Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 6B, Ligonier, Noble County, 8 March 1928 — Page 4
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A Battery Without ithout jars Thne new Gummite case, an exclusive feature with Exide Batteries, is mouided all in one piece, including compartments for the cells, Thus, indis vidual jars am: done away with, Qummite is practi- . cally indestructible., will not warp, and is not af- . fected by temperature; ecid, or water. Let us show you this ideal bate tery cas™, BLAZED TRAIL GARBAGE
Foßretz tor Glasses : 31-":4?‘;,:43;: 7., Sharp Eyes . v 2 :_:g’" : _T;-‘ flmf FO!’ . " & .et Sharp Work LA’& - X u:fi’ 4 A" menanios ke te use koo ol e wi let OIS, Erye o= tonls of fhe mind enéd smin ne ahurp 'o do good work and '-w’.)il L WeRY flt -.‘.‘(1130131’.3 USs, : "~ ua sharpan gowr sight By ravashiag zieases that will enabie gwov W Fow cleariy. : : o M What Condißen oo Yous Hgaef @ ; ' Nevin E. Bretz - OUptometrist agd Gpticlse ' 130 8. Main 8¢ : . BOSHBR - . . Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers “hone 156 Ligonier. Indiana
O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc. Well Drilling Phone 333 LIGONIER Next door to Ford Garage . Howard White ' WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Fhone 2an 1 Wawaka _ Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Merchants Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday Evening b e e e ee e W. H. WIGTCN Atiorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, ND Dr. Maurice Blue VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm Phone: Ligonier 857 _Sanitary Plumbing] and Heating ° Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind Harry L. Benner Auctioneer i Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley . - County Phones
There are all kinds of cheap printing—butnone ofit isreaily cheap—at least not on a basis of value. Cheap stuff is usually worth almost what it costs. Our printing isn’t the cheapest you can get, but it’s as good as the best.
Made Fire by Breeding At first the giridale terrier was a cross between the otter hound and the black-and-tan wire-haired terrier. This breed was practically unknown outSide of Yorkshire, England, where it existed 60 years ago as an unkempt long-eared mongrel.: But after ahout 30 years of careful breeding most of the hound blood has been bred out of it and today we'hfve the well huilt, well marked animal.
Cellulose
The following are some of the uses of cellulose: Basic raw material for the manufacture of cotton goods; basic raw material in the manufacture of artificial silk; manufacture of electrical appliances and similar articies after treatment by certain processes; manufacture of the gun cottons, celluloid, etc., by the controlled nitration of cellulose. § ;
Chinese Society
The English translation of KuomingJfang, mentioired so frequently as operating in China, is as follows: Kuo means country, min means people and ‘tang or tong means association. The whole word is interpreted: Association to bring the country into the hands of the people. The association is half patriotie, half political.
Teeth Worth $5,000
The market price of teeth is sald to be advancing—not human, but elephant teeth. Some of them now bring $5,000 each. The only true ivory comes froin the teeth or tuslis of elephants. The dontine i 3 used for making billiard balls, piapo kers, nankin rings, cheasmen and all kinds of toilet articles. -
Smallpox From Spain
The Spaniards brought smallpos to America early in the Sixteenth century. It eppeared first in Santo Domingo, three years later in Mexico, when it destroyed 3,000,006 people, and thence spread with frightful severity over the New world.
Study T hyself
Many a man who boasts that he is self-made wonders why his fellows do not share his admiration of his creation. Such a man should go farther and give sérious thought to his achievement. Introspection might reduce his conceit.—Grit. ; -
For Whitening Teeth
In default of tooth-powder, common salt -mixed with fine soot—or either of these anlone—is quite good. The soot makes tl}le teeth wonderfully white, and the salt not only hardens the gums, but puts a glitter on the enamel of the teeth.
{mmortal Words
The words, O Liberty, what crimes are committed in thy name,” were used by Mme. Roland immediately before her execution, as she stood before the statue of Liberty that- had been erected in the Place de la Revolution in Paris.
