Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 13A, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 April 1929 — Page 2

et eil o e . e . | The- Ligonier Panner - Established 1856 ‘ Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. - W..C. B. lHarrison, Editor -~ _ M. A. Cotherman, Manager ' ————————— ———————————————— Puhlished every Monday and Thursday and eul%red the Posioffice at Ligonier, indiana,” as second class matter. : Injured in Auto Crash, Mrs, Delbert Phillips of ‘LaGrange was painfully and seriously injured when the Dodge sedan in which she and Mr. Phillips were riding was struck by a tourist’s car from Cleveland, ()hin; on Road twenty about seven miles east of LaGrange. . Mr. PPhiflips was driving and as he ‘drove onto Itoad 20 from the north tailed to scé the rapidly approaching car from the west. The Cleveland car struck the rear of the P:hillips Mt~ chine smashing the fendér and one avindow. Mrs. Phillips was sitting iu the rear seat and the flying glass caused a deep gash in her head another in her elhow and one in her hand. A physician wad called at once but the injured woman wasi greatly : weakened from the loss of blood before surgical aid reached her: : Best For College Préparation That students conring to Harvvard Univeérsity from public 'schools are Iretter prepared for college than, stndents from private or "l'm‘(_n'in;."‘ schools is indicated hy a study recent v made at the nniversity of the re cords of treshinen: students. in -the classes of 1929 and 1930 it wns found that 436 men in the class of 1929 who eéntered as I'|'v\’l'mls§h from “public schools 102 obtained ranka which gave them places on the dean s list, and 60 had unsatistactory vecords Of 411 freshmen in the same class who came from private schools 53 “were put on the dean’s list, and 92 had unsatistactory records.” In the class of 1920 the number of freshmen slu‘(hn‘n’s ‘who- entered « from gmiblic schools was® eight more than the num lwrf(\l',l‘:)7‘;';!.\“\oll who entered tfom privite schools, but the number of tliose (~i,)1hi11:: trom public schgols who at the end of their freshman year were . placed in the first 3 _A_urjpnps of the rank list. was greater by 54 than ihe nnmht»:}:' of (l\(\.\'u whd came from private schools. It was further found that public schoo] men in this group contribnted 58 fewer 41\1(191)1‘9 to the number of those whg had unsatisfactory records and 1%:'0\\'011 to those "~ whose connection"witlf !.h(‘é('()“(*gt' was " gevered. Of the 4% men who in 1927 entered the freshmen class from tutoring schools,; 2 were placed on the dean’ list, 20 made nrisuli%:l'uctury records, and 12 had Th‘eilgl‘umnuvlion with the college severéd. ™ ; : ~ Te Write Story of His Lire Former Gov. Alfred K| Smith of New York is to write the §tmj\' of -his life it has been :ninnum:od,_ to run serially in the Saturday Evening Post Afterward it will be published in book - form. : Just how much he is to receive for the work was not made public, but it - Is_to be a “substantial sum.” Mrs. Henry Moskowitz Mr. Smith's press _ rem'esemativ‘é smiled a denial at the i report that it was to he $2 a word,

