Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 10B, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 April 1928 — Page 2
The 'L‘gomm Banner Fftablished 1856 _ Published by ' THE BANNER PUBLISHING (0. W. C.. B. Harrison, Editor . : M. A. Cotnerman, Manager
pPublisiied every Monday and Thursday and entered the Postoffice at Ligonier, Indiana, as second class matter. -
Rainbow Division Reunion, | Fort Wayne’s -~ rapidly growing chapter of veterans who served. in the famous Rainbow division of the A. E. F.'is leaving no stone unturned in perfecting a plan of campaign and ax_id adequate prepartion for what ther determined shall prove the great est reunion of Forty-second division members since the war. It will be held this year on the tenth anniversary of the great war yvear of 1918 with Saturday and Sunday Junc 9 and 10 designated for the big time in Fort Wayne. ‘ Studens At Heme ' The following students - arrived home last week from their different colleges: Helen Kelley, James Kelley, Dan Inks, Raymond Rager Edward IFisher, Helen: Dunkle. Those to come this week are: Betty DBacheler John Weir, Florence Coth¢érman, Opal Weeks, Virginia Gentry, Donnie Lane, lEmily Wigton, James Schuft, Lenore Kunkalman, Bermice Rager, Robert Wigton and Jack Draper. FHelen Kelley, Helen Dunkle and Emil,\r' Wigton are on their last “lap” as they graduate in June.
Noble Farmer Suspends
Suspension of the Nowie Farmer effective at once is announced hy'\lw Holcomb Printery at Kendallville and the paper is to be combined with the Farmers' xchange of New Paris Elk-
hart county. The combined papers will be publislied in the future from the New Paris printing plant starting this week. The new paper uill be sixteen pages with four cofumns to the page., Striken With Apopiexy. . J. Lennon, jr.,. 26, assistant _at—toruey general of Indiana, sor of Mr. and: Mrs. BB J. Dlennon, sr., of PFort Wayne, died of appelxy late 'l‘\londay atternoon at St. Joseph's hospital. Mr. Lennon underwent an operation for appendicitis three weeks ago. Ten days ago a second eperation was necégsary. He was rvecovering from these operations when he suffered u relapse and died shortly afterwards. : Boy 7, Saves Baby Nister. Ed Laßounty, 7, carried his baby sister, Gracie, and another sister, Alberta, 2, from their burninz home at Hammond and sumoned a ncighbor who saved a third sister, Gloria. The children set the house afire playing with matches while their mother was at & grocery. : ot
John Carlson Fined.
John Carlson paid a fine of 35 and costs in Mayor Auman’'s court at Ken dallville on charges” of leaving the scene of an accident without stopping preferred by Lieut. William .Denovan. Carlson drove his machine into the car owned by Virgil Grady, Saturday evening. |
Garage Burns.
Fire destroyed the P. D. Parks garage, two miles east of Warsaw. Three automobiles were destroyed and the Polk filling station, which occupied the front part of the garage. was damaged. The loss is $4,000.
Would Serve Another Yeuar. Chester A. Lincoln, of Columbia City, present prosecuting attorrey of the Noble-Whitley circuit courts has announced his candidacy for re-non-ination. . :
William Rittenhouse, 45, well known contractor at Columbia City is dead- of typhoid fever. He was taken ill several weeks ago.
Reub Deter has procured the neces--Bary equipment for the work and is now in position to repair roofs. A call will procure his services on short notice. e datf
For County Sheriff. I desire to announce to my friends that T am a candidate for sheriff of Noble county on the republican ticket and ask their suport in the primary May Bth.
