Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 23B, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 July 1928 — Page 3

@ Stanley Surfus FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Service 110 West Third St. Phone 495

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loßretz tor Glasses rfl;.)}"‘._ R /. f,q Stylisk, RBT IS o« 4o . €O~ Distinctive pre iR i _ ‘ '.‘,&f-j_‘""’»‘,_' b % 60 e %d Rememer that glasses are an Important - factor in your personal appearance, : Carelessly fitted, they detract from your looks. Adjusted with the precision that characterizes our service, our glusses will add distinction to your appearance and bring real comfort te Foiir eyes, We Welcome the Opportunity of Serving You.

Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist and Optician 130 S. Main St . GOSHSN Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers Yhone 156. Ligonier. Indiana O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc. Well Drilling ' Phone 333 LIGONIER

Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Phone 2 R 1 Wawaka

Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Mercharts Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday Evening

W. H. WIGTON Attorney-at-law Otlice in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, ND

Dr. Maurice Blue VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. Phone: Ligonier 857

VERN B.FISHER . Sanitary Plumbing] and Heating - Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

Harry L. Benner Auctioneer Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley w=County Phones

This Means You, Mr. Merchant! F e —— l)lD b L o ch.& h'fi?? m hfi mon? Y our success he the oo &3 [ i b f begl %o us. ; | Whenamerchant adver. ‘ &“!:fi&heum 1 fhfl:f . iw" .

- Notice of Sale of Real Estate } The undersigned executor of the will of Mary C. King deceased, hereby gives notice that by virture of the power contained in said will the un|dersigned will at the hour of 1 o’clocl; P. M' on Tuesday the 31st. day of July 1928 at the law office of W. H. Wigton in Ligonier Indiana, offer for sale at private sale the following described real estate situated in Noblg County, State of Indiana, to-wit: Outlots 44 and 45 in the city of Ligonier: Also a piece of land situated in the north one-half of the south east quarter of section twenty-two, describ ed as follows: Commencing at a poin}) where the quarter section line between the southeast and northeast

quarters of said section cross the ling of the Ligonier and White Pigeon State Road, thence south 14 degrees west on the line of said road 3.62 chains thence due east 14.63. chains; thence north 3.53 chains, thence west on the said quarter section line 13.7§ chains to the place of beginning containing 5 acres; also a piece of land described as follows: commencing af ’the northeast corner of the southeast quarter of section twenty-two running thence south eight and 30-10 Q chains, thence west 8.17 chains, thence ‘north 8.28 chains, thence east 8.20 chains to the place of beginning, containing 6.77 acres of Tand also a piece of land described as follows: Commencing at the point of intersection of the White Pigeon Road and the east and west quarter section line of section twenty-two, running thence north 14 degrees east 5.17 chains thence north 85 degrees east 12.40 chains, thence south 6.73 chains and thence west 13.73 chains to the place of beginning containing 7:50 acres of land, all of the above land is in section 22, Township 35 North range 8 east, S |

~ Said sale will be made subject to ‘the approval of the Noble Circuit court for not less than the full appraised value of said real estate and ‘upon the following terms and conditions; at least one-third of the purchase price cash in hand and the balance in two equal payments due in nine and eighteen months from date. Deferfed payments to b eevidenced by the notes of the purchaser bearing 6% interest from date waiving relief and providing for attorney’s fees, and secured by a first mortgage on the real estate sold or purchaser may pay all cash on date of sale. Should said real estate not be sold at the above time and place the undersigned will continue to offer the same for sale at the same time andg place from day to day thereafter . until sold. Abstract for said real estate may be seen and examined at the office of W. H. Wigton, Ligonier, Indiana, said real estate will be sold subjuct to the tenants lease and subject to the taxes for 1928 payable in 1929 Charles Wemple, Executor. W. H. Wigten, Attorney 22bdw Three Escape Injury Ted Anderson 43 Pennsylvania railroad mail clerk his wife and son James 8 escaped with minor injuries when the machine in which they were riding was struck by a Panhandle electric train at the Whitley street crossing Columbia City. - The automobile was demolished. The boy has a cut on his right elbow, Mrs. Anderson is suffering from a bruised nose and Mr. Anderson is suffering from shock. They reside in Columbia City.

Sold Booze to Students.

Indictments against thirty-seven Lafayette persons who, it is cluu}'rged, sold liquor to Purdue students, were sent to district federal court at Hammond by the . federal grand jury which met at South Bend last week. The grand jury returned 200 indictments for alleged violations of the prohibition laws.

Carl Taxler Hurt.

Carl Taxler, well knowrd contractor of Kendallville, suffered severe cuts and bruises and had a narrow escape from death Saturday evening, when h¢ drove his car into the dredged ditch, south of LaOtto, to avoid strilking another machine.

Dies From Heart Trouble.

Dr. Norman Reynolds, 54, of Warsaw, dropped dead in his garage Monday of heart failure. Dr. Reynolds was a member of the Mizpah Shrine of Fort Wayne and a prominent worker in medical circles. Surviving is the widow and two brothers. ~ .fay your Banner subscriptions.

