The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 July 1936 — Page 3
ITiE DAILY BANMCR, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA TUESDAY. JULY 28, 1936.
Eleanor.Barred From .Olympics
Cenevere Sandy were at Hollybrook
Saturday night.
t- + Donald called
visited over the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Will Morrison and family. Mr. and Mrs. Will Wingert, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wingert and Mrs. Maggie Long attended the Wingert
reunion.
Miss Gardner of Indianapolis, came last week for a visit with her cousin
Miss Byrle Sandy.
Mr. and Mrs. James Hughes called j Harvey Thomas, last week
on Mr and Mrs. Charles Rockwell,. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Staggs and sons Sunday afternoon. ( EUion aml Eugene, and Miss Ruth Mr and Mrs Ger! Furr returned, Skim) ,. r called Mrs. Emma All-
! U .. d ' l ' VS 8 of Balnbrlc « Sunday evening.
Mr. and Mrs Libert Bettis. Mr.
+ + + + + + CLINTON FALLS + Eula Staggs *)■ + + + + 4 Thomas and son James his pare.,Is, Mr. and Mrs.
visit with her sister at Niles Michi-
gan.
Mr. and Mrs. William Allender and Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Jackson of Terre Haute, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Allender. Mr and Mis Otho Smythe attended the Randolph reunion near Fillmore Sunday. Misses Bettie and Ann Duncan of | Hammi nd. are hi re visiting Mrs. Ida McKamey and Mr. and Mrs. Estes I
Duncan.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Lewman o! Georgetown 111., visited last Thurs-j
Laura and Belle
and Mrs. Clark Miller and Mary Toney spent Sunday with Willard
Miller and family
Raymond Bui !■: spent a few days last week with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John Burk.
Edwin Marshall and son called on Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Thomas last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Abner Sigler, Mrs. George Pierce and Mrs. Joe Staggs called on Mrs Catherine Johnson
Sunday with Mr. ami Mrs S. O En- | Skeleton Warns Speeders and a whisky bottle at its side seatsor. . - ed on a demolished automobile, is beMrs. Ben Sutton and Mr. and Mrs. I MARYSVILLE. Cal. (UP) A new ing used as a warning lo sj>eedy drivAbernacky of Hammond spent Sun- ] use for skeletons is being tried out ! ers at a dangerous curve on the Paday with Henry Tweedy and family. I here. One. with a cige.r in i(s jaws, cific highway. Junior Colling! spent a few days I — —— 1 ■ ... .1 - ■ with John, William and Duane Pork
last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Abner Sigler called) on Mr. and Mrs. George Pierct Wednesday evening.
4 4 *1* 4 •> 4- 4 4 4 + 4 !• NEW MAYSVILLE 4 4 Miss Helen Weller 4 jgj, 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 + 4
Thursday.
Miss Vivian Martin
I days last week with Mi°s Maxine
1 Bettis.
* Arvo! Roach and family and I Claude Newgent nd familv attended the Roach reunion near Pittsboro,
News of the dismissal of Eleanor Holm Jarrett, world's premier backstroke swimmer, from the U. S. Olympic team, reverberated through the sporting world following the arrival of American athletes at Hamburg, Germany. In the announcement, made shortly after the athletes landed, Avery Brundage, president of the American Olympic committee, said Mrs. Jarrett was dropped "for violation of training rules”. The champion swimmer, shown above, is the wife .. of Arthur Jarrett, radio singer.,
4 4 4 4 T + 4 CLOVEKDALE 4 Mrs. Clara Dorsett 4 »•« »!« *!• *t Mr. and Mrs. Jesse McCoy spent jer Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Kentli McCoy and daughter at Cinhnatti. Ohio. Mrs. Ollie O'Conor attended the O - inor reunion at Owen Park, Sunday.
Miss Nclia Wingfield of Chicago came last week for a visit with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Myers of Connersville were Sunday guests < f Miss Bryle Sandy. Mr. and Mrs. James Martin and daughter of near Brazil call, I on Mrs. Mary F. Heifer Sunday afternoon. Miss Mary Horn of Greencastle
day with Misses
Long.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Morrison of Greencastle were Sunday guests of
Mr. ami Mrs. Frank Morrison.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Evens, Mrs.)
Nannie Fultz and Mrs. Coons were Sun,ln >’
in Qreencaath ist Friday afternoon. | Annual electio officera of the Arthur Herod visited over the week! M P rllurch wiU hcl ' 1 Thun,t,a y end with Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Hurst. J ‘‘vening. July 30 All members are
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Spangler and ur K ptl to ,)e P rcs
family of Midland visited over the' Paul Boswell visited his gianoweek end with her mother Mrs. Ida niother nt LaPoi l ist week. Miss Cleo Furr of Terre Haute! Mack McCartney and iamily spent
• ■■ w itli her put - '■ —-
cuts, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Furr.