Wken Rome Was Auctioned
Didius Julianus bought Rome for about $10,000,000 when it was auectioned by the Praeterian guard in 193 A. D. He lived only two months to enjoy his purchase, being executed by the troops who captured the city from him. - ; Which the Better Half? It is said that more than 50 per cent of the women in this country have defective eyesight. That accounts for about 50 per cent of the men who are able to get married.— Cleveiand Plain Dealer. Oldest Confection Licorice, the oldest confection, was eaten 3,000 years ago by inhabitunts of Egypt living in the vicinity of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, and their manuscripts make reference to the growing of the root.—The Mentor. For the Run-Down Feeling ‘ln a contemporary magazine a doctor tells readers what to do when run down. The best thing is to take the car’s number if possible—Londen Passing Show. : : Instead of Ice When you cannot obtain ice for outward application to an invalid, make a lotion of methylated spirit and milk, equal parts—the coldest Ilotion possible. ~ :
Bears Her Share
“Man that is born of woman is of few days and full of trouble.” Woman’s. lot is evidently left to be finferred.—Boston Herald. Value of Wives “Whenever anybody looks at my wife,” says a writer in the American Magazine, “he looks again at me and my value goes up.” They All Lie Man makes opportunity. Those who don’t fish or play golf or burn gas find something else to lle about.— St, Paul Dispatch. . Earnings of a Lifetime The average high-school graduate’s lifetime earning capacity is computed at '553,000. . Greece’s Floral Emblem _The violet is the floral embiem of Greece. Cars Stolen at LaGrange. - Two automobiles have been stoleér at LaGrange according to word re celved here. The cars taken includuec & Nash coupe license number 434-19 owned by Joe Barnes, Columbus, O. and a Ford license number 324-714 .-Iv : . ~ i ‘-'l‘i‘ Y : . Pay your Bamuer subscriptions.
~ t . eee o e et e e e e et sit g vius badl MICHIGAN INDIAN MONUMENT RECALLS Vil madd I ! THRILLING LEGEND . - et ettt ee e e P (By E' M‘ T' SerVECG) e B SN U IR 2 1 - o~ Copyrigated, 1927 o » ahee O ; e : S L R e e R A R s e R R eASR R § R ee R T R Suptoas AR e o s S e T e e o R R R R R A s e N & SR RS N e S e O eG Sl ’ RPR Ve R SRR e o e R Y S e o R e o it 3 SRR LA R : Sy e R T S bR R S S S o A R R S SRR 5 % SR :~:2l3N§§':>;}33~f Tl N O RR e R o R oot oRE eel Zi W.”‘(;‘ S RS R ot DT T e e e O SR e e T o B PR e R WQ}, S '*%}‘ : _‘;-:1-","5,-4-/ B o nemNeß s A R e Ry SR S oRN RPN Sny iMO SRR g e o e S S &a :.,-. SST RS _‘9l._*,;; ‘;'l’s2-\‘ Bt RN, e R Ske AR O DR SO MR Y Y, (S REe s IR R R R eN ot Gl b R L B PSR L ;b"ifi.?:551'12‘;3:':",:-:f:ffy-..'--?:'?\?"‘1'7‘;'? it RN 0 BSO e B I B i R e, iT T R SR S - &R R TR SR e ~ Re e L 2 Ue A ¥ O R SRS IR SR #%m Bke V'fizi‘.:',-:o e, gf.‘". Re N 4’%% R R R ‘o’.»3!" i B S s 1 '-'-.;v.4.,(-‘<-"_f.. SR "gfl R R - B R N S R A s B B N B ”%? B o R S s bas e e e RSN R A .’*%V% R RRN T P O IS R e e s 5 -.’?{g‘f ;Z—:l,‘éi-.%i'é’i"'%'?:‘:;ci‘;féfi:'?f&%ssss:2 S, *‘-.( ‘,E-%ff'f‘- SRR SR %3 SN f)’:< “'?,:;:izii«l& RSR B R A RNi- o o s M sST OB | o 5 R e o ':5;-:5?1;{??%;;;';:-f_e;;;;g;z;r;;-:.,;;;:r;»f;;:'_se,;f;.fl.x;%?é;.;_;'3" ie G L AN R L R sTV R i A U e e SN }’;‘ EEER '-:gs;‘t;-,:;:;:;:}';:;g; R R k e .:;:;Z-‘..'rv_,'-_:;‘-,;;:,y%};l};';_"‘;ki'4'-v. RO R ,f-:"a».-:':»‘-f?.4'3;::::-';_-'4;"-:»'..;, RI L A e e o T A N A B R L " o A S é .;:zi:!;.:wii‘.;.: PR AB R e RRA e e B e e e b.v-r'('\ R A N eO, g i R A eelD e I LR ee T e eSR SR SRRy S »':_7:;‘;:;-;:..j.;:{:}';:{';:-'-:",.%%.‘ T ’j"“:cl;:':f:%;.‘_f;’»:-;;f:fg:?::?"‘v O RN A A R e pas IRAT ot B o SO SOt geAR S "li.é. R i N A Sy eL e e e e N e e e
SIX miles frcm Rogers City, Michigan, which is located on U. S. Highway 23, on the rim of Lake Huron, stands a giant limestone boulder. Sacred Rock it is called. It stands a legendary monument—defying the onward march of centuries, impervious alike to the battering barrage of Huron’s ice in winter and to the seduective swish of Huron’s satin waves in summer—solitary, aloof—a tacit reminder of the aboriginal Indians who roamed this section centuries ago and to whom this boulder became a temple, a place of worship.. Sucred Rock is situated in the heart of one of the resort and tourist sections of that great summertime “Vacationland” — East Michigan. Here thousands of residents of Indiana come annually on that persistent, persuasive, precominant and universal quest, the master passion of life, the goal of the human race—Happiness. Hundreds of Indiana residents who last summer visited Paul H. Hoeft State Park—one of the 34 state parks in Bast Michigan—also visited Sacred Rock. . : And flamboyant white initials, carefully carved by those possessing tools or hacked and gashed out by others, almost invariably on the face fronting the lake, testify to the number who have visited the boulder. Presque Isle County, in which the rock is located, was believed by the Indians to be sacred ground. Later, sacredness did not affect the entire county or that section which is now designated as the county. It merely affected as sanctified the area . between the mouth of the Waw-waugh-waugh-que-oc River, which empties into Hammond’s Bay, 16 miles north of the present site of Rogers City, and Swan River, which debouches into Lake Hurcn four miles south of Rogers City. Waw-waugh-waugh-que-oc is now spelled on all Michigan maps Ocqueoc, . Hundreds of years ago there were two tribes of Indians in this seciion. Where Sacred Rock now stands narked the boundary line between the two tribes. A keen riva‘lg existed between R gl s > st gl N S s S R >
