The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 November 1936 — Page 4

rffffi DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA MONDAY, NOVEMBER

19.°,6.

CHATEAU GABil

Tonight and Tuesday Matinee Tuesday 2 P. M.

iu. JACK LONDON S CALLot

LORETTA YOUNG v l&VA QAHJg ALSO — MAKCH OF THE PRESIDENT’S AND NEWS.

A hearing will be held in the office of County Auditor Abigail Cooper, Nov. 9, at 9:30 a. m., regarding additional appropriations? for Madison township according to word received Monday from C. A. Ketchum, secretary of the state board of tax commissioners.

•?ji + + +l'+ + *f , + + 4 , + + + + ^J F RO ACH DA EE •* * Mrs. Orville Perkins < {5} 4 1 4- *!• + "h H* Miss Essie Summers of Connersville spent the week end at home and attended the state teachers Institute at Indianapolis. Dr. Paul Ream was brought to his

home Sunday from the Methodist Hospital at Indianapolis having undergone an operation for appenricitis. Reeder Stroube who is superintendent of the school ae Gary was a week end guest of his parents Dr. and Mrs. C. N. Stroube. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bishopp have returned to their home here after spending the past several weeks with relatives at Kentucky and Caseiton. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Wright and son of Spencer were week end guests of Mr and Mrs. Robert Crosby and sons. Mr. and Mrs Elmer Davis and son of Greencastle Mr. and Mrs. Edd Powers and son and Mrs. Alice Woo 1rum of Crawfordsville spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Orville Perkins and family, afternoon callers were Mrs. J. B. Dickinson. Mrs. Andrew Moore, and Mr. and Mrs. Laurel Perkins of Indianapolis. Misses Nellie and Kate Lovett of Greencastle spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Lovett and son Ward Mrs. Charley Douglas is a patient ! at Culver hospital suffer ing from eye

infection.

Charley Evans is spending a few days with relatives in Indianapolis.

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Mr and Mrs. Marion Martz of i , Monticello have moved to the Mabel | | Rogers property. 1 Mrs. Ross Richardson and son 1 Philip of Bloomington spent the week | end with her parents Dr. and Mrs/ C. j

N. Stroube.

Robert Holland of Danville spent 1 , the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Ira ' Holland and family. | Jack Porter and fried of Crawfordsviile spent the week end with

Mr. and Mrs. Ward Porter.

Miss Lola Stewart returned to Hobart Sunday to take up her school i activities, after spending the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Charley Stewart.

Those from here who were sight seeing in Brown County Sunday, were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lockridge, Mr. and Mrs. Charley Bogan, and

Mr. and Mrs. Audry Modlin.

Mrs. Myrta Buchanan returned home Thursday morning after spend- ^ ing the past several weeks at the home of her brother-in-law Charley Hughes and family of Danville. There was an Oyster supper held in the basement of the Christian

church Wednesday night.

JJoe Putney, 84 years old passed away Sunday at the home of Mr. , and Mrs. Tommie Shrout, funeral services were held at the Chastain

funeral home Thursday.

As the new season gets under way. the music world watches with Interest as to whether the successor of "‘King’’ Leopold Stokowski will prove his ability to assume the ''throne'' Eugene Ormandy, new conductor of the Philadelphia symphony, has a stupendous task ahead of him In attempting to carry on the work of the genius who made the Philadelphia orchestra one of the three finest In the world. Or* mandy was bom in Hungary, came to United States on tour at the age of 21—a violinist of note—broke into prominence as conductor of the movie orchestra at New York’s Capitol theater, and was director of the Minneapolis symphony before beuig drafted by Plula- ■* deiutua.

filled are in sure southern Democratic territory. One-third of the senate membership plus persons to fill vacancies are to be elected to-

morrow.

NATION TO VOTE <Conliniieil from Page One> west sufficient to place him in the White House on next Jan. 20 inauguration day. Republicans variously predict they will gain from 45 seats up in the house of representatives in which the Democratic party now has a majority of more than 200. Democrats privately concede they will lose 35 or more seats. In the dozen border and northern states in which there are senatorial contests. Republicans have a chance to gain here and there. But it is a mathematical impossibility for the G. O. P. to regain control of the senate this year because so many of the seats to be

Sweeping Lines Mark New Outfits for Winter

The parade of voters which will form first on the east coast and extend finally across the nation will number from 42.000.000 to 45,000.000 in the opinion of statisticians who have examined records of extraordinary registration increases reported from all parts of the country. The vote four years ago was just short

of 40,000,000.

Outstanding among political issues as this campaign closes is that raised by Republicans with working men and women in this country. Repub- j licans are charging that the new deal social security program will impose a one per cent tax on the workers’

wage as of next January I.

