WABC. Sketch (NBC) WEAF. Gems o' Melody (NBC) WJZ. 6:3o—Molle Show (NBCi WEAF. Songs (NBCi WJZ. Music On the Air (CBSi W'ABC. 6:4s—Boake Carter 'CBS' WABC. Irene Rich (NBCi WJZ. 7:00 —Happy Bakers (CBS) WABC. Jack Pearl and Van Steeden’s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Crime Clues INBCI WJZ. 7:ls—Edwin C. Hill 'CBS' WABC. 7:3o—Conrad Thibault; Albert Spaulding and Voorhees’ orchestra (CBS) WABC. Dangerous Paradise (NBC) WJZ. Wavne King’s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. 7-45—Baritone and Marlani's orchestra (NBC) WJZ.

Fishing the Air

Kreisler’s “Cradle Song” and the popular "Bells ot St. Mary’s” are among the selections to be sung by John Herrick, baritone, during the Gems of Melodv program, Wednesday, at 8:I.-> p. m , over WKBF and an NBC network.

HIGH SPOTS OF WEDNESDAY NIGHT S PROGRAMS 7:OO—NBC (WEAF)—Jack Pearl. NBC (WJZ)—Crime CluePart 2. 7:3o—Columbia —Albert Spalding, violinist; Conrad Thibault. B:oo—Columbia —Kostelanetz orchestra and chorus. 8:30 —Columbia—Burns and Allen — Lombardo’s orchestra. NBC (WEAF)—Fred Allen'* revue. NBC (WJZ)—John Charles Thomas. 9.OO—NBC (WEAF) —Corn Cob Pipe Club. m Columbia—Ted Florito orchestra; Dick Powell.

- The concluding episode of "The Absentee Killer,” in which Spencer Dean reaches the end of the trail leading to the murderer of Sheriff Enright, will be presented during the Crime Clues program

PAY HIKE ANNOUNCED BY PBEST-O-LITE Factory Employes Are Given Wage Raise. A w'age increase to all factory employes whose hourly rate has not been raised since establishment of NRA was announced today by the Presto-O-Lite Battery Corporation. Belief in the theory that prosperity can be restored by rapid establishment of higher wage levels was announced by officials of the company, who stated they felt the time had come when general business conditions justify manufacturers in making such increases. REINSTATED FIREMAN REDUCED IN GRADE Harrison Penalyzed for “Efficiency of Service,” Says Voshell. Chauffeur Marion Harrison, reinstated to the city fire department by court order a few days ago, has been reduced to the rank of first grade fireman by the safety board. Fire Chief Harry E. Voshell recommended Harrison’s demotion for “the efficiency of the service,” he declared. After being discharged from the department on the charge of turning in false fire alarms, Harrison was ordered reinstated by Circuit Judge Earl Cox, who declared the penalty was too severe. KILLS 5 IN FAMILY, THEN ENDS OWN LIFE Broker Also Slays Pet Cat in Minneapolis Tragedy. By United Prcsß MINNEAPOLIS, April 11.—Alfred Freudenfeld, 48, insurance broker, today shot to death five members of his family ar.d then killed himself. t The six bodies were found last night, each shot through the head. In the basement, Freudenfeld had meted out the same end for the family cat. His wife, Gretchen, 38; his mother-in-law, Mrs. Ds Haven, and his three children, Janet, 14; Carrol, 11, and Richard, 8, were the victims. Dies on Honeymoon Cruise HONOLULU, T. H., April 11.—A world cruise honeymoon reached a tragic end today with the death of Mrs. Arthur H. Buhl Jr., Detroit, in a hospital here. Her husband is a son of a Detroit financier