Taxes Increase This Year.
The total amount of taxes to be collected in Indiana this year, for state and local purposes, lis $140,496,619, compared with $132,139,384 collected in 1927. The increase is $8,357,235, or 6.32 per cent. | These figurues were obtained by Harry Miesse, secretary of the Indiana Taxpayers’ Association from the December abstracts filed with the Auditor of State. Eighty-one counties show increases and only eleven report that their govermental costs will be lower this year. Prior to the time the budgets were fixed and the levies adopted, appeals were taken to the State Board of Tax Commissioners from seventy-five units in thirty coun ties. The state board lopped off $4,605,386. ' | ' “Thus it will be seen,” Mr. Miesse explains, “that if the taxpayers had not taken the trouble to perfect these appeals and carry them through to final hearing, the total tax burden this year would have been about $13,000,000 higher than it was in 1927, or approximately 10 per cent. Explaining some of this increase is not difficult. The general assembly of 1927 passed a large number of laws to increase sallaries, some of them ;m'a.ndatory. It permitted the formation of holding companies to build schools, auditoriums and gymnasiums, and lease these to the municipay corporations, thereby avoiding and evading the constitutional debt limits of these corporations. There hag been a constant increase in capital outlay, addihg to the annual requirements for ‘bonds and interest. We must take into consideration as well the normal growth of the state and the theory that the cost of government increases with increases of population. This, however, is but a drop in the bucket. Another increased expense for this year is the general election. , ]
‘ Chickens Burn. Two hundred chickens were killed when fire destroyed a poultry house on the Purdue university farm at Lafayette. : ~» " Take New Home. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Bickle, newlyweds, have taken apartments over the Economy Chain grocery, moving their furniture in Tuesday. : A. D. Newton; is havigg' the interior of his shoe store repainted and papered. Harry Mentzer is doing the work., o . S
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
the tribes. The men of both were iflerce warriers. They often engaged with other tribes in bloody combat. 'They scalped their foes always. * An Indian burial ground was located at the mouth of the Ocqueoc River. Up to a few decades ago, this burial ground was in a state of perfect preservafion. The individual burial places were marked by little houses, coustructed of smooth, lath-like pieces of wood and birch bark. ‘ t One beautiful Indian summer afteri noon, the two chieftains' met alone. An argument was followed by a fight. Gitchie Manitou, the Great Spirit, i who was summering in the Lake Su{perior ferritory, according to the leg- | end, looked down and beheld his children violating his mandate of peace and amity. Impatient at both chieitains, he seized the Sacred Rock and, hurling it down, crushed the red warriors beneath its tremendous weight. Such was the impact when the rock struck ihe ground that a cataclysm resulted. The banks on the shore trembled and heaved. They started to slip and slide and they have been sliding since. ' ‘ With the death of the warring chieftains, the two tribes made peace. The rock became an object of worship, a place of protection against famine, an altar which provided peace and prosperity. And thanks was offered to the Gieat Manitou at the shrine of the spirit, Sacred Rock, Today the hills tower 80 feet above the level of Huron, but they tremble still. - The banks, composed of clay and sand, are continually . shifting. Wkbhen the tourist stoops to take a drink from one of the fresh, sparkling water springs, bubbling by the hillside, he can hear the muffled sound of the sliding, shifting, shuifling surface, ~ And this sound—even today with iis cynicism and skepticism—heard by the tourist above the rippling mu:mur of Huron’s waves in the witching environment of Sacred Rock, supports to some extent in the minds of ymary the lezend that has survived: lthe ravases of time. -
Isabelle R. Smith.
