Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 52B, Ligonier, Noble County, 17 February 1927 — Page 3

The Ligonier Banner Established 1856 Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. W. C. B. Harrison, Editor M. A. Cotherman, Manager

Published every Monday and Thursday and en.tored the Postoffice at Ligonier, Indiana, as second class “matter.

_ Notice to Seed Buyers. Noble County farmers who purchase clover or alfalfa seed this winter and spring may be surprised td note strange colors in the seed sacks; These colors are the result of staing applied under the provisions of the new Federal Seed Staining Law andl they are fully explained in an exhibit prepared by County Agent Cunningham which may be viewed at Haly ferty’s Drug Store Albion. ) This new law, the result of recent discoveries that the use ofl foreign seed from regions of mild climate is responsible for much winter killing of clover and alfalfa in the American clover belt, requires that all imported clover and alfalfa seed must be stained. If the seed is un) adapted or of unknown foreign origin, then at least 10 per cent of i must be stained red. All other foreign clover and alfalfa seed must be¢ stained 1 per cent green with the exception of seed of Canadian origin, violet. The stained seed that Indiana farmers should be careful to avoid id the red seed, which is of little value under Hoosier conditions. i The attractive exhibit designed by County Agent Cunningham showy samples of the stained seeds and explains the main points of the new law with which every Indiana farmers should be famiiar. A study of this highly education exhibit may bd the means of preventing many clover and alfalfa faiures in the county. !

“Honest” Taxpayer Found.

Elkhart County Treasurer Elizabeth Miltenberger’s mail Friday included $35 from the “most honest taxpayer in Elkhart county.” Tha sender is a woman. She explained that twenty years ago she owed taxes to this amount to the county. But at that time she was too poor to pay the money. Since then she has been trying to adccumulate it and now at an advanced age has completed the fund. Officials and employes of the court house joined in the expression —“You don’t find them so honest often.

South Bend Man Held.

Russell Frederick secretary of thd [South Bend Chamber of Commercs was arraigned nbefore U. S. Commis? sioner Henry C. Reitler charged with violation of the Mann Act, and held for trial Feb. 25. Frederick is charged by Mettie Mesnar, Lasalle, I1l;, with being the fathey of her child. She alleges Frederick brought he from Chicago to South Bend on Oct. 10 1925 and that they livy ed in the LaSalle Hotel in the Indiana city. |

Convict to Pay For Crime.

Albert Rosenberg, 36, escaped prisoner from the federal prison at Atlanta, Ga., who was arrested at South Bend for robbery of the Charles Pask home will answer for his crime in In; diana before being taken back to Atlanta to finish his ten year sentencq which he started on October 16 last. Rosenberg will be given 10 to 25 years if convicted under the charge against him here and the government will return him to Atlanta after the expiriation of that term. ’

Stolen Property is Found in Tree A check for $145 a bankbook and other valuable papers belonging to Roy Murray -real estate®dealer with of} fices in the Haynes building at Elkhart and a check for $5O belonging to Dr. V. L. Kennedy, who has offices in the same building which had been stolen on Christmas eve, were found Thursday by Mrs. Ada Howland in 2 hollow tree near her home east of the Six Span bridge. The property has been returned to the owners.

Considering “Medium Priced” Car Henry Ford is’ experimenting with a “medium priced’ automobile price of which would range between that of the Ford and Lincoln cars, the Unity ed Press was informed at the engin; eering laboratories of the company. No further inkling of what sort of car Ford intends to put on the market was given. It was generally believed that the car would be a sixs cylinder one. ¢

Will Arrest Autoists.

Drivers of automobiles with old lic-I ense plates will be arrested it was announced yesterday by Chief of Po/ lice Wolf. It had been announced that motorists would be given unti} February 1 this year to secure li4 censes, but as Feb. 16 had been thd time in previous years mno arrestg *were made here during the first twq weeks in February. Beginning yess terday however it was stated that the law would be strictly enforced. -

County Agent Begins Work,

C. B. Blosser newly elected Elkhart: eounty agricultural agent began his new work Tuesday. Mr. Blosser was elected by the county board of educas tion to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Chas. A. Jackson who has gone to Florida.

