Ligonier Banner., Volume 59, Number 22A, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 July 1925 — Page 3
KOTIGE! THE NEW i ; .V §CED 1 BT 3 O\ Rite Way” Shoe . Bhop. is now open for businessand the public is cordially invited to bring in their work. C. .H. LUCE,. Prop.
SRS R RB L PRR Time to Rebpair Y ,Q* = *1 7 . our Lar --, Now is the time to have your car repaired and put in shape for summer. - - We do alljobs, no matter how large or how small. We now have with us, Mr. Ed Keasey, a first class mechanic to do the work. Give us a try-out and you will be a cus'tomé'r. - o: . - it you need Batteries, Tires, Tubes or Accessories we have them at attractive prices. ~ Kiester . ® Electric Shop Phone 481
< : . A : F'oßretz for Glasse ,%?.. Sharp Eyes s'w% For e “3’ : o M Sharp Work All mechanics ks to use keen edged, perfect tools. = ¥ Eyes are tools of the mind and must be sharp to do good work and peaist the wear of constant uee. %et us sharpen ¢our sight dy furnishing glasses that will enable Jou to mee clearly, . 5 Im What Cendition . Are Your Eyop_? . . Mevin E, Bretz Uptofuetrist ard G)ticlan : 130 S. Mzin S : GOSo S
Dr. Maurice Blue | . VETERINARIAN | Otfice: _lustamere Farm 1 . Phone: Ligonier 757 | A DITTRMAN | }O. A EKLLN‘E/‘%ZN | Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, i : Water Systems, Efc. | A Well Drilling ;o Phone 333 1 LIGONIER|] Next door to Ford Garage i L W WIGTON | ‘ S Atzorney»at-!kw : 1 . Office in Zimmerman Elock | LIGONIER, . IND ! Howard White i WAWAKA, INDIANA | - -AUCTIONEER o Thenetond Vawaka E. R Kurtz ~ Auctioneer | - ¢none No. 65, Ligonier. VERN_ B.FISHER §Sanitary Plumbing .and Heating§f; Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind Harry L. Benner Auctioneer = ‘Upen for all engagemends - Wolf Lake, Indiana - Both Noble and Whitley - County Phones ~ Crustee Perry Townshsp oo Office Mier State Bank, Ligonier
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REPORT TELLS HOW SALVATION ARMY - “MEETS THE NEED” The emergency relief given by the Salvation Army last year to 29,859 needy persons In the counties af west- " “ern Michigan and N . northern Indiana R S TR ' ? s, G 650 given & A Christmas dinners, 13,990 pro&g -?if;;,z?;, provided with WD o N=l - forded loduing, 8 Ll 88 060 families relieved, is but part: / - of the record of »;«“ service revealed ey in the Annual sLT MR Wl Tome Service reMaj. Stretton Port recently- is- - . Sued from Divisional Headquarters, 227 Pearl street, Grand Rapids, Michigan, by Major Richard F. Stretton, commanding the Salvation Army forces in the western Michigan and northern Indiana divislon.. - . . » Hospital Service. The report is brimful of the human interest that ever surrounds the work done by the Salvation Army, not only in its field work but in its divisional women’s home and matérnity hospital in Grand Rapids, where, during the past 12 months an average of three unfortunate girl mothers to each county in the division has found shelter and eaee,. : ’ New Divisional Fresh Air Camp. - As a part of its program of Home Service to reach the unreached mothers and children in the division, Ma~ Jor Stretton reports that a divisional fresh air camyp, near Grand Rapids, was acquired during the past year. It is a heavily wooded tract of 33 acres with a wide expanse of lake frontage. This camp will be thég center of sumimer - outings for needy and underyourished women and children from iall parts of the‘ division. Service Funds Needed. - The results of Salvation Army prison visitation showed marked development during the year. A visit ¢f the Divisional Commander with his staff band of 35 to the lonia reformatory resulted in over 500 men raising their hahds for prayer at the conclusion of a meeting there, - :