i Isabelle R. Smith, wife of N. W.! Smith, was born near Ligonier, Ind.,; April 16th, 1877, and died at South | \Bend, February 29th, 1928, at an age! of 50 years 10 months and 14 days. | { She was united in marriage Octo- | ber 11th, 1899, to N. W. Smith, who with one son, Morris and a daughter Catherine, two brothers, Charles and! :Joseph, a Sstep mother, Mrs. Jennie !Drain and a grand son Morris Smith,i _Jr., survive ‘her. : ;' Mrs. Smith spent her childhood and | early womanhood ‘in and near Ligo‘nier, later moving to Sterling and Woodstoek, 111. After residing there ‘for fifteen years, she returned to In‘diana locating in South Bend where} she continued to reside until the time {of her death. A great host of relatives, friends and neighbors mourn her loss. ' ; 2 Interment at Oak Park cemetery, Rev. F. A. Risley, officiating. . !‘ Elkhart Man Vietim of Accident , One boy is dead and two girls are] suffering injuries as the result of an Eauto, occupied by six people, crash‘ing into a telephone pole at the side tof the Lincoln highway at Elkhart, k Sunday morning. . | Tony Chechia 21 son of Mr. and _Mrs. Raymond Chechia of Elkhart, 'driver of the auto, died at 6:30 Sung {day evening in Elkhart hospital. ; .Miss Gladys Swan, of Elkhart. and ‘Miss Roxie Ellsworth of Osceola are ‘at their homes suffering painful but! ‘not serious injuries. e Vi 4 Goshen Street Car Case. * The battle to retain Goshen’'s only street car took a new turn with the Chicago, South Bend & Northern Indiana Railway company asking for a lchange of venue on its appeal Yo the Elkhart superior court from the recent decision of. the public service commission ordering the car be mgintained. The case will be heard in the Kosciusko circuit cort. e
. Fracfures Arm in Fall. = August Yorkey, aged 86, civil war veteran and old resident of Ligonier, had the misfortune to fall the first of the week and.fracture his right arm between the wrist and’ elbow. Dr. Shobe reduced the fracture. ; : Stray Dogs Costly. - Depredations of dogs in Fayette county during the last year caused payment of $4,242.90 to persons whose livestock was killed, leaving only $19.35 in the dog fund. Lk
. Officers are Chosen. 3 The following officers of the Meth‘odis‘t Episcopal church were elected at the fourth quarterly conference to serve during the conference year of 1928-1929: o Trustees—F. P. Bothwell, Fred E. ‘Weir, John Henry, S. C. Sackett, Le‘land Calbeck, J. B. Schutt, .E. G. Thompson, John Huffman, Will Hire. _ Stewards—Albert F. Turrell, F. P. Bothwell, J. B. Schutt, Edward ‘Bourie, JosepMine Shobe, Mrs. Harry Mentzer, Mrs. Jennie Drain, Mrs. William = Milner, Mrs. Jennie Hess, Mrs. Etta Harsh, Mrs. William Hire. ‘Mrs. Anna Silburn, Mrs. Mae Carney, Will Hire, destrict steward; 8. C. 'C. Sackett, reserve district stewart; ‘Mrs. Sackett, communion steward; J. W. Moore, recording Steward; Ed‘ward Bourie, Sunday school superintendent; Mrs. Etta Harsh, Ladis’ Aid president; KEllis Head Epworth League president; ‘Mrs. E. G. Thompson, W. F. M.S. president; F. E. Weir, deleagte to the annual conference; J. B. Schutt, reserve deciegate to the annual conference; F. E. Weir, Mrs. Jennie Drain, Mrs. ‘Harry Mentzer, delegates to the layman’s conference; Blanch Harsh, reserve delegate to the conference. : Albion Organization Cooperates The- Albion Chamber of Commerce will furnish the opera house for a. joint meeting of the Shorthorn and Jersey. calf clubs on Thursday evening, March 15th, and all members of the chamber of commerce and their families are invited to attend. Alec M. Rennie will give the address of welcome. Claude Taggart .of the Shorthorn club will respond to' the address. : The feature of the evening will be a debate on the question ‘“Resolved, that the Shorthorn Calf club surpasses the Jersey Calf club in accomplishing the objectives expected of a good 4-H club?’ Howard Harper and Earl Butz will present the affirmative side of the question while Kenneth Blech and Raymond Stump will speak for the negative side. R. J. Plaster, agricultural agent for the New York Central lines, who arranged for the Noble county trip to Bufralo last fall will be presém as will also Harry Ainsworth, assistant state club leader. ' e . Other numbers on the program will consist of a reading by Richdard Smith of the Shorthorn ‘club and a musical number l.g' John Leming. of the Jersey club. .
