Ligonier Banner., Volume 61, Number 37A, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 October 1927 — Page 2
on the : ‘Bargain Counter . 200 acres one-guarter of a mile south of Syracuse, on {the ca:lt;mt road to Webster, with a fine set/jof buildings.. Also 70 acres of nffnt land which can be sold separate; from this farm. e 145 acres two and one-hailf miles west on the Lincoln Highway from Ligonier with good set of buildings. Gaod soil. 127 acres north of Albion on State Road. Fair set of buildings. 120 acres east of Skinner Lake and onc and one-half miles south on State Road to Avilla. Fine set;of buitdings. 5 ' 49 acres fwo and one-half miles northwest of Cromwell. Fair set of huildings. ‘ : : 43 acres one-quarier of a mile west of Cromwell with fihe set of buildings. If interested see ' SIMON SCHLOSS Citizens - Bank o LIGONIER ' INJ)IA.NA ¥
Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers ' Yhone 156 Ligonier. Indiana
“ G, § Foßretz tor Glasses Ui, A f Sharp Eyes ) ‘ i":. " :r: - A g For T 4 gmly Sharp Work " AL mechanics e to use keom o gad, perfoot tools. : : yws are toolr of fhe mind and sost be sharp to do good work and rseist the wear of constant use. s zharpen sight ¥y m:mgt glasees th':t" will enabis swa & gua clearly, 4 In What - ) &ua Yo-c‘m- & Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist aed Opticlan 130 S. Main Bt. = GOSHEN
How about your letterheads, billheads, statements, envelopes, cards, etc. Don’t wait until they are all gone and then ask us to rush them out in a hurry for you. Good work . requires time ' and our motto is that any- . thing that’s e worth do- " ingisworth &= o e 7171 ¢ RN . . ' |YY ’ /-” Let us have that order N.O-W while we have the time to da Printing as & ehould be m
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Thirty Years a Favorite Smoke, Famous Old Cigar is Now Better Than Ever | » at a Nickel ‘
Some smokers raise their eyebrows when you say “five-cent cigar.” You can’t blame them when you think of the average nickel seller. But a nickel cigar can be a wonderful buy. That’s where volume production comes in. There’s one cigar on the market selling at five cents now which cost more for years. Today it could not be sold at agywhere near a nickel if it weren’t so popular! After smokers try it they forget the price. They keep on buying it. That keeps the volume soaring, and that keeps the price at five cents. The name is Havana Ribbon. It’s mild, mellow, smooth. It’s made of ripe tobacco. It’s been a success for thirty years. No matter how many times you’ve been disappointed in five-centers, you owe it to yourself to give Havana Ribbon a trial. You've got an eyeopening surprise coming,
Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Merchants Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday 7 Evening
. W. H. WIGTGN ! Attorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block : LIGONIER, iND
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 entered the Postofflee at Ligonier, Indiana, as second class matter.
400 Toe Go East
,~‘Pla_ns'f_or: “Indiana Day’’ in Boston Mass October 29 when Irgiana University's football team will meet Harvard in the Harvard istadinm ave being made by eastern alumwvi of the Hoosier schiool W. €. Mattox graduate of the ciass of 1999 now a resident of Boston is chairman of the couanitiee on arrangements. - Definite arrargements have been made for a special train to carry members of the 190piece student military band stulents and’ alumni to the Indiara-Harvard foothall game in the Harvard staduan Gctober 29. At least 400 are expected {0 make the irip. : ‘
Marriage Licenses,
Errést W. Case 37, actor, of Michigan City to Ruby K. McHaws, 27 of Michigan City on Oct. 12. Edward Crego 21 of Sturgis, Mich. to Winona Mathews 17 of Avilla on Oiet. 15. ; L i'ree- Hart 40 of Valentine railroad employee to Florence Miller (18 of Kendallville on Oct. 15. ° ' Welty Smith 27 carpenter of York township to Heler: Gaff 20 of Green’ township on Oct. 15. - Oliver C. Phinney 33 printer of Albion to Muriel Melish 26 of Albion Oct. 13. : ' j
State Paving Awarded
Fingal highway paving and grading contracts of the season were awarded Thursday by the State highway commission. Awards included paving the 3.185 miles of relocation, rjear Culver, ind., to Highways Improvement com: pany South Bend $69,150; two gaps in the Dunes highway No. 20 the .51 mile near Barleytown Porter county to Hinsey and Dull Portlaxd $12,373 and the .14 mile nmear Rolling Prairie LaPorte county te Rieth-Riley Con, struction. company Goshen for K $9,816 Breaks Leg in ,Fall.\z : Joseph Hash formerly of Ligonier ’su;[fered a fracture ir¢ the bone of hid right leg just above the knee cap Tuesday morning when he fell from a ‘wagon. ' Mr. Eash had driven into the field on the Levi Miller farm west of LaGrange and in some manner lost his ‘balance and fell. He struck the ground and rolled under the horses feet. In falling his leg hit a wheel E,of/t.lw wagon ard caused the fracture,
Boy Expected io Die.
