The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 11 August 1928 — Page 4

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Page Four

ME GREENCASTEE DAILY BANNER, SATURDAY, AUGUST 11, 1928.

HALF-PRICE SALE ENDS TONITE

305

AUGUST SPECIAL AT CAMMACK’S

:

:

T

Three—Five Is More Than Just A Telephone Number

H RE E—0—FIVE is more than just an ordinary telephone number. When central rings 305 for you she gets for you one of the oldest and best established institutions in Putnam (’ounty. A concern with a re-

markable record.

j Yoiicastle

Monday- Tuesday

HALF

PRICE

SALE

Your final liortiifiily To

Save!

O,,

I’rcvo.-' Groenea.-tie’s Economy Center.— Thrifty v. imen style wise women prefer Prefor . - members of the Nation-wiile Conjiirativt Huyers’ t -ociation PKFA'OS’ ol>tain the stvie news first and gain price con-O'.-sion.s which are pa--ed on to you.

s. c. PREVO CO.

This Ad is good for $1.00. Just clip and bring it «ith you and we will allow you $1.00 on a dozen .SIO.OJ pictures. Good 'till \ug. 31.

!

Cammack’s Studio

'YOU! HO.Mi; INSTITL'TIO.N FOJt 2h YKAKS”

It \Dlos — C'a])ito|

DIVOItt I! TO ST It K Df.S MOINES, la., Aug. 11. (IP) — When and if K. I.. Smith comes home again he will find hi wife Atina C Smith in posse Uon of a hi and new divorce from him. Mi reover, ho will find the decree hacked up by tourt order prohibiting him from entering hie home. Tin divorce obtained by Mrs. Smith wa> really the second sin- had gotten from Smith, li.uk in IlMfi he got i derree, and when Smith came home

St NDAY’S MV I IJESI WEAK, Network, 5:.'}0

Theater program.

rr- :-=rrrr WEAK, N tw rk, 7:15- Atwatci-

siie told him to get out. He laughed j * oncert '

at her, declared he didn't believe it' WJZ * Network, 8:15 — National

and steadfastly refused to leave. j Symphony orchestra.

But this time, Mrs. Smith says, it will be different. She plans to make

the divorce stick.

CHICHESTER S PILLS

TIIK IIRANII. / v V.ndt. ot A«k jour Vruggtmi f t /j\

WO li, Network, N:00—“Come

the Fair.”

WPG, Atlantic City, (273)

Operatic Concert.

7:15 —

'. B A N « K £,V u H T A T AfLVa‘KI

\ thriliy, chill) fun-fest. It’s all in tun—but baffling, mysterious. If it'-, a laugh you’re after, coupled »illi spine tingling hair-raising thrills then see Esther Ralston in her melodramatic my lory farce.

Today Only

( OMIM <)1 > 2 MEL II P. M.

•AOL LAiMMlt

UGgL vnuti’iuiW'ELhmXSlt UT** wlU» _fllu« Kitdiua. 1

in YS GROt Kin

year, knot'll «f Lrst.:Sfest Alwtn H

f .m d r.v owiriiiLiTS wpvM/m pr

WHITE LILY FLOUR

Thomas Flint win sold his north Jackson street grocery to W. I). Witty several yeai.- ago, has repurchased the store and will take charge next week. Mr. Witty will go to Colorado Springs for a visit with his brother.

with BARBARA KENT an \NDRI BERANGEK.

(ontiiins those hidden qualities that make your bakings full of pleasant surprises. Why not order a sack today?—Your grocer has it.

HARRIS MILLING CO. I’HONK 77.

PAID WHIM IN JAIL I-ANSI\G, Aug. 11'. (UP)—Harry Alexander, the man who got paid fi r going to the state penitentiary in Jackson, will obtain hU freedom on kept. 2n, after ervirtg the maximum of one year for running liquor between Ecorse and Houghton lake. Kvei inre entering the penitentiary Alexander has received bi-weekiy, "pay checks” from partners in the turn running busines,-, he testified at a parole hearing before Arthur I). Wood, commissioner of pardons and paroles. These checks amounted to a considerable sum of money during the yea r.

