The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 12 July 1932 — Page 4

THE DAILT BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, TUESDAY, JULY 12, 1932.

July Clearance Of Ladles 9 Silk Underwear

$1.98 all -ilk iTi'pt 1 under*aar Imth lace miH (ailorcd Irirnnird, cciiMialinK "f panties, combina-

tions, dano sets, and step-ins, July sale

Silk rayon undies in all differ-

ent styles and all sizes

98c ill differ44c

98c Kayon underwear excellent

quality, any style July sale

Kayon slips, bias cut, lace trim

79c 49c

$1.00 $1.29

S. C. PREVO COMPANY

I OX elv rayon slips, lace trimmed, all sizes Pink and W Hite—Special

(.ossard corsets $3.50 and $5.00 models, broken lads and sizes—( lean up

THE HOME STOKE

LEAGUE STANDINGS

American Association

W. L.

INCREASE LIME USE

Building up soil fertility by the use of light liming is being promoted by the county agent’s office as the result

of successful experiments with lime Minneapolis f>0 on farms in Putnam county last year. Indianapolis 50 Building up soil fertility now by the Milwaukee 44 use of light liming will enable the folumbus 46 farmer to increase his production Kansas City 44 when prices for farm products im- 1 oledo 44 prove, it was jKiinted out. j Isiuisville 35 Several farmers who have used the St. Paul JO

light liming experiment report that it increased coin production 15 to 20 j bushels per acre The count? agent | says the purpose of the liming is not ' to increase production of farm crops but to increase the production per

acre. High crop yields per acre will Cleveland . enable the farmer better to surmount Washington the present handicap of low prices, it M Louis . was said. Chicago ... Farmers who have not been con- Boston ....

verted to the lime idea are urged to •

watch the results on experimental National League

34 38 39 42 43 45 47 54

Pet .596 .568 .530 .523 .506 .494 .427 .349

Ann i n an

League

W.

New York . Philadelphia Detroit ....

54 48 44 45 43 39 28

177

L. 26 35 33 36 38 39 .,il 61

Pet. .675 .578 .571 556 531 .500 .359 .218

plots which are being placed in every.

community Proper use of lime | Pittsburgh

ami legumes is said to reduce cost of building up the soil more

permanently.

the Chicago

Boston .

TKY A BANNER CLASSIFIED FOR RESULTS

('HEMIC U. COMPANY KINDS \l \\ oil \( ELL I KK \ I MEN I MIDLAND, Mich., (UP)—The Dow, Chemical Company has discovered a : new treatment for oil wells, which, it j claims, has increased production in the Midland-Isebella fields since its J introduction. By injecting acid into oil hearing sand, chemists for the company claim ! they have increased the porosity of the strata.

St. Louis .. Philadelphia Brooklyn . . Cincinnati . New York .

W. 43 42 42 38 40 38 39 33

L. 31 35 37 39 43 41 48 41

Pet. .581 .545 .532 .491 .482 .481 .448 .446

Yesterday’s Kesults National League Pittsburgh, 5: Brooklyn, 3. Boston. 8; Chicago, 2 Only games -cheduled-

NEW MAYSVILLE It Ida and Laura Steward spent Sunday with Mr .and Mrs. John Oramdr. Jim Malicoat and family of near Coatesville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John Malicoat and family. Gerald Eggers of Poland is spending a few days with his father, Char ley Eggers. Mrs. Ellen Keck and Mrs. John Malicoat spent Thursday with Mrs. Ruby Davis at Danville. Will Bonher returned home Friday from St. Louis. Mrs. John Springer and family of near Danville spent Monday afternoon with Mrs. Alma Weller and daughter Helen.

tWBSffePlflWr HAZEL LlVlHOSTDIil 1= .-H ■!., COPVR/OW 1931 MY JitWXFKSCEVRES . , ^ ■ » - . -

