The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 December 1928 — Page 3
MKMOKI\M
In loving remembrance of our dear cl the citvV m e-" 131 '' v ' ot ' husband, father and brother, Charles 1 officer will' retire tra,rit ' Buis, who passed away three years 1 \ P w Year’ .i-,,, . e, ' h ' forc, ‘ on ago today, December 2«.th. ty Y ,^„' “V- «•«;•<- spending thirIt is sad that one we cherish should D a | so t | u , i . t " t ‘ 1 '! I ' :,ltnu ‘ n t- 11 ( ' hl . taken, from our home, but the joys is police d^;/ ,M ' that do not perish, live in memory „ ’
alone. All the years we’ve spent to-
gether, all the happy, golden hours, shall be cherished in reinembrance, fragrant sweets from memory’s flow-
ALL OVER INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS — Charles
T.
GARY — Convicted on two of three liquor charges, Orin Brown, was Riven fines totaling: $2fl(i and a thirtyday suspended sentence when he appeared in city court here. He was found not truilty of maintaining a nuisance, the only one of three charg-
c that he escaped.
FANNIE ~ BRICE \JYMAN Arline dc Haas Copyright 1928 Warner Tfroa Pictures Inc. “MY MAN,” starring Fannie Brice, Is a Warner Bros, plcturlzation of this novel.
J SYNOPSIS
In an apartment in the Pronr Fanny Grice is bringing up her orphaned brother, Phil, and her attractive sister, Audrey. Fanny, older than Audrey, makes every sacrifice that her selfish sister, now a stenographer, may be saved from the humdrum life she. herself, lives.
She stopped, her eyes wide with fright. The girls scattered like frightened rabbits to their places "Vat is ills! Vatisdis!" Thorne'S thick voice resounded, lapsing into a heavily accented English, as it always did when he became excited or angry, and this time he was both. It was bad enough to have such
On her way to work Fannu watches foolishness going on in his estaba handsome young man demons!rat- \ li hineiit, but for one of the girls to ing o muscle builder. She hurrits make fun of him was a little too on to Thorne's, the theatrical < ■ v- much. "For vhy do you nick such turner, where she sens. At noon, foolishness!" He glared at the Fanny dresses in a ballet costume girl, his little eyes flushing arnl entertains the girts. I.o'aru Fanny gasped. Her heart was ort direct--r for Wa Herm producer, hears l-anny singing. as (iiough to speak, but no words
came. She'd done it this time, she thought, her cheeks burning with chagrin and fright. Now Thorne'd lire her sure. She swallowed bard. “It was lunch hour, Mr. Thorne," Mrs. Paul, the forelady, spoke up timiiHy. "She wasn't taking any
CHAPTER II—Continued
In the center of the room wag Fanny—but another Fanny entirely from the serious head-of the-family of the morning. Tills was a clown,
a comedienne, who had forgotten work - We a " ask, ' d her real self and had become a cen- _ , "She vasn t takin no time from ter of amusement. A pair of ballet ] 1(ir vojk! For vy should 1 pay good slippers, entirely too large for her, money she should nj.ek out off me were tied about her feet. She had a fool;” Thorne was'growing more slipped off her dress, and now. in "lore excited. “Ol gevalt! Iss its place, was the ballet cos,,,me !t 1 sh,, " 1<1 be in,i,ll, ‘‘ d ,n ra,n, ‘ own
from which she had been copying the new model that morning The pink tulle hung in a bedraggled parody of the real skirt. The bod ice, supposed to be a tight lilting,
shop! 1 ask you! Iss it she should mek from me foollshment, the lowlifer' She's Trough. I don't vant
I should see—’’
"Just a minute, Abe " Lazarus
svelte sort of thing, was unevenly laid a restraining hand on the cos-
hooked together, and on Fanny it turner’s arm.
bulged and wrinkled. The tinsel Thorne looked up quickly. He was faded, the sparkling decoratiou had forgotten the other man in his
—— tirade against Fanny. His face
turned a dullish purple. "I'm sorry, Mr. Lazarus,” he apologized- "But i you see how it is! Them girls, they're so lazy, good-for-nothing—’’ I "AH right. Abe, all right," LazaI rus interrupted. ‘.‘Who is that
girl?"
