Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 October 1928 — Page 2

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GREENCASTLE HERALD PAGE TWO

THE HERALD

Established as the Star & Democrat I in 1868 Entered as Second Class mail matter! at the Greencastle, Ind., postofllce. | Charles J. Arnold Proprietor Lclloy Bee City Editor! Boy Evans Manager Published every afternoon, except Sunday, at 17-19 South Jackson Street, Greencastle, Indiana. TELEPHONE 65. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By mail in Putnam County, 63.00 a year; outside Putnam County, 63.50! a year; In Greencastle, by carrier. 10c a week; weekly edition, 61.50 a year; advertising rates on application.

f eeding Porto Rico’s Survivors

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THE THEATERS'

NEW YORK TODAY By Wm. M. Myerg *

THE VONCASTLE Spirit of Girl Pervades Film AVhat’s in a name ? If you are really anxious to get an answer to this age-old query, ask any member of the east that played in “Mademoiselle from Annentieres,” the groat Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer epic of war, love and adventure which is the attraction Wednesday at the Yon-

castle.

Tlese fellows engaged in making this wonder story of war, love and laughs do know what’s in the name of “Mademoiselle from Armentiercs.” Every one of them saw military service in the war, including the director, Maurice Elvey, and scenarist, Victor Kafille. This is assurance that they know all al>out Medemoiselle. It is assurance, too, that travestly figures not at all in portraying the actual conditions of life at the front.

The above striking photo shows a scene in Playa Naguabo, San Juan, of several score refugees receiving food supplies at hands of

municipal police. This was taken in advance of receipt of Red Cross supplies. (InterntUonal N«ir*re«l)

PARENTS AND TEACHERS TO OPEN MEETINGS

ENGLANDLOSES FIFTY MILLION BY RUSS BREAK

LITTLE FARM PAYS

IN GREEN-

By International News Service LONDON, Oct. 2.—The breaking

FOUR ASSOCIATIONS

CASTLE TO HAVE FIRST SES-joff of diplomatic relations with RusSICN8 OF YEAR THIS WEEK—isia a little over a year ago has cost AIMS AND PURPOSES ARE OIV-|Great Britain nearly fifty million dol I EN ;!ars according to trade

ijust published.

Tliis week will see the first meet-1 Figures show that during the nine! j inr of tile Pal i nt-Teaehci s As.-ocia- °f the 1927-28 financial year

A Parent-Teach alone there was a decline of 615,000,-'

RUSHVILLE, Ind., Oct. 2.—(INS) —Sherman Andrews who lives near Arlington has found that it doe s not take a big farm to make a little money. Andrews put a half acre of ground in tomatoes this year with ' the following results: 12,714 pounds of tomatoes were I harvested. He got $98.67 for them, i The remainder he sold for $3.15. Thus he got $101.82 for tomatoes j from a half acre of ground.

statistics pjGURES TELL STORY OF STUDF.BAKER STAMINA

The figures below offer analytical

These fellows know that Mademoi-1 tl0ns of Greencastle. A Parent-Teach l alone thee was a decline of 145,000,-1 proot of the glganUc 8tratn8 and

selle, legendary though she may have,* 1 ' Assbclatlon ls a S>oup of teachers 000 over the preceding year In the been, mystery that she always was, and I' : "cnts working in the interests orders placed by the Soviet Govern-

proved her worth thousands of times ; 01 ohildren (, f ad the people

all tin- time. There are 20,000 Assoc

as a bearer of cheer and provider of

mirth and good will in many a tight ia, ions uith o\er 1,2.9,000 members

place. Always she was a Godsend on | 111 1 ^ le United States,

long marches, in the trenches, back in ; *Pttrpo.se of these Associations billets, and everywhere that a soldier *° Promote child welfare In home, might give way to song. I school, church and community; to This is why “Mademoiselle fromj la,se t 11 * standards of home life; to

Annentieres” carries so much of mag Into closer relation

netism in its title and its story. The :l,ul the school > that parents and spirit of the much-sung lady pervades j teachers may co-operate intelligently

the picture to make it what it is.... one of the greatest of war dramas. It was filmed in England by th'/

ment.

stresses that each of the four strictly stock Studebaker President Eights so triumphantly with stood when each

In the third quarter of the present | trave ied 30,000 miles in less than financial year, for which trade figures ; 30,000 consecutive minutes at the have Just been completed, orders plan Atlantic City Speedway: ed by the Soviet government amount-1 Total revolutions of each

ed to 67.439,395. This is some one

engine 67,320,000

Total explosions in each

269,280,000

Total up and down travel of

each piston ... (feet) 49,087,500

Gaumont Company, Ltd.

