Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 8A, Ligonier, Noble County, 18 March 1929 — Page 3

Eyes Examined ~ QGlasses Fitted % - De | S. Wellington representing the Meigs Optical Shops of Goshen, . Wayne and South Bend will be o Binks Jewelry Store Every "'l'hursde.x_'v. alternoon and Evening. All advice and glasses are ba_cked by Indianas largest Ontical Organizgh’on: Relia‘hlc service thru-out Indiana

SERVICE | A special hnvaeionitic of cur E ‘scfvice is the careful" attention given e\}ery'd,etail no matter ho,w‘ -’s,mail;.‘:- - Stanley Surfus § ~ Funeral Director i -+ Phone 495 |

2 Ve are in a po‘sition L o giveal |==J Ob s Db Printing | Prorhpt and Careful i Attention

m in your letter. d other printed matter i helpful © your business. Ve are ready at all times to give you the benefit of our experience.

H. E. Robinson - Plumbing Hot-Water ~ Steam Heating Phones: 4530 r 218 Ligonier

Harry W. Simmons trustee Perry Townshsp Oifice at Farmers and Merchauts Bank Saturday Afternoon and Ssa(urdar " Evenlng

. W. H. WIGTON Atmrney-at—l.awf? - Ofice in Zimmerman Hiock / "LIGUN‘(ER.‘ ND

Bothwell & Vanderford _‘ Lawyers : Yhone 156 Ligonier. Indiana

Howard White WAWAKA, INBIANA AUCTIONEER Yhone 2 ap I Wawakse

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

Job Printing o gty rotr SO4 80 || o givs vea el

' WARFARE AGAINST THE RAT !g:{\lew Crieans H;:E;:prehensivc Sysf’ tem for Elimination of Man- ' | : kind's Enemy.

- Conversion of insanitary districts into healthful ones and the proofing of the enfire city against rats is conteme'platg'd in the plans made by the health authorities of New Orleans for permas :nemly ‘stamping ovut the causés of buf’boui'c ‘plague. ’l']cle_ methods proposed are similar in certain respects to those itollowed Yy the federal government at the Panama canal, while their execus ‘tlon is as much an engineering probJdem as it is a medical one. Accomplish, iment of the work depends upon the ‘nassage of enabling legislation which ‘bears directly apon the building regus Jdations and affects practically every ‘structure in the city. Popular Mechan. les Magazine, in an illustrated article, ‘BHYS o . - - “Ordinances designed to handle the situation provide that all buildings 'which rest upon the ground shall have concrete floors and every structura 'shall be proofed against rats. Other ordinances abolish henhouses within the city. limits, excépting when they are thoroughly rat-proofed: make stringent. rulings conceruning the disposal of garbage, and subject shipJping in the harbor to binding regula:tions intended to prevent rats from landing from beats docked at the ‘wharves. It is planned that ships shall lie eight feet from the wharves, have ‘all hawsers fitited with rat guards and have a guard at the gangplanks whenever they are lowered” S

ELECTRICITY TO BE POWER

Owners of Antnracite Mines in Penn sylvania Decide to Make Use of , ~ It Exclusively. L

Electricity is to take the place ene tirely of steam and compressed air in the anthracite mines of Pennsylvania, according to a paper read recently before the Engineers’ Society of Northeastern Pennsvivania., .

The total of electric generating ca: pacity and power purchased for use at the mines at the present time is glven as 79811 kilowatts, which is ap‘proximately equal to 105,100 horse ‘power. The horsepower produced by stéam is given as 521,811 : * The first electrical iustallation in mineg was made in 1887 by the Penn: p_vh'anm Railroad company. In 1859 »rthe Thompson-Houston company placed a tocomotive and. a generating station in the Erie colliery of the Hilk side Coal & Tron company.. This locomotive was in operation until 1911, 22 yeard ol continuous operation. The ffiret electric pump installed was in 1890, and sias been in continuous serv. ice ever since. From 1891 to the present year plant after plant has been erected in the mines, . :

