Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 41A, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 November 1928 — Page 3
Stanley Surfus ~ FUNERAL DIRECTOR Al Soriee . 110 West Third St. Phone 495 i
We aim to pleasc ‘
ol Siylish; |€ S ? } L{‘ ‘.:(» & k‘:‘, . . . Vet 77¢) Distinctive . By _ by }“f«'a\{?\ """ffi? t, h (N Fow =" GLASSES RE. o &“'l?{’};’ 7 S A Méfl\‘:’. : Remember that plasses. are an Important fuctor in your personal appesrance. e Carelessly fitted, they detract . from vyour looks. - Adj Justed with the precision that characterizes our service, our glusses wili add distinction to your apprarance and bring real comfort te Foir eyes . We Wealcome the Opportunity . of Serving You Nevin E. Bret: Nevin E. Bretz * Optometrist aad Gpticiap 130 S. Main St GOSH & :
Bothwell & Vanderford ~ Lawyers Yhone 156 Ligo.’pier. Indiana Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER - Phone 2 en 1 Wawaka Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Ofiice at Farmers and Wercharts Bank Saturday Afternocn and Saturday > Evenlng 7
VERN B.FiISHER _Sanitary Plumbing and Heating Phone 210 - Ligonier, Ind
Harry L. Benner Auctioneer Jpen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley e=County Phones
O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc.’ Well Drilling Phone 333 LIGONIER
Dr. Maurice Blue VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm Phone: Ligonier 857
W. H. WIGTON ' Attorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, ND
Our Advertising ~Service Means More Sales for You, Mr. Business Man When you begin advertising in this paper you start on the | road to more business. There is no better or cheaper me- § § dium for reaching the buyers - of this community. We can also provide Artistic Printing of every description.
. %gigg}gz ; ¥ 4 . b oo S . - C SR ; 7 VR FRANCES M. BEANE Democratie (andidate lor Clerk oi the Noble Cirduit Court. Your Support Will Be Aprpeciated
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~ OWEN A. YOUNG Democratic Candidate for Noble Comty I promise the people of this county an efficient and economicyl administration with courteous service to the public at all times. I Respecrfully Solicit Your - “ ’ Support . . V(;te for | RALPH W. PROBST Demecratici Candidate for | Ndble-Whitley Counties | will appreciate your consideration and support ‘WILLIAM HOFFMAN Deinocrafic Candidate for : of Noble County Your Support Wil be Appreciated
E Dr. Finger - EDV Sam Finger, Expert Doctor of Furs. Practice limit ed to destroying moths, putting new life, strength and vigor into coats of old age. Positive cure for sickly looking coats.
~ Office Hours 1 7AM. to 9 PM. ‘ FINGERS - FUR SHOPPE 116 W.Jefferson Phone 2345 , Elkhart
MITH VICTORY OR RUIN, SAY = FARM LEAZERS ‘ & e Anxious to Get Out Every Possible. Vote for Champ.:2 of -, . ~ Agriculture. CITE RECORDS OF NC.!. .EES Bcores of Farm Organizations Endorse Democratic Candidate and De__nounce Hoover: Officials ; : Active in Campaign. Threatendd with ruln by a “con--tinuance of the Coolidge policies,” and realizing their only hope for relief lies in piling up enough farm .votes to ensure the election of Governor Smith, American farmers are making, through their various organizations, a tremendous effort to get every agricultural worker to the polls on election day. : Ungqualifiedly endorsed by practically ;ull farm organizations .of consequente in the West and South, the Democratic candidate is assured, despite attempts to defeat him by appeals to bigotry, of the votes of all farmers who place their own prosperity above partisan prejudices. Farm leaders, however, are anxious to make the Smith farm majority large enough to offset any possiple advantage gained by the Hoover forces in backward districts which might be influenced by the misleading propaganda of the Ku Klux Klan and Anti-Saloon League: . Calling upon all farmers and members of their families to register and vote for (overnor Smith, they stress the attitude of the two presidential candidates as revealed in both their past records and their utterances during the present campaign. Candidates Contrasted Govérnor Smith has consistently proposed and secured the passage of legislation. which was invaluable to the farmeérs of his State. Herbert Hoover has just as consistently opposed 'measures which might have benefited Agriculture.. It was he who, as Federal Food Administrator, held down the prices of wheat and hogs during the war. - : What is more important, Governor Smith proniises to give the farmers immediately the legislative aid. for which they have struggled unsuccessfully for the last five years. Herbert Hoover is opposed te it, the agricultural leaders point out, and his election would mean the death of the farm movement. r
