The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 August 1932 — Page 4
THE!’ - n*/ BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA, MONDAY, AUGUR 1 \ 1»
J ( 0
Final Clean-up ot all
! ! Vi',1 K 'T vNMNG^
National l^-uauf
W.
iiirjrli • r >i* lK „ 57 del|,hiit •’>*' 5(i
55
iyn
N ork
bummer Merchandise At Less than Halt 'rice
oO •4M 47
TLOVERD vl.', WIN'S
Pit. .657 614 .5 IS .5011 ,47«
4i;71
.420
, ated the Spencei Kora Pat In tilt on the south P tnam county basehall ciiatnpml Suml \ afternoon. Althoutrb the Spencer players outhit the Cloverdale nine, tl > were unable to take advantage of lie u. j /
Vinerican League W.
7:1 R5 04 5'.l 54 4X ,H0 20
Pc*-. .070 .5»6
( ome in and lalvt* inKimta^ 4
\ merican
tilt'
lui|
low [triers whilt* ilitw last. \
ii*‘\(*r avain.at sm ‘
t*r
ow lint
VsHociation W. I . . . 07 . 07 . . . 05 . oo .... 67 50 40 4.H
Dlt'I.U.VI M il WASHINGTON,
host of (liplomatit from the tfneit \ world today, iu't major military pi nation involved sti 5*»x 1 tr*u' ; * nl ie conflict.
.540 Grt y-creen tro .524 swept over the I .46.H Cirey on Au.eust 2 .340 time the Passion <
.24* ' ed into <lermany
Three days befoi
I gan, Austria had p ( .( 1 A Igei ia. Then foil 5KK cession, declarath .50x Russia, Germany, .550 an and Japan int .522 I ‘nd America folh 4X7 During the moi
t<l \ PR ELS Vug. • (IP)—A irrels arnsing confront the ears after its In g m. I'Nery paying for the
53,x.315 ot thitn and wounded or injured 21,21!'.452 more. Treasure to the amount of $300,000,000 000 one sta: -tiiian has estimated. wa J
,nd disarmament.
Put there has been no peace, save the |>eace that result- from exhausti,,n Franco-German tebtions
al-
poureil , ut m the battlefields oi for though gradually improving, are still indirect co-ts. upset each time a nationalistic oiator
of Germany nch border at 'll At t he sjune • -oldiers nmv-
To dati • wai ha cost United St it, alone near!.. $40,000 000 (Pi V.though its men suffered less than tie e of most nations, nearly 500,000 of them have been hospitalized at public expense- The treasury -till owes the American peoph nearlv $14,' no,000,non i account of the war, \\ I ile the state department is i ngaged m an airimonious effort to colle.t fro a Kuiope more than $11.000,000.000. Thousand- of American veterans
ither side of the border Stirshatred and dissention tiermany and Poland are deadlock-j i d ni in apparently insoluble ,-trug- | gle over the Polish corridor. A Fran,1 Italian naval rail threatens. Japan and China are at each others threats while Russia looks on atixious-
1 iy-
For six months the nation of the | world have I engaged in a dis- : .u.. ament conference for which they ! pent nearly a decade in prt paring, |
, who helped to fight* the world war I hu- far the conference has succeed-j have just been evicted from Wash- , | only in balinin • gas and bacteriol-j ingtnn by militaix force. They are "uical warfare .mil indicting the | thnatening a still more strenuous bombing of civil populations. Real,
4P1 .404
of conflict, 115,0brought into the
377 bayonets, gas am
'in- invasion,- be- - hired w ir on d, in rapid sucwhich brought in c Gn at Pi itie conflict Italy d later. than four years sOI nun were •niggle. Bullets, -ease kille i 8,-
Tfort to collect now their reward far di armament is still in the futme.
service. ’I he United States entered the war to "make the world safe for democracy.” Today, Italy, Germany, Poland, Turkey, J. pan and Russia to a varying degtee, have d'ctatorial gov- ' ernments. Tin \ erasilles treat, ending the long strugglt i ffered ho| •• of peace
DI PRF'SION HUS I (iRFK.NKRS GREKN BAY, Wis., (UP) Leo Puel, circuit court clerk, blames the depit s .-n for tin lait that not a single jietition for citizenship has been filed in Brown county since Jan. 1. Applicants must pay $10‘for first papers and $15 for second. Green Bay | has a large foreign population.
S. <:. IMiKVO COMPANY
HI IMF STtiRR
VI I I KDAVs RESULTS
Post!) Duly
National league s-| : New York, 2-8. , (l-.i; ( iih innati, 1 -P. ; Pittsburgh. 1 ti. . ue- scheduled.