HERE’S CIGAR Never Before Has a Nickel Bought Such a Cigar! . Talk about the past and present purchasing power of a nickel, here’s a buy that upsets all previous standards: Havana Ribbon cigar. Thirty years on the market! Produced by the millions today! That and longstudied cigar-making have put value into Havana Ribbon such as you've never before known in a five-cent cigar. And there’s something else: Ripe tobaéco. Imagine what a fine, mi{}d, fragrant smoke that means! No bitter under-ripe top leaves of the tobacco plant. No flat-tasting over-r;iipp'botfom leaves. Pure flavored Ripe middle leaves only. Long filler—that won’t come out in figguhr '-n;télng;%:snmg as lt;sed' iré er-priced cigars.'.’'. . You jus can’t beat it for the money! Don’t. dally—slip -one nickel over the lgountgzl' and ’tset yourself for a smoke you’ll want agai . again. Jetter sfifi,lbuy r%;%fi?gd Pracb {:cgt Pq;%’qfi% ihfiv% cig;ut and be prepated for the longing that’s mm

MOTCRISTS ARGUE FOR ADDITIONAL. ~ SAPETY MEASURES ON HIGHWAYS f:Convincév Officials of Perils on Many Cro;vded Roads—- “ Prevention of Dust an Important Matter : to Be Considered.

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ESPITE the increase in the use D of white painted guard rails, whitewashed traffic indicators of one sort or another and more elaborate danger signals, automobile accidents are steadily growing more numerous, automobile associations point out in reviewing the summer’s casualties. : The next great important step to reduce the number of accidents will be the elimination of dust, in the opinion of those associations. Dust, in spite of the greater mileage of concrete roads, is causing many accidents, a condition due in part to-the constantly growing highway congestion. :

YOUR SNEEZE MAY - NOT BE FROM COLD

Draft May Hase Nothing to Do With the Matter—- ’ Million Particles.

o HEN you sneeze it is not al- ‘;‘; ways a sign you are taking cold. That is the opinion 'ot physicians working on public health problems in the last few years.

Most men and women when they feel that tickling in the nose or throat immediately look for the nearest door or window, convinced that they are sitting in a draft. - ' However, the draft, if there is one, may have nothing to do with the matter at all, physicians say. The unhappy one merely has inhaled a few million or so dust particles. That may be true particularly of our cities where enough dust floats in the atmosphere in one year to build a cone-shaped mountain 1,500 feet highj with a five-mile diameter.

Some statistician has figured it out that if all the dust that hovers a\rbove American cilies were gathered in one place, say Manhattan I[sland, that dust would be piled up on the streets of Manhattan to the depth of 21 feet. .

But one is likely to sneeze while walking along a country road, though not quite as likely as in the city. Here the dust that is raised usually comes from dirt or gravel roads. There is, however, less likelihood of this today than ever before as highway officials now have at their command many methods for “binding” the top cever, particularly the use of such chemicals as calcium chloride, considered by engineers the best of dust layers.

KANSAS FAVORS GRAVEL HIGHWAY

HE Kansas Highway CommisI sion has adopted a definite policy of using sand and gravel on all the roads it can improve that way for the present. e “Gravel and sand cost only $1,500 to $2,000 a mile,” said John Gardner, Highway Director. “By using these materials, which are plentiful in many sections, we can build roads passable at all seasons without difficulty or long delay. They are easy and inexpensive to maintain. By using the calcium chloride, the gravel and sand are held together and the dust is obviated. Of course, these roads will have to be rebuilt in five or six years, but we feel that it is better to build that way and get as many people out of the mud as possible rather than build short stretches of more permanent and more expensive roads, just at this time.” cßlin 2

Ligonier Banner $2.00 the Year

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

High wincs and passing cars raisa dust clouds that have been compared with the smoke screens of naval destroyers. Through that screen the average motorist must guess his way and trust to luck that no one is directly in his path, the automobilists assert. o In some sections of the country, where motorists have been able to convince officials of the perils in dustcovered highways, the authorities are applying chemicals to the road surface, particularly calcium chloride, a moisture-absorbing material that lays the dust. The prevention of dust is unquestionably a large factor in any safety first campaign. : ;

WATER REDUCES " BACTERIA COUNT -:lnvestigato;:;l;w How the Moisture in Paris Sub-_ way Cut Down Germs.

OISTURE decreases the numM ber of bacteria in the air enormously. French scientists counting microbes ir the air before and after a rainstorm in Paris have found wide variations in the totals.

