The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 December 1936 — Page 6

CHATEAU Tonight & Thursday I!«‘rr’» A Musical Comedy That’s Ccod end Funny l.ooU At The Cast. NED SI’AKKS, E LEAN OK POWELL JIMMIE IM NX ALICE FAVE ( LIFE EDWARDS GEOKtiE WHITE AND MAW OTHERS In ‘ George Whites Scandals” Also—Camera Thrills And News.

U. S. PRESERVE ADMITS 1.700 DEER HUNTERS

PISGAH FOREST IN NORTH CAROLINA THE SCENE OF

ACTION

ASHEVILLE, N C. (UP>-Men ami women with rifles assembled here Monday, November 16 for the biggest deer hunt in history. From 14 states and the District of Columbia came 1,700 persons to participate in the fourth annual public deer hunt on the Pisgah National Game Reserve. The participants were selected. Fcur hundred others were (Hawn as Pernatives. And 700 others who made applications will have to look orward to next year’s hunt. Each of the 1,700 hunters entering , the forest for disignated three-day

down’’ one buck. The hunt will last | come out of Hollywood. Singing, through December 12 * dancing, and more than the usual ... ' . .. amount of comedy feature the show. No dogs were permitted in the A|icc Faye j^y Dunn , Ne d preserve. U. S. Forestry officials will Sparks, Eleanor Powell, Cliff Edbe allowed to pick their stands on the wards and George White head the

85.000 acre preserve. cast. Each year, because of a surplus number of deer, a hunt is called,

thrown open to the public.

Included in the list of hunters were

Granada

A hardboiled managing editoi crosses swords and purposes with a society girl who inherits the news-

clergymen. educators. U. S. Army of- ! l^P e ‘; h '’ supervises in “The Girl On

J I the Front Page,” on the Granada

officials, attorneys, agriculturists and

ficers, airway lunness men,

housewives.

The names were drawn from North Cu: olina, Tennessee, Georgia, South '.'urolina, Alabama. Virginia. Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania, Florida. Illinois and the District of

Columbia.

Two hundred hunters went into the Torest at intervals, with three-day periods set from Monday through the middle of December. If they are unsuccessful during the throe-day period, they will have to wait until next year and hope that their name is drawn again. Strictest laws are enforced by the

pe iods will be privileged to “bring i officials of the hunt. No smoking is __________________________ permitted on the preserve. And only a

M^M^^^'ajaiaiaaia/srai^'ajaMMia'a'a/SHisisiEfa'aiaiaisjsjsaMaMarajaiaiaiarsaic ccrtain kinii of bullet ^ permitted.

F I s I i' :|

S2G&SE SALE •I I*. M , SATl'RDAV, IF ( . .'», \T BA1XBRIDGE, INI). One car load Neb.aska brood mares in foal by a Mammoth Jack. The Jack will Ij" vild in this sale. These mares arc most all broke, g( title, young ami sound. Tiie mule colts will bring enough next tall to pax for mare*. No season lo pay. Regardless of price to the highest bidder. Two real good saddle horses. Sonic matched pairs. One big Western saddle. K. E. BYARS

IMii'S£®ESMicJDijEEi'E®SElSEISJEJ3(e!Jt!iJSiS/ciJ£.'SJEISISi3/3JS/5jSjSiSjBiSMtI3. f SJSEIEJSlS/SJSj^

All participants in the hunt are given instruction days before so there will be no last-minute slips. Forestry officials said the hunt is held to relieve conditions resulting from overpopulation and as a part of the game management work of the

forest service.

