The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 November 1936 — Page 4
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THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTLE, INDIANA SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1936,
CHATEAU Today Tim McCoy’
C IIAI'. 9 & HINTY” Also—Buster Keaton t 'omedy
BULLDOG COURAGE
Midnight Show Tonight—Sunday
Monday - Tuesday
The New Kings of Comedy/
Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam Methodist Episcopal Church
A great new comedy team, rippling with hurnor—bubbling with gagt— in a whirlpool of hysteria I A craiy pair of mirth-pro-voking mod-hatters riding the crest of a tidal wave of lusty laughter!
JOSEPH M. SCHENCK pound
I SpenwrTRACY JackOAl—
OKING for TROUBLE with CCNSTANCE CUMMINGS ,'.U ARIINE JUDGE * JUDITH WOOD
1*1.1 8—CABIN KIDS in It A DIO RASCALS and NKWS.
+ .MORTON
e. +
Glen Clodfelter of Lafayette called on his mother on Wednesday. The Clinton Falls Ladies Aid met at the home of Mrs. Lizzie Hart on Thursday with the following members and visitors present, Mrs. Lida Pierce, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Miller, and son Russell, Mrs. Mary Garrell, Mrs. Mildred Newgent, Mrs. Opal Newgent, Mrs. Ruby Brattain, Mrs. Ellen Chadd, Mrs. Goldia Bee. Rev. Sample, Mrs. Carrie Clodfelter and Mrs. Sarah Lane. The Ladies Aid of Morton had the election dinner on Tuesday. Mrs. Ethel Lawter has been seriously sick the past few days.
Mr. and Mrs. George Inge spent Monday at Indianapolis. Miss Freda Lawter returned to her work at Kokomo on Thursday. Mrs. Helen Maddoxs’ house caught fire on Friday moining, by hard work they got it put out but the roof was burned considerable.
Nino Terms Served LINCOLN. Neb. (UP)—Charles Smith, 65-year old Birmingham. Ala., negro, was candid about it. at least. Pleading guilty to robbery, Smith admitted to Judge E. B. Chappell he had gone to prison nine dfiferent times. He had been sentenced to a total of 48 years in prison, but had served only 14 years. * \
Totalitarian War _ With Armistice day approaching, Americans will be interested in General Ludendorff’s new book on “The Totalitarian War.” What is ahead in Europe? Look into Ludendorff's mind! Ludendorff believes that the wars of yesterday were struggles between armies, not between nations. In past wars foreign policy was superior to military recommendations, and while foreign policy was adapted to military needs, the war command was subordinate to the political policy makers. Ludendorff believes that it was the friction between the military and the political leaders that cost Germany the war. He thinks the military would have used the submarine regardless of protest and would have won the war. War is exalted in his thinking. It is r. biological phenomenon necessary for the conservation of the race, and he goes so far as to state that the next war which will demand the service of the entire nation, will be a racial war. His idea of a totalitarian state involves every necessary coercive measure to insure conformity, the crushing out of all religious or political non-conformity, all in the interest of national cohesion. These measures are to be taken before war so that the nation may be ready for war. Ludendorff would not declare war. He would strike, bomb the industrial centers of the enemy by air attack, and launch a terrific offensive on | land. To be successful the totalitarian state waging a totalitarian war must submit to the will of the military commander and place its total resources, physical and spiritual, at his order. What Is Ahead? What is ahead for Europe? What is the sense of signing pacts in the light of such morality, shared by the way of military men in other lands than Germany? What manner of
mind is this that would destroy intellectual freedom, scrap the common principles of honesty, extirpate morality, and launch a nation upon a murderous Eissault upon other nations without warning, and in the interests of a superior race? Are these men insane? No wonder Ludendorff has no use for Christianity. The Sermon on the Mount and Ludendorff’s totalitarian war? Criticizing Mussolini’s use of gases in Ethiopia, cautious Stanley Baldwin Eisks, “What guarantee have we that they will not be used in Europe?” Then follows a prophetic sentence, “I believe if such a thing were done the raging people of every country, torn with passion, suffering, and horror, would wipe out every government in Europe and you would have a state of anarchy from end to end as man’s protest against the wickedness of those in high places.” Unintelligent communists and ignorant capitalists talk much on the war questions. The communist declares that capitalists favor war. since it stimulates business and silences revolutionary discussion. The communist insists that the logic of capitalist competition for the world market eventuates in war. Some capitalists of militaristic spirit think a litlle blood-letting is not a harmful procedure, and that war strengthens the moral of the nation. Intelligent capitalists know that Baldwin is right, and that another extended world war means revolution. If they are sufficiently intelligent they will cooperate with every sane proposal to maintain peace.
Sunday - Monday - Tuesday Matinee Sunday 2 I*. M.
