The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 March 1944 — Page 4

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THE DAILY BANNER, ^REENCASTLE, INDIANA, FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1944.

CHATEAU-Tonight and Saturday

Power-Packed Thrills In The Tall Timber!^*

When a blonde bombehell turns battling lumberjack in a savage timber war, get set for ' roaring action and 1 racy romance!

A Paramount Pkture itarring RICHARD SHUGHESi with June Havoc Sheldon Leonard George E. Stone Dick Purcell Directed by FRANK M<OONAI.D SiJii Maxwell Shane and Edward T Lowe

Chapter 8 “M.\SKKI> AIABVKL" and A (iOOI) COLOB CAKTOON

CHATEAU Midnite Show Sat. 11:30 SUN. THRU THURSDAY

PACIFIC t&vyimm job STANWYCK McCREA with •KIM UMItOFF • KOIEtT PtESTOK LYNKE OVERMEN f IHEN DONIEVY •no • cast or rmuMNOs PioMatti eaM li'Mtetf kt CECIL I. DcMlLLE

How To Relieve

Bronchitis

Creomulsion relieve.-, promptly because it goes riuht to the seat o' the '.rouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe md heal raw, tender inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist 10 sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you

are to have your money back.

hr OiulhPc^i^CoWs^o^hiH* (Tim) Grimes saying he had i ... ^ rr=: j arrived in England. Tim would like

| to hear from his friends. His ad- ' Jress is T Sgt. Chester L. Grimes, \a. S. N. 15104177 A. P. O. 874, C/o Postmaster, New York, N. Y., The iuli address may be obtained from

has been transferred from Westoner Field, Mass., to Chatham Field, Georgia. Cpi. Schonfeld graduated irom Radio Operator and Mechanic School at Scott Field, 111., and also from Aerial Gunnery School at Tyndall Field, Fla. Cpi. Schonfeld is tile son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwatd Schonfield of Butlerviile. Ind., and was mai tied to the former Miss Pauline Kendall on November 7

1942.

Mr. and Mrs. .Clyde Grimes have leccived word from their son, T Sgt.

—— — — TPAV ELING PDX (30RL€$K*,

VONCASTli tonight s Saturday [ SHE’S FOR HE

WITH

the coroner’s office to perform the autopsy. Beverly Hills police investigated

is a Red Cross field director and as aslant field director, with additional I

) the possibility of poisoning. A widower. Buck had been livin.;

Questions? a crxc/ | Answers!

assistants when the size of the force requires. At many camps and stations there is a Red Cross headquarters building. At the larger hospitals there is a Bed Cross recreation building equipped and staffed with trained workers. Many volunteers ire serving al Army and Navy hoslituls.

M'TOI'SY OltUKKhT) BKVERLEY HILLS. Cal., March 24. (UP)—An autopsy was ordered today to determine whether poison

under care of a registered nurse.

Pvt. Taul A. Hur t of Camp Mackall, N. C. is visiting with his mother, Mrs. Ada HursM and family, near Belle Union.

} CUR 80VS

(w.

WITH TNA C010RS,

3

his parents.

OBLIGING ACTRESS

HOLLYWOOD, March 24.—(UP) Screen actress Fay Emerson keeps

John Joseph Danahey is stationed , a t | a t e with 200 army fliers tomorit Great I>akes, Illinois. He would ! I0W „ight when she attends the like to hear from his friends. His j graduation ball at the Santa Ana iddress is John Joseph Danahey j Army Air Base. Miss Emerson was A S. Co. 570, U. S. N. T. S., Great j .selected by the newly commissioned .■akes, Illinois. j officero as the girl they’d most like Robert Alexander ot Fillmore who to dance with and she said she’ll w is inducted into the army recently, j oblige as many as she can. has been sent to Camp Croft, S. C., j —— from Fort Harrison, for his basic Akl D addv tccticicc im military training. J0AN BARRY TESTIFIES IN Earl Phillip Sourwine of 208 Hills-! FILM COMEDIAN’S TRIAL

dale Avenue, who wa 3 inducted into ^ the army at Fort Harrison recently, I

has been sent to Sheppard

the middle-aged comic, the 23-yeav-old Miss Barry told a story of dinner at the 21 Club in New York. Irinks at the El Morocco, and a night with Chaplin in his bedroom in the tower of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. She charged in effect that the multi-millionaire Chaplin transport'd her to New York in October. 1942. for the sole purpose of indulging In sexual relations and that he sent her iack to Hollywood three weeks later for more night-long revels in his levcr’.y Hills mansion. The red-haired Miss Barry, who is growing plump since the birth of the

DAVID BRUCE grace McDonald GEORGE D0LENZ plus selected shob,

baby she claims was fathsM. Chaplin, spent most of ernoon telling her tory t 0 elderly men and women in thf] of Judge J. F. T. O’Connor a cutor Charles H. Carr did th, tioning.