LAURENCE WOLF
For County Clerk
1 wish to arnounce my candidacy for the nomination of Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court subject to the will of the voters of the Demccratic primary*May 8 1928. - HARRIETT MILLER, Albion ~ Gabw
FOR SHERIFF
I take this means to announce my name as a candidate for Sheriff of Noble county on the Republican ticket subject to the primary election Tuesday May 8 1928. ’ EUGENE J PARKER
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 Bth. ARCHIE M. BORTNER *
Clerk Announcement
« 1 wish to announce my candidacy for the nomination of Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court on the democratic ticket subject to the Primary election May Bth. i FRANCES M. BEANE
Thirty ¢radustes at Albion
The cian: ¢f 1928 of the -Albicn uigh schocl -has thirty members whose names follow: Mildred Baker, Lenneth Black, CGrace Brumbaugh, [iclen Brumbaugh, Madge Carmichael Harry Cullar, Marry Clouse, Fred Clouse, Marian Eagles, Marcelle Foote Leone Gatwood, Eva Kirkpatrick, Georgia Layman, - Georgia Luther, Paul Marshall, Harry Metz, Thelma Owen, Arthur ’riest, Jane Ray, Alberta Seeley, Arthur Stringfellow, Hubert Singleton, Hazel Schott, Keith Seynmicure, Avon Schwab, Elizabeth Trittipo, Glen Willits, Pauliue Weimer and Dale® Weimer.
Hire's Pateh of Ground.
Curtis Hire of Ligonier was a caller at the county treasurer’s office in Goshen .on Monday. He is owner of 480 acres of land in Benton township and has reasons to visit our city semi-annually to make a neat little deposit to assist in keeping the roads in good shape.—G.W.K. in Goshen News-Times. .
IForce Priest to Open Safe.
Three men one of whom branished @ revolver, obtained $3OO late Saturday night when they forced their way into the parsonage of the Rev. Father Athanasius Kovacs, pastor of St, Stephen’s Hungarian Catholic church at South Bend and compelled him to open the safe and hand over the church funds. T
Valter ook Buried.
IFuneral services for Walter Cook, who was slain by Marguerite Bumbaugh at 'Niles, Mich.,, were held Monday afternoon at three o'clock at the Methodist church in South Whitley. The funeral was attended by a largze number of people. ;
To Remain Here.
Chester Werick, who it was reported would return to Wawaka to take charge of the telephone station there will remain with the Ligonier Telephone company where he has been employed more than a year. :
Saturday Last Day.
Saturday, Apvil 7th is the ‘last day for candidates to file their declaration for the May prima.ry. There has been some hustling to find candidates to fill the county tickets.
“The Gorilla” the funniest fastest, creepiest, cleverest of all mystery plays at the Crystal tonight.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE.
The, undersigned administrator of the estate of Charles W. Johnson, deceased, hereby gives notice that by virtue of an order of the Kosciusko Circuit Court, he will at the hour of 10 a.m. of the sth day of May, }Saturday, 1928, at the office of Geo. L. Xanders, attorney, in_the Tewn of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana, and from day to day thereafter ;’until» sold, offer for sale at private sale, all the interest of said decedent in and to the following desecribed real estate, to-wit: The South Half of lots 13 and 14 in the village of Syracuse, being the Original Plat of said Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. . lots 3,4, 87, 92, 99, 190, 103, 104 and 109 of Strombeck & Weaver’s Second Addition to the Town of Syracuse, Kosciusko County, Indiana. 