“Jim the Congueror” a fightin’ dynamo he never missed the faster they came the quicker he got 'em. Seéd William Boyd in Peters B. Kyne's " most thrilling story of the American fi;fl\s at Crystal Friday and Satur,

Announces Price Reductions. ’ South Bend, Feb. 16—Sweeping price reductions ranging up to $2OO were announced today by the Studebaker Corporation in celebration of its seventy-fifth/ birthday. The new prices, which go into effect immediately, reflect the aggressive spirit of the Corporation and the confidence! with which it looks forward to what, in the opinion of its president, A. R. Erskine will be the greatest year in its history. ; : } The price reductions affect the Sport Roadster, the Custom Victoria, the Custom Sedan, and four model§ mounted on the Big Six chassis—Tha (Chancellor, The Commander, The Sheriff, and the Big Six Sport Roadster. | The new prices bring the Custom | Sedan from $1385 to $1335, the Cus-| tom Victoria from $lB5 to $1325 and | the Sport Roadster from $1250 to | $1195. _ I

Brougham reduced 200

~ The largest price reduction was made on The Commander Studebaker’s Big Six Brougham which wag reduced from $1785 to slsBs—a cut of $2OO. The Chancellor—the Big Six Custom Victoria was reduced from $1735 to $1645. The Sheriff (Big Siig Phaeton) was reduced from $l6lO to to $1445, and the Big Six Sport Roadster from $l6BO to $1495. }

'l‘pnil to Be Paved Across Indiana The Yellowstone trail will be paved its full extent across Northern Inj diana upon application of paving projects for which bids were called by the state highway department. | A gap of 40.6 miles between Hamlet and Warsaw not previously covered by contract is included in the 80.75 miles of paving on which the highway, commission will open bids Wednesday March 9. according to announcement of John D. Williams director. The department expects to complete the paving by fall, Williams announced. , i ‘Completion o fthis work on U. S. route No. 30 the Yellowstone trail will provide a paved highway all thq way across Indiana from the Ohio line through Fort Wayne Columbia City, Warsaw Plymouth Valparaiso to the Illinois line at Dyer at the south edge of Cook county in Illinois.

Fined For Passing School Hack.

D. W. Walling drew a fine of $25 and costs amounting to $35 in the Kendallville city court Saturday evening when arraigned on a charge of driving past a school hack on the Kendallville-South Milford road, which had been stopped to discharge the children passengers. Section 35 of Chapter 213 of the Indiana Acts of 1925 specifies that “It shall be unlawful for any person who is driving or operating a motor vehicle or motor bicycle to pass or attempt to pass any street car, interurban car of school hack at a lateral distance of less than 20 feet on any street or highway of this state at any time when such car or hack is stopping to allow passengers to alight therefrom or embark thereon.” The law further states that vehicles must not be driven less than six feet from the rear of tfe car or hack and remain at a standstill until the car or hack has started. The law specifies a minimum fine of $25.

Commissioners Act On Road Petitions. LaGrange county commissioners in session last week discused several road projects. Viewers were appointed for the proposed Milbour and Bovee roads in Milford township both under the three mile law and will re: port at a later meetihg of the board. Some opposition has developed to the Myers road running from the north ‘corporation line of LaGrange to the south line ofr Lima township and 2 hearing on a remonstrance has been gset for the last Saturday of the present month. It is understood the remonstrance is based upon the assumption that the state highway commiss; icn will divert the O. I. M. trail from its present route and run in west from the Oliver lake corner. \

Examiners For State Board.

Edward A. Cooper and Vaugh Wis~ field men for the Indiana state board of accounts are in . the Kosciusko county court house, making the semiannual inspection of the records of the county, city and township officials, According to the inspectors they are making a check of all the records ir Kosciusko county for the year 1925 and 1926. The work will keep the two men busy for eight or ten weeks.

Salaries of Judges Before Senate First attention of the Indiana senate upon convening Monday afternoon was directed again on the bill to increase salaries of five Lake county judges. The measure -failed of passage Saturday after a heated debate, ~ Objections were raised that the Lake county increase if allowed Lwould be followed by similar demands from all parts of the state. s

* Meets Death in Accident. .

Charles C. Overholt Jr., 25 cashier of the Fort Wayen branch of the Western Newspaper Union was instantly killed Sunday eight miles southeast of Hicksville 0., on the Fort, Wayne road. Overholt was brushed Ifrom the running boar of his car by, a passing machine. :

First Presbyterian Church. Cavin St“fi Rev. G. H. Bacheler, Pastor Residence 318 W Brd St. : Telephone 346. : o ~ Services : Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Men’s Class 9:30 A. M. Preaching Service 10:45 A. M. ; Vesper Service 5:00 P. M. , Y. P. 8. C. E. Monday 7:00 P. M. Mid weekk service Wed. 7:16 P. M.

