The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 May 1936 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, (J BEEN CASTLE, INDIANA

FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1936.

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CHATEAU-

Tonight and Saturday

t ome ICarly If Vou Want \ Sent.

THE ONLY WESTERN IN TOWN Its \ Ziine tirey Paramount — It Must Be tiood.

White man battle} red for ancient treasure in this thrilling romance!

witli Larry Buster Crabbe Robert Cummings Marsha Hunt Tom Keene • A Paramount Picture

Also l (mhmI < oinccli«*s

“W HO IS TH>; KATTLKK ?”

Src The ('hapt^r of

Ivl N MAVNAKI) in “.MVSTKItV MOI VI AIN” Kiddies - Free Prizes - Saturday At 2 P. M. 5 DAYS — s| \KTs SIMJAY—MIlt.NKiHT SHOW sATI KBAY KBWAKI) \K\OI.n in “SI TTKKS (.Oi l)"

Presidents Daughter Visits Star

HOI It (.PASS \I.AKM PIMKS TKI.KPIIONH <DNVKKSATIONS LEIPZIG. (UP) It no longer is necessary to watch the clock to avoid extra charges in telephoning. When the telephone operator announces that the three minute interval is up. sometimes persons are in the midst of a conversation that cannot be finished without an extra fee. An ingenious telephone call-time has been devised which warns of the

| approach of the end of the call. The 1 device consists of an hour-glass arj rangement which rings a bell at the end of two and a half minutes. The half minute which follows before the end of the telephone period should be long enough to finish the conversation. The phone call alarm which is shown at the Leipzig Fair is devised for world-wide use. as the limit for a telephone call is three minutes in vir tually every civilized country in the world.

Two well-known young women met for the first time when Anna Roosevelt Boettiger. left, daughter of President and Mrs. Franklin P, Roosevelt, visited Joan Crawford on the Hollywood set where she was working on a picture

Today and Saturday

\\ XDVKNTI'KK IMCTUKK

MH LI. KKMK.MBKK! WHISPERING SMITH BY NAME - BUT DYNAMITE SMITH BY NATURE!

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.- doror v..v. O'Brien WHISPERING SMITHSpeofe i.’.w.i»» > ■ ; KINNfTM THOMSON

GRANADA I vONCASTLE

III AI.THI I I.I.Y ( OOI.

TODAY and satfuday

The Call of the Wild Re-echoes in *He Heart of a Girl and Min!

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A drama of wild ifMTUOBP ^

horse courage and

pro'hirct Robert Sisk r r o • f a o: o PICTURE

dog devotion. fcg

U’.th Eg V¥‘'ME«U

10MM P.tl.COGE r.

LOUISE LATIMER Siim

M 0 n 0 NI OLSEN “LIGHTNING”

t;,r rlnf?' and l‘ • ' ' ' “ VVA R R ! 0 n ” ^•<^‘1 e 7 oCl.v.v //^1

A DIM. I) — (>; i; (. \ \ (. ( |)\||. |,.| ( OLOIl < AKTOON _ M.Ws

Try A Banner ( lassified ad. It will nay dividenHs;

“TALK ABOUT SPEED!

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ALL COOKING SPEED RECORDS GO TO THE MODERN GAS RANGE

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TIIKATKK 1*1.1 (IS LOOI’HOI.KS PORTIdrtFIELn Cal . (UPl The Monadic theater has been obliged to put screens ovei its skylights not to kop the bugs out, but the hoys. Light dropped in on the show that wuy in one evening. PH TI RE STOIM OF ('ll A MIES IN LTIIIOPIA I’.FIMi PLANM-a) NEW YORK. (UP) Young women who seek new excursions in feminism might be Inspired by the career selected by Mrs Greta Dored. The daughter of a Norwegian diplomat. Mrs Dored abandoned comforts and luxuries to marry a cameraman and se the wars and woes of the globe. During the Italian invasion of Ethiopia she aided her husband, John Dored, by transporting his films by plane. And now that the fighting is over, Mrs Dored sees even a greater opportunity in Ethiopia. It was at ' her suggestion that Dored wired A I Richard, Paramount newsreel editor in Now York, asking that he be allowed to remain on duty in Africa indefinitely. She remembers that text books were the sole medium from which she gained her knowledge of the early conquests of the Romans. She visualizes children, 25, 50 and 100 Horn now. actually seeing the present day colonization of Ffthionia through the eyes of her husband’s camera. Richard has acceded to this request He quotes Mrs. Dored, who married Dored two days before hostilities commenced in Ethiopia, as saying recently: “The Italian army is now the army of occupation Tomorrow, judging from all indications, it will bo representative of the citizenship of a new Ethiopia. Where else in the world have cameras been available to record a nation in the state of eclipse: studying the birth and evolution of Redheads Preferred!