"How should I know?” Thorne waved his hands and shrugged his shoulders. "Well, she’s not half bad." 1mi&rus commented. “Not half bad—no, I’ll say she ain't " Thorne, noting the art director’s interest, calmed himself and began to smile at Fanny. Fanny stared in bewilderment at the change that had come over her employer. She didn't know what Joe Lazarus was saying to him, but she knew Lazarus—rather, knew who he was, and his presence awed her. But now he was coming towards her, still smiling. Her knees shook, her ankles wobbled. She smiled a sickly smile and swallowed hard again. “So you’re a comedienne, eh?*’ Lazarus looked the girl up and down, inspecting her style, her cos-
"I'm Perky. Quern of the Pallet "
soiled and worn. On her head she had stuck a wreath of flowers, and
now they hung side wi . drooping Dime, her altitude w ludicrously over ■ D< "Oh, no. Mr. Lazarus,
Humming a song, now and again breaking out Into the word , F inny
Fanny
gulped and managed a kind of a grin. "I I was just having a little
was doing a burlesque of a wi>"d-|fuu—you know—1 kind of like to land dance. Her pipes of Pan was do this stuff—you see, 1 always a banana and she raised and low- 1 wanted to go on the stage hut— ered it. bending forward and bark hut—” Fanny stopped, afraid to
wards In imitation of a ballei ay any more,
dancer, swaying and writhing until “So you want to go on the stage i her audience shrieked. Her f<. : —as a comedienne, I suppose ’"
never seemed quite steady, and her i
ankles would suddenly give way. taming sidewise. With assumed concern, as though her pedal extremities had strangely surprised her, she would look down at them In mock reproach. Then painfully she would rise on her toes and mince about, fluttering her hands as she hud seen dam rs do. Lazarus, watching over Thorne's
1 can sing
Well, not just that, different things.”
"All right, let's hear somethingsomething funny. What was that
you started to sing?”
"Oh. Mr. Lazarus, I don’t know anything—I—that is—I wouldn't know anything you'd like—I mean —” Fanny was swaying back and forth, twisting her lingers nervously, frightened, now that she had
shoulder, was smilin' Tin girl really found a chance to display
seemed to have a ua’uril ability her talents,
for clowning. She >: funny!
enough in the costume, ai d her actions were even funnier. But Thorne didn’t seem to b taking the matter in the light of 1 He was scowling, hie heavy brows drawn together. He started into
the room.
Most of the girls were too occu-
Sing that ’Becky of the Ballet,* Fanny,” one*of the girls whispered. "Go ahead, sing anything you know,” Lazarus insisted kindly. He wanted to see what the girl could do. And great actors have been found in many more strange places than a theatrical costumers. “I’ll try, Mr. Lazarus.” Fanny
avairni. wi 1.11X7 p^iiin v» ' ‘ ' iisi# s’iu — » »
pied with watching Fanny to notice fluffed out her ballet skirts and asthe entrance of their manager, hut umed a pose usually adopted oy one. nearest the door, caught sigh’ h.illet dancers. Site crossed her of him. With a little gasp sin feet pointing her toes, clasped her nudged the girl next to her. h. nds in front of her, and took up
"Funny!” she called out, trvlnr Me tune.
to attract the performer’s attention.
Hut Fanny was too preoccupied to pay any attention to her. One of the other girls took up Fie
call, trying to signal Punj But
Fanny only waved an airy hand. “Oi, gevalt! You should be to
voik!” She Imitated Thorne, twisting her head to one side and looking out of the corners of her eyes.
One day I met Davis Belasco Said he: What a iigger! Superb! I ll educate you for the Ballet . .” She swung into the chorus, making silly, amusing gestures that set the girls to giggling and Lazarua to smiling. She was really quite funny, the art director kept thinking. It wouldn’t do auy harm, anyhow, to give her a try-out.