Quick RELIEF FTI CORNS g£j -TENDER TOES! D[ Scholls lino pads BARGAIN ROUND TRIP FARES WEEK-END TRIPS CHICAGO $5.50 Leave on anv train from 10;45 a. m. Fridavs. until 1:55 a m. Mondays. Return Mondays. Reduced round trip Pullman fares. ’ _________ NEXT SATURDAY CLEVELAND $4.50 Leave 10:00 p. m. or 10:50 p. m. Retuen on any train until 3:00 a. m. Monday. Coach service. DETROIT $4.50 TOLEDO $4.00 Leave 10:00 p. m. Return on any train Sunday. Coach service. NEXT SUNDAY ST. LOUIS $4.50 Leave 12:35 a. m. 2:45 a m. or 8 15 a. m. Return cn any train same day. Coach service. CINCINNATI $2.50 Greensburg, $1.25 Sheibvville. $.75 Leave 7:45 a. m Return on any train same day. Coach service. BIG FOUR ROUTE

B:oo—Fred Alien revoe (NBC' WEAF. Grete Stoeckgolt. Kostelanetz orchestra CBSi WABC. Raymonn Knight and Cockoo* (NfjC) WJZ. B:3o—Lorribarde’s orchestra; Borns and Allen 'CBS) WABC. John Charles Thomas and Daly's orchestra NBC> WJZ, 9:00 —D:ik Powell. Fioritc’s orchestra i CBSi WABC. Corn Cob Pipe Club (NBC) WEAF. Musical Cruiser NBCi W'JZ. 9.3o—Ghost Stories (NBCi WEAF ’The Republican Reaction" (CBS) WABC Tourist Adventures and Talbot’s orchestra iNBC) WJZ. 9:4s—The Columbians (CBSi WABC. 10:00—Nick Lucas and Rich's orchestra ■CBS) WABC. Ferdinando s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. 10:15—News; Madriguera's orchestra (NBC) WEAF. News; Jack Little's orchestra (CBS) W'ABC. 10:30—Rubinoff’s orchestra (NBC) WEAF. Stein’s orchestra (NBC) WJZ. 10.45—News; Pollack’s orchestra (NBC) WJZ. Sosnik’s orchestra (CBS) W'ABC 11:00 —College Inn orchestra 'NBCi WEAF. Rolfe’s orchestra (NBCi WJZ Hopkin’s orchestra (CBSi WABC. 11:30—Lucas’ orchestra (NBC) WEAF George Hall’s orchestra (CBS) WABC. Stern's orchestra (NBC) W'JZ. WFBM (12,’i0) Indianapolis (Indianapolli Power end fight Company) WEDNESDAY P. M. s:3o—Bohemians. ,

over WLW and an NBC network Wednesday at 6 p. m. Vivien Ruth, contralto soloist, and the Happy Bakers, Frank Luther, Phil Duey and Jack Parker, with Will Donaldson at the piano, will offer an elaborate musical bill during their program over WFBM and the Columbia network Wednesday, from 7 to 8:15 p. m. John Charles Thomas, baritone, will sing the aria "Vision Fugitive” from Massenet's ooera "Herodiade” during his concert with William Daly’s string orchestra over WKBF and an NBC network Wednesday at 8:30 p. m. Strauss’ beautiful “Blue Danube” waltz, played by the forty-piece orchestra conducted by Andre Kostelanetz, will open the second program In the new series featuring Nino Martini, brilliant young tenor, to be broadcast over WFBM and the Columbia network from 8 to 8:30 p. m., Wednesday. A special half-hour program, featuring Johnny Noble and his Roval Hawaiian orchestra, will be broadcast over WFBM and the Columbia network from Honolulu Wednesday at 10:30 p. m.