( RASH 1)1 M IPO I D PU S IN MlNMXil V
minor injuries
Cl.FAR I.AKI thousand pies, • neapoli- to I oc St lowed when a ' liorse here The along the highwa led t»\ the lig ' failed to get olll approaching n. 1 i. • 'Die hoi e wnscattered over tii truck turned ovi steel 1 rn n i if !!, ei and hi o -ja
M in-
Minn., (UP) route from N. U., were
i k ran into a race - was being h d when it wa- .-tarlof thi truck, and if Die path of the u Inch i ould not
PH I LIPPI NFS 1(1 PnlM |)il(, HI I I I I IDI.MU
I let ! .
A, P. I., (UP
I he
idled and t ountry -idt
rah saved the driv : who i s ,'tpoil will
Tl
M AMI
deniic of d-ig h Philippines esp the early si many cases In i Pasteur ilinic
si ience.
Dr Ara \ asiiuez-Colet, gist in charge of the lahnr that an B'eruge of 1 !() <5 repelted daily Most of the victim in ' \icinity were ihildien.
Vinerican league J; Boston, I. 0; Philadelphia, 1-1. " I 7-(i; Washington, 4-2. ' k. I ! !': S' I .ouis, 5-4.
Xmerican Xssociation ipolis, 3-1; Vlilwaukee
Toledo, I 7.
X; Minneapolis, 5 1 i -i; i nui- \ die, 1 -2.
2 I.
I.OU VI
( Dl.OKFH MNI HI 1 I V 1 ' MV IM INSX II l,F
I l»l) - i olln'r at Winston v
dith
0, he
file Martinsville Mom bants, with n ' i -i tioii el' Three I-ye league and
coll« ■ stars including Johnny a o his hrotht i "Sally” | ml I.arr\ Vi r, went down ! at Martinsville Sunday, I I re the I nil .a i a I ’olored All- : nl Gri o i . tie I was the four ' vutory out oi seicnteen ga.n-;
the local colored team-
y Saunders pitched a no-hit I'm l ie huals I'm eight innings' •I his performame iva--j
l iiPlu r wa- allowed third
ill!..'e. Huffman and Cartwiji heavy hitters for the
and cnnti ihuted to '
tie
II. ( "lured <
I - I (Kid watched the tilt rtinsville park. J hatti > was Saunders an I while l\. Ily. Sudilith and i- tin Mar'insvilh- battery.
R. H. K
II 16 1
I> 2 2 fternoon the All align. Ilk. meeting there Sunday afterg t he fast I lanville, |
Sunday to ( ha ed Flks
the latter
iti a night gnmo
hat evening
Alfred C. Holman ‘'atlier of Lihhy Holman Reynolds, i' ks he arrived at \\ nston Salem, N. (k, from his Inniie in ' ad i. counsel for ms unused daughter. IhJmun demur Reynolds he permitr J hi i freedom on hail while waiting ti alleged mor der of her tubai co heii husband.
tha*
PI. VIM II I D XX |\s ! Ilmon I" t to Plainfield Sundav, t" 2 in a re -i Irani fought game, i lean lle ( ted six hits 'I he cored on a base mi ill . followed by a two base hit 'Bed' XX right and Herman Day "ed tin battery for Fillmore and Morrison. D. Glenn and Schwiu for Plainfield. Iii day the Terre Haute Cubs ■ > Fdl.nore at Lydick’s Park.
As Broadway Acclaimed Libby Holman^
Four interesting f 1 Ibby H mu Reynolds L ihe was kn -i o New York theatri al audiences vben at th« height of her fame an a "torch tinger."
;e appearing- in (he "Litt’* Show » I on Uiurdir do must tland tual* ”"■*
HAZEL LIVINGSTON
, COPYRJOHT tG3/ BY KINO i'EA-TUUES SYNDICATE, INC
CH XI'i I l II I Y-ONE
Once Lily I Xsmay froi ■ rid tales, a «iit she listc Ji .... Sne had c »ut it was amc Nahli onie with n go as far ul bookings lublirity ai ,'ou will aci he violinist “I—accent! hey- wouldt "Not a W uind is mu It was an - ,.ou found i ie had disi lling in tl voice that Ile register "You arc I ianist,” Ti
i wnuld have lied in the prima i.,mna’s lllizahethan English, : new, smiling a lit-
to ask for a loan, wo asked for. Ma;nd, "you must n my concert tour, St. Louis. XVonder- . Ily i|uite the best idvanee sales . . . pany me. Seline is,
you!! Rut you— ; he satisfied!” It is settled. My ip just like that!” ed. Afterward Lily ' hat it was the trick red Just summer, of hole" in Nahlman’s y space in the niid-
rtainly not a great told her, “hut you
- an acci ate and an intelligent ini', with aoi'e sympathy than a
nigger arti-t would have. So do not thank her too much. You serve her
purpose.”
