Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 8A, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 March 1928 — Page 2
The Ligonrer Banner Establishpd, 1856 Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING 0. W. . B. Hawxison, Editor
M. A. Cotherman, Manager
Published every Monday and Thursday
and entered the Postofflice at Ligonicr, Indiana, as second class matter.
Daughter :Beaten Draws 8 Months ‘For whipping his 18-year-old daughter Mary with a belt Paul Lukececk 43-year old Whiting oil company employee was fined $5OO and costs and sentenced to serve eight months on the state penal farm at Putnamville at Whiting Friday. The father admitted he whipped the girl last Wednesday when he said he had discovered she was incorrigible. She immediately left her home and stayed with friends who advised her to consult the police. They advised her to swear out a warrant charging him with assault and hattery which she did. : At today’s hearing in city court, the mother who sided with her daughter and two phrsicians testified saying the lashes from the belt lett large black and blue marks over the girl's body. The father said he had the right to punish his daughter. ‘ “Why I would give vou just as large a fine and just as long a prison sentence for beating a horse that severely.” City ‘.lur];:(‘- Frank Keeran told him. - Knocked Gver By Cow. Grant Simon residing near Roancke is recovering from a cut on his head and sévere bruises sustained when he was knocked down by a frightened cow. The animal was scared by a dog and in its blind flight rvan into Mr. Simon Lknocking him down. In the fall his head struck the ground and he was rendered - senseless - for several minutes. A Aged Man Found Dead. Jasper Lewis Bennett past 77 years old was found dead in the sitting room of his home east of IL.oon lake early Wednesday morning by his son Fred Bennett and Daniel Rex of * Etna. Coroner Alice Williams who was called to investigate the death pronounced the cause to be apoplexy. :
samuel Egoli Dies, © Samuel Egolf 93 yvears 7 months and 18 days died Wednesdays afternoon at five o’clock at the home of his niece Mrs. Wiilliam Hazen in Noble county after an illness of several months due to hardening of the arteries and general senility. ; Dies at Home Near Stroh ‘ Mrs. Amanda Howe eighty-one vears old died on Tuesday evening of last week at her home three an da haly miles southwest © of siroh. Mrs. Howe's death occurred on the farm where she was born and liived her entire life. Griifith Ah End Man Cecil 8. Griffith of Ligonier a ‘son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Griffith of LaGrange was one of the end men in the recent Lion club minstrels in his city. Mr. GQGriffith is a prosperous druggist in Ligonier—LaGrange Standard. _ Over to Cirecunit Court. Carl Cotton of Rome City was arraigned before a jujstice of the peace in Noble county Wednesday on charge of selling liquor to youths and his bond was fixed at $500: . Will Go to LaGrange = A number of Ligonier and Noble county voters will attend a democratic meeting at LaGrange Thursday evening March 22 Prominent speakers will be present. : U. 8. Willard In Serious (Condition U. S. Willard cashier of the State bank at Howe a position he has filled for many years continues in a serious condition at his home the result of heart trouble. : Indianapolis Woman Dies Mrs. Louis A. Bacon widely known in Indianapolis art circles died Friday after a brief illness of pneumonia. FOR SHERIFF - I take this means to announce my name as a candidate for Sheriff on the Republican ticket subject to the primary on May the StA. ARCHIE M. BORTNER *
. : AR . Stan ley Surtus FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Service 110 West Third St. | Phone 495
s ) p “We arm to please
Auto Clobs Undertake Edrcational * Campaign to Safety-ize Indiana
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Good at Fiiggers? Figger These Oui.
