The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 May 1936 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1936.

THIS STORE WILL BE OPEN FRIDAY EVENING UNTIL 9 O’CLOCK. CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY HOSIERY For Your Vacation Needs.

PR.

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"EVERYDAY” Chiffnn ... a ahailowIrM 4 tlirraH boor for alrert aud biiainr.* wtar.

Manv women are taking ail* vanlage of tlm caving our Phoenix Hoeieiy Club offers. You too ran save! Come in and enroll. Then you hny your hoaiery as you need them. I .arh purchase is recorded on your membership card and when you have hougnt 12 pairs we give you 1 extra pair with our compliments.

Kaysers Washable Silk Gloves Whiten, Navy and Colors. Exclusive Styles.

69c ~ $1.00

Pair

Men’s Preshrunk, Sanforized WASH TROUSERS New Styles mill I’ulterus $1.50 “ d $1.95 p » ir

S. C. PREVO COMPANY

CHATEAU Tonight Don’t Miss You May Be Sorry Come Early If Aon Want A Seat. ELISABETH BEKGNER "ESCAPE ME NEVER” Friday and Saturday Tlie Only Western In Town And Its A Paramount.

In Smith Plot

'Zone DESERT' COED A PoTjonvount PI^Kif* .

KIDDIKS FKKK till'TS SATURDAY AT 2 P. M. Don't miss tin* last chapter KEN .MAYNARD in ".MYSTERY MOUNTAIN" Also 2 tiooil Comedies

5 Days Starting Sunday “SUTTERS GOLD”

ed into being what is described as the world's largest collection of embryo brains. The collection is used by workers of the institute's mor phology department in studying the structural varibility of different regions of the cortex in the adult human, the embryo and animals, beginning with

anthropoid apes.

Included in the brain collection, for purposes of study, the brains of outstanding persons such as the poet Mayakovsky, Klara Zetkin. Kutbyshey and others are preserved. Antong experiments of the institute i are included some on animals that

New York Grand Jury returned true bills charging extortion against Max D. Krone (above, a private detective and A. Henry Ross, attorney, on complaint of Alfred Smith, Jr., who claims he paid hush money to a total of $10,000 to the accused men.

| known in Sutton, W. Va„ her birth- ! place, as Susan Fisher, has had unusual success in Europe. She was a member of the Berlin Staats Opera in 1931 and was singing at the Opera Comique with Kauri Volpi last June when the ilirector of the Metropolitan. Edward Johnson, heard her and engaged her. She left for New York with her husband. Harry Jacobsen, whom she had married secretly in 1934, to make her debut at the Metropolitan, where she gave 14 performances singing six different roles. She likewise gave numerous concerts. Miss Fisher still is thrilled and a little surprised at the realization of her success in the United States. •'Success in Europe creeps up on you so imperceptibly.” says the singer, "that you don't realize it is yours, even you have it. In America, it is a sudden roar that almost bursts your eardrums. There is stupendous applause coining from a huge audience, such as can be seated only at the Metropolitan. "There is an equally stupendous amount of newspaper space consecrated to your efforts, whereas in j France the reaction of the publis is j considered about everything else and j the critics are permitted to enter an 1

GRANADA

Last Times Tonight JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD'S THE COUNTRY BEYOND

Tomorrow & Saturday SOMETHING NEW IN excitement; WHISPERING SMITH BY NAME — BUT DYNAMITE * SMITH BY NATURE!

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Kiss Cost Him job

R. Elwrn Matteson (above) 36-year-old principal of the Andover, N. J., high school is shown above after he had been ousted for “conduct un- 1 becoming a teacher.” Charges had ;been brought against him by a 15-year-old girl, who said he had kissed her.

OPERA

SUCCESS FOUND

VARIABLE

PARIS 'UP' American patriotism' is so strong that it is more difficult j for an American singer to make good in the United States than in Europe, I accor ding to Suzanne Fisher, youth- j ful lyric soprano who returned to France recently after a season at the New York Metropolitan Opera. “Americans arc so proud of their own compatriots when they become successful that they expect them to he better than any one else in the east.” said Miss Fisher in explana- j tion." "There is a growing feeling of nationalism in American musical! circles. We American singers are welcomed and encouraged with great enthusiasm but we are not permitted to make any of the little slips which might be tolerated by a foreign singer. One might even say that America has adopted a parental spare-the-rod-and-spoil-thc-child attitude to her own singers.” The American opera singer, who is

IKOtJI OIN MEN DISPLAY | Montagnais and the Algonquins have FLAIR FOR HIGH WORK found a variety of occupations suitable to their talents. Depending on MONTREAL 'UP' True to the the locality, Indians of Quebec ale

traditions which history has built around them as the most aggressive and daring of the eastern North American Indians with whom preRovolutionary colonists had to contend. the Iroquois Indians of Quebec province have found their place in the modern industrial scheme as steeplejacks and structur al steel workers. Constituting approximately onefourth of the remaining population of more than 12,000 full-blooded Indians living on 15 reservations in the province, the warlike Iroquois have prov cd, parodoxically, the most amend able to "industrialization." Construction engineers in Quebcr City and Montreal say that "high work" has an unusual appeal to the modem Iroquois brave whose antecedents lived in onestory tepees, and that the courage and agility these red men have inherited stand them in good scaling towers and guiding gird

ers.

