Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 20A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 June 1929 — Page 3
‘ %. By Y& 2 RAWIO CIRCUIT e : / / -& \\‘ : : 7 A . _ L 5 ) ‘ [ —_ & ) amassngly DIFFERENT Za ...a TRUE SPARTON | ~ 50 Sl ooy 18952 BN » | 'i;,Q\\’/{y“Ei_é‘_\. 'f ElG}rrtubes; dynamic speaker; - EEHRIS ’:-;\'s%’:“l,-;1l‘;::!‘-jg,‘ Wl two power tubesin push-pull; & 'u}_\ R e E?"nj..‘_ & ik all-electricoperation ...! Here,at ; l}[;_@f;} eE (? (Wil a price that is astoundingly low, B RE RN Rl is a Sparton EQUASONNE that A s’tk‘y"f"*"~’ b ki dio histo ‘ "{}' !é‘ \H:-‘{-'%&' Al is making ra‘ o history. il ol Model 930 is the instrument you ‘ Eee=—9> =] bave hoped and planned 10 own )T | & some day It brings “Radio’s H g t W Richest Voice” within the means A % ) of all. Hear it... tryit... and 00" ¥ the first thrilling notes will be a i} The NEwsPARTON & revelation. B\ EQUASONNE - : MODEL 930 Kiester Electri ' iester Electric Shop Lincoln Way West Ligonier “Radio’s Richest Voice” .
Eyes Examined Glasses Fitted Dr. J. S. Wellington representing the Meigs Optical Shops of Goshen, Ft. Wayne and South Bend will be at Binks Jewelry Store EVcry Thursday; afternoon and Evening. All advice and glasses are backed by Indianas largest Optical Organization. i ’ = ,»\ [ sL_‘l.«b; =5 Reliable service thru-out ln.diana
Now 1s the time to pay your Banner subscription—DO IT NOW!
; ‘This Tire, When Sold For @ Passenger Car Use, Will Be / FOR ONE YEAR ; ' Against 4§ ACCIDENTS BRUISES ; | « FMTS RIM CUTS . . BLOWOUTS : e WHEEL UNDES: @ »2IGNMENT INFLATION \'Es . fi;@« Y T Seiberling Protected S AQ"‘;{ Service Corporation t:is e '.'.:4:f;:;;:;'ffZizfjf‘:.;:;:~fi:; , : » 3 f.::'”- ok \ 1% L R @ N Q} NN T | ~.;;;-‘:;,_ / _:;;;553:1".I;Z;;;:;;:_@.,fltk:gig "-i;::::g.;:{:;;3;3;E;?;?;:‘?:S;:,%;:;:;:;:;.;:;;:;;:,:::;:§;§$5§£?€;Z;E.E;5;;::::;5;5*:1;;'~;555§;§§‘;.::;ng-.'-&' B\ IR\ TP ) B 353.11:\,1;:-:2?:‘2?5 /ey oPeIRO R B et NX NG NT e F R ACAEAE % b =555355'5=' P N N e gl -fool RSR S EER A ANI R ---*'.;555‘5:'5:'5;’:5:;‘.;3?5-§ SETE Ivlvl vl SRR G GTAT N ['/ RN ?255:5:;::.\';"\:593155555_3 AN SN TR PN RSR £ T 2 .c'*/ Igl ,"*“?51:':5:;:; & EER LA LI ETTN S éfsf:'(..:"ésfsf-:ffs:s:séisi.-'-‘%-...:::::::'??" MRNG ' G KB Y oA ™ XXX /"'J i P LA e Y \""\ g -\ fir?{??:ff:?"-’:":"'_".:,.;.;.';:ff-f;,:gl‘??f;t‘ s . i oSSR S «. £ g *"",,,nf'(//: 7/ LI P A W A | Y o VT e R Al IR BPR :
Kiester Electric Shp
| $lO,OOO Damage at South Bend . Kire starting from a spark in silk Iloss destroyed the Mid-West Mattress Co., 1118 Mishawaka anvenue the Powell restaurant 1116 Mishwaka avenue and caused considerable damago to the South Bend Awning compiuny which adjoins the mattress company on the east Thursday afternoon: Total damage in the three places involved pr#bably - will amount to $lO,OOO, part of which is covered by insurance. The . Mattress company building owned by Carl Wade was insured for $3,000. L " Mr. and Mrs. Wade and their three children who lived in an apartment in the rear of the building were homeless following the blaze. ' . Osceola Man Beaten and Robbed William Bondurant real estate agent living alone at Osceola was beaten and robbed of $2O his watch and a revolver at 10 o’clock Wednesday night by two men who knocked at his front door to ask.for water for their car. They received it and was returning the pail in which the water was poured Bondurant was attacked. - He received several ugly gashes about his head which required several stitches. Unconscious on the floor, the thieves proceedéd to ransack the home and enteréd the rooms where they scattered qolothing and bedding about in search for money. Rziy S. Lantz of Ligonier and Emma A. Miller of Wolcottville have heen Mcensed to wed in LaGrange >
