The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 November 1928 — Page 4
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sm GRtENCASTCE DAIEY BANNER. THURSDAY NOVEMBER 1W.
CLASSIFIED ADS
—For Sale—
D<*!ta Thota Tau will hoki a market at Eitcl'- Saturday. Nov. 17th. l'»-2t
Mu Phi Epsilon will have charge of : the word books, “English Singers"
, . I Friday night. Prices 10c. 15-lt. FOR RENT—fi room modern house • o
well located. Reasonable rent Phone
f.iM-E.
15-tf.
RUMMAGE SALE at Eire Depart ment, Saturday, Nov. 17th. by Sec tion Three of Christian Church. 1
Section Ten of the Methodist church will have a food sale at Snider’s Wall Paper Store Saturday morning.
15-2t.
]HURSOAV> HVR BES i PAPIO KK \TI RES.
-2t
The Ladies of Somerset Church will .have market and lunch in lobby of
FOR SALE: -8 cylinder Olds Sport |( . )urt |louse Katur !ay Nov . , 7 th. Model touring, at a bargain. O. L.! j 4 _3 t Knight, at Heck Sales Co. lo-:ip :
N. G. C. WJZ network 8:30, Maxwell hour. N. B. C.- WJZ network, 8:30 Milady’s Musicians. WOR, WABC, Columbia network— 8:00 Sonora hour. WBAC, Columbia network 9:00— i Hank Simnu n’s boat. WEAK N. B. C. network 8:00— ! Seiberling Singers.
SUBSCRIBE FOR “THE BANNER"
AT THE VONCASTLE In “Exe s Baggage,” which will open at the Voncastle Theater, today for a two day’s run, Director James Cruze has turned out his finest ex- 1 ample of an intensely interesting motion picture since "The Covered Wagon.” With Willi n Haines, who also rises to new heights, t ruze has turned
FOR SALE: Old “Strad" good condition. John Tharp.
642-X.
violin FIGHTING THE CORN BORER
Phone 1 GKEE.N’SIIURG, Ind., Nov. 15 (UP) j 15-2t I be putting of corn into the silo i [
o the mo t effective method of fighting! FOR SALE: Grand piano, half-jthe corn borer, according to Janie.-1 price. Mike Wolfe. Cayy 795-1.. Tiii iilt\, of the Craig-Tumilty corn-)
15-lt ;paiT: who poke at the Washington
—o j town-hip Farm Bureau meeting here, i FOR SALE We t Virginia lump. ; l he coi i borer situation was the cell-; Ky. lump amj egg and Indiana lunipjtei of disci: ion by all of those who
coal. Quality and weights guaran- pol .
teed. Wright & Shoptaugh. Phone 345. “Putting corn in a silo is 100 per
14-2p. jcent cffcctivi* against the corn borer,”! FOR SALE:—78 acres with fairlTumilty -aid.
buildings. $2,000. Federal Mortgage Othei p: which range from 90j that must ell. K(|uity $500 or might to loo p. cent are the cleaning up of trade. If you want a cheap farm come ! stall., and burning them or deep in AT ONCE. Milton Brown Reality ph soiling. He said. Company. ll-3tj The speaker told of the different o Istaggrs of the borer, how it multipliCOAL FOR SALE: Rest grade of ■ 1 of the experimental stations Indiana Coal, clean big lumps, priced in the infected districts, reasonable, prompt delivery, Green- Deep ploughing, Tumilty said r an castle Canning Co. 805-Y. 10 lit. effective ten against the progress of o ; the borer because where there is no FOR SALE Electrict range. Fair trn-h oi rubbish on the giound, the rondition, $15. At 030 Is. S' minary. 'bird md fowl can ea ;ly find the
13-3t'iiorei ,i they come up through the ,K o——— -arth.
FOR SALE—A child’s crib bed
tores, Inc.
Copyrlflht,' 1928, wi^TUrjj.Bru*. Picti
HB,S1NGING FOOL,” itarrlng A! Jclson^la a W gner, Bros, plcturlza-
^5 tlon of.this novel.
fjiriup's and mattress, as good as new 009 Illinois St. Phone dild-K. 13-3t
FOR SALE: Barber Shop. r,01 Ohio St. See owner at Crawford Hole.I
—For Rent-
FOR RENT:—3 room furnished apartment, 12<i East Walnut St. Ph ne 590. 15-2t. j
o
FOR RENT: Two room furnished apartment. Phone 708-Y. 81!) South Indiana St. 15-311
I lU. in ENKI) BY (.( NS
GARY Nov. 15 (UP)— The youths of this city who insist on firing rifles at dangerous angles and throwing
II , , tones are being apprehended and re-
] rimam ed by juvenile authorities.! Si vi ral pi tsons were reported to have !> en frightened by the guns and a few re-hl.-nts reported windows Lrok-
n by tones.