> Little hope is held for the recovery of John McCarey six years old son of Mr. and ‘Mrs. William McCarey of Mishawaka who was struck by an automobile driven by Paul A. McKinley Wednesday afternoon. The child is said to have run in front of thé machine while playing. His skull was fractured and he sustained other injuries. ‘
Guilty of Manslanghter.
“After deliberation less than an hour a jury found Mrs. Dorothea Walsen 17 of Fairmount guilty of maqsla,ugfi-, ter for the death by poisoning of her 1. \year old cousin ‘Clifford Cox at Fairmount on May 27. The statutd in such cases provides for a sentencue of from 2 to 21 years in the Indiand state womewnq's prison at Indianapolis.
Has Paralytic Stroke. Samuel Smith of Albion father of County Auditor Edwin Smith suffered a stroke of apoplexy Wednesday while at the court house. He was taken tq the home_of his son with whom he resides where his condition was reported as improved. He regained consciousness Wednesday evening. Mr, Smith is about 70 years old. -
Meet at Albion.
Delegates from all counties in the second district .of the state farm bureau organization attended the district meeting held at Albion. The meetirg was the last district gathering of the year. Counties of the district represented at the meeting included Kosciusko, Elkhart Whitley Allen Noble Steuben LaGrange andc DeKalb. =
Paralysis in Poultry.
Paralysis in poultry is prevalent in Bartholomew county with a heavy loss as a result and the diseass is spreading according to William A. Donglass county agricultural agent, Chicken that become weakened by weather conditions are particularly susceptible to the disease it was said and once infected seldom recover. ]
Dies at Wawasee
Whitmer Held 36 died quite suddenly at his home at Lake Wawasee at 9:30 Thursday morning. The family resides on the north shore near the ald Jones hotel. His wife and two children survive. :
Jubilee Monday Evening.
' All arrangements are perfected for laycelebration of Hallowe'en in. Ligo ‘nier next Monday evening October 31, The program provided will offer good entertainment for old and young. Car: Crashed Into Trec. Marion Bushong’s Chevrolet - coach crashed irfo a tree at the Pine Tred Inn near Benton Friday evening, Ttie car was bodly wrecked. Ve
Starts 700 Savings Aeccounts.
“I owe all my success to thrift”) Paul Monroe 24 widely known hoba ard man about freight yards told in4l ten"iewers during a brief visit to Hastings Nebraska. Monroe was given an official reception at the police station, Members of force became interested in him when they learned he had deposited $1 in a savings bank after begging money for food. - i Monroe said he had $1 accounts in banks in 700 communities thus being provided with if not a sinking fund at least a gind to keep him from" being sunk if his usual sources of income ever failed. : W ‘ ~ “Besides” he said “the money wil} double itself 4n time and when I settle down I'll have someé money.”
Elkhart Aectress Weds.
George Edward Harding Jr., 21 tfni-i1 versity of Illinois spohomore wag at his classes Friday wrestling 'with prosaic trigorometry and Latin following ‘a 36-hour courtship with a three-a-day “Blues” singer which began with strains of “Ain’'t She Sweet’] and ended with a few notes from Logengrin. | : i Harding son of a Chicago Realtor heard HEdith Elizabeth Lord of the “Elever. Musical Flappers” sing “Ain’f She Sweet.”” He agreed with her arranged an introduction bought a license and married her all in 36 hours; Miss Lord a former University of AMinnesota coed whose home is in Elkhart will contirue to de the three-a-day while her youthful "husband acquires his education.
Gates Changes Residence
Attorney Lloyd F. Gfites of Columbia City district chairmar of the Republican party has recently purchased the law library of the late Attorney Lon D. Fleming of North Manchester and will move his family there and locay there in the near future. He will have offices with John Isenbarger real estate man but there will be rp con= nections between the two branches of business. - : g
Tomatoes on Potato Vines.
- Green tomatoes on potaito vines—that's the nature freak reported by Mrs. Julius Walker which she noticed while digging potatoes on a farm three miles west of Alexandria. Farmers in the vicinity say the tomnato plant was grafted upon the potato vines in a mafimgwhich they cannot explain and later pollination completed the process.