Goshen Men Honored (ioshen figures rather prominently in the affairs of the South Bend Kuife and Fork club for the coming year, Judge Orlo k. Deahl of the St. Joseph superior court No. 2 having hwm named president and Martin J. Schnur a director, Lloyd E. Greenan secretary and treasurer who is related at Goslien was re-elected. U, S. Senator Barkley of Kentucky was the chief speaker Tuesday night. : Organize Gun Club. : Preliminary plans were started for the organization of the. Kendallyil]e Rifle - Pistol Club at a meeting held at the Noble County Bank. There were more than twenty names on a list of prospective members and. it is prob-. able that additional names will be added at a second meeting to he held -this evening at the same place. : i Using Gasoline Cars. " . In the interest of etonom.: the N: Y. €. railway has instilled electrogasoline cars to repiies sdufént the lighter local passenger trains on some of its lines. The curs arve 5 feet long and divided info cmz;n;ntinents for the motorman, smcker, passengeis mail and express IRev are capable of a speed of 8) milles an hour. , Visit Home Folks ; Mrs. John 'Seag'ley and (laughrer% and Mrs. Emmitt Herr and: son of South Miltord were guests of their mother Mrs. E. D. Mclntire, last Wednesday. : : South Bend. Man Killed i Edward Gatz 25 was almogt instant—i lv killed shortly betore 5 o’(;flm'k Wednesday night when he was struck by a sedan driven by Chesly L. Wolfe 31 at South Bend. ; ] Hoime From (alifornia. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Sinon Gemberling custodians of the Ligeonier tourist camp, are home after sfiencl.ing the winter in California. : {1 ’ e o BD See and hear Bradley Kincaid the} mountain boy from WLS at Crystal tonight, : e | » SO AN 1 A CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY ~ Services in Weir Block. ' ~ BSunday school 9:46 A M. Lm& 30n Sermon 11:00. A. M. ~ Everybody welcome. Lo

PERCH ELGS FOR l.\‘(‘l'll-,\'.l‘lflx - 150 Quarts Being Hatehed By State Fish And Game Division For State - - Streams st Artificial hatching of 150 qu'a“rt.s of pike-grch eggs is being completed by rher.ish and game wavden of the siae «-unsel'\':!lion'«l(*pm'!.m('n,lles 4 means of stocking lakes of the state. The cges were obtained from outside the state as there are not .enough fish of these species in the state. ; . Fifty-one quarts «‘:t"eggs'mi» under incubation at the Riverside hatchiery in Indianapolis and 94 guarts are heing. hateched at €olumbia City. The consignment contains aboul 22 006 000 eges and a waximum hatceh is 6p) per cent according to George M. Mannfeld,. director of the fish and game division. . : ““The eggs will start\hatching i 18 dayvs and a week later the voung ("r_\' will .be dsitributed. The action is taken hecause it is ‘Enumssihl«fm rear them all to the fingerling stage and because they are cannabalistic and will start eating each other if not pro‘\'id«'q with mmu,‘;]f food. o . Several million yellow perch also are being artificially propagated and the five state hatcheries this spring will raise several hundred thousand black bass fingerling. The department has several hundred parent fish for thig purpose. In 1928 43‘\',‘)00 bass fingerlings were raised and distributed The value of the hateh was approximately $44.SOO, e i ‘ ~ Legion Convention at LaGrange Thursday afternoon and evening of this week some two hundred World War veterans of the TFwelfth district are expected to assemble in JaGrange for the district April meeting. The LaGrange menibers of the Aner ican Legion post are bending efforts to rovally (311[01"1;1i11 their buddies there on that date. A husiness meeting will be held in the :it‘tg*rnm)n at the Legion home and in the evening at :30 o'clock the Masonic dining room will =be the scene of a hunqu(*t and program. Rum-Running Airplane Nabhed The first rum-runing airplane ever to be captured at Indianapolis was in the hands of Sheriff George 1,. Winkler Friday. ; ' A case of alleged whisky which was found where it h;ul‘h‘gén dumped from :fliw plane was held as evidence while anthorities’ sought for the piloth * ~ The sheriff started on the train of itlw aerial bootlegger whenshe was tipped off by telephone that a load of Eliquur was heing trzmsi;vrrcd from fl}g plane to an antomobile. : ! prissial ) | Ends Lite After Argument r Believed to !E.uve heen despondent following an argument with his wife, E(‘qnn'mf Gerrard 45 Clay ‘township Cass county trustee committed suicide ?nmir Logansport by firing three shots !im(» his chest. - o . The body was discovered in. the 'hufil'n.\'.‘n‘(’f of the man's home three !-hitllet,s having pierced his chest. A ;smull automatic revolver was found near the body.

