Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 49B, Ligonier, Noble County, 27 January 1927 — Page 3

Hogs and Chickens Stolen. The theft of three Hogs and about 3 dozen chickens from the farm of thd late Wallace Hosier, west of Kendall ville has been reported to Sheriff John Singleton at Albion. Sheriff Singleton stated that he had been workix’ig‘qfii(g} ly on the case but ag yet has obtained no clues or trace of the stolen stock and poultry. The theft is believed td' have been committed during the ill» ness and death of Mr. Hosier.

Notice of Sheriif’s Sale of Real Estate Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a certified copy of judgment, decree and order of sale to me directed by the clerk of the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana and issued in the cause wherein Citizens Bank, of Ligonier, Indiana is plaintiff and Chauncey E. Wagoner and Susie R. Wagoner are defendants, being civil cause WNo. 9521, said court, commanding me to maks, by sale of the real estate hereinafter described, the sum of gix hundred and twenty-six dollars and fifty-seven cents ($626.57) adjudged in favor of said plaintiff upon its complaint in said cause, with seven per centum interest} thereon from the 30th day of October, 1926, a first lien upon said real estate, and costs taxed at eleven dollars and ten cents ($11.10) and accruing costs, including the costs of sale, I. John Singleton, sheriff of Noble County, Indiana will offer for sale at public auction to the highest and best bidder, at the east door of the courthouse in the town of Albion, Noble‘ é’}ounty, Indiana, on Saturday, the sth day” of February, 1927, hetween the bours of ten o’clock A. M. and four o’clock P. M. of said day, the rents and | profits for a term not exceeding seven years of the following real estate, in Noble county, in the State of Indiana, to-wit: Commencing one chain north and three chains and thirty-nine links west of the southwest corner of lot' number fifteen (15) in block number four (4) in Fisher & Company’s addition to the town, now city of Ligo. nier; thence west two chains and twenty-eight links; thence south twenty-three links; thence south fiftynine degrees east two chains and sixty-seven links; thence -north one! chain and fifty-six links to the place of beginning, contalning t\\"enty-two one-hundredths of an acre; also, a tract of land, towit- commencing five chains and sixty-seven links west of the southwest corner of lot fifteen (15) in block four (4) in said addition; thence south five feet; thence south fifty-six degrees east, three chains and sixty-sven links ; thence north five feet; thence north, rifty-six degrees west, two chains and sixty-seven links to the place of beginning, said described real estate being embraced within | and designated on the plat of saidj town by Gerber and Zimmerman in; 1875 as out-lot number one hundred | and seventeen (117); also a strip of | land fifteen and one-half feet wide off of the west end of out lot num- | ber one hundred and eighteen (118) in said town, now city of Ligonier, Indiana; also all that part of out-lot number one hundrea and eleven, in|; the town, now city of Ligonier lying | south of a line running east and west |, across the same in line with and as a | continuation of the south line of out- | lot one hundred and twelve, excepting | therefrom that portion thereof of conveyed by Hattie B. Brown and hus- | band to the Lake Shore and Michigan | Southern Railroad Company off of the | south end thereof by deed dated June | 29, 1893, recorder in deed record 68, page 107, of the deed records of Noble County, Indiana, and also reserving to the public the use of the alley| on the east side thereof extending | from the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railroad Company’s right of | way along the west ends of out-lots one hundred seventeen, one hundred | sixteen, one hundred fifteen and one | hundred fourteen and to the south-} west corner of said out-lot number one hundred twelve, which is shown on the map of said town, now city, of Ligonier, Indiana, made by Gerber & Zimmerman in 1875 of record in the office of the recorder of Noble County. which said alley is excepted. Also | lot nuniber fifteen (15) in block number two (2) in West Lawn addition to| the city of Ligonier, Indiana, and if said rents and profits of said real estate fail to sell for a sum sufficient to pay and satisfy said judgment, de-. cree, interest and costs, then I will, at the same timg and place offer for sale at public sale to the highest bidder the fee simple of said real estate and without relief from yaluation and appraisement laws. John Singleton, Sheriff of Noble County Indiana. Bothwell & Vanderford ; Attorneys for Plaintiff. "47b3w