261 AWARDED DIPLOMAS
Large Crowd Gathers at (ounty Seat | For Eighth Grade Commencement ’ and Field Day Thursday With * ideal weather prevailing a ;large crowd of residents from’ all parts 'of the county commenced pouring into g.‘\lbion along al] routes early Tbursday" !,morning for the annual commence;mom exercises of the county schools 'held under the direction of Miss Roma !Milnm- county school superintendent. There were 261 students to receive jth(rir diplomas at the commencement fsw-vices -which started at 10:15. | Robert Ross educator and noted ispeaker of Monticello gave the commencement address. The Albion band ‘had a prominent fimrt in the program ;and their concert preceded thé open{ing of the exercises in the morning. } The afternoon was devoted to the iamnml county. field day with most jof the schools entering teams. l F‘oll(ni:ing is a list of nearby gradulates:
i Elkhart township-—-Glen Reiden'bach, Marie Poppy, Howard Weaver, ‘Marcile Schwab, Wallace Piggott, Don /Poppy, Coy Franks, Carrie Tice, Deltbert Gardd, Cecil Smith, Herman Ed{ward Yeager, Virginia Cripe, Joyce | Frick, Mary Blanche Frick, William FHunter, Edna Peterson, Bernard Boyd, Ralph Stoops, Vera Emmert, Dale ‘Stoops, Velma K. Emmert, Naomi ‘Eherly. Lillian Jacob, Roman L. Hun{ter, Vernon Russel Poyer. :
| Derry township—Milton Shuder, Ne{va Shuder, Stanley Ecker, Margaret | RHewitt, Helen Brill, Delois Gangwer ; .-\lhm‘r‘Stromzui’, Henry Wolf, Ells-lwm-th I’({tt‘x's()ll'. Maurice Fisher, Mary ilmt‘oum. ‘Marceil. Huff, Dewayne J. |Johns, Chester Wolf, George Moore. Sparta township—JLoran Heffner, Dorothy Bordner, Frederick A. Shock, Carroll Faunsnaugh, Everett Baker { Raymond Hobbs, Fred Johnston., Jenynie Brazel. Charles -Michael, Deloss ‘.\laggert, Myrl Leamon, Dennis Brown, Helen Knox. Elwood Mortison, Ernes’[ine Gatns, Dallas Arther, Franklin 1 Leamon Don Brown, Robert LeCount, !Kat,hryn Henny, Besie Marie Byrd, !‘Lnis Moore, Adrain Archer; Stanley Connor. ; :
York Township—Katherine M. Bair, George Buckles, Kenneth Baker, Elizabeth Hover, Norman J. Noe, Velma Murphy, Eugene Stanger, Dorothy Lucile . Weeks, Paul Black, Karl Ken} neth Bowman, John C. Palmer.
Albion Wins Field Meet.
Albion high school won the track and field meet held Thursday afternoon as ap art of the annual county commencement exercises. The hub athletes scored a total of 36% points, to win firet place. Ligonier was second with 18 points and Wolf. Lake was third with 6.. There was no team entered from Kendallville but all other schools of the county had representatives in the meet. :
One of the largest crowds in the history attended the field day and the commencement exercises with Robert Noss of Monticello delivering the special address. Miss Roma Milnor county superintendent of schools presented the diplomas to the 261 graduates.” The' Albion band furnished 8 L . : music during the day and played a special concert Thursday night. ;
Child Killed by Eseaping Gas
Charles Verdanwen 5 is dead and his father Jules 31 and his brother Alfred 3 are in a critical condition at South Bend as the result of gas which escaped from a broken hose eonnection and filled the Verdauwen home.
