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Indiana daily times. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]) 1914-1922, December 11, 1920, Last Home Edition, Image 9

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STATE HONEY
PRODUCERS TO
GATHER HERE
Annual Meeting of Indiana
Beekeepers to Be Held
Dec. 16-17.
SPEAKERS ANNOUNCED
The annual convention of the Indiana
Beekeepers' Association will be held in
the Senate chamber. Statehouse, In this
city next Thursday and Friday, Becom
ing to an announcement by C. O. Yost,
State *plnry Inspector for the depart
ment of conservation, and secretary of
the beekeepers’ organisation.
Mason J. Niblack of Vincennes, presi
dent of the asociation, will act as chair
man. Several speakers prominent In
bee cnltural work are scheduled to ap
pear on the program.
George S. Demnth of Medina, Ohio, edi
tor of “Gleanings In Bee Culture,” will
apeak to the convention both days. Mr.
Demuth formerly was connected wltn
the United States Department of Apia
culture at Washington. Other speakers
are E. W. Atkina, extension specialist,
Watertown, Iowa; E. S. Miller, Valpa
raiso; Ross B. Scott, La Grange; Wil
liam A. Hunter, Terre Haute; Richard
Lieber. director of conservation In In
diana, and Frank N. Wallace, State en
tomologist. Mrs. Louis Bruckhardt of
Indlajmpolis will present "Observations
of a Beekeeper in Switzerland,” her na
tive country, and Q. O. Ralnbolt of
Terre Haute, agricultural agent of Vigo
County, will give a talk, using Illus
trated cinema pictures, of a bee tour
conducted recently In Vigo County.
ORGANIZATION SHOWS
BIG GROWTH IN YEAR.
In a letter sent to several thousand
beekeepers In Indiana, Mr. Yost calls at
tention that It was only a year ago that
ibe Indiana Beekeepers’ Association held
its annual convention in Indianapolis
and reorganized along more progressive
lines. The membership Is now about
ten times as large as last year and
there Is a very substantial sum in the
treasury, he says.
The letter urges persons Interested in
more advanced beekeeping and augment
ed honey production, to lend their sup
port toward procuring Improved legis
lation to further the business. It points
out that while inspectors of the State
Department of Conservation Inspected
more apiaries last year than ever before,
they did not visit all localities because
there were too few of them to respond
to all calls for their aid.
Unless the department Is allowed more
money for this work there will only be
three" inspectors in the field next year
where there should be six or seven, Mr.
Y'ost says.
Beekeepers of Indiana produced ap-
MOTION PICTURES.
ALL LAUGH WEEK
YOU’VE COT JO
“LOVE, HONOR a! BEHAVE"
A T\ a k Sennett Super Comedy
Five Funny Reels of False Testimony
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
Tom Moore Li* “Stop Thief”
THE FAMOUS STAGE PLAY
CIRCLETTE OF NEWS CIRCLE ORCHESTRA
* T r “"“ j Thrl 0n the Lrink ° f ° Fred P ice
Br%s. j&it $ Two men, sworn enemies,
t' *' l■“ struggled—one to save a
>i t rvt /pr!/ woman’s good name, the
ALL NEXT WEEK other t 0 besm j rch it ... A
Tl vs r j • single misstep and both
( Ihe iY'e.od c matic would be plunged to dc-
of 7. e Year struction!
The Most
Terrific Hand
to-Hand Fight
\ Ever
7: Filmed.
( - * ,*§Sfcfc .*£&■ jK '* S' I
5H03. W. RO3S and WILFRED LYTfcLL
Charlotte Merriam In StLSZST*' A Pajama Marriage
proximately C,000,000 pounds of honey
last season. Hooalers accepted honey as
a substitute for high-priced sugar and.
In adltlon to local production, many car
loads of Imported honey were consumed.
According to Mr. Yost no other State In
the Union has a more liberal distribu
tion of honey-bearing plants than In
diana. One hundred species gives the
State two.classes of early summer flows
and two classes of fall flows. An entire
failure of all of these groups at once
has never been known.
PROGRAM FOR
SESSIONS GIVEN,
The program follows:
Thursday, 10 a. m.—Opening address.
