Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 161, 17 May 1920 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, MAY 17, 1920.

PAGE SEVEN

l.U. REUNION WILL nr nn n rnnn

dc ntLu rnur.i mat

30 TO JUNE 4TH

1 Indiana University's 100th milestone fJias been reached and to properly celetrate the event, a centennial pageant lasting from May SO to Juno 4, will be given on the campus at Bloomington. More than 1,200 persons will appear in th pageant which will be directed by William Chauncey Langdon of New York city. It is expected that more than 3,000 alumni -will return to enjoy the week of festivities. The first announcement of the completed program was made today by Alumi Secretary Humphrey Barbour. The centennial week begins with the baccalaureate address on Sunday evening, May 30. The Rev. Allan B. Phillputt of the Central Avenue Christian Church, Indianapolis, will deliver the address.. All-University day, on Monday, opens with flag raising exercises at

6:30 on the campus. Later in the

morning the Alumni Council will meet

in the faculty clubrooms for a confer

ence. J. F. Giles Is A Member. The council is composed of State Treasurer Uz McMurtie, Dick Miller, Prof. Charles A. Greathouse, Mrs. Kate Milner Rabb, Prof. Oscar H. "Williams. Josephine M. Cox, Dr. Willis

D. Gach, Linneus N. Hines, James W. Fesler and the Rev. Allen B. Phillputt, all of Indianapolis; Prof. William F.

Eook. Dr. James A. Woodburn and Benjamin F. Adams, Bloomington;

Dale J. Crittenberger and Edward C. Toner. Anderson; Prof. Joseph T.

Giles, Richmond; Harri3 R. Kurrie, of

Chicago and Lemuel A. Pittenger,

Kent, O. The faculty and senior baseball , teams will clash on Jordan field at Z p. m. Monday. The thiid day of the centennial v.eek program will be observed as "alumni day," with attention centered upon activities of the "old grads" and former students. Election of an alumni trustee will be conducted at a meeting In Assembly hall. Two important athletic events, the baseball games between Indiana and Notre Dame and Purdue have been scheduled. The first showing of the university pageant will be at 4 p. m. on Tuesday. Wednesday opens with emphasis on "class day," beginning with breakfast in the student building for alumnae, former women students, wives of faculty members and women of the senior and junior classes. Alumni will gather on the campus in front of the student building for the annual alumni dinner at 6:30 p. m. Class reunions will be features on Thursday. The final, showing of the 1 ageant will be at 4 p. m. .During the cupper hour and evening various organizations will arrange dinners, cances and reunions. Many clever stunts are on the program of a carnival to be held in the amphitheater at 8 p. m. Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood will deliver the commencement address on the campus at 10 a. m. Friday. T. P. A. Would Hold Down Immigration; Wants Canals The Indiana division, Travelers' Protective association, adopted resolutions yesterday in its thirtieth annual state convention, urging congress to enact more stringent laws regulating immigration, particularly as applied to entrance examinations. The convention recommended that an alien be compelled to live in the United States 10 years before becoming naturalized. The meeting also went on record as urging the immediate improvement of Inland waterways' and connecting them with the Great Lakes, as a means of relieving transportation difficulties and providing cheaper transportation"?

Criticism of "apparent lneniciency

WIFE OF NEW U. S. MINISTER TO SWITZERLAND

n m 11

Mrs. Hampson Gary. Mrs. Hampson Gary, wife of the new minister from the U. S. to Switzerland, accompanied her husband when he tailed recently to assume his new duties. The photo was taken on the day they left New York.

Oxford Exercises Slated For June 8; Will Be 87th Year OXFORD. O., May 17. Oxford Collego for Women will hold its eighty-

seventh annual commencement on June 8, at 10 o'clock. The events of commencement week will be as follows: June 5 Alumnae Day. June 6 Baccalaureate sermon. June 7. Exhibits of the Household Arts and Science department. Also the annual meeting of the

board of trustees, the annual art exhibit and, in the evening, the commencement play. The senior banquet will take place after the play. June 8 Commencement exercises. To Observe "Tree Day.' Tree Day at the Western College for Women, one of the most notable events of the year at this institution, will be celebrated Wednesday. The

principal event of the day will be the presentation of the play, "Joan of

Arc," on the campus by members of

the senior class.

