Newspaper Page Text
Board Endorses Market and
Community Service—Recrea
:uon Committee Reports,
The horizon of the City Planning
Commission was greatly widened
Thursday and its position on many
questions affecting future Atlanta
was vividly clear. In a long discus
slorlx lat; Wednesday of plans, gen
eral an specific, its i
g pulicy was
Without dissenting voice, the com
mission went on record as backing to
the limit the proposals to establish
A city market or system of markets
and to create a community service.
It also went further into the hous-
Ing problem and disclosed an inten
tion to learn through experts what
were Atlanta’s needs and then to
work systematically to supply them.
Learning from John J. Eagan,
chairman of the committee on hous
ing and public welfare, that nearly
pvery question had angles touching
the negro, the commission adopted a
resolution calling for the creation of
A c«‘yred commission to co-operate
with ®he planning commission.
NEGRO COMMITTEE.,
It is to be named by the mayor,
chairman of the county commission
ers and president of the Chamber of
Commerce, the trio that brought the
planning commission into being.
To give a more definite and legal
gtatus to the commission, it was sug
gested by Robert R. Otis that a plan
ning commission act, similar to that
now in force in Ohio, should be arged
in the Legislature.
The Ohio measure creates commis
sions and gives them authority to de
velop city plans, jurisdiction over all
public buildings, thoroughfares, parks
lnd&playgrounds and the right to de
termine where different types of
buildings shall be locatcd.
Chairman John W. Grant made his
first statement of intentions, discuss
ing many questions broadly and oc
rasionally in detail.
PRACTICAL WORKERS.
“Substantial progress needs expert
advice,” he declared. “What we need
alt the beginning is not so much de
tailed and elaborate plans, but some
practical workers in these matters
who can act in an advisory capacity
with us. We are not plamning for to
day or next month, but for all the
years to confe.” ¥
Among the “big things to which we
must address ourselves immediately,”
he said, were these: Location of
permanent passenger and freight
lerminals; abolition of the railroad
livide; grade crossings; more cross
lown thoroughfares, particularly
nothern and southern; extension of
Sptu:g street; playgrounds and
parks; segregation of lmsiness, in
justrial and residence localities.
“All_of these should be considered,”
he said, “without reference to the ef
fect on individual property. We must
seck a right and sensible and proper
solution.”
Chairman Eagan of the housing
sommittee told of the work on this
‘gblem. ‘Conferences are being held
g!y with real estate, building and
spgineering organizations. The com
fied plan, he said, would contain
the most practical ideas advanced by
sach group. - |
URGE SERVICE PLAN. |
The recreation, arts and music
sommittee, of which James B, Nevin
s chairman, was instructed to ap
pear before the Finance Committee
of- council and the county cnmmis-‘
sioners to urge support of the com
munity service plan. It was an-|
nounced by Mayor Key that an ex
pert of the markets bureaun of the de-‘
paftment of agriculture would reach
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN * o w A Clean Newspaper for Southern Homes L THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1920.
Champe S. Andrews of
Chattanooga,-who will speak
on ‘‘The Coul of a City’’ at
the ‘‘All-for-Atlanta’’ din
ner in the Capital City Club
Friday evening.
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‘Atlanta March 15 to begin a survey
for the city market.
The recreation committee’s report
on the community service plan was
\
ordered published in all Atlanta
newspapers. It follows:
‘“Your committee on recreation, arts
and music has considered, at the di
rection of the planning commission,
the proposal to establish a community
service bureau. Your committee, at a
public meeting, invited discussion of
the subject from all parties at in
terest
WOULD BE BENEFIT,
“After r-.'\Lrefully investigating the
plan of th® proposed Atlanta com
munity service, your committee be
lieves that such an organization would
benefit our comrmunity, particularly
in work extending playgrounds,
wholesome recreation and amuse
ments, park amplifications, better
sanitary and health conditions, and
perhaps, above all things, operate to
a clearer and more cordial relation
between the white and colored peo
ple of Atlanta.
