Ligonier Banner., Volume 59, Number 39B, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 November 1925 — Page 3

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Py T ELYS T AEROPL ANE . cvEN W : [0 Coliers Beead ,Wrappe{s &Eild. 24c SAVE, THE WRAPPERS AND | Coul ers Bakery

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The I.agomer Banner RSTABLIBHED 1885.5 : Published by ! “he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor : / Publiched every Moßday and Thursday wnd entered im tho Postofilce at Ligoafer, Ind., as second zlass matter. '

Pleads for Rural Social Justice. A program of social justice that wil]l give to the people engaged in the task of tilling the soil a fair share of the products of their labor is a basic factor in any plan for rural reconstructipn, geclared Dr. M. A. Dawber, gsupvrinfiendena of the department of f,ruml work of the board of home mis-i.f,-;ions and church extension of the Methodist Episcopal church in his re-port-to the board at its annual meeting in Indianapolis. “At present” he «aid, “we are drifting toward a landI'fios{s people in agriculture and condi}Yi()ns of farm tenantry in whiecl it is Pmpo’srfiiblg to develop a community or (0 maintain self-supporting, self reis;:ufling institutions.” - " Banquet Arranged. ‘ The Noble County Live tSock Breeders 'nssogiation held a meeting in the court house Friday evening and decided to hold the sixth annual ban'quct at the Wolf Lake‘Community building on Dec. 11th. ' Two talented i.\*peakers have heen arranged for, al!Hmnfi:h the program is norflyetf Complete. A silver tréphy is to be given ‘m the Girls’ and Boys ’Live stock ‘ club having the highest percentage of !t’heir total membership present.

Peeved OQver Progress, Patrons of the .Qlive Center school, in Elkhart county, where there are but eleven students, and the Sailor school, which has thirty-five pupils, refuse to send their children to the fine new building in Wakarusa. The two schools, old fashioned buildings located north of Wakarusa, are being kept open by petition. © Mrs. Culp Divoreed. The wife’of Rev. Wilson Culp, eloping parson Friday held a divorce decree from her erring hushand -at South Bend. Mrprs. Culp whose hushand deserted her four times for other women, charged abandonment, cruelty and non-support. There are ten children, Golden Rule Sunday Dinner. Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle of South Bend heads the commitiee foxy a Golden Rule dinner December Ist. Mrs. Carlisle expects an attendance of 500 guests to plan enthusiastic Golden Rule observance. Sunday, December 6th. Fred W. Keller, former mayor, is St. Joseph county chairman. Train Hopper Loses Life. Hopping trains cost the life of Cecil Hamilton, §. The boy’s hand caught in the steel ladder of a car and the wheels severed his left leg at South Bend. v

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fhk "'THIS "READS WELL, Graphie and Eloungated Account of an | Automobile Accident in Whitley ' Lo o County. You hear .about knocking a chip off "your shoulder, but you seldom ever hear of a man trying to knock a train off the track. That 'is not exactly what O. R. Gage, of Chicago ,did with his Star! sedan, but the resulting damage ’qfl the auto was if anything a little greati er than it Would have been, had t,he‘; first hy-poth‘esis;,béen the cage. = = It-all happened: this way: Mr. Gage was ready to cross the Panhandle railroad at the Dohmer crossing,:-two and three uqarter miles west of South "Whitley about 4:50 p.m. Thursday afternoon, when. & machine approached from the opposite direction and to avoid a collision, Mr. = Gage turned his machine down the track. It is rumored that he found the going about as smooth as he had been finding it on some of the side roads, so he kept right on. The alffi wheelsg were riding nicely but. outside of each of the big steel rails and everything was “jake”, Suddenly the lightning express on the Panhandle—the passenger train due there at 5:08 ‘hove in sight. - There was no chance ‘to make the front wheels climb over the big steel rails, so there Mr. Gage lwa's, heading strnighfi; for the locomo\'tive and the locomotive was heading straight at him. : ! He had progressed about a third of a mile down the track when the train showed up, and evidently he was not

over the excitement of his neav-collis-ion with the auto at the Dohmer crossing, because he never thought of backing up. Ii he was going to be collided ‘with, he wanted it te be a real ?l*espec-table.smash, and not just a bump from another car. .

But all this time the Panhandle locomotive was bearing down upon him. He couldn’t get to a crossroad, for the_ good and suflicient ‘reascn that there wasn't any. He might have backed up, but he didn’t. If hg had been strong enough, he might have lifter the front of his Star roadster off the track and then driven the rest of the way on the machine’s