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i . Pastor is Ousted. ~ While armed deputy sheriffs guarded the ballot box, members of the First Christian church of Mishawaka held an election Friday night, and by a margin of 28 votes removed its pastor from power. i But the internal strife of the church did not come to an.end with the election, as had been optimistically expected. Instead, S. O. Redacre, the pastor, announced he would contest the election which was conducted under 3§ superior court order. “No court has the power to rule on the membership of any church,” Mr. Redacre declared.

Man Ends Life With Gun.

The body of Arthur “Buck” MeNeeley 46 with a bullet hole in thg right temple was found at Rochestern Sunday afternoon on top of the Big Hills three miles southeast of that city, by Sheriff Fred Carr who had been asked by relatives to conduct a search. A .22 caliber target rifle with which MdNeeley had taken his life, was found beside the body. <Coroner McClurgh pronounced the death as due to suicide. W : : McNeeley who is said to have been mentally weak borrowed the rifle Saturday from a neighbor saying he was going hunting. ’

Sues Doctor and Nurse.

John S. Conklin a farmer of Kosciusko county has brought suit for $50,000 against Dr. Chas. G. Beall ofl Fort Wayne and ‘Miss Luella Branning his assistant and nurse. He declared that while in the doctors’ office where his wife was receiving X-ray treatment he received an electrical shock through the carelessness of the physician and nurse and that he was incapacitated. g

Elkhart Worker Found Dead.

The lifeless body of Carl Bert Shig, ley 57 of Elkhart was found by a fellow employee at the Elcar Motor Coj Monday morning in the stock room at the factory. Coroner W. A. Stauffey announced that death had been caused by heart trouble, Shigley is survived by his wife ong son and six daughters. He was a machinist at the Elcar company.

Listed Free From Bovine T. B. Nineteen counties in 11 states were anounced by the department of agriculture as being freed from bovine tuberculosis and were designated as modified accredited areas for a period of three years. The Indiana counties are Davies, DeKalb, Union and Vermillion. The total number of counties now recognized as freed of bovineg tuberculosis is now 285.

Goshen Man Fined.

‘Goshen police arrested James Mishler on a charge of public intoxication. He paid a fine of $lO and costs in the Goshen city court when he pleaded guilty to a charge of public intoxigation.- - ¢ el : C. D. Burk of Chesqua Heights, 0., paid a fine of $ll in Goshen city court Monday afternoon on a charge of speeding. ‘ .

. Millon Fer P. 0.

An ‘expenditure’ of $1,000,000 for a new federal building and site for; South Bend was officially recomended to Congress Saturday by Postmaster General Harry S. New and secretary of the Treasurey Andrew Mellon as part of the $117,000,000 federal building program to be carried out between 1928 ‘and 1933. :

Case Dismissed.

‘Ralph Manaham of Goshen arrested Feb. 9 for having no title card in hid automobile entered a plea of nof guilty ‘in Blkhart city court and after he had explained that he had just secured a new certificate that day and had inadvertently failed to put i§ in. the car, the case was dismissed.

Cars Damaged.

Dan Yoder of LaGrange figured in an auto accident with Adrian Wey? bright of New Paris on the Lincoly highway east of Goshen. Both mayJ chines were damaged but no one wag injured. :

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

Angola Judge Appointed. = Judge A. F. Biggs of the Whitley circuit court has appointed Attormey, A. C. Wood of Angola special judge in the case of the Ways Sanitarium com-' pany vs. the M. E. hospital of Fort ‘Wayne in which the plaintiffs seek to foreclose a vendor’s lien for $60,000. The case was tried two years ago and Judge Biggs found for the plaintiff' but the case was reversed in the appellate court and sent back for retrial. The case will probably be tried the mext time in Fort Wayne. }

Syracuse Coach Hurt.

~ Emory Druckamiller athletic coach at the Syracuse high school sustained injuries to both legs and knees when he .was -struck by an automobile on the Lincoln highway between Goshen and Elkhart. Mr. Druckamiller had stopped his car and got out to rub the ice off the windshield when he was struck by another car. He was able to drive home, but will be confined to the house for several days.

6,698 Killed By Auto.

