The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 23 July 1932 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, SATURDAY, JULY 23,1932.

We pride ourselves in having - the newest and smartest styled furniture obtainable, at a very low price. Bed room and dining- room in butt walnut finishes, with lines that make it look like very costly furniture. New styles and beautiful colors to choose from in our complete living room suites. We would be glad to show you through our furniture department. S. C. PREVO COMPANY HOME STORE

HE I M HI. A. M. E. CHl RCH C. E. Benson, pastor. 11 A. M >ervices. The pastor will use for his subject "Backgrounds and Forejjioun Is." This is a special ser mon that everybody should hear. 2:3(1 P. M. Sunday school. At 7:30 p. m. a program will be given by trie church, after which the committees will read their reports.

I.EUU'K SI W'DINOS

National

League W

L.

Pet.

Pittsburgh

51

36

.586

Chicago

48

49

.545

Boston

47

42

.528

Philadelphia

.... 47

47

.500

St Louis

43

44

.494

Brooklyn

42

4K

.467

New Y’ork.

39

45

.464

Cincinnati

40

55

.421

American

l-eague W

E.

Pet.

New York

.... ti2

29

6H2

Philadelphia

.... 56

39

.589

Cleveland

.... 53

38

.582

Washington

51

42

.548

Detroit

... 48

40

.545

St. Louis ... ...

40

49

.449

Chicago . ...—....

30

58

.341

Boston . ..

22

67

.247

American Association W

L.

Pet

Minneapolis

iti

38

.612

Indianapolis

.... 56

44

.560

Milwaukee ....

51

44

.537

Columbus

.... 52

47

.525

Kansas Cit.

.... 49

49

500

Toledo

48

53

.157

Louisville

40

55

.421

St. Paul

36

62

.367

YES IERO \ VS RESl ETS

National league Philadelphia. Brooklyn, 5. Pittsburgh, 3; Chicago, 1. American l-eaitue Philadelphia. 8: Washington, 4 1 oston-New Yolk, wet grounds. Only games scheduled. American \saociation Minneapolis, 7. St. Paul, 2. Milwaukee, *; Kansas City, 6. Only came- scheduled.

summer months. A1 iea<ly t ils season the experiment tation h;i' received many reports of damage, and the abundance of this pest and injury are certain to increase with the piesent hot dry wearther. It is difficult to reach and kill with the usual contact sprays because the pest is resistant to most sprays and furthermore it is difficult to reach through thi covering of silk which it , .'pins o\er the foliage. I nle>s the infestation is too se- ! vere, good control can usually be obtained by vigorous sprinkling with a -trong stream of water. The most efficient insecticide is on oil spray and for plants in foliage the summer or white oil sprays are most effective. If the directions on the container are carefully followed no in jury wil re-ult to most foliages. Occasionall.’. some burning results when .-pi'in i- used on Norway spruce. On (line susceptible plants, du-ting with i msting grade of sulphur • s lei ulliineiuled. Boot r esults will he obtained if two parts of hydrated lime :.te mixed with eight I parts of lusting sulphur. Colloidal sulphur^ which can lie applie I as liquid prays have given excellent control. Inasmuch as thi- pest develop- and increases very rapidly, treatment should begin with the first iniicatn.n- of infestation. fljMarkety ! INDIANAPOLIS, July 23 (IP) — Hog- 2,000, holdovers 284; market 10c lower; 100-210 lbs. .'i;4.8& to $4.00; 210 to 235 lbs. •?4 75 to $4.80; 235 to 275 lbs. $4.05 to $1.70: 275 to 325 lbs. $4.55 to $4.00; 325 lbs up $4.45 to | $4 50; 140 to 100 lbs. $4.55 to $4.«5;l 100 to 140 lbs. $4.26 to 4 40; pack-1 ing sows $3.25 to $4. Cattle 50, Calves 100; for week:' Beef 'ti er- 26c to 76c lower, heifers j 50c off, cows 25 to 50c lower; top steers $9.10, bulk $7.25 to $8.75;! (irassers and plain killers $4 50 to $7; good and choice heifers $0.50 to $7.16, top $7.50: common and medium! $4.50 to $0.25; cows $3 to $4, top $4.50; low cutter.' and cutters $1.25' to $2.50; Vealer- 50c 1 iwer, $5,501 down.