His Ashtray

Cover a small box lid inside und -out with tapestry and:proceed to line it with glass. This means that five pleces of glass must be cut, one large piece from the bottom, and four ob. Jongs for the sides. Any paint and window glass store will supply vyou ‘with these pieces of glass, just ag they formerly cut them for the lia:zsel partout work that was the rage a number of years ago. Glue carefully put along the edges of the glass will ‘glue it to the bottom of the box znd the pietes of glass to each other. There will, of course, be a rough edge at the top. This edge should be covered awith tarnished gilt galloon. Cover the wrong side of the galloon with glue and procced to bind the edge with it half of the width of the galion going inside the tray dnd half. upon the tapestry outside the tray. It is a pretty little novelty which would look well in a man’s den, and the tapestry will be sufficiently dark to pleage his mas‘culine taste. 1y

~ Monster of the Delta. - - A 320-pound shovel-ose sturgeon, & decided rarity in Ney Orleans, attracted a large crowd in front of Kolb's German tavern ' Sunday afternoon. This big fish was caught in the Gult of Mexico a short distance off the coeast, in a seine. It measures about six feet in length, has a narrow body and five rows of bony shields which extend from the gills to the tail. The striking peculiarity of this fish is its sucker mouth, a‘round gristle projection about five inches in length, be. neath a broad snout. The snout is about eight inches in length and is msed to burrow in soft bottoms for ‘mollusks, which form tlié sturgeon’s ‘principal food. ' The eggs of the sturgeon are used in Russia to make caviar. The bladder is used in the manufacture of isinglass. The fish is coarse and is cut dinto steaks for broiling—New York Sun., : s

Great Work Completed.

- The Jura mountain tunnel has been ‘completed after three years of uninterrupted work. It is a fivé-mile tunmel and has been cut through the Jura mountain from Moutiers, France, to Grenchen, Switzerland. The cost was $5,000,000 of which $2,000,000 was ‘contributed by the Eastern railroad of France. The tunnel will shorten the traveling distance hetween Paris and ‘Milan and Paris and Bern. :

Size of Zeppelins.

© Zeppelins vary in diameter and ‘length, but most of them are of farge gize, being almost as big as battleships. The Deutschland, for example, is 485 feet long and 46 feet in diameter, with a capacity of 25000 cubic yards, and a lifting power of 44,000 pounds. ; s

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Services in Welr Block. Sunday school 9:46 A M. Lesson Sermion 11:00 A. M. Everybody welcome.

.. Now is the thne to pay your Bann subscriptéen—DO IT NOW! .

| SUPPLIES FOR THE SOLDIER

Line of Communication Must Remain [" Intact In Order to Provide Army - ' With Supplies.

, General Grant said that -when hae pad re-established railroad cominuni cation at Chattanooga and so brought Food to his starving army the soldiera alled it the ‘cracker line.” It is the gnost essential line in war, “Giard™ gwrftes in the Philadelphla Ledger. ; The two armies facing each other in France and Belgium contain as many men as there are people in Philadels hia. At peace this city wears out §2,000 pairs of shoes every day. What uust the soldiers wear out when cons *stamly marching over rough cosuntry? ! To feed Philadelphia requires daily moany train-loads of provisions coming gln all directions. A soldler, like .. eiti Zzen, must be fed. e needs clothes, glankgfls, rifles, amumunltion, and ha fequlres them constantly. . ¢ The “cracker line” is the line that connects the army with its own «toreg 40 the rear. That's why we hear so much about cuiting the enemy’s ling of comnunication. To cut such i line and keep it cut means starvation. " But we had two spectacular instances ;in the Civil war where such lines wers {eut without producing apny particular results. Just prior to Gettysburg, Gengral Stuart’s Confedérate cavalry rode entirely around the Union camp, ¢ros ing its “‘cracker line” on the wu;x_Z ; The following year Sheridan’s troopers made a complete circuit of Lee's army in northern Virginia, Both these cavalry raids carried temporary terror to their foes, but neither was produc tive of any permanent good.