Clinie Held in Wawaka

Twentyv-tfive persons applied for examination at a clinic held Wednesday afternoon at the school house in Wawaka under the auspices of the Noble County ~ Tuberculosise society. There iwere Tive re-examinations; 6 suspected tuberculars; 9 cases where the doctors recommended removal of tansils and one inactive Case. Another clinic will be held in the near future at Kendallville.: ;

Fierce Dogs Maim Calves

Sheep-killing dogs of the ferocious tvpe gol into a bunch of eight calves on the Emory Church farm in Wells _('mimty'and so hadly wounded one that M. Church had te }mo(-k it in the head to [put it out of its misery. The dogs hull fm'n the calf about the nose until thé‘ teeth were exposed had tore the hamstring and the side of the calf un?il the stomach was exposed. The otlfer seven all show marks of the doish g :

H - Farmer Suicides li&vlieved to have been despondeunt heql'ause of ill health Charies Hutchens GT;\\'%Mh,\' Henry county farmer comimi‘led suicide at his home near New- | cagsle by, hanging. : | | he body suspended by a rope from | a datter in his barn was discovered by ’his young sof. o . ‘ | Test Store Tax Law. uit to enjoin the state tax board 11‘:‘( m administering the Store Licens%in{ act passed by the last legislature {was filed in federal court at Indianaipolis by Lafavette A. Jackson proprie{tor] president of the Standard Grocery ,!('O. operm\fng-z% stores in ludianaipol?s. _ : I o i e - . L Borger (Calls Meeting @ . { . 0. V. Borger of near Ligonier has ](f;illed a meeting for the town folks to be held in the Benton Community ihall Monday evening April 22. Thls {meeting.is to be of value to each home las the subject will he “Fire ‘Protection " : P - Neek (Chicken Thieves, L Goshen police officers are searching for the thieves who Thursday night stole more than 100 chickens from farmers west of Ligonier. , e dimidi oy | LaGrange Man Honored, ~ Dr. A, J. Hostetler of LaGrange has been re-appointed as a member of the state board of health by Gov. Leslie. ~ Bradley Kincaid from WLS tonight at Crystal. '

EDUCATIONAL PREPARATION A Death-Knell Sounded for Guesswork and Slipshod Methods by Advancing Technical Proficiency in Finance, Trade and Industry—How Banks: Are Developing a Professionally Qualified o Generation of Younger Bankers. . - By HAROLD STONIER , American Bankers Association THF. great school of Experience is still holding classes in America, but the scientific spirit of the age has so generally invaded the workshops of industry and trade that they .~ have largely become technical research aud

SO I I ISP RAR 4 ‘> b .‘_:'_,. : : :gé 4"%' g % e % B i 25 . S A BB % e AN <35 o \’?" 4 .75;2'&?‘ = ‘F;?-/ ¢ e o seod g SR ; -z © A s whiing WD N TN HAROLD STONIER

finance are virtually essential to outstanding success in these fields, \as it is already an absolute prerequisite in the various recognized professions. This is not to depreciate the vaiue of