Naomk Hunt, colored, was before Mayor Hughes last Saturday, etfarged

by Oxford College girls with practicing

a trick game. Mrs. Hunt claimed to

be in the second-hand clothing busi

ness, and secured from the college girls a quantity of cast-off clothing to be sold. All efforts of the girls to get nn accounting with Mrs. Hunt failed, hence an appeal to the village officials. The mayor gave the woman one week in which to settle with the girls or return the clothing. The Western College for Women has adopted the daylight-saving time. The girls of the institution become Rreatly confused, for the village and the railroad are running on standard time. Miami Gets New Teacher.

A. R. Williams, assistant professor of 1

chemistry. University of South Carolina, has been appointed to a similar position in Miami University, beginning next September. He will succeed Prof. Vernon Godshall, resigned.

Masonic Calendar

A-

in the handling of empty cars by the railroads was offered by the convention. Hartman New President.

Alexander Hartman of Post O, New Albany, was elected President. Orice

White of Post W, Elkhart, was elected

first vice president; A. J. Miller, Post

V, Laporte, second vice president, and Fred D. Fisher, Post EE, Indianapolis, third vice president. Charles. M. Zink of Indianapolis was re-elected secretary-treasurer. The 1921 convention meeting place was left to the board of directors. ConnersvilleNfas asked for the convention. Richmond members returned home Saturday evening and Sunday.

Monday, May 17. Richmond Commandary No. 8, K. T. Work in the Order of the Temple, beginning 7:00 o'clock. Tuesday, May 18. Richmond lodge, No. 196, F. & A. M. Called meetin. Work in "Master Mason Degree, beginning 6:30. Wednesday, May 19. Webb Lodge No. 24, F. & A. M. Stated meeting.

Thursday, May 20. Wayne Council No. 10, R. & S. M. will confer the Super Excellent Degree on a large class of candidates, beginning 7:30. Banquet. Visitors welcome. Friday May 21. King Solomon's Chapter No. 4. R. A. M. Called Convocation Work in Mark Masters degree. Saturday, May 22. Loyal Chapter. No. 49 O. E. S. will give a basket supper and social to the members and families. All visiting members are welcome.

commencing Wednesday. Irene Rich, who is the most beautiful woman in the photoplay world, according to Mr. Rogers, has the principal feminine part. She is cast as a rugged westerner's daughter. Marguerite Livingston plays as her weaker sister. Wade Boteler appears as the small town physician who has be

come a victim of drink and Is shaken

New York from California to make

pictures, and already she is tired of the nerve-racking pace of the metropolis. So much so, that Mrs. Gish, her mother, has purchased for the little comedienne and her famous sister, Lillian, a nine-acre farm within commuting distance of the studio. "There I hope to keep a red cow,"

said Dorothy, recently, "that will give

to the realization of his folly only by j milk at twenty cents a quart, and I

a great accident. Rowland Lee is the hypocritical agitator who urges prohibition only to fatten his own wallet and surreptitiously drinks his whisky. Lillian Langdon and Lydia Yeamans Titus both have character parts that afford them great opportunity for clever work. Mary Jane Irvine as the child is credited by Mr. Rogers with being the only actress who ever made him shed real tears. In addition to the scheduled players there is an army of dare-devil western riders, a bevy of pretty girls from the "big city, musicians, townspeople and 'every character necessary to give the proper color to the story-MURRAY.

am going to raise several hundred chickens to lay those nice doilar-a-dozen eggs."

Uric Acid Treatment

MALCOLM DILL WINS BOYLSTON PRIZE AT HARVARD UNIVERSITY In the Boylston Prize competition held at Harvard University last night, Malcolm H. Dill of Richmond, a member of the senior class, won the first prize. The prh:e Is given for the best speaker at an annual public contest, and was founded in 1870 by Ward Nicholas Boylston from Harvard in '35, for the promotion of public speaking in the university. Dill chose as his subject "The Raven," by Edgar Allen Poe.

FOREIGN TRADERS TO CLOSE SESSION AT FRISCO TODAY (By Associated Press) SAN FRANCISCO, May 17. More than 2,300 leaders in International trade Saturday in the final session of the seventh annual foreign trade council's convention, formulated a national program for foreign trade. Three days, morning, afternoon and evenings of intensified study of trade problems were to be crowded today into a summary of recommendations of policy to guide foreign traders' future.

WET CANDIDATE DENOUNCED BY SOUTHERN BAPTISTS (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, May 17 The report of the committee on temperance and social service, submitted to the Southern Baptist convention Saturday, speaks of what it terms "the sorry spectacle" of the governor of one state "swearing to uphold and enforce the constitution of the United States and in the next breath declaring that to the extent of his power he would make his state as "wet as the Atlantic."

