Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 22A, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 June 1929 — Page 2

The Uigonier Banner .- Established 1866 — : Published by G "THE ! ' NNER PUBLISHING CO. . WoOB Harr,i.»xon.AEditor A\ Cotierman, Manager =

Published every Monday and Thursday and entered the Postoffice at Ligonier. indiana, as second class: matter.

~° (harged With Drawing Gan. Affidavits have: heen filed against Arthur Ervin who resides near Pales tine by James Durham fish and game warden of Warsaw. One is for public intoxication filed I justice court and the other charges Ervin with drawing a dangerous and deadly Weapon. - Mr. Durham said that when he went 10 the Ervin home (iu_";vonxpim;.' with David Rippey unmher:’-*wzu'ri'en, forvin recognized him uml;t()'ld him he was going to get ’his gun and kill. him. He went to the house according to My, Durham and rvlu:'ne(l"with the oun. When the fish warden backed his ear into the road he said_ Ervin followed him and that Mr. Rippey then drew his revolver and ordered Ervin to put down his gun. ! i - Durham had arrestéd Erwin some time ago on a fish law violation, . : Man Without a- Country. “A man without a country’” today was the term placed upon Paul P. Glaser of Gary who has been called red, ('omimm'isl. socialist. bolshevik and anarchist.’ : Fo Glaser who fled from Russiz_: to -escipest¥ranny while Czar Nicholas II wag on the throne has bheen denied re-i-nstatement as a citizen of the United States. As he renounced allegiance to Russia when he became an American citizen Glaser:today is not the citizen of-any country. To Fight License Law. ’,»\pplimlinn for a temporary injunction against enforcement of the ‘chain store license law effective July 1 was to be filed today in federal court at hulianup‘nhs.‘ul'mrm-.\'s for Lafayette A. Jackson owner of two hundred and fifty standard groceries announced. . : R e - S 0 Aceres For Nale Within three milles of Wolcottvillle ten room house, two ‘large barns hog, house two chicken houses other’ outbuildings plenty of fruit. Well ‘fence(l‘ Write 109 So. State St. Kendallville, Indiana. : L A

‘Grants Over 500 Permits John L. Henry in charge of the state auto license bureau in this city has granted over 550 driving permits to applicants theretor which is not many. The drivers license law goes into effect. Monday July Ist. :

~ Legion Plans Street Fair. - A six-day street fair will be held at Angola under the auspices of the American Legion starting July 15. There will be special free acts presented daily. : :

- NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT State of Indiana Noble County 355: i In the Matter of the Estate of o Permelia J. Buckles Deceased | No 3150 7 - . in the Noble CGCircait Court May Adj. Term 1929.. L e Notice is. hereby given that the undersighed .as EKExecutor of. the estate of Permelia J. Buckles deceased has filed in,/ said sourt its account and vouchers in final settie. ment of said Estate, &nd that the same will come up fer the examination and action of said Cecurt at the Zourt House at Aibion Indiana on the 9 day of July 1929 at which time and place all. persuns interested in said estate ave required to appear in said Court and show cause if any there be why said account should not be approved. : » And the heirs, devisees and legatees of said decedent and all others interested in said Estate are 'also hereby required at the time and place aforesaid to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part ot said estate, - State Bank of Kimmell, Executor Posted June 12th, 1929. Lo 21b2w

Home Realty and Investment Co. ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR . LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. J. L. HENRY Manager , City Properties and Farms for sale that will appeal to you, especially when you consider the possibility of future prices. . . - FARM LOANS | . 57§‘FFDERAL LAND BANK FARM LOANBS o/ O with EXCEPTIONAL Privelege Clause 270 | SECURITIES j The Securities that we have to offer, are of the highest type. GRAVEL ROAD, SCHOOL, PUBLIC UTILITY and REAL ESTATE PREFERRED STOCK, all TAX FREE. : ‘ . ~ Official Indiana License Branch Automobile, Truck, Chauffeurs License, Cerlificates of Titles and Transfers. All given special ‘ : - attention.

" THE FORD ! Mcliugh Auto Sales

Under conditions more difficult than those which c,onfronfed -Joifre's infmortal “taxicab army” i its franti dash to the Marne ‘in 1914, Model A Fords swgpt 1o victory in a specially Mn'rang"?d contest based on war emer’genties staged by the military first aid section of the General Finnish Automnbile Association / Competing: against fourteen different makes of “auntomobiles manufactured in the United ‘States-and one Italian made car, the sturdy Fords captured 18 out of 29 prizes Ten of the fourteen “honor prizes” went to the Fords. Every Ford which entered the contest finished the 400-kilometer route. One was driven by a woman.