“GUARDED” BY A CRAZY MAN

Sane Prisoner Gets a Suit of Ciothes t and Doesn't Think He Has . Much Kick: Coming. :

. When Frank Begosek, a Ravensdale coal miner, was examined by a lunaey commission and found not insane, he ‘was ordered sent to the county hosipital to recuperate for a few davs. At the same time another patient from the jail was found insane and ordered to Steilacoom. , - The deputy sheriff in charge of the two prisoners misunderstood the or. iders and reported to the jail offlcials that both mén- were “crazy” and had been ordered to Steilacoom. So Begosek was. packed off to the asylum without protest. Later Dieputy Sheriff Johu Cudihee went after him 3and tucked . him in .the county hos pital. | i '+ .Bégosek was perfectly good huraored about it. They had burned his clothes at Steilacoom and allotted him u new suit and a pair of shoes, and he will go home fitted out for the winter, * ' "It i 3 a very good place, and the meals are plenty,” said Begosek la conically, referring to Steilacoom. ! “Begosek is entitled to the prize as the Dbestnatured man in the world,” sald the gnard. “When he went over, the real ‘nut’ with him imagined him. self entirely sane and insisted on tak ;Ing charge of Begosek and the dep: uty in charge humored him. So the sane man went to the asylum in charge of the crazy man, and there ‘was never a hard word between them."—Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

Moved Pole and Wires.

¢ Moving an -electric-light pole, with ‘its burden of wires, was the feat ac ‘complished recently by a Cleveland il duminating company, which is regardZfd as novel from several standpoints. dn adding five feet to the width of St, ,Clairr: avenue it was decided to move the curb on each side of the street back two and omne-hali feet, but for part of the way the difficulty was increased by the presence of a pipe just inside of. the curb.® This was overcome by the use of an electric truck of three and one-half tons capacity pupplied with a three-horsepower mo. for and winch, which is ordinarily used for drawing wires through thae conduits. This outfit was backed up {0 a distance of twe and one-hali feet from the curb and the pole secured by a chain near the ground. The pole and its load of wires then was raised aud the truck backed to the curb and ghe pole lowered into its mnew locg~ ;ion.- This was done in many In. lstances without any mishap.

Worth, the Dressmaker

! The noted Parisian dressmaker, Worth, owed his early success to the patrohage of that famoug personage of the third empire, Princess Pauline de Metternich, the wife of the Austri. an ambassador to France. By her wit pnd numerous vagaries of dress and qnauner she created a sensation at the gourt of Napoleon lIT and Eugenle. Therefore it was easy for Worth to become the most sought of the world’s dresmakers when the princess ap;)’roved his styles. Charles Worth, while so long the creator of French fashion, was an Englishman, born in Bourne, England, in 1825, and died in Paris in 1895.—Baltimore Star.,

Caesar Met Check on Yser.

¢ Official dispatches to the Belgian aegation at Washington of the German failure to cross the Yser, caused legatlon officials to recall that Caesar sufifered on the same ground. ¢ “The meadows of the Yser,” said a ißelgian official recently, ‘“constitute ithe ancient province of Menapie, where ithe legions of Caesar were checked. IThe story is so deep rooted among the :people that a legend says a tree still stands there which is said to be the last one to which Caesar tied his horse, having been unable to travel far ‘ther.” g o

Nearby Deaths.

A. B. Kroger, 71, apoplexy, Elkhart; Christ Hunsbherger, 66, complications Wakarusa; B. S. Dorsey, 76, complica tions, LaGrange; €. A. Nelson, 73, paralysis, Millersburg ;Mrs. Ajnel}a Sherrick, 95, Waterloo.