~ Attention is called to the fact that it is through the annual Home Service appeals .conducted by the. friends | of The Salvation Army in the communities it seeks to serve, that the Army | raises the funds it requires for its work throughout the year. It must limit or can expand its activities only ;,in the degree in which financial assisti ance is forthcom_ing; in such appéhls. | Major Stretton points out that there is one other source of income which is gradually growing in importance, This is through the medium of bequests. As the work of the Army in its several fields of humanitarian endeavor becomes more widely known and better understood, it is felt that a steadily increasing number of people will be. disposed to remember the or- . ganization in their wills, It is requested that communications with reference to the Salvation Army and its work in northern Indiana and western Michigan be addressed to the Divisional Commander, 227 Pearl street, Grand Rapids, Michkigan, Christian Science Society. | Services are held as follows: ‘ | Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. : Every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock Every Wednesday evening at 8:00 o’clock. o Meeting place in hall over store of Weir & Cowley. o ~ Everybody welcoms. ' 2
- AUMAN SALVAGE | - CORPS SAVES UNWED ~ MOTHERS AND BABES | Speaking -olit of over 25 years of | pr:xr(igfigfi;expfifi(ince in dealing with E\ the age-old prohlém of the unwed girlmother, and- of the manner in which | . the Salvation: | J-:»:-Ez:-':;‘_ Army copes with } %*3**\&%@%,? the problem in its R T M 50 wolten's homes e :~.~.‘.'3.3"'5-‘:"‘;':1:1'- : o e *z = 555-55:55‘::::5;_.3._‘5;:;5;;;55 and maternity lm__sfi 3 S @ % g E pituls in the Unit- j . N° .2 @ ed States, Lieut. *: Col, : Annmie | J.l B s Cowden, execw DAL i tive secretary of AES ¢ e salvation ;. g‘{*yfi‘; ritorial Women’y o W & ¥ Social Service de Lieut.-Col. Annie Partment, has is. " J Cowden, = ©Sned the following ; statement: Almost 4,000 girls annually claim thq shelter and help in our Salvation Army women’s homes .and @;i}}gfifiiiy hos: | pitals. Most of such girls cofie to ug E in their final extremity, many timey. i from the brink of a suicide’s grave, t¢ i,beAled batk from the depths of de | spair into avenues of hope and a new . grip on life. - . : | Problem of Adclescence. - E We. believe that no girl has ever ‘ sunk to any depths so low but what [ she can retrieve her wrong. We would } help her to forget the past and to _turn her eyes to the fufure with a new E urge to live. The Army segs-in “edch girl a soul that God meant tospe puta; i and undefiled. We seéek to take into - account that difficult period of transi. i tion from girlhood into womanhood, | - when judgment and knowledge of vital i things do not generally keep pace with her physical growth and development, ! Indeed this problem is largely one i growing out of adolescence.. The ay- - erage age of girls served in our .insti- , tutions last year was only about seventeen years. No few expectant mothers l of only thirteen and fourteen years of ' age and many at sixteen years cama . to us for help. | Mothers Keep Babies. { There are twe things that we ask | the girl to promise when she enters] | one.of our Anstitutions—to stay with | . us at least three months and not to! | give away her baby. We believe that % God often works through mother love f for the regeneration oftthese pathetic | little mothers, that the/touch of a tiny | hand, a baby’s smile,-its very helplessI»ness and dependence on her, warms | into life in the mother’s heart a love | that will not let her baby go, a deter- . mination to work and to live for the | little one to whom she has brought | life. It is not unusual for these mothi ers and babes to remain in our Salvation Army lomes for as long as one | year, leaving only when strength is | sufficient, courage is restored and their . future with honorable employment is | assured. . ¢ l The Salvation Army, while sure of ithe healing power of Christ’s love, | does nqt'regard the girls who come to | these homes as objects to be preached ‘ at, but just girls to be treated as girls lby women who understand the heart -and lives of girls. : i ’ ~ Grand Rapids Service Center. . Inquiries regarding this and other lphases of Salvation Army work should | be addressed to Salvation Army Head- | quarters, Grand Rapids, Michigan. ‘ Mrs. Audley Green .and son Ralph |visited relatives in Bremen several days last week. Do g ). Awnings, Tents, Porch Shades iW’agon Covers and Electric Signs. See }o_fls, L. Fuller Goshen Ind. Phone 251.