BANNER U (NT \BS." P\^
FOR RENT: Modem house. Phone 7P..-L.
room ; 15-lt.;
FOR RENT: 6 room house semimodern. Phone 407-Y. 15-lp () FOR RENT Modern sleeping room, large closet, for one or two gentlemen, 111 En. t Uu-li. St. Phone 1 ! 632-1.. 15-lip. o FOR RENT Two unfurnished room and kitchenett, 310 We I Liberty St. 1 l-3p.
FOR RENT room 409 E.
Modern sleeping i minary. Phone 712-1.. 12-tf
— o-
FOR RENT water and light
l furnished rooms - I Phone 5C0-K. 13-3p!
FOR RKNT:Three , r four unfurnished rooms. Phone 5II5-Y. 13-tf, o Ff)lt RENT: Two or four room.:, kitchenette, and hath, mnilcrn, furn-| .-lied or unfurnished. Call at 8n8 South Indiana Street. 12-5p — —o — —Wanted— . WANTED: General hou e work h> , experienceil girl. Phone Rural I I. 15-2p | ® WANTED: A good reliable man to sell monument in this vicinity. Brock Monument MIV. Co. Vinci mi - Indiana. I5*3t — o WANTED General house work by experieneeil girl. I'anciii Lloyd, lOP East Berry St. ID-Op. o WANTED’ Room and Boarder-. 402 So. J nek -on treet. Special rat. for College Students. 1 !-2p AGENTS WANTED Men and women to sell hardy guaranteed nui ■ ry lock. Enliiely new proposition anil a money maki r. The Hawk Nui i ry Co., Wauwato-a, Wis. 12-0p.
wp
Cold Weather IJrinjcs lots of added expenses. Let us help you pay your bills. LOANS On fcrniliirr, pianos, radios, automobiles, live stock, etc. Pay te. back in small weekly or monthly payments. INDIANA LOAN CO. 21 1 j E. WASHINGTON ST. Phone 15.
Italy’s New King rr v
WANTFD: Odd jobs by th<‘ bout for Saturda; ’ or aft< moon . K. Wonn 12H S. Jackson. 14-2p — o —Lost— LOST:—Combination brown h thei , billfold and pur e in Greenca-tle in I vicinity. Liberal Reward. I.eave at | Banner Office. 15-lp. j • o —Misoenaneoun- - Indianapolis Doubles to trade fur property here or a farm. Milton Blown Reality Co. 1-1-31 LADIES SILK Bloomer , Me. The Duality Shop. J. H. Pitchford. 1 l-tf • o- ■ ■ If you have anything to haul, call Hutch Darnall, Bainbridge. Two truck* at your disposal. Give me a trial. Leave onli !■ at Gray’s Service Station, Bainbridge. 9-01.
E
Persistent rumors in. Italy say that King, Victor Emmanuel will soon step from the throne, that his son, Prince Humbert, will renounce his right to succession, and that Duke Puglie, above, eldest son of Duke D’Aosta, will wear the royal crown. Carefully guarded stories say that the change will fiot affect the sway of Mussolini.
briefly, settliuz down comfortably
in Al’s protecting arms.
"All right, ' agreed the father. “Now listen closely. Once there ( was a fat old I'i'oggie who lived In ( a hole in the ground under a great i big tree. He had a big deep voice > and—” I Al glanced down—Junior’s eyes ’ had closed. He tried desperately j to hold them open, hut again they j went shut as the story continued. * . . . When th< tale was ended he I was sleeping quietly. Then Al, J singing to him softly, put him back ^ into ins bed anil tucked him in. His j toy was placed beside his open . hand where he would see it first thing in the morning, and then—, one last adeiing look, a quick kiss,’ and Al tip toed from the room. 1 Molly had disrobed the moment , she reached her room and slipped into a negligee. But her door was j open and. a she went about the | business of cold-creaming her face ^ she could not help but hear tho ■ sounds of joy and perfect comrade- . ship that came from the nursery. J Somehow, they cut into her con- j sciousness like acid on a raw ; wound, so that sho quite forgot j what she was doing. The anger she , had felt and stilled when she entered the apartment now returned in greater force than ever. It seem- i ed to her that everything that Al j
Again he made a move as had done tonight irritated her. ’ jif to touch the child, hut Molly Kvcu his prcsi ntation of the brooch j
SYyONTS
MI Stnnt, a singinq waiter at litarkie Joe * Neic York night chib, ] wins fame as a e-omposcr of popu5 lar songs, (trace, the cigarette girl at Blackie's, who loves Al without i his knowing it, is left behind., lie i marries Molly Winton, a ballad ; singer, and makes her famous, too. \She does not love him. Molly has ■ a baby. Junior, whom Al adores. ! Al becomes part aimer of the fashf ionablc Club Ifombo and on the } night of the third anniversary of LhD marriage presents Ms beloved i Molly with a diamond brooch, lie {does not know that Molly, while 1 approaching the club in her limovj sine, was ardently kissed by his ’ friend, John Perry, who begged her [ to leave Al. On the way home with - Al she is moody. V'hen she sees I Al later in the nursery bending dr{votcdly over sleeping Jun ior, h is , baby son, her conscience bothers her. This, in turn, makes her ) angry at her husband.