“Your committee, therefore, recom
mends to the planning commission,
that it endor™ the propnse}l to estab
lish a community service bureau in
Atlanta, ‘'and that the commission
suggest, in an endorsement to the city
and county authorities, that the com
munity service bureau is worthy of
financial support as they may deem
proper, in connection with such other
financial support as the bureau pro
poses to secure, through voluntary
contributions” and otherwise; pro
vided, however, that the community
service organization, particularly in
the matter of park extensions, play
grounds and such matters, shall op
erate at all times through and in con
nection with the duly constituted city
and county authorities.”
Ge A Tt me A
Memorial Exercises in
South Carolina House
COLUMBIA, 8. C., Feb. 26.—Me
morial exercises. for W. W. Johnson,
member of the House from Claren
don County, who died February 9,
were held in the House last night.
Speeches were made by Speaker
Cothran of Greenville, Mr. Sprott of
Clarendon, Mr. Berry and Mr. Ful
mer of Orangeburg, Mr. Orr of Pic¢k-*
ens, Mr. Ashley of Anderson, Mr.
Wingard of Lexington and Mr.
Keenan of Aiken. The House ad
journed out of respect to the memory
of Mr. Johnson.
The House passed a bill to prevent
the sale after January:l,> in ‘South
Carolina, of any new wagans.or other
vehicles with other than the standard
tread of fifty-six inches. " The bill
exempts trucks or trailers with dual
tread or wheels.
Chance of your |
life—HERE
IN The Georgian WANT AD
section, Read it. Would you
like to go into business—are
you looking for a partner—are
you seeking an opportunity -to
place your ambitions and capi
tal into something really worth
while? ‘
See the WANT ADS in The
Georgian,
\ It pays to md The Georgian
Classified advertisements,
e e
Majors and Captains Are Named
and Campaign to Start Mon
.
day—Women Organized,
On a big chart in the headquarters
of the expansion campaign of the
Cl_v.: mber of Commerce the team or
ga'dzation began Thursday to take
derinite form, T‘lere are two or three
vacancies, but these represented last
minute changes always likely in such
an enterprise, The drive will open
Monday, and may be ended in five
days.
The women's division is complete,
Mrs. George Harrington, general
chairman, has beaten her male rivals.
The four women's teams wili be
headed by Mrs. Julian V. « Boehm,
Mrs. Edward Charbonnier, Mrs. Roy
Dorsey and Mrs. Charles E. Dowman.
There will be seven majors of th
men's division. Six of these arg
George T. Green, James B, Nevin,
Hervey T. Green, James M. Nevin,
Watkins and George Winship. The
seventh major will be named before
Thursday evening. Robert B. Trout
man, chairman of the teams commit
tee, said that if the man in view is
secured, the campaign will have an
element of interest not contemplated
When the committee started to work.
Five majors have reported tne
names of their captains. Mr. Trout
man said that all the rosters will be
completed before night.
“Major” Green has enlisted Alvah
E. Harless, Frank McGaughey, W. D.
Phipps, Randolph Shatter and New
ton C. Wing.
“Major” Nevin will commanad W,
H. Adkins, H) I. Dimond, J. A.
Fischer, Col. W. L. Peel and H. F.
West. )
“Major” Slicer's captains are J. T.
Belcher, Harry Cohen, Lon Credelle,
W. L. McColly and L. G. Murray.
Willlam Burckel, G. E. Chambers,
Frank Daub, Arthur Howell and Jack
Salmon are to work with “Major”
Watkins,
“Major” Winship's selections are
Palmer Blackburn, George A. Camp
bell and Bayne Gibson.
There will be a general meeting of
the whole team organization Thurs
day evening in the Chamber of Com
merce when the campaign material
will be distributed and final instruc
tions given. st
After the “All-for-Atlanta” dinner
Friday evening in the Capital City
Club, the drive will be open, though
the teams are not pledfed to com
mence actual work until Monday
morning.