The purpose of the Finnish Autoniobile Assaciation is to promote allround driving training of its members in order that they may be able to take an active part in war maneuvers in a sudden emergency. Drivers received instnu?t‘inn_s regarding . the. route, parkinz -places, and average speed required “two minates hefore the start of the race.- No restrictions

were placed on the size of the car or evlinder volume, which brought the F‘m'ds into comnpetition with »t'_he more expensive and larger cars. . The race started from Helsingfors and .the cars were started at intervalls of a few minutes in different directions. “Control Stations” were located at various points along the course 1o .check the speed and other requiremens, Repm:t.\- of the outcome of the competition have just been, reteived in this country, .

: THE HUDSOGN HUDSON-ESSEX SALES: Phone 486 s Ligonier, Ind

President W. -J. McAneeny of the Hudson Motor Car Company following the annual stockholders’ ineeting this week announced the ;‘ll)lmfimnent of E. W. Sheldrick to the secretary and a director and €. C. Winningham to be .a director. o

Appointment :of these two men to the directorate j‘nt"eserved the jealousIy gunarded tradition of the company which almost makes it a necessity that the men who direct itlmmust have come up through the ranks. Mr. Sheldrick qualified bv reason of his 18 years' service with Hudson manufa('t.urers of Hudson and Essex cars, while C. C. Winningham's association with the company goes back 20 years. He is president of his own advertising agency, which has handled Hudson advertising since 1909. Prior to that he was Hndson's advertising manager and later director of sales.

Four Persons Iniured

Four yvoung persons F. Ely Current Florence Jackson, Carrie Pharis and Carl W. Stark all of Fort Wayne were quite seriously injured when the car in which they were riding enroute to Rome City turned over on the T-C. Pike four miles west of Kendallville, When taken to Lakeside hospital it was discovered Current had a broken back and the others covered with bruises. o ' :

Pro-Amatear Tournament

The first annual pro-amateur tourna ment will be held at the Tippecanoe Lake Conntry club on Monday July 1 with $l5O in prizes for professionals split three ways $75.850 and $25 and seven dozen goif balls for amateurs, split four. three and two. There is no entrance fee the event being. open to all “pros” and amateurs. A special noon day lunch will be served in the basement of the-club house,

Child Run Over Killed

Father Francis J. Quinn a Catholic priest of Lafayette while motoring-to East Chicago to visit a brother ran over and killed Fred Wright age 2 at Hammond. . The baby was ('l'awling on its hands -and knees in the street having escaped from the lawn in front of its home. The priest said he saw the child too late to avoid hitting him.

1,500 Youths Gather

Fifteen hundred youths. from, Ohioe and Indiana were trooping into Fort Benjamin Harrison to begin their 30 days of training in the citizens’ military training camp.

*HE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIARA

SUICIDE IS CHARGED

Death of Will H. Latta Brings Up Many ~ Complications in Disposition of His Insurance Estate e ‘{‘ontest of payment of $85,000 in ac¢iflent insurance carried by Will H. f.atta lml‘mnabolis attorney, is expected by representatives of the insurance companies it was indicated today. Latta was killed the night of June 12 when the antamobile he was driving was str'\i('k'h& a Monon train near Carmel and an open verdict in the case was returned by Coroner Frank I Evans of-Hamilton county Wednesday after witnesses had testified that the car was standing on the tracks with both headlights and tail light out. | Liability was denied by the Emplovers Liability Assurance corporation with which Latta carried a $30,000 policy. In two letters written to John 8. Hunt, brother-in-law of Latta the company has charged that the death was due to suicide and that circumstances of the death indicate a schieme to defraud. . It also was alleged that Latta made false answers in applying for insurance. ’ The letters of the employers corporation and the policies have been turned over to -Frank C. Dailey at-‘ torney who declared that attempts would be made to collect on the three policies. Suits will be filed to compel linynxem if the. companies indica’te‘ furthér disinclination to pay Mr. Dailey said. ' ' Miss Margaret Sander of Fort Wavne Latta’s fiancee was made the bheneficiary of $40,000 of the accident insurance, Miss Sander and Latta were to have been married in New York last Saturday and Latta had reserved passage to Kurope on the S S. Aquitania for a honeymoon trip. _ Policies in which Miss Sander wag named beneficiary were carried with the United States Casualty company and the Hartford Accident and Indemnity company, S2O‘OHU with each. The $lO.OOO balance of a $30,000 poli¢y carried with the Hartford comwas to go to Depauw-university Green castle of which Mr. Latta was a ara fduate and a trustee. = o ' Other beneficiaries were relatives of Mrs. Latta who died two years ago. They are two nephews and a niece.

Purdue Specialist at Albion.