Automobile accidents caused 6,693 deaths in 78 principal cities of the United States in 1926 the departmenj of commerce announced. In 15 cities no fatalities were reported for January but automobiles killed 473 persons in other communities during the same period. New York City led all other cities of the country in the number of fatal automobile accidents in the past year reporting 1,084 deaths.

Game Warden In Aececident.

Jim Durham deputy game warden had a narrow escape from serious inj jury when his Ford coupe skilled on the state highway north of Warsaw and went into a ditch. No one wag injured. The car went into a marsh which was flooded and the engine of thec ar was under water. During thg night someone stole the deputy’s spare tire. :

The voluntéer fire department of Columbia City will give a public ball February 22. C. M. Graham, deputy state fire marshal will give a talk and there will be other numbers on the program. At 9 p. m. there wili be a dance. |

'Mrs. Mary Shearer 69, RBlkhart} Jacob Bressler 80 paralysis, Elkhart; Mrs. Catherine Gliesman 63 paralysisy Elkhart; Mrs. Elizabeth Kidder 86 genility, Elkhart David Sherbahn 34 appendjeitis Columbia City; Mrs. Tota Haas heart trouble Whitley county.

~ (Charles F. Miller Monday handed' to Elkhart County Auditor <Chas. A, Cropo his resignation as county sups erintendent of schools to take effect on March 8. On March 16 Mr. Millen 'will- take office as state superintendent of public instruction, to which he Fwas elected last November. :

Banking Conditions Better.

Despite the closing of several rural banks recently the general banking conditions in Indiana are better than a year ago, according to a detailed report prepared in the office of chief bank examiner, Luther L. Symons. |

Gilliom in Tax Opinion.

Municipal water works bonds and those issued by municipally owned plants for extensions and improvements are taxable, according to an opinion given by Attorney General Arthur L. Gilliom. - |

Factory Fund Drive On.

The drive for $150,000 to be used in bringing industries to Elkhart is on in full swing. Yestefday the first day of the drive $36,635 was raised.

Want Armory At Goshen.

‘Goshen national guardsmen are circulating petitions which they hope will be the means of bringing them a new armory. .

» Readers of Marion set a new record last month when they read 18,771 library books according to Miss Daisy Springer, librarian. .

Dies While at Church.

Seraphim Miller, 61, dropped dead of heart failure while attending mass at the Precious Blood Catholic church at Fort Wayne" Tuesday.. :

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Firemen's Ball.

Near-By Deaths.

To Resign.

Readers Set Record.

SAW CRESCENT FALL - BEFORE THE CROSS

M. Stephan’s Cathedral Has Long History.

For the first time in over 400 years the gothic spire of St Stephan’s cathedral In Vienna is without a watchman. Thirty years ago automatic street fire alarms made the fire watech a mere supernumerary. But the habit of centuries was strong, and the post was not finally abolished until recently, when Vienna declded to cut down city expenses. Similar customs enduring from the.Middle ages go down with the passing of the fire wateh and town crier, although an exception is that the muezzin still continues his eall to prayer from the Moslemized minarets of St. Sophia in Constantinople, : ' - Bt. Stephan’s has been Vienng's watchdog through trying times. When the Turk marched west in 1683, and agaln in 1809 when the French threatehed Austrian supremacy, the old cathedral tower did good service. Gold-j braided generals watched from its gargoyled lookout and sent iorth'swiftl messengers. on hazardous missions. Visible from distant points of 'thql horizon, its spires have been familiar landmarks since the Fourteenth century. . . Most visitors to Vienna climb the tower. Starting in darkness, one follows the small spiral stairwsay until it becomes less dusky by reason of marrow slits let into the outside wall. At about the height of the surrounding buildings a balcony juts out from the church, providing a vantage point from which to view St. Stephan's place, the large square in front of the church. To get this view one stands on a bheautiful tower built by Rudolph YV. The plains of Flungary lie to ‘the northeast, with the Carpathian mountains beyvond. A climb .down a short perpendicular ladder leads to the belfry. Here, from heavy beams, hang bronze bells in huge clusters. Josephine, the largest ‘bell, cast in the reign of Joseph I from guns captured from the Turks as they fled 'from Vienna in 1683, was heard for the first time when Charles VI entered the city for his coronation. Close by Is, or was until recently, the fire watch, . These guardians of safety, in old days, wore a uniform similar te that of soldiers on line duty, At the first puff of suspicious-looking smoke any‘'where in the city they picked up a “huge trumpet and with loud blasts an‘nounced their discovery to sleeping citizens. . ' From just over the room of the fire watch Count Starhemberg sat on a stone bench and watched the advance of the red crescent when the Turk made his historic attack on western civilization so many years ago. Leopold I had fled with his court, leaving the city defenseless. From July until September Vienna tottered umder the Purkish siege. Count Starhemberg and his officers repaired the fortifica‘tlons as best they could, with the assistance of students and citizens whom they drilled to act as reinforcements until help arrived. Day after day and week after week the Austrian general climbed to his lookout in the church steeple to scan the northwestern horlzon for troops he believed were hurrying across Silesia and Moravia, now part of Cxechollovakin.