own power. There might have been a big grade, and who wouldn’t prefer to be hit by a locomotive instead of rolling down an embatkment? ' Yet here comes the train. The engineer whistled. ,Geng honked his horn: The train slowed down as fast as it could but it didn’t slow fast enough. o - ‘Gage managed to stop his car. With the big locomotive léoking bigger and gefting bigger and noisier every moment, he hopped out,: making uqick work of that. He had sufficient time to get far enough away to have a box seat to the spectacle. The s¢pectacle consisted of seeing the locomotive render the Star roadster into.a mass of broken and 'tf.visred and tangled junk. The machine rolled ofii the track. - » ) Must Revive Application. - If the Kendallville country club is granted articles of incorporation it must revise its appliéation for charter 'or apply under another statute, according to a ruling made by Atorney General Arthur Gilliom Friday. The decision was made at the request of the secretary of state who recently refused to grant articles of incorporation to the organization which applied under the “no profit act of March 6th, 1883.” ; The attorney general held that since the club desires to sell stocks it cannot be ingorporated under that act. Two Wives Part of Trouble, Ray Bradford, 43, of St. Louis or any place else in the United States, who is being held in the county jail at Fort Wayne under the aliases of James C. Clark and Frank Clark. He was arrested for issuing fraudulent checks and since his arrest six weeks ago a continuous stream . of letters regarding the prisoner has flowed into the office of William F. Pappert, c:xp; tain of detectives. In addition-to his other troubles it develops that he has two. wives: = - :

Pinchot and Landis to Speak.

Gov. Gifford Pinchot of Pannsylvania and ex-Judge Kenesaw Landis, supreme arbiter of major league ‘baseball, will be among the principal speakers to address the state Izaak Waiton ’league convention to be held at Elkhart Thursday and Friday. Dec. 3 and 4, C. I: Dewey, president of the Elkhart chapter announced '

| Hamer Glick Bankrupt. ! Hamer Glick, a farmer living near Churubusce, has filed bankruptcy Proceedings in federal court at Fort Wayne before William D. Remmel, federal .court office there. The petition listg liabilities at $27,176.28 and assets at $596. He asks exempticn allowed under the bankruptcy act. o Granger Man Indicted, John Andorka of Granger, Ind., wag indicted by the grand jury at South Bend Thursday for the unlawful possession, sale and manufacture of intoxicating liquor, and for maintaining a public nuisance, G First Policewoman, Mrs. Minnie Evans of South Bend was the first Indiana policewoman. She started May 1. 1914, and is still in ser‘vice, never having been out of it ~ Elk Memorial, e Samuel D. Jackson, prosecuting attorney, of Noble and Whitley counties will deliver the address at the annual Elks Memorial services to be held at the temple, West Berry street Fort Wayne, Sunday, Dec. 6, =~ ' ‘ Pay your Banner Subscription NOW

Rejection Slip “Made” | ~ Great Southern Poe? Was Sidney L;mie:_*“ma;de” by a 8 reJection slip from the Atlantic Monthly? So it would seem, to judge by the discoveries of Dr. Ernest Kuhl, who this year taught at the University of Maine summer school, says the Boston Herald.

A letter written by the great peet from his, dismal garret to Edward Spencer, the poet and essayist, has just been unearthed. In it he tells of the rejection of his poem “Corn,” which has since become so widely known, by Editor William Deanr Howells, in 1874, on the ground that it was inconsistenty put together. The chagrin- which fellowed this setback, he indicates, was the turning point of his career, the rebuff having inspired the ‘determination to devote his life to poetry. i L ; ',

+ This find was made by Doctor Kuhl, professor of English at Goucher college, Baltimore. He has adopted the avocation of “literary miner,” aad speuds much of his spare time secking out documents which give new light ot the careers of departed peets and writers. 'The negro section of Baliimore has proved a fruitful field, and strangely enough, he has unearthed many a first and secend edition of unusual interest in garrets and storerooms of old houses. There has always been a connection in the popular mind between garrets and poets, and Doctor Kuhl’s researeh shows that this is not a mere melodramatic conception, ’

In fact, the precious Lanier letter was itself discovered in ene of these curieus Spaces reserved for things eof no practical use, but which are kept because of sentimental attraction. In it Lanier tells of his misfertunes and of the indescribable spiritual elevation which comes through sorrow and hardship. W . Doctor Kuhn has read hig letters in the course of his lectures, and it is anderstood that he plans te publish them. He gave the 'Lanier address at the Johns Hopkins university recently and has also within the last year delivered lectures on Lanier af the University of North Carolina and other Southern colleges. ‘ i o City Ways = “Patriotism -is a good thing, but it should never make a patriot stamd up for his country when she .is in the wrong.! - . The speaker was Oswald Garrison Villard, the New York editor. “Such = patrietism,” he went on, “smacks too much of a ¢ertain milkman. . = j “ ‘Look here, milkman,’ a lady said. ‘T don't like your milk.’ : “ ‘Oh, you don’t, don’t you?” sald the milkman. ‘What’s the matter with it? “‘lt's thin and blue, and it never kas any cream.’ ' : ! “You're from the country, ain’t you? : . e “ %, Tam’ . - “The milkman gave a° Sneering laugh, . 3 : i ““Thought sO,” he said. ‘Well, after youw've lived in the city a while you’ll get over them jay-hawk mnotions of yours.” ” . )

Breaking With the Past

Bessye Bearden, president of the Women’s Democratic league, said in a brilliant New York address: “Wide horizons open before the modern girl. There’s politics, there’s the professions, business, everything. But the modern girl makes a great mistake when she breaks with the past’ altegether.