CHAPTER XIV
' Al heard Molly’s step and turned to embrace her. She deftly avoidi ed his grasp, stifling the look of j aversion in her eyes as she did so. ’ Al thought nothing of it; he bellieved sho was merely anxious to : avoid any noise that might wake
j Jhnin
Icanght his hand.
; "Sh!” she murmured in an Irriftated voice. “Don't wake him. I’m >tired. He might cry.” ( Al pretended in earnest pantn‘mime that he had no intention of ' waking Junior, but. unseen by Moljly, his other hand crept toward the protruding toe of his boy. The .truth was Al couldn't bear the.
“Tf/J me a story, daddy!" thought of going to bed without a word or two with little Junior. So as Molly turned away to go to her own room Al nudged the baby's foot and smiled to himself. Junior’s eyes opened sleepily and, as he recognized his father, ho murmured, “Hello, daddy.” At the gentle words MoJly turned, a smile stealing over her face in spite of herself. There stood Al. pretending surprise that Junior had awakened, hut obviously delighted that it hud happened. He quickly leaned over, gathered the tmby in his arms and straightened up with the child held close to him. One chubby, soft arm went round his
neck.
"Good boy, daddy," whispered Junior, snuggling closer. “Came
home."
Swiftly Al carried his precious bundle toward Molly, who waited, n look of undecislon upon her face. She wanted to see Junior and cuddle him, too, yet tin* sight of his innocent baby face at this moment sharpened her guilty thoughts and aggravated her irritation toward Al. But Al was holding Junior toward her, so there was nothing to ‘do hut take the child in her arms. “Be more careful,” she whispered petulantly. “You’re spoiling my
orchids.”
Al noticed her tone and quickly took Junior from her. But as soon as she had left the nursery and Junior sat down on his father's lap, the baby began to chat volubly. He was thoroughly wide awake and Al forgot his chagrin over Molly's Irritability in his delight over Junior. Was any sound as sweet as that high childish treble? “How big are you, Junior?" he
asked.
The baby's tiny arms were spread wide as he gave the required an-
swer:
“So-o-o big!”
ATs head went back, as he laughed delightedly, just us if they hud not gone through that nursery ritual a thousand times. Then Junior turned and demanded, “Now, daddy, tell me story.” “Story?” repeated Al. “What kind? Animal story, giant story?” „ “Frog story,” answered Junior
had a bad conclusion, for it had made John Berry discreetly with- i draw from the party. And Al's pride in her and love for her, in- ( stead of soothing her vanity, work- (
ed just the other way.
At this moment site glanced in the mirror t see Al approaching from behind, his face aglow with that same expression of joy and devotion. A he came closer and slipped his arms around her she jumped up ml stepped out of the , embrace, making no attempt to hide her displeasure. Before Al could say anything in protest she ’ had crossed the room. |i lie shook his head in astonish- * ment. Oh, well, lie thought philosophically. it was just another of Molly’s moods. He made a move i to cross over to her, but suddenly Molly’s white arms went above her , head In protest. Sho stood glaring at him, like an animal at bay. "What 1 the matter witli you, Molly?” he asked sharply, in amazement. 'What have i done? For weeks you haven’t seemed like
yourself!”
There was challenge in Al's voice, but there was pleading, too. The expression of aversion left Molly's face; desperately she struggled to think of an explanation that would smooth things over. Hut it was no use—she had gone too far; there was no turning back. “What is it, darling?” Al pleaded. “t’an’t you tell me? Haven't you everything to make you happy —a beautiful home—a baby—me?” But Molly seemed to grow harder with every word he uttered. Her icy Rih nee, as site confronted him with gh uniing eyes, sent a dreadful current of tear through him. Was there nothing he could say to arouse her—to drive out this evil spirit and bring Imek the Molly ho loved. Ho said with a controlled quietm that gave no hint of his
madly throbbing heart:
“You art us thougli you didn’t love me—any more. Don't you?” At that Molly’s head came up. It was as if she had been waiting, trying to force him to a show-down. Now sho was ready to speak. "I don’t love you any more.” The dreadful words were spoken slowly ami soberly, but the mtnuUi they were out a look of disdain furled iter lips and her eyes flashed defiance. Now—at last—she had come clean. Now, her attitude said, what was he going to do about it? Al recoiled as if she had struck him tu rnss tho face with a whip. The words seem to travel swiftly down interminable corridors in hie brain, and come echoiug back. But finally Molly could stand the
silence no longer.