Miss Blanche Zarin extension specialist of Purdue University will meet with the Home . Pm‘nishings_ project leaders next Wednesday June 26 at 10.00 A. M. in the county agents office. This will be the third project leaders meeting of the year, to which each township organization is entitled to ‘'send two leaders. In addition to the project some time will be given at .this. meeting for discussion of ex’hihits at the Kendallville Fair.

rFank Current Dies

_Frank Current 24 of Fort Wayne who was seriously injured late Wednesday night near Kendallville 'in an automobile wreck died at 6:40 o’clock Thursday evening at the St. Joseph hospital. His death ‘was acused. by three broken vetebrae of the hack and injuries. %o his head. : ‘He was taken to Fort Wayne Thurs. day morning from the Kendallville hospital. '

Indiana Dry Goods Men Elect

The Indiana Retail Dry Goods association at the closing session of its annual convention at LaPorte elected F. W. Sanger of Peru president; A. A. Leiter Connersville, vice-president; F. M. Avers Indianapolis secretary-trea-surer and W. E. Balch Indianapolis manager Directors included Dan Niblick, Decatur; C. E. Smith Evansville D. Eldridge South Bend and J. Levine LaPorte. :

Ends Official Career.

Twenty-four vears’ continuous service as ‘a detective for the Indiana Bankers association will be brought to a.close this month by Captain Harry C. Webster who will leave with his wife to reside with their two sons in Detroit. ' Webster is well known throughout Indiana. .

Bank Robbed Western Style

Posses were threading their way today through swampy bottom lands near Caney Oklahoma in search of the old-fashioned holdup men who robbed the Caney bank of $2,194.65. The *bandits galloped into fown three abreast on horses. They clean ed out the bank and were gone in a few minutes. e

Boy 7 Falls 60 Feet

- Earl Lytle seven year old son of Mr, and Mrs. Dewey Lytle of Kokomo is in a hospital in a critical condition as the result of injuries suffered in a fall down a 60 foot wall into a stone quarry near his home, He suffered a fractured. skull, fractured ribs and possibly internal injuries.

Huntington Man Drowns

Losing his footing on the slippery apron of a dam in St Joseph rive: north of the Tennessee bridge at Fort Wayne Edward White 29 of Huntington fell into the river and drowned beore his companions could pull him out, b :

Bitten by Horse

The nine-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob J. C. Miller, of near Middlebury was painfully injured when a horse which she was hitching to a buggy bit off a portion of her lip. . . e ;

People Interested

In a six weeks kindergarten beginning July Ist call Elizabeth Hire 195 or Isabelle Taylor 28. G

’ g , ! Moles Long Cherished as Marks of Beauty - For centuries, it would seem, moles - have been considered a real mark of beauty. The truth af the matter fs, . of course, that some people with moles are ravishingly lovely to look at, and some are as ugly as they can be, Wyatt, a poet and artist of the court of Henry VIII, says of Anne Boleyn, “Likewise there were said to be upon . certaln parts of her body small motes, “ Incldent to the clearest complexions.” ~ Certain it is that Anne Boleyn had a lovely ccmplexion and the courtiers of the time referred to her as “fresh and young.” Santa Teresa’'s three “moles have »come down' in history and sa far from being looked upon as a blemish on her beautiful face, they were consid--ered a contribution to her beauty. The biographer leaves nothing to our im~agination and tells us. that “she had “three moles on her left cheek which became her much—one below the bridge of the nose, another between her nose and mouth and a third below her mouth.”

Skates of Bones Used in Ancient Britain Skates were not always made of iron or steel. According to Fitzstephen’'s “History of England,” it was cus tomary for young men in the Twelfth century to fasten the leg bones of animals under their feet by means of thongs and. slide on the ice, pushing themselves along by means of an iron shod pole. Specimens of the primi tive skates hive been found from time to time in the marshy fields near London. o Just who invented skating is-not known. Holland, with its extensive water surfaces, is sometimes looked upon as the birglxl)lace of the sport. But the Twelfth-century bone imple ments are said to indicate that there were some followers of the sport in England before the Dutch spread it abroad in the Thirteenth century. In Twelfth-century England the skaters on bone are said to have jousted at each other as in a tournament.

A Review of Reviews

Measuring backward by the breadth of one or more centuries, 1928 was notable for the number of its memorial observances. : Men of letters seem to have claimed most of such attention during the past 12 months, while music, art, philosophy, statecraft and exploration each have been singly represented in the list. By means of gencral observance, or by:more or less restricted attention, the people have been brought to recall the achievements of John Bunyan, Ibsen, Jules Verne, Tolstoy, @eorge Meredith, Edmund Burke, William Tyndale, Captain Cook, Francisco Goya, Dante, Gabriel Rossetti, Franz Schubert and Oliver Goldsmith.