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
,”Ndvcr' “Take Medicine, e - Pharmacist, 84, Urges y In one of the oldest parts of Rome (one of she oldest cities in the world) is to be found the oldest pharmacy in Italy, presided over by the oldest pharioacist of Italy. Founded in the -Sixteentl: century by monks, it was operated under religious auspices until 1730, when it came into the fjossession of the Prato family, which has eondiicted the pharmacy from that day to thi#—2oo yeurs in a single family. The store furniture amd all the equipmeant are centuries old, Presiding over this venerable establishment in the Plazza della Maddalena is Dr. RecoleScaletta, who at eighty-four years ot age is rounding out bis sixty-second year of service there. Doctor Scaletta works 14 hours dally, as he has for three-score years. So vigorous is Doc tor Scaletta thut one would think him twenty years younger than his actual age. Asked for his formula for longevity and good health, Doctor Scaletta genially replied that his first principle i# never to tuke medicine! He drinks a half liter of wine and smokes two clgars daily. “Eat heartils and take a bath daily” is another of the coun: sels of this veteran pill dispenser in an establishment which might well be one of the =ights of the Eternal city.
Secret of Silk Was | Long Kept in China Although silkworms are now cultlvated in many parts of the world in order !o obtain the lovely product which they ‘make, #f one time the secret of producing this cloth was known only in China, where it was jealously guarded. ' - Raising silkworms was a great industry in China as many as 2600 years before the Christian era. Try as they might, other nations were unable to learn the secret of making the fine clofth. But, according to the story, a faithless Chinese princess finally betrayed her country by carrying with her to India some of the eggs of the sßk-moth and the seeds of the mulberry tree ‘upon which 1t fed, concealed in her headdress. From India the secret gradually spredd to the west, although it did not reach Europe until the Sixth century.
Old Records in Danger
The parish churches of England, long the hunting grounds of persons interested in genealogy, and their agents,” have suffered so much from such bands that steps are being taken to save their records. °These church records go back to the reign of Henry VIII, and until 1840 they were the only records of births, marriages, baptisms and deaths. Con stant handling of these records, says The Pathfinder Magazine, has damaged themn, - Not only that, but un. scrupulous: genealogists have not hesitated to tamper with them, making alterations to :suit their -desires. Church officiais declare-that . most ef the persons coming to “examise the parish records are mongy seekers. <A large proportion of “tliem.dre ‘Amert., CRDs.
London Mayor Busy Maa
The lord mayor of Loandon presides over one square mile ef territory, for that is the extent of the “city.” With. in its boundaries are situated the bank of Hogland and oher great financial ingtitutions, There are some 1,%00 policemen detailed to guard the district, #0 criminals give it & wide berth. The lord mayor receives as much pay as the President of the United States and is the highest-salaried magistrate in the world. In ome year he attended 180 public dinners, 85 receptions, 36 meetings and delivered 1,100 :mpeeches.
Birds Eadanger Airplanes
The United States War department onge more has called attention to the - danger of collision ‘with birds by ' night-fiying airplanes. In recent ma.nemuvering in the dark a formation of observation machines eneountered a flock of wild ducks. One bird hit the - wheel of Capt. Ress ‘G. Hoyt, spinning ‘& violently. Had ome or more of the 'birds struck a prepeller the conse- . quences might have been serious.— World’s Work.
valldeVille Community The- ‘ ‘UiCatre, Syractse Ind All Week Starting June 10 Big Magic and Mystern Show. ... Prince Omwah & Company Crystal Seer ; ¥ P . : L M 3 L ‘ g : TH. Ry | = e R The man who telfi all--Ragayog or Dharma, the eriginal East Ind: —Concentrations. No -one knows what you ask. .All .questions free a the theatre. Original seftings and Beautiful Costumes. Different Show - Each Night—Card ..Manipulations Chinese, Japanese.. Hindo and Persian Magic Believe no one—Ceme and see for : yourselves—lt's Different Also-Moving - Pietures—Two Programs | at the price of one ' | Admission 15 and 85 Cents
[ Christian Science Services - “God the Only Cause ~and. Creator was the subject of the LessonSermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist on Sunday June 9. Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: **And behold, there was a man which had his hand witheredd. And they asked him saying Is it lawful to heal on the sabbath days? that they might accuse him. And he said unto them, What man shal] .there be among you, that shall have one sheep, and if it fall into a pit on the sabbath day will not lay hdld on it, and lift it out? .. How much then is a man better than a sheep? Wherefore it is lawful to do well on the sabbath days: Then saith he to the man, Stretch forth thine hand. And he stretched it forth; and it - was restored whole, like as the other!” (Matt. 12-10-13).