Mason J. Niblack, president, Vincennes;
secretary-treasurer report, C. O. Yost, In
dianapolis; appointment of committees by
president: “Beekeeping as a Vocation, ’
Ross B. Scott, La Grange.
Thursday, 1 p. m.—" Beekeeping and
Conservation," Richard Lieber, Depart
ment of Conservation. Indianapolis; re
port of past year's apiary inspection,
Frank N. Wallace, State entomologist,
Indianapolis; address, E. W. Atkins,
Watertown, Wls.; address, George S.
Demuth, Medina, Ohio.
Thursday. 8 p. m—-’’Bee Tour Vigo
County” (Illustrated), Q. O. Ralnbolt,
Vigo County agent, Terre Haute; "Evoln
tlon of Beekeeping," George 8. Demuth,
Medina, Ohio.
Friday, 0 a. m.—General discussion of
hives and equipment, by the member
ship; address, George S. Demuth. Medina.
Ohio; “Modern Comb Honey Produc
tion.” E. S. Miller, Valparaiso; ten min
ute talks, membership.
Friday, 1 p m. —"Observations of a
Beekeeper In Switzerland,” Mrs. Louis
Rurckhardt, Indianapolis; “Marketing of
Honey,’’ William A. Hunter, Terre
Haute; report of committees, etc., mem
bership ; address, George S. Demuth,
Medina, Ohio.
Inmate Kills Himself
Special to The Times.
GREENSBURO, Ind., Dec. 11.—Fred
Reitz, 14, an Inmate of the Odd Fellows
Home, committed suicide Friday In his
room by shooting himself in the left
breast with a large caliber revolver. Mr.
Reita had been at the home for nearly
twenty years, coming here In 1901 when
the institution was opened. He was men
tally unbalanced. Death was instantan
eous.
MOTION PICTURES.
CANNIBAL
CHILDREN
NEVER CRY.
SEE THEM IN
SHIPWRECKED
AMONG THE
CANNIBALS.
ALL WEEK.
ISIS.
HAS BIGGEST HAT
SHOP FRONT IN U. S.
Levinson’s New Store in Loew
Theater Tops ’Em AH.
Soft draperies in front ©f the wall
cases, a pleasing Indirect, lighting sys
tem, woodwork and fixtures of oak fin
ished in silver gray—those are some of
the attractive features of the new hat
store of Harry Levinaon. 37 North Penn
sylvania street, which was opened form
ally today.
It Is In the new Loew theater building
and is In the same location as that where
Mr. Levinson had a hat store before the
old building there was wrecked to make
way for the present one.
With this addition to his stores In In
dianapolis, Mr. Levinson will have four
hat stores In the city—the largest num
ber of hat shops owned by any one man
In any one city west of New York. It
might be mentioned also that the now
store has the largest front of any ex
clusive hat store In the United States.
Carl Schey, who has been In the em
ploy of Mr. Levinson for about fifteen
Paramount Simper-Plays
Announcement
Beginning tomorrow the management
of the Isis inaugurates a change of
policy whereby Paramount super-plays
will be presented for a season. Each
picture will have its first Indianapolis
showing at the Isis, and each will bear
the personal guarantee as to its worth
that goes with the PARAMOUNT
trade mark. The first of these will be:
Universal Comedy
“THE LION TAMERS”
INDIANA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1920.
years, and Clarence Mills, who has been
in the same employ about six years, will
be at the new store, of which Mr. Schey
will be manager. Mr. Levinson will
make bis headquarters there.
County Assessors
to Meet McCray
County assessors of Indiana will meet
In annual conference next Wednesday
and Thursday with Governor-elect War.
ren T. McCray, Governor James P. Good
rich and members of the State Board of
Tax Commissioners. The conferences
will ba held In the Statehouse.
Governor Goodrich, Mr. McCray, Fred
A. Sims, chairman, and W. C. Harrison,
secretary, of the tax board, and William
N. Cox of Parke County, will address
the assessors Wednesday. On the sec
ond day of the convention Philip
Zoercher and John G. Brown, members
of the tax board, and George C. Bryant,
agricultural statistician for Indiana for
the United State* Department of Agri
culture, Elmer Fferguson of Delaware
County, and Georg# F. Fraser of Tip
pecanoe County, will talk.
