The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 September 1936 — Page 4
(THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1936.
CHATEAU — Tonight GENE AUTRY—in ‘SAGEBRUSH TROUBADOUR’ CHAPTER - 1 AND 2 OF “ADVENTURES OF HEX & RINTY” POPEYE AND BETTY BOOP - CARTOON 5 Days — Sunday, Through Thursday Midnight Show Tonight — Matinee Tuesday 2 P. M. THUNDERING WITH THE ROMANCE OF SOULS LOCKED IN CONFLICT The cry of a nation in the throes of glorious birth could not still the wild beating of their love-swept hearts. HARRY M. GOETZ presents THE JAMES fENiMGRE COOPER CLASSIC
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FEATURE Randolph
STARTS SCOTT * SU VJ Oruce Cabot
4 ; 2o Robert tarrat 6:tG Directed
Binnie Henry
BARNES * WILCGXON
Heather Angel • Philip Reed
Hugh Bucl'.ler • Willard Robertson
by Coerce B. Seitz
8 : ]2 Hit EDWARD ]0:00 * B»liorco Pictur* •
SMALL Production R»l«o»«d thru UNITED ARTISTS
SON<; REElr—“HILL OF OLD WYOMING” AND NEWS. THIS IS A DANDY PICTURE — DON’T MISS IT THE LITTLE THEATRE WITH THE BIG PICTURES
Gas Barrage Routs Strikers
State highway patrolmen dispersed a crowd of 2.600 pickets with a barrage of tear gas above during a strike of workers in the lettuce packing houses of Salmas Cal
Investigate Murder Cult Story
Investigation was launched into the possibility of an alliance between law enforcement agencies of Decatur. 111., and the “Hounds of IHell Hollow", a reputed gang of criminals allegedly operating in the vicinity following discovery of evidence that seven recent murders ■were the work of a mob Chief of Police Joshua Cooper, left, and 'State's Attorney Arthur O. Frazier, right, have been mentioned in connection with the case on the basis of their indictment last Janu* uary by a grand jury investigating vice conditions.
Facing Facts By Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam
Garage His Car The Department of Commerce grounds a pilot who violates the regulations that govern flying. Why not ground, or garage, the car of a man who drives when under the influence of liquor? He is a potential though unintentional murderer. A salesman who knew that he could not drive again for a year, might pay more attention to a law that is written in the very scheme of things, namely alcohol and gasoline do not mix. Put the drunken driver’s car in the garage. If he drives during the period his car is garaged, put him in Jail for the balance of the period. Railroads will not employ men who use alcohol. The railway engineer must have a keen eye and a clear head. Why should corporations allow employees who drive cars to jeopardize the lives of patrons ? Prohibition may not have been the answer, but some of us would like to know what the anti-prohibition-ists are going to do about the mounting toll of fatal afeidents. The Supreme Court has not abolished this A. A. A. Alcohol! Automobiles! Accidents!
GRANADA
“The Family Theatre”
J20.
ANY TIME ANYWHERE
Tonight—Buck Jones, “McKenna Of The Mounted” ALSO — CHAPTER NO. 1 — “THE PHANTOM RIDER” with BUCK JONES Sunday, Monday, Tuesday — Sunday At 2 P. M.
tips*
Also — Comedy “Gags And Gals” and News
Cart Before Horse
Davil Lililenthai, one of the big j three directing the T. V. A., says “The farmers need cheap power.” The I public utility corporations insist that rates cannot be lowered until there . is sufficient volume to warrant reduction. Lilienthal argues convinc- I ingly that you cannot get volume until you have low rates. Ford knew this and got his volume by selling Fords at a low figure. The Union Pacific with its train “The Chal- 1 'enger” has shown what cheap transportation will do to travel valume. Eastern roads have fought such reduction. Power corporations have fought rate reduction and have thereby stupfdTy denied themselves he larger volume that would make •heap rates profitable. The T. V. A. las proven thV. Now comes the Georgia Power Company with it« iroposal to spend four million dollars o bring light, power, and heat to '5 000 farms in its sales area. The •access of the enterprise will rest
ipon the rates charged.
It is in this very connection that he Brookings Institution, whose "'resident Dr. Moulton is one of the ablest defenders of capitalism, points out that the trouble with capitalism is the capitalists. To be successful capitalism must pass on the advances of science to the con-
sumer by reduction in prices. Too chauffeur expressed it all in a careoften the advantages have been kept free ' but f,omcwhal profound obserby a small owning group, price re- va ^ :on - Said he, “We live today. If ductions have been fought, and the 1 have mone y' today I go home. My result is that the owning group han f arni 'y h as meat. We go to the
Frenchman in law, and the Spaniard
in honor.
The Englishman is a man of action, the Frenchman a man of thought, the Spaniard a man of pas-
sion.