SYNOPSIS

Lily Lou Lansing, young and pretty telephone operator, gives up her opportunity for an operatic career to marry wealthy Ken Sargent. Ken's parents had hoped their son would marry the socially prominent Peggy Sage and threaten to have the marriage annulled. However, the young couple go housekeeping and are ideally happy. Then Ken loses his position and. one night, Lily Lou hears him sobbing. Next day. Ken's father calls and informs Lily Lou her marriage has been annulled, heeling Ken no longer cares, Lily Lou accepts a railroad ticket and STpOO from Mr. Sargent and goes to New York. She rents a furnished room and through Maxine Rochon, one of the boarders, secures a position playing the piano for a dancing teacher. Later, she and Maxine go to live with the wealthy Mrs. Paula Manchester, whose hobby is befriending young artists. Word comes that Ken is engaged to Peggy Sage and l ily Lou is depressed. Shortly alter, Lily Lou is stunned with the realization she is to become a mother. She longs for Ken, thinking how proud he would have been, but refrains from writing him. She loses her position but Dwight Gwin. the noted vocal instructor, employs her cs his accompanist and promises to gne her sing-

ing lessons.

CH APTER THIRTY-THREE

Gwin was a miracle worker. No wonder that he could pick and choose his pupils. He slaved, he inspired, he roared, he reduced his students to tears, to profanity, to the depths of despair. He walked the floor. He wrung his hands. Tears of rage, of delight, of disappointment, glistened in his small, dark eyes. His hawk nose twitched with distaste when some one flatted His wiry graying hair would writhe under his anguished finge rs. Unless he wasn't interested. In that case he would walk the floor, examining bits of brie a-brac, small objects of art on his chests anil tables, with the air of an amateur discovering them for the first time. His pupil could sing anything, any way he wished. Unless it was someone in whom he had hope of real achievement he hardly listened at all. But if he was interested, nothing was too much trouble. He’d take a line, a phrase, a trill over and over. “Again, please—once again!” Lily Lou could never decide which was the most tiring, trying to accompany someone who couldn't stay on key and whom Gwin wouldn’t trouble to correct, or playing one phrase over and .ver and over until her fingers hi bed. But she loved it. She slaved She learned. She took to heart everything he said. Every song she accompanied she song in her mind Her old dreams of cuccess were with her again. When she heard Faust at the Metropolitan, she was Marguerite. From her place in the balcony she silently sang every note. Gwin gave her sheaves of tickets. Piays. Operas. Concerts. “They're given to tnc. You may as well use them,” he said. Sometimes she worried about that. Gwin gave her too much. She was getting too indebted to him. But just about the time she'd begin to fear that Maxine's sly innuendoes were right, and Gwin was sentimentally interested in her, he would fly into a rage over her poor German or Italian, and for a while ahe would be convinced that he al-g^^ly-tcd her.

"Stud) he bellowed. “Study! Are you another of those poll-parrot singers with no intelligence, no soul?”

He swore. He called her a fool. Her teacher the seventh daughter of a fi*!. What were they thinking of, to Het her go so far without languages Singing opera roles, and not alii' to say "Hello! Goodbye! How are you? Go to the devil!” ‘‘Study!” he bellowed. “Study! Are yvou another of those poll-par-rot siaigers with no intelligence, no soul ?'” He thrust books into her hands, talked to her in French, Dalian, German. Made her answer in halting, broken words, beamed when she was right, snarled when she was wrong. SNe made friends Miss Carlton, the pianist across the hall. Tony Schtinlli, the violinist. A group of stuitents. Three commercial artists had a stuifio in the rear, upstairs. They served tea in the afternoons, She went sometimes. Gwin frowned upon it. "You have no time for such trash,” he told her severely. Lily Lou shrugged. She did not know how to answer Gwin. Sometimes she thought she no longer knew right from wrong What was there to do? What should she do? What did it matter what happened to her now ? She was just pretending she was going to have a career. She was really going to have a baby instead. There was no one to talk to, no one’to care. Sometimes, in the midst of the laughter and chatter of one of the studio teas, with Mignon Hassler shouting above the radio and everyone talking at once, she would wonder what they would say, if they knew. But don’t think about that. , . . Don't cross your bridges until you come to them. Forget about the baby. Don’t let yourself think of it. Sing! Laugh! Make it come true, all that Gwin promised . . . career ... auefesa -