THE LIGONIER BArnvex, LIGONIER, INDIANA
Suicides After Forty Years. John Wilkes Booth assassinator of Abraham Lincoln lived for 40 vears after his crime accérding-' to the Reyv. John Wesley Potter Kokomo pastor, ~ The man shot in Garrett's bar non the night of April 26 1865 12 days after the assassination of Lincoln and who died before dawn on the front [porch of the .Gararett home was not Booth thep astor declared. i ~ “The man who . was Kkilled was ‘Gerald (Ruddy) Roby one cof the seyeral persons who were assisting Booth to escape’ the Rev. Potter said Booth escaped fled beyond the 'Mixs:issi].)'pi river into Texas and thence inio South American _ceountr"’ies, finally returning to the United tSates living at various places and committed suicide in Enid Okla., in 1903 almost 4«) yvears afier Lincgln was shot'™ . = = The only object in giving to the public the result of his long investigation into the matter was ‘to make it possible to ° teath truthfal history in the schoolg and elsewhere’” Pastor Potter asserted. e : Topeka Journal [tems, ' Mrs. Jane Fisher son. Harry and Ellsworth -Stevens and wife of Iligonier visited Sunday afterncon wiih Mr. and ;\'lr.‘s';'\\", L. Righer 0 Mr. and Mrs. E. D Mclntire and Waldo Seagly were Sunday gutsis of Worthy Stroman aund wl'innily of Helmer. L ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Smith were entertained at Sunday dinner by their son Joe Smith and wife of Ligonicr, Dea Trowl. and: lenlzili\};g,;.;.-vhlz-“*@?;ui}}‘: Bend Mr. and Mrs.~Frank Hall Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Pancake and granddaughter and Mr. and Mrs. Joiin Winright were entertained at an cluborate Sundé.y dinner by Walter Trowi and wife, . o
Finally Loses Temper. , The wife of Wilson W, Culp former minister who is at the present time on his fourth elopement has de(:idled that she has fogiven her husband otten enough, if not too often. She has secured a warrant against him charging non-support and is determined to prosecute him if he ean be found. ° Mrs. -Culp believes that her husband has gone to Mexico stating that ,he had frequently expressed a desire to go to that country. Mrs. Dorothy Culp wife of Clio Culp a brother of the ex-preacher disappeared with the South Bend man. : The Culps have nine children. five of svhom live at home. Others are heéing taken care of by relatives and friends. - o o © Leming-ott Wedding. Thursday afternoon at the U. B. parsonage in Albion occured the marriage of ‘Faye Leming and ' Miss Georgia Ott both popular young. people of Ligonier, The. ceremony was pronounced by Rev. Franklin. Mr. Leming ig a son of Mf. and Mrs. George Leming and is employved at the Refrigerator plant. The bride is the accomplished daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Ott and is a trained nurse After a short wedding trip the newlyweds will take up their residence in Ligonier. They have many |young friends to wish them well. : Two Are Sentenced. Judge Biggs of ° Ligonier in the \\7]litl(¢\3f-'cil't:llit court Wednesday sentenced Kdward Watson charged with robbing the home of Eric Sickafoose t‘o serve one to fourteen yeavs in the state I'efol'llla-fol*y and gave Orvilie Peppers a fine of $5 and -costs and a suspended sentence of from one to eight years for stealing a 63-cent cake of ice: from the Ramp-Ice house at Wilson lake. Three divorces were also granted by Judge Biggs making hig day in court an active one. o
Gets Quick Action, Ninety minutes after he attempted to assault a white girl in a field near. Hammond Louis Lang 24 a negro was on his way to fl/l,e state penal farm fm-i a six months’ stay. | Intense feeling aroused by J'(%Cé:lij _af tacks on white women in the szlu-—% met . district caused officers to .give him a speedy trial for fear of violence: . , v : } : ~ Sticks to Horse. l T, J. Hire of Ligonier called &t the News-Tinres office on Thursday. Mr. Hire because of physical disability is unable to ride comfortably in an automobile but owns a good driving maref that brought hi§n from his home in| Ligonier to Goshen in two hours and. forty-five minutes a distance of nine-| teen miles.—Goshen News Times. | ‘Woman Drops Dead. Mrs. Jane Snyder aged 70 years of Harlan died suddenly Wednesday at Shady Nook Big Long Lake where she had heen occupying a cottage with her daughter since last week. Death was believed to have resulted from heart trouble with which she had been afflicted. , } - WANTED | To huy corn. €, Li Cha,mberlain.‘ hone 61. S aanr Ae s 3 | Mr. and Mrs. David. Wilson and family visited Churubusco relatives one day last week. ’ ‘ “Baree Son of Zazan” by James' Oliver Curwood at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wolf and chil-l dren were week end guests of the Charles Green family at Diamond lake. : G : The Standard notes the presence in. LaGrange of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sisterhen who visited the H. H, Zimmerman