The Englishman, faithful to action, is empirical; the Frenchman, faithful to thought, is theoretical; the Spaniard, faithful to passion, is individualistic. The Englishman rules his life by moral-social standards; the Frenchman rules his life by intellectual principles; the Spaniard rules his life by individual experience. For the Englishman, virtue is wisdom; for the Frenchman, virtue is reason; for the Spaniard, virtue
is serenity.
The gap between standards and behavior is called hypocrisy. Englishman’s hypocrisy is in
morals, feigns when he does not behave; Frenchman’s hypocrisy is intellectual, feigns when he does not understand; Spaniard’s hypocrisy is in passions, feigns when he does not
experience.
In England, structure of community is aristocratic in France, structure of community is bourgeoise; in Spain, structure of community is
popular.”
During a recent trip in Spain our
nore to invest. This means undue Mant expansion. It also means the masses do not have enough purchasing power to make their demand ef-
fective.
If capitalism passes from the current economic scene, it will no’ be due to communist propaganda. It will be due to the ignorance of capitalists who selfishly refuse to allow reduced cost of production to be be reflected in reduced cost of
commodity and service.
Given cheap electricity, the Ameren”. farm privately owned by the American family can become e. cultural center of extraordinary sig-
lificancc.
movie. I say to them, ‘We have money today. It is all yours.’ I live today. Tomorrow I have nothing. We do not have meat. We stay at home. I say to them, ‘We have
nothing. It is ail yours.’ ”
MOMIES ifUiB.i MJTiiwiin itanm
Voncaatle
William Powell attains the distinction of being butler for the nuttiest family in the whole country, in the romantic comedy, “My Man Godfrey,” which comes to the Voncastle theater Sunday. Monday and Tuesdav. Carole Lombard is co-starred _____ [ with Powell. I The screen narrative reveals
. punish Psychology I p owe p as a ‘'forgotten man,” being
The bitterness and brutality mani- brought to a very ritzy party by feat in the Spanish Civil War have Carole Lombard, so that she may confused manv Americans, who ^} n filat P Iize in a senvanger hunt.
r ri , Then she engages Powell as the buthink of the Spaniard as a wooing ler the fun beglng .
dnger who strums p. guitar. Sal- I This nuttv family. generally radar do Madariaga has written a known as “the batty Bullocks,” infascinating little volume in which he eludes; one baffled husband who has
contrasts the mentalities of the Englishman. the Frenchman and the Spaniards. He says, “The Englishman is interested in fair-play, the
IRUN—SILENT CITY OF DEAD!
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hrrn thoroughly bluffed by a slightly daffy wife. He is laughed at by "r»rir't”’<i riffraff for permitting her to pamper a “protege of the rich” ••od for giving him the freedom of the parlor. The husband is further confused bv the wild expenditures and tall doings of his dizzy fltiughters. When his fortune is lost in the stock market he is saved by the but'er who finally falls for the diz-
I 7.‘0" r’"llght Q r.
| Besides Powell and Miss Lombard the eor-t include^ Aliec Bradv, Gail P tri'-h Je-n D!von, Eugene Pallette ‘ and Alan Mowbray.
Granada “.TeUiircsk.” wtfh Craig Reynolds pi l r;iio T-nvis in the leading roles end fiettirin" Rs*don McLsne comes to the Cran ia Sunday, Monday and i -ueod--- c, jn £ bp i nc i, lr i r a -tti h-‘t!e hetwen done runners pid let tie -1 -viltontlarv riot t we rr.uvrters within the prison walls and o <ett hrnak • ; r>o"ii*e its mclodrarntie flavor the r>w llr( , j, not without its ronape« the love interest being develoned between o star reporter covering the crimes tfnd the secretary of a reformed gangster, the latter being slain in his cell because he refused to join in a scheme of dope runners.
Despiic a valiant and desperate defense, these Loyalists anu many of their comrades laid down their _|ives In vain " a futiU effort to stem the tide of
the Spanish revolt as It swept over the strategic border city of Irun, which U now a deserted city of ashes.
SEEK 10,000 ZOO BACKERS TOLEDO fUP) The Toledo Zoological Society, which supports the Toledo Zen has planned a campaign to enlist 10,000 members.
Fort Still In Hands Of Rebels
WITHSTAND BLASTS AND BITTER ATTACK OF LOYALIST FORCES
TOLEDO, Sept. 19, (UP)—After an almost constant eighteen-hour bombardment following the dynamiting of the ancient Alcazar, besieged rebels within the fortress continued to withstand loyalist guns today. The loyalist attack was halted and troops which had entered the fortress were ordered back to the positions they occupied before the dynamiting. Lieut. Col. Luis Barcelo told the United Press another dynamiting was necessary and probably would occur within a few days. The rebels fought bitterly through last night and today. Government commanders were unable to determine the strength of the defenders within the fortress but one militia leader told the United Press he believed nobody was killed in yesterday’s dynamiting. He said it would be possible to tell only when troops comb the ruins and determine whether portions of tunnels collapsed crushing the besieged rebels. Th'e explosion, effected by mines placed in tunnels bored under the Alcazar, shook buildings all over the city and smashed every window pane in Toledo. The remaining tower of the Alcazar fell and thousands of tons of stone crashed down on the
cellars.