Perhaps the most important expression of organized agriculture’s stand in this election is the resolution endorsing Governor Smith’s position and condemning that of the Republican party, adopted recently in Des Moines by the Corn Belt Committee. This is the alliance of the 40 most important farm corcanizotions in., the Middle
West, with a cqmbined membership of 1,500,000 heads of families, : Mr. Hoover’'s record has been bitterly condemned, also, by a resolution passed by the Naiional Farmers’ Union. : : . :Leaders Endorse Smith . Among the many prominent farm lead-* ers who have endorsed Governor Smith's position on Agriculture. and 'denounced that of Mr. Hoover, are the following: S. H. Thompson, President of the’ American Famn Bureau Federation. W. i, Settle, President of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation. Earl €. Smith, President of the Illinois Agriculture Association. . Wm. Hirth, President of the Missouri Farmers Association, and Chairman of the Corn Belt Committee of Farm Organizationsa ; : Frank W. Murphy, of Minnesota, Chadrmar of the Legislative Committee of Corn Belt Federation of Farm Organizations. W. L. Stockton, President of the Montana Farm Bureau Federation. J. J. O’'Shea, I’resident of the Montana Farmers' Union. : .C. E. Huff, President of the Kansas Farmers' Union. Jno. Simpson, President of the Oklahoma Farmers’ Union. = ~ Milo Reno, President of the lowa Farmers’ Union. J. I'. Reed, President of the Minnesota Farm Bureau Federation. Chas. (. Talbott, President of the North Dakota Farmers’ Union, A. W. Ricker, Secretary of the Corn Belt Federation of ¥arm Organizations. H. G. Keeney, President of the Nebraska Farmers’ Union. Chas. Stewart, Secretary of the Nepraska Farm Bureau. ; - George Duis, President of the North Dakota Wheat Growers’ Association. . BE. 1.. Kennedy, Secretary of the Illinois Farmers’' Union. o Henry A. Wallace, Editor of Wallace's Farmer. i . Miles Cannon, Former Commissioner . of Agriculture of Idaho. John Napier Dyer, Director in the American Farm Bureau Kederation. Chester C. Davis, Former Commissioner of Agriculture of Montana. Thos. E. Cashman, Member of the Executive Board, Minnesota Farm Bureau. N. S. Winder, Secretary of the American Farm Bureau [Federation.
~ Joe Plummer, Colorado Wheat Growers’ -Association. Dr. B. W. Kilgore, Chairman of the Executive Committee of: the American Cotton Growers’ Association; : Judge X. Caverno, President of the Missouri Cotton Growers’ Association. Frank ;| Wheatcraft, Manager of the Union Live Stock Shipping Association of Chicago. George N. Peek, Chairman of the Committee of Twenty-two of the North CenAral States Airiculture Conference. Mrs. Verna L. Hatch, Social and Edacational Director of the Indiana Farm Bureau. Clarence Ousley, of Texas, former Assistant Secretary of Agriculture. Robert ‘A. Cowles, Treasurer of the Illinois Agriculture Association. This is an incomplete, list of farm lsaders who have made public announcement that they are supporting Governor | Smith, : e > METHODIST DEAN, A DRY ! - REPUBL|CAN, FOR SMITH One of American’s foremost educators, Dr. Edward T. Devine, dean of the American Universityv Graduate School, Washington, D. C., a prominent Methodist institution, is speaking in behalf of (Governor Smith. Dr. Devine is a Republican and a Dry. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Services in Weir Block. Sunday school 9:46 A M. . Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Everybody welcome. : Now is the time to pay your Banner subscription—DO IT NOW! ~
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
321,257 Licenses to Fish and Hunt. A total of 321.257 licenses, to hunt fish and trap in this state ‘were issued daring the fiscal year 1928 ending September 30, according to George XN, Mannfield, fish and game division superintendent. Of this number 10,536 were non-resident fishing, and 517 non-resident hunting fishinz and trapping licenses. The gain according to the report, is 58,999 resideént licensés ég nor-resident license hunting, fishng and trapping licenses znd a loss of 844 in non-rvesident fishing licenses explained by the increase in.the higher fee. The former cost of a non-resi-dent fichinz leonse was $l.OO but the 1927 legislatnve raised it to $2.50 operative in 1928. A total of 528 dpQ kennel licenses were issued during the year 1928'cmnpared" to 562 in 1927 a gain of 166. : : ' In the same report Mr. Mannfield shows the game wardens in the year 1928 made 2,631 arrests of alleged vio lators of fish and game laws, and that 2,472 convictions were obtained; 109 cases remain to be tried and 59 cases were dismissed. Flnes wud costs in all cases amounted to $35.021.81, and all fines went to the public school fund.