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Jenkins and family rf Brazil visited Saturday eve-' ning with Mr. and Mrs. John Logan. 1 Miss Mary Gilmore was Sunday, dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alloc
and Mrs. Harette Gilmore.
Mr. and Mrs. Mont Crowe of Joplin Mo., came last week for a visit with I her sister. Mrs. Salnda Horn and other relatives. I Mrs. Hattie Gorham left last Friday for a visit with her son, Dr.
Frank Gorham in St. Louis, Mo.
R.alpti Frye and Harry Moran attended the funeral of Luther Areand
at Eminence last Thursday.
Mr. ami Mrs. Estes Duncan ami guests, Mr. and Mrs. Allen of Cali-! fornia were at Elletsville Sunday. I Mrs. Mayme Reed and Miss
Mr and Mrs. Walter S ewart. and Helen Weller attended services at Cadle tabernacle near Belleville Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Risk and Mrs. Ferba Stewart of Kraghtstown called on friends in New Maysville Sunday. Glen Weller of Vincennes spent the weekend at his home here. Mrs. Juanita Kendall spent Satur-
day in Indianapolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronert Chatham and spent a few family. Robert and Cecil Kcfauver of
Indianapolis and Mrs. Ruth Bolton of Danville spent Sunday with M‘ and Mrs. Dale Weller. Mr. and Mrs. John Smiti’ spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John German. Fillmore Modlin spent the past week with friends in Ladoga. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Eggers spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs. Charley Gordon. BANNER WANT ADS PAY
Interest in Folklore Rev ived
Wayward Charge Gets Bovs Court Spanking
m '-lisS
Joe Rossi
Trank Buccierrl
(ieno Antonclli
r Flore Buccierrl
Accused of waywardness, three youths were ordered lashed In court by a Chicago judge. This dramatic photo shows the boys, left to right, Joe Rossi, 20; Frank Buccierrl, 17, and Geno Anto-
nclli. 19, being lashed by Fiore Buccierrl, brother of Frank. The lash is described as a rubber hose, three-quarter-inch _ thick . and _ doubled _flve-foot length. '
Snapshots From Filmdoms Family Album
Plans announced recently for the forthcoming state-wide folklore festival sponsored by the state of Pennsylvania at Bucknell university at Lewisburg call attention to the interest aroused in the cultural beginnings of our country This year more than a score of festivals reviving the songs, dances and verse of American pioneers have been presented. America appears to be “coming of age". Judging by the attention attracted by these events. The Pennsyl- • _ vama fete is scheduled July 30 to Aug. I
big reasons for the phenomenal success of Shirley Temple has been “her mother-manager, Mrs. George Temple. And blonde Alice Faye obviously comes by her good looks rightfully, judging by the informal picture of mother and daughter which is shown at the right.
LEWISBURG, Pa. — Plans announced recently for the forthcoming folklore festival on a statewide scale on the Bucknell university campus at Lewisburg call attention to the widespread interest aroused in the nation's cultural beginnings. The Lewisbui : festival is but one cf several this year which trace the history of Unit I States’ early set tiers in song and dance. Not only is the Pennsylvan i festival attracting | attention throughout the Keystone I state, but it is ilso stirring keen in- | terest in New' York and New' Jersey where many f imilies are descended I Horn the colonists of Dutch extraction who settle,l Pennsylvania. | The Lewisburg festival is planned ! for three days. July 30 to Aug. 1, ami will present a program of internaI tional nature. Songs of Swedish. 1 French. Welsh. Negro, English and Danish extract' n will be sung. Inj dian dances and those which trace their derivation to Ukrainia and other European nations will feature the program. Occupational folklore, dance and song contests presenting the compositions which have been handed down from generation to generation for three centuries will be rendered. The Pennsylvania festival is the first of its kind to be presented on' such an ambitious scale. It is expected that thousands of tourists and visitors from throughout the east will attend the event. The recent stir of interest in the songs, dances and customr of American pioneers has brought to light
many new contributions to the stock of rich folklore handed down by the Dutch colonists who peopled Pennsylvania and whose descendants comprised more than half of the families who originally settled the territory west of the Mississippi. The same direct and simple spirit which prevades the folklore, the songs and dances of old England is found in many of tne compositions and verses popular among American pioneers. Indeed, they closely reflect those of the old country because America’s early culture was in the main a conglomeration and revision of the songs and dances which those same pioneers brought with them to the new world. One of the interesting features about the folklore of any section is the intimate manner in which its songs and dances are bound up with the activities of that section’s residents. In Pennsylvania, for inrtance, the early pioneers and their sons and daughters had much to say, both in song and dance, about mining lumbering (which was an extensive industry a century ago) steel making and transportation. Most of these memories of a past age are annymous. Many of them wore composed by obscure working men who sang at the labors or who entertained others in the community by composing verse around the fireside after the day was done. It has been said that America has no distinctive culture of its own. It may be, though, that United States is finally coming of age.
io:v
ft “
>!
