The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 March 1929 — Page 4

THE GREENCASTEE DATEY BANNER, SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1929.

EASTER FROCKS

At Popular Prices Very well made, Rood materials and attractive styles are these dresses we are offering at $9.95 Come in tonight and see them.

S. C. Prevo Co. The Home Store

rm

MOVIES

AT THK VOM VSTLK

'you can’t save it, arcordinK to a eon-!

' sensus of Chicago ministers. Radio sermons and efficiency of 1

I modern theoligical training combined with modern demands of speed, have

Rich comedy fare is provided for j combined to make the limit of the those who patronize the Voncastlc most effective sermon one-third of | thearte Sunday and Monday. Adolphe j an hour, the ministers generally were i I Menjou’s new laughing comedy, “Mar- agreed. I quig Preferred", opened there last Rev. Howard R. Blinker, rector of | night and it is the best this star has St. Bartholomew’s church, said he bei made in many months. j lieved no souls were saved after a, ^ The story i- oni of those mart.. twenty-minute talk. | <»| laughable mix-up- •vhich Adolphe “If a minister can’t do his mission* Menjou does so wi ll. It concerns a i in 20 minutes,” he said, "I don’t bebankrupt French nobleman who, at lieve he ever can." the instigation of his tailor,, his valet Dr. H. P. Almon Abbott, rector of;

* St. Chrysostom's, and nationallyknown as a speaker, differed from the I majority in setting a limit, however. 1 He said that a pastor should talk as' long a his semi n was interesting.' He himself preaches from 25 to 35

minutes.

VONCASTLE

today only

2 TO 11 P. M. 10c-25c Glorious adventure in the Old West with the nation’s favorites at their speediest.

CRT BROODER -lot l. »■ above the floor and around the edge R1 FOR ( HU KS of tin hover, when the chicks are | put under the brooder, seems to give an(i sco ' rns Mt , n j oll aml

“One of the a:-urances of a successful poultry brooding season i.> a brooder stove that is easy to operate and reliable,” a>s P. 11. Gcoding of 1 the poultry extension staff of Purdue

University.

the best results. This temperature i

Adolphe Menjou in the Paramounl Picture "MarijuU Preltxrad."

and his chief, incorporates for the purpose of effecting a money marriage. While his three partners are looking for a girl with a dowry, Menjou is falling in love with a penniless

young governess.

The governess discover.- the plot

he is forced

to go through with his bargain. He

The brooder stove should be cleaned thoroughly and examined to see if all parts arc intact at lea.-t two weeks before time for the chick- to arrive. A good policy is to .-tart a fire in the ,-toV' a few days bef re the chicks come. This will give ample time to make adjustment and get the temperature legulated before the chicks are put in the house. A temperature of 100 degrees, three inch-

should be maintained for the

t irve days. Then it may be lowered | her after the ter( . mony> .. c t eut to i'5 degree- fer a week and to 00| makp his own way in th (. world and, d' Tees the third week. Afttr th' i through a series of circumstances, thu d week from MJ to k5 degrees I everyt hj n g ends happily, will usually give enough heat. | ’ ,,

HOl.E IN POCKET COST HIM JOB GLOUSTER, O., Mar. 23 (UP>—A| hole in the pocket of Mayor Hugh Gormley cost that individual his job. i Mayor Gormley, 70-year-old veteran of county politics and mayor of this city 2'J years, lost $171.86, money paid to him in fines and license fees for February. He said the money was lost through a hole in his pocket. Called before the city council to ] make his report and turn over tht funds, Mayor Giomley evplained the | situation. The Council demanded that, Gromley pay back the money by instalments. And Gus Ga-kella, council president, is mayor following Groin-

ley's suspension.