It was easy sometimes. Easy to think that the past was all a dream, and that she had never had any life but that of Gwin's studio, her singing, the gossip of Maxine and Wanda Pillsbury, the ease and luxury’ of Mrs. Manchester's flat. "A bright girl can get anything she wants in this town. Look at me,” Maxine said, stretching comfortable arms in the quilted crepe bathrobe she had wheedled away from Mrs. Manchester. "I hitch-hiked all the way from Los Angeles. I started with ten dollars and arrived in New York City with two thin dimes and no job. And now, here 1 am! Swell clothes, swell address, swell friends, swell job—all because of my swell personality and wanning ways. ‘‘I haven’t pinched a milk bottle in eight months. ... 1 used to pinch milk bottles when I first came to town. Did I ever tell you, Lansing? When I lived at Mrs. Grampas’ — before l began to get on. It’s quite easy, only you must get up early, or stay out late.” She laughed, and showed her uneven white teeth, in a flash of impish remembering. Lily Lou laughed, too. It sounded very gay and innocent. But she knew that it was stealing. .., What would the folks think, back in Woodlake? For a moment Woodlake would seem real again. She'd see it as it was on the day she was married. An old, shabby little town with one main street and a spattering of houses. Then that too would pass. The whole panorama of what had been her life would fade, and she’d only know that she was alone. Frighteningly, sickemngly alone, with no one to turn to, and a babe that she w-as afraid to think of, coming nearer every day. - - f To Bp Continued'

American League New York, 15; St. Ijiii.s, 4 Cleveland.'!i-12; Philaielphia, 8-7. Detroit, 5; Boston, 3. Washington, •>; Chicago, 1.

CLINTON FALLS Mrs. Grate Roberts and daughters of Green astle spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Abner Sigler. Mildred and Velma Colder have returned home from Ferndale where they visited their sister. Miss Georgia Honey of Ferndale spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs-! Joe Staggs. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bettis and son spent Sun lay with Mi.-s Leona Calvert of Russellville. Elmer Harvey and Lloyd Spencer spent Sunday with Eldon and Eugene j Staggs. Sam Dickey anti wife spent the [ weekt ml with Mrs. Violet Shonkwiler. Merle Boswell and children spent one evening la.-t week with Mrs. Eula Staggs. Olin Henry -pent Wednesday night I with Curtis Neal.

GRANAD

ADDED KITH KITING SINGS LOONEY TUNE CARTOON

American XswHiation Toledo. 11; St. Paul. 5. Milwaukee, 3; Indiattipolis. 2. Louisville, 10 Kansai City, 9.

PORTLAND >1 ILLS Mr. ami Mrs. Ja k Scott are the parents of an SVj pound boy, born Friday. Mr. and Mis. Ray Rivers and chil-

E \ ST JEFFERSON TWP. Services at Walnut Chapel Sunday were well attended. The Rev. Richard Newby of Plainfield was the speaker. Mi t.nil Mrs. Dtllas Hodge and son Charles were on their vucution last week. I! hey visited in the southern part of the state and in Ohio. Mr .mil Mrs. W. J. Nerfort anil son Lloyd and Mr. and Mrs. Doris Soloman attended the Coffman and Taber teunion, held southwest of CloUerdale Sunday. Lowell McCammack and family

dren, Mr. an 1 Mrs. J [>. Harbison,j'i-ited with Green Dizney and family Mr. and Mi . Donald Harbison, Mr. of near Danville Saturday night and and Mrs. Ray George and Mr. and Sunday. I Mr Ray Kn land and son -|ient Gail Morns and family visited with Stinda with Miss Mollie Harbison *' Ir ' Morns' mother Friday. 'near Russellville. j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hurst and | Mr. and M s. Charles Lunning. Mr. sun Raymond were Sunday afternoon ami Mrs. F,\ei tt McClain and Mr.II’allci.- of Mis. lluist's mother and land Mrs. H irry Ramsey and family!Claiame Runyan. ■ pent Sunday with Mr. an I Mrs. Al- Herman Wallace was injured last iiert Spencer. jFri : iy when he fell from a tree from Mi ( lay Ball and children spent (which he had been cutting limbs. His ! Sund.iy with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald condition remains about the same.

