The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 May 1936 — Page 4

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SPECIAL—MATINEE In Order Tlmt Kvery One Will Have A Chance ToSee This Pielure Show Starts At 4 P. M. Thursday and Runs Continuous Von Can Sign A Curd Anytime Thursday CHATEAU - THEATRE Only Two More Days — Tonight and Thursday ONE OK THE BEST ■•H TI KES EVER I'KAYED IN THIS TOWN. — A LX. IN NATl'KAL COLOR. FRED MacMURRAY and SYLVIA SIDNEY Henry Fonda and Other Stars ‘ THE TRAIL OF THE LONESOME PINE” Little Theatre With The Big Pictures

ROACH DA I.E COMMENCEMENT

Commencement exercises for the class of 1 St.'t6 of Roachdale high school were held April .‘10 in the Presbyterian church at Roachdale. j Twenty-six members of the class were present. Oneta Smith was con- : fined to her home by illness. Speak- | ers Included Professor Hildebrand of DcPauw university. Thomas Taylor and Janies Myers. The following program was given. I Processional and instrumental mu- | sic by the orchestra. Invocation, Asa E. Giger. Salutatory adress. Thomas E. Taylor. Address, Prof. Hildebrand. Instrumental music. Junior Irwin and Dana Wilson. Presentation of citizenship awards, Harold Garriott.

Presentation of scholarship awards.

J. M. Stafford.

Valedictory—James Myers. Presentation of diplomas, Lee Wal-

ters, principal.

Instrumental music Junior Irwin

ami Dana Wilson.

Benediction, James A. Risk.

Recessional, orchestra.

Members of the graduating class arc Juanita Modlin Hatileld, Helen ; Louise Bales. Claude VV. Baker. Maryj Ann Isbell, Thomas E. Taylor. Lois. Young. Ooneta Smith, Margaret Peril' Skelton, Sara Martha Hatfield. | Forest Hicks, Charles M. Parker, Cecil B. Perkins, Ruth Eldridge, Janet Garner, Robert Earl Holland, Lethia Wilson, Dorothy C. Booker,

With

DE. O. BROMLEY OXNAM | President DePanw University |*

The Next War

General Ludcndorff, German Chtef of Staff during the World War. has written a hook called "The Totalitarian War.” By looking into the minds of men who determine policy.

Martha Jean Sands, Thomas James we may be able to predict with Rady, Madonna Dodd, Mildred Max- some accuracy. What is ahead in inc Davies, Martha Ann Wilson, Europe? Look into Ludcndorffs

James Lynn Myers, James Allen mind!

1 Risk, Margaret Fall, Asa E. Giger.

GIVES PLEASING RECITAL Grcencastle heard some very beautiful singing last night when Howard Jarratt. tenor, sang a profgram of some fifteen songs in Meharry Hall. The program was opened with a group of Donaudy, all lyrical in character. After the lovely “Unii Furtiva Lagrima” from Donizetti's Elisir d'Amore ‘which Mr. Jarratt sang most excellently‘ the program proceeded to a group of songs by Grieg, Hallstrom and Kjerulf, sung in the Norwegian. Most outstanding in this group was the stirring "Tak for dit Rad” (Thanks for thy counsel) in which a young man insists upon learning by his own cxpericnc. ratlin than accepting the words of an oldci and wisei- person, the dangers and thrills of guiding a boat at sea. Mr. Jarratt shows constant improvement. In addition to his top voice which is always sure fire there was a rich and colorful lowei voice which has not been displayed before. If he continues to improve a: lie has in the last two years, we pre diet a very fine vocal future. ^ Mr. Jarratt was accompanied by ilia wife, Ingeborg Jarratt.

OLD IRISH (TLTKKE BELFAST. Ireland. (UP) Excavation of a prehistoric tomb near Dunloy In County Antrim bus reveal-

ed the burial customs of people who inhabited Ireland 2,000 years before Ch rist. Archeologists of Queen's university here said the discoveries showed '•an astonishing variety of structural skill and culture among the people who evidently brought to Ireland the first knowledge of civilized life.” In the ancient tomb or burial chamber the excavators found traces of the cremation of human bodies as well as gifts to the dead, including t wo arrow heads, several knives and breads. The most important find was two finely polished stone axes, keen enough to cut paper sharply, which lay at the door of the tomb. SHOCK CITIES HIIEt'MATISM ALVINSTON, Out., (IIP) Lee Bosburg. a garage worker, was nearly killed when he grabbed a live wire, but he was cured of chronic rheumatism. Bosburg became entangled in a network of wires charged with electricity, and was rescued just in time. His rheumatism has not both ered him since, he says. CITY HOLDS TIN CAN PARADE SALT LAKE CITY, (UP) A tin can parade in which citizens marched, each witli six tin cans tied together with a string, was held here to open the annual city cleanup, point up. plant up. fix up. campaign of the Junior Chandler of Commerce.