Champe S. Andrews will be the
principal speaker at this meeting.
baad OB R BEL
Chicago ‘Movie’ Row
Is Taken to New York
(By International News Service.)
CHICAGO, ' Feb, " 26.—The contro
versy between Chicago motion pic
ture theater owners and union oper
ators, which may result in the clos
ing of all “movie” houses here Mon
day, was carried by the union men
to New York today. Charles C. Shay,
president of the International Al
liance of Theatrical Stage Employees
and Motion Picture Employees, with
headquarters in New York, is to be
visited by local heads of the union
Friday. ' They will ask him to 'back
them in their fight with the Chicago
theater owners, andl, if a lockout or
strike results, to institute.a boycott
against all film companies in the
United States and Canada who con
tfnue to do business with Chicago
movie houses.
Legitimate and vaudeville theaters
will not be affected, the union heads
said.
lThls Time, However, Wife Is
Unforgiving, and There Is
No Brother.
(By Universal Service.)
KANSAS CITY, Feb, 26.—A parallel
to the famous Spiker case has de
veloped in Kansas City. This time it
is a French, not an English girl, and
there is no brother of the alleged
guilty man to step into the breech
to save the girl from deportation, and
unlike Mrs. Spiker, the Wwife is un
forgiving.
l The man is Lee Shippey., Misscur}
poet, once a candidate for “poet
'laurentn" of the State, a newspaper
man, lecturer and formerly editor of
the HMigginsville Jeffersonian. He
was editor of “Missouri Notes," a
column in a local newspaper, until the
case became public. .He is understood
to have gone to Los Angeles.
The girl is Madeline Babin, who,
since she came to Kansas City from
her home in Paris, where she met
Shippey, has been living with her
mother, a war widow, and her sister,
Georgette. The family came to
Kansas City from Paris several
months ago.
HEARINGS IN CASE,
The case was brought ta the at
tention of Federal officials by Miss
“onstance Woodson, a sister of Mrs.
Shippey. Mrs. Shippey is a daughter
of Mrs. Blake Wondson, an Aactive
club worker. Her father is a widely
kn&wn attorney.
/arren Long, in charge of the bu
reau of immigration here, has held
two hearings on the case and has
sent recommendations to the bueau
of immigration,
Mrs. Shippey, while her husband
was in France #4B a Y. M. C. A.
worker, carried on his newspaper
work here. She is understood to have
refused to sue for divorce. The
Shippeys have one child, a boy 10,
The story, as told to federal au
thorities, is that Shippey was in Paris
lwhen he met Madeline, the French
girl. He was assigned there by the
Y. HoA |
HOW THEY MET. |
They met on a street car on All
Saints’ Day, Madeline having been
on her way to a cemetery to put
flowers on graves of soldier dead.
Her younger sister, Georgette, was
accompanying her. Shippey’s desti-;
nation was'the same. He inquired the!
way and was told to follow the two!
girls. |
Later Shippey, who was accom-|
panied by a gray haired army cap-|
tain, offered to carry the flowers for
the girls. Q \
While shippey was taking photo
graphs of the services at the ceme
tery, he ran out of plates and noticing
the girls had a kodak borrowed it,
The girls gave their address, and his
|visit to return the camera was the
first of many. ?
' Later Shippey boarded in the Babin
home.
When Shippey. returned to America
he was met on the dock by his wife.
According to information given fed
|eml authorities by relatives of l\‘lrs.i
Shippey, he seemed cool, and told his
wife he had lost his heart to a girl in’
France.
“I love a little girl in Paris,” he is
reported to have told her. “I want
you to get a divorce so I ean marry
her. Choose your own grounds.”