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5 45—Enoch Light orchestra 'CBS'. 6 00—Bohemians. 6:ls—Pirate club. 6 SO—Buck Roger* (CBS). 6 45—Cowboys. 7:oo—Happy Bakers (CBS). 7:ls—Edwin C. Hill (CBS). 7:3o—Albert Spalding 'CBS, 8 00—Nino Martini and orchestra (CBS' B:3o—Burns and Allen with Guy Lombardo (CBS>. 9:oo—Ted Florito orchestra (CBS). 9 30—Beauty that Endures 9:4s—Myrt and Marge 'CBS). 10:00—Atop the Indiana roof. 10:15—News iCSS). 10:20—Little Jack Little orchestra (CBS). 10 30—Broadcast from Honolulu (CBS'. 11:00—Claude Hopkins orchestra 'CBS). 11:30—George Hall orchestra CBS'. 12:00—Atop the Indiana roof. A. M. 12:15—Sign off. WKBF (1400) Indianapolis (Indianapolis Broadcasting. Inc.) WEDNESDAY P. M. 4:00—Ho-Po-Ne Safety club. 4:30 —News Cashes. 4:4s—Arm Chair quartette (NBC). s:oo—Xavier Cugat orchestra (NBC). s:ls—Dick Steel. 5 30—Georgs R Holmes (NBC). s:4s—Little Orphan Annie iNBC). 6:oo—Singing Cowboy. 6:ls—Gems of Melody (NBC). 6 30—Knothole Gang. 7:oo—Harry Bason. 7:ls—The Bluebirds. 7:3o—Wayne King orchestra (NBC). B:oo—Raymond Knight and his Cuckoos (NBC). • B:3o—John Charles Thomas (NBC). 9:oo—Musical Cruise- 'NBC). 9:3o—Ghost stories (NBC). 10:00—Don Bestor orchestra (NBC). 10:15—Press Radio bulletin iNBCi. 10:20 —Don Bestor orchestra iNBC). 10:30—Dave Rubinoff orchestra (NBC. 11.00—Frankie Masters orchestra 'NBC,. 11 30 —Clyde Lucas orchestra (NBC). 12:00—Sign off. WLW (700) Cincinnati WEDNESDAY P. M. 4:oo—Concert favorites. 4.3o—Singing Ladv iNBC). 4:4s—Little Orphan Annie NBC). s:oo—Jack Armstrong. s:ls—Joe Emerson and orchestra. 5:45 —Lowell Thomas iNBCi. 6:oo—Amos ’n’ Andy (NBCi. 6:ls—Henry Thies orchestra. 6:3o—Prairie Symphony. 6:4s—Dimmick Sunnvbrook orchestra. 7:oo—Crime club (NBCi. 7:30 —Dangerous Pardise 'NBC). 7:4s—Clark's Radio ocurt. B:oo—The Hour of Sfailes iNBC). 8:30 —Fred AUen and Ferde Grofe orchestra (NBCi. 9:oo—Corn Cob Pipe club of Virginia 'NBC-Red). 9:3o—Zero hour. 10:00—News flashes. 10:05—College of Music Concert orchestra 10:45—RubinofTs orchestra (NBC) 11:00—Dimmick’s Sunnybrook orchestra. 11:15—Hotel Gibson's dance orchestra 11:30—Harold Stern’s orchestra iNBC). 12:00—iMidnight)—Johnny Hamp's dance orchestra.

.APRIL 11,1934

PRATHER LODGE MEETSFRIDAY Former Grand Master of State Lodge Slated for Address. Charles P. Benedict, past grand master of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, Free and Accepted Masons, will be the principal speaker at an “old-time acquaintance” dinner at 6:45 o'clock Friday for members of Calvin W. Prather Masonic lodge. No. 717, at Prather Masonic temple. College avenue and Forty-second gtreet. Others on the program include J. Lewis Bray, Grover A. Miliett, Russell R Hinesley, Karll V. /fhimerman, Hubert L. Wann. Carl G. Winter, A. Frederick Thomas and Scott McCoy, master of the lodge. Carl A. Ploch, a past master of Prather lodge, will act as master of ceremonies.

A Correction! In The Times on April 10 we advertised Goose Feather Pillows, 2 for sl. This should have read “Feather Pillows.” We will gladly refund the purchase price to any one purchasing these under the impression that they are goose feather pillows. BLOCK'S DOWNSTAIRS STORE