The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 April 1937 — Page 4
rHB DAILY BANNER, QRL^M ASTijE, INDIANA MONDAY, APRIL 19, 19157.
CHATEAU Tonight and Tuesday BAlUi.MV MAT. TI ESDAY i r. m. — i5c A Laugh A Minute 1 NEW SON(J HITS in Mary Roberts Rinehart’s SutunUiN Evcn'ng To-it Story
HOURS
2 LEAVE
•Innic i Elii'on ,V Terry Walker
Arthur I^iliu - 1‘aul Harvry
235
‘Venus” on Be;idi
Tlev&i \ Chanm like This! Special Combination Offer Sktrofaty ( P&ridAi±, CR€AM OF ROSES CLEANSING CREAM (JZc Size) and FACE POWDER fSOc Size)
UOTMM for *i.OO
For limited time only S. C. PREVO CO.
Raskob and Dupont Subpoenaed
of output over those of the previous ! the country. year were shown by petroleum, ce- “The 19:;6 output was greater than
ment. gold, miscellaneous stone, brick anti hollow building tile, silver, lead, copper and other building ma- , terial.*.” Only Slump In Zinc 1 Receipts of bullion at the mint and smelters, it was indicated, showed an increased output of gold of approximately 159.000 fine ounces over 1935. All other major metals, with the exception of zinc, also showed an increased output. “The increased gold production and higher prices for these metals stimulated their yield and brought about the reopening of numerous mines, including the Walker plant. Plumas County, for many years a large producer of copper,” Bradley said. 1 The value and amount of the petroleum output showed increases over those of 1935, with a total quantity of about 214.212,000 barrels, a gain of approximately 3.5 per cent. The l average price of all grade of crude ^ oil was higher than that of the pre- , 1 vious year.” From the standpoint of gold pro-
that for any year since 1916. and, in value, exceeded that for any year since 1862,” a federal report said. New Gold Doscovcres ‘ The remarkable recovery of the i California gold industry since the j start of the depression has result 1 from the expansion of output of working mines, old producing mine ; ] reopened, and prospects an 1 new discoveries brought into production. “The Grass Valley-Nevada Cty district continued to be the center of the gold-producing industry in California. The leading mines there ] all appear to Tiave enjoyed larger i productions in 1936 than in the pre- ! ceding year. Along the Mother Lode | most of the ol 1 established mines maintained or Increased their rate of production and several new operations reached the productive stage
during the year.
“The reopening of old mines and the development of new prospects went on at an increasing’rate.” Indicative of increased operations, it was pointed out that silver producJon, largely a by-product of gold
GRANADA I "The Family Theatre" I Tonight and Tuesday OLD MAN KIVEK given up his f secrets to a re|M>rtcr with a nose for news anil an eye for a pretty jgirll MYSTERY J MENACE! MURDER!
Mysterious
'X JAMES DUNN JEAN ROGERS
Mus: VAUDEVILLE REEL AND LATEST NEWS ft SPOUT REEL “FISHING THRILLS”
V0NCASTL “Where The Crowd, 0«Tonight and Tuesday kton
MIR ens cut
theking
FERNAND GRAVIT n,i, BIOAOtll Huj.i.j, Alon * wi«vyN («fto? K ,
John J. Raskob, pictured at left, and Pierre S. Dupont, right, have been served with subpoenas to answer charges of having evaded payment of Federal income taxes. The two industrialists of the Dupont munitions firm and General Motors were prominent in opposition to President Roosevelt in the election lust November. The subpoenas require Dupont and Raskob to produce 482 records for examination at New York City on May 3.
duction, California continued to hold | mining operations, increase 1 70 per its position as the leading state of | cent during the year
NON-RESIDEN i HI NTERS IN UTAH CANNOT KEEP GAME SALT LAKE CITY, (UP) — If a hunter happens to be in the woods when the next season is on and some one crashes through the underbrush witli a deer thrown over his shoulder shouting “warden, warden,” it probably will mean the Utah law is being
observed to the letter.
But if the successful hunter doesn’t find a warden, that’s another story i so interesting it should be told. The out-of-state hunter who bags a deer can have his picture taken with one foot planted on the kill, <
then he can even keep the animal for a few days. But only for five days, for he must mail the deer to the state game commission. That’s the law. Under a bill signed by Gov. Henry H. Blood known technically as an amendment to section 30-020 of the Revised Statutes of Utah for 1933— it says that an out-of-state hunter must mail his kill to the commission shortly after he kills it. The act starts innocently enough, all about a non-Utahan being able to get a license on payment of certain fees to certain officers, and other formalities.
V/cdnesday and Thursday 2 BIG FEATURES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE!
But a little farther on is the joker. Says the law: “There shall be attached to such license ... a special deer tag . . . which ; must be immediately attached by the licensee to each deer killed and thereafter mailed to the fish and game commissioner not later than five days after the close of the season . . . unless earlier removed by warden.” There seem to be some legal niceties in the matter. For instance, does the hunter shoot a deer, triumphantly yell “tag!” and wait for the warden; or does he go find the warden. To put it in simpler language, does the state hunt the hunter or does the hunter hunt the state as well as the deer ? Also, there’s the possibility of deerrunners operating in the forests, to tempt law-abiding citizens. Nobody seems to know exactly
ADDED: KEN MURRAY AND OSH In “MAIL AND FEMALE* TRAV EL TALK ’
Coming Wednesday and Thursd* MAE WEST in “Go West Young Man"
what the commission expeetj ti with all the venison, althougn legislators suggested setting state controlled market to rai» ed revenues. One other drawback is the that game wardens are noton reticent folk, particularly r hunters. Nobody has made any sugge about who tags the hunter, if should chance to wanter when ffter fear to roam.
June Lang Is she the "modern Venus”? So say some. She is June Lang, rising young screen actress who shows you the latest in beach attire for coming season.
COLD IN LEAD AS C ALIFORNIA > minim; rooms
VALUE OF Ot TIM T IN 1936 EXCEEDS A N\ YEAR SINCE 1862 SACRA MENTC 1 Cal. (UP) California’s far-flung i linns, located on mountain tops, rlennn and des erts, added $300,557 000 to the state’s wealth in 1936. This estimate, pi -t 1 bv V’ dteW. Bradley, : tat • Mine nloiLst is the highi t 1929 and was indicative of the steadily increasing activdv in t’ psnea of c 1ifornia, many m v ■ r w M " : ormant until the price of ■ ’ ! w is incrcs.sc 1 and economic co i litions ieinroved “The estimated total of $300,557.000 is an inerca c of approximately $37,716,000 ovei tic tot ' vain of the 1936 production and is the largest since 1929,’’ the report sai i. “The principal increases in valu"
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Cook s beer has mat uniformity of flavor which everyone enjoys. It tastes good the first time and every tinie thereafter. Be sure to call for Cook’s. f. W. COOK COMPANY CVANSVIILI, INDIANA
GOIDBIUME BEER Distrihu ed by Boh Hoffman 17 - 519 N. Indiana SL Phone 349
Wow! .. says A l Schacht ...the Clown Prince of Baseball whoops it up for the grand opening of the 1937 baseball season.
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Come on” the bleachers roar.. '.'Swat ’em out!'' As the big leaguers swing into action watch those Chesterfield packages pop out of the pockets. There’s big league pleasure for you,.* everything you want in a cigarette. A homer if there ever was one ... all the way ’round the circuit for mildness and better taste ... with an aroma and flavor that connects every time.
Copyriiht 193’, Liccitt A Mrm Tobacco Co.