1. If six feet of camn awaits a reck- | less driver, why don’t he*give an inch?: 2. A certain city has. 216 automobile | deaths, or thirty-six times as many‘ auto deaths as street car deaths. Howg nany deaths by street car accidents? : 3. If there were according to the \ccident Prevention Department ot the UHoosier State Automobile Association 2,170 automobile deaths in the' country during November and 1,870 of
Notice of Sherii’s Sale of Real Estate Notice is hereby given that by virture of certified copies of judgments, decrees and orders of sale to me directed by the Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana, and issued in the causes in said Court wherein Citizens Bank, Ligonier, Indiana, and Farmers & Merchants Trust Company, Ligonier, Indiana are plaintiffs, and Vern E. Foster, John €. Foster aud others, are defendants, being gauses numbered 38862 and 9863 in said/Court commanding me to make by sale. of the real estate hereinafter described the sum of three thousand four and 5/100 Dollars ($3004.05) adjudged in favor of said Citizens Bank and the sum of Nine hundred ninety one and 74/100 Dollars ($997.74) adjudged in tavor of said Farmers & Merchants Trust Company, upon their complaints in said causes, together with seven per cent interest thereon from January 28, 1928, first liens upon said real estate, and costs including the costs of sale. I, John Singleton Sheriff of INXoble County, Indiana, will offer for sale at public auction to the highest and best bidder at the east door of the Court House in the town of Albion No--2)19'(‘,011111_\', Indiana on Tuesday the ord day of April 1928, between the hours 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 vears of the following real estate in said Noble' County, Indiana, described in said decrees and therein ordered sold, to-wit; the west half of the south east guarter of section eighteen, township thirty four north range nine east, also the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of said section, town ship and range aforesaid, all in Noble County, Indiana, and it said rents and profits of said real estate shall fail to sell for a sum sufficient to pay and satisfy said decrees and judgments, interest and costs, then T will at the same time and place offer for sale at public auction to the highest and best bider the fee simple of all of said real estate or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay and satisfy said decrees, Judgments, interest and costs. Said sale will be made without relief from valuation and appraisement laws. John Singleton, Sheriff Noble County ‘lndiana. ; Bothwell &Vanderford Ligonier, Indiana ; : Attorneys for Plaintiffs 7a3w Administrator’s Sale. The undersigned administrator will offer at public auction on the John (. Foster farm-two miles east of Kimmell, sale commencing at one o’clock on jo ‘ ! THURSDAY, MARCH 22 The following property to-wit: sofa, six chair, four rocking chairs, hookstand, four stands, organ; two easels, pictures, hanging lamp, two cots, commode, two mirrors, sewing machine, table five chests, two wardrobes, bed. with springs, dresser, three cupboards, three stoves, clock, copper kettle, two iron kettles,, kerosene tank, four wooden barrels, Enterprise lard press, churn, two chairs, spinning wheel, flour bin, six: stands lhees:,‘ watch, safety razor, Garr S‘cdttJ separator, fifty bushels corn more or yrie‘*ssg',] 56 calibre Spence rifle and cartridges, old McCormick binder, numbér of 4"mi'scyélldhg§ps books, wahmt bookcase, can cupboard, beeswax. _/ JOHN F. GORSUCH, Admr. | John Singleton, Amet. subscription—DO IT NOW! |
THE LIGONTER BANNER. LIGONIER, INDIANA.
them were of adults, how many were ichildren under fifteen years of age? | 4. If 51.7% of all the fatal accidents iin the United States were in the cities ’\vhat per cent were in the Rural Sec(tions? : 5. Is the general impression that it's Safe in the small .towns «corTect? : . ! Then Think for.the Thoughtless Child.
Important Changes Made Several important changes in the election laws of Indiana were made by the state legislature of 1927 which will be in effect for the first time this year. No registration of yoters is required, the registration law haying been repealed in its entirety. No ahsent voters’ ballots ‘'may be cast this year, as the law making pro'v,ision for this procedure has also been repealed. Voters must go to the polling places in person on election day in order to have a part in the election. The repeal of these two laws will greatly simplify elections here and vill eliminate much of the work and expense of holding the elections. Burning Cigarette in Pocket. Fred Kissinger was fined and costed to the amount of $l6 by Justice Abbott Saturday when he was found guilty of putting a burning cigarette in Elmer Pence's coat pocket Friday night. . Several holes were burned in the coat and Pence filed an affidavit against Kiissinger. Kissinger was uanble to pay his fine and was taken to Wabash to spend sixteen days in jail.—North Manchester News-Journal - Detectives After Milk Thieves. - Stealing of bottled milk and other dairy products at Peru has reached a stage where dairymen are employing plain clothes detectives to work with police in an. effort to catch the thieves. e : Five to 15 complaints of thefts have been received daily for the past two months one dairyman told police. ' For County Clerk I wish to announce my candidacy for the nomination of Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court subject to the will of the voters of the Demeocratie primary May 8 1928. : . HARRIETT MILLER, Albion