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THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

tiood Musie is Popular.

l‘ Radio has dene more within the span of a few years to popularize fgood music than any other mediun ?_wuld have done in a thousand years. | That is the view of Dr. Frederick ‘Stock, scholarly conductor of the world famous Chicago Symphony occhestra, heard every Sunday +ight, 6:00 to 7:00 pm. (CST) in concerts sponsored by the Standard oil Compan of Indiana through stations associated with the Nationa! Broadeasting co{mpany's system, . ' | “Music—good musie, is life to me.” Dr. Stock said in a recent interview, “and 1 am naturally ecautious about trying any new medium. for its expression or transmission. Although I have in many years past received many flattering offers to play. radio concerts I refused because [ wanted to study the situation and see whether or not this new mediitm of transmis‘sion was capable of carrying the music of a great orchestra and presenting it in & worthy manner. i “Y ‘listened in’ to hours and hours of concert music, testing to my own _aatisfaction the reproductive "gualities of recéivingf sets, studyving the possibilities of the field, until 1 came A 0 Taiiize tihat here really was a medium that offered the greatest pooun to music lovers and potential ,music lovers that the world has-eve: known. e ,

“When the Stanaard Oil company of Indiana approached me last fall with the request that I play a series o Sunday evening concerts over the Na tiondl Broudcasting Company’'s Bvs tem 4 decided to make practical us of the knowledge I had assimilated I realized that I hed probably th greatest tack—the greatest oppor tunity of my life befere me. Wherea, we had played to hundreds of peopl now miilions wouin hear onr ever: effort, - .

“Too, 1 realized that thousands o the people who would tune in on ow concerts would - not have any grea knowledge of good rmusic or whar i meant. That magnified my task.

must necessarily plan concerts ¢f suct a wide appeal that they would satish: the longings for good music of peopl who really knew and understocd it and. on the other hand, must appea to peonis w:io didn't have, eithie - nat. urally or acquired, that taste. More over, T must culti¥ate that love fo those who didn’t have it, and hely them to understand what the musi meant, : .

“With that end in mind my firs programs were planned and present ed. 1 wondered whether anyon: wounltd comment on them--there is n applianse from a radio audience excep by mail—and 1 was frankly ner‘voug Thi{n, almost unex'pectemy‘, came the flond ot Jettem. I was - astonishad Bankers-from Chicago, lonely plains men on the wide ranges of Texas cripples and shd®=ns from cities tarms and villages, people isolates from cultnral advantages and thos who are able to hear the orchestr: in its own home--they all wrote i 1 and told ‘how much they appreciates the music, what it meaut to them. - - “Some of the lotters were highl flattering because they were words o praise from well known music critics and musicians themselves. but the ones that really made me want tc play, play, play were the pathetit little notes, often in peneil, from thosg poor soults who were starving to beauty and this was granting then a - surcease from their troubles.

“Today I don't believe that there i anything that we can do in orchestr Hall that cannot 'be ‘duplicat through the radio receiver in any cc ner of the land. Radio has done mot in the span ol a few vears te popula: ize good music than any other m- Jdiun could kave done in a thougand vears,

_'O_A-KLA;\'D SETS SALES RECORD. BEN GLASER, Dealer Ligonler, Indiana Phaoue 44

Setting a-new high v ord o 0 the month, the Oakland Motor compan during February sold 28389 new Oak and "and Pontiac Sixes, according figures reported to the Natlonal Automobile Chamber of Cemmerce, W R. Tracey, vice president in charge o sales announced. : :

<This compares with 25.786 units sold during the same montli; last y\;aiz and 9,403 in February, 1927, Mr. Trac: stated. It also shows an iucrease o more than fifty per cent over the out put in January of this year. Current production schedules point ot a new all-time monthly rceord during March in. view of 'the popular favor which the new Oakland All-Am-erican Six and the new Pontiac BiZ Six are enjoying. Mr. Tracy declared February came close to achieving this end, the record month having been June, 1928, with a total ontzut of 29,477 cars. ’ e

