The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 18 January 1937 — Page 4
IBB DAILY BANNER, GREEN CASTLE, INDIANA
MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1937.
CHATEAU
Tonight and Tuesday Bargain Matinee Tumorrow at '2 I’. M. Admission 15c ONK HOI K AND FIFTY M1M I TKS OF SWEI.I, EN TEKTAIN MENT.
VIARY PICKFORD ond JESSE L LASKV
cMottfcXtaJitutt .THE GRV DESPERRDO
IDA LUPINO-LEO CAPRILLO mROUBEN MAMOULIANrodvchan
I’Iiih: ‘‘Mii'kpv Mouse” and Color Cartoon.
always put on a great scrap and we expect to see the laigest crowd of the season on hands. o—:—-o Preliminary rounds of the annual Wabash Valley tournament will be held in various cities Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The winners will then go to Terre Haute next weekm I for tne finals when the 19.'!7 Valley champs will be crowned. Teams play ing in the tourney here this week end include Belle Union. Fillmo.e Russellville. Putnamville. Bainbridge Cloverdale and Roachdale.
Spirit of Jackson Symbolizes Roosevelt Inaugural
‘Agitating The Draperies”
Wednesday night the Tiger C.ib clash with the Athenians at Craw fordsville The up-Monon team holds one victory over the Cubs this sea- ‘ son in the New Year’s Day tourney I at Attica. We are predicting a good game. o—:—o Saturday night, the Greencast’e Tiger Cubs meet the stiong Indian quintet at Anderson. This will be a real test for the locals as the Ander son Indians are rated as one of the best aggregations in the Hoosici state. o—o AT (IKEENCASTEE Thursday, Jan. 21
BASKETBALL SENSE AND NONSENSE
< By Jimmie)
WEEK'S NET CARD Wednesday Wabash at DePauw. Putnamville vs. Brazil (B). Greencastle at Crawfordsvillc. Thursday Wabash Valley Tourney (here). Saturday Greencastle at Anderson. Wabash Valley Tourney (here).
This is not a ”1 told you so”—but Saturday afternoon we were asked by Bob Black, well known local tonsorial artist and sports fan, as to who would win, ‘ Indiana or Purdue?” We told Bob we were picking PURDUE because we believed "they have the better team.” And. the Boilermakers won from the Bloomington squad. 41 to .’iO For once we really picked a winner!
A college game of state-wide interest takes place in Bowman gym Wednesday evening when Wabash and DePauw tangle. It doesn’t make any difference what kind of a team cither school has these two old rivals
No. 1, 7 Russellville. No 2. 8 Cloverdale.
p. m. Putnamville vs
Bainbridge v*
Friday No. 3. 7 p. m. -Belle Union vs Roachdale. No. 4 8 p. m.- Fillmore vs. Reels ville. Saturday No. 5, 2 p. m. Winner game 1 vs. winner game 2. No. 6 3 p, m,—Winner game 3 vs. winner game 4. No. 7, 8 p. m.—Winner game 0 vs. winner game 6. Officials Clyde Gentry and Cecil Tharp. o—-o (Brazil Times) Greencastle must have recovered its hitting eye. The team which shot hell west and crooked here sank enough of their shots to defeat Rushville, 34 to 25, last Saturday night. o—:—o • Crawfordsvillc Journal > DePauw’s Tigers showed their supremacy over Butler's Bulldogs at the giant Butler fieldhouse last week. 29 to 28, as the two teams met after an eight-year break in athletis relations. From 1921 to 1930 the Tigers and Bulldogs met sixteen times with the Bulldogs winning twelve times.
VONCASfl
“Where The Cn
d
Tonight and Tn^ MATINEE ••U Stars By Li J Don t Miss It;
IIimorvs Most Him,,, ^ Immort.m.i/td B, Tin Gmi; Loviks Or "Cai'.ain Bir, 4 ERROL n.YNj OLIVIA Oc HAV1 LLAfj
TiicCHAFiGtJii LIGHT I5RI Gil
ill ir*» ii c r Bril f 1 cn* iton'i l)cat , 'lni J PATKIC KNOWUS .ii.mI STEPHENSON. NIGEL bill
ALSO: COLOR ( \htqi “COOCOONUT (,Rovr
Becond inaugural of Franklin p. Roosevelt as president of United States will reflect in spirit and tone the program which marked the start of Andrew Jackson's second term in office The reviewing
stand is a replica of Jackson's Tennessee home, the Hermitage At President Roosevelt's request, the ceremonies will be as simple and informal a. possible paralleling second inaugural of "Old Hickory".,
AT BAINBRIDGE Final score Bainbridge, 32; Rockville, 26. Score at half Bainbridge, 15; Rockville, 12.