3 A portion of Section 34 in Township 35 North, Range 8 East, in No§hl<» County, State of Indiana, described as follows: Commencing at a stake 10 chains north 85 degrees 35 minutes east from ‘the southwest corner of said Section and south 58 degrees 30 minutes west 1.42 chains from a hickory tree six inches in diameter and north 36 degrees 30 minutes west 2.28 chains from a burr oak § inches in diameter; thence north 3 degrees 58 minutes west 40 chains to a stake north 32 degrees east 1.93 chains from a white oak 36 inches in diameter and south 24 degrees 45 minutes east 0.34 chains from a burr oak 3 inches in diameter, thence north 85 degrees 12 minutes east 9.85 chains to a stake north 31 degrees 45 minutes %west, 104 chains from a burr oak 4 Linches in diameter, and south 34 degrees west 0.81 chains from a burr oak 3 inches in diameter; thence south 4 degrees 13 minutes east 40.06 chains to a stake 15 degrees west 0.60% chains from a burr oak 24 inches in diameter, and north 3@ degrees east 2.17 .chains from a burr oak 20 inches in diameter; thence south 85 degrees 35 minutes west 10° chains on the section line to the place of beginning, containing 39.70 acres, more or less. 1
Said sale will be made subject io the approval of said court for not less than the full apraised value of said real estate, and upon the following terms and conditions: At least one-third of the purchasemoney cash in- hand, the balance in two equal installments, payable in not to exceed 9 and 18 months, evidenced by notes of the purchaser, ;bearing six per cent interest from date, waiving relief, providing attor--Iney fees and secured by mortgage on the real estate sold. } Said tracts herein enumerated to be sol d separately, on the foregoing termg and conditions. : ! - CHARLES C. BACHMAN, | Administrator of the Estate of Charles W. Johnson, Deceased. George L. Xander, Attorney for estate. : : . 10bdw
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOOIETY Services in Weir Bloek. Sunday school 9:45 A M. Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Everybody welcome. ;
THE LIGONTER BANNER. LIGONTER. INDIANA,
Nearby Deaths.
Walter Randelph, 79, complications, Mishawaka; H. A. Tallerday, 78, heart disease, near Elkhart; Mrs. Mary Foulkes, 52, cancer, Elkhart; B. M. Bergerson, 55, Bright's disease, Elkhart county; C. S. Bartlett, liver trouble, Waterloo; J. W. Woodward, 65, paralysis of throat, Wells county; Dr. Ben Beavers, 37, heart attack, De catur; Mrs. Hazel Igleheart, 38, peritonitis, Goshen; Geo. Sturgis, 41, Liberty Center; Mrs. George Jackman, 73, paralysis, Warsaw,
Notice to Contractors.
Notice is hereby given that the Board of Commissioners of Noble County, Indiana, at their office in the Court House in the Town of Albion,
Indiana, will receive sealed proposals for the improvement 'of a certain highway known as the Maurice Blue road in Perry Township in said county and state, by grading draining and paving the same with gravel as set out in the plans, specificationz and profile therefor now on file in the office of the Auditor of said INoble County. _ ‘ ‘Sealed proposals for the contract for such improvement will be receiv-| ed up until, and will be opened at two o’clock p.m. on Thursday, April 26th, 1928. Bids submitted shall be for completion of said improvemeat. in accordance with the said plans, specifications and profile therefor now on file in the office of said Auditor and shall include all labor and material required for said work. | Each bid must be accompanied l):."i personal or surety bond in a sum equal to double the amount of the bid filed for said work, to be approved by said Board of Commissioners. Said bond = shall be conditioned for the faithful performance of said work; the sureties thereon, if personal shall be resident free holders of the State of Indiana, one of whom shall be = resident of said Noble County, Indiana, and said bond shall be tfor the benefit of any person, 1)(*’1'30!1':4. firm or corporation who sall suffer any loss or damage by reason of any such bidder failing to or neglecting to euter into a proper contract to perform said work as it is awarded by said Board of Commissionérs, or to carry out said work in any particular, or to pay for any labor or material which may be furnished to any such contractor or contractors, superintendent or agent under him in the construction of said work. : -