In a cubic meter of air gathered up near the Place Clichy Messrs. A. Sartory and Mare Langlais found 3,800 germs on a wet day at 5 p. m. and 16,000 at the same time on a dry day. Similarly in the Paris subway after the tracks had been sprinkled thoroughly only 410 bacteria were found to the cubic meter while two hours later, when the tracks were dry, the investigators discovered 68,000. Taking advantage of such findings, officials of many communities are advocating . more generous sprinkling and in many instances have applied calcium chloride to road surfaces to lay the dust. That chemical, which in itself has high germicidal value, absorbs moisture as well as killing germs, -

Good Road Facts

Henceforth, civilization can be no better than its highways. 4 More than $1,000,000,000 was spent in improving highways of the United States last year. Good roads are a fine thing, but it is well to remember that ‘they lead away from the farm as well as to it. All roads leading to the four gate ways of Yellowstone National park are reported to be in excellent condition. d ’

The national pavks, seven in the United States and three in Canada, are now linked together by improved highway's. : The Defense highway, shortening the distance between Washington and Agnapolis, Md., by eight miles, will be completed this year. - Twenty times around the world! Such, at any rate, is the distance American motorists could travel on their 500,000 miles of surfaced roads. The Arizona highway department has taken consideration of the pedestrian on the roadway and has made official recommendation that he walk on the left side.

Minnesota has 100,000 miles of public roads of which 7,000 are trunk highways treated by special patrol maintenance, on which there has been expended during the past five years $33,000,000 annually. This state is a large user of calcium chloride for dust laying and highway maintenance.

' Fish Are Too Small , Ministers are not immume from the fishing fever. Neither are they immune from arrest as Rev. Ralph C. Plank of the Methodist church at North Manchester discovered. The North Manchester minister went to Webster lake where he has a cottage at the Epworth League Forest and decided to join the scores of others who were enjoying fishing at the lake. But a short time later he found that his fishing trip was an expensive one. He was fined $24 in the court of Justice of the Peace Griffith, game wardens having charged him with taking undersized fish from the lake.

Given Right to Praectice.

Judge James S. Drake of Elkhart circuit court overruled of the state board 'of medical registration an examination to grant licenses to _six drugless physicians in Eikhart and ordered that they be given the right to practice osteopathic massage. ‘The court decision was based upon the alleged fact that the state board’s action was based upon the reputation of the school from which all six had secured diplomas. The evidence was heard last week an dthe decision given Monday. . : ‘

Plymouth Boy Killed Billy Riddle 18-months-son of Mr. and Mrs. Benson Riddle of Plymouth ‘was instantly - killed ‘Monday afternoon when he was struck by the Boardway limited. Pennsylvania railroad passenger train. The child had taken a toy wagon and climbed onto the body was badly mangled. He was identified by his wagon and clothing. _ * Knepper zsoes Free ~ Walter W. Knepper charged with killing a dog the property of an Indianapolis family camping at Spear lake was acquitted at a hearing in the court of Judge Schutt Monday afternoon, : , , " Mr. and Mrs. Royse McGuin of Goshen are guests of his parents Mr. and Mrs. Frank McGuin in this city. Pay your Banner subscriptions.

. VWe are in a position f ; o give all ‘1 e I O.b s | %P ® s } rmtlrg,q,i l Prompt and Careful | « _Attention ¢

min your letter. fihe‘l);hfi?”mmed matter o your business. Wcmr:ady at all imes to give you the benefit of our experience.

Better than ever. and winning even greater success

Ever since it flashed into the field, Pontiac Six has been a history-making car. And today, Pontiac Six is winning even greater success— because today’s Pontiac Six in countless ways is a better car than its famous predecessors. Combining the masterly beauty of bodies by Fisher and the as-

E_ 2-Door Sedan, $745; Coupe, $745; Sport Roadster, $745; Phaeton, $775; Cabriolet; F : . = $?95; 4-Door Sedan, $825; Sport, Landau Sedan, $875. Oakland All-American g‘? i Six, $1045 to $1265. All prices at factory. Check Oakland-Pontiac delivered £ : TR prices—they include lowest handling charges. General Motors Time Payment Plan = e available at minimum rate. ; \ \\\\\" : { : = G R ee e T r @ ”" : G 2588 e T /Al N e T O GRA Y E 'l_?’ LT fi' /}lY“\' ‘r >asW Do Seden ; A T\ o | N Body by Fishes WAR TAX REMOVED--DELIVERED PRICES REDUCED 2. BEN GLASER, Ligonier, Ind. : . i 'P.fl\ODUCT: OF GBNBR‘.‘.‘;L MoTéas V &

Ligonier Phone 145 = Indiana Starting SATURDAY, July_7th, we will offer to the public ONE GALLON of pure high grade oil to every customer with a repair job or mechanical work amounting to $5.00. {This offer holds good for one week only. Now is the time to have your car repaired by experienced mechanics, and adjustedtor the remainder of the summer months. LESTER BAUGHMAN ‘ Service Manager

Time Flies Isn’t it time to bring in your car for service? To adequately protect your car it is important that it be regularly oiled. » A bath in eil would not lubricate yobr ~car as well as our complete high preasure lubrication service using the highest grades of oils and grease. We lubricate every friction poinf in your engine, gears and chassis. ‘ _ We give fast, courteous, efficient service ; We also do top dressing. Cars called for and delivered. o e | Kiester Electric Shop Shop Phone 481 ' ~ Night Phone 298

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surance of highest quality construction with its numerous notable engineering advancements, it provides style, comfort, long life and smooth six-cylinder performance, such as never before were available at prices as low as $745. Ride once—and you will agree . . . here is value that cannot be matched!