Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 3B, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 March 1926 — Page 2
Fo Bretz for Glasses ESR sham Eyes | ' 'J’ “Por ! /}‘,A Sharp Work | All mechanics’ like te use keem j odged, perfect tools. | s pesist the wear of constant use. ; Tet us sharpen your sight ¥y | fou to see clearly, . | s cpmga ¢ Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist and Gpticlan | 130 S. Main S: | GOSEns ;
TR &@é&.’,agj b ‘. W » Il Ex e et | B A Battery | ° h . o Without Jars § The new Gummite case; |8 an exclusive feature with o ~ Exide Batteries, is |8 moulded all in one piece, : including compartments : for thecells. Thus, indi. ‘ vidual jars ars done : . away with, % Qummite is practi- @ cally indestructible, will g - not warp, and is not af- 5 fected by temperature, S acid, or water. Let us ) show you this ideal bate i tery case, BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE ~
Harry L. Benner Auctioneer Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley County Phones
VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing ~ and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind
Dr. Maurice Blue VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. . Phone: Ligonier 857
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The Ligomer Banner ESTABLISHED 186¢.§ Published hy : ™ ™ “he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor
Published every Monday and Thursday and ontersd iz the Pomlm_a.t Ligonier, Ind., as second elass matter.
C. of C. to Meet.
The Chamber of Commerce will meet Friday noon March 12 at Hotel Ligonier for regular luncheon. ’
HUDSON’S HUDSON'S NEW THINGS " FOR SPRING
Smart New Coats $lO up to $59.50
Smart New Dresses $lO, $l5, $16.50, $25
Smart New Hats $2.49, $2.95, $3.95, $5 and up to $7.95 .
Georgeous New Slips $1.59, $2.25 and up to $3.95
Crisp New Tub Fabrics 25c up to $1 yard
And loads of other new Novelties
3 ~ sm=~'im e i e HU,OMC GOSHEN ¥’ INDIANA.
At Dairy Feeding School.
The dairy feeding school in Albion last Friday was attended by fortyfour farmers and twelve high school boys. Among those in attendance were several new dairymen who entered whole heartedly into the discussion led by veteran dairymen and G. A. Williams from Purdue University. e Visit Calf Clubs =~ & § County: Club Leader Nord and County Agent Cunningham vigited the members of the newly organized Shart horn Calf club Tuesday. The club has 23 members, . :
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
Out For Judge, 1 Lloyd T. Bailey prominent attorney of Columbia City announced his candidacy for the Demccratic nomination for judge of the Whiley- Noble circuit. court. | : ‘Mr. Bailey has been one of the outstanding lawyers at the bar for manyyears and has been prominent in Democratic politics, .but’ has never held elective office. He has a wide acquaintance not anly in Whiley and Noble counties but throughout the Twelfth congressional district. ' -Mr. Bailey is a graduate of] Adrian College ‘Adrian, Mich. He studied law in the office .of A. A. Adams formerly of Columbia City now general council tor the Arbuckle Coffee company New York. - : e After completing his legal education, Mr. Bailey was admitted to the Whitley county bar 17 vears ago. He served as deputy prosecutor of the Whitley-Noble district under Prosecutor Weir Carver of Kendallville, from 1908 to 1910. He was city attorney of Columbia City for four years prior to January 1. i Mr. Bailey is a member of the Presbyterian church the Masonic order, thé Shrine and the Klks lodge. He is marrvied and has two.children. ‘ Judge Arthur E. Biggs of Ligonier present judg'b of the Whitley-Noble district’ will seek renomination on the Republican ticket. The = district -is strongly republican. s
Goes to Whitley Court. ~ The case of Frank Strater vs Claude Deardorff for $3,000 damages filed in the Noble ‘virc‘uit court has been venued to the Whitley circuit court. ‘The accident occurred on November. 13, 1923 when the plaintiff was driving a teani of mules east over the T-C pikg west of Kendallville. He says the defendant was driving an automobile in the same direction and the car struck the wagon on which he was riding. Thé wagon was pushed against the mulegy and they ran away. In the. I'ulia\va}l the plaintitf alleges he sustined iny juries which rendered-him incapabld to perform farm work for 16 months.
The Order of the Rastern Star has arranged. for a banner meeting to be held at. Kendallville Thursday March 18. Mrs. G. W. Hartsuch has been commissioned by the Grand Matron to inspect all chapters in-Noble county and she has planned to have the chapters meet there for inspection on that date. Plans ave being made to entertain about 300 Stars from Ligonier, Albion, Rome City and Avilla.