, Last Chance fto Join. Membership in the 1928 Jersev Calf club will be cosed within a few days. Boys and girls between the ages of 10 and 20 years who wish to join the eclub should call one of the following committee: Carl Hostetter, Ligonier; E. E. Cole, Albion; Earl Renkenberger, = Kendallville; = Herman Lash, Avilla or George Stump, Cromwell. Each mgmber will be sup plied with a good yearling = Jersey heifer, ‘ ' Yaluable Papers Found. Mrs. Sam Landon, Sunday, reported to the Goshen police that the §59,800 worth of valuable papers lost Thursday by Benjamin Billman a roomer at the Landon home, had been found in a dresser drawer Saturday. It was first feared that the papers had been stolen. / Notice to Contractors for bids to Construct Ditch Notice is hereby given that the undersigned appointed by the Board of Commissioners of Noble County;, Indiana, as .Superintendent of Construction of the ditch and drain ordered established and counstructed in York Township in said County and State on the petition of Lafayette Crothers, et al,” will at two o’clock P. M. on the 22nd day of March 1928, at the Surveyor’s Office in the Court House at the town of Albion in said County and State, receive bids for the contract of construdting said ditch and drain in accordance, with the plans, specifications and profile therefor on file in the office of said Surveyor. where the same may be seen. Said contract will be let as a whole and o include the furnishing of all title, all hauling, all labor and other things required for the constt;uctian of said ditch as aforesaid. Bids shall be ac}comp'auied by a certified check for an ‘[a.mounvt not less than $50.00 as a guarantee that the sucecessful bidder 'will enter into contract and bond for the construction of said drain in the {event his*bid be accepted. The right is reserved to reject any and ail bids and if a satisfactory bid therefor be not received on said day bids for said Econtmct' will be received from day to day thereafter'at the same time and place and upon the same terms until [La, satisfactory bid be received. o Charles Dawson, Superintendent of Construetion ~ : - . 6b2w . Notice to Pay Ditch fiissessments Notice is hereby given by the undersigned appointed by the Board of Commissioners of Noble County, Indiana, as Superintendent of Construc-. tion of the ditch and drain ordered established and constructed in York Township in said County and State on the petition .of Lafayette Crothers, et al, that the assessments made against lots and lands to pay the cost of such construction are due and payable in ten egual monthly installments; the first thereof to be due and payable on. the §th day of April 1928 sessments shall be made at State Bank of Kimmell, Kimmell Indiana. . Charlée Dewson =.. . ~ Superintendent of Construction Lon e e e
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- POCAHONTAS Extra Quality New River Coal ~ Coal, Firm Structure | - Low Ash ~ FORKED PREMIUM o TOAL . , Ligonier Artificial Ice Co.
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- First hatch MARCH sth and twice eic}é week thereafter. Qur prices are reasonable in line with 'othier reliable Hatcheries. We furnish you with good chicks, the kind that make money. Order early and get your chicks whenngou want them. You have everything to gain and nothing to lose by orfering early. - Send in your orders or come in and talk it over with us. LIGONIER HATCHERY . __ROY J. JORG, Manager = ' 106 Lincoln Way West, Ligonier, Ingd. Pnuane 502