NFAV STOCKHOLM OBSERVATORY j STOCKHOLM, Mar. 23 (UP)—A new and modern observatory will soon

FAANKIE fsK ty TBilArl

CHAPTER 11 “Tarzan” Serial

AND “Uncle Tom”

HowUiiev^

PATHE COMEDY

Granadi

^IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllIllllfc

TONIGHT 7

^ -a, 1

Sinners -d»

OOROTNy Revier

Drama revolving arnund th,

mates of New

fast set.

v,,rk ' s ra,£

COMEDY \N|)

« VRTOOS

SUN.-MON,

; marries the wealthy girl but leaves i be erected near Stockholm, at the cost

1 of $268,000. The money for the building, which will be used by the Swedish Academy of Science, has been donated by the Stockholm banker, Knut Wallenberg, and his wife, Alice.

If a brooder stove is to be purchased, select one that may be fired ami cleaned out easily. It should also have an ash pit and sand ring or some device to protect the floor from overheating. This will greatly icduce the danger from fire.

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SHOC K ABSORBERS

AT THE GRANADA “Submarine,” the Columbia De Luxe special, which is coming to the Granada Theatre Sunday and Monday is a composite of the most thrilling incidents in all the great submaiine disasters of the past. It generally pictures the conditions under which the rescuers work, the steps being taken by the government to safe-guard the lives of th nun in submarine service, the conditions of the sailors entombed in a wrecked underwater craft and the efforts to get oxygen down to the vessel. The picture is really a De Luxe entertainment furnished in an entirely new setting and contains everything you like to .-ee—passionate love sequences — spectacular scenes— and j mighty thrills. I The cast includes Jack Holt, Dorothy Revier and Ralph Graves. [ Acclaimed by the Press and Public as the most sensational Picture ever j filmed. Tonight only will be a picture of (Broadway's gave t life entitled "Sin- ' in*rs' Parade" starring Victor Varco-

Threr I'cnt.iiii n w li nn the contact between President Hoover and all who have t. o bus • - at the executive office of the nation. George Akersen. right, f >rn' r Miiihi apoli- new-puper man, is chief of the -ecretarial staff and i the liui-..n Iran between Die president and official callers; Lawrence Ro |. v, left, a iated w ith Mr. Hoover more than ten years, attend- to the nr. iib t’s more per- nal work, while Walter H. Newton, inset, most recent appointee, who ha- been a congressman from Minnesota and i a i twy. . i adnui .-trativt u.-si.-t.mt to the chief executive. Each gets $10,000 a yeai.

SAVED PAL BI T DIDN’T KNOW IT

Drang down upon < ight G- i ma American oh en dian plane, ( api two of th. enemy ciaft and .ii-| happt.'ned in I'MH. Rickenltaeke not Colomd W. G. Sehauffler, i adventures with him when he u -, iji the }i!'.’ le had r. cued.

planes v hieh had surrounded a hapless iin Kodie Rickenbacker, l*‘ft, brought down ised the rest, -aving the American. That having jjst met his old friend, Lieuten^ht, in Atlanta, Ga., was di cussing war ivered for the lit si tune that 8hauff .. r wa»

WOMAN HEALS SNAKE BITES PUZZI E> SON IET Pin >l< I NNS MOSCOW, Mar. 23 (UP)—A woman who apparently possesses the mysterious power of healing the most poisonous snake bites has lx ■come the center of a heated dispute in the medical world of Soviet Armenia. A well-known Russian journalist, Marietta Shaginyan, ha- just investigated the phenomenon and her report in one of the leading Moscow periodicals has drawn the question into national prominence. “Djavayir the Snake Woman,” since her arrival in Armenia from her native land, Persia, has won wide fame and n large practice, poisonous vipers being eoinon throughout the country. Apparently no one—not even the doctors who are attempting to suppress her activitie.—denies that she has saved many lives through her strange