Notice of Sheriffs Sale Of Personal Prooperty. : Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Sheriff of Noble County, Indiana by virtue of a writs of execution and order of sale to me issued by the Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana upon judgments rendered and entered by said court in favor of Citizens Bank Ligonier Indiana, and Farmers & Merchants Trust Company, Ligonier Indiana, against Vern E. Foster et al., has levied said writ of execution and order of sale upon the personal property hereinafter described as the property of said defendant Vern E. Foster and will as such sheriff at one’ oclock p .m. on THURSDAY MARCH 22ND 1928. ;at the residence of said Vern E. Foster situated in York township Noble County, Indiana offer and expose for sale at public auction for the purpose of making assets for the payment of such judgments all of the personal property herinafter described to~wit: ' Huber steam {ractor 16 horse, number 5486; Russel separtor size number, 3046; Biirdsel cloyer huller size number 6; bay mare, brown gelding; grey horse” Rock Island corn planter; | Deering mower; International riding corn plow; one other riding corn plow iGale walking corn plow; Syracuse breaking plow; Oliver 405 breaking plow; new Idea manure spreader ; two springtocth harrows; double box farm wagon; set double harness. ~Terms of Sale—Cash no property to be removed “ntfl pafd for. = - John Singleton Sheriff of Noble| ' Consty . s
Lucky Find ' Coins in a rock were discovered at Amesbury, Wiltshire. A member of & shooting party picked up a stone and casually threw it away. On striking the ground it burst, and a number of gold coins fell from it. At an inquest it was stated on the authority of the British museum that the coins are about 2,000 years old.—London Times. Bricks Turned to Earth Why are the ancient cities of Babylonia buried under such ‘huge mounds of earth? Where does all the earth cbme from? All this earth comés from mud bricks, the building material of the Babylonians. ‘lhere was no native stone in that eountry except what was imported.—Washington Star. : ~ a Early Keys In the metal keys excavated at Herculaneum we find the early foreshadowing of the spring locks of later times, for their keys were made to perform only a partial revolution, unlike those of the keys functioning in the wooden locks, whereln they deseribed a complete cirele. Democratic Hats The Turkish fez xgx’s ‘the most picturesque and economical hat in the world. Worn winter and summer by every man in Turkey from the sultan to the poorest laborer, it was the world’s most democratic head covering.—Woman's Home Companion. Next Best Delight - A small boy whose parents had repeatedly instructed him not to eat candy was visiting an aunt. A dish of the forbidden sweets was sitting on the table and edginz near, the lad said: ‘Please, auntie, just let me smell of the candy.” All-Metal Nest Scrap metal, including old bicycle spokes ‘and bits of sheet metal, have been used by a pair of pigeons for building their npest in the yard of a Greenwich (England) metal merchant; the finished article weighs about 22 pounds. :
Great Man’s Weakness I have not so great a struggle with my vices, great and numerous as they are, as I have with my patience. My efiorts are not absolutely useless, yet 1 have never been ahle to conquer this ferocious wild beast.—John Calvin. : = : Young and O!d Mountains In America there are mountains of various ages. Geologists say the Laurentian mountains of Canada are the oldest, the Rockies the youngest; that the Appalachians have been lifted up three tigies and wern away. ; Post-Mortem Visit Dear Old Soul (visiting her very sick brother)—“l've had a very nice letter from Lmily. She says she’s so sorry she ain't able to come and see you, but she hopes te be able to come to the funeral.” Famous English Bell The bell known as “Great Tom,” whieh is in the tower of the Tom Gate of Christ chureh, Oxford, weighs 17,000 pounds. Every night at 10 minutes past 9 (clesing time) it is tolled. . Ashes to Dust ‘The reason a man doesn’'t notice dust on the library table is because he’s afraid he may ‘get bawled out himself for spilling ashes on the rug. —Philadelphia Inquirer.. / Anybody Can Have It Adventure is where interest 18; where curiosity, eager and enthusiastic, leads on to new knowledge, new expe ience and to new achievement. —Anerican Magazine, Show Best in Age Natures that hdve much heat, and great and violent desires and perturbations, are not ripe for action until they have passed the meridian of their years.—Bacon.