(HAPTER 3 YKLl.OW CAMEO OFE BA) \N( K (OMEDY OUDIIY NOVELTY

ADMISSION NIGHT MkM A TINE! Ilk

-25c 20c

Grassada Monday—Tuesday

Another

Record

Month

July Sales Greatest of Any Month In 18 Years

Again in July—when motor car sales generally slacken Graham-Paige broke all sales records for any month m eighteen years; the last week in July being the greatest week in the company’s history. And—for five consecutive months, Graham-Paige has established new all-time sales records. r , . x S* n a h A^fTrYctir^

LOUISE FAZENDA and ( LYDE COOK

“DOMESTIC TROUBLES”

( omedy That Teems Screams.

With

Today, Last Times

CONTIM Ol S 2 TO 11

THE

fill Ni)ER, M V | {VKL doc; in “WOLF FANGS”

i HAPT ER 7 i RAIL OF TIGER l VIMOON NOVELTY

Special Added Attraction

The TUNNEY HEENEY FIGHT PICTURES

Forty minutes of the loughest battle ever ioHffhtin a square ring.

C. W. TRIBBY GARAGE

HUSH ATHLETES GATHER

£AAMAM-PAI££

(MOW)

DUBLIN, Aug. 11. (UP)— More ‘lum 7,00<) of Ireland’s athletic and 1 riiug ch dren, many <>f whom ha*i 1 PV| ‘ I kefon the green land of ‘■cir extration, gathcre here today lrom “U Part* of the world for the “ ginning „f t he Tailteann Game Ireland’s Olympics. I be opening ceremony at the fam- ! ( toke Park brought thousai.de ut ''Iimsfy and sightseers t© the cllv.

Today Admission .. 10c—35c

HOMES

AT THE YONCASTLE

Someone once said that “the bigger they are the harder they fall.’’

, The hero—if we should call him 'that—in the Universal-Jewel farce I comedy “The Small Bachelor’’ which is at the Voncastle this afternoon and evening only, is just what the title implies—a .-mall bachelor, but he

brUhers impersonate each other, am the laugh-provoking complicationthat arise from their deception, U , L . the ingredients that make “Domestic Troubles” an excellent vehicle for Clyde Cook and Louise Fazenda I Louise Fazenda as a fii r ta t io U ijoimg lady, and Clyde Cook, in the | dual portrayal of James and Hor.au- Bullard, twin brothers, prove j themselves laugh producers of the

, first magnitude.

I Supporting Miss Fazenda and Cook is an exce’lent cast, including Betty

. ... an( Arthur

couldn’t have fallen any harder if he J 1 -' 1 ' 10 ’ Jt ‘ an Lavel ^

had been a Samson. , n

Graham Baker wrote

Tht 'Msdt.n——

-iNiktuAl

S8ur e n inin. fli

All of which is preamble to the ' ^ ,arial '' wr °W “Domestic fact that “The Small Bachelor” is the ' 1 r,,ub ' ,fi which was directed by Ray

most rollicking, hilarious farce com-j 1lt-

edy to be shown here in many a day, bunc.- ic tou . cs, u Warner

Bros, production, comes to the Gian-

imptJ

man YXI

r WiUi ^ to, n fo;m lu theoJB

'the kind of a picture that makes one | want to forgive his worst enemy. Barbara Kent and Andre Beranger I are featured in the opus which was directed by William A. Seiter. Miss 'Kent, in case you have forgotten, is of the crop of 1927 Wampas Baby stars and the other twelve members of this select gathering must look to j their laurels if Barbara is given a few more pictures like this one. Ber-

a ia theater next

of two days.

Monday for

a run

ai«

anger should he has been

FIGHT FUTURES

Three reels of motion pictures of the heavyweight championship fight between Gene Tunney, the champ, and T om Heeney, the challenger, are being shown at the Granada Theater today. The complete scrap with slow

need no introduction; ’motion pictures of the eleventh rounf in several of the best in which Tunney stopped the Austral-

pictures of the past year.