Reported King's Fiancee

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Fine-car with

Practice Joins Low Price in

Hands the

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f'j m

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I >%ri

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This is a recent portrait of Princess Alexandrine Loirne of Denmark. 22-year-old daughter of Prince Haralil, brother of King Christian, who is reported favored as the bride of King Edward VIII of England. lendon dmpatchea indicate the King and Alexandrine, his third cousin, will j announce their betrothal in the autumn. '

I Ludemlorff believes that the wars of yesterday were struggles between I armies, not betwen nations. In past I wars foreign policy was superior to military recommendations. ami .while foreign policy was adapted to I military needs, the war command was subordinate to the political pol- | icy makers. Ludcndorff believes that it was the friction between the 'military and the political leaders that cost Germany the war. He thinks the military would have used the submarine regardless of protest and would have won tiie

j war.

j War is exalted in his thinking. It i Is a biological phenomenon necessary | lor the conservaton of the race, and | he goes so far as to state that the next war which will demand th' > ! service of the entire nation, will be

racial war.

His idea of a totalitarian state involves every necessary coercive measure to insure conformity, the crushing out of all religious or ik> litical non-conformity, all in the in lerest of national cohesion. These measures are to be taken before war so that the nation may b‘

ready foi war.

Ludcndorff would not declare war He would strike, bomb the indus trial centers of the enemy by air at tack, and launch a terrible offen sivc on land. To be successful thr totalitarian state waging a totalitar ian war must submit to the will oi the military commander and place its total resources, physical am' spiritual, at his order.

What Is Ahead?

What is ahead in Europe? Wliai is the sense of signing pacts in tht light of such morality, shared by the way by military men in othe lands than Germany? What mannc' of mind is this that would destroy intellectual freedom, scrap thi common principles of honesty, ex tirpate morality, and launch a na lion upon a murderous assault upoi other nations without warning, am in the Interests of a superior race? Are these men insane? No wondei Ludcndorff has no use for Chris tianity. Tim Sermon on the Mourn and Ludendorff's Totalitarian War Criticizing Mussolini's use of gaso? n Ethiopia, cautous Stanley Ral.i ’V" "What guarantee have w< that they will not be used in Eur “pc'."’ Then follows a propheth sentence, "I l.elievo if such „ thin , were done the raging people of cv erv country, torn with passion, suf fering, and horror, would wipe out every government in Europe am' you would have n state of anarch, from end to end as man's protes' against the wickedness of thosi

in high places."

Unintelligent communists and ig imrant capitalists talk much on th< war question. The communist iTe •lares that capitalists favor war amee it stimulates business and

silences revolutionary

The insists

logic of capitalist the world market

war. S'Nine

discussion that the

competition for eventuates in

that an-

wai means

are sufficiently cooperate with

proposal to maintain

capitalists of militaristic

spirit tlnik a Ittle blood-lettng is not a harmful procedure, and that war strengthens the morale of tin nation. Intelligent capitalists know

that Baldwin is right, and

other extended world revolution. If they intelligent they vvill

every sane peace. Why ?

Sectional strife

| The answer lies in these facts

I'lie ""Xt war will begin as a

flirt led ween vertical sections Picj t iire nation as a vertical section with Us rich at the top of the sec '■oil. its middle class | n the center y 1 ,MV,r nt ,h( ' bottom Suppose the nation so pictured is at war with another nation, a vertical sec"on with its rich, middle class and poor. These sections may he likened to two tail hull,ling* upo „ elth|>i . side Of thn street, with the people on nP floors of one building shootling across the street at people on

9, l t 10 "'* 1 of that building.

t em of the opinion, that a war of I several years will result in | ’banco of alignment of the sections | U will cease to be a vertical alien- , ment. It will become horizontal The !

poor at the base of the

GRANADA Today and Tomorrow

Hist I Footprints!

Plus—Andy Clyde Comedy and Melody Maxtor—"Ramon Ramos and Orchestra”

will come to think that they have more in common with each other han with the classes above them They are likely to join forces and tiie horizontal section composed of masses, may be fighting another horizontal section, namely, those ibovc them, whom some call the

lasses.