In a magazine Suzy sees a picture of Madame di Chabris with Andre and recognizes her as the uoman tcho tried to kill Terry. ! She rushes to Terry to he 1 . > /icr; save Andre. They find him at | | the home of Madame de Chahris, When he refuses to leave, bcliev- | 9 Suzy is merely jealous, she J I makes her actnisation.
Chapfer Eleven 1 Madame de Chabris burst out
laughing.
“This is bettor than a play or a murder mystery. Please go on.” “Suzy,” said Andre, "have you Inst
| Suzy said to Terry. "Ho doesn't ; look as if he were delirious. What I can be so important now?" Then she noticed he was looking intently nt his wrist watch Terry 'had an inspiration He spoke in . I loud, cleat voice lo Andre. "You're supposed to take off at four — is that It? Dt n I worry about that. I'll take care of it. There's plenty of time.” Andre sank back and closed his
eyes.
Terry walked to the window. It had iron bars across it. No escape
there.
"If I can’t pick this lock," he said to Suzy, "I will have to break the door i may need youi help. Even \ our slight weight will be rome
help.”
His mechanical training stood
your mind to inak, such an accus.i iiim in good stead ns it happened,
and fumbling, he opened the door.
help,” he said, “or
d I'll i
lion'.’ And you, Terry, what do you
mean — ” , „ T .., ,
... I f" P° ? 01
xou cant laugh this off " said i if you prefer, you go and I’ll stay Suzy calmly to Madame de Chabris. hero. It is about ten minutes by , “And 1 am net crazy, Andre. 1 know | fast driving to a little Inn. Per-1 exactly what I aln saying. Madame haps there is a telephone there If; de Chabris, I have seen you twice net. ^ me one will come back with
before and on the same night. It you.”
was when you were operating ini Suzy shock her head. London, just before the war." 1 ,. My placp la here with Andre .''
“There is no one in the house but us evidently, but that's for the better, perhaps. You will not be
frightened?"
Til be all right. Go right now. ,
is no time to waste.”
"Mistaken idontily, evidently. You remember Captain Moure, 1 m always thinking 1 ve seen some one before. Madame Charville is , vi dently like me in that one respect.
For 1 haven't been in England since ! rhUV,
1 was a school girl."
Andre gave her a sharp look. I* was a bad slip she had made; li; remembered her telling him she hail been walking along the Embciil. men' when she heard th ■ nev He a shouting of the as assination at Sarajevo. Ho did not speak. He v. I
Before he had reached the bottom of the stairs, he heard her
calling him to come back.
"You look at him," she said chokingly. "I .think he but I thought
you were, and I was wrong."
He bent down over the couch.
Jg*
listening intently to what Suzy w;u; Then he rose slowly and fac A her. faying, “This time you are right," he
“I saw you shoot Terry,” Suzy .said,
went on firmly, "because you She did not cry out, she did not thought lie knew your plans. You weep, she did not move She stood really needn't have done that, for | perfectly still, gazing straight
ahead. There was a strange look on her ' face. It was al-. most hard; it seemed bred, not of sorrow, hut of deter-
mination
"Terry," she said after a I moment or two, < "I don't know | bow it is to be done, but some-1 v ay it must bo , done. We could not save Andre * fro m death, [ but some way, you and I must ive him from * the scandal of' such a death. , Kvcn if there should be no scan dr. 1 , it is , .* ) unfair that h" died as he d d lie had e a r v. c d t lie i ilit to a l.cro’j death." • "I understand, ft: But what c n wc do?" ‘If he had d!< l in the air ,
- if—"
. ! '£
■jsfc
■ v 3.’
.-v
'■'i gmm
mm
“Terry", she said, "I don’t knor !■.' iv/ it is to be d<>ne, but some way it must be done.”
memma
hp doosn'l under ' n 1 German. And before that. 1 : .iw you down a'
BchmliUs fac'-ory.”
i “Thlrt Is loo fan.a tic,'' raid Ma
damp Chabris. "And it
with every word you ay. No only hav ■ L not hern in London for years, as 1 just told you, but until tins mlnu’.t I nc\ i hi aid 11 M
. Schmidt's factory.”
