The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 20 October 1933 — Page 4
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THE DAILY BANNER. GREENCASTLE. INDIANA. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 20. 1933^
For This Week We Are Offering Many Attraetixe Bargains riiroiijrlij r r oul The Ston*. .... We mention here Just a Few Items
f I’epperoll Sheets torn ,Y
Loxelx I’laid Blankets. 70x80
hemmed, size 1 81 x 99 Special Oz I. |
good weight ’"xUf* Each
(■uarant.M'ii fast colnr I’lTcalo. Hi imhfs 1 “ , wid«-. Yard . *
(inod ma\v ouIuir '.ird wide lailh liRhl and 1 dark colors, special dd !■<»-
A. I! ( l ine quality print 1‘crtalo'. (iuaranteed 1 Q.» fast colors. >d- Xt/C
CHIN \*W.AItK M-ld I M " ,, 10c 25c 50c
S. <:. I’KEVO COMI'W'I
HOMt: SIOKK
drew their .shaio of glances, too . . ■ The Irish have banned John Farrow’s novel, “Laughter Ends.” Maybe he’ll change the ending for the next edition . . You can be glad you don t have to pay Bruce CaJiot's daily telephone bill to Reno. They burst out laughing when Alice Brady tells the names of her I >or dogs: Sam my. Jessie De Brady, .\ine Hopkins and Hot ('ha Igivinia .Marion . . . Florine McKinney i> going with Billie Bakeweil these days. I hey ma e a foursome at the Club Ballyb »o with Helen Mack and Ben Alexander . . . Illness is taking great toll on film sets. I^itest case is Leonard Carey, who had done two weeks’ work : - the butler in “The Vinegar Tree" when be had to rush to the hospital for an operation The veteran Halliwell Hobbes replaces ini . . . Prank | Morgan is so crazy about his new yacht, the Alma Ann. that he has been sleeping on it nights. i’ette Davis was credited with II rescues during a summer she worked a the only fleminine lifeguard at Ogunquit Beach on the Atlantic coast.
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦••♦♦♦♦♦♦a* ♦ Public School News ♦ l ♦ j (Patch Week In I he Banner) ♦ ♦<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
.Ho£:'eVwooi>^^
HOLLYWOOD. Some pro Deal joker is having more fun at Ginger Rogers’ expense p’or week-, the flair.ing-hahvd star has bieu leceiving . senes of duni.ing letters fn m i -e. d r nnpany in Paradise, Pa. Now tbec’ve climaxed the campaign by hinting at hei arrest unless he semi- them <0.411 f,, v seeds, which they insist she promised to sell. The best laugh of the mixtip was the letter fr 11 a jerkwater detective agency in which they inch -il a new . paper picture of ;i, man in prison clothes with the ‘ aption: "If. ordered seeds but forg^il to -end the money.’’ Ginger would love to know who sent in her name. A jovial group wn a the ed around IV. C. f ields at t e Colony Club th" other evening when A| Kaufman came up “Too bad. VV. t .." he -wnpathized. “I just saw your picture and Baby Leroy steals it." f ields leaped to his feet. “How ")ld is that kail V” he cried. "One year? Wait until he gets some teeth and I’ll knock Litem out for him.” Winning a 1 x contract was exciting enough for Winnie’Shaw, Cleveland night duh entertainer, but the bigger thrill i.ame the other night after her ana .d in I! llywood.
I The torch singer, a striking brunette of Irish tnl Hawaiian pareiit- | age, was sitting in the Beverly Hills Brown Derby alone. She was 1 neI. nme and blue and -lie looked it. Suddenly, a waiter came up .and handed her a ! aided note. She opened it and her unbelieving eyes read: “You look like a stranger in Hollyv.\>od. I am Mary Pickford and I I would nke to introduce myself t you.” It was Mary, too. She brought Iter I nie e, Gwynne, over to the new-com- ! it's table, e itted foi a while, gave Wmnie her telephone number and 1 isked her to cull.
Storm signals ate up already on jthe I'ifi Dorsay-Maurice Hill romance. She's insistent upon his finjishing bis medical education and becoming a duct r, while young Hill is | - iid to be equally determine t t'f take la job 0.1 the Orient. | I- it relevunt, 1 wonder, that lift (and I yle Tallu t are flying to San Pianei in on Die -ame plane to see i thi Stanford-L'. ( . L. A. football game ?