“You heard me!” she exclaimed harshly. “I meant it. 1 don't love you! Do you understand? I don't love you! Now let me alone!" The last remark was shot at him with Uealdy aim and purpose, as she might have thrown a burning, blinding faggot. It was all over now, she thought; there would bo no more pretending on her part. Tills was the climax of the storm that had been gathering force within her for more than a year. She didn't love him; In fact, she hated him now with a terrible intensity because lie made her feel unworthy by loving her too much. She wanted to hurt him with all the cruelty In her power, driving forever that adoring look from his eyes. Al did not cringe as he listened to her, yet he knew at last that their life and comradeship together were utterly smashed. His face was pale as death. But as they faced each other, eyes agleam. hands clinched, they heard another sound like the faint sweet tinkle of a bell. It was Junior’s voice, call-
ing gently:
^“Mumma. Please come to me.” (To bo continued)
111 Mild: enough for anybody and yet they Satisfy* j
*lVr iLDNESS ,S n0t thC Wh ° ,e St ° ry ° f a of hi S h quality tobaccos; because th 1V1 fine cigarette. blended and cross-blended in a ™2\ Chesterfields are genuinely mild but they can’t be copied—and that blendmewicM I are something more. They stand out as the a satisfying taste and fragrance ^ cigarettes that satisfy because they arc made They are ’’the w/'/</cigarettes
out a picture that has the audience alternately laughing and crying with an occasional moment in between when they feel like cheering. It is not too far fetched to say that “Excess Baggage” is to human emotions what “The Covered Wagon” was to natural drama. The plot which deals with the romantic adventures of a small-time vaudeville juggler and his motion picture star wife is a continual series of revelations which keep the audience keyed to the highest pitch.
es Gretel Woltz, James Bradbury, Sd. Tod Sloan, and Lloyd Whitlock. William Craft directed. Louize Fazenda in "Pay As You Enter,” will be the attraction tonight
Veidt, the John Bwrymort of| M:u'y I’hilliin, Baclanova, ( m i : , Braminn, Nick rJ | Ion, J -i iihine Crowell, Cm
only which is hailed as the fasti si telle, auil Charles Puffy : .. -:.i-. .*• stars irf the picture.
joy ride of the season.
AT THE GRANADA Glenn Tryon, star of Universal’s sensational comedy, “Hot Heels,” which will open at the Granada Theater on Friday has been gaining histuric experience since the age of six, when he first played a role in his father’s stock company in Spokane. Patsy Ruth Miller appears opposite him, while the supporting cast indud-
I ’aul f.'-ni, iii,' o/UmpeJ THE CIKI LK | tab ri.d itii'i's '•The Man (('•■. Laugh*,’ mi,’ of the I ■ <i ■. >• aj.1 mu i pertnciilni' pii-tiite in the hi "1: ■ '■ ATioUufl ter; "' ie rii en, ha n .I 1" '> ».V: lBl| Py the Ciivle then’ie, and will hi ■' ' iinth life I G.v.n in 1 iiilianapol,< the \\. ■ I . ■ nt. I 1 iak*«1 | November 17th. it is tho version of the eye»«f uu|4 th* most cherished of all Victoi Hugi ii a. *!>:•« novels, and is presented at the Circle him. A beautiful love ho^ witli a maggnificent sound accomptr.-! h' Dvi > n thi m. iment. | A cruel pleasure in i Hailed a. greater than “The Hunch- lion attracts a heartlesn i 'i.'o Not r< D.i and the “p' an- ' 1' 'i'’ 1 1 ■ th* Dpi i.i,'' 11'.,> former pic t e lost child of 4 tun ba ed on Victor Hugo tori kiingt th*esap ‘ I he Man Who Laughs,” introdun a I "ry fraught with cliw^ to American screen audiencces Conrad lu ual -dilations.
AFE BONDS FOR NOVEMBER INVESTMENT Indiana tax-exempt Road, School and Municipal bonds yielding 41-8% to 4 1-4% Tax-exempt Real Estate Preferred Stocks and First Mortgage Real Estate Bonds yielding from 51-2% to 6% Genera! Market securities yielding from 41-2% to 7% fpnlral National Bank LIdl Trust Company Southwest Corner Court House Square