>l(,\S \NO! HER HI REEK

Sheep 100; not enough for market;

Manager Myers v ( the Greencastle ,ambs ^ down.

Merchants announced this morning that he had signed "Skinn;.” Miller, of I/ena. as relief twirler with the local semi-pro baseball club. Both

VOTE TO ADJOIKN

GENEVA, July 23, (UP)-The'

Rollings, starting pitcher ^gainst the n *“ oluU,,n adjourning the world dis-

armament conference until autumn 1

Greys at Cloverdale tomorrow, and Mill* r tiied out with the Terre Haute team of the Three I league this spring With these two hurlers in. uniform, Myers believes his pitching depart-

ment is in capable hands.

The game at Morrison park will

start at 2:140 p.

having strong lineups in action, fans pre ent should witness a most interest : nc exhihition "f the national pas

time.

and embi lying the work of the conference to date was adopted today. The \ote by the general (ommission was 41 to 2. with eight abtsen-1

tions.

The provision provided that the

With both teams j work " f the “ ,nfprpn, « ^ < “ rri,, d u "j

in negotiations during the summer recess. It left many important points! to bo settled !>et ie the conference

reenne encs.

The conference adjourned at 12:4(ii p. m. after setting the date of the

E-Sl ES W ARNING AGAINST next meeting of the -teering commit-i DAMAGE BT RED SPIDER (ho for September 21. The commit- 1

ee was instructed to leassemble the

A whitening or speckling of the conference within four months of that |

f Inge of phlox and other flower time.

garden plants, or the whitening and ... ilvery covering on evergreens, is a HEN GRID FAN LAID C od indication of red spider attack. EGG LIKE FOOTBALL a cording to J. J Davis, head of the IMBODEN, Ark , (UPl—A Whitt entomology department of the Pur- Leghorn pullet with the, football spirdue university agricultural experi-1 it has been ducovered in the chicken -•"tnt .' *t'or This pfsK which Is al- y dr d of Mrs. W K Davis,

rrrst microscopic and belongs to the c^rr.e class cf animals as apiders, su:ka the jukes of the plants and is

The hen laid an egg which looked like a miniature football, seams, lac-!

espo-ially severe during the Hot dr. j the performance.

and all. The neAt day she repeated

When representatives uf the British Isle- South Africa, Canada and Hungary arrived in Chicago j Friday on their wa> to the Olympic games in Los Angeles, they were accorded a hearty reception. In addition to Greeter Gave, Mary Pickford also \va. was on hand. Here is Col. Gaw pointing out the sights to the famou- movie queen, while to her right standing, is Eord David Burghely, captain of the British team.

I

Tonight: Tom Keene, Western Thril| er 1

A Ha, <GilR!ANA\IOy

in the story of a heart thci yearned for the arms of the man who had broken it! "WESTWARD

L from the Novel of thi - ln ,. name. Tou’ll enjoy it a- p,,,. trayed by this unusual last, a with

am

LAURENCE OLIVIEt

HmM PICHEL. UW PITTS, JUUETTC COHPTa

* the drdmo of a "love divorce" that searches the secret heort ! womonl.. a striking revelation of a wife who dared to doubt. I

HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT 193/ BY K1HO FEATl/KSS 3YNCICATB, INC —

CHAPTER FORTY-ONE Lily Lou tried to sit up ami was ■ Ettle surprised to see that nothng happened, she remained lying flat on the pillows. She felt if she •/it up she could talk louder and tlien the sister would understand. She began again. “So if you don’t mind, I'd like to hold him, for a little while. 1 would be very careful of him.” But they didn’t speak English. “Bubchen—” She tried to hold out her hands, so that the sister would see that she wanted the baby. "No, no -»• schlafen sie — sleep, please!” Lily Lou made another attempt to reach out her hands She wanted 1 to push back the covers anyway. She was very warm. She had been too warm for a long time, but 'he could not tell them. They would not listen. The pale sister had come in, and was pushing back her sleeve, to put the needle into her arm. But she did not want to sleep now. There were things she wanted to say. "No!” she cried sharply, but they paid no heed to her. The rosy sister brushed the wet dark hair from her hot face. Eily Eou tried to push her away, too. "Bubchen ... if you'd just bring him back to me—” The sisters, the rosy one and the pale one looked at each other. The pale one shrugged. The rosy one pulled a big handkerchief from one of her many pockets, and blew her nose violently. But they did not bring the baby "Well then, bring the Professor," Lily Lou whispered, “Herr Doctor —I can talk to him. Herr Doc tor—” He at least spoke English. He would,make them bring the baby. "Herr Doctor," the sisters echoed. They whispered. "Herr Doctor—” But Lily Lou found she could not wait for him Her leaden eyelids fell. Darkness cane again! There was no time. Just light and dark. Sometimes they gave her cool things to drink, and then, for a little time she could float in the dark, and be at peace. There was a cradle song of Brahms, that Gwin had taught her. She thought that she was just singing it silently in her heart, but she must have been singing it aloud, for the doctor and the sister, and Madame Nahlman stood at the foot of the bed, as if they were listen-