The entire civilian population of the city was evacuated before the explosion. A motor truck parked too close to the fortress was split in half and the wreckage blown into the second floor of a building 100 yards away, opening a big hole in the house.
THE NEW DELUX VONCASTLE “Where The Crowds Go”
TONIGHT
Lionel Barrymore ‘THE DEVIL Dou |
TONIGHT MIDNIGHT, SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUj SUNDAY 2 TILL II p. M.
gif
Up
/
She pulled the butler's cord so often it got twisted into a wedding knot!
u n i v e * s a i
presents Clrc4o{l>
POlMbLOmBBM YM&M
Added — Musical Comedy and News
HEAR GOV. LANDON (Continued from Page One) portance of "what powers the government shall have and what powers it shall not have.” He emphasized the effect of "oiganized authority wielded by one man” on their daily lives. He said that the clepiesaion had ''robbed our young people < who have been unable to find employment) “of opportunity they had dreamed of for yeais—the opportunity to be selfsupporting, to be independent, to stand on their own feet.” But, he said; “We must convince them that our form of government has not failed. We must prove to them that our economic system still is capable of giving them work at full pay. We must maintain their faith in the eternal value of human liberty. Of course, we no longer have
make decisions t for businessi I ; inci easing extent. “This argument, let me want I is far more dangerous, far mor( sidious than the contention 1 have come to the end of an eraJ 'There is a fundamental difftlj between this argument and thep we have always pursued. In t!ie| , we have had regulation of by the government not directiool ' management of business by the] I eminent Under the one systen | have independence, liberty, fred under the other system we lose I j independence, we lose our libf we lose our freedom. And we lot this without obtaining secur j promised by those utging an i I increosing accumulation of powetl be wielded py a pr esident of"
United States.
This nation has always
far more important form the point
All three facades of the Alcazar view of the youth of this country.
which, with one tower, had withstood terrific bombardment for weeks, collapsed like a house of cards when the mine fuse was touched off. The pal-ace-fortress, long the “West Point” of Spain, was left a heap of stones and rubbish. Loyalists charged from behind barricades erected in Zocodover square. They dashed around the square and entered the former gardens of the Alcazar with rifles in hand. Storm guards with hand grenades attacked the central quadrangle, scrambling over the heaped ruins to take the : cellars which the rebels had forti- '
fied.
They were met by withering fire ; from machine guns and rifles. The storm guards were forced to retreat and take loss dangerous positions. The militiamen their rifles stuck (trough shell holes in the walls of he cellars, fired hhndly at rebels intde. The insurgents returned the ire furiously. MILAN, Sept. 19. (UP)—Former King Alfonso of Spain bought maps of northern Spanish roads today, indicating that he contemplated re- 1 turning to his native country if the rebels win the civil war. Alfonso told members of the Civil Engineers’ Club he needed the mans *o study his itinerary, but quickly added he was undecided whtFn he would leave. Traveling incognito, the king left for Inbersago in the Brianza region, where he will be a guest at a villa belonging to a Spanish prince.
4-H CHAMPION ROSEBURG, Ore.. (UPl John Alexander, 83, claims the distinction of being the oldest 4-H club leader in the United tSates.
a geographical prontier, he continued !
in rejecting suggestions that the na- pride in its young voters—our ( ton has come to the end of an a tea voters ate not content with the p or theit America s iiitiustriu.! pl3.nt is 1 They have their eyes on the full complete. J -ghey h ave the courage and the! "But we have a frontier that is; b jtion to go forward. They are!
termined to build a better Amel They—More than any other gro«j our nation assure progtess. presence here today is proof Young America is not asleep. I j come you to the comradeship i great cause. This is no ordinary0 paign. It is a campaign that
across all party lines.
"I have an abiding faith in thej selfish purpose of the young' in his desire to make his govern! responsive to the needs of a g real J tion in his determination to r his vote count f"t ’•ountrv |
That is the frontier of new inventions. That was the frontier developed by the automobile industry. And that industry alone has absorbed many times as many people as ever moved across a geographical frontier during a depression. Another argument of those trying to make youth believe they have no future under the American system is that American business men arc no longer capable of running their own business. They would have the government
Democrats Fete Vice President
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John N. Gitrner nml James A. Farley ., fex., When Vice President John N. Garner left his home at Uvall ‘ t'> begin taking an activ» part in the election camt> a '8 n v £ j, c aav feted at a dinner given by prominent Democrats in N*’"' ' ej by James A. Fat ley, light, Democratic national chairm