Elkhart township Farm Bureau officers and project leaders for 1926 are President T. J. Mawhorter: vicepresident C. Frink; secretary, Virgil L. Todd; treasurver, F. D. Resler extension project, Roy Smith £. Johnson T.. J. Mawhorter, A Franks D. A Rose, Alton Lower; economics projects Jess Boss, Virgil L. Todd program committeé Floyd Resler, Jesse Boss T. J. Mawhorter, C. Frick Virgil ¥ Todd. { 3
irrest Eloping Bridegroom.
Emil Volz of Sonth Bend was arrested Saturday night when he stepped off a train in that city. He had, eloped several days ago with the six-teen-year-old-daughter of ‘Mrs. Anna Mathey -and was married at Belleplaine, la. The couple was trailed hy Mrs. Mathey and the girl was brought back to her home. When Volz tollowed he was arrested on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. .
The death of two well known residents .of Kendallville ocecurred over the week-end the first being that of Mrs. Jennie Haller wife of Jacob Haller 72 who died Saturday night about 11 o’clock at her home north of that eity, following. a short illness, Frank S. Finley 66 died Sunday morning about 10 o’clock at a sanitarium in Battle Creek Mich, where he had been a patient. .
{ David Zoll 62 Wells county droppfed dead while attending -farm sale: Albert Darr 6 Sheart trouble Syracuse H. H. Hopkins 5 sElkhart ~county; Mrs. Bertha Cripe 34 heart disease, Elkhart, Mrs. Elizabeth Huffman 79, Elkhart ; George A. Thomas 57 apo- ! plexy, Elkhart; Mrs. Cartherine Dexéter 71 Bristol. . L
A seven yvear old lad was being held by Marion police pending the roundup of a gang of youthful bandits of which the lad was leader. : The members of the gang the oldest of whom.is twelve years of age are said to have admitted to a series® of robberies in down tewn stores, - -
Robbers broke into the Arnold & Purman department store at Montpelier and carried away merchandise valued at $2,500. The Thoruburg garage was also raided by the samg gang it is believed and a supply of automobile tires valued at $5OO stolen.
~ Ready For Y. W. Banquet. Miss ‘Alice Ogden chairman of the program committee announces that all is.in readiness for the Mother and Daughter banquet to be held at Kendallville ‘Thursday evening. Miss Hazel Belle Withrow secretary of the state Y. W. C. A, will speak.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Services in' Weir Block. Sunday school 9:45 A. M. Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Subject-—-Substance. _ . Wednesday evening testimonial neeting 8:00 P. M, : Everybody welcome. .
To Entertain Stars.
Farm Bureay Officers.
Two More Deaths.
Near-by Deaths.
Boy Bandit Held.
Loot Garage and Store,
~ Sues Insurance Compan¥. ‘ Hilda Shane of Warsaw formerly of Ligonier executrix of the estate of her husband Bertram Shane has brought suit against the Fidelity Health and Accident Insurance company for recovery of $5,500 alleged to be dug upon accident insurance policy issued upon Shane on Nov. 13 1912, The plaintiff says that’ the premiums had been paid upon the policy and that it was in force on Nov. 10, la.nd December 2 1924. The plain, Liff says that Bertram Shane went hunting Nov. 10 1924 and while engaged in hunting small game he struck his right instep against a branch ot a fallen tree and stumbled and fel] and sustained a severe bruise ‘which became infected and that he died Dec. 2 1924 as direct result of the injury sustained in that fall. The plain tiff says that all provision of the accident policy have been complied with ;and that the defendant insurance company refused to pay the face value of the policy, $5.000 for accidental death, \Demund is made tor the face of- the H)o]i(‘y and the interest amounting to $5.500. . ' . The ~case has been taken to the Whitley circuit court on « change of venue. P
Oppose Wel Governor, - Having already annouuced unalterable opposition to the nomination of Governor Smith of New York as the Democratic = presidential candidate, the board of temperance and morals of the Methodist Episcopal church turned its guns on Governor Ritchie of Maryland. Ll o “They have been talking of Governor Ritchie for the Democratic presidential nomination,” a statement given out by board’s press bureau said, “When they get through jokiug- why not trot out a few real ‘candidates. If Ritchie were nominated the Republicans conld send any cub reporter to Annapolis and. get enough real dope in one half hour to make every Democrat wish that 'RitcHie had® never been born.” : S ;
Many Candidates Announce, Thrity-three candidates for otlice have announced their intentions in Whitley county through the- ¢olumns of the Columbia City Post.