Part of the defense had already gome down before the Turks when on September 11, 1683, as the gray light of morning furned te pink, the tireless watcher saw the sparkle of a helmet. Betwen him and the Danube floated the Christian banners of John Sobleski of Poland. On came the ranks of Poles and Germans into the midst of the astonished Mussulman hest. White tents and red crescents went down before the combined armies huried against them. The Turk went back to his home beside the Bosporus and Leopold I came back to Vienna. Leopold’s first visit was to St. Stepham’s cathedral, where a Te Deum was sumng. His first order authorized OCount Starhemberg fo Introduce into ‘bis armerial bearings the spire of the gathedral, a wall and the letter L.

Belleve It or Not!

There are no seasons in the Maslay jungle, according to Carveth Wells, the explorer, who wrote “Six Years In the Malay Jungle.” While one tree 13 fa dud anether near by may be in full ploom, according to Wells. In the great mud flats along the coast there dre fish that live in holes and climb teees for relaxation. Mr. Wells deelares he saw a fish scoot down from its perch in a tree, trip to the edge of a peol and scoop up water in its Sa, which it poured em its head to ooel itself. W

Runner Well Paid

Paavo Nurmi receives 30 cents each ¢ime his foot touches the ground durfag a race, according to statistics compiled by the sports editor of the Budapest newspaper Magyarsag. He caleulated that Nurmi received an aver age of 35,000 Hungarian crowns for each step taken in the various races fa which he has participated. Thirtyfive thousand erowns is the equivalent : half a dollar, American money.— e. 3 g

Timid

* A cenversation with an ofd Dm‘ moor farmer’s wife turned on an empty house in the neighborhoed. | ‘“f am surprised,” said the visitor, ‘*that sueh a fine place should stand ‘empty so leng.” - Lo . “AR sir,” replied the eld lady, “it's a fine house, but it's festive with rats.”

. See “Midnight Lovers” a ta.scinat~] ing story of a hasty after the war mar- 1 riages in England—starring Lewiq Stone and Anna I, Nilsson Crystal Sunday and Mon. : :

“Now is the time to pay yciur Banner uoo per year. = | Py

Knot Kecords Reveal " Past 'of Great Nation

Sclentists recently deciphered a tangle of loops in colored strands of fiber which ‘throw new light on the activities of America’s earllest civilized people—the Incas. Bl Knot records were the only history books of a great nation which occupled an’ area equal to that of the United States—an absolute monarchy ‘which, so far as social organization was concerned, was very advanced, for the Incas collected taxes, took census records, built bridges and irrigation ecanals, and were successful agriculturists. These wonderful people flourished for thousands of years before being conquered by the Spanfards in the Sixteenth century, yet these mysterlous knots revealed chapters of their life almost as plainly as a &rinted page. : | he records were discovered a century ago by a ship’s carpenter, who came by them in South America. Aeccompanying the tangle of knots was a key written in Latin, apparently by a Spanish ecclesiastle, The records consist of several bunches of looped and knotted strands, ~each upon a lacquered ring apparently formed from the sinew of some large animal. From the circumference of each ring proceed from. 80 to 100 strings looking like catgut, each about one foot long, and on each string are from 10, to 30 knots which vary In complexity from a simple “put through” to a tangle of loops amnd twists three-quarters of an inch In diamefer, Mranslation of these primitive records reveals a knowledge of the Deluge, corresponding with the Biblcal aecount. According to the old historians who patlently twisied these yards of Aber, the first white civilizers came to Asmerfea 2300 rears ago—centuries before Columbhii: w : horn. Who were they? Thee: rraord nary fact that the Incas ‘appare 't'v wer-hiped Wotan suggests that the sisst invasion of Amerlca was made by Scandinavians,