WANTED TO WED GIRL. |
The reason for a divorca, Shippey
|ls said to have told his wife, was
to enable him to do his duty to thei
girl. Mrs. Shippey refused to take
steps for a divorce, but offered to
take the child.
. Mrs. Shippey, broken hearted, per
}suadrd her husband to return to
Kansas City for the sake of their
young son and to forget Madeline.
They returned, but shortly after let
ters began to arrive from Madeline.
Mrs. Shippey read them and realized
the affair was growing more dan
gerous to her. "Later Madeline, with
her mother and sister, came to
America. Madeling had signed a
contract to teach school in Oregon. It
is said by federal officials that rela
tives of Shippey live in Oregon. But
the Babin famfly came direct to
Kansas City.
Madeline is 22, though she looks
younger. Her hair is fair and curly,
her eyes blue. She speaks English
well.
“I would not hurt him for worlds,"
said Madeline today. “He was a good
friend. That is all. He lived at our
house and was most solicitous. 1 can
not speak of this. 1 would never
wish that I should hurt him. It
would be too terrible.
WAS “ACT OF KINDNESS.”
“After all, you see, it is my own
private affair. 1 do not wish thut
people should look at my life. I wish
to be let alone to go'my way. I can
teach and 1 can get along with my
mother and sister, Surely those who
know Mr. Shippey can believe he
B i urios i
l B. F. Keith's c
.
VAUDEVILLE--2:30, 7:30, 9:15
—————————— T —————
REVUE '
GIRLS! GIRLS!! GIRLS!!!
D
OSCAR LORAINE
————————————
OTHER KEITH HITS
OEW'S
l IN :] ‘
CONTINUOUS ITO II RM. 1D i
Vaudeville, 3:30-7-9 P. M. |
Mats. 10-20 c; Nights, 15-25-35¢
e s
JIMMY BRITT
Former Champion Lightweight
Who Has Made Good on Stage ‘
MELVA SISTERS, KINGSBURY
& MUNSON, “NINE CRAZY
KIDS” FREDERICK & PALMER
—————————————————
MADLAINE TRAVERSE
In “THE HELL SHIP”
Cheer Up!
By John Kendrick Bangs.
TOLERANCE.
AS weeds are parl of nature's
plan
So do I think is weedy man,
The deadly night shade and the
rue
Hold deep within some purpose
true
That in a world of floral love
I know not of—
And so for them that fail and
err,
The weeds of human character,
I'll judge them not, for deep
within
Their outer semblances to sin
May lie some bit of gold that we
Too prone to judgments can not
see.
(Copyright, 1920, Atlanta Georgian,)
The county commission, at its
regular meeting next Wednesday, will
receive a recommendation from the
county public works committee, of
lwhlch Paul 8. Etheridge is chairman,
‘that permanent repairs, estimated at
‘850.000, be made on the Collins Bridge
over the Chattahoochee River. The
bridge is declared in dangerous con
dition.
The cost of the repairs is to be
apportioned among Fulton and Cobb
Counties and the Georgia Railway
and Power Company. The propor
tionate amount to be paid by each is
to be determined at a rconference be
tween the county attorneys of Ful
ton and Cobb and the attorneys of
the power company, whe will con
strue the State law relating to the
building of joint county bridges.
| The recommendation of the public
' works committee was determined
IWednesday afternoon at a joint meet
‘ing of the committee and the Cobb
County commissioners. Tha Cobb
commissioners, who wished time to
'study four plans submitted for mak
ing the bridge safe, wil ‘take action
‘at their regular meeting next Tues
day, and then will meet with the
Fulton commission on Wednesday to
'make their report. The Cobb com
'missioners indicated that they, too,
‘favored the plan of perinancat re
‘pair, which provides Zor she raising
of the bridge four feet and the build
ing of a concrete approach on the
iCobb County side.
.
Ship Board Agrees
On Nitrate Tonnage
(By International News Service.)