THE GRANADA

“Stocks and Blondes'*

Sophisticated New York’s inner secrets are bared in “Stocks and Blondes,” an FBO special directed by Dudley Murphy, which is to he the next attraction nt the Granada theut-

and a half millions less than those placed in the corresponding quarter n

the home [year ago.

The actual shipment of goods to

Russia in the above period amount-j Total times each valve

cl to $7,704,595, while a year ago j opened 33,660,000 they exceeded 620,000,000. | These figures, the results of slide

These startling figures have rnu«-j rllle calculations, are so colossal that

ed considerable alarm in financial cir they are riiffiicult to visualize. But cles where It Is feared that even a I , h elr vastness emphasizes the signl-

not flc a nt feat of stamina and endurance

Something of an idea of how big New York really is came to light the other day when a checkup of office workers was made in a downtown office where thousands of men and women are employed. In one department alene it was discovered that ten workers, all knowing each other by their first names, live on the same street in The Bronx, but never had dreamed they were neighbors excepting at their desks. • • • Next-door neighbors in Flatbush discovered they were working for the same concern through the checkup, but neither had been aware of the fact they'had been neightbors and coworkers for more than three years.

One fellow when asked where he lived said “Way out in the country” but when the questioners became more exacting he told them the number of a street which is in the Northern end of Manhattan, but so lar away from the hub of activity that there are densely-wooded hills about with the always fresh odor of a countryside. • • • Some of the more remote sections of Manhattan are like small-town centers. In the Inwood district near the Dyckman Street ferry the druggist and the butcher and the grocer know their customers by name and the policeman on post waves a friendly hand as the “townsfolk” pass. * * * Highbridye is another neighborhood where local taxi men meet you at the station standing beside the open doors of their cabs to whisk you to your home a few blocks distant. Yet these sections are but slightly more than half an hour’s ride to Times Square on the subway, but always sort of smack of the smalltown. • • • I know of two busy business men who live so far out in New York they frequently remain over night at a hotel, to conserve time and gain sonm sleep. Frequently at The Roosevelt a Yonkers family—man, wife and daughter—will remain over after the theatre to offset the tedious journey home late at night, and families from other nearby towns follow the same proceedings.

Often New Yorkers will appear greatly surprised when a friends admits he lives in New Jersey, but Exchange Place, Jersey City, is but a three-minute ride on the Hudson Tubes from Cortlandt street, Manhattan and Newark, New Jersey’s largest city, is only forty minutes away by the same route.

Long Beach, Long Island sounds far away from Broadway, but you get there on the Long Island R. R. long before you can complete the first page of your newspaper. Corona and Austoria, Long Island, are more quickly reached than many parts of Manhattan Island.

One millionaire flys to Long Island every morning from his home near Cape May, N. J., and has his ear awaiting his landing. One morning there was a heavy fog and his plane landed at a field outside Philadelphia. He had his ear at the Long Island flying field start to Philly for him and he took a private motor car toward New York. They met midway and the millionaire got out of one car and in-

TORTURED BY BULL LAPORTE, Ind., Oct. 2.-,,^ Mauled by an enraged bull Gierkey, 45, was in a critical cl? tion today at his home east of I- 1 ' Mills. 1 The bull held the man prisoner,, literally tortured him for v, m The arrival of Mr,. GhrS"'™* her husband’s life. Gierkey was repairing a feiK . c when the bull attacked him wit ! 'Tin T k ht ‘ bu “ ' vas bl ' hor ^5 rolled Gierkey around in the fle H Gierkey suffered several fractm* ribs and possible internal injuries

l/ID0IES’C0LDS |\ Should not be ‘dosed." Tru, ■ « them externally ViSSS ftvr 17 IHill, Jat , B

-‘•••SX

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Public Sale! of Milk Cows Friday, October 5 1928, at 12:30 p. m. at my farm 4 miles west of Roachdale, 1 mile east of Raccoon, Ind : 42 HEAD DAIRY COWS 42 Consisting of 28 head of 2 year old Jersey Heifers; heavy springers and some with calves by side; 14 head of fresh or heavy springer cows. In this lot are some as good cows as can be had; and the heifers are an exceptionally fine lot and should make great milk •

cows.