| Rejected Suitor Kills Girl, . His marriage proposul rejected, Clarence Price, 39, shot and killed Ruth Davis, 21. and then killed himself at LaPorte. . . The slaying and - suicide took place on a country road near Price's home and was witnessed by Nellie Breuan,‘ a friend of the slain girl. e Price met the girls in LaPorte Friday morning and after his proposal was rejected he drove to his country home and obtained ‘his shoet gun. Tie girls, frightened, ran with him in pm'-' suit. He fired at- Miss Davis, tha charge entering her back. He then shot himself. - v = o That Will Muddle. Indications were that the trial‘of A. H. Reinhart against Lie 'and BEzra Reinhart, to establish a lost will, venued to this county from DeKalb and set for trial last week will be carried over. There is a widespread interest in this case because it may establish a. precedent in law as to the in‘he,ritance of real estate by u'w'ill. that is claimed to have been lost. - - DePauw Instructor Dead. Dr. Wilbur Brown, 68, for 43 years connected with the 'smff of DePauw uniersity at Greencastle is dead. He died Thursday night from heart disease, doctors said. ~ Dr. Brown retired three weeks dgo as head oOf the mathematics (l(‘pamment'of the nniversity. He had been on the staft ofi the astronomy observatory.of Harvard university. . .- : ‘ “Ramona’” is a screen triumph. See it Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at COrystal. ,
Before you lie two courses-two parties, two platforms, two candidates, two attitudes jupon farm relief- The names of the parties and candidates mean nothing. How they propose t(l deals with you means everything. Thfs fall you have to vote for the farmer--or against him, against yourself, your family, your neighbor. By platforms and candidate the two parties have taken dé;finite stand.
~ Republican The Republican ‘Convention voted down the farm plank supported by 262 west and mid-west delegates. o L : The Republican Farm Plank repeats in identical words the broken promises of 41924. It promises “vigorous efforts towards broadening our export market.” It pledges ‘“‘assistance in reorganizing the marketing system” and assistance “where diversification is needed.” ' The Republican platform mentions *“‘adequate tarriff protection,” favors co-operative marketing and’advises the creation of a Federal Farm Board to promote stabilization corporations or associations. ; The Republicans do not promise to make the tariff work for the farmer. There is no assurance that stabilization corporations supported by their trading profits, would be of any more benefit than the present grain dealing interests. Hoover | Hoover pledges himself to the repeated broken promises of his party. He says agriculture was not on a satisfactory basis before the war. _ - He thinks some branches are greatly recovered. He says you bring low prices upon yourselves by engaging in competition. He sees relief in a system of inland waterways. (When?) He promises, you more tariff. In his West Branch lowa, speech on August 21, 1928, he probably summed up his program for you when he said: “My fundamental concept of agriculture is one controlled by its own members organized to fight its own economic battles and to determine its own destines.” (If that be help.make the most of it!) ‘ - Follow Hoover’s advice—fight your own battle. Elect for president, Governor Alfred E. Smith, who will make the tariff work for you. can
- Vote as Farmeis, NOT Partisans THE INDEPENDENT EQUALITY FOR AGRICULTURE CLUB Hotel English i ' " , - Indianapolis, Ind.
Tries to Get Rid of Marshal. The town of Edinburg has gone into the real estate business in an effort to get rid of W. (. Milburn, its preacher-marshal. . : ' - The marshal who has been in office since January of this year, and who has been the center of a series of stormy episodes, offers to resign and leave town providing his home is sold for not less than $1,400. He made the proposition to the town board and its members are now endeavoring to find a buyer for the house, they said. - The marshal allegedly firing at au automobile driven by George Myers, Franklin college student, October 21, brought a renewal of the fight “to out” Milburn. Five shots fired by Milburn shattered a running board of the Myers' car. He was asked to resign by the board, and refusing at first, changed his stand by making the house sale proposition. J
~Another arrest for the murder of Mrs, Genevieve Stultz, was made Tués day when Jack Kimball, 39, of South Bend, was taken into custody by Cant Seth Spillman of the Elkhart detective force. Kimball is a brother to Mrs. Charles Revher, who with her husband and Harvey L. Smith, former private detective, are also being held for the murder. Kimball had been arrestedfpn October 13 in connection with the crime, but was I‘ater released. - )
~ New evidence has been uncéered by Capt. Spillman and . Prosecuting Attorney Glenn R. Sawyer at Elkhart, which has convinced the officers that Kimball was one of the principals in the murder. ' d
The large flock of sheep belonging to Albert Jacobs Elkhart township was menaced by two dogs one a Germar police and the other a-collie. A number of sheep were killed outright and others so badly maimed they died later. Twenty-one sheep in all were killed. The police dog was owned by and Elkhart township resident who had the animal killed. The loss has been appraised and Mr. Jacobs will be paid from the doz fax fund. In the meantime flock owners are worried.