_ Production facilities of the company are now keyed to peak capacity, two Oakland assembly lines. and thve» Pontiac lines turning out finished cars at the highest speed consistent with percision manufacturing methods.. To keep production abreast of the public demand, several manufacturing divisions in the medern Oak-land-Pontiac plant at Pontiac, Mich, are operating on day and night shifts, Mr. Tracy announced,

Canada Thistle Bill,

Gov. Harry Leslie signed house bill 181, presented by H. G. Eshelman of Kendallville, which provides for the eradiction of Canda thistle by chemicals, placing the burden on owhers of real estate on which the thistie flourishes, providing a maximum fine »Hf $lO for the first offense and $2O for second offense for failure to do so.

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Guernsey Cow. Sale,

- 1 will offer for sale at my farm 2% miles northwest of Wawaka, 5 miles cast of Ligonier, one-fourth mile south of Kansas school house on Frick improved road beginning at one o'clock on Wednesday, March 20th. S Head of Cdttle—Pure bred cow 9 vears old, fresh; pure bred cow 1 vears old fresh by day of sale, pure bred cow 3 years old fresh by day of sale, ‘erade cow 7 years old frésh by day of sale, sgrade cow 7 vears old giving milk, grade cow 8 vears old giving wilk. grade cow 5 vears old, grade cow 2 vears old giving milk, good one,; 2 pure bred bull calves.

2 year old elden in May. Good one. -4 Gilts due to farrow in Aprvil. Poland China type. - ; 10 head of good ewes partly lambed by dav of sale

14 disc harrow, coranplanter, International feed grinder 10 ipch pur, & good one. New ldea manure spreader and other articles not mentioned, Terms—Six months ¢redit will be given on approved Ssecurity at 7 per cent inferest from date. 2 per ceat off for cash. No property to he removen. until hbove térms are coris plied with. : : Joseph W. Smitl. ~ Johu Singleton, Auctioneer, . . . Charles Schwak, Clerk. - .

Publie Sale.

At my farm residence 2 miles south and 2% miles west of Ligonier and 312 miles northwest of. Cromwell on +riday, March 22 the following property, sale to beign at 12 g'clock: Seven foot Deering binder, Johnston corn binder, Ohio hay loader, Key--stone side rake, 7-foot Deerinig mowir, hay tedder, Ewmerson ' maniure spreader, one-horse grain drill, Oliver walking plow, spike tooth harrow, spring tooth harrow, Gale (*ol'xf”*l’fla::t—--er, pair. bob sleds,» Weber wagon with tripple hox like new, steel wheel wagon, 16-ft. tight bottom hav rack, fanning mill, Mover 'bugg'y_.'- 2-horse mgine, huzz saw and frame on trucks seltf Teed post drill, feed grinder, stoek rack, 2 P. & 0. plow bottoms, sinzle shovel plow, breaking cart, feed cook2T, 240 egg incubator, blacksmith forge and anvil, foot power emery stone, set jack screws, double trees, aeck yvoke,s, forks, shovels, ice tongs, vire - stretehers, sickle © grindar, swamp hook, harness, “hammers, vrenches, augers, sledge, tool chest, grindstone, corn cutters, brace and Sits, oil cans, "ste_el drums, pump oil -ank, sleigh, large drive belt, small yelts, lightning rods and points, sa[j sailsg, cross cut saw, work’hargwss; driving harness, halters and collars, ind many other artieles, | Terms—§s.oo and under cash, over 35.00 bankable note for six months )éaring 7 per cent interest from date 5 sale if paid when due, if not paid when due § per cent interest from date. No property to be moved until settled for. : . - " Mrs. ‘Charles Dull. Harley Lougeor, Aunctiomcer. ‘H. k. Hoak, Clerk. ; .