The girls shrieked with laughter leaned thoughtfully against a table. But several more had noticed “And now I'm Becky ... of the
Thorne, and were making quieting Ballet,
gestures and. winking, nodding over their shoulders to where Thorne
stood.
"Don’t shush me." Fanny giggled. And immediately she broke into »ong, rolling out the words with a mock seriousness. “Im Becky, the Queen of the Ballet, I usedta live up In the Bronx; But I wandered from there and got lost in Times Square W'th some Broadway HonkyTonks . . . One day i met David Belasco . ,
With a flower in my hair.
I give all the Johns the air . . .
ka kibble. . . .
With a flourish Fanny executed a few pseudo ballet steps and
finished.
Vigorously the girls applauded,
hut they watched Thorne and
Lazarus covertly. III at ease “What's your name?” Lazarua
began.
"Funny—Fanny Grice,” the girl
(‘•Jimmie")
viNt i:nm:s ;tH; (IRKEM \SI I K Id.
| THAT SCORE IS NO DISGRACE. WERE I’ROl D OI OUR CUBS!
Vincennes is expecting a hard bat- ! tie from the Greencastle outtii t< - night and Coach Adams is counseling ' his men against overconfidence in orider to avert a repetition of what happened last year when the Tiger Cubs I handed a cocky Alice team a stingi ing defeat. And after Vincennes disposes of Greencastle they face the down-trod-den Marion outfit on the home Hour of the “Giants” tomorrow night before they start pointing for the game with our Stonecutters on the local llnor next Friday night. "In the Wake of the Game." Bedford Dail\
Mail.
dill VG() TONK.HT!
THE GREENCASTLE DAILY BANNER, SATURDAY. DECEMBER 29, lit-.
Net
L®
Louie Huft also commented on me Greencastle-Yincennes tilt, Friday a
follows:
team face the l niversity of Chicago quintet. This will Ire the fir-d appearance of the Maroons at Greencastle. DePnuw has an excellent chance to win, and it would be quite a feather in the former Brazil coach - cap.—“B. B. Shots," Brazil Tinn
W est. I the Putnam Circuit Court, of Putnam
‘feSffS’fiBR.tt an of h >v;
purchase price cash in hand and one Dreimeastb;. Duhanu. at the hour of
half in one year secure by
NOTH I. OF ( (IV dlSSIONER'S SMI. OF REAL ESTATE Notice is hereby given that the un-
dersigned commissioner appointed in an action for partition in the Putnam Circuit Court wherein John A. Hank i- plaintiff and Zadia Crosby, guardian of Cora Hanks, and Laura Gough, Zadia Croshy, Ira Hanks, |{o-. I Hanks and Merrill Eerrand and t'oia Hanks, are defendants for the par tition of certain real estate therein descrihed, to sell the real estate therein described, to sell the real i - tat> described in the complaint in said cause, I will as such commissioner, on the 1 Ith day of January, 1H2K, o! for for sale to the highest and In I j bidder at private sale, the following
.. .. mort-
gage on the leal estate sold, and said deferred payment to hear six per cent, interest per annum from date. Slid real estate to be sold in parcels and subject to the approval of
J o clock P. M. of said day. JGIIN \. HANKS, Commissioner. >\ M. Sutherlin, Attorney. Kidit
Sii.OOO Is For Nil III KIKD I NDEK “PA I PE ICS" HUM I
“lubby” Moffett's DePauw net tos \ 'Inscribed real e-tatc, m Putnam : sers meet a real tot in the Big Ten I ( " unt - v ’ Duiiana, to wit:
' i ,.r ... ... '
told him
(Tu i>« eoutluued j
Jimmio Tobin, stellar floor guard for the locals, was the outstanding player of the game, according to ri poit from Alicetown tin morning. Vincennes fans were t-i ncrous in their praise of the Tiger Cub flash even during the gallic win ii the outcome was doubtful. Tobin gave the crowd in tile coliseum in the outhern Indiana city, thrill after thrill with his spectacular floot work and splendid all i t und exhibition of the hardwood court game.