In a world, a war between unions, international war. is likely to become a war between social groups, ir class war. There is nothing moiicrriblc than fratricidal strife. Such i conflict upon a world scale would ie n disaster calculated to destroy '.ivilization itself. It must be avoid--d at any cost. It. will not be avoid'd by gnorant persons whoare already marching down the very ‘venues that led to MlH. A halt mist lie called by intelligent Ameri•ans who would save America from •atastropho. '■j •:* -i- -j* -i- -p j."} •• FILLMORE *♦ *t« .?• •?« .?• O. E. R. No. 1Kt> will meet in regdar session Thursday evening. Mrs. Until Ragan entertained the >ay Gleaners class Monday evening Seventeen members and two guests vere present. A social hour followed he business meeting. The hostess erved refreshments. The next mectng will be in June with Mrs". Lolia

■Vade.

The Mothers Afternoon club met ’uesday with Mrs. Ruth Gorham. Jinetccn members responded to roll all. A Bible story read by Mrs. Jllio Wright was followed by prayer •y Mrs. Katie Bnstin. Mrs. Dovie Iryan presented a paper on the orTin of Mothers day. Refreshments vere served by the hostess during he social hour. Mrs. Hazel Bryan ■ill be hostess at the June meeting Mr. and Mrs. Perry Ward and Jetty Jean Wilbur of Indianapolis ) md Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Whicker >f Amo were entertained Sunday at he home. of Mr. and Mrs. Jess

Slliott.

Willis Itastin of St. Louis is visit ng Mrs. Katie Bastin and liimily. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sallust of Main■ridge spent Sunday with Mrs. Mary Toctor and Mr. and Mrs. Frank

Vhitc.

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hicks and dr. and Mrs. (). N. Hicks and sons ittended the funeral of a relative at ,yons. Sunday. Mrs. Walter Barker spent the vcckend in Indianapolis witli her laughters. Mrs. Marie Clements and Mrs. Zola Stuart. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bryan and laughter of Greencastle spent Sunlay with Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Mc-

Camey.

Louclla Smith is visiting Mr. and Irs. Paul Itrown in Indianapolis. Sunday guests of Mrs. Kate Camp-

Unjov the hwu Voncastle Today & Toi

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bell were Rev. aivl Mu. J Shockley of Indianapolis, Mr| Mrs. Albert Hunter aiul daig) Coatesville. and Mr. and Campbell of Grcendastle. Court land Sinclair of Indiaiq spent Sunday with his mother,} Elizabeth Sinclair. Mr. and Mrs. (\liiert llrni moved to the llunter propertfl

day.

Min". Vii.".ini 1 Elliott attrnddj commencement »t Amo evening. She alno attended thi din;; of M1:.: Man rleen id. Hnli j Forest Mi la an, Mirs GlidenBI graduated and manicd Uie sau^

ning.

1 Mr. and Mis R. K Drill daughter of Indianapolis rpall weekend v.olh Mr. and Ms .l|

Hubbard

Rev. and Mrs Wilbur D»jr<! phi spent ia Mailin'; his pamkl

md Mrs. Frank Day. Mrs. G. L. Swisher of Indi#

ipent the weekend at home. .Mrs. Mary Proctor. Mr and I Frank White attended the cornua nent at Bainbridgo Fridhy Of

Mrs. Janice Carpenter o( I

spent lust week with her m*

Mrs. Kate Campbell.

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i o m ini; STA1I6N Mrs. I rank Wood*

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’mis. Valei in Layne Siienl >C with Wayne Phillips and fan#! Mr. and Mrs. (ii ft Cox wH

dy called on Mi and Mm. .■n and family Monday

Mildred find EuRene Smythfl Monday with Mrs Joe W* L Mary Ann Hand of PiuiriUM^ Mh woDkrnH with ^ J Guests of Mr. and Mo ^ Woods were Mr. and Mu

Mr. and Mrs. HarokU

Lewi*. Kenneth

Mr, and Mrs. f‘ lis l'®*!

■ihue.k. Duane Jenkins

Miss Romona

Smith of Danvi»

Waneta and BOhby

i 1

Raymond (wei» '

Da mail oM

(Harence

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MULLINS DRUG STORE

URSl CHOICE OF f)lSCHIM«NATIN<^ PAINTE 1 } 5 SlNCl

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