Lodge Holds Last
Reception for Year
Motion pictures nnd dancing were the
features of the last social affair of the
year of Mystic Tie Lodge No. 398, F.
& A. M , held last night at the Masonic
Temple. Clarence Crlppln, master or
the lodge, headed the reception com
mittee.
Under the direction of Clyde Titus,
chairman of the entertainment commit
tee, the final social event of the year of
Raper Commandery No. 1, Knights
Templar, will be given tonight, for mem
bers and their families and guest.-.
Administrator of
Myers Estate Named
Judge Mahlon E. Bash of the Marlon
Probate Court has appointed W. Todd
Young administrator of the estate of
the late Frederick A. Myers, who was
fatally shot by his wife. Mrs. Inda
Myers, in their photographic studio at
1800 North Alabama street Saturday
night. The value of the estate Is esti
mated at $5,000.
LEGION ASKED
TOSELL SEALS
Commander Issues Appeal
Through Tuberculosis As
sociation.
Member* of the American Legion are
asked to aa*l*t the Christmas seal sale
by National Commander J. H. Gal
braith, in a letter made public today by
Secretary Murray A. Auerbach of the
Indiana Tuberculoala Aasociation. Com
mander Galbraith say*:
"The aeriousneaa of tbla problem has
been brought home to the American
Legion, which now Is bending every ef
fort to alleviate the condition of our dis
abled, thousands of whom are afflicted
with tuberculosis and are without prop
er hospital treatment.
"Members of the Legion are vitally In
terested in the community eduoatlon and
organisation pravantlv* plan, which In
my opinion combata the evil at Its
source. I have been a hearty supporter
of the Christmas seal campaign for many
years. There la all the more reason why
MOTION PICTUREB.
at the ISIS
LOIS WEBER’S
SPECIAL PRODUCTION
(X Cpammounl Q>ictim
lure and desire of the ages! The irresistible urge, from Adam
£ I down to latest love-mad youth and the workaday husband, striv
fj H ing and happy—or driven —To Please One Woman.
L The fascinating, nerve-tingling, oldest and newest game in the
world! Now in a thrilling motion picture!
If the woman be worthy, the man may rise to the stars. If his goddess takes all
and gives nothing—
You’ll want to see this vividly intimate photoplay romance. A story that
bares the secret of the most vital power on earth today—the power of a
woman to make or break the man who loves her.
Legion men and women should support
It this year."
The largest single contribution, ar
ranged by a single organization for the
seal sale this year wag announced b>
Secretary Auerbach today. It la the
sum of $5,000, pledged by the Rotary
Club of Warsaw, which binds. Its mem
bership to sell that amount for the bene
fit of the Kosciusko County tuberculosis
prevention work.
Driver, Who Tried to
Whip Pastor, Licked
NEW YORK, Dec. 11.—The Rev. H. M.
j Hancock, pastor of the Methodist church
at Huntington, L. 1., was driving his car
In Huntington today when It collided
with the car of George Carbone, a chauf
feur. Angered, Carbone struck the clergy
man in the face.
I Then followed a hot sparring contest,
In which Carbone was given a thorough
trouncing. Dr. Hancock was asked if
he Intended to make a charge of assault
against Carbone. “Why should I? I
guess I gave as much as 1 received,” he
said.
Clips Hair of Woman ;
Sleeping in Pullman
FORT THOMAS, KyT" Dec. 31—Mrs.
Waters Howe of Orlando, Fla, claims to
have been the victim of the meanest
thief in the United States—one who,
she said, clipped the hair from' her "head
while she was asleep in a Pullman
route from Jacksonville, Fla., to this city.,
Mrs. Howe reported that, besides her
hair, she was robbed of several pieces
of jewelry and S3OO In cash.
v
Herbert Foltz Down
on Architect’s List
The need of competent men as archi
tects, the way to succeed In the profes
sion and the compensation to be expected
■will be the point* emphasized by Herbert
Foltz, designer of the Central Y. M. C.
A. building, who will make an address,
In the lobby of the Y. M. C. X. tonight?
on the subject: “Architecture as a Pro*
session.” His talk will begin at the
conclusion of a motion picture show at
j7:15 o’clock.
franker
*.. a. vi ii
9

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