The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 July 1932 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE INDIANA, SATURDAY, JULY' 30,1932.
j Classified ads 1 —For Sale— SALE—Irish t'-flGkt Pota^|B(j a) K iiti par LuAu I. edits per bu>hel. John A.
Dietrki A good
$2.M< fcook’r South End Store. Phone
29-2ts.
■ ■
PUBLl 1 ' SALE—Having more furnitme than 1 need, I will sell the followtap aitides at auction at my home, ,517 N’. Jackson St., Saturday, July 80u at 1:'!0 p. m: extia good piano; Una good living room suite; rockers; die -ei ; rugs, large and small,Bo mI ones; two large mirrors; one foiii p ter bed and dres-er, black ■walnut in nice shape, lOt) years old; complete dining room suite; a lot of mi tra nice linen; one china closet; pine Columbia granola; one music >Jk< ; extra nice lot of dishes. R nilAMRlCK. Vestal, Au-.t. J L>i; 4t. FOR tAI.E i’eachcs, pears, and applet. ; Eu hheit Orchard. Phone
R-1K1.I
Confesses Killing
Husband
t •••• -&■ .
29-2f
For Rent
p iiH
FOB* Rl-N’l' August 1, imdern apartm* e three rooms, furnished. Comer FOR RKNT: Modern, newly decorated tei'rr to five-room apartment in doubleRiou «■. Furnished or unfurnished. Gtpye and every household convenience Kent reasonable to right party, tall at 111 Highland stieet. 30 Aug. 5-fi-3t.
: d r: tj ii!-d •P o ; fl
itioD i
rr of I '• V 1
FOR RENT—Four-room modern apartment, reasonable. Cull 532-Y. 2!»-2p FOR RKNT —Attractive, molern 4-room double at 518 Kast Washing ton stret F i, IP u • FOR RENT: Modern six room house on ea-t Walnut street, $30 per month, H E. Robbins. Phone 418 or 527-K. 627-tf.
Wanted—
POSITION WANTED as Housekeeper b\ cultured, i efinod lady in good horci' ('liar - ter reference fur nished. Addre-- Box A. Banner office. 30-lt. WAWTKI): To lent 4 or 5 room house. Pli :ne 165-K. 30 It. Student drsTes position To earn board ami room. Piivate home or farm preferred- Best of references. % this office. 28-.3p.
"till,. WAJfTKi): Yellow male pup with Collie st
(MiseollancMMis
-4'
SUNP \ Fried Chicken Dinner. 60c -.Cill 715-Y for reservations at
VermiHc,
The IT tie Cafe will be closed until Sept 1 while undergoing repairs. REDl CED PRICES at Elms Inn. Ihnn^P, in 50 . and 60e. 30-lt BAJSHiAl I Tern Haute AllFillmore Merchants, at Fill ■Hunday, July 31. 1932 (Jame ■ ■:0u p m. Ailmission: Men 15c, I (Jiii Chil i Hu-Ip
AY DINNER: Fried Chicken 50c; Baked Ham and Swiss St<tt* lonrhes, 35c. Crawford Hotel, opposite tion, 30-lt LOSFS TIKE AND WHEEL J. D. Cnnliy ,,l iRu lidali- n ported tiff Alva Br. an Saturday that | he was attending a concert in lie .thieve ri moved a tire and. tim his parked automobile. To Tly with War Foe
| hope that • ■ i mce will benefit their families—figure in the suicide attempts. But nerve strain, frust rated line, ihj-u-^l illness and feai of discovery also take their toll. Results? T'irre is a filing case full of lesults reported by the league and a iay-t -day v ar i index of work
now going on.
An executive in Wall Street, a w< man offi.-p director, and nianv a business nun owe their reprieve-- on life to tlu league’s counsel. "Now full of fight’’ r* ads the r lief worker’s notation on the index ’ar i of a man whs turned on the gis
I a week ago.
jCHK AMI BOYS Blll.l) 1 RF.Pl.IC \ OF 1 INCOLN ( \BIN I WINONA LAKE. Ind., (I PI—A replica if the lor cabin in which Ab-I raham Lin <dn w.e born ; t Hodg n ville. Ky . is being constructed by 33(1 Chragn boys in camp heie. Witli logs from a dismantled .•abi.i, and supeiintended by a manual training instructor, the boys, ranging from eight to 18, ate constructing the cabin according to men urements of the oi iginal Lincoln home. Later the cabin will he furnished ■■■•itb replicas of the furniture of th, ( ivil war Piesident’.-
first home.