" = New State Fair Features. i..:.One of the big features in conneetion with the agricultural department of the Indiana -tSate fair will be a 'claSs of educational displays. This feature was added to the premium list three or four years ago and has been meeting with great favor. Last year there were 10 counties taking part in this section of the State Fair. Seven hundred and tifty dollars .is offered in prize.money for eight different prizes the first being $200.00. Last year Fayette county was the winner of $200.00 with an exhibit on Michikoff wheat, with ‘ijter county seconnd with an exhibit on T. B. eradication in dairy cattle. ’ © Boetiegger Duped. s A blufton man rendered a bill of $75 for '‘three quarts of whiskey sought legal advice as how he eould protect the price. Then he told the bootlegger “iry and collect.” : : Wm‘d comes]from Kimmell that five horses- were kilied by lightning Sunday on one .of the B_u(-kiéfl farms, = , Mrs. Nellie Se,dg'\\'ik*k,_‘ is (!I'l\'iglg a new Reo sedan. a recent purchase . Anita 'Stewart, in “‘Ua'ren Son of Kazan” Tu'e.»sduy" Wednesday -and Thursday at Crystal, G L 7 PR eso 18 8 Notice to Water Takers. You are hereby notified that water rents are!due July Ist, 1925, payable at the residence of the city clerk, On ajl _;3@11& due and not paid on or bef6Te July 20th a penalty of ten per cent will,be added. , ' All Water rents for 1925 are now due and must be paid on or before July 20th: ; - Office hours 9 am. te 6 p.m. - 20a5t . H. Jeanneret, City Clerk.
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A Battery X Te Without Jars | Tne new Gummite case; an exclusive feature with ~ Exide Batteries, is moulded all in one piece, including compartments for the cells. Thus, indis vidpual jars are done away with, ; Gummite is practic ally indestructible, will * not warp, and is not affected by tempergture, ‘acid, or water. Let us show you this ideal hate . tery caseé, P i BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE
Bothwell & Vanderford .. Lawyers . Phone 156. Ligonier. Indiana
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Touring Car .
' fi-¥ ' » ' : (k- ....1--"- - ' el oy < o S SN T P . i rec TSRS S TSR ",‘A B o PNy RTt g R “‘ R N oS e - () « ?5'% s S ‘\»\:\3‘ X ‘;’@Zflflm N "{',‘ N ‘;‘.::V‘M:lrl_"‘f"" e R Ny A S A\/’ SBe P — )BT e P :‘§~s>;%j%w > ‘5%5' & / o P . Sy :j‘;, % == .:; : : . - Simply reverse the motor—o and back out from the shore This is another distinctive feature which you will appreciate in your Johnsen motor. So simple and easy, a woman or small boy can operate it without danger of damage or injury to themselves; or the mech&nism of the motor itself. Whether you fish, hunt, speed, or just want to idle about from place to place upon the water—a Johnson motor will give you the service you want. : ; It weighs only 35 pounds, complete and ready to run. Itis quickly attached to any rowboat or canoe without altering either. You can carry it with you—in your automobile, on the running board, :aboard train, trolley or steamer and always be ready to enjoy the water when you get there. . Let us arrange a demonstration! - fohnson .« OUTEOARD MOTORS .~ j - " GEV INTO THE BOAT AND SEE FOR YOURSELF ' ‘ Use vour Johnson while you pay for it. Come in = ; and ler us explain our Deferred Payment Plan. 4 L. L. KOON ~ Sporting Goods , -
’ - The quality of SAEETY must be , ‘exceptionally conspicuous in any . © mortgage which we offer for sale. | D } First mortgage loans which we buy . v ~ and sell are secured by improved ~ real estate in Chicago and its =~ " . - suburbs. : - . - .We should like an opportunity, with- ' . out obligation on you, totell you ~ - . . ~_of the conditions which we impose : ’ m order to insure absolute safety , ‘ - {for our investment customers. =~ ' ITY N INT s - IRVIN JACOBS & CO Represented by - - ‘ Farmers & Merchants e ' . Trust Co. = o o BEdwinl) Smith
N R N RN NN NNNANIRNRAT AR NN T RSN AR RN AN AN AR A : Please tell me how I can secure a Ford Car on easy payments: § § Name : : ' : ee S g E' Addrua______;_w § L Gl St oo ol Lk 2 i Mail this coupon to A i CR : K e e rtonyiang, Eillllnlult.uunuuul‘:ulllluuull;u"u.l!’.llg‘llfilpl’lulilpnugggiu!lu'yl‘lruu'uauunuj