Hurt in Auto Accident
Verna Horn 32 of Elkhart was badly cut about the face when arn; automobile in which he was riding with hig father Jesse Horn crashed into a truck loaded wit furniture which had been stopped on the highway north off Wakarusa. The truck was owned by Henry Truax. : :
Accident Vietim Recovery
Mrs. Charles Rosenburg of Chicago who has been a patient in the Dr. A. Hostetler hospital at LaGrange for a ciouple of weeks following an automobile accident is reeoverirg and will leave for her home soon.
Goshen Firms Gets (Contract.
The Rieth-Riley Constructior. Co. of Goshen was given the contract for the construction of a fraction of a mile of pavement near Rolling Prairie by the state highway commission for $9,816.80, : : :
Will Be unable to Play.
Director Art ißeed of the Ligonier School band says that musical organizatioh will be unable to furnish musiq for the Hallowe’en celebration as advertised. The members desire to mask for the parade and compete for the prizes offered, T
Bremen Woman Dies.
" Mrs. Caroline Helmlinger 77 one of the oldest Bremen residents died at her home there Wednesday eveniry aftr an illness of several weeks of influenza and heart disease. 7
Injuries Fatal.
Iryuries received Wednesday afternoon by George McCarney six years old son of Mr, and Mrs. John C. McCarey when he was struck by an automoebile proved fatal at Mishawaka
William Coney Stroh Dead.
- William Coney aged 80 years of near Stroh died Sunday after a prolonged sickness. His funeral was held on Wednesday,
Notice of Finmal Settlement.
State of Indiama Noble County ss: In the matter of the estate of Josephine Jefferies Deceased No. 2902. In the Noble Circuit Court January Term 1928. { Notice is hereby given,-that the undersigned as ‘Administrator of the Estate of Josephine Jefferies Deceased has filed in said court his account and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the jame will come up for examination and action of said court, at the court house, at Albien, Indiama, on the 3rd day of Jar. 1928 at which time and place all persens interested in said estate are regquired to appear ip said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account sheuld not b& pproved. : : And the he{)irs, devisees and legatees of said decedent and all others interested in said Estate, ave also hereby reyuired at ‘the time and place aforesaid to appedr and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate, : § . Alfred O. Jefferies, Administrator Posted October 21st 1927. 37a2w
‘'Races in Malta Speak: - . . '. Same Tongue as Christ ! There is still in this world a race of “people who speak the same tongue that Jesus and His apostles used in their ordinary everyday talks to the people, says the Christian Science Monitor. | » This spoken language was “Aramaie.” We still may find languages and dialects which have descended from Aramaic. | To find today in the pure Aramaic practically identical to the colloguial language that Jesus used we must go ; to the island of Malta, . Even there the traveler must not ex pect to hear it in Valletta. The people of the seapert have long had inter course with the Italians and the English and their language has changed accordingly. Travel inland to those compact cities of stone—to Zeitun, to Mausta with its enormous dome, the third . largest in the world—there one hears not the Anglicized, not: the Italianized speech, but pure Aramalec, There also one sees a race ef people of not only similar speech, but of similar appearance and of similar character to the “chosen of our Lord”—‘“devout men and women who serve God daily.” One can well imagine while living among these people what Andrew, Peter, John and Matthew must have been like, Many races have held so-called dominion ovér these islands, but ncne has succeeded in implanting its language, :
Lucky Discoveries of 1 - Vast Mineral Wealth Tin is worth dbout $1,470 a ton, At North Dundas, in 'Tasmania, a nugget of the metal has been found which weighed 5,400 pounds, and was almeoest pure metallic tin. \ : Copper often occurs in nature in a pure state. A solid block of this metal, weighifg more than’a ton and a half, has just been found in South Africa. The most wonderful discovery of the kind was made in the Andes, at the back of Peru, where, at a height of 14,000 feet, there has been found a mountain of copper ore a mile long and half a mile wide. : - Silver is sometimes found in great masses. Most of us have heard of Cobalt, the miracle silver ecity of northern Ontario. One day, In the spring of 1903, two workmen quarreled while at work on a rough railway track made for “hauling lumber. High words led to blows, and one man flung an axe at the other. It missed him but struck a bowlder, splitting it in two and showing up in its heart a mass of glittering whiteness. It was a lump, of almost pure silver, ' : “That spring Cobalt had four small shacks, but six months later there were more than 5000 inhabitants.