AGreat Story By A Great Author! MALE and FEMALE in a LAWLESS L A N DS, / W : >
Previews and Reviews AT LOCAL THEATERS
V’oneastle
With New York as its principal setting and a distinctive double-tri-angle type of theme, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers introduce a wealth of novelty in their newest vehicle. “Swing Time,” at the Voncastle, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Unlike their former offerings, the new picture has an intricately romantic story, with both stars pursuing the course of true love through obstacles offered by a pair of rivals. Astaire is a cheerful gambler, seeking his fortune in Manhattan so he can go back to his home town and marry his childhood sweetheart; Miss Rogers is a dancing academy instructress who takes Astaire as a pupil, despite the glowering of an orchestra leader who intends to
marry her.
Complications come thick and fast, especially when Astaire’s fiancee , shows up to find out what he’s doing. > and the band leader makes frantic
Michael WHALEN JEAN MUIR Slim SUMMERVILLE CHARLES WINNINCER
efforts to break up the growing romance between Astaire and Miss Rogers. All this is interwoven with some of the catchiest song numbers and dances the pair have yet presented and the hilarious counterplay of a new screen comedy team in the persons of V’ictor Moore and Helen Broderick.
yVa
ow:
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MULLIN’S DRUG STORE STEVEN’S DRUG STORE Mfg. by B-ETTES CO., INC., DuBois, Pa. AT YOUR DRUGGISTS’, SOLD IN BOXES OF 12 AND IN HANDBAG PACKETS OF 3
Chateau
Spencer Tracy ami Jack Oakio have some highly exciting adventures into danger. love, and comedy in “Looking for Trouble,” showing at the Chateau theater Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. The two telephone girls who are their sweethearts, and incidentally the cause of many of itheir more humorous escapades, are played bv Constance Cummings and
Arlini Judge.
Tracy and Oakie have a series of thrilling adventures as telephone linesmen when they run afoul of wire i tappers and gangsters engaged in
engineering
bank robbery.
I also a part of their jobs to keep the communication lines open during an earthquake when they find themj selves perched precariously on tottcr- ! ing tclenhone poles amid a tangle o' high-voltage wires while sidewalks buckle and streets crack open be-
neath them.
Granada
A beautiful girl from “outside” pits her love against the ruthless ■ code of the wild in Jack London’s “White Fang.” at the Granada Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. Michael ! Whalen and Jean Muir have the lead-
■ ing roles.
I Miss Muir is seen as the courage- ! ous heroine wiio dares all the perils of the north country to help the man I she loves. Whalen has the starring
I part. Others in the east are Slim i ° | Summerville. Charles Wininger and ' canff01 ''
Jan i Darnell.
“White Fang” is a sequel to Lon-
don’s “Call of the Wild.”
Olive Johnston
$1.75; E. A. Browning Hdw:. $1.80; Metzger Lumber Company, $2.97; Alice Detro. $20.00; Rebecca White. $30.00; Alice Davis, $30.00; M. S. Phillips $1.15; Merit Shoe Co. $11.40; C A. Kelley. $218.70; E. A. Browning Hdw., Co.. $13.06: Allan Lumber Co., $19.65; Miller Grain Co.. $25.50; Indiana Reformatory, $38.63; Purity Bakeries, $33.13; Metzger Lumber Co . $20.69; Lee School Supply Co.. $10.50; Hilli? Feed Store, $24.50; J. R. South $6.20; Metzger Lumber Co. $20.69: Mooresville Public Service Co. $28.70; The Owl Drug Store, $14.54; Frank E. Reed, $75.00; James A. P.urk, $113.10; Russellville News, $11.79; The Daily Banner, $63.58; R Mullins, $2.10; C. B. O'Brien. $5; Tne Daily Banner, $4.00; Indiana State Sanitorium, $357.12; TimesNews, $.10.60; T. R. Woodburn Ptg. Co., $381.41; Mrs. Bessie S. Zaring, $16.00; Fred Lancaster, $190.55; Metzger Lumber Co., $72.25; Benton Curtis, $22.38: Indianapolis Orphan j Asylum. $23.25; Sam Hanna, $16.08; i E. A. Browning Hdw. Co., $2.91; Arthur Plummer, $1.00.