M I y Pollok. 2<; ,ear-,,ld 1 CMa P> «■<*«) the Miapicefl of Chicago woman, who telephoned the! ^ Ie Chicago Hoys ( lub, annually police and calmly said, “I’ve just[ K ' VPs * dcago’s underprivkilled my husband.” She then gave' il ‘‘K p<1 bo y !, tP! > 't a y s of vamp life,
her address ami asked the police to! come over. Later, she broke down on the witness stand and pleaded self-
defense.
SAY E-A-LIFK LEAGUE PREVENTSSUHIDES
Faces Second Test
UNIQUE rtsH Bait BRINGS $50 FINE — BATAVIA, O., (UPi Dough balls, -•vskeri in homo brew, aided I>*o Fein stein, diuggist. in a so - fid ti ' itg trip, but later hm ur-iue plan did a boomrr ng and ie.-uib in h- catching a D5i) fine for vi lotion o r the fish ard game law. Accor ling to Ft .i k Sta ir v ime ' warden, Feinsteih fed the into:*' iting jlali- to the fish, which, after putak I ing of the morsels, came to the too f the water. The druggist then used ; a net to bring in his catch. The fine was assesed by a justice of peace at Milford.
Will Soon Be Mr. and Mrs,
Back in the polit il limelight by virtue of the big lead she rolled up in the Texa- orimnrv ver Governor Ross StciluiB for the Democratic nomiiiatinn for G©'"rnor, Mrs Miriam "Ma" Fergu- n. former Ciovernor of the I.one Mar State faces a second test in the primary of August 27. Two ye*i ago. Mrs. For guson defeated Sterling in the fir si primary, but was badly beaten u liit rut. oil.
MOONLIGHT S WES <TTY LIGHT BILLS
GROVE CITY, O., (UP)-“The light of Grove City, when possible, will be moonlight savings’ light.” That’s the explanation given when
Mayor John C Felton was asked whv i, i
NEW YORK. July 2?, (UP»_Ten the street lights «f this village weie ’
to fifteen men and women will enter no t turned on recently, a busy mid town office today to an- “When the moon shines bright over nouncethat they are thinking of com* Grove City, we turn out the street mining suicile and would like to talk. light* to save money,” the mayor <,VPI - i said. “Of course, on real dark nights The number has almost doubled in ! we probably will turn them on for a the last year of the depre-sion. Two i few hours. We’ve got to have light,
thousand would-be suicides applied j you know ”
for ai l at the offices of the National | — Save A Life league here in 1931 In GIRLS ROBBED HOMES
numberiami County t- "hope chest”
burglars.
Two girls, accused -if robbing summer homes in the Flyslmrg section, took silverware./lim clothing, an.I
an electric clock.
They admitted taking the household articles to fill tin- "hope chest” of one of the girls .vim planned to be married within u -liort time, po-
I Cl'EI N YND M l Sit I KSSONS STAKES IN FIGH I WAGER
—
MONTROSE, CM ).,. (UP)-I.l >yd • Millyc'-, director of musi in the Montrose schools, an I Charles Addington .owner of the Home Mortuaty (li-i i little betting on the recent Simr-kr>-Sc uneling heavyweight bout. Hilly r offered a year’s music les- [ son- if his favorite, Sharkey, lost. AdI dington generously offered a coffin in I case Srhmeling delivered the telling
i blow.
Hillyt i has not yet called for his |i«ffin, Addington stateil. He i- holding it for-him. though, he addc I.
The wedding of Walter J. Smith. 22-year old son of Alfred E. Smith former Governor of New York, to Mis-- Florence E. Watson, of Scheme lady, N. Y., will be held on August 13, it has just been announced. Thi • ereniony will take place in the bride’s hometown and will be a quiet affair, only the immediate families ,>t' the bridal couple attending. The newlyweds-to-be are shown as they appeared on the beach at Southampton, L. L, recentlv
B<>\.
the seven months of 1932 to date, that , number already has been equalled. And the list grows daily. J. Last week eight persons, all men, committed suicide in New Y’ork City,! three by hanging, two by gas. two by leaping from hridg< md one by j
TO FILL HOPE ' HOT SUNBURY, Pa., (UP)— North-
15, MILL ENTER
DAR IMOUI H I HIS F \l I
LY NN, Mass., (I Pi- Sumner H j Bi rof'ki, of this city 'till enter Dart-j mouth College in the fall, at the age
of 15. >
The precocious student went ahead of those of his own age tit the very | start of his school cai er. He was so bright upon starting hool that he 1 was put in the third, rather than the
first, grade.