power,

Soviet medical men are carrying on a relentles- war against superstition as embodied in “wich doctors" of all sort ■, who still flourish in the more backward regions Mme. Djavayir clearly seems to belong in this category, and particularly because of her popularity makes a convenient target for attacks. On the other ban , her actual curestand as an answer to charges of witchcraft. Dozens of grateful patients testify to the* genuineness of her claim . A . ction of the medical world therefore argues that rather than persecute h< r, doctors should endow her and use her. Mme. Djavaylr’s "treatments” take jthe indelicate but effective form of ; .-pitting on the wound and covering (the saliva with a leaf. Soon the leaf • begin.- to change color, seemingly abI sorbing the poison as it is diawn out by the .-aliva. The snake-woman herself is entirely immune to snake bites. Her house | is crowded with snakes of all varitie* and she permits her year-old daughter to play with poi-onous vipers, it is suppo.-eii that her saliva possesses i some chemical power to draw out ! poisons. ■ . ——o— I.IITI E TIME FOR SAVING OF SOULS nilC AGO, Mar. 23 (UP) —If you !'an’t ave a suul in twenty minutes,

BUSHMAN SEEKS NO. 3 CAMDEN, N. J„ Mar. 23 (UP)— Francis X. Bushman, pioneer among movie leading men, is looking for his third wife. The Hollywood veteran made this admission while playing an engagement here. MEXICAN IN NEW FLIGHT MEXICO CITY, Mar. 23 (UP)— The flight attempted by Capt. Emilio Carranza from Mexico City to Washington may be completed soon by an-j other young Mexican aviator, Lieut. Antonio Cardenas Rodriquez. Captain Carranza on his flight last summer which meant to be a non-stop flight to Washington was forced down within a few hundred miles of his goal. Later on his return he wa- killed in an electric storm over New Jersey after he had started out from Long Island. Lieut. Rodriquez instead of flying to New York. Although his plans are not yet formed, probably he will also fly back to Mexico by the same route. A local committee headed by Alberto Mascarenas, manager of the Bank of Mexico, is in charge of raising funds for the flight. The Carrenza flight was backed by the newspaper

Excelsior.

Three mechanics of the Valbuena army aviation field, Simon de Hoyos Ue.wa, Alfredo Menchaca and Daniel Cardenas are the originators of the i "a of having Lieut. Cardenas Rodriquez complete the (light attempted by Carranza. At present Lieut. Cardenas is flying the mail route to the frontier between Monterrey and Nuevo Laredo. He is a native of Coahuila.

A NEVER-ENDING WAR Ordinary rules of sanitation in the home and by municipalities are saving the lives of thousands of Americans annually, and making virulent epidemics almost unheard of. How many people a few years ago knew that malaria germs were spread by the mosquito and that many disease germs were broadcast by the common housefly? No greater in number than these were those who realized the efficacy of screens, covered garbage cans, clean yards and the elimination of stagnant water in exterminating the mosquito and the

fly

Nearly all are Michigan farmers. clubs run by aliens. Morrison and Foster as sakar The Brinks are Pennsylvania Dutch. Several of the yew clubs have Misa Florence- Pattcr.-on John, his parents and eight brothers sprung up in the west-end of London’ L. I., came to be with herl and sisters came to Michigan in 1877 during t*ie la t few weeks. They make i Herschel Foster who i taerri

from Keystone state. a point of good cooking and good winfrom the Keystone state. , es and cater as much for luncheon liam-, now living with her husband, cu tomers as D r after-theatre-paities a retired Muskegon, Mich., farmer, which come in for supper and a cab-

Ten children, six of whom are living aret show.

were born to Mrs. Williams. She is 80 There are stringent regulations gov years old. erning membership and the observance

John had two daughters and a son. of licensed hours.

One of the daughters is dead; the The clubs open much earlier in the other lives at Ravenna, Mich. She is day than did the old night-clubs, and the mother of seven children, all liv- specialize in tea dances in the aftering, John ha- two great-great grand noon. A cabaret show is given about children. He recently lemarried follow midnight, with supper, and the doors ing the death of his fir.-t wife a year close ju.-t about the time when the old ago. type of club was beginning to get in-

Next in order in point of years ate; to full swing.