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The Theatres

WASHINGTON , Will Rogers, Goldwyn star, has been surrounded by a remarkably strong cast in his latest photoDlay, "Water, Water Everywhere " w) h comes to the Washington Theatre ior two days

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Town." the Dorothy Gish picture coming to the Murray theatre for three days commencing Monday, the little star plays the role of a country girl who deserts a sleepy southern village for Broadway's 'Gay White Way, in real life Miss Gish is just the opposite. She recently arrived in

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one free bottle to any family or address. Advertisement.

RICHMOND THEATRE Between 6th and 7th on Main "Home of Clearest Pictures in Town" LAST TIMES TODAY J. W. KERRIGAN in "A White Man's Chance" and HAROLD LLOYD in "FROM HAND TO MOUTH"

' jl ' - . .

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1

Scene Feom "' MACK SENNETTS Five Peel GomeJ'I ?e?n,jrf',n

V DOWN ON THE FARM'

COMING TO THE WASHINGTON 4 Days Beginning Sunday

SELECT VAUDEVILLE

MURRAY BETTER COME EARLY"

HEAR OUR PIPE ORGAN CONCERT ORCHESTRA

Three New Keith Acts and Feature Photoplay Today, Tuesday and Wednesday

STRATFORD COMEDY FOUR

l i

The best singing male quartet in vaudeville in their comedy sketch. "THE NEW TEACHER." Harmony and laughs galore! A combination of good singing and comedy.

DOROTHY GISH

in-

1

'Mary Ellen Comes To Town"

Five-reel Paramount-Artcraft feature depicting this clever comedienne as chauffeur to a soda fountain in a small town her latest and funniest production.

BLACK AND MILFORD In "DISTRICT SCHOOL NO. 2" special school settings. Laughs a-plenty when the old school master meets the female advance agent of the burlesque show. LYNN AND LARAYE In "MIRTHFUL NONSENSE" a blackface comedian and his dusky sweetheart. More songs and laughs. COMING THURSDAY Gordon 4. Day, Comedy Pantomimists and Cyclists: Luciana Luca, "Incomparable Tenor," and Berni.-fict Bros, in Their Musical Scenic Act, "A Night in Venice."

THE BRILLIANT STARS OF "232 HOURS' LEAVE" IN ANOTHER SMASHING LAUGH HIT!

OOOi

core rax pGVN ON THE tARM

COMING TO THE WASHINGTON 4 Days Beginning Sunday

PHLACE

TODAY

WM. S. HART

in

The Poppy Girl's Husband And the Mack Sennett loymaker "Her First Mistake" TUESDAY CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG "The Better Wife" Pipe Organ for Muslo

THOMAS H. INGE jbnasenfe

"MARY'S

ANKLE'

j QaramountjirlcraftCpiclure Adapted for the Screen by Luther B. Reed from the Famous Stage Play by May Tully Directed by Lloyd Ingraham A Thomas H. Ince Production

Mary had a little ankle ; Injured it one day. Now the young "doc" who repaired it Just can't stay away! Fact was, Doctor needed cash, but could get it from Uncle only when he married a wife. So Doc asked Mary, "Let's pretend," and Mary said "O. K." But when Uncle took them at their word and hustled them into a bridal suite on a ship heading south the rest is a hurricane of fun ! '

T N0W hMuWS TODAY AND PLAYING ' UMS&J TOMORROW '

Theatre Beautiful

MURRETTE

Hear Our Pipe Organ and Jazz Orchestra.

"WHERE THE STARS TWINKLE FIRST"

STARTING TODAY THE SHOW YOU HAVE WAITED TO SEE A DRAMA THAT THROWS THE X-RAY ON THE HEART

YOUR WIFE IS WAITING FOR YOU"

It was the fighting parson speaking speaking to one of his flock speaking to a man hopeless and helpless. And the same soul-saver knew the needs of his folk. He had come back to be his brother's keeper; to fill his brother's shoes; to take a cold town and put a heart full of feeling and humanity into it.

Children loved him for them ho found place to play and grow. For tired women he found a place in the sun. Vet he kept from them all the biggest secret of his life. His sweetheart knew it his enemies knew it and the secret gnawed at his heart. Gould he, an ex-convict, fit the shoes of a parson?

HAVE YOU EVER SEEN LOVE WORK A TREMENDOUS MIRACLE, EVEN AGAINST BIG ODDS? And the Big Feature Comedy by Robertson Cole "PASS THE APPLE, EVE" Do You Enjoy Good, Clean Comedy? If So, See This One

ADMISSION: Adults 35c, Children 20c.

Bargain Matinees 25c