, Took Sixty Cadets to Death
poison. Forty-five mere attempted suicide unsu •ces-fully. most of them boys and gi'ls in their 20’a. Mcir hile, ",) pel suns visited the, offices of the le-gne during the week. 1 ■ , ' ) < J i\ - of their! , rrhle.ns, and were dissuaded from their intentions. ^ The Rev. Harry M Warren, dire t^ er and founder of the league, has e lica’ed his life to that work for the last 25 years, ever since his sermon in which he offered to help those, thinking of self-destruction. Ten persons came to him for aid, and the work of the league began. Since then he has uiivise I 25.000. Today he directs the work from his suite of offices, employes ten per-j son in. in ling four advisors, tind mi.int-tin' a “rest home” on a beauti-! ful i s4at“ at Hastings-on Hudson. where de-titute and unhappy men may recover their strength while the league seeks to place them in jobs again. Although Dr. Warren’s organization carries on correspondence with would-l>c suicides 'hroughbut the nation, and even abroad, the greater part of his work is here. “Painful though the realization may be. suicide is more common among the educated classes than among the illiterate masses,” Dr. Warren says. “One of the predominant auses is loss of interest in life. AH feel that there is no love in the v.'t rid for them—nothing to look forward to—nothing worth struggling for-” Financial reasons-including the
Here is the German Navy training ship “Nlobe” wluc oundered dur ing • storm off the Fehmurn Island in the Baltic, n> id, Germany, taking sixty of her crew to the bottom. The ship wn anned by 100 cadets and junior cadets, of whom forty were savci .■ the steamer Theresa Russ. The Niobe was a three masted vc . I ■ i an auxiliary motor. Count Felix von Luckner, famous sea midi i nt e World War, was her first commande’
Safe After Jungle Ordeal
Sole Wendel Heir?
fcaOWIl during the World War a» th# ’“Black Knight” of the Kaiser’s firing gildiers, Baron von Schleich. u«nnan air ace, is planning a traas-Atlam ic flight w ith one of his war-ttnia enemies. His opponent ol yean ag is Maior Christopher Drap#r, whose daring war exploiti *• • lb#nib, r of the British air fore##, earned him the title of “Mad Major." The erstwhile enemies plan Ykeir wesUmd flight very shortly.
lore is the latest claimant to th« $75,000,0(10 estate of the late Ells Wendel, New Fork iccluse, who, il he proves his claim, will inherit the entire estate He is Thomas Patrick Morris, of Dundee, Scotland, who asserts he is the son by a secret marriage of John Gottlieb Wendel brother of Ella He says he has documentary evidence to prove hit vasertioo-
Clarenoe McElroy, Indiana aviator who was recently rescued from the Oaxaca, Mexico, jungle, is shown on crutches a> he war greeted by his brother, Richard, on his arrival at Mexico City by plane from San Heronimo. McElroy sustained severe injuries to dis leg when his plane crashed into the Jungle, killing his eo pilot. He crawled through th« tlncK underbrush for two weeks before he was tound by natives.
HAZEL LIVINGSTON ... COPYRIGHT I93J BY K//YO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. n i m-
CHAPTER FOR I’Y-FIV K She let her fancy slip ahead . . . saw herself, as she used to do, in the roles she dreamed of . . . ragged and lovely as Mignon, regal in crimson velvet as Tosca . . . she’d do Tosca soon, too . . , Before her dreaming eyes the lights of the Palis Grand Opera blazed . . she saw the magnificent white marble stairways, the glittering crystal randcluluu. heard the thud of the baton, saw tin curtain, going up . . . ’ Yes, and V'ienna, too . . . the opera there that she never saw. She must sing there. The lovely, quaint place, with its magnificent approach, the winged horses, the Siegfried and Don Juan candelabra. . . . The taxi jerked to a stop. She was home. With an over-generous tip for the driver, she rati up the stairs to Nahlman’s apartment, singing softly to herself . . . stopped for a moment heard the departing concierge whistling the Carmen ana too. . . She wished that Madame Nahlman had come home . or that she could have stayed t<> have supper with her . She went into the kitchen to mnke choc date, and find something to eat. iL>w cold and barren European kitchens were baek home everything was handy. You could dip into the ice box
and . . .
The baby j». . Lily Lou went cold all over. M hat kind f woman was she? To forget him. To come home, her head full of herself and her silly little triumph, and make
herself chocolate
In her room, the room with the big bed. and the little one in it, the Bonne sut dozing in her chair, crocheted lace cap a little askew. The room was warm and airless, the night light horned very low. The bubchen lay with his little head turned from her, sleeping
quietly, his hair, light brown now, wus something lurtive and slightly curling, brushed buck wholesome about it. I: to show the high forehead, cheek- bpr ’ And now that she
bones faintly discernible in the
shadow.