~ Notice of Final Settlement.' State of Indiana Noble County ss: In the matter of the estate of Annie Eby No. 2687 In the Noble Circuit Court March Term 1927. ; Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned as Executor of the estate of Annie Eby Deceased has filed . in said court his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will comie up for examination and action of said court, at the court house, at Albion, Indiana, on the 7 day of March 1927 at which timg and place all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. : : : : - And theé Heirs, devisees and legateés of said decedent, and all others interested in said estate, are alSo hereby required at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. . Farmers & Merchants Trust Company ‘Posted Jan. 24,1927 50b2w

¥ AT A R AR AR S AR R e A DIES AT 100 YEARS OF AGE. , | e i e : : |Mrs, Aley W. Roscoe Passed Away at fié‘%;étlome Near Albion Monday Ot Imfirmities of Old Age. 1 Mrs, Aley W. Roscoe, agéd 100 years land three months, pased way at the ;i"‘fiome"of her grandson of infirmities of old age, J. C. Roscoe, south of Albion, |Monday morning at k;en_ofclo'ck, The funeral was held Wednesday after|noon, with burial in the Albion ceme|tery. The grandson was the only near relative of the aged lady. In an interview a feww weeks before her death she had the following to relate: 1 attribute my long life to “regular hours, sleeping soundly and plentifully, eat sparingly of meat but planty of fruit and bread”. In relating the incidents of her life, Grandmas Roscoe said that she considered it nothing unusual from routine living and working. | “I have drank but little coffee, no tea, but I surely love hot water.” and }added that she thought some contri;{ buting factors for her long life were that she had always lived with a clear conscience and tried to be of service to her family and friends. ' ’ Mrs. Roscoe was horn in Essey ‘county, N. Y., October 29, 1826, thsd daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Barr. Soou after her marriage to James Roscoe they moved to Erie:county, Ohio. In 1861 they migrated farther west along ‘with the other early settlers. . Mrs. Roscoe loved to relate how they loaded their household goods in a broad wagon and drawn by a team of oxen, started for Indiana. - “We had only bheen three days on the road when we can to a little towg where a meeting was being held tc “drum up” volunteers for the war with the south. Mr. Roscoe was exempted from the army bhecause of physical disability. : “Then began a long struggle to build the home where [ have since resided. It is now known as the “Ivergreen Farm” bhecause of the 400 pine trees which the Roscoes set out in 1880.

{ “While going through all the hardships connected with that pioneer life I believe we were happier than most folks are today. OQur family was al‘ways together. Our long eveniug were spent by the fireplace with tallow candles and later kerosene lampg to made our log cabin a cheerful place.” ‘ As this veteran woman completed her narrative of her life she d-clared, but 1 do appreciate having lived ong hundred years and seeing with my own eyes some of the marvelous changes that have been made in that time. It seems almost like I had lived in another world when I stop to think how different conditions arg now from thlt they were when I was a little girl.”/ 2 State Funds to Be Distributed. State funds aggregating approximately seventeen and a half millions of dollars will be distributed for deposit among 475 Indiana banks, according to allotments announced by Lewis Bowman auditor of state and approved by Gov. Ed Jackson. Of the total sum, approximately $2,000,000 is to the account of 20 state penal and benevolent institutions and the four state maintained educational institutions. . :