Ball and children. Mr. and Mr-. El Bettis and son, | Fre t Wid’o and Mi>s Leona Calvert

Oliver Stringer and daughter visited wdth Sofia Stringer Sunday. Elsie Dunbar his returned to her

spent .Tin iy afti noon with Mr. and home at Poland after visiting wdth

Sun

Mr . I o Cdvert.

Mis Ruby Gillnughhy spent

day with home folks.

(I h I t'and b.:, ( ball t. am lie-

Bi llmnre team Sunday 11

[feate I tic

i to 10.

CLOVEKDALE Rains of Bloomington i onlar services at the Chuieh

mday.

irgie and Ester Benefiel tie visited over the weekieir aunt. Mr Will Win

I The R' (ducted i .of ('hi i i

Misse-

I of (ii pen end with

I gert.

I Mi and Mrs. Fred

'fain I \i ed Sunday with Mr. and

Mrs. Loui Neier.

Mr .an I Mrs. Weldon of Green It istle wen weekend guests of Mr. land Mr- Dewar I Smythe. I Sevt i.d from heie went to MeCor- , mick Creel, -tate park Sunday.

Mrs. Florence Anderson the last two

weeks.

Mr. and Mrs. Delmar McCammack vi-ited with Oral McCammack Sat-

urday.

RUSSELLVILLE Mrs. Maigant i'ir.k of New York City ame Saturday for a visit with hei -iaters. the Mi es Belle and Lucy

Leonard.

Mrs. Lmr Gar' "d is visiting rela-

tives at Greencastle.

Mr. and Mrs. Iver Bain and family (spent the weekend with relatives at

Fordice and.f hicago.

Mr. and Mrs. C. T Malan and son of Terre Haute. Mr .and Mrs. Alva Stark of Morton, Ralph Stark of Ft. Wayne and Mr. and Mrs. Ford Scribner were dinner guests Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Mort Inge and family. Mis- Inez Owens of Indianapolis is visiting her mother, Mrs. Charles

i Mr. and Mrs. George Knoy and Mr. jnnd Mi- Rab"rt Davis Spent Sunday i Owen-.

i at Hoosier Highlands. I Mrs. Myra Fordice returned to In-Mi-s M id n Duncan of Indiana-1 dianapolis Monday after spending the v iting Mr. and Mrs. Fred week with her sifter. Mrs. M"lUe

(Win gert. Gardner.

Donus Denny spent the weekend at M rs - Mary Donohue is visiting ■ Kempton. .relatives at Terre Haute. Dr. an I Mrs. E- M Hurst were in' Mrs. H. P. Wilson returned to her Indianai Ii- Sunday to eall on Mr.! home at. Kingman, Kan., Thursday,

'after a vi-it with Mr. ami Mrs. E. W

Simpson.

end Mrs. Roland Fox. Mr.-. Ro-p Potteroff and children attended t i - Coffman reunion Sunday

south of tow n.

Mr end Mrs. Lockey Hurst and Mr. and Mrs. Msrt Lyon of Greencastle were in town Sunday’ afternoon. Mr and Mrs. Lee Hubbard of Putnamville were callers Sunday with Mr. and Mis. Frank R-ed. Mr. and Mrs. Marry .Moran, Mrs, Luella Jordan and Mi’s. Nellie McDonald were at Greencastle Saturday

afternoon.

Mr and Mrs. Dave Shartee and family of Indianapolis and Victor [Snell of Greencastle were dinner j guests of 'dr .and Mrs. Fred Lasley

I and family.