FARM WORK HORSES One span of sorrel mares, well mated and a good farm team; about 7 or 8 years old. TERMS OF SALE:—A credit of 6 month on bankable note bearing 8 percent interest from date. John W. Shannon FORD & MILLER, Aucts. D. B. Hostetler, Clerk ..

am

::

In the training of the child; and to j develop community responsibility for its part in the education of its children. The Parent-Teachers Association movement is non-sectarian, non-,

political, non-commercial and purely j resumption of relations

democratic.

Prohibition-

Religious

liis a co-operative effort bring back the trade previously held j achieved by The President Eight in -o produce American citizens who 1 with Russia. : maintaining better than mile- a-min--hall lie - Hong in body, alert in mind. It is stated that the majority of ute speeds for 19 8Ucce8giv e days and tm! sound in character. the lost trade has gone to Germany ig successive nights. Ih- re are four Parent-Teachers and the United States, in spite of the i ———_

A iociations in Greencastle. There latters non-recognition of the Soviet er. According to Manager Bldwell, it i activities will be directed this year 1 regime.

is a roaring comedy with a dramatic by the following offlcci.-. First Ward: The Labor party,; who has long ! ' ,l D. II Brunei. pre-ident; Mi.-, hailed the rupture in relations as one Peaches Ted Kauble

V/"' 1 ' f the greatest blunders of the pre-; Peaches Melhcr Dr Ralph Overstreet

wallets Batten, how the blonde enter- ‘ " - . . , . .1 • r

Continuation C

the Exchange when fortunes and hopes hang in the balance. There is a fascinating love story, too, nh«-t a

boy who works in a broker’s office and j treasurer.

uuy; Mi . P. K. Duntan. cut government, has found great. A1 Smith Andrew Druham

out. Si • • ml Wind: Mrs. Iliad satisfaction in the publication of this- Harold Lloyd ... Glen Lyon

Mi -. Frank Wallnc. trade decrease. Clara Bow . . John Cartwright

viei pn ddent; Mr-. A. W. Broad- Already they arc taking advantag* General Persliing .... E. R. Bartley

1 of It itt declaring that the lall trade Army Russell Brown i lilt i Waid. Mi Ft ank i responsible for the steady growth And Lincoln Snider

tainers keep their cars in gas are some of the gay doings against a background of lively jazz. There is tense drama in the big trading rooms

ot stock brokers and on the flour of | treasurer:

piv-ideiit; Mi . Edgar Van in unemployment. Navy . Frank Bittles

' "*'*• i’ll mi m; .Ml . Carl They have also given notice that II Atmee McPherson.Stephen Washburn

.'Icyer -. secretary; Mr. Ina -Malone will be om- of their most formtdabh Cherry Sisters High School; Mrs. Louis 1 mean^ ot attacking the Incapabilities i Han-v Williams Orville Morris

• girl entertainer in a t ht • M . i, eth Peck, of the Baldwin Government ’ Harry Will,ams. Uiville Moms

because she

can’t dig gold crudely

has principles.

There are four principal members of the cast. Gertrude Astor, one of the best known comediennes on the screen, appears as a Kold-di^^ing' blonde of the night clubs. Jacqueline Logan, famous leading woman, is an entertainer, but is restrained from the crude systems of some of her associates by her love for a young man. Albert Conti and Richard “Skects” Gallagher, both of whom wye received with acclaim in “Alex, the Great,” have roles as a broker and a broker’s clerk, respectively. Much of the humor and the pathos of the production revolve around them.