■* serves mine. Ttflv, 1 what I’d have done if come along.” uld not starve,” he told
“Ami -
don't km (his hailn
"You w
her eusil.
“I'm g .Nalilmur 'old Gw ' to get n “Is tha sorry? ” Lily i She ktiei thinking lessons \ I owe x me— There i to talk t When he sun! Lily I „ need < is notli about been did mg to N He i most a gray ha Could I,
ig on concert tour with or fourteen weeks,” she "I’m soj-ry -you’ll have her accompanist.” the only reason you are
looked down at her feet so well, what Gwin was I'll be sorry to lose my h you. I know hovv^much how much you’ve taught
He seemtu, tYir tin moment, almost as old a I , , maturely gray hair. \n old. defeated man.
is no further opportunity i, another pupil came in. iter, she prepared to go, After the concert tour, 'll help you if you ever mg on a role. Put there more I can teach you ing. Things might have ■nt. Put since you're goIman ” ed, for the moment, alJd as his prematurely An old, defeated man.
waiting for her in New York. After that there was Tuscan! Opera Company, u third-rate company played i^ small towns. Tony g(4 her into ,t when it became evident that her ub nee with Nahlman hud cost her the -mall parts she had been promised at the Met-
ropolitan.
She wasn't very grateful. She would have preferred to stay in New York, and be with the baby. She never knew (hat Tony spent half a year’s salary buying the place for her. The Tosfani Opera company did not pay its sopranos.
ive cared for her. really ? ; It allowed them to pay. And Tony
never
She didi. t know — would know. Tt,. \> shook hands.
“GoodI ye, Dwight.” “Goodbye, Lily Lou.”
It was t really goodbye. They would mi t again in the morning.
But it wa
It was th' last sign of affection orl. . . paid for eight hundred of it. leeling h> was ever to show for She scraped up the rest.
i It wasn't a very successful sea-
XVhen. t, n days later, she left for son. Toscani did little mm than Philadelpl .a with Madame Nahl- break even. She was mad with joy
baby to get hack to Robin—too big to he
never knew that she had to put down an additional fifteen hundred
for costumes.
Uncle Eph’s estate . . . that meant the curly, grayish wool sheep that used to graze on Lone Moun-
a farewell, for all that. | tain . . . dear, darling Uncle Eph
mail, at establishing the and Mr Jensen's aunt, Mrs. Nilstrom, w h the bubchen in Maxine's flat, she was beginning an-
other era
It took Idly Lou just live years to reai-h I r goal, the Metropolitan. Live yeui from the time she came to New Yi k, a frightened, hut determined ■ rl. After th contract trip with Madame Nuhl’ian it was comparatively easy sailing. There was the matter of “the hole” in N'nhlman’s voice. To rover r. Lily Lou was allowed to join in wo numbers, singing a high, fiuti like obbligato to one, a lower, ern rung melody to the other. When she got too much applause Nahlman would fly into a tantrum, threaten t get a more competent
called Bubchen now beginning to totter around on his little fat legs, and to say things that nobody hut she and Tina, the nurse, could un-
derstand.
Hut she went hack for another season, and when at the end of two years touring Toscani disbanded the company and retired to eat spaghetti ami polenta in a cozy flat on il u ndred aod Twenty-second street, she had sung fourteen stellar roles and felt like a trouper. It should have been easy to crash the gates of the Metropolitan now, hut somehow it wasn’t. Just the chorus, and a few minor parts which she Bang with charm and delicacy, of which nobody took any notice. Thanks to T'my, who was
accompanist, and ■♦here would be'creating something iff a sensation
uncomfortable hours. But few audiences noti< e ( | Lily Lou particularly. I hey had come to hear Nahlman, and old and tired as she was, with a “hole" in her middle register, she gave them the fire and thrill of an enthusiasm that wnuld never die. Beside the glowing, exuberant personality of the aging prima ilonria, the accompanist was just a pretty, promising young girl. Well—Lily Lou didn’t care. Not while sin i as earning two hundred and expenses every Vnek and the
Bubchen
since he had been made one of the
.
petting well paid engagements. She •ang with a symphony orchestra in a tour of the . . then a season with a fashionable Fifth Avenue church, and then signed for four weeks at a moving picture
theater up town.