PUBLIC SALL,

I will off i at public sale on the Jesse Corser farm two miles east of Ligonier on the Toledo and Chicago Plke, «ile to cominence at 12 o'clock on TITURSDAY, MARCH 21, the ftollowing property: . . Two Horses—Grey horse 8 yeurs o:d, weight 1500; bay horse 12 years Il weieht 15000 A ' . Three Cows—d Jersey cow 5 vears old o -freshen in July; red cow 5 years ild to freshien in June; black eow 12 ears old. fresh. . o L

lmplements-—l6-ft. hay rack; Moline vower, breaking plow, single shovel alow, eultivators; sSpring tooth harrow, peppermint weeder, peppermint rakes and cans, hay rake, fencé stret“her, feed cooker, 60 gallon gasoline ank, 20 gallon kerosene tunk, heavy vork hLarness, cream separator, lots of carpenter and iron tools and many other articles too numerops to men-

fion, : ; ! Terms—All sums under $5.00 cash “t hand. All sums over that amount i ¢redit of six-months will be given with 7 per cent Interest from date of sale, purchaser giving good hankable note. : :

; . MRS, PEARL (OSPER Harlay Longcor, Auctioneer., Harvev FHoak, (lerk. _

Suspect Benig Held

A man giving his name as William . Summers, 45, Silverwood, Fountain ounty, was being held in connection with the robbery of the I’errysville State bank in which $l,lOO was obtained. . . |

Summiers was partially identitied by Quincy A. Myers, president ol the bank, who was alone at the time of the robhery. It was the second robbery suffered by the institation this year. . : Summers was unable to aseount for $5OO or $6OO which he was said to have spent during the past [ew days. An aviator's cap corresponding to one worn by the bandit was found in his possession. - -

Hiker Struck By Auto,

A hiker was struck by an autonobile near the Henry Tyler place in Rochester Thursday afternoon and quite badly hart, He was under the influence of liguor and claimed to have served overseas in -the array and that he was on his way from Dayton Ohio to South Bend. He ‘was taken to Goshen hosgpital,

Railway Oifers Prize,

-The Pennsylvania Railroad is now offering a spécial prize of $5O to the best county dairy calf sending an exhibit to the Indiana State Fair this year to assure that the winner will be entered at the National Dairy Shgw.g

B e L T ;F . THE FORF T - McHugh Aute Sales ==~ Phone 54 . Ligonier, ludl. ~ Visitors have passed through the plant of the Ford Motor company it Detroit in such large numbers during the last year that on sonie months more than 50,000 persons witnessed production of the Model A Ford. * J. W. Turton, of Niles, Mich., has driven the three Ford automoliles lie has owned a distanee equal to nin. times around the world, has never been ont of gas, oil 0;’ water and has never had an accident He purchased his first Ford a touring cae in 1615, drove it 163,200 -miles and then sa'd it for §sl26 cash - - . - From 8,000 to 10,000 telephons calis are handled Th two hours eévery worl:ing day at the Fordson :“:{}ii'zws_ of the Ford Motor '(é(')"rnpmfy[ The peak tei:phone loads are between % and 10 i B oand 2ta3 p . . e The Henty Ford Trade sthiosl wois started October 26, 1916, ‘with six students. At the beginning of this year, 2750 were enrolled. Boys A& taught to he Skilled workers at “the school. . - - It ‘reqiired seven years and tvo months to produce the wmillionih Model T Ford moter, Thz million'ly Model A Ford motor was produced in slightly over fifteen months. _ 'Th_e tunnel being planned from the Detroit’ river' to the Rouge pant of the Ford Motor campany will perniit 1006,000 glaons of water (o flow itito the power house of the Ford plant daily. : o . To carry communieation batwesn the. Fordson plant of the FEord Moior company ar_'x“d the outside worid, 10 telephone lines extend from the switeh board of the new Ford ;idtx.:iv;tiuz’a:‘:vqi" building and the 'Detroit central -« xchange. L o ICalvin® A. Pleming, 70 yecars old, drives his Model A Ford touring eay from St. Pail; Minn., to his Loulsiaua nlantat.inh,‘lwenty miles south of Now Orleans, in four days. He has never had a puncture on the 1,408 mite trip,