( hap. IO"Ad\cntures Of Frank Merriwell and Cartoon. KIDDIES! Special (■ills Sat Afternoon They'll Surprise Add!

NOTICE! “The Adventures Of Frank 'lerriwell” will he continued al The VONCASTLE on Saturdays.

such a phase of civilization?’’ I Dored declares he and his wife can live almost as happily in Addis Ababa as in London or New York. EXPERT SOLVES THREE RIDDLES OF E ASTER LSI. AND HONOLULU. (UP) The three great “mysteries’’ of Easter Island I are no riddle to Dr. Alfred Metraux. French ethnologist, who has joined the staff of the Bishop museum here. Although Metraux first went to Easter Island as a representative of the Paris Museum of Ethnology, he transferred his services to the museum here because of his conviction that only long residence in the Pacific would make it possible to solve all of the problems of the origin of the Polynesians and various tribes of ; the Pacific. As regards the colossal statues on the seashore at Easter Island. Dr Metraux declares there should be no mystery whatsoever. The statues, I he points out. weigh only five or six tons. He insists they could have been carved in the inland quarries from which the stone originated and dragged to their present position by natives. Four hundred men could drag them with ropes of native weaving, he says. The second “mystery” which he has deflated is that the Inhabitants of Easter Island are the remnants of the population of a lost continent He identifies tic : as being merely related to the Maor i or New Zealand and calculates tle y came to the island in the 12th centur v. Finally, the third “mystery” of script on wooden tablets found on the island is explained by Dr. Metraux who insists that it is not a true wr itten language but rather- a device to aid the memory of the natives in reciting sacred legends

Starting- Saturday Midnight — Sunday and Monday CLAUDETTE COLBERT -m“SHE MARRIED HER BOSS”

Kansan Looms as G.O. P. Farley

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Gov. Alf Landon Jr

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Jjohn Hamilton |

Henry P. Fletcher [

The increasing intensity with which the national political spotlight is turning on Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas is serving to bring into I corresponding prominence the figure of John Hamilton, Landon cam-1 paign manager. Hamilton, a Topeka, Kas., attorney, began his PM litieal career with election to the Kansas assembly in U'25 where he j served as speaker of the house for two years. He was state com-| nutter chairman from D.I30 until 1932 when he was elected nationall committeeman. It was his outstanding work in building up th!J young Republican organization of Kansas, however, which won himl the attention of national G. 0. P. leaders. It is now widely pfH luted that nomination of Landon would mean election of Hamdtolj to the post of national chairman, replacing Henry P. Hetchor.J Whether or not this comes about, it is a certainty that Hamilton will j be an important figure at the national convention in Cleveland | In June.

Look for // ese 4 features in a gas range f Autitmalu top hxhirt fimr hurnets light unit*motically «m gat i\ turned nn

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Dr* 7huk (hen Ittxulahnn e*f hea*> rock nor/ keep* all

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the heat U belongs

I his fast moving age demands speed . . . Fpccd pot < 1 ly on the race track hut also in the kitchen. Mcdrtn C ;-s (.ookinj; is laps ahead' of any other corkine nrilad. Here you have speed as desired ... a simple iu:si of ;| e (alve and uisUtntli you may have a siinncnpu p ,■ , y full intense heat. I here s no waiting; no pur.ssipp. V I ( t! rr you are cooking with the top burners, the even 01 il.c broiler, the modern j;is range jjives you ins hut ceilin'

of the heat.

You will discover in the new jjas ranges not crK s| red but new features that save you time and wed Ir.v| erl (I e

modern (ias ranges in the showrooms of your Dealer or your Gas Company. Choose a new Gas range to harmonize with your kitchen. You will find

modern gas cooking is fast, J

clean, convenient and abuse all

economical.

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NORTHERN INDIANA POWFR CflV$ANY

These Modish Swim Suits Feature 36 Beach Parade|

One of the most important parts of milady’s summer wardrobe is her beach outfit, a fact of which these thi'cc striking Hollywood players arc apparently fully aware, judging by the attractive and novel designs of their swim and suntan outfits. Heicn Wood is at the upper left, Jean Chatburn, upper right, and Rochelle

Hudson, lower right.

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Jean Chalburn

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Peggy Carper

Student? at University of Oregon demonstrated their preference for redheads over blondes and brunets when they selected attractive Miss Peggy Carper as campus queen to reign over the traditional schedule of college May actmtie*.

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