M. S. Bink, 76, of Canton, O., father o— of two girls and a boy. j CLOVEKDALE Mr-. A. Griswold, 74, of Muskegon, Maurice York went Thursday to Mich., widi w, mother of three boys Indianapolis where he has accepted and two girls, all living. a position in the Internal Revenue Mrs. Eunice Riley, 71, of Grant, department in the federal building. Mich., mother of 1C, two dead. Mrs. George Larkin is ill at her

There are now more than 100 grand home on Lafayette.

children, 50 gread grand children, an i nine great-great grand children. John's father and mother both died when they were 75. One of the grand children is a banker, another an electrical engineer and a third a Methodist minister. All others in Michigan's laig> ,t family

are farmers.

LONDONERS GIVEN NEW SUPPER CLUB

LONDON, Mar. 23 (UP)—A new type of luncheon and supper club is being evolved in London following the

Mi Audra Rundell is out of school

uffering from intestinal flu.

Mr. and Mrs. George Knoy and Mis. Glen Lyon spent Friday in In-

dianapolis.

Mi-- Annie Layne left Tuesday for Louisville, Ky., where she will make an extended visit with her daughter,

Mrs. E. L. Shaw.

“The Road Back” presented by the —Maitland, populatsm Gratia players of the First Baptist mourned the los- of ! ■ church Terre Haute was well played Unction 46 year- a' " a

ment in the Methodist hM-paU dianapolis. Mr. and Mr . William M: tk Thursday for Wat.-cka, III., wteii, Minnick will be . nn !■■>•• D ery. THORN BI RD NWIED MARION, lud*., Mar. . i'3j Alfred Thorn!".-g. ' ' C' ■!!( Spencer, has been nainH ' re| dent of the Appal i h e Ifcj Association, in i-.. '"•-M district. H< wa • appoints post as result of the recent ik E. E. Blackburn.

GOES FAR 111 I .'I WMUIR, Mich., Mai - . (l'Pi-3 Husted, 49. ha- travtM tb ** lent of more than 11 time ‘ r,|lr world, and he i a learn"! a I* humanity and chain," ’n;.’ I 5 " 9 over people in that din. his traveling ha !>"' canf"" 1 ' route only 11 mil< and a •* long. Husted ha carried l '• on a round trip of -’d 1 :

years.

JUST SLMI'LY Ol'TVOT® HARTLAND, k in.. M 6. ''

and enthusiastically received by

large number present.

the meeting, lament! v

the fart, r'"*

recalled the neighboring t " ll

ill

A fly in the house is a sign of care-'• :itam,,ing <,Ut ° f 'lu- .tio.mhle nighties- hou-ekeeping in this era of swat-i - - — - - - —^—

the-fly. It j; only in the poorest tenement districts and the squalid home of the mountaineer that the horsefly is still given free rein to taint food and carry disease germs from person to person. Neither is the mosquito permitted to inject his malaria 'germs into the veins of every sleeping hu-

man.

To successfully combat the fly and the mosquito the campaign should be launched early in the year. But the battle against summer’s pestiferous purveyors of disease must not stop with preventatives. Debris must not be permitted to accumulate, garbage cans must be kept tightly closed at all times and screens must be kept in repair. And the fly swatter must be kept in daily use.

Charles Pickens who formerly had in won the court eat with al* agency for the Pontiac and Oakland signed by 2.8!'l county " has accepted a position with Ring when only 500 it. e ited th' (

WHERE POPE MAKES FIRST VISIT AWAY FROM VATICAN

ONE FAMILY A BIG HELP TO MIC IIIGAN'S POPULATION CADILLAC, Mich., Mar. 23 (UP)-j John Brink, 78, a farmer near here,) claims to be the member of the largest family in the state. Still living aie parents, . hildren, grand-children, great grand children and great-great grand .hildren to the number of 250.1

t» h v. c K i t '!«?\'i'k(Tzir'*; 1 ’ i ' h “2 k ' w "» *••• N.pi„, *« .pot pi.oo.d.. * by I opc ,us M, left, ouk.de eaMeun. ftiu,' ,1,1. to Moptec.klu, eeHmtte. the KOOth unnivtw" “ ^>aint Benedict. The cloister is shown on the right -