Mr. and Mr Otho Smythe and Mis- Stella Collin- were in Martins

Mr. and Mrs. D“Pew Goff and son spent the Fourth at Dunes park. The following from here attended the Gardner reunion Sunday «t the

KOKOMO AWAITS HOOSIER LEGION KOKOMO, Ind . July 12—The lavish entertainment arranged by Kokomo for the fourteenth annual state convention of The American Legion, July 30 to Aug- 2-, has led to the greatest advance demands for room reservations in the history of the Hoosier Legion, L. W. Penniman, state convention committee chairman reports. A great many Legionnaires anti their families, who cannot afford the longer trip to Portland, Ore., for the national convention commencing Sept. 12. are turning to Kokomo for their annual Legion outing, Chairman Penniman reports. Membership total of the Indiana Legion when the books at State Headquarters clo.-ed June 30 for the Kokomo convention had reached 32,522. considered a remarkable membership in the face of economic conditions from which veterans have suffered heavily, State Adjutant Ollie A. Davis of Tipton, reports. A Big Legion Parade, in which men of the World war from every community in Indiana will march should er to shoulder again, has been arranged for Monday afternoon August 1, at the state convention. More than forty Legion bands and drum and bugle corps, ail in colorful uniforms, have already made reservation and will be in the line of march. The massed colors of more than two hundred seventy five Hoosier Legion posts along with the Stars and Stripes will be an attraction. Dancing, pistol matches, golf matches, boxing, athletic contests, ami musical contests are among the colorful events of entertainment. Weighty business problems, especially those dealing with the> increa.-o of service the Legion gives free to veteran.-, will be decided in the business sessions. Five candidates are already conducting active campaigns for the

growing championship by H‘Pankop of DeKalk county w ith a of 156.2 bushels. The records o‘ corn growers whose yields writ daily checked in 1931, and the ings of over 400 men and boys exhibited at prominent corn ■; are listed in this report. Thirty-three men have midt honor roll for winning at leas’ medals in the five-acre project. •: of which must be gold awards growing at lea-t 100 bu-hek ot-1 per acre. C. E. Troyer of Wai county leads this group witk medals, nine of which are gold, practices followc I bj,- Hoosier growers including varietie.- jr seed sources and methods of hair seed, effect of preceding c amount of manure and fertilize! and method of application tiw planting, -end bed preparation,her of (ultivations, and effe t o! ious implements u-ed are summi' from field record -beets h\ v Pence of the Purdue univei-it tension staff who has charge o; five acre project. Small applications of fertilii* the corn crop ma le i n the hill on may be considered a cheap enp suraiice according to a summwy com fertilizer expeiiment.il work viewed by G. P- Walkei of Purdue this report. The place or aop in a rotation following ’ rn and p ceding small grains, and the (ft an clover are discussed in un art by K. K. Beeson entitle "Are ■ beans Soil Builder-?" lioth art! are summaries of tlis us-ion? a*

annual meeting of thi a- natior. | Other articles of interest to H I ier corn nvn appear in thi- ac history i f the progres- mode wit i

liana’s leading crop.

Eiirht hundred Hoosier corn r ers hove already joined the a^- ( tion for 1982. most of whom exp check up in the five-acre com < A. (’. Greensburg is president K. E. Beeson of Lafayette k •*

state rommandership of the Hoosier

Legion They include William o Nel- for ,h " current year.

son of Anderson, mechanical en- i

gineer; Bruce L. Peters, of Cambridg” TIPS IN CANNING PEAS City, Attorney; V. M. Armstrong, of GIVEN B! MISS HEt

Indianapolis, attorney; L. V. Hauk, of

Morristown, an undertaker and B. W. Peas, being a non acid xegr. Met irty, of Gary, Superintendent of are one of the most diffii it to

a -teel mill. The Auxiliary convention is held simultaneously with the Legion conclave. Mayor Henry Quigley, of Kokomo, and more than forty officials of Howard county, all Legionnaires, have extended a welcome to Hoosier veterans. Veterans who have not made room reservations for the Kokomo convention should do so at once, Chairman Penniman reports.