Said improvement will be -lot as a whole to the lowest responsilde bLidder upon- affidavit of non-collusion, which affidavit must be submitied with the bid, and upon failure to suimit such affidavit such proposal il be rejected by the Board, und the ‘,Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. Time for the completicn of said work will be agreed upon at the letting of said contract by ihe Board of Commissioners and the succpsstul bidder. : The estimated cost of said improve‘ment is $13,233.60. : . Given by order of the Board of iCommissioners of Noble Coun'y, Inciana. : CHARLES W. BENDER JOHN W. LONG NOAH F. SMITH
Board of Commissioners of Noble County, Indiana. EDWIN SMITH, Auditor of Noble County, Indiana. ' 10b3w
e 3T —y . . —“-\" s % LA s3a | B i ¢ 1 b i‘. 1 W T~ v ; A ‘ / g nide” !) B N B| s 25T i - R > : g BTN LiR ™\ ) \ R {\_‘i!;f:‘i"t_- 74 YRO BATERE ||& L 1 YB T e x AR VS TB ok G BRSOI 2 g T \ “"‘"j‘,//// e /5"“71\ B P g o ELION \— e NV ‘—‘ad,»;r:"' B T i o o+ N 7 . ST l“V v = Body by Fisher e , . Z = e X 4 ! A . . s 7 . < 5. Ilis American Standards of X 2 ce y and Style = X \ 4 . 5 9 XD Lerformance-Luxury and Sty B ' In every section of America. deep, soft-cushioned seats. .. . R A wave of admiration for the andotherelementswhich con-All-American Six. Admira- tribute to restful riding ease. tion for itsbeauty, foritsstyle, * X % for the mastery of Fisher That’s why the All-American craftsmanship expressed in is winning such favor in every : ; every deftly executed line. section of the land. That’s _ Tk e : ‘the result of the All-American And equally marked is ap- principle in automotive de- : _ preciation of its spacious com- = sign. That’s why,.after you o fort .. . its generous size. Of come and drive it, you’re sure : theleg-room made possibleby to want this brilliant General its 117-inch wheelbase. Gfits Motors Six. ’ - : 2-Door Sedan, $1045; Landeu Coupe, $1045; Sport Roadster, $1075; Phaeton, $1075; $-Door : Sedan, $1145; Cabriolet, $1155; Landau, Sedar, §1265; (wire wheels, spare tires, and trunlk rack extra). New Series Pontiac Six, §745 to £875. 41l prices at factery. Delivered prices ine clude minimum handling charges. Easy to pay on the General Motors Time Payment Plan, e * ; . 2d. ’ ] - BEN GLASER, Ligonier, Indiana . % s : \_-:t_?:\\ ’ 4 ‘f" 3 :_:',k:.-:,_ ; ‘ .’ ‘:.‘3 : BT A MM Y eli - 3 i "{%) + = 3 : i ~ : : ’Q PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS S
Watson Under False Pretences
. Oscar G. Foeliipger Indiana manager of Herbert Hoover's presidential campaign Friday flatly charged that Ben. James E. Watson the Hoosier “favorite son” has agreed to get Indiana’s 33 presidential votes and give them to Frank O. Lowden” of Illinois “when the time comes at the National republican convention. ~ et ~ “Senator Watson's statement that he is not a ‘stalking horse’ nor a ‘decoy iduck" is extremely interesting,” Foellinger said. -
“Does he fail to recall agChicago conference of Lowden, Will iettle of the Indiana farm bureau Ex-Senator Murray Barker and himself at which it was ggreed that Watson should try to get the Indiana votes for Lowden” “Does the senator forget so easily? If' so, he should have his memory refreshed from time to time.”
Avilla Sehool to Cost 81,000
Fratz and Lautz of North Manchester: were awarded the general contract for the construection of the new Allen Township combination high and grade school. by the Allen Township advisory board there Thuarsdayr after-
noon. R. B Fox was awarded the heating and plumbing contract. Both bids totaled $81,600. The general contractors plan ‘o state work on the New building im-
mediately and hope to have it reacy for occupancy by the beginning of the school term this fall. S
Three (ottages Buri, » Cottage owners on the north side of Crooked lake suffered fire losses estimated at $lO,OOO. when three cotfages were destroyed and another damaged. Cottages belonging to Earl Smitley. of Hoagland; Mr. Brandou, of Auburn, and Sheriff Zimmerman. of Steuben county, were -destroyed. The lake )home of Mr. and Mrs., Charles Nestle {ot‘ _Fort Wayne was badly damaged ;during the fire. ' : : A slogan for Miss 1928-——Gét Your Man'---see how Clara Bow does it at Crystal Sunday and Monday. :
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Long Motor Trip.