"Why — did you say Mrs. Schmidt r” a ked Suzy in an even
voice. "I said — ”
“We all heard what you said," . raid Andre. "And 1 think you have aaid enough. It is all quite clear
I now. 1 . no 1
The door opened. The
came In.
, "I am here, Madame. Togo'her wo
will hunul ■ th. ; lit it ‘ affaii
1 Terry t ado a daub for the tele-
phone.
“I wouldn't, if I were you." tlv? but ler itakl w ho ’ wi 1 id smile. "It would only I i e of t Imc i
have cut the wires."
He raised the arni v hich ha I been lx hind him He was holding a
pistol.
“Hurry, I >lo no,” ho comn i I 1
“The cm I 1 '
it and a h: nipi r of foe I The windows and doors are all barred, ai this on i will bo wh >n we hav • 1 ft
"Whatever his
brave and gallant
of Andre alone 1 here's hia father
grows more k \ v ‘ n « hi ?, *on die
but tbit; "
Try s y o il on Anciro’a 1 y i n g coat which they had flung on a chair. He drew in li a luvath chciipiy. it was too wild a c li m n c o, t li e odds would be— fault a, wa.; And It's nut I in thinking. He could bear a he ru'd death,
Terry had leaped across the floor, lie took olT hia coat lb* was putting on Andres. Whatever tho chances, however great the odds,
he knew what he must do.
‘‘It may fall," he said to Suzy, “but I’ll do my bc.st to see it doesn't.
I can’t explain now no time "
"All right," said Suzy ‘‘Ju^t
tell mo what T am to do."
‘‘Nothing but the hardest thing anyone can ever do wait. Jmst
butler * c * a y hero until I come bark. And
that will not be soon. You may have long houra alone. There iiu
much I have to do."
"Very well. 1 will wait." ‘T don’t know how I'll go It has just come to me that they must have put our car out of commission, someway. Th°y'd not overlook that. I may have to walk. But somewhere it Kin;: th * way, I’ll surely be able to g* t lift." He picked up Andre s cap. Ho
came over to Suzy.
‘‘You imu’t b* prepared for anything that may happen," lie raid. "I feel rure you arc in no physical danger, but the mental’ strain— you'll have to bear that. And there is something else." He hesitated
\.v have t
- but only enough." a moment. "If It in within human Madame tie Chabrh star ed to- possibility if It Is beyond what V.ard the door us he kept Suzy, would neem possible, I will b ' buck. 1 ’'’erry and Andre covered. Sh- atop Re chaps I won't rome bnek That, ped a minute, looked at Andre and you must fare If I em not luncrhed back by mid-morning but I can t "At leai t I’ll never I,eve to listen UJ.'IS UV. .U."'.!'" jU,t .
to your childish prattle any more
-- that’s something
Andre. In a fury siartod neross, , , ,,,, , . , ‘ Madame de Chabris 8tum-!' ,aw " ‘*>0 stairs When hp reached
have to do whatever vou can.' " Phank you, Tei ■ v " he aid I Without another word, he ran
the i i mi.
bled against the butler. A shot rang
eut.
The butler backed nut after Madame de Chabris. There was the sound of a lock turning in the doer. Within Hi • room, thi re was a cry of pain Andre fell lo the floor. Suzy rear hed him (li st. Sh helped Terry carry him to the choii hntyur, hoping to in-lie him more comfortable. There was a table with - decanter of brandy and a siphon bottle on it She spurt d water in his face, while Terry fcrc-d some
(he road, he found as she had fof%-s-en that he eould not u o the ear. Ml the tires had been slit to ribbons. One wheel w>s gone There was nothing to do, then, but walk— and prav for some one to he passing en the road et that hour. For one moment he faltered, ft seemed so utterly hopeless. Rut h* eou'd ••’p Suzy standing there alone if* the room with Andre He had sa’d he would try even the impossible. ,; fe knew he would not falter again.
Someway—
In the dim light, he saw some-
■ brandy down his throat. Then they thing leaning against a tree. If .opened his coat to find the wound, only—he hardly dared hope the It was bleeding badly. spies would never have overlooked * He regained eonsrtoiisner's after a h" walked toward It He rlasood moment He tried to rise from the pin hand aeross his mouth, to stlflo"
couch. They had to force him to i i shout of triumph, lie back He was trying desperately I a motor-eyele-
to speak, but he was too weak. “Don’t try to talk." Terry said. •'All you need Is a little rest and
you’ll be all right.”
But he would not rest,
"What can it be he wants to say?"
Andre’a,
with his insignia on it. (?) 1036-Mpt? , o-CWld'rjm-MnjTr Oorp. (Tomorrou' ■ Trrrsi keeps faith With the living and the deadL) \ (To be concluded^'