I ne blonde \ eree T*‘asd:ile and the dappi r Adolphe Menjou were the fo cus of all eyes ut the Beverly Wilshire Gold Ko m the other evening . . . Bute Davis and Irwin Gelsey
This week marks the dose of the first grading perh I for the year. It is an excellent opportunity for pupils and parents to take an inventory of each indivi lual's pi'ngram. Grade
Lane home. A short talk was given on the life of former Governor Une. Henry Myers, who won a drip to the Century of Progress at Chicago be getting 40 new subscriptions to Dm Indianapolis Mews, told about bis (ij|, and showed sevaral pictures for the Huosier room program in room ~ lad Thursday. Others who had been I,, the fair supplemented by telling of -nine of the things they had seen. The High Scho I Parent Teacher uciath n hold it- first meeting Monday afternoon in Die high school iiulitorium. Mr. Bishop expressed , veral needs of the school, and Mr. Boston stated that our ultimate pur-.-e this year w;e- to do the best and most for each individual as far as •h tr interests anu abilities would allow Miss Hick - and m< thers of sevral eighth gtude pupils were hosto tea f, Hewing the business
meeting.
The Junior R. i ( m -s council of the \| ,rtha Ki ipa' -e ioo| held its n nthly meetii fue-day afternoon. \fter a brie '• mess session the e in. il w as wn some beautiful 1 11f 111os whi had been sent to lie Red Cross the Mary F.muna I ones - hool. Tht se wore I "in Japan and Greece and were very 1 it and interesting. I hey were sf wvn in the various ,'eoins md wer m ah appreciated. I he History and Travel duh of the local high sch a! held one of their most interesting meetings 1 f the year last Friday. M Boston told of hi-
DREAM THEATRE CLOVERDALE Saturday & Sunday JANET GAYNOR & HENRY CARAT in ADORABLE" \lso Comedy • makkiage hi noK" CARTOON 10c and 20c COMING Wednesday and Thursday Bing Crosby in College Humor
nils will he. di-iributed next lues- experiences in a them Michigan in day noon tor the lirst six gi ! <!c- and uhich he discu ed plant and animal Wednesday i nior-set jn the ra. developing uppw ior high sehi ol. peninsula. He also related some of
• his fishing experiences.
During the ab.-eiue of Mr. Skel- j
ton on Oct. 11, the home room held a John Richard Long entertained the program with oflire - ti charge, f.iurth grade o' ihe Jones school with
(imige Davis started an interesting st ry eailed “Thu Baseliall Detective." which he finis!.ed at the next meeting a Oct. 12. Ossie Dickey reviewed a short story, “The Ransom of Rol Chief.” d Anne Clippinger started “'I e Masque of the Red Death,” by
Edgar Allen Poe.
Betty Oxnam, a sixth grade pupil from the second ward, gave an interesting talk to the fifth and sixth grades of the Mart a Kidpath - hoal Tuesday morning. Betty desi rihed a fi w of her experien cs and the things she saw while in Egypt this summer. A Unit fifty students from the history department of the high school went to (’nawfordsville Yor the historic field day la-t Wednesday'. During the morning they visited the Lew Wallace estate. An interesting program on toe life of the author was g.xeit. In the parly afternoon they \ -iti I Spring Lodge. There the caretaker sh .wed them many unusual birds. Later thoy went through the
a weiner roast usi Friday afternoon. Fourth grade children i f the Martha Ridpath sch' I have bean studying “Bird Records" in their reading cla.-'i“s this v •> “Airplane Rec- • :ds” were also rought and used in
their social scien.o work.
Dimmed the stoiy “The Halloween party” Wednesday morning. The children read this in class and Esther Hildebrand read the story to the entire school before the piny began.
ales Jim Tully, one ttme itinerant, who turned sifccessful author. That isn't all- In fact, to hear Jeff Davis, Cincinnati preskient of 'the hobo guild, talk, that.isn't the ls*gin ning- Fir.-t. Davis said th* nation’s hoboes applaud and heartily support Charles Bjiencer Chaplin, movie comedian, in his assertion recently that Tully is “just a ex-bindle stiff ” Ikivis siiid further that Tully shows “ringtail” tendencies, just falls short of being “fuzzytail,” ami is •umler ; some suspicion of being a “dingbat.” The elegant name of Jeff Davis’ j fraternity is International Itinerant Workers’ Union and the less elegant i terms used by the president are de- ' Tint'd a - follows: HINDI.E STIFF — Carries his belongings in a bundle, a practice scofj fed at my hoboes. RINGTAIL*—'A boaster. F1././YTA1L — One who think-, he is better than his fellow men simply because he has roamed a bit. DINGBAT — One who takes credit ' for work he never did, a lowliest trf the low.
I EX AS FIRM OFFERS INSULTS AT 25 (ENTS
HOUSTON, Tex., (UP) — For 25
Student - from Dr. Middleton's psy-
chology department of DePauw uni-j cents you can insult anybody in Housversity liegan testing the children by ! ton. That is the gist <f a proposition the Slant id Benot tests this week in offered in a circular being distributed
.(•mi Unjii CiiR:A\^A\Dj SATURDAY ONLY MAT. night V* ^
second ward.