Previews and Reviews AT LOCAL THEATERS |

ft Save 25% to 65% on your Chrin mas or New Year trip an.vtvhen Pxitie in warm modern coaches. STEVENS DFTG STOKE E. Wa-Hhington St. Phone *91

^3 m

Fare Bargains One Way Round Trip Indianapolis, 1ml. .70 $1.05 Terra Haute, Ind. .55 .85 Detroit, Mich. $5.00 9.00 Pittsburgh, Pa. 6.05 I *.55 Kansas City Mo. 7.80 14 05

Voneastlo

Edmund Lowe and Elissa Landi arc featured in “Mad Holiday," | showing at the Voncastle tonight and j Thursday. Lowe is seen as an actor

who walks out of the studio because . , . . he is disgusted with the type of roles | tlle fact that the act I ,laccs a11 stock- [ he has been given, that of a detective j holders at a great tax disadvantage i ' r a series of movie mysteries. While j us compared with partners. An iron-

~ holiday trip he discovers that I

screen tonight and Thursday. Edmund Lowe portrays the manager and Gloria Stuart the heiress. CORPORATE TAX STUDIED NEW HAVEN. Conn., (UP)—De spite the corporate surplus tax, corporations still can build up reserves, according to Benjamin Graham, Co'ur.ibia university’s lecturer in fiisace and president of the GrahamNewman Investment Corporation. Corporations, he says, can capitalize any desired part of their earning.' either by paying taxable stock divi dents or by other readily available devices. Graham asserts that since the act should work no fundamental change in corporate fiscal policies he believes the position of bond holders will not be impaired. He also anticipates that the law will have a healthful effect on stockholder-man agement relations, since it would curtail numerous advantages frequently gained by insiders through manipulati’ig dividend policies, and since the | advantage of retaining earnings rather than selling new stock accrues more to the management than to the

stockholders.

According to Graham, the statute’s ' ily ( bjectionable features are not in the principle of the tax, but in numerous “unfair details'' Of appli-

cation.

One of these unfair details rests in

Circus Magnate Called By Death

JOHN RIXGLING PNEUMONIA IN YORK CITY

DIES NEW

NEW YORK, Dec. 2 <UP)—John Ringling, 70. last brother of the famous Ringling Brothers circus family, died of bronchial pneumonial in his New York apartment at 2:45 a. m.

today.

Ringling. sixth ol seven brothers, | bad been ill only a few days. Almost to the last he spoke in his aw. soft voice to family members ind close friends. At his bedside were 'da Ringling North, a sister, John Ringling North, nephew, Frank Henleisy, life-long friend, Dr. Maurice lostello. his personal physici.n, two lurses and a chauffeur. Funeral arrangements were incom-

plete.

John Ringling, called the greatest nagnate of the sawdust ring, was born a poor boy. At the height of his career he was eputed to have been worth $50,000,)00, a fortune which dwindled during .iis later years. JJohn and four of his brothers started in the entertainment world by holding "Kid" circuses on a vacant lot in Baraboo, Wis., long the winter home of the Ringling Circus. In 18,84 the show went on the road dannered under the imposing string of descriptive adjectives. It was success from the start. During the busy years which followed a number of circuses were bought and merged with Ringling Brothers, climaxed in the deal which brought Ringling and Barnum together under one big tent.

GRANADA “The Family Theatre” 20c ANYTIME

Tonight and Thursday DID SHE TAKE HIM FOR A RIDE!

YOU’lL IQVt III 9 1 ^tMf new uNive*SAi PReseNts , ()IR ,c>r7%e FRONT PAGE GLORIA - ■ STUART > O W E N J

with EDMUND 10WE - (REGINALD

—Also— POLLY MORAN in ‘OH, DUCHESS’ AND n::ws

STORES SHOW 14 PER CENT INCREASE IN CREDIT SALES ST LOUIS. (UP)—Credit sales are up 14.1 per cent this fall as compared to the 1935 figure, a survey by the research bureau of the National Retail Credit Association reveals. The highest percentage was found

i the author of the mystery stories is r. beautiful young woman. A l ike murder is arranged to hold his interest. A real murder and a missing I diamond add complications to the plot. Zasu Pitts and Ted Healy head the supporting cast.

Chateau

Although not a new picture “George White’s Scandals,” at the Chateau tonight and Thursday, is O le of the best musicales that has

ical aspect of the provision which effects this result is that it was absent in the house bill as originally drawn and was only inserted after business lenders, inveighing against the act, convinced congress that the desired tax yield could only be realized by retaining the time-tried corporation tax Thus, “business seems to have talked itself into a higher tax bill,”

Graham says.