Now He Knows

- In the English department of one of the state colleges the freshman themes are marked, returned to the student for correctlon, and then -are handed back to the teacher, who for obvious reasons places them eon flle. One irnocent freshman; eithwer ignorant of the subterranean chammels Into which § returned theme somefimes finds itself or overconfldent about the commervial value of his ligerary efforts, asked in a disappointed tone, “But what @& you do with them? What good do they do you?” “I am saving them for an insane asylum, where they will be used for a research library,” confilded the professor with apparent seriousness.— Tlndlanapolis News. ;

Built on Eccentric Lines

Hlecentricity, some crities declare, is one of the ourstauding charaecterlstics in modern art and, te Hlustrate their point, cite the unfinished Bareelona cathedral, the dream of the late Antonio Gaudi. The designer cast aside many traditions and sought. t: achieve his effects through a continued arrangement of ourved. Ifiies and masses. The spires, as eommenced, have started to soar -upward, but are rounded and the open spaces in them are set in.a winding line. Lavish ornamentation that follows the same tendency in curves is found in other parts of the structure, which was gtarted thirty years ago. Carfeatures of animals ln wood and glmss mark the. work ef other eraftsmen.—Popuiar Mechanics Magazine. ; '

His Opinion

_ “My npiece, Gloriosa, was going te get married,” in the crossroads tore related Gap Johnson of Rumpus Ridge. “She came to my house to see how married folks get along. She noticed my 14 children fighting and yelling, and all such, and watched me and wife quarreling the golden heurs away, as the feller said. Pretty soon she ran ot of the house, and I reckon she missed the path somehow, fer she tumbled slapdab into the creek.” : “Then she ain’t going to get marvled, after all?” questioned one of the Jeuangers. T hain’t the slightest idy. She is or she ain’t, and I d’know—-;aw—w-w-w’n.! —which."—Kansas City Star. .

Beginning to Trousers

¥t is recorded that the Asiatics, imcluding the Persians, Assyrians, Parthians and Medes, were the fiest “trousered race.” The Romans looked down on the trousered peoples. Im their .carvings and paintings on momuments captives are frequently represented a 8 wearing tronsers as a sign of subjection. 'The Saxen soldiers weore long, ‘wide trousers somewhat similar -to those worn by sailors today. There ‘Were many different styles in the early days. For a time, during the Middle ages and thereafter, long frousers went out of style and knee breeches became the fashion. s

To Hearten Sunken Crew

A new device has been designed In' Wngland for the purpose of talking to «erews of sunken-submarines. The.ap--paratus ceonsists of a buoy earried .alongside the conning tower. If the .submarine is unable to rise the buoy .can be released, and, being fllled with .compressed air, rises quickly te the .surface and floats above the senken wwessel by a cable. The buoy contains «a telephone by which rescuers and the fimprisoned men can communicate. It «Also holds rockets, a lighting apparswus and a signal bell

.. FREE—NHW PICTORIAL K:ATA-] 410 G, showing twenty views of fire-. preof quarters. Sent post paid upon ‘reugest. South Bend Business Col-

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'All roads lead to G. W. WICKIZER

- Auctioneer ~_ LIGONIER, INDIANA Phone 145 Nine Years of jence. 'Nine Years o s Satisfaction or no Pay

Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Phone £ on 1 Wawaka

mscy ' o%h gnmwmiigws Office ‘m-s 9:30 to u:ko; 16 and 7 to 8. ‘ Other Hours by appointment Phone 103 Zimmerman Bldg.

Harry L. Benner Auctioneer Open for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley ‘County Phones

This Means You, Mr. Merchant! e el know that have an imterest in comoy übihiatenieal s to us. When a merchant adverS el i et N

VERN B.FISHER % FSanitary Plumbing' and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

W. H. WIGTON Attorneyat-law OMce in Zimpserman Block LIGONTER, 18D

- 0. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, : "iVatér séyst?é, E‘ticmps Well Briling: Phone 333 LIGONIER Next door to Fard Garage

Hey There! How abowt your htiaeten wntil they are ol gane and h‘-h,‘h“ n & husry foryou. Good work ‘ requires time “m is that anp thing that’s N inglsworkh ( (}) doing wel A ¥ “Lat_we have that ovder N-O-W

Bothwell & Vanderford Phone 156. Ligonier. Indiana

Putting it off today won't get it doxz tOmMOrrow. a}c‘iisvertisem in th today .