Gave Name to Comet , Enpcke’s comet was discovered by Pons, at Marseilles, November 26, :1918. It was more fully investigated by J. F. Encke, for whem it was - named. Keeping Up With Mary " A long-legged sheep in the Himalayas is able to run 40 miles an hour. That’s the kind of little lamb to follow Mary nowadays.—Arkansas Ga- " zette. v Midget Cactus Plants * In many parts of Holland tiny cac~tus plants may be seen in miniature plant pots. Some of these plants are .little larger than a thimble. : 3 Optimistic Prophecy - Fortunately we shall be dead be- . fore the world erects its first bronze of a statesman in plus fours.—Waco {(Texas) News-Tribune. : Erudite Boston’s Gift American football was first organized in 1862 by Gerrit Smith Miller at the Epes Sargent Dixwell school in . Boston.—Liberty. ‘ Many in the Running Some men are born reputed, some' achieve reputations and others try hard to get away from theirs.—Boston Transcript. R CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Bervices in Weir Block. - Bunday school 9:46 AM. ; Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. - Everybody welcome. " B 0 ‘ Now is the time to pay your sub. } subscription—DO IT NOW! ;
~ Big February Sales. Responding to a demand unprecedented in its history, and with its factory and sales organizations operating at peak efficlency the Chevrolet Motor Company in February set a new high 'monthly production record, while retail domestic deliveries were more than 20,000 units above February 1927. : L : ‘ ~ Production for the month just ended was 116,943 cars and trucks. The Dbest previous Chevrolet month was May 1927 with an outlet of 115,623 units. Production this February shows a 36 percent gain over the 65,817 cars and trucks built last February and is more than four times the 28,081 units built in February 1825. - Domestic retail deliveries for this period are estimated at 80,000 units as against 58,223 in February 1927 ' Since introduction of the Bigger and Better CHevrolet 'on January 1 previous records have been consistently shattered before the buying enthusiasm displayed throughout the world. A large number of cars now being built are going into the export market to meet the demand for the new Chevrolet evident in every country on the globe. The fourteen domestic Chevrolet plants are operating on full time to ceep production on an even keel with orders piling up. Day and night ship ments are going out from the seven assembly plants in the United States to keep dealers everywhere stocked with an ample -number to assure promnt delivery. : - Marc¢h promises’to out-do even the high figures set during February. As February volume set neww records so January production and sales exceeded by a wide margin any similar performance for the month in the history of the company. . - . But One Law Repealed. Merle Thorpe in Type Metal Magazine says there are 1,900,000 laws on the statute books in the United States. We are the greatest law producing nation in the world. ' We pass thousands of new laws each year, and rareiy repeal any old ones. : “1 I.now of only one law that was ever repealed,” says Thrope, ‘“and that was by a middle-western state about a year ago. It repealed a law provitied that anyone driving a horseless carriage when approaching a village, must get cut and phone ahead so the -people could get to their horses.” ' ! We have a client who has a nine room duplex on Riverside Avenue, {Fort Wayne to exchange for small ifarm or Ligonier property. ‘ Kimmell Realty Company.
i . L In the W Ol’ld” Z r;" = j;' .‘:' - ' = Sy . ' (* 0222 7728 L Not long after Goodyear announced this new tire—it pecame-generally known as “The - World's Greatest Tire.” e , i This new tire has an All-Weather Tread o specially designed for balloon tires: it does away . o with all existing ideas of how long a palloop tire _ should wear, it gives better traction, more - non-skid. ‘ o . ~ Now—we know something about tires We tested this one looked it over cut one up tried ' it for everything we could think of. We ve ‘ . . watched it for months. : o ‘ ~ v | : _»'l:ake our word, it is the world’s greatest tire. L We have your size. It costs no more than ordio narv tires Come in and see it. More people e o ride on Goodyear Tires than on any ower Knd. | ~Kiester Electric Shop LincolnWayWest . Phoned B- - gonier. Ind
// SERVICE ‘ We don't say you can't get it M\g;_ elsewhere, but we do say you can get it here. | Would you call a “Horse Doctor” if you had Smallpox? Of course not! Then why be in doubt as to the kind of service you are going to get on your baitery when our service is aveilable.. ’ | _y | We can furnish a new battery for ' _ - any car or radio. Kiester Electric Shop Shop Phone 481 | Night Phone 298
7 C” A | “ELEC” & e 3@%}, - ; ‘\//’\\ : MAGICIAN + There is absolutely nothing up his sleeve but behind him is a mighty army and a great system of lines and power plants. By pressure of a button he will: Turn night into day. © Cook without fire. Freeze without ice. ©~ | Change weekly wash. ‘ ELECTRICITY TO SERVE YOU A\\ b\ Y L) ‘/1// //A/(///’//’/ Innisie & MicHIGAN eel SNSGAHY e - —— ELECTRIG COMPANY—- —————— e e N e e