SCHOOL IN CEMETERY ELGIN, 111., (UP)— Possibility that the Elgin board of education might take over an abandoned cemetery as the site for a new school building has been under discussion here recently. The burial ground covers approximately 17 acres and has been unkept for a number of years.

in Decatur, 111,, where sales rose to a high of 36 per cent. The bureau, in checking 13,162 retail stores throughout the country, found business greatly improved in October over the same month a year ago. It reported an almost “universal” pickup in employment and generally higher prices for farm prod-

ucts.

Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a “city where unemployment doesn't exist,” had the highest collection record of 45 cities in the United States. The figure was 25 per cent above last year’s. An average increase of 5.8 per ce in collections was reported, with Fort Lauderdale first and San Francisco graining with a decrease of .3 per

tent.

In explaining the increased collections in Fort Lauderdale the report

said:

VONCASTLE “Where The Crowds Go" Tonight and Thursr^ READ THE ( Asfi ENOUGH SAID! A HERO TO THE LADIES! But what a scream when ha runs up against his hist murder mystery (oil the screenl)J

swLOWE ^ LANDI ZASU PITTS . TED MEALT EDMUND GWENN i EDGAR KENNEDT I OirtCtti^y George S s.9» k P'odotee 6, Horry topi

—Also-

YACHT CLUB BOYS IN “DOUGH-NUTS” GEORGE STOLL’S OK< ItESTR* IN “SWING BANDITRY” M-G-M NEWS.

“Collections in the Florida city were due to continued building activity and no unemployment. There aiv| practically no able bodied men theft I who do not have a steady income It this time.” Both collections and credit sales continued to increase in the New York and Pennsylvania area, the association said. Pittsburgh reported ! a general improvement in industry— which is running above 90 per cent of normal with employment greatly improved.

Mi-s. Charles Boganl of Bainbridge underwent an operation at the county hospital, Wednesday morning.

...out of the Horn of Plenty come the good things that smokers enjoy

..mild ripe tobaccos from the Carolinas, Georgia, Kentucky,Mar) land and Virginia—there’s aplenty of the best in Chesterfield. ..aromatic tobaccos from Turkey and Greece—and plenty to make Chesterfields taste better— and different. Pleasing taste and aroma, refreshing mildness—Chesterfields are chock full of the good things you enjoy in a cigarette.

U f ! m

ONE BAG OF THE Old Reliable Safe-Way Saves -15- Bushels of Corn A BALANCED RATION of CORN and SAFE-WAY costs lossproduce* more imrk than any other ration. $1.00 WORTH OF SAFE-WAY plus the sows milk will feed your fall pigs until 3-months of age, wean your pigs with the sow, PREVENT the RUNTS. SAFE W W fed pigs xx:'igh 60 to 85 Ihs. when 90 days old. ONE BAG SAFE-WAY EGG BALANCER Make i — 5 hags of EGG MASH — saves $5.00 l isten to WI S, 6:10 and WOWO 11:50. For Sale by DR. H. L. PARKER Dealer For Putnam County.

.. .for the good things smoking can give you

...etyoy Chesterfields

Copyright 19)6, Licosu A Myers Tobacco Co,

FREE INFORMATION OF THE Federal Home Modernization Plan Information now available, In simple, readable form, the Important facts eoneerning the plan of the Federal Housing Administration to provide funds for repairing and modernizing homes. There is nothing rnmplleated about the (dan, so far as the home owner is < oneerned. To any reader who fills out and mails the isnipon below, we will send, tree of charge, eomplete details on who may apply f ,,r a loan, where to apply and all other necessary Information. Please print nr wfrlte plainly. Please send me the pamphlet explaining the home modernization plan. * ,,: "e rooms in my home. I am hilercyted ()|e t vpe of home Improvement checked below: * V Jjf < * Roofing' t ■ ( > Painting < > Plumbing < > Plastering < » Electrical Work ( > Redecorating < • Additional Rooms < i Cement Work < > Heating < » Garage < • Brick Work < ) Hardwood Floors < > l.audscap'ng and Grading < > Termite Control Or Here write any other type of project. Name Address Address your letter to: Federal Housing Headquarters Room 3, Central National Bank, Bldg. Greencastle, Ind.