The Lesson-Sermon ‘also included the following passages from the Chrisian Science textbook f‘Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy:
“To admit that sickness is a condition over which God has no control, is to presuppose that omnipotent power is powerless on some occasions” (p. 182 “Our Master treated error through Mind. He never enjoined obedience to the laws of nature if by these are meant laws of matter Inor did he use drugs. There is a law of God applicable to healing and it is a gpiritnal law instead of material” (p. 463 . ) ;
To Patrol Roads Again
Alll automotive -traffic along the Dunes highway, U. S. Road 12 and U. 8. 20 the main entry between Chicago and Michigan will be:patrolled for corn borers this year, Frank N. Wallace state entomologist announced.
. A vigid gquarantine will be muintained along the Dunes highway to prevent entry of corn borers into Illinois. now that the pests have sprepd to that section, Wallace said. Receht failure of both Indiana and Michigan to enact clean-up legislation will increase necessity for a clogse watch he added.
Marriage license.
-Charles E. McCune 25, teacher of Avon Lake, Ohio to Xena Martin 25 teacher of Rome City. Russell Weaver 21 truck driver ot South Bend to Lottie Louise Blake 22 of Ligonier on May 29. : William Gushua 23, press feeder of South Bend to Audrey Dellinger 25 of Ligonier on June 1, Ernest B. Lawbaugh 27 ‘machinist, of Crown Point to Esther J. Rathke 19 of Ligonier June 1. -
Po The Public
I will hold another community sale in three or four weeks with the date announced later. George D. Foster,
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These Cars All Carry A Thirty-Day Guarantee
SPRING C‘-‘g‘-c ' OFGOOD USED CARS
Some of the greatest Used Car values we have ever offered Due'td the tremendous popularity of the new Chevrolet Six —we haVe had traded in to us an unusually large number of good used cars. We are going to dispose of this stock in a sensational spring clearance sale. Come in! You will find the most remarkable used car values ever offered in this town. Many makes and body types. Some of the very latest 1928 models that are practically like nmew. Every car has been thoroughly inspected. Many of them have been completely reconditioned and carry the famous red “O. K. That Counts”’ Tag* Spring is just around the cornef-——and now is the time to get the car you want—at a price that will save you money. Come in TODAY—while you have such a wide ~ selection to choose ffom.
Lincoln-Chrevolet, Inc. G.T. Whittaker, Prop.
Phone 145
k. Jacobs & Co., Inc.
| We have received several ot ot New Spring Dresses This added to our already larg.et stock gives you very large selections of this seasons be: utifull newest styles to choose from. Special price reductions of 10 per cent on all Dresses for the next ten days. . : 9 Closing out coats at 25% ‘ reduction " Rugs at greatly re- ~ duced prices _ E. Jacobs & Co., Inc. Lacies’ Ready-to-Wear, Hats, Dry Goods, Rugs l
: > Icc-efl-i")f- pertetion : : S 5 E\’E‘fiLEJ T ‘ ~ at these Used Car values 1927 CHEVROLET COACH Duco finish like new. Mecharnteally perfeét, Five good tires and Bumpers front ‘and rear. WITH _AN OK THAT COUNTS 1926 FORD COUPE Mechanically in the very best condition, Good rubber, and paint. Cléan inside and out. : WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS 1926 ESSEX COACH Five gbod tires, Bumpers, finish like new, Upholstery clean and in the very best shape and mechanically first clags.- - WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS 1926 OVERLAND SIX COACH This car has been thouroughly check and is in first class condition inside a_nd out Good rubber and paint. 'WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS 1926 YOR TON TRUCK Good grain body and cab. Tires like new and new paint. Priced to sell. .WITH AN OK THAT COUNTS - - All the above cars have been checked by our factory trained mechanics and must be as we recommend them. Small down payments or a used car of the down payment value. Balance IGMAC easy terms, the cheapest financing Company known. : Open evenings aund Sundays until noon
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