—o—
Otis Gardner in a telephone conversation with Paul Wood declared that Jimmie played the "greatest game of his eareer” against the Alices. WE HOPE TO BIN REPEATS THIS PERFORMANCE TONIGHT | AGAINST PRINT KT. N. The score as we gel it was 211 to IS at the hall in favor of the locals. We had a rcpoit Iasi night that il was Hill with the (Tibs leading at the intermission but this was unofficial.
—o—
John “Nibb-" Crawley also saw the game and h< said the boy \\ re “off" on baskets.
—o—
Mr. Gardner al n told Mr. Wood that “Vincennes get all the break-.” Otherwise it might have been a ' ifferent story.
—o—
Through the courtesy of H. 1!. Walls manage) of the Greencastle Telephone Company, a call was put through to Vincennes and the score at that time was knotted at 10-all. There was so much noise in the coliseum that it was all .Mr. Wall- could do to hear Unvoice of the man on the other end of the line. This indicates that \ ilicennes’ fans were excited. We're ce-tainly satisfied with the; KhottiiH* iht* ( nils, Iml ot eoiirs«* I victory would have been a thousand! times belter.
—o
The Alin are good and the Cubs have demonstrated that they aic ju t about as good. Yes sir!
—o—
Greencastle had control of the ball the majority <>f the fir-i half which speak, well fot the team work deployed by Bausman’s proteges. HE 11 PRIM ETON
— o—
The Princeton papci m l-'tiday had the following to ay about the game with (Ireencusth tonip Then ti monow night the Tigers entertain Coach Bailsman and hi- Tigei Culls of Greencastle high school These Cuhs are going to be hard to stop. But they were good last yeai and hard to stop but the Tigers did that little thing and it could be re peated again this yetn Tonight the Cuba am playing the Vincennes Alice, at the Did Post city The Cubs have been meeting the lie I of the -tate teams this y nr and have been doing right well in all of them. Crawfordsville fell by two points, and several other teams have lowed before the onslaughts of the university city team. They are reputed to lie -mall in size but swift on foot. Which means little or nothing to th- ■ Tigers of ours -_jf they are going - they have gone in one or two ganv this year. As the first attraction of the Saturday’s bill the Princeton Tiger Culiwiil meet the Decker Chapel second team at 7 o’clock. The first team of this Iterker Chapel is fast and plenty good and if their Ceserv. are at all like the first ^stringers the little I igers are going to have their hands f u || “Gym Dope,” Princeton Clarion-
News. —o—
Yester lay Mary Beth snidt Greencastle, whose narrow loss to Maitlnsville and decisive victory over Crawf- rdsville place them m the foreground as a strong contender, meetsouthern Indiana opposition for the fir-t time this season tonight when they ifo to Vincennes. Greencastle defeated the Adams squad lost year, in one of the upsets of the season. Tomorrow night V mcennes make u long jaunt northward, to Marion. Greencastle takes on Princeton. “Follow Ups,” Bedford Daily Times.
(T.nfeience from lie Windy City this
evening at the Bowman gym. We’re Banking on the Old Gold. A victory over tin Maroons would
' place tile Tigers ill i very select cla-s jan I give Purdue something to worry
j about next week.
Part of the northwest quarter of i the northwest quarter of section 12, I township IT north, range I wr t.| hounded as follows, to-vit: Beginning ] at the southeast coiner of said qnai ter quarter running thence north !• chains and 71 link-; thence wist I chains and .VI.47 links; thence -outh it chains and 71 links; thence east ! chains and 51.47 link.- to tin- beginning, containing I II at res, mom or less. Also, 12 feet in breadth of land lying on the we-t side of said premises, the entili length of raid
t r.-i
A g' od many basket bull fan w ill
go to Greencastle t. r orrow night to , l ! 7 .