g " PR SRR M. T cov—bwy SOR————— : 3 B e = ~..,:.‘..1..;4 : e R iSA e i, ¥ i ; TIPS TT RN - .:,,"g&:kf' i"“\vf)?fk ~-l’ ’Lo ¢ : o i 8 u\:““ ey '(,“lx? ® L a Ael e T - » - s D e by "ELM\E‘E\‘_;;: ;;%;54‘), mTfi l*‘\a e. A ‘ O !lfi”l(‘ 3 o epeße e egTR T Tl . N &R N ‘ FULL-length IR | O\ 1 d: 4B LouisXVlcabinet e L ",‘_‘ii": e \‘a\\ Pl g " “of high-grade construcBN e | é -tien and elegant finish. t v».‘.?;‘ d EaAg N N 7 i Matched walnut panels.. . “h}‘ ;&a S ] Gl Contains the 8-tabe s ;;gfifi _Jfé-::‘t’n B L e 5 . {including rectifier) P e &1’%1”:@"'“ =T W Philéo Receiver; power & T %\‘gfi“ " supply; built-in aerial . P = : £ 1 and New Type ElectroE e , : : LB \ Dynamic Speaker. - = ) s :“, i i o A : e 2 : Q\\\. NI_WIS A~ . ] DINEEEY New Model | ! P A adm i 7 1 ¢ Y ‘Dq ~f’ - 2 i 3,;‘:@_ :‘:‘l_'_; '£ H - - § o e T’!" : 5 ' -8R ’ i H . | - | . i ;’:“,:w 5 e - o s = Lol - )‘TZ i b-3¥% / ™% i ‘ By’ | ALL-ELECTRIC RADIO | oel ea 3 2 o i iy : : : i o e : i 4 - The Philco “"Neutrcdyne- | = g' { " Plus” Radio, famdas for vast distance i e 3 - range; split-hair selectivity and vuperb . | ; S eal oy 3 . aver! . : ;g Less tone — ;‘\OV\ dreater than sver! ' B Tibes £ L L ‘ , « : , , with SEW TYPE 262 i 1 3 - 8 tubes, including rectifier. ‘!4s2‘(?“‘o- l?} namic dpeaker { NewTypeElectro-Dynem- | At last, a Dynamic Speaker | lc Speaker. ' . that gives you the high notes as well | Push-Pull Amplification, as the pleasing lows. No unnatural ‘ o . . - rumbling no blurred tones. Speech | No Aerial Needed i -clear and distinct. And tremiendons | All Elecfri?: émfiel : | volume without distortion. | Alte ; ely dry. i - ‘ . 4 Exquisite Console Modals, i Free Home Demonstration Neutrodyne-Plus. | EASYTERMWIS Jlr Youlocidetofiny | Come In— Hear It—No Obligation 0. G. Bowen and Edmond Fritz

- . JORG'S | ee i o Ligonier Hatchery BLOOD et / BABY TESTED X 07 ssd\- CHICKS vamensti |(R g | e White Leghorns, Brown Leghorns, Barred and White Rocks, Rhode Island Reds, Buff Orpington and White Wyandottes. Th_'e chicks are produged from high quality. Heavy laying flocks, Closely culled for Size, Health and Vigor, also Blood Tested of Bacillary White i . Diarehea Custom Hatching 3c per egg Spend your chick “dollar on VALUE not CHANCE., - Price right. Qufality »un§urpassed. - - LIGONIER HATCHERY chone 502, e s e e Ry Tors Mo

‘O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, - Water Systems, Etc. -~ Well Drilling Phone 333 - LIGONIER

'VERN B.FISHER | Sanitary Plumbing . and Heating | Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

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

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If it Is results you want you should use this paper. It circulates in the majority of homes fn the community and has always been,, considered 5 The Family The grown-ups quarrel about it, the children cry forit, and the whole famlly reads it from cover to cover. They will read roux ad if you placs t before them in the proper mediym,