- Nearby Deaths. Mrs. Elizabeth Stephenson 77 paralysis Bluffton; James Jarrett 78 Wells county; Mrs. James Schell 69, pneumonia Leesburg, J. A. Ault 67, heart trouble Packerton; Mrs. TYda Eash 64 pneumonia, Middlebury: Nathan Hibish 82 paralysis Benton, Squire Badman 65 paralysis Auburn; Mrs. Mary Houtz 76 paralysis. : 1 Heating Plant Wrecked. The heating plant of the Elkhart Truth blew -up and was wrecked, When it let go, a head in the overs headz sprinkling system opened and poured water into the hbasement to thd depth of four inches. OQil, gas ang electric stoves were pressed into servy, ice until repairs could be made. Killed 108 Crows. Howard and Brent Nutter, Charlest Haynes - and Norman Shuefelt killed 108 crows on the Allen Speheger‘ farm. Speheger went back ‘to hid woods a day after the slaughter and discovered 20 more cripples and fivg hanging dead in the trees. Tunney May Visit Ft. Wayne, Gene Tunney champion heavy weight pugilist of the world, will officiall open_and dedicate the new $750,009 (Catholic community center building at Fort Wayne during Easter week, if plans now under way are successlfully completed. ;

$150,00 Factory Fund. An ‘Onward Elkhart Campaign’ to raise $150,000 to be used to defrey expenses of bringing new industries -tg Elkhart -will ‘'be conducted under the auspices of the Chamber of Commerce in February. E Mrs. Sophia Krehl Dead. 5 Mrs. Sophia Krehl, age 68, wife of Joseph Krehl, died Monday afternoon at her home northwest of Corunna, following a lingering illness of over two years resulting from cancer. ; 4 - ——— - v 7 j Get Booze in Raid. i . J J. Ross is held under a $l,OOO bond in city court at Fort Waynoe charged with ‘possession of liguor after a raid at his home Thursday night. . Had Slet Machines, Fined. , Guy Murphy of Auburn paid a fine of $33 for having slot ‘thachines in operation in his place of*business.

Fish's Odd Method o - of Attracting Prey

_For a long time it was considered that the nearest allies of the angler ‘fish,- -well* known: in British waters, were fish living on or near the, bottom of the sea. 'But recent investigations show that there is another group that live in midwater at depths of from 1,600 to 5,000 feet from the surfaee. . This regionu presents conditions inhospitable to life, and as condifions must be almost uniform’ fron’ season to season, by day and by night, peculiir modifications are to be expected in creatures capable of adaptation to such a strange environment, Perhaps one of the oddést concerns the primary need for the maintenance of the species. How can a fish find its mate in thesey vast, trackless, gloomy spaces, wlhere they are prevented from living in shoals by the poverty of the food supply? If ‘has been found thuat in some of the specieg the males are winute dwarfs living as parasites attached to the females. : Most of the fish live wholly on other fish, and, like the angler fish; obtain their prey by attracting it and then engulfing it in capacious mouths armed with sharp and flexible teeth that bend inwards towards the gullet, The fishing apparatus is developed from one of tlie spines of the dorsal' fin, and consists of a stiff but movable basal part, the rod; a long flexiblel part, the line; and a tHip with barbs, representing the hook. The balt is | a luminous bulb, the outer skin being | nearly transparent and contalning a glandular sac which sheds a secretion l by a pore.—Vancouver Provinee,

Many Luminous Plants Known to Naturalists Glow woring are not the only living things that are luminous. Several plants and parts of plants have the power of shining in the dark. There is, for example, a luminous moss. ' It can be seen in crevices among rocks and large groves by the roadside, sometimes in patches measuring six or seven inches across. The comiion tormentil gives off a light, too—just ciose near the roots. If the roots are dug up and cleaned of soll, they will be clearly outlined in the darkness by a pale green phosphorescence, - The light given off by decaying wood Is common enough, but few people perhaps have noticed the light giden oft by leaves during the fall of the year. When beech and oak leaves start decaying they glow with much the same kind of light that comes froin fresh fish. _ . ; This light is caused by tiny threads that are interwoven into the pluunts and are essential to their health, although often they do not start glowlng until the plants are either dying or dead. If the underside of a glowing beech leaf is examined under a magnifying glass, small yellow spots will be seen. These are the centers of the tibers, and if one is disturbed with the point of a pin it will glow more brightly for a few minutes,