Also, the oilmen
see Coach Donovan Moffett’s DePnuw |township I
nilhea-! quarter of ec-
n< rth, range 4
IF YOU NEED MONEY We Can Accommodate You QUICKLY Budget Your Bills Borrow the Money and Pay Them in Full. S 7 Mo. Repays $100.00 Loan $14 Mo. Repays $200.00 Loan $21 Mo. Repays $300.00 Loan This Is All You Pay. Nothing Deducted or Added. INDIANA LOAN CO. “Ill I nsl U ashinglon st. Phone 15
GOSHEN, Iml., Dec. 28. — More Ilian Jd.OOn in currency and government bonds was found in a tin box buried under the home of John F. Conkel, K2 years < Id, lielirved to have been penniless, who died last night. Tv>> day- before his death he called n a neighbor and revealed the hiding place of his savings, and after a search the box was unearthed and found to contain s:i 1 l(MI in currency and $3,000 in bonds. Conkel came hero unknown twelve year- ago, and whs employed by Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon King, with whom j he made his home. Mr. King died a number of years ago and Mr-. King died a week ago, and in her will left her home and $500 to Conkel. Sunday, the day of Mis. King’s funeral, Conkel became ill and the next day, fearing that be would not recover, he asked that the buried treasure tie hunted for.
’’BANNER W AM’ ADS." PAY
Now oil Display in our Shoi»roorn /
Today you can see the most sensational automobile ever introduced—Tlie Outstanding Chevrolet of Chevrolet History, a Six in the price range of the four! T oday, this amazing new automobile is on display in [our showrooms and we cordially invite you to come in for a personal inspection! When you lift the hood and see the new sixcylinder valve-in-head engine you will realize that a new era has dawned for the buyers of low-priced automobiles. Representing four years development and testing, this new power plant is a mart el of advanced design. At every speed it operates with that delightful smoothness which everyone demands today in a modern automobile. It develops approximately 32% more power than any previous Chevrolet engine. It displays sensationally greater speed and faster acceleration. And yet, despite this brilliantly improved performance, it maintains Chevrolet's worldwide reputation for economical transportation by delivering better tlum un uteruge of tu’eufy miles to the gallon of gasoline! Cireat Array of New Features Matching this spectacular advance in performame is the greatest array of new features Chevrolet has ever announced. The big, new four-wheel brakes are exceedingly quiet in operation. I lie new two-beam headlamps w ith foot control dimming device were never before available in Chevrolet’s price class. And so on throughout the entire chassis, you will find feature after feature previously demanded in the linest of automobiles and now offered on the Outstanding Chev rolet in keeping with Chevrolet’s policy of constant progress. Distinctive New Beauty But, however impressed vou may he by the mechanical superiority of the Outstanding Chevrolet, your admiration will reach even greater heights when >ou study the i ar’s distinctive beauty— —the marvelous new Fisher bodies represent a masterful example of artistic coach work. Never have beauty, comfort, convenience and staunch construction been more skilltully combined in the bodies of any automobile! So we urge you to come in today and inspect this outstanding new car.
conikz//v invited
initial sh
Outstanding Chevrolet
of Chevrolet Historv
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'ght
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Neve rbeli pioof I lectrolock. Nt w tienii automatic *park i ontroL New waterproof »puik toil bn ale J belieatli vowl, CHASSIS New self adjukling, dingle plait dry di»c clulcb. New urnootb sliding Lftpeed irarumi»«ini» with vanadium meel gear*. New ftolid shall type ktecring column. New Hat type, olender rim steering wheel with large horn h iftnn ir center. New and more efficient rmiffliiig aybfein. N< w and more complete Alcintf# chuiwi* lubrication. New riihber-oii'ilrel pedal curb iMjres. New larger g.imlinr tank at rear-— 11 -gallon < apat ity. New, •mailer, •niarter whe, ( l» with hill balloon tire».
Come in today lor complete information
L. H. CHEVROLET GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
SALES
Q - U T A
L*I
T*Y
AsT — L.O W - C CKS.T