BAYLESS GRAYS DEFEAT RUSSELLVILLE NINE

George Bayless’ Crawfordsville Grays defeated the Russellville base-

home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed'Gardneri bj 11 club at Ru *' ellville Sun,la - V after New Market: Mr. and M , s . noon ^ a score of 5 to 3 ' Du ' k

! ville

and Bloomington Sunday.

Claude Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. 0. V. Gardner, Mr. and Mr-. Floyd Gardner, Mrs. Maggie Gardner. Mrs. Emma Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gardner, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Card ner and family, Mr. and Mrs- Charles Proctor. Mr. and Mrs. Noble Miller. Mis. Pearl Goff, Misses Anna and Beryle Gardner and Ethel and Lee Gardner of Indianapolis. Mr-. Lon Wilson. Mrs. Effie Owens. Mrs. Mary Jane Rogers and Miss Mollie Harbison spent Sunday at Turkey Run.

erson who did the twirling for the local pastimers, allowed only five hits and struck out sixteen batsmen. Johnny Lewis scored the winning runs when he hit a double with two men on base in the eighth inning. Johnny Roach, another player, connected for two hits in two times at bat. Carver caught for the Greys while Miller and Cook formed the

Russellville battery.

Miss Myrtle Tucker of Martinsville

| was in town last week.

Miss Betty Gorham of St. Louis ! is heie vi.-i’ntg her grandmother. Mrs.

j Hattie Got ii un,

Mis. Curti* Baker and niece. Miss , Berniie Barns of Montioello ate visit|ing Mr. and Mrs. E.-tal Meek and . daughter fo> a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Corns visited I Sundav aft* moon with Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Hale at Brazil.

Miss Helen Evans is visiting her parent-, Mr. and Mr- Dwight Evans.

JAIL NOW TOWN KITCHEN ABCOCK. W’is., (UP)—This village of 500 is without, a jail for the first time in its history. The space

CORN GROWERS’ REPORT GIVES HOOSIERS RECORD

The thirty-second annual report of the Indiana Cbm Growers’ Ass cia tion containing a record of Hoosier accomplishments at the last -tate and international corn shows is now being di.-tributed to 1,500 members of

sucres-fully and yrt if proper c; taken in preparing and pr'c f this vegetable, it should keep wi” spoilage, says Aneta Beadle, -ion nutritionist. Purdue univen’ The rule, “not more than hour.- from the garden to tie should always be ipplied to pea.' " | lert only young lender peas, the pods thoroughly but do not

f he |>ens. S rt the pea

thn-p of the same size tog 1 thet A grading and sorting is no esMfJ cause the boiling period ' trie! ’he age an i size of the pea which have begun to lose their -hould not Tie canned. Cover with boiling water ant the young tender peas for thrM utes, .md the more mature for j minutes. Pack Irosely in hot cans, addi*’ teaspoon of salt to each quart will with the cooking water. 1’ been found that there is le •ulty with spoilage by u.-ing cans. In using the pints add ow teaspoopful of salt to ea h f* 11 In using glass jars with the* top, seal tightly, then give co" quarter turn back, for bale top do not fasten the lower bale, in waiter hath for three hour pressure cooker at ten pounds sure, forty minute* for pints or minutes for quartsWhen tin cans are used. proT No. 2 or No. 3 tans three hou w-ater hath or 30 minutes in pr*' cooker at 10 pounds pressure.

formerly used for the jail has been the association. This year’s report

turned into a kit-hen for the town not only reviews the winning of the 1 f '- E. 1 Girlnit . t, hall Kino th. iair „wu la i_. I:—, : ~ . 'visit Mr. and and Mrs CharlM'

hall. Since the jail was built 38 years international championship at Chiaco, it has housed fewer than $0 cago by Ed Lux of Shelby county, but

| also the w inning of the national com

prisoners.

“BANNER CLASSIFIEDS ^