There is & motoring tour now under way, it {s safe to predict, will out-do in thrills and drama any of the experiences of some 40,000,000 Americans who will take the highways this season. ;
It is a tour through jungle trails, over desert wastes, across rivers unbridged except by make-shift pontoons, through mud and swamps and infested marshes. Four men are attempting, the journey, a trail-blazing route 10,000 miles long, from Cape Town, in the southern most part of Africa, to Cario and thence on a swing through Europe to London. | - A good share of the trip is through uhicharted lands never before traversed by a stock car, amid jungle life, where a tropical sun burns dmvn by day, and where the wilderness echoes with the threat of savage life at night.
_ The transportation selected: by the adventurers consists of a stock Chevrolet sedan trailed by a Chevrolet truck on which is carried equipment necessary to hew ‘a path through the wilderness tanetle, . Included in the
equipment is a complete wireless outfit with which the men will maintain contact with the outside world, and a medical chest containing auti-venom serum, and suvrgical and first aid supplies. Each member has been inoculated against jungle fever. . * The run was officially started by radio from New York City by J. D. Mooney, president of General Motors export, who expects to sail from New York in time to greet the travelers in
Furope.. The first leg of the run, Cape Town to Cario, is scheduled for com pletion in 40 days. . i Heading the party is the famou: African adventurer, Captain Lacey Others of the party are a wireless op erator, a newspaper man, and a mo tion picture photographer. :
j ‘Not in. years has the screen given 'yon drama so realistic so, vivid, so tappealing as “The Noose”. It is i supreme triumph for Richard Barthelmess; . - :
. : 3 ’ ‘ : ¢ : ‘ | 5 ~ Ferry's Bulk Garden VEGETABLESG:#: s 2 : - AT NG & GRASS: 7 All the Called for Varieties in fl - Bulk Seeds FERRY'’S SEED--Recognized as the standard quality and known the world over. Prices on all varieties are reasonable. Garden and flower seeds may be-purchased in 5c or 10c packets. Also a complete line of garden - Hoes, Rakes, Lawn Mowers and other lawn and garden needs. Now is the time to use VIGORO on your lawn and garden. Vigorois a real plant food made by Swift & Co. Try alittle now and notice the results. Comes in all size containers. ; - POULTRY SUPPLIES--Purina feeds-and a’ complete line of feeders. . : SPORTING GOODS--headquarters for quality lines, fishing tacke, basetall' tennis, golf and guns. - : o - ; % WEIR'S T R aat A A w WEL] fi
ee e e Al B .5. S . Sttt sttt e . R e > AA . ) s ‘,:E:;; .‘._ ’ 5 e o g’gfi& N - PSS 3 . s E > etV ) e . it s Jagdar e i . xW] i 3%" 5 ; ' A opaN B 8 E L few e e LEESI - s 4% 3g % PR e ® B 0 fl_“,_____,, ot ¥ LN L Toe &5 e Vit ’-\“-_\ 3 W ] ==DIRT BPER MINUTE . z‘i X SR : ' w 5 . : . A}f‘ "{ 4‘" .. = | The accurate measure of "a 1 { electric cleaner eificiency . fe2nd ' MR is dirt per minute - ’,_ }fé A D «‘r" : - ,«’s*}' Ak ; . A o ] : i o bony 3 i g !":_4,;;“”‘ £ - s : > i
Keep ruos FREE from germs
Rugs harbor billions of germs, brought into the house on the soles of shoes. But there is a way to keep rugs almost germ-free. The Hoover, with its amazingly deep, thorough cleaning, removes this menacing bacteria. It outcleans other cleaners by the most astonishing margin, as proved by the remarkable d. p.m. (dirt per minute) test. Telephone for a free home demonstration. Liberal allowdnce for your old cleaner.
Only 36.25 down— Balance monthly Ligonier Electric Shop O. G. Bowen, Walt Robinson, Props.
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