Mrs. Cyril Frazier, 207 Bio, ton street, ivlurned to her i Thursday from the county h*

HOLLYWOOD. March 24.—(UP)

Field ! —J° an Barry, who wanted to be a

Texas, where he will receive his basic; , rnov * e star and claims she wound up military training. 1 a s Charlie Chaplin’s mistress, faced Pvt. Raymond C. Crawley has been I * n federal court today the veteran transferred from Fort Warren, Bos- j criminal attorney, Jerry Giesler, who ton. Mass., to North Camp Hood. ! sought to make her admit that she

Texas. His address is Pvt. Raymond j *i ec *-

C. Crawley, 38572345, Btry. C, 9th j As the government’s principal witc: A., North Camp Hood, Texas. ! ness in its Mann Act prosecution of

Mrs. William Francis Schonfeld ,

has received word that her husband 1

TAYLOR'S GROCER —Open Sundays10:00 A. M. Until 2:00 P. M. Meats-Groceries—Produce

101 3 South Locust St.

Plione J]|

was responsible for the death of q. What in the Bed t russ setup Charlcs w Huck , retired capitalist In military posts and naval stations? and one of tile original stockholder . .... . . and organizers of the Pet Milk Co. A. Wherever our troops are lo- . , , . . , . Dr. L. H. Kohlhasc, family doctor, cated. at Army posts and Naval sta- j ., ... , , . , i reported that Buck died suddenly tions cither at home or abroad, there 1 J from an unknown cause. He asked

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COATS and SUITS BUY NOW FOR EASTEH Our Stocks Are Most Complete LOVELY ALL WOOL SUITS AND COATS *25 00 to Make your selection now with ample time for necessary alterations. PIKE VO’S

$• | >

Smart, New, Lightweight

LUGGAGE We have a limited supply of thii Airplane Gotti Covered Luggage in sizes and styles for botfi men and w omen. . > \ H

Men’s Ovemlgtit bags $14.90 Women’s Overnigtit bags $14.90 Ladies’ Pullman '' m bags $25.50 Men’s Two-Suiter ^ t bag .$26.15

Remember! Tfie Supply Is l imited! Horace Link & Co.

-—4 .

The Store ot Furniture

HEAR Former liovernor M. CLIFFORD TOWNSEND

AT THE

FARMERS MEETING GREENCASTLE COURT HOUSE Monday, March 27 at 8 P.M.

SPONSORED BY THE MILLER GRAIN CO. Also C. F. MARSH, General Sales M 3 r., McMILLEN FEED MILLS Will speak on “Changes in Feeding Practices”. Joe W. Seabold — Kiwanis International Song Leader

WAR BOND

SOUVENIRS

OTHER GIFTS

YOU CAN GET IT AT ALLAN LUMBER CO.!

BARBED WIRE, 4 Pt POULTRY FENCE, 10 Rod - - • HOG HOUSES BROODER HOUSES CELOTEX ASPHALT SHINGLES s,|,mr, ‘ MULEHIDE ROLL ROOFINGINSULITE SHEATHING LOWE BROS. PAINT ULTRA LUMINALL, Gal.

- $5.00 - M.50 \ $6.00 - $1.25

$2.69

Come On Down The Hill And See Us! ALLAN LUMBER CO. (« fH ONE 403

He Does The

/ Dirty Wo*

He may not be the "personality kid" of this war ... He may not wear the most medals, nor get his name in the orders of the day. But the Seabee is paving] the road to Victory. And that suits him O. K.! He goes in with the first wave. Builds the beach fortifications, the airfields, the roads and gun-emplacements. And he keeps his rifle within reaching distanceready to defend what be builds! Like the Seabee, most of us who are fighting this war can’t be headline heroes. ' We’ve got a job to do, and we do it... the job of keeping our front-line fighters supplied with fighting equipment. And the closer we get to Viaory, the bfgger and tougher that job becomes! Railroad men can already see how much bigger it will be. £ S L>r , ™ inCreaSed P assen 8 er service by 60%. This year, military necessity demands that we top that increase by another 10%. 7

"a ' 5

In 1943, we carried more freight than experts had thought possible. In ’44, we must add another 29 billion ton-mila! This can be done if you ... as a railroad passenger, or a shipper or receiver of freight . . . remember that every inch of railway space is more important today than it has ever been before. You won’t get any medals for helping to keep America’s supply lines open. But. «• like the hard-working, hard-fighting Seabee . . . you’ll be defending what you’ve built I

New York Central OAfrorj/HrH/ai'xxd/txMV* Mv/rso sox r/croxr' 7

Railroad man and woman am working la Iha (•'"• JJ»k capacMaa. Mam railroad wartarr ora aoadod al oacan yoa am nor aaw amplayod In oauntM orw-ww*. YAK 1 A tAMOAD XM FOR VICTORY I

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