Nobody—Tony least of all had
. . . had he she have w. songs'.’ (0 iv much, and iv singer of p, p Some of Tony. Me Im said, “you ai when U'c ani
been wrong? Should I lor ora ..rio. hyiv she hoping for Kju .,s she just a cheap
Jar ballads?
his she confided to k his head. “No,” he pn artist. Lily, and t sings, or plays, the
world lisVem It does not matter where. .No ait 1st should really think him.--' If good until he has made a living mi the corner, passing the hat ” "I almost came to that, when 1 was new in New York!” “And 1 liio. And when 1 played my fiddle the people, they stood to listen. Fhey didn’t like it as much as when they pay, because the people, they like o pay big ptiees for what they h •. but they listened, and they | he pennies, the lives and the ten nt pieces, sometimes the quarters . my hat!” After the ti • ater engagement she signed a coni n t to sing at one of the more fa ! liable nigh' clubs, be- * wise it wa te enotiffh not to intci lcrc with I r opera appearances. Inking a ] if out of Nahlman’s notelioiil,, In npitalized a dramatic entrance. The first number was always something showy and spectacular. She wore a white luce gown with lacquer red slippers, and the '■rmine wrap lined with lacquer red chillon that XIadame Nahlman had given her three years ago. After the first number he threw aside the wt p, and the grand opera manner, put the paste and ruby tiara, another relic of Nahlman's genei si'.y, on the piano, slipped off her bracelets which she wore, again after the style of Nahlman, banked nearly to her elbows, and motioning tl pianist away, sat down and played her own accompaniment to otic of the ballads she had sung at the moving picture theater. After that she asked if there was a hing anyone wanted ' old song anv opera aria? The old trick of memory. I he gift of ploying and sing, ing by ear if need he. It was a success. An overwhelm-
J
iiinid ■'* r " 'oiled Imi i'l the metropoht.an .! Two of ||„. r
last TIMES T<)NI( lHT ‘Miss Pinkertun”
CiKA\^A\IO>4
,v
IDES. & XX LD Xou've wanted a good laugh . . Here it is . . . don't miss it.
ME
Gov
expected her success at the theater n ' tt J> az ' ,u ‘ s had full page portraits It had been a lucky chance for her hrr L I ' ll > 1- u Fan - who just
to make some money. The applause frightened as w. 11 as »urpri»'d her
as rosy and blouuiwg, Uej mind had buen so set on opera
opens her mouth and sings . . . any. thing . ,. any win re anytime ... Copyright by King i ,tyres Syndioat*. Ins.
cAt. *KEL
kA #4
jbj& ^
E
GEORGE SIT CHARLIE MURRAY
June Clyde, Norma .f
ADDED
' "Mi in J (t Mii'inl
Succeeds Lanuuit
l Hoy I) Ch in, Detroii out ive. who was appoint' of t’ommerce in i’residci ieplacitii' Robert I’. I 1 cngai, who resigned Uha devote all of his time to he said, hut will retail chaiiimiM of the board company.
NO I It K PO \ (iN
In the Putnam Ciri lemhei Term, 1932, Suit <’ u No 139IK; AH' II vs. Julia Ni Uo , et al. < 'ill' now the ; la : t Sutherlin, hi attornev i "inj 1 lint herein, tog 1 Ii livit I a competent resi ience, upon dilige l.1, iic i ndant, XV.irtn ! unkh wn; and that - party to sail action i actio te quiet Die lit! tiff to the follow ini' •!' e-t ate iii I'i iiimn i 'oiint ' it-; The north half " ■ mi;ter of Se lion 2 Noitb, Range 'I Wes CM'S, mole or les . N i.e in th;re r o|i i> I lit fondant an I ah i i evi that claim t n it'! " ti -t ite, that 'ink •• i'i car on the 1st ihy 1!)'»2, in t' e Put il i ' the Haiti' h"ing the ' '' Si ; tend i'i 1 l ei in. I ' House in th Uitv "i Gi mid < ounty and St ' ! •' 1 ieovir to sail comp 1 i 1 ' will he he ;rd ail -i'' ini
1 o!r ahsetice.
IN XVn NED ' \\ i 1 FliI 1
In t lint a et my h'i'id •' l ' 11
se I i I sai I ( ourl at ' 1 ‘ • Jerk then' f, in h * < a; tie, Indiana, th 8t 1
gust, 1!’32. ,,, I)n n
JOHN W HKK0B
that
t leik of the f’litn.iin i XV. M. Sutherlin. Attorn.')•
Hi
Rooc
Mi
rovia
Pr
retur Berli Gree;
Mr
India
a>