.~ Finishing Sealskin Natural sealskin 18 so heavy and salt-lmpreghated, so thick, greasy and coarse-haired, that ne woman would care to wear the fur until it had been properly dressed. It requires a number of operations. to finish the raw skins. They «are washed, - dried, cleaned with ofl-soaked sawdust and skived to one-third of their original thickness. The skiving requires the most sensitive touch, as the knives must go deep enough to loosem the roots of the stiff hairs but must net touch the roots of the fur itself. When the bristles are loosened the skins are turned over and the bristles are rubbed.out. The skins then go to the hot rooms, where the fur side is exposed to blasts of hot air. The last operation is the dyeing that gives the fur its characteristic color. Unlike ordinary things, sealskin is colored l:{ being painted with coat after coat dye, put on with a brush. An Alibi for Ed o Two - backwoodsmen in Maine knocked at the door of a house at the edge of the forest. “Hello, Bd!" sald one of them to the farmer who came to_the door. “Say, we comeé facross the dead body of a man over there in the hollow an’ we kinda thought 'twas you.” 7 “That so? What'd he look like?” asked the farmer. : - ‘“Well, he was about yoiir' bufld——" “Have on a gray flannei‘ shirt?’ (GYep.Ql + I “Boots?” L uYep.n 4 . “Was they knee boots or hip boots?” “Let’s see. Whch was they, Charley, knee boots or hip boots? Oh, yes, they was hip boots.” : “Nope,” said the farmer. “Twasa’t me.”—Boston Transcript. - :

- He Knew Better 1 Two negro boys were engaged to change one of the large, heavy tlresl used on the present-day type of motor coaches. ' The bulk and weight of the tire was glving thém quite a little trouble and a bystander, noticing this, made an offer of a quarter to the one making the nearest correct guess "!1 the actual weight of the tire. S - The very firsf boy to proffer his guess very confidently said, “Dis hera tire weighs 3§ pounds, boss.” ¥ Whereupon the other boy hilariously drolled bis reply: “Boss, dat ‘shows how ignorant some niggers ig. AR Jest put 70 pounds of air in dat tire.” ~Forbes Magazine. e i -—-—-—-—.r.-'- ¢ | Phore ih#s : JOHN W. CASS 2 Taxi and Troekfng = Successor to o St - Geo. D. Foster : _ Now is the time to pay your Bannet subscription—DO IT NOW! .

THE LIGONIER BANNER. LIGONIER, INDIANA.

e U DWA&M& ' Postmaster’ Generdl Harry S. New will deliver the address at the But--I¢f University' foutders day banquet 6" be hefd at the Claypool hotel in Indianapolis ~Saturday evening - February 5 aecording to Dr. Robert J. Aley President of the- University. Postmaster Cenéral New ‘is a former Butler student and will' make the frip west solely for the purpose of speaking at this function. He will leave for Washington the next day. - " A special program will be held at ten o'clock on the morning of founders day in the University chapel. Members of the faculty and seniors will appear in academic gowns. : A large number of Butler Alumni already have notified officials of the ‘Uuiversity that they will attend the ‘founders day exercises. Dr. W: L (Richardson head of the department of education is-in charge of the genera! program. : b LaGrange Man Arested. = A man about 30 years of age and giving' has name as Carson, of Fort Wayne was arrested at Laurange on charges of stealing an automobile at Howe. Charles Sunthimer of Shipshewana drove to Howe and while in‘l a bank, his Essex sedan was stolen. He reported the theft to Sheriff Clarence K. Minnich, who with his deputy found Carson in an intoxicated c:oudi-" tion in the stolen machine at Howe, When questioned, Garson was said to be too much under the i‘nfluencej of liquor to give details of the thefti or His identity. -- . |