Stanley Kessler, $40.00: Sam Henry, $47.50; Roy Arnold, $108; Russell Plummer, $67.80; Will uiHR-weil, $33.00; Robert Thomas. 366.00; A. P. Robinson, $63.00; Maurice Stierwalt. $67.20; Lee Whitaker, $69 00; C. C. Hurst. $38.25; William Neese, $10.00; Bud Littrell. $31.75; Clay Lane. $37.00; Harry Lane $5 00; James Skimmerhorn, $20.00: Thomas
$39 00; Paul Foxx. $7.50;
The O. & I. Stone Co., $216.37; Midwest Crushed Stone Co.. $113.22; Dobbs Tire and Battery Co. $147.72: Indiana Associated Telephone Co., $10.10; Gallon Iron Works Co., $53;
of claims allowed by the 1 Indiana State Farm ' *115.84; L. &
H. Chevrolet Sales Co., $134.24; Lee
Srhool
COMMISSIONERS’ ALLOWANCES
A list
hoard of county commissioners of Putnam county, Indiana, at the No-
vember term, 1930:
Homer C Morrison, $219 12; Gertrude Onklev, $40 00; Sallie Morrison, $6000- T. R. Woodburn Printing Co., $25.00; Typewriter Sales Co., $3.50; Western Union Telegraph Co., $1.73: The Globr Print Shop, $22.50; Lee School Supply Co., $1.10; Indiana Associated Telephone Co. $53.50; E. A. Browning. Hdw. Co.. $1.80: $11.90: Lea School Supply Co., $56.87; Greer.castle V/ater Co., $03.10; Lee School Supply Co. $37.65;
AUCTION SALE 500 Montana, Wyoming and Nebraska Cattle. Slockers And Feeders Wed., Nov. 11, Roachdale, Indiana Sale begins at 12.00 Noon, rain or shine. 300 Choice Steer and Heifer Cdves 200 choice Hereford Shorthorn yearling Steers and Heifers. These cattle will arrive at Roachdale from Monday, Nov. 2 on and may be seen there. Miller and Ford, Auctioneers. Dave Clark ’lamcstown. L in charge. See him for particulars and he will show you the cattle. Wertheimer Cattle Company FKKD CASE, Manager
Supply Co.. $65.00; Allan
Lumber Co., $82.98: High Point Oil < o., $404.11; Kimel Larkin. $41.00; V. R. Woodburn Printing Co., $2.50; Cary Dillinger. $169.35; Greencastle Water Co. $2.97; Emery Sutherlin. $573.38, Metzger Lumber Co., $13.10
Sam Roe, $98.35; Lester Wilson,
$105.75: Earnest Thomnson, $90.15; Elme Clodfelter $116.50; Fant Judy, $123.20; Heorv Phillips. $189.25; Ar'hur Eggers. $276.25: Alva M. Gowin $31.65; Lee Myers. $271.00; Andrew Rweepev $73.60: Kenneth Knauer. 5407.10. Kimel Wilson. $271.05; Wilrnv Blue. '$22:50; L. E. Hervert. $101.55; Georgy Hurst. $242.05; To! Walters. $92 50: Charles Duncan. $16.75: E. J. O’Conner. $134.10; Eugene Cooner. $99.00; Ertis McCullough $321.90; J. C. Hinote, $290.85; fno M. Sigler. $149.65; Ira Hutche-
son. $271.95; Claude King, $149.75.
ROACHDALE 4 Mrs. Orville Perkins 4 ^ •!• •!• + 4. + + q- + + j. + + + ^ Mr and Mrs. William Myers of Crawfordsville are spending a few 'ays with Dr. and Mrs. C. N. Stroube. Mrs. Nathan Call has returned home after visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. B. Crosby and family at Silver Springs, Md. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wilson of Dayton, O., spent the weekend with their parents, Mrs. Ida Wilson and Mr.
Jack Porter and Robert 1 ! Crawfordsville spent the with their parents. Mrs. Kathlcn Perm of Mia| spent the weekend with her | Mr. and Mrs. G D. TuppenlatJ Mr. and Mrs. Ward Rice i ily of Indianapolis spent with the former’s parents, Mrs. Frank Rice. Mr. and Mrs. Orval Boll daughter have moved to tha home on south Indiana street.| Miss Rutli Eggers of India! spent Monday night will mother, Mrs. May Eggers. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wilsl family spent the weekend "'id parents, Mrs. Ida Wilson ani Julia Case. Miss A valine Noland of polis spent From Friday unti^ day with A. C. Noland and fai Harry Hosier and famdi moved to the house recently i by Orval Boling. Mr .and Mrs Joseph Case! Sunday with Mrs. Julia Case! Mrs. Ruth Tobin of IndiaT spent the weekend with her] Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Cross. Barry Clark and familyl moved to the Faller propert>| Mrs. Ray York, a patient I ver hospital, is slowly iniprf Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Foi near Parkersburg spent Sund^ Mr. and Mrs. C. A Faller. Mr. and Mis. Homer Morphl moving to the Coslin property Mr. and Mrs Homer Tobin [ derson spent the weekend and Mrs. Claude Smith and M Mr. and Mrs. John L. "'Hi Lafayette and Mrs. Myrta B u ' spent Sunday with Mr. and villa Perkins. Margaret and Herbert Indianapolis spent the weekeij their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crosl sons were Sunday diner g Mrs. Lottie Heighway at La ] Dr. Paul Ream has suffer" lapse and is in a serious con ^ his home here. ,. Mrs. Donald Cox and son o I castle spent Wednesday " Mattie Cline and family-
LIGHT BULB WAR >TA * SYDNEY. (UP) ' AUSl
starting to compete manufacture of cheap
electril
lie- vr* --- - . iS|
bulbs. A $500,000 appropr'M been made for further eqmpPJ
of the
Manufacturers Ltd.. o{ When the plant has h '' f ' stalled it expects to . nual output by 5 000 00 riff to make reductions i" P from 16 to 37 per ceht-