Announcement My practice has grown to such an extent that 1 am uow permanently located in the Zimmerman Bldg. rooms formerly occpied by teh Heiber Studio 1 combine the Osteopathic Massage Mechanotherapy and other manipulative systems. ~Abnormal pressure on nerves and blood vessels is removed by relaxing tissue replacing displaced bones thereby liberating the free flow of blood and nerve impulses and removing the mechanical cause of diseases. Practically all diseases can be successfully treated by natural methods. Here are a few of the diseases, constipation, headache, rheumatism, lumbago, nervousness liver trouble, goiter all spinal irouble disease of children and deformities. M. G. Williams O.M. -Osteoppathic Massage o & Hlectrical Treatments Sunday and other Hours by Appoint- : ' ment QOnly , Office Hours: - 9:30 to 11:30 3. m. 1:00 to 5:00 p. m. ' 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Phone 103 - Zimmerman Bldg.
- For the First Time ‘5OO B Closed C 560 Buys a Close ar ' If you plan to spend over $5OO F. O. B. Factory for an auto- : mobile, you can get the year-round comfort and conven- ; . ience of a Ford closed car. L ‘ The price advantage which the public enjoys in purchasing . Ford cars is the result of volume production. In 1920, when the Ford Motor Company was producing approximately L only a million cars a ycar, the Ford Touring Car soid for $575. Today, with production on the basis of nearly two ~ . million cars a year, the Tudor Sedan, a high quality all- ~ steel closed car, can be purchased for ss2o—§sss less than ~ the Touring Car sold for six years ago. Open car prices are - correspondingly low. _ : ] , While this program of price reduction has been carried on, ; - important refinements and improvements have been made ~ in Ford cars.. The latest improvements include new and attractive body lines—a lower center of dgra'lvity, closed cars in color, all-steel bodies, new brakes an new style fenders, However, the basic features of Ford design have not been changed. Three point motor suspension, planetary trans~ mission, dual ignition system, torque tube drive, multiple - disc-in-oil clutch, splash lubrication, thermo-syphon cool~ 1 ing system —outstanding features of automobile design — , have all been retained, regardless of cost. : ~ FORD MOTOR COMPANY, Detroit, Michigan S TOURING o _ RUNABOUT 310 NEW PRICES~— 290 TUDOR SEDAN ' COUPE ~ FORDOR SEDAN $ : $ $ 520 500 565 _ Closed car prices include starter and démountable rims. ’ : , . All prices f. o. b. Detroit. : . “Ford Design Costs More to Build—ls Worth More—- . C But Sells for Less"’ "
: ,s;'. L | A AA’/: \t\ & g ; J SRR TR § e I@’ : =l ‘,._,.w "i t \\é
The Test of Thnft
- The true test and the value of a Thrift Account comes when, h’ke a bolt from the blue sky, vou find yourself out of work. It may_bev 10 i'ault.of yours, but the fact remains tnv‘be faced. With a Thrift Account to tide you over you can agaifi» get started without sacl‘ificing your ability to necessity. ‘ » <
CITIZENS BANK " “The Bank by the Clockf
CJ.C. KIMMELY, - J. K. KIMMELL KIMMELL REALTY CO. a Phone 800 : ' Office First Floor Citizens Bank Building Ligonier Ind. ol ET— —— i - ittt .-,‘ A “‘" T ki .. Rl "'i. s FARM LAND BULLETIN 7915 acre farm 3 miles west of Ligonier' Would trade for Ligoaier property. - R - $2300 cash and long time on (’lgl’ern--d payments takes a good 96-acre farm in York township on paved road, Good building and fertile soil. Would trade for Ligonier preperty. : S 0 acre farm in Elkhart township just off the Toledo and Chicago Pike 80 acre farm within two miles ot Albion on State Highway, Two sets ol ‘buildings. .~ ce : : LOO acre farm in Swan township. 30 acres of ounion auld mint grouud. $1.500 cash and long time‘on balance, . } : 103 - acre. farlil'nu_)l;iut:oln Highway 3 miles southeast of Ligonierg $l,OOO cash and allthe time.you want on balance. : ' 80 acre mint farm all under cultivation within 3%’ miles of Ligonier. Good buildings. Priced to sell. G L b acre tract with good buildings, on Toledo and Chicago Pike. Would trade for Ligonier property. : : ; : 120 acre farm 1% miles west of Wolcottville., Rertile soil and good buildings. Would trade for a smaller farm. 2 80 acre farm in Kosciusko county, 4 miles south off Mentone. 14 acres of choiee muck.: . o , 20 acres near Kimmelk to trade for a larger farm,. ‘ i 75 acres near Sparta church without buildings. On State Highway. 77 acre farm south of Syracuse for sale or would trade for smaller farm or town property,. - S ' FEDERAL FARM LOANS INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS SOUND SECURITIES : A
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