Makes Confession of Theft. William (Caesar, who opérates tarmers’ feed barn in Fort Wayne, is in the DeKalb county jail in defauit of $l,OOO bond, ¢harged with receiving stolen property. H. L. Kaellner, of Altona, who is in the county jail, has confessed that he stole a Shetland pony, harness and buggy belonging o Charles Carlin of Garrett, which Ly sold to Caesar, who got him drunk and persuaded him to let him have the outfit for $l5. Caesar in turn sold the ponyv. o First Robin Seen. “The Tirst Robin” was sighted by Mrs. Joseph Fries, of Connersville, according to her report made to a newspaper. Her claim . was easily the first of the year there. . "~ oil Boom at Monon. g Monon is the latest Indiana town to enjoy an oil boom. Great interest is being taken in the “black gold” since cil was discovered in an old well drilled more than a year ago. Sl Now is the time to pay your Banner subscription—DO IT NOW!

After the Public School W o : Ydfir children’s education mjay,be,a-\ problem because of its {cost---but start a 'savings account with this bank fo; them while young, and you can solve the education problem nicely . with ‘weekly or monthly deposits. ' - We pay 45, on time dcpqsits ahd SQVm‘g account The Farmers & Merchants ! " Trust Company “THE BANK OF SAFETY AND FRIENDLY SERVICE.”

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Attention Sportsmen! = This is the time of year when quails must be looked after and fed if we want to save them. Ligonier Chapter of . the Izaak Walton League of America asks that all who-can feed such quails .as they can until the present deep snow leaves amd dif .amy -person feels that he cannot furnish the feed at his own expense and will present his bill for any feed furnished to the secretary of the Ligonier Chapter he will 'be paid for all feed :furnished. Farmers are especially urged to look after the quails as they are in position to do so more efficiently than the: man irom ‘town who does. not know where the flocks of quail may be starving. . - | . Chexter Vanderford, Secretary. ; Booze Running Couple Bagged ~ Four persons were arrested at. Angola last week on charges of transporting liquor. Two of them gave the names as Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hilton and their home as Fort Wayne. They were traveling in-a Buick sedan at a high rate of speed and were apprehended ft the bridge over Pigeon creek just south of Pleasant Lake when the sheritt drove liis car crossways of the road. A search in the car revealed a large supply of liguor,. The -other couple gave their names as Mr. and: Mrs. Barney Gowah of Tulsa, Okla., and were enroute from Detroit- home. They were driving a Chevrolet coupe which was found to contain ten cases of whisky and 20 gallons of alcohol. :

Twice Paroled, Arrested Agaji. - Nignam Woliinger, 27, of Klkhart, was arrested by the police of that city Thursday anight, and is said to have confessed to the theft of a diamond ring valued at $5O from Miss Maric Anglemever: Prosecuting = Attorney Glenn R. Sawyer has not vel decided whether 1o file a larcenv _charge against himm or to ask the revocation of hig parole. Wolfinger was sentenced to the state reformatory in 1921 for forgery, and was parvolcd threo years later, arrested again tor iforgervain 1924, and paroled last spring. He is also said to have served several short terms at the farm.. ‘ Hay Try Lee in ¥lorida., .Wlorida authorities’ may refuse to turn Ralph IL.ee; notorious jail breaker, over to Indiana to stand trigl ror muvder, it was indicated Tuesday. Claude Worley, chief of Indianapolis detectives, received a letter from Jacksons ville stating that Leo.would be tried there tor a i(illing siation holdup he recovered trowr a hullet wound received in a ficht with police after thg holdup. Now. is the tiine to pay your Banner subseription—DO 1T NOW! .

et Ty Home Realty and Investment Co. * ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR fi -+ -~ --EEVY- BLOCK, -LIGONIER, IND. o " J. L. HENRY Manager

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