GIRL ON WRESTLING CARD
INDIANAPOLIS. Jan. IF Wrestling's spotlight will shine on a 22year old girl here Tuesday night at the Armory despite the fact that sev-
eral of the best known heavyweight j idian.
ler, in a special added attraction on the weekly card which is to be featured by the second appearance of Ali Baba, 205, the "Mysterious
| Turk.”
Miss Mortenson. daughter of a former middleweight grappler, scales I around 133 pounds, is said to he extra speedy and can dish out the I punches if necessary. Miss Burke has wide experience as a wrestler and hopes to out-maneuver the Flor-
It will be a one-fall bout.
and state fans on his first appearance three weeks ago. Ht is “bald as an eagle" and sports a handlebar mustache. The entire program a’5n mustache.
RESEARCH, COMPETITION KEEP FOOD PRICE DOWN*
grapplers in the nation will see ac- Rough ami tough Babe Zaharias, tion on the card. 235, Colorado “meanie," battles Ali Clara Mortenson. of Florida, who Baba, former world's champion and claims the world’s wrestling champ- one of the widest publicized mat
ionship as far as the ladies are con- stars in the game, to top the regular ; !heir cJollar sales gained about 7 per corned, will tackle Mildred Burke, program of three matches. The ■ in over t |u)r ' £ ‘ °f the precedwell known St. Louis woman wrest- 1 Turkish mat ace attracted 4,000 local : in ^ V*-’ 31 They attributed this 7 per
NEW YORK. (UP) Improved general business, and a rise in real purchasing power, caused the public to buy more and better food during the year. Food retaileis. whole dollar volume is about one-third of the total retail dollar volume, estimated
cent inciease to the buying of better quality foods, greater quantities, ami a price rise of about 3 per cent, which was brought about largely by the drought that cut supplies of domestic foods about 3 per cent below apparent consumption demands. Research and intense competition - there aie about 2.000 more food manufacturers in this country than there were a year ago should keep food price advances in the next two months moderate. Growing weather, the prime determinant of food supply, and public purchasing power, an essential factor in food derrnn 1, will continue to be the main influences on food prices.
GRANAD
“The Family Thraln'l Tonight and Tues
4 Stars By Liberty Plenty ()t Advenim
Paramount Piduri «
NAY NAY LAD YE CANNA GIE ME THOSE ILL BUY MY OWN KIND I KEN WHAT THEY DO...
FRED MacMII JACK OAK! JEAN PARK!)
H0V0 NOUN • fOWARtil P.fdudd and Olxitad by /Ly l
ADDED: FOI'EVE, Ml “BROADWAY HKiHI-IU
rH .1. •’■41 !• ULOVEKDAEE, I'OUTSf Xt + .r. + a .j. * j- -*1 Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fir scl Sunday were Mr Charles Pettit and dauuhta Charles Green and Mrs Jack Jackson and family | Frank Day called on bH Reuben Day. Fred Hansel and son calldH I'. Gibson. Miss Mary Pettit callell ami Mrs. Jack Jackson. Tims Mr. and Mrs. Charles W ed or. Mr. and Mrs Bill BafJ daw Mr .and Mrs. Bill Barton* M •. and Mrs. Clyde Coinli‘ i '|^B Miss Minnie Crawley is nl the Putnam cotinly hospit^B A double birthday sufl^B held Jan. 11 at the hon* Jack Jackson, in lionor of me Hansel and FtiehanlfJ Tho-n present were M r Charles Pettit and daugl’t^B Mini Loretta Hansel. Bill'P'!® bv Lee Jackson. Mr. and Hansel, Everett Eugene Mr.:. Emma. Hansel.
* -!•
•?• »*»
WEST JEFFERSON Mrs. Viola Mef iimmi
+ A ... .J .J. A A •• * James Watts and daugW*
Clay Neeley »
'J When smokers find out the good things that Chesterfields give them ewe do
called on
oiimla;' evening. The Thursday club met
Id", Barron.
Mr. and Mrs. Abb Alice•lav with Mr. and Mrs. Ke'i 1 a* Martinsville. Mr. and Mrs. CharlW Mnrde Pierce spent Sunda) •i” ’ Mr:. Lee Allen. • on • Mt-.. Frank visiitng Mr and Mrs. J 0 * 1
Mtes Pauline Watts
calk
Viol- McCammacI’: Moa'la Mr; Kenneth Mo'riaoi’
. John. H
•'re' railed on Mrs.
^Copifr^M IOJ?, Uoptn A M.ns To»*CC0 Co.
M and Mrs. Charles N I- > v.-rr*. w'th Mr and Mi MvCurnmack.