Members of the other principal In-

trappers, farmers, stockmen, fruit pickers and packers, loggers, guides, boatmen, fishermen, hunters and trappers. The Hurons, once a powerful race, liave been reduced to a small remnant of fewer than 300 survivors. Indians play an important and conspicious role in the tourist business which is one fo the province’s biggest industries. At Caughnawaga 'Indian for "At the Rapids" > a settlement a few miles south of Montreal at the head of I^achine Rap ds, one group of Iroquois, "doing business" under the name of "The Square

Deal Rand of Indians." has

model Indian village,

built a

MOSCOW LEADS IN CONDUCTING BRAIN RESEARCH MOSCOW 'UP' Moscow has a "brain trust" which has nothing to do with politics or economic planning. Its official title is "The Moscow Scientific Research Institute of

than fir tars surviving in Quebec, tire Brain,” and its operations have cail-

12 West Washington St.

MERIT

Is He Insane?

have had one hemisphere of their | cerebra removed, described as important to physiologists. Another de-, partment studies electrical currents ( emanating from parts of the brains of both animals and human beings. NEW HARVESTER REDUCES COSTS, CUTS 47 CROPS MINNEAPOLIS. (UP) — A new machine, by which cost of harvesting may be cut from 19 to 2 cents a bushel, has been announced here. The harvesting unit will cut and thresh crops in one operation. It will operate on power available to the average farmer and will sell for approximately the same price as the

power binder.

Recent tests at the University of Illinois revealed that the machine would eliminate the necessity of buy- j ing twine, shocking the grain, ami would eliminate extra harvest hands. I according to the announcement. The unit is powered by a two-plow tractor and driven by a single man. I It will cut 47 different crops. Instead of the usual 10 or 20 foot cutter bar * that forces the grain into a 20-inch spike tooth cylinder, the new ma-! chine operates with a five-foot cutter bar ami a fan type rubber flail of the same width. The grain never reaches the flail any thicker than it stands in the field.

A

O'Brien WHISPERING SMITHjfittfc -V. .iifc • IRENE WARE* KENNETH THOMSON OircrtrW by DsvidHowsrd From *h* Dory by FRANK H SPEARMAN

THE NEW DELUX V0NCASTL1 New Seats. Always tool Last Times Tonight ANN HARDING —in— “THU WITNESS CHAIR”

TONIGHT’S THE BIG NIGHT! DON’T MISS. Tomorrow & Saturday The call of the Wild is answr, In the Love of a Girl and Mj Wild horse courage and dog devotion in a drama of human love! Tina‘dir

As the state rested in the trial of John Fiorenza (above) for the murder of Mrs. Nancy Evans Titterton, mystery story writer, in her fashionable New York apartment, Fiorenza’s counsel revealed that his defense will be based on the contention that the confessed slayer is insane.

auditorium just as a gesture of courtesy from the management.” The young prima donna thinks that success is a combination of luck and hard work added to natural talent. She says that she has never belonged to the "hitch your wagon to a star” school but always has worked hard in hopes of eventually having a chance to show her ability. Five years ago in Berlin she was playing insignificant roles and considered she was lucky if given the part of a page allowed to say "Dinner is served, my lord.” When a leading soprano suddenly was taken ill and Suzanne Fisher was to take her place, the unknown American singer was as much i surprised as everyone else. She laughs and says. "I just guess I had a lucky break.” *1* -h + PALESTINE + Mrs. Henry Osborn + *1* *9 -1- -J- d* d- 4* T Mrs Michel. Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Michael, Junior Smith and Beulah

Hill, JOHN ARLEDGE LOUISE LATIMER MORONI OLSEN “LIGHTNING’’ the Jog, and the hone, “WARRIOR’’ skotadio PICJUEE DutcttJ by GLENN WON tobtn inL, jiiochic (>r«4uc<r

Smith all of Indianapolis spent | day with M. E. Smith Born to Mr. and Mrs. Glenn I Saturday morning. May 2,'i a 7j lb. girl. Mrs. Marie Oliver of near Mod town visited part of last week \ her mother Mrs. Fred Beck Mrs. Ted Noll and son of bridge spent last Friday with I Fred Beck. Miss Ruth Bowman has been sick the past few days. Eli Osborne and family of G« fild are visiting his brother Osborn and family. Mrs. Bert Miller and Mrs. Miller called on Mrs. Henry Friday evening.

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