ing.

Lily Lou looked at them with interest. Madame Nahlman had been crying. The mascara was running in bluiah streaks down her cream enameled cheeks. “She's conscious! Darling, speak to Nita!” “Nein!” the pale sister said, shaking her head. That was all the pale sister ever knew about anything Wrong every time. Lily Ix>u wanted to tell her •o, and to speak about something very important, but it had something to do with the baby, and that would be hard to explain, so she would not say it just now, because she was so tired. A little later, when she was not so tired, she would ask for him again, for her funny little baby, with ears like Ken's . . . Was she going to die? She wondered, listening to them talk, the doctor, and Madame Nahlman, next time she opened her eyes. She was very sick, she was sure of that So sick that they did not bring the baby to her any more. Two other doctors had come. Fat aea. both of them, with long-tailed 'oets, Due had a bea^dL % % .

If - nad felt better she would have t- them not to lean over her so nv. and the day sisters, flusteicii . respectful, kept breathing on her reck as they passed things to the <]<)Ctors. But it was too much eff rt to speak. She just lay there. re was sorry that she was going t ue, her mother would feel very ba'i . . . possibly she should do sonu 'hing about the baby . . , but not now . . , she was too

tired . . .

Once He heard Madame Nahlman up 1 raiding Doctor Sanders. The loud angry words seeped into her const musness: • “If this were in the States it would never have happened. Vienna! Don't talk to me about your wonderful surgeons! What good is a surgeor without a decent hospital ami a respectable trained nurse! What do these cows know about nursing! Look at what you've done to that girl. She should be as well as I am hy now. Bunglers! That’s what you are bunglers!” Madame Nahlman thought it was the fault of the sisters that she was sick! But no, they had been kind, even if they had brought her sausage when she wanted ice water. It wasn’t their fault . . . Presently she heard the doctor blaming Madame Nahlman. "What kind of crazy business is it!" he was asking. “Bringing that girl all over the country like that? With no medical attention. Nothing! What kind of crazy business do you call that? A girl all skin and bones, ready to get any infection that blows her way. Then you Y'OU! blame it on me. But you will not. I will write. I will cable her people. I will explain. The full medical report—” "What ? You dare to tell me—! Oh! Look here, you quack—” They were ahoutiur •«

other. It hurt Lily Lou’a head so that she screamed, "Oh, don’t! Please don’t!” The rosy sister came to the bedside, shaking it so thA Lily Lou cried out again. And presently it was quiet. Everyone had gone. Very slowly Lily Lou went over it in her mind. She was sorry for Herr Doctor Sanders. He would be hurt, not understanding that Madame Nahlman never meant all the mean things she said. But he said ... he said he would cable , . , cable ... to her people .. . Lily Lou sat straight up in bed. Her mind was suddenly clear and keen. "Get that man back!" she called authoritatively, to the gaping sister. “Professor! Herr Doctor! No, no —let me alone. Call him! Quick!” The rosy sister rushed to support her. "It is the end," she whispered in her guttural tongue. "Ach!” The pale sister fled. • • • • 'T won’t have my people cabled to! Madame Nahlman, you promised me — you promised you wouldn’t ever tell them—” "Now, now—just to lie quiet, blease!” the doctor begged. “Now you feel better. Isn’t it so? No?” "I won’t be quiet. I’ll get worse if you cable. I’ll die—I’ll—111—" “Darling, we won’t. I won’t let him—” "No, no cables. Now quiet blease.” “Shh!” the sisters -whispered, fingers to lips, “Shh!” Madame Nahlman was on hst knees by Lily Lou's bedside. “She 1 ! better!’ she whispered to the doc tor, “I know it. Lily, cherie, yot are better? I knew it—” ^ (To BtjPtxituiuqj})