KOAtHDW.E WOMAN IS sWINDI.EI) Bf STRANGER
The Danville Republican says that Mrs. Nan Smith of Roachdale was robbed .i>2ii by a well dressed stranger, Friday afternoon. She answered a knock on the door and a man stepped into the room and inquired about her health and her son, Walter, of North Salem. Mrs. Smith engaged in conver-ation with him and he said he \xa- “nt theie to look after her
eyes.
Placing a fluid in her eyes, he asked if that improved them any, and receiving a reply that it did, he demanded a fee of $27. Mrs. Smith, who is 82 year old, remonstnated with him, but he frightened heur so that
The Travel .lab of room 2J at their she consented to write a check. As lust meerting. enjoyed a talk given by " :1S H fD’ r banking hours he teHarold Stewav n his travels in the quested uer to write the cheek on the
Duckworth grocery store. Mrs. Smith called the stoie and asked the pro1 priet r if he would cash it for that
said he
The Junior F; I Cross of the Jones school is “adopting” six elderly people in the eon muuity xvho are to be remembered each month with gifts.
Hilly Kim er recently captured a terrapin and showed it to the children of the Jones school. Second xv.it;t ixxa- the recipient of nearly 200 narcissus bulbs from Mr. and Mrs. James <Byrkit this week. Second grade of ec nd ward pan-
in office buildings and other places. It appeals to the criti ■ who desires to aim his shaft at another while remaining anonymous himself. All the critic does is send 25 cents, the intended recipient's name, and the criti-
cism.
The organization, which gives a postoffice address, promises to forward the "subscriber’s” complaint in the form of a neat letter on plain stationery, guaranteeing that the sender’s name is not revealed. Prospects tire invited to heckle their neighbors by mail for playing t ip radio too late or too early, npglecting their yards, talking too much, using slang express! ns. complaining of illness, borrowing mcney, matches and cigarettes, thinking their children “too good” to play with other children, an 1 smoking smelly pipes. Other targets suggested are “the woman who talks continually while playing bridge, or is too slow in bidding and playing; the woman who J tells everything she hears, regardless of the truth, and the woman who uses too much rouge, perfume or lipstick.” EASIER ( RKI)HS FOR I \RMKRS OF < ANADA IS URGED MON I REAL (UP)—Establishment of easiei credit terms for Canadian farmers may develop from the inquiry of the McMillan commission into the Dominion's hanking system,
it is predicted here.
. iv. ivvx ri << .i n. n » " different p inte of the coamie-
CINCINNATl, 0. (UP) Hoboes of • . .
, stuns investigation, great emphasiAmerica, a national organisation of ^ J
amount. Mr. Duckworth
cculd not let her have that much but would let her hax’e $20 This satisfic'd the stranger and he received the money from the store. He left town immediately and no trace of him has
been found.
HOBOES SNI B JIM TULLY
gentlemen of the road, flatly repudi-
the question of rural
Prtienfed by JOSEPH M. SCHENCK The sun was his! Andthnj was his! The moonondi) stars —All his! No woi ALJOUl sang so all the world touldj MADGE EVANS FRANK MORGAN HARRY IANG00N CAR D M)N & COM ED) WB£T.—MM. SATURDAY NIGH111 ij SUNDAY & MOM 1
credits, complaint 'f'ttll hank - ■ ■ .1 !'y thattH auv farmer is unable to gi’i 1 It i.- mi e; ■ i th< 'ini favors provision of 08<siffJ terms than those which art | ent available.
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FOR ALWAYS LUCKIES PLEASE Choice tobaccos rolled right—no loose ends
COAL TRICKERS GEM INK RR \ZIL 111.04 K (OAI. NO DELAY IN LOAD! N(i )ol R I ID ( h lurn south from the National Road at Rra/.d, lndiiin'"( | Road No. 5tt, gat J 1-10 miles, then turn La>t .mil g" 1 I'® 1 mine. Our coal in union mined and is sized oxer shak. i siwR.. Hoosierville l5io<k hint Telephone Brazil *HS|.
WORLD'S FAIR ARRIVAL
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Always thcjtncsi tohaccox ALWAYS tln jincst U'orhnwnshifi
AlWAI-S Luchicsplease/ When , moking , L , lcky h>v , vou
noticed the long white ash? That’s
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the sign of fine, choice Turkish and Domestic tobaccos. And have you noticed how fully packed Luckies are with these choice tobaccos-rolled right —so round —so pure—with no loose ends. Luckies always plcaSe!
Cowrlfhi, |»1J, Th. American TobaocoComaanr. it’s toasted * S FOR I'HR( »AT PROTEUIION—I OR BETTER TASTE
. «• our m) ,,| PrM i - 1 • *' 1 11 : *l air gg'iinrt' in Chiengo Dat-v lloorlHii ' *' -hown holding the new arrival as ho indulgos in h - D"" • milk •
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