native abhility and experience in busi: ; ness, hut education after all is merely | a means for helping the individual to | apply the net good of the accumulated | experience of many to his own day’s l work—a means for helping special native ability to come into its own ' more rapidly and surely. and for. en- | abling all classes of ability to gain the 1 maximum of success to which they | are entitled. o ’| These facts are plainly recognized by practical, work-a-day business in every line. Every progressive business ,organization in America is emphasizing the importance of education as never before, Education has come to be looked upon as the answer to many of the problemg within the organization as well as to problems affacting industry.as a whole. v : Businessp Organizing Institutes ; Instimte:gor developing specifically qualified workers are being operated or organized in many fields of commercial and industrial activity., These institutes are trving various types of educational work with a distinet trend toward more and more efi\phasis upon education for the rank and file of businesg employees of all grades. We have been having' business failures in this country at the rate of about 2,000 a month, This score speaks for itgelf. It is gliring evidence of incompetence on the part of thousands of business men in handling the problems inherent in their flelds of endeavor. The detailed records show that practically’ 75¢, of business failure in this country is due to lack of training and competence on the part of those who failed. This is concluslve evidence that no one can afford to undertake executive business responsibilities without adeguate sducation and training. It is for that reason that every enlightened business organfzation is today insisting as never before that its employees take advan‘tage of some typ@®of technical trainIng. : : American banking is fortunate and has just cause for pride in that it has a record of twenty-eight vears of definitely organized educational activity -among its workers to its credit for de- ' veloping trained bahkers. People in banks in large numbers are ‘taking advantage of the educational opportupity given by the great non-commercial college of the banking business, the American Institute of Banking. They 'sea on every hand evidences of the ‘yalue of the training it gives. Of the 10,000 graduates of this Institute, 70% now occupy official positions in American banks. The other 309, are still too young to have atfained such heights. Here is an example and. an encouragement to the people of all lines of business. The American Institute of Banking fas a membership of 64,320. Of these 33,851 are clags enrolments, comprising vounger bank people, both men and women, who are learning the sci--entific technique of their chosen business at the same time they are engaged in the practical work of earning their livings at it. The difference between the 33,851 enrolled in classes and the 64,320 total. membership comprises older bankers who have taken the Institute courses in the past or are at the present time sponsoring some type of educational work in the - organization. it . ' Banking Educates Its People * It has been estimated that there are . probably 375,000 bank officers and emr ployees in the United States at the present time. These figures would mean that about one banker in every 3ix is either enrolled: in Institute classes in banking or is actively supporting some educational function of the organization. No statement;could * possibly give more emphasis to the importance placed on education by the ~ banking interests of America than -these facts.- e . This American Institute of Banking

Ligonier Banner o we the'\’fi{“egrk

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

training laboratories in themselves and areno longer run on the old-fashioned cut-and-try methods of former generations when kExperience was considered the only teacher. It-would be hard to find a working force in any pre-eminently successful business or industrial organization in the United States today but what the dominating leadérship is schooled in the scientific principles of i{3 specific field, whether manufacturing, merchandising or finance. The rapidly advancing standards of business in this country, with their relentless demands for efficiency as the only hope for survival in the competi= tive struggle for economic existence. has sounded the death-knell for guesswork and slipshod methods. . As a result, educatjonal preparation in the techniques of commerce, industry and

is the educational section of the Amerlcan Bankers Association. It .was formed twehty-eight years. ago by bank’ employees and officers aud has been carried on ever since as a volunlary organization. Many students who have graduated continue their mewmhership in order to give active support to some type of educational work other than the actual class program. The greater part of the educational work is carried on in 200 cities and towns in the United States. Here the local chapter of the American lnstitute of Banking has its regularly organized courses of study under supervision of the national body with local instruetors and directors to fulfil the standard requirements regarding text material, classwork and examinations. Instructors are recruited from the staffs of leading —universities, from members of the legal profession and from among accountants and -bhaink men who have made a record in some field of activity in banking that marks them as experts. All instructors must be approved. by the national*organizatlon. They are compensated by the local units. The students pay tuition, in which they are frequently aided by their employing banks, and this, together with contributions made by tha "fl‘banfis for general classroom overhead, finances the gducmional program. Education a Pathway to Advancement ‘Leading banks in various parts (_if the country are insisting that tlieir ~employees take work in the Institute. This is frequently a part of their contract of emplovment at the ‘time they enter the bank. It is also ‘now quite generally understood in tha field of American banking that study in the American Institute of Bank: ing is considered one of the basie factors in the promotion of the individual to-a place of importance in a bauk. L : . The Standard Certificate of ‘- the American Institute of Banking is annually gaining a greater and wider recognition among practical Bankers throughout the United States. These certificates are coming to have the same importance in the banking world that certificates of education have in the field of the general professions. This is a practical example and one thoroughly well demonstrated by secasoned experience of the new spirit of American: business. -