A total of 186 townships in 21 counties now are infested: by the cornp borer, according to a report made today by Frank N. Wallace, state entomologist, ' Four new townships huve been added to the area. They are: Union township in Elkhkart coun to; Madison township in Starke coun, ty; and North Bend and Center townships in Starke _county. : -
Ramona” from Heien Bunp- Jile-—’ son’s great American novel. See it | this Tuesday. Wednesday and Thursday - o
A VCTE FOR HOOIER IS A VOTE AGAINST YOUR FARM
Another Arrest in Murder Mystery
Twenty Sheep Killed By Dogs
Corn Borer in Elkhart (‘ounty.
Attention Automobile Owners! ‘, j ~ READ AND SAVE MONEY | Wrecked Auto Bodies, Fenders, Frames, Top and -3 Doors Repaired Glass Cutting and Grinding Department. Glass for windshield, 4 door and curtains.cut and ground to fit all cars. HEATERS for all makes of cars INSTALLED WOODWORK IN COUCHES AND SEDAN Co’mpetent 'Mechanics---Compléte New Equipment---Service TOPS, CURTAINS AND CUSHIONS : And All Kinds of Trim Work a Specialty o ED AND ORA GOSHEN AUTO TGP AND TRiMMING COMPANY Cor. 3rd and Washigtcr Sts. Phone 438. = GOSHEN
Read the Advs. Millions of Families Depend on Dr. Caldwell’s Prescription
When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1875, the needs for & laxative were not as great as they are today. People lived normal, quiet lves, ate phin( wholesome food, gnd %)t plenty of fresh air and sunshine. ut even that early there were drastic physics and purges for the relief of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did not beYi:ve were good for human beings to put into their system. So he wrote & prescription for a laxative to be used by his patients. . Themi:reeeriptlon for constipation that he used early in his practice, and which he put in drug stores in 1892 under the name of Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, ls a liquid vegetable remedy, intended for women, children and elderly people, and they need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowal stimulant as Syrup Pepsin. Under successful management this r:ucrlprt.ion has proven its worth and now the largest selling liquid laxative In the worla. The fact that millons of bottles are used a year proves that it bas won the confidence of people who needed it to get reliei from headaches, biliousness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and fevers. : Millions of families are now never without Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsim, and if ysu will once start using it you will alss always have a bottle handy for emergencies. : ‘ It is particularly pleasing to know
~ Democratic The Democratic Convention welcomed*farm representatives and heedéd their counsel abeut farm relief. : ; : - The Democratic Party faced the surplus problem squarely when it said: “Producers of crops whose total volume exceeds the need of the domestic market must continue at a disadvantage until the government shall intervene as seriousls and effectively in behalf of the farmer as it has intervened in behalf of labor and industry. ~ “The Democratic platform promises legislation to prevent the price of the surplus from determining the price of the whole crop. It pledges “such other steps as are necessary to restore and maintain the purchasing power of agriculture and the complete economic equality of agriculture.” ¢ e D aea s t Smith - | In his acceptance speech Governor Smith said “The tariff is ineffective on commodities of which there is exportable surplus without controlled sale of the surplus. Our platform points the way te make the tariff effective for crops ef which wo produce a surplus. | ~ Contrast that with two Republican vetoes to thy bi-partisan McNary-Haugen bill. . , At Omaha, September 18,1928, Governor Smith, said: “as I read the McNary-Haugen bill, its fundamental purpose is to establish an effective cons trol of the sale of exportable surplus with the cost imposed upon the commodity benefited. For 'that principle the Democratic platform squarely stands, and for that principle I squarely stand, Mr. Hoover stands squarely opposed to this principle by whicp the farmer could get the benefit of the tariff.” £ ;
e SEETa e '\\ SRR ' : R R RS TR SR oo R R ¢ :3S e N i SRR AN o Sk RS R R oo RTR Iy BTy | e TR R N R & ' R o RO T i { SRR R S RN S 3 RS U g’fi( : SR R R : 5 ATR IR e i e o vAR PRSREEER o % x\" % e s % 5 'T:_’f:‘,'v::' R T R [~ P BRI oo L BLE PR e ‘ ‘ Czi':.:»:"--‘:.\. IR SR ;-.:-f,'}..r. v/ i 2 3. Cottarcee. swed AT AGE 83
that the ‘most of it is bought by mothers for themselves and the ehiidren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for elderly people. All drustores have the generous bottles. We wduld be glad to have you prove at our “expense how much Dr. Cald well’s Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write “Syrup Pepsin.” Monticello, Illinois, and we will send you prepaid o FREE SAMPLE BOTTLE.