WASHINGTON, Feb. 26.—The
shipping board and the principal ni
trate concerns have reached an agree
ment on the furnishing of prompt
‘tonnage covering the period from now
until June 30 for shipment of nitrate
from Chile to- meet the requirements
of American farmers for this season,
the department of agriculturg has an
nounced,
ki SO Adh o A SIS
\
‘would do a kind act for a girl for the
isake of kindness alone, because he is
s 0 good and gentle”
Mrs. Shippey is prostrated. Her
mother, Mrs, Blake Woodson, said her
daughter patched up matters with
!Shippey in an effort to hold together
a home for the sake of a 10-year-old
boy, who was waiting to welcome his
“daddy” from France.
“He had written her, saying he
wanted her to come to meet him for
a second honeymoon,” said Mrs.
Woodson. “Shortly after Mr. Ship
pey met my daughter ne told her of
the French girl. While she realized
affection was dead between them, yet
she urged for the sake of their child,
who had been waiting to eagerly to
see his ‘daddy,’ who was a hero in
his eyes, that they return here and
make an attempt to rebuild their
home.”
After Mrs, Shippey dJdearned the
French girl was in Kansas City, in
an .apartment, Mrs, Woodson said,
she told her husband she would not
countenance him keeping up two
homes. Shippey then went West, his
mother-in-law said.
T IZUNN
e THIRWEER
DOUBLE BILL
D. W (i;i&h';'-vondednl
“THE GREATEST
QUESTION”
A Momon%«:;. ’Dr-m- of
Extra Attraction
CHARLIE’ CHAPLIN
“A Day’s Pleasure”
Mutt l".o i"fw' 'S:ln.dy
Criterion Orchestra
Dave Love, Conducter
I FRIDAY l
The Ellis-Holstein
Hawaiian Serenaders
Singing-—Dancing-—Music
William S. Hart
In His Paramount Success
“Wolves of the Rail”
‘The Battle Royal”
MACK SENNETT COMEDY
Town Topics
'
Election of Dan T, Gray Presi
dent Features Final Ses
sion Here.
With the election of Dan T. Gray
of Raleigh, N. C., as president and
the delivery of addresses by Dr, L.
W. Allen of the United States de
partment of agriculture, Dr. W, M.
Riggs, president of Clemson College,
S. C,, and Prof. John R, Fain, Geor
gia State College of Agriculture, the
twenty-first annual convention of
the Association of Southern Agricul
tural Workers ended Thursday.
Mr. Gray has just served one term
as secretar vof the association. He
is one of the executive officials of
the North Carolina Agricultural Col
lege at Religh. He succeeds Dr. Tait
Butler of Memphis, as president.
Dr. T. P. Cooper, dean of the Col
lege of Agriculture, Lexington, Ky.,
was re-elected vice president of the
association; . A. Mooers, chief, di
vision of agronomy, Tennessee Agri
cultural Experiment Station, Knox
ville, was elected secretary, succeed
ing Mr, Gray, who was elevated to
the presidency.
COMMITTEE CHOSE OFFICERS.
Officers were selected by a nomi
nating committee, of which J. Phil
Campbell, director of the extension
department, State department of
agriculture, Athens, was chairman,
W. H. Dalrymple, Baton Rouge, La.,
and B. W. Kilgore, Raleigh, N. C,,
were named as members of the ex
ecutive committee,
qunrls were submitted by the
nominating committee and a report
on the co-ordination of investiga
tional work by the committee on live
stcek and animal husbandry. The
live stock report was submitted by
Chairman R. 8. Curtis, of the ex
periment station at Raleigh, N. C,,
and the discussion was by Dr. H. P.
\Stuckey. director of the Georgia ex
‘perimen! station at Athens; Dr, T.
P. Cooper, dean of the College of
Agriculture, Lexington, Ky., and Dr,
'W. H. Da¥ymple, Baton Rouge, La.