Mr. Roosevelt and his aides are bitterly resentful of that phase of the Republican campaign. Last minute surveys indicate the wage-tax i argument has cut into Mr. Roose1 veil’s strength in the smoky industrial cities of the east and lake

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states. It is there that the race is closest and where it may be won or lost. I Trained political observers believe the mould of new parties has been cast in the hot campaign which will end tonight as the president and Gov. Landon turn away from microphones in Hyde Park and Topeka. There has been a mass movement of left wingers and so-called radicals toward the Democratic party as defined under Mr. Roosevelt’s new deal leadership. Conservative Democrats began more than a year ago to draw away from the new deal end many are to be found now in Republican shelter. i The campaign has produced some notable fence sitters. Republican Senators Charles L. McNary, William E. Borah and Hiram W. Johnson have been silent or hardly audible on the question of the respective merits of Mr. Roosevelt and Gov. Landon. The voice of all or either would tremendously aid the Kansan’s cause. I Sin. Carter Glass, Democratic Vir-

ginia's favorite son, has refused to campaign for Mr. Roosevelt although the new deal high command long hoped it would persuade him to reply to the anti-new deal crucade of another famous and unhappy Democrat, former Gov. Alfred E. Smith. Sen. Ellison D. Smith, D„ S. D., and Sen. Harry F. Byrd, D., Va., scarcely conceal their dislike of the Roosevelt administration, but neither has left the Democratic reservations. Both linger now near its outermost

limits.

Bolt of A1 Smith, former Sen. James A. Reed, of Missouri, former (Wilson administration) Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby and other non-office holding Dehiocrats from Mr. Rosevelt to Gov. Landon is offset, perhaps, by transfers of Republican allegiance to Mr. Roosevelt. The late Sen. James Couzens, R., Mich., Sen. Peter Norbeck, R., S. D.,

r.nd Sen. G«®rge W. Norris, recently v. Republican and now an independent, of Nebraska, are among former IG. O. P. figures who have endorsed ( tho new deal. j Rank on rank of laboring men and | women are marching in the Roosevelt parade but they are under a withering Republican fire of argument that Mr. Rosevelt’s old age soC’al security program is more a lifetime tax upon their wages than an assurance of security when they can work no more. Radical off-shoots of the republican party in the northwest, the LaFollette’s progressive organization in Wisconsin and the farmer-labor party in Minnesota, are aligned with Mr. Roosevelt for th's election. There has ben a shift of socialist voters and leaders from their positions to places or varying prominence in Roosevelt campaign

affairs.

A priest for the first time lias taki n a front rank political position in an American presidential campaign. Father Charles E. Coughlin organized the National Union for Social Justice and dedicated it to the defeat of Mr. Roosevelt. His candidate is William Lcmke, presidential nominee of the Union party, but the beneficiary of Father Coughlin’s hitter campaign will be Gov. Landon. Three fourth’s of Lemke’s votes are expected to be drawn from among

VONCASlJ ^■hereTheCro^J ^S^d_Tu3 THOSE who SUvTrr". AI,K KrSa

■•••III All-Sill Ci„| HARLOW _ *WHUAM POWELl

TRACY

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groups which otherwise would | voted for the new deal. Conservative Democrat? standing by to recapture I party at once if Mr. p.oosevJ defeated and for continued batj its leadership and title to its hi nan.e if he is returned tomorn winner. Left wingefs and foui cf new minority party groupJ rcntly associated with Mr. Rool arc prayerful for a party brel which would cleave the countl tween conservatives and liJ And they are maneuvering to I over tlie liberal or radical movj if that cleavage comes.

FRANK GARDNi For Auditor OF PUTNAM COTNTI On The Democrat Ticket I

Your support November 3, | be appreciated.

Ethiopian Children Become Junior Fascists

Hollywood-Bound

Here are three Hollywood celebrities garbed in costumes which are among the smartest being shown. June Lang sports a baby leopard coat which is cut along the new lines, flaring at the bottom The nock which Virginia Bruce is wearing is of black crepe with s front vest of pleated silver cloth which

Virginia Bruce

is also repeated in the tight cuffs. The gown which Ann Sothern models is definitely shorter and has an uneven hem line, sweeping the floor in back and raised to expose the ankles in front With the dress is a draped cape which exactly follows the uneven silhouette of Uie skirt.

The thoroughness with which Italians are going about the job of colonizing Ethiopia is illustrated by this photo showing Ethiopian children wearing

junior Fascist uniforms and parading in review fore Viceroy Grazinni in Addis Ababa, former ital of Ethiopia.

Wreckage as Pennsylvania Flyer Leaves Track

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Francica Goal Francica Gaal is the latest Hollywood import. She is shown above cn route to the movie colony to fill a contract she was given for her work in Hungarian films.

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International Illustrated Newt Sou 10 of the 13 cars, mostly Pullmans, lef< In this International Illustrated News ! officials are viewing the wreckage of demolished cars.