At a village church a wedding was fixed and the happy morn arrived. In due course a youthful swain and a buxom damsel presented themselves at the chancel steps. : When the supposed bridegroom was asked, *Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?’ he stammered: “Please, sir, I’xfi({tm the man! 1 don’t wa‘gt to get married!” “Not the man!” exclaimed the clergyman aghast. *“Then where is the bridegroom?” ; e “He's down at the bottom of the church, sir. He's too shy to come up.”
. %What is the idea of that old Tfel. low’s taking the road warning sign, ‘CURVE, and sticking it up in his front yard?” asked a motor tourist lin the Ozarks, ' “I reckon likely he wants to get his oldest daughter married off,” replied Jig Fiddlin of Clapboard Springs. « “What in the world has the word, ‘curve,’ to do with it?” * ' %I reckon you hain’t seen the shape of his—p’tu—oldest gal, have you?"— Kansas City Star. :
Nancy, age four, sat on the back steps at grandmother’s holding one of the many kittens which lived there. “Mother,” she called, “come see what a nice kitty this is.” : “Yes, it is,” replied mother, “and what is that kitty’s dame?” “Oh,” said Nancy, “all of grandmother’s kitties have the same name.” “That’s queer,” said mother. “What is their name?” ) : “Why, their name Is Scat,” said Nancy. :
Louisa, the colored kitchen maid, was from the country, but she was energetic and learned fast, Part of her duties was to water the fern and change the wateér in the goldfish bowl. Her mistress asked her on the second day: “Did you remember to empty the water! under ‘the refrigerator?” “Yes, ma’am, 1 emptied it and put in fresh- water.”—lndianapolis News.
- Musical historians in France contend ' that * the familiar music of “America” and “God Save the King,” which was supposed to be an old German air, was really eomposed by the famous Lulli, musician to Louis XIV. It 'is claimed the air was composed on the occasion of the king recovering from sickness and was first sung by the pupils of the St. Cyr girls’ achool,
Mrs. W. C. B. Harrison son George and Mrs. Lyman Kilmer and mother Mrs. Marvin drove to Wakarusa and spent the week end. George Harrison joined relatives on a trip to Bloomingtoyy to attend the Indiana-Notre Dame football game Saturday.
The Modest Groom
Advertising
Common Name for Cats
Trying Hard to Please
French Claim “America”
Sees Football Game.
Dies of Fractured Skull.
A fractured skull and not acute alcoholism caused the deats of 3. V. Johnson a Huntertown garage owner. Dr. Edgar N. Mendenhall Allen county coroner declared and as the result of . this firding an investigation is to be made to determine how the [man received the injury. v
To Pension Ministers.
“The United Christian Missionary society is making plars for raising an $8,000,000 pension fund for ministers of the Disciples of Christ* H. B. McCormick of St. Louis promtional secretary of the society announced Thursday right at the annual missionary ‘meeting of the Fort Wayne churches of Christ. .
Ready For Rooi.
° The ned addition three stories in height at the Refrigevator factory is now ready for the roof and will soon be inclosed. It is a handsome structure. ; =
Go to Indiana .U.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthar Biddle joined Anisworth Bassett Mrs. Biddle's father on a trip to Indiana university and French Lick over the week end.
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT State of Indiana Noble County 35: | In the Mattef of the Estate of | Alton L. Baughman Deceased : No. 2956 In the Noble Circuit Court Adj. Oct. Term 1927. : : Notice is hereby given that the undersigned as Executrix of thg Estate of Alton L. Baughman deceased has filed in said court her ac: count and vouchers in final settie. ment of sald Estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Courf at the Jourt House at Albion Indiana on the 4 day of Wovember 1927 at which time and place all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause if irany there be why sald account should :[not be approved. : s And the heirs, devisees and legatees of said decedent and all others interested in said Estate are also hereby required at the time and place aforesaid to appear and make proo? of their heirship or claim to any part ot said estate. Millie Baughman Executrix - Posted Oct. 13 1927. W. H. Wigton Atty 3622 w
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Home Realty and Investment Co. ~ ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR™ - LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. - ’ . -J. L. HENRY Manager ' Sede City Profierties and Farms for 'sale'thagwin appeal to you, especially when, you consider, the possibility of future prices. | | 'FARMLOANS . 57 FFDERAL LAND BANK FARM LOANS.S7 O wtth EXCEPTIONAL Privelege-Clause Y /0 | - SECURITIES . The Securities that we have to offer, are of the highest type. GRAVEL ROAD, SCHOOL, PUBLIC UTILITY and REAL ESTATE PREFERRED STOCK, all TAX FREE. ; ' | Official Indiana License Branch Automobile, Truck, Chauffeurs License, Cerlificates of Titles and Transfers. All given special - . - attention. - - -
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