Added Features - News & Comedy

WATCH BILL WITH INTEREST tion. have furnished -i, INDIANAPOLIS, July 23, (UP)— nue to feed the newh

F’ederal internal revenue officials, | ster.

who had admittedly viewed the prob- , Once developed, the api"titt lem of collecting their 1 cent a gallon i creature must be satiated, gasoline tax with some trepidation, ! public must rise to th,- iiaih

considering their scant personnel were understood today to be eyeing with exceptional interest the propo.-al to equip Indiana's law with a sharp

set of "teeth "

Few states have provisions to back their motor fuel tax statutes as well

gle. If liquor becomes lecaliu great reservoir of food t rif- j

keteers will be cut off Far-sighted leaders m the :.•?

have foreseen this deve ; r*in their foresight have . husen ■

furl as probably the mo-t

W.e.r inoiur .uei rax siauues, as wen potentiality of all as u ... w ■ • I as Indiana will be able to, if and when income . strength is ' - J

the proposal in house bill No, 730. is a lopted. So rapidly has motor fuel risen to the forefront as a revenue measure—now eclipsing any other single source that it has outstrippei

enforcement provisions.

Racketeers, driven back to their second line defense' by the smashing blows of fedeial enforcement machinery in recent months in the liquor industry, have not been slow to recognize the possibilities of filling their depleted treasuries with money from

bootlegged motor fuel.

Their lawyers have with alarming access riddled such statutes as have been hastily assembled for the protection of the state governments, ami have more or less openly challenged tuthorities to battle. They know that -tate enforcement laws are weak, if not wholly impotent, Indiana no worse than most other states. Cooperation of the federal government with the state has added con-

being

daily to the forces "dabbling 1 form of bootlegging.

70 I II INDIAN A REGIMEYHl!

ASSOCI ATKi V UEi yi

The 58th reunion the TOtij

iana Regimental A •soauUoii .J -

unteer Infantry v. iV. be VVt

insville, Indiana, in the Vir-' '.OT

odist Episcopal Church, Aucuat 17. IN* at ten .

Lunch will be served it htc-M Sessions will adjourn a' ' JH

clock p. m.

Survivors of the regiment, and descendents are in\ i 1 1 ed to attend. Address ii .- N information of intent to ftl the undersigned at 340 Kit ton stieet, Martinsville I i ii* Department Comman • r, Bowden, of Muncie, and General Joseph B. Henn "r, ianapolis, have consenteo t ,

ent and speak.

|n A rt, ll

n thi

and I - a! 4

siderably to the reserve strength with

which the racketeers may he met but \o’| |< p; op- FINAL SP I'TI.H

the reinforcements are of almost entirely a moral nature. In actual man-power the feueral government

ha-n’t even mobilized.

A new cloud—a dark menacing one —has risen over the horizon, to give motor fuel tax enforcement officials the greatest concern of any recent de-

velopment.

Not only have the racketeers found in the large tax a method of picking up easy money, but they have now suddenly began to concentrate a much magnified attention to motor fuel, because of the agitation for repeal of the 18th amendment. Hitherto illicit liquors, in which racketeering was born and flourished to giant hood as an American institu-

OF ESTATI

NOTICE IS HER KID the Creditors, Heirs an. Henry E. Moss, deyca in the Putnam Circuit ( Greencastle, Indiana, day of September 1!' cause, if any, why the I

ment Accounts with t( • f*! said decedent should i t 1, | proved; and si id heir .ee r‘1 to then and there maki pri heirship, and receive their dl

tive shares-

Cause No. 7374. Witness, the Clerk of -aid | this 14th day of July, l" - J John W Hand, 1 • ^

cuit Court.

Warm Ueetinj? For Byrd Ship

? 1

i It waa 95 in the shade and a whole lot hotter out on Chicago-- • when Admiral Richard E. Byrd’s famous South Pole expedition n-’-l;;:; New Wk. was toered into Belmont Harbor of that city The ^ towed by tug Via GSeat Lake,* from Montrael The craft v.U re-tain-j I ‘4*0 a*0 ee :£ exfcibi^Oft duryu 14* worldL faar n** 1 f c * r ' |