Lily Lou stood very still, holding
the light.
The bonne was speaking. “It is not measles, tlie doctor said. Just nothing Heaven only knows why it should have looked like measles. The doctor himself, Madame, said it was very like. But there is nothing to disturb one. You see. he sleeps, and il is time that you and
Rodney, i( appeared, was not only clever, but economical. Tliere was n*
first cabin lor (his crossing.
Mr. Rodney Horton-Hale kissing | She thought of Gwin. What one of the younger maids. There would he think of her now? Of her
I. Madame, should sleep Lily Lou did not answer. She stood motionless still, looking down
at the sleeping child.
A torrent of tears flooded her heart. She ought to fling herself on her knees ... to thank God . . . but she could not move, could not stop looking at him. Such « tiny thing, to be so like . . . Kon . , . The very bones of his baby chin. Her eyes blurred, blotting out the dim room, the sleeping child ... She was back in a little country (own in northern California. The first pale morning light was coming through the open windows of the crude hotel room. And he was sleeping, the light on his fair head. ‘She sank to her knees, tried to stifle the sobs that were having their way with her, in the down of
the baby’s coverlet.
The Bonne woke up. She said in
her French patois;
“But he is better, Madame. Did 1 not tell you? You will frighten him, le pauvre petit—”
“Yes, ye*—I see—"
And Lily Lou wept again.
He was quite young, very English. He spoke in a high, affected voice, twirled his fair, waxed moustache. , Madame Nahlman became another being. She primped, she preened, adopted her grand opera manner. . lino n'gbt Lily loi» surprised
and un sickened had sur-
prised him in that, he became bolder in his advances towards her. N a h 1 man began to twit her about Hlumentbal. "If you let men alone for the next live yeais you’ll be better off,” she said bluntly. “You’ve bad your lesson. For lieaVe-
en’s sake profit by it!"
Lily Lou was hurl, and she could not help (wing angry. It certainly waoi’t her fault that Nahlmau’s husband looked at her. She began to treat him with something like
rudeness.
Two days later Madame Nahlman said: "The bubchen annoys Rodney. The English are su averse to anything natural, that a baby in the
house—”
’’Oh!" Lily Lou said, "Oh!” "So, since I have that tug class coming up, and won’t have any real time to coach you anyway, it seems to me that you might as well go bark to New York. There isn’t a thing for you at the opera house this summer. Nothing but Americans here in summer anyway. So you go on back to New York, and later, when you're a little tietter prepared, I'll plan something worth while. You know you can trust me for that, Lily?” “Oh of course!” But she felt that Nahlman had struck her. * "Go baek to Gwin for a while.” "Yes,” Lily Lou promised. She let them plan. Watched Susanne Coin parking Realized that she was adrift again. And her own mind went racing ahead, hack across the sea, to New York, to face the people she had known, with the bubchen in her arms. She'd probably have to board him somewhere, she’d never he able to earn enough to hire a nurse. It had been so easy here . . . her comfortable rooms, the devoted bonne, everyone's natural acceptance of her as Madame Lan-
■ip*. . » -
small triumph in Carmen, and two critics writing that lor voice gave promise of iieing the musical find of the year. . , . And now the year was over. Madame Nahlman came to the room to bid her goodbye. Kissed her on both checks. Wept. “I have left all the arranging to Rodney,” she said. “He is so much cleverer at business affairs than
1.”
Rodney, it appeared, war. not only clever, but economical. Theit was no first-class cabin, for this crossing. A small • abin .ship, with Lily Lou's stateroom far below. It was July, and one of the hottest days in the year. The boat developed engine trouble the last minute and lay at her lierth over night. Most of the passengers had been apprised of the delay in advance and did not board the steamer until late at night, but Lily Lou did not kin w. She arrived on scheduled time, spent miserable, sticky hours in her tiny cabin b«- | low decks. The porthole was open, but no breeze stirred. The bubchen protested, wailed at the top of his excellent lungs. When morning came, and the ship was underway with a chill wind blowing from the channel, Lily Lou was worn out, and so was the buhehen. She had not real!Bed how hard It would he. The bonne had taken full care of him. Now she was alone. She was nervous and awkward. “Such a good baby,” everyone had always said. It must have been something in th? bonne's management, or perhaps it was the food. The steward, who told her at once that he was a father himself, prepared the bottles. He would not hear of Lily Lou doing it herself. He arrived at all hours of the day and night, entering and knocking simultaneously, backing out, if hi# entrance seemed inopportune, with a murmured “Pardon, Madam#—" (To Be Cvntiau^l
mm
.