“An elderly man, said to.a young man in a kindly voice: _ “‘You wish to niarry my/daughter. Can you cook, sew, wash @and ironm, Sweep, darn, nurse' children, :shop—' - “The young man gave a’ puzzled laugh. : - “‘Why ask me if ¥ can:«do those things? he said. )

*“ ‘Because,” said the eh_ierl;y man, ‘my daughter can’t.’” i

British Thrift

The latest figures on sawinfg“aszw that two-thirds of the peeple off Qreat Britain maintain savings accojgntls in some form. More than 15,000,080 people have amassed $3,766,200,000 in savings and savings certificates. Savimgs bank deposits have increas 100 per cent in less than a genér:t?z(m, Despite war losses since 1914; thle national capital of Great Britailn i) mow estimated in exgess of $92,0(/0,000,000. Figures from co-operative soclieties show a membership of meore tham 33,000,000. One writer on thle spbject says that “British thrift explains| British pelicy, tolerance and love of order.”—Thrift Magazine, .

Uncle Sam Breeds Bugs ' In a strange nursery en, the banis of the Potomac the United States government keeps a host of, fleas, mosquitoes, mites and flies. When fully grown, they serve to test poisons that are sold- throyghout the country fon extermination of insects, says Popular Science Monthly. Amfong the most valued assistants on the bug farm are four dogs, two cats and 125 chickens, ‘which produce bumper crops of tleas and mites for the tests. : New Waterpower Scheme - The Ohio river is to be put ito work developing electrical’ energy on} a large. scale for the benefit of the people living in Louisville, Ky., and surxounding communities. The hydro-elecgmic plant which will harness the enortnous volume of the Ohio river ag it l:itlowss past Louisville will start with an] initial ca~bacity of 108,000 horsepowd:r of electrical energy and will evenf ually have a capacity of 135,000_»horsq power, \ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE S.OCIETY Services in Weir Block. - g Sunday school 9:45 A. M. e Lesson Sermon 11:00 A, M. [ | . Subject—Soul and Bodly. Wednesday - evening, . tpstimhnia{ meeting 8:00 P. M. { ; . Bverybody welcome. 13 L 4

PROTECTION l o AeED - While he lives, a’father surrounds his ! child with every protection. Yet the 1 - child is in' need of greater protection | ~ should the father die. e ‘ In case of your déath.the protection of . your child will be sure if you have a ~ substantial account in the bank, - v Life Is Uncertain . Now is the time to arrange vour business and have your attorney name this bank as - executor of vour estate, so - that your family will ireceive all the benefits ot your savings. » . - . ;’_v'.,ri."' The Farmers & Merchants - Trust Company - | The Bank of Safety and Friendly Service.

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LMYy J. C. KIMMELL Home Real;ty and gl’ah“’ nt Co. L FARM LAND BULLETIN

- 160 acre dairy farm near Rome City. Good buildings. Priced right. 73 acre improved farm north west of Rome City at a bargain, $6OOO bkuys a 127 acre farm on paved road, west of Albion. 30 acres of choice muck. 4 10215 acre farm near Pierceton. Fertile soil and fair buildings would take a smaller farm in exchange. g 281, acre farm near Indian village. 7 acres of muck well drained. S . . 80 acre farm near Kimxfiel! Good buildings with modern conveniences. : '+ $BOOO buys 2 choice eighty within 2 miles of Albion on the State Highway, Good buildings Tenant house. - ' 80 acre farm in Elkhart Township, Productive soil and good buildings. " - 145 acre farm on the Lincoln Highway near Noblesville. 25 acres of choice onion ground. - 18 acres timber. TFertile soil and good buildings. $2OOO cash and balance on long time.

Phone 165 Over Levys Furniture Store Ligonier, Ind.

——www.uw vo % .;4,1.&‘ WA m'aw: - 147 arce improved {arm on in: proved highway near Cromwell 40 acre poultry and truck farm near Lake Wiawasee. | Will frads for latger faviy:in @ Svavia. oy Washington townships. ; . $2OOO. cash and a long time for the balance for ene of the best 100 acre farms in. Swan Township.- 30 oeres of onion ground. Good buildings. Federal loan, . . o ° 247 ‘acre farm 315 miles south east of lLigonier just off the Lincoln Highway Good Buildines Priced -to- sell. _ e . 240 acre dairy farm within one‘mile of Albion. Up tb date equipment. Good buildings, “ 40" gere ‘tract south of Cromwell ‘without buildings. 144 acre farm on ihe Elkhar Perry township line. Valuable tract of timber. v 95 acre -farm on the paved road west-of Albion. = Goed buildings, - $2700 cash and 3 years to pay the balance. © _ 'The above is a few of the 60 farms we have listed: Call at our office and -we will tell, you ‘more about them, =« .«