‘ Dr. Allen’s paper was on “Organ
ization of Investigation in Agricul
ture.” The general discussion of this
paper was led by Dr. C. A. Carym,
dean, veterinary college, Alabama
Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala.;
Prof. J. R. Ricks, Starkville, Miss.; F.
R. Loyd, director tarm bureau, Mem
phis Chamber of Commerce.
TALKS OF A. E. F. WORK.
Dr. Riggs spoke on “Educational
Work with the A. E. F. in Kance.”
Prof. John R. Fain, of the College of
Agriculture at Athens spoke on “The
Grass Situation in the Coastal Plain
Section.” Discussion of this paper
was led by Prof., J. F. Duggar. Au
burn, Ala.; G. A. Cardwell, Wilming
ton, N. C, C. B. Williams, Raleigh,
N. C. Dr. H. H. Harrington sukb
ritted a report of the works of the
“soft pork” committee.
Wednesday afternvon the delegates
'to the convention were the guests
of the soil improvement committee
of the Southern Fertilizer Asocia
tion. They were taken for an auto
mobile tour of the city and were
then entertiined with an elaborate
luncheon at the Piedmont Drlvlm:\
Club,
At this luncheon were leading ax-‘
ricultural extension workers of thel
South. Representatives from the
State colleges of agriculture and gov
ernment experiment stations were in
attendance from Georgia, Alabama,
Forida, Tennessee, Louisiana, Mis
sissippi, Arkansas, North Carolina,
South Carolina, Kentucky and Vir
ginia.
In additlon to the extension work
ers high officials of the United States
department of agriculture, the agri
cultural and industrial depnrtmflnts‘
of the leading Southern railroads and
editors of welt xnown farm maga- |
zines, :
Prof. J. N, Harper served as toast
master and there was but little
speaking. Professor Harper expressed
the pleasure of the Soii Improvemert
Committee in having the opportunity
of entertaining the visitors., Dr. R.
J. H. DeLoach made a short talk
on the need of having a proper in
terpretation made of the relationship
between corporations and the Pub
lie. Dr. Tait Butler, président of the
assoclation, then oalled on Dr. T. P.
Cooper, of Lexington, Ky, to de
liver a short address of thanks.
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—in—
Added Attractions:
“THE NIGHT OF THE DUB”
Parnmeunt Cemedy,
“Kinggram News Weekly"”
GUESS “WHO'S WHO" AND WIN
A SEARON'S PASS,
Every day this weok we will show
66 Prominent Atlanta Business Men
on the screen (luess who they are
and win a season's pass Clircular,
with full information, will be given
you at the theater Ask for it
ALL THIS WEEK
BIG
TOM MIX
In His Latest Big
SPECIAL FEATURE
“THE FEUD”
Do et Spbetue Tom " Mix over
starred In,
ADDED ATTRACTION
COLLEEN MOORE
In @ New Comedy
“The Bridal Night”
-
France Seizes
21,000 Kegs of
-
U.S. Whisky
(By Universal Service.)
PARIS. Feb, 26 ~Twenty-one
thousand kegs of American
whisky, imported by a group vt
Americans for consump*on by
thirsty American tourists, have
been confiscated at Havre on the
ground of illegal importation.
A license for importation had
been granted by the former
Chamber of Deputies, but one of
the first acts of the new cham
ber was to revoke it. Although
no efforts are being spared to
save this, the only cargo of
American whisky in France since
the war, it is not expecte dthat
clearance permission will be gb
tained in time for the rush of
tourists.
i
(By INternational News Service.)
. LONDON, Feb. 26.—Leaders of the
labor party today prepared a motion
}opp(;sing the second reading of the
government's new Irish home rule
bill in the House of Commons, on
lthe ground it will not lead to a set
tlement of the Irish question, the
'Da.ilv News revealed.
| Thae Daily Chronicie »ays the moeas
‘ura provides a joint court of ap
peals for all of Iraand. The idea
In government cires is to havoe tlhe
Ml referred at once to a joint com
‘mittee of both houses of Parliament,
‘according to the Daily Chronicle,
. When the bill was introduced in
‘the House of Commons by lan Mac-
Pherson, chief secretary for Ireland,
«nly the tit'e was read and none of
its details divulged.