Esther Ralston has been given a distinctive type of picture in her latest Paramount starring vehicle, “Something Always Happens,” due to be shown at the Voncastle theater, Monday and Tuesday. It is the story of hilarious happenings in a haunted hou-e, and shows he star as a girl seeking adventure, and getting it but not as she anticipated. Siie meets up with screaming hoot |owls, ghostly figures, and mysterious j hands that grip her by the throat and i or om es embroiled in a series of spectacular adventures which are hailed as “thrilling, chilling, baffling and amusing.” “Something Always Happens,” is a typo of picture that has never before i.een made on the Paramount lot in tne words of studio executives. Mysterious melodramatic action i combined with fun in huge quantities. The production was based on an original story written especially for Miss Ralston by Frank Tuttle, who directed her in “Love and Learn” an.I “The Spotlight.” Tuttle former Yale dramatic writer and author of a number of one act successes, conceived more than one hundred adventurous situations, which give the star a great opportunity for satirical light comedy portrayal, for which she has become popular.

AT THE GRANADA rapid-fire comedy in which twin

icn and views of the Yankee stadium and the crowd are all included.

MILWai ia l

• L 'Pi-Mis, v'H year-old Chew A1 te '-«l a Mil, % V ■■'nice bir;h, «t with her noii, « vi

Six delicate, un

essary to re ndi< blocked the ith eyes. Now it li which ha, ti tep*

touches objec

Friends, a , iadc simple obj.c: hen recognizable l ,ref touch them,(,,‘ n * Perfectly ,he G*'

OLD WARNING REPEATED This season of heavy traffic on ural highways brings with it the need for repeating a warning again-t a practice that causes man> avoidable accidents, in the opinion of M. E. Noblet, Secretary- Manager of the Hoo-ier State Automobile Associa-

tion. The condition to which Mr. Nob- images wh onlet refers is that created by the mo- retina until' ,nfit torists failure to pull entirely off the to her. n n the road when changing a tire or One »f j,.. ’O'' making -mail adjustment or repair with color, to the car. I when blind sbjB “Many states have specific regu- of what red, terr iation requiring that the car he driv- rest uf their on at least half (and it should be reality left p, ’ icn

such circumstances,” says Mr. Noblet. filled wi h ...

“Of course, it is impressible to sta- “One of th.

tion motorcycle policemen in positions “is the Ino!,,

to enforce this on every mile of the ver> -tronir extensiv highway system. It i a regu A . 1H Iation, however, that should need no time 1 find fe - police enforcement. Based upon u jud "IV".-!' , e sound principle of .-afety, the indi- 'bd I mah> n j { viiiual car owner should lie willing to think • ^ jgnt abide by it under every condition. v, h..i. ■ . (1 “With States lifting their speed the fee! * ,, , | limits, it becomes more and more im- Marc-iu •,: perative that the car owner who ’ 1 ' v " ■ l ' needs to make a roadside repair take 1 :i ' tuw].,, a i>| the precaution to (move his car from t-' 1 1 ' | the path of the fast moving traffic, t"'’ "‘xiuainted i The motorist ha-- been deman. in? mr ^ "'hich

hiuhrr speed limit- because he kiniws (he y./my j they are safe, but he defeats their un- ' * TA?

omen.

Hie New M0N0PH0NE Is In Town

IT'S THE LAST WORD

in a telephone for the up-to-date business man ai ^ particular housewife.

The Monophone is handier for the office desk ■ ^ far more convenient and better looking- in the ■ than the ordinary wall or table phone. k.

It’s just what you’ve been waiting- for! This mistake—we’re confident of this statement.

Monophones are being: installed in all the cities. Greencastle is a progressive city and tlienothing: too good for its citizens. The Mono))! 0

perfection plus.

Come in and see us. We’ll be glad to give you jjjj formation you desire regarding the new Mono!

You’ll never be disappointed

1

Get yours now!

•k~*3**

Greencastle Telephone Compel 1 '