Skinny Folks! Build Up

II you are discouraged because of | failure to put on weight and to build yourself up through Cod Liver Oil or | otherwise, you owe it to yourself to 1 try Burke's Cod Liver Oil and Iron In sugar coated tablets. Be sure to specify Burke's in order to secure a ! full 18 days treatment for $1.00. Guaranteed to benefit or money re-

funded.—Adv.

MULLIN S DRUG STOKE

vice president; Mrs. O. II. Smith, secretary; Mrs. George Garrett, treas

urer.

These organization hope to create in Griencastle a bond of friendship and leilonidiip between parents and teachers; dev elope parents * ho can bettci understand and train their' children act as a cleaning house for ! misunderstandings and complaints In j l he schools surround the children |"lth the best Influences and advanI iiu.i.- In the home, school and community protect, enrich and beautify : their lives discover school needs and i plan to meet them generiously elej'otc character education to the place that the need of the age inquiries and awaken intelligent community interest in public education. In doing this they will need the hearty cooperation of every parent and teacher

in Greencastle.

Detailed announcements of thei I plans for the various meetings to be [ held this w eek will be made later in

I the v\ eek.

during Smith Brothers

forthcoming General Elections, i .. Raymond N- Co*. C. C. Gautier Moon Mullins Orris Lush

Kayo Bobby Fenn Aunt Emmy Ernest Stoner Cal Coolidge Sam Hanna Herbert Hoover .... Frank Timmons Queen Mary Fred Snively Prince of Wales James Zeis | Jack Dempsey Wm. Peck

WISCONSIN DOCTOKS ( I \|{ \l-.\v Dl-I MM Sl’KKAD BY RABBITS

Bj International News Service MADISON, Wis., Oct. 2.—Tuler-

emia, a disease of rabbits which is,_ _ „ , t,

I _'Gene Tunney Coach Bailsman

frequently transmitted to human ings, is a new disease to be reckoned with in Wisconsin, with two cn.-,es recently reported from the northwestern part of the state. It is nearly always fatal in the rabbit, and it is known that more than 5 per cent of human patients afflicted with it die. The state hoard of health recently addressed a letter to Wisconsin physicians calling attention to its pres-

ence in this state.

The disease is transmitted from rabbit to rabbit through ticks, deertlies ami the rabbit louse, and to the

Graham McNamee Joe Crosby Gilda Grey Wilbur Donner Miss America C.C. Gillen Abie Goldberg Wm. Bishop Eva Beemer Havens I Topsy Banker White

ACT II

French Inspector ... Beemer Havens i Two Black Crows Kimber Gardner. Reese Matson i Circus Barker Frank Timmons j Dr. Bull E. E. Green Little Bullet Bobby Fenn Flora Dora Girl Frank Bittles

TLNklNS” (.0 L I’

SHELBYVILLE, Ind., Oct. 2.— ! (INS)—Eight dollars a ton is being ! offered Shelby farmers for their 1928 pumpkins by tanning companies. Last year the price was only $6. Two ; or three years ago the price was $2

I to a ton.

human b.dv by contact in <lrt* t ing j Nu™ Giri 0lmeS .'^El'mer Saile^ |

wild rabbits that have been killed L* u

while diseased or through the tick or^ ’ n , Kimber Gardner l deeruv A few eases have been known ' 3arney 0 ° 0gle Fl ' pd SnlVP,y tZtiXZZZ « %•* "f ft* <*■. , , . . . . ... ^ary Garden Russell Brown bit* harboring tuleremm which was . . .; _ , i : insufficiently cooked. Evidence of the™ *^ nch Glrl ” ’ ^ JHa.r dint use in dead rabbits is found in l T V r 7 , * small white spots m th. liver and OoMberg Twms John Cartwnght. (!)l spleen. i — Now that the characteristics of tu- USE BUCK SHOT leremirt hav« become known, It ia instead Of Bird Shot—Advertise In thought more utse £ will tome to light. | THE HERALD

Tammany Hall issues will be discussed by Mrs. Pearl Vernon an able lawyer of Martinsville, Wednesday, Oct. 3rd at 3:30 p. m., in the Court House Assembly Room GREENCASTLE, IND.

Under Auspices of Putnam County Democratic Club

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