ONE COW VS. ONE DOZEN “Why milk twelve poor cows when one good cow will do the work of the twelve?” asks the bulletin of tha American Bankers Association Agricultural Commission. It declares that analysis of more than 100,000 indi vidual yearly records from cows on test in dairy herd improvement associations indicate that on the average: Cows that produced 100 Ibs. butterfat a yvear returned $l4 each over feed -cost; i : : Cows that produced 200 lbs. butterfat . & year returned $54 each over feed cost; : 9 Cows that produced 300 Ibs. butterfat a year returned $96 each over feed . cost; ¥ - % Cows that produced 400 lbs. butterfal a year returned $l3B each over feed cost; <‘ e Cows that produced 500 lbs. hutterfat a year returned $l7B each over feed cost; : : . In other words, one 500-pound pro ducer will return $lO more over feed cost than twelve 100 ib. producers This does. not take into account either, the added labor of milking and caring for the larger herd, or the much greater expense of providing stable room for a dozen instead of a single animal. The figures are baszed on farm prices from all parts of the country. 3 coa ;

Will Hays Files Suit For Divorce - Will H. Hayes prominént as {hs ‘czar qof the movies’ and as former Repnblican national chairman and‘ postmaster-general in President Harding’s cabinet today figured in a divorce suit. L . The suit which was fited at Sullivan by Mr. Haves -against Helen Thomas Hayes gave incompatability as the basis and set out that the “couple had not- been living together for several yvears. _ “ Michael Ed Foley Indianapolis attorney said that a satsfactory settlement had been made and that the son Will H. Jr., age 14 would remain in the custody of his father. ' Hastings Director Of Airerait - Directors of the new Indiana Aircraft Trade Association an organization for “the promotion of commercial aviation in Indiana’” were elected at a meeing at the Indianapolis Chamber of ¢onumerce Thursday night Directors ‘are: Paul 8. Cox. Terre Haute: 1. 'J. Aretlz Lafavete: € E. ’}{astin;:s of Goshen; H. Weir Cook, E. H. Jose and H. C. Brooks Indianapolis J. A. Schrach Gary; C. L. ('()rixish Fort Wavne and B. F. Swain Seymour. i it wes announced the directors wiil elect officers next Thursday 1o which meeting all owners of aireraft in the state will he invited. ’ Veterans of Civil War Dies. Jefferson Mohn a resident of Churues husco died Thursday morning at ‘ten o'clock after a two years’ illness with complications. His wife Sarah Mohn aged 85 died just a week-ago. ; Bradley Kincaid from WLS hmigm at Crystal. . Nofice of Final Settlement. . State of Indiana Noble County ss: In the mafter of the estate of Almena D. Morrow Deceased o No 3180 ’ - odn the Noble Cireuit Court May Term, 1929, ~ Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned s Administrator and adainistratrix ol . {he Kstate of Almena D. Morrow deceased has . filed in sald court his %accnu’ut and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for examination Tan(rl action of said court, at the court house, at Albion, Indiana, on the 13- day of May 1929 at which time !aud place all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court. and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. . - ‘ - f And the heirs, devisees and legatees of said decedent and all others interested in said Kstate, are also hereby requived, at the time and, place aforesaid to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of sajd estate, : | Ray A. Morrow and FElorence Al. Peffley Administrator and Ad- | ministratrix. - - Posted April 13th, 1929, fßot‘ln\'eH & Vanderford, Attorneys. o i L gy

A Legal Reserve Life Insurance Co. offers salary, commission and renewals to a man of character and ability. Correspondence confidential. Address L PEARLE SAUL. Dis't. Magr. 516 E. Broad St., Angola, Ind.

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-Kiester Electric Shop i;cbolnin Way West =~ Phone 481 L : Ligonier, Ind.,

e o WNptice.... = ~ May Ist we will have 1n stock ~ a complete line of Ignition parts for all makes of cas. If yqu - have ignition trouble ee us for ' pa»rls. ; L ‘ ~ Kiester Electric Shop Shop Phone 481 = ' Night Phone 298

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