~ Announcement was made that the
terms of the new home rule bill
would be made public in the House of
Commons tonight.
s
Troops Keeping Order
AsI.W. W. Trial Goes On
(By International News Service.)
MONTESANO, Wash, Feb. 26.—
Montesano awoke today to find the
city like an armed camp, with a de
tachment of 100 men and several of
ficers of the Thirty-fifth United
States Infantry prepared to quell any
disturbance which might interfere
with the trial of the ten alleged I
W. W. charged with the Centralia
Armistice Day murders. The call for
troops was made by Special Prose
cutor Herman Allen to Governor
Hart,
The trial was resumed today. The
first matter to be taken up was
the insanity defense for Loren Rob
erts, one of the prisoners.
Sheriff Jeff Bartell says the local
situation is not such as to warrant
the presence of the regulars.
» % o
Drinking Water Supply
Infected From Sewage
(By International News Service.)
BLOOMINGTON, Ilil., Feb. 26.—
Twenty deaths and 450 cases of ill
ness from typhoid fever among the
2,000 employees of the Chicago and
Alton Railroad shops led to an in
vestigation today by the State Board
of Health.
It is believed the drinking water
became infected from sewage. 1
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- Club Events = ¢
‘r ~a history of Atlanta and Georgia society, of E
S which Atlanta and Georgia are proud—a record of
¥4 gocial happenings—of engagements—weddings— .
@ births and of family life— i
£\ A recording of club and personal doings—of the 5
splendid work of the organizations and soecieties.
g,; —The Society Sections of The Atlanta Georgian '
#( and Sunday American—edited by Polly Peachtree .
| and her assistants—are the most complete in all
the Sonth—intensely interesting to both home
folks and the strangers within our midst.
. Read Polly Peachtree Every Sunday in the
Sunday American and Every Day in The Daily
Georgian and Enjoy a Better Knowledge of |
Things Social.
(By International News Service.)
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb, 26—
Possibility that Indianapolis may lose
the national headquarters of the
American Legion loomed today when
it became known that a determined
effort is being made to have the
executive offices of the organization
removed to Washington,
A committee composed of Kenneth
Mcßae and I. Lester Jones of Wash
ington :n.ml Walter Myers of Indian
apolis will make recommendations to
the Legion convention in September,
and the convention will determine
whether or not the headquarters will
remain here, it was sald.
A $10,000,000 national memorial
hall project is under way in Washing -
ton, to be erected on land given by
Congress. The matter of appropria=
tions for a national headquarters
building is one of the matters sched
uled to ome before the proposed
special session of the Indiana General
Assembly
TONIGHT FRI. & SAT,
MAT. SAT.
COMSTOCK and ELLIOTT
Present
Brightest and Smartest of Ail
Musical Comedy Hits
Augmented Orchestra
PRICES: All Performances,
50c to $2.00
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e ————————
MON, MATINEE
Toes. MARCH 1-2-3 " 'web.
WED,
A. L. ERLANGER PRESENTS
el
OLCOTT SINGS 4 NEW SONGS
PRICES—
IR s cevs . BOC to :2.”
Wed, Mat, ¥ 50c to $1.50
Seats Friday,
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THURSDAY
Geraldine Farrar
In & Six Reel l"en’t,nro
““
Shadows
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FRIDAY
In n Big Seven Reel Special Production {
“ »”
A Woman of Pleasure
—————————————————— |
SATURDAY
Tom Mix ‘
In & Five Reel Western Dr-mn”
“
Heart of Texas Ryan
—————————————————————————————
Comedy Every Day
3