Fever Carried by Goats

Malta fever, or, more technically, undulant fever, epidemic along the Mediterranean coasts, particularly on the Island of Malta, is carried by goats. It is common in the United States, principally in Texas, where goats are raised. Recently Dr. Edward Francis contracted the disease. He also was a vietim of “‘rabbit fever” (tularemia), named after Tulare county, Calif., where, in 1910, it was*first identified. Doctor I'rancis isolated the germ of the latter, and the ailment’is known among the medical profession as Francis disease.

Weighs Half of World’s Gold More than half of the gold produced in the world is now passed through the weighing rooms of a refinery at Germiston, near Johannesburg, South Africa. Unrefined blocks of the yellow metal are placed on scales in dust-proof cases by the official weigher to be recorded before going to the refining plants. Latest available figures show that of nearly $400,000,000 worth of gold produced in the world in a year $200.000,000 comes from the Transvaal. -

Wouldn’t Need a Horn

A couple of cute young ladies who were visiting a western city decided -that they would go horseback riding, we are told, and the head groom asked one of them whether she would prefer ‘the flat English saddle or the western ‘saddle with a horn. “The flat saddle,” sald the young thing,*® “because we -aren’t going to ride in any traffic and won’t need a horn.”—New Yorker.

They All Dol

A mother who had been explaining .the meaning of “turning over a new 'leaf” to her small son found him teas‘ing his little sister. . “Bobbie,” . she said, reproachfully, ‘%] thought you were going to turn ‘over a new leaf?” ; “So I did, mummy, but it got crumpled !” :

A Slight Misunderstanding “What's -the chatter?” inquired .grandfather. © T am trying to recite the Greek :alphabet,” answered the. schoolboy. “I'm glad to hear it. I thouglt you ‘were practicing the chorus of a new ‘popular song.” :

Remembrances

“We enjoyed hearing you speak,” remarked the loyal constituent. “Could you remember anything | said?” inquired Senator Sorghum, “Oh, yes! Several of your humorous anecdotes we have remembered through long years past.”

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Services in Welr Block. SBunday school 9:46 A M. Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. - Everybody welcome.

‘Now 18 the time to pay your Banner subscription—DO IT NOW!

AIM IS FOR WORLD PEACE

Ambassador Dawes and Premier MacDonald of aEnglum‘i Purpose the Way For Disarmament

: The address of Ambassador Dawes at the Pilgrims club dinner in London and that of Prime Minister MacDonald at Lossiemouth were regarded by Washington observers today as having provided auspiciously _'what the latter described as the “beginning of the negotiationg” for a disarmament program. : _The tenor of the ambassador’'s address was worked out in more or less detail during the conferknce he had with President Hoover and Sécretary Stimson before his departure for England. With the ideas expressed thus definitely reflecting Mr. Hoover's views, the address was taken as a fresh indication of the determination of the ¢hief executive that future inaval reduction negotiations shall. not be. characterized .by the listakes {which maked the 1927 tri-patrite nalval conference. i

At the same time it is interpreted* as meaning that no new or additional international madhinery looking to re~ duction of armaments. will be contemplated, but that the question will be left Tor the time being - with 'tehle League of Nations preparatory commission, the work of which is confined to the development “of ‘formilae for comparing_fiaval strength by experts of the nations concerned as suggested at Geneva by Ambassador }Gibson. s . : A new suggestion was advanced by Dr. Dawes in his reference to taking the naval problem out of the hands of experts and putting it up to ‘‘statesmen.”” That was interpreted as indicating that after the preparatory commission experts have: completed their work on new formulae the Washington governmént might consider a conIferen(:e of “statesmen’ to effect a comlpromise on the different viewpoints in order. -

Prominent Farmer .Dies

‘George Arehart one of the prominent and_progressive farmers of the county died suddenly at his country home three miles west of Kendallville at-2 o’clock Friday morning. - . Stricken with hemorrhage of the brain and paralysis about 8 o’clock Thursday évening he fell into a state of coma and never rallied. ;

- ' See : ; ¥ . DWIGHT MOCK : ; for : : - Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing Row Boats, Motor Boats and Canoes - South Side Lake Wawasee on Cement Road Phone 504 S Syraeuse

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WHEN you sit down to a delicious . /meal that your wife has prepared, do you ever stop to consider how many heurs each day aré"spént in the preparation of your food? Give her an Electric Range-—it will free her from the kitchen, - give her more time to enjoy life as you would have hei_ enjoy it, give her golden houts with the children—hours of leisulfe, otherwise lost forever. The Electric Range is truly a kitc‘hven gift of untold benefit. 'Electr'i_c Cookery will éngbie your wife to make your favorite dishes taste even better.

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