Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 24B, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 July 1929 — Page 3

- Bitten By Rattlesnake - Mother love almost cost ‘the life of Mrs. Warren Boggs of Elmira Sunday afternoon when she risked her own life to save that of her small daughter Waneta age 11 years who was bitten by a rattlesnake while bath ing in Pigeon river near Mongo. . The snake which was sunning itself on the river bank imbedded its fangs- in the little girl's knee, inflicting a painful wound. After apply ing first aid Mrs. Boggs knowing of nothing else to do attempted to suck the poison from thie wound. A small cut in her mouth resulted in the poison - infection and her condition became serious as did that of her daughter. : - For a time Mrs. Boggs and her daughter became deathly sick as a result of the poison from the snake, and it was then late Sunday évening that a Kendallville physician was sum moned and administered aid. Both victims responded to the antidote and soon revived. Today the condition of both mother an ddaughter -is much improved and it is believed both will recover. ' Goes For Alleged Pig- Thiex Deputy -Sheriff Eugene Parker of Albion left Monday morning for Jack son, Mich., with extradition papers for A. L. Daniels of near that city who was arrested there several days ago after members of the Wayne Townskiip Detective association had identified him as the l'i(-x'sofi who ‘had enter ed the hog pen on the Robert Strater farm and stole a pig or pigs. Daniels% refused to.return with Chief of Police Orrie. Sawyer when the »Kendallville} official went to Jackson last week and it was necessary to apply to Gov-! ernor Harry (. Leslie for the extra-l dition papers. Daniels will face charges of larceny and automobile banditry in Mayor W. C. Auman’s court. :

Gets 66,000 Yolts Lives Several times the amount of electricity which is used in death chairs passed through the hody of P~% J. Heweston 34 head of the Radio carrier current communication svstem of Northern Indiana Power Compamy at Kokomo without causing his death. Heweston was taken to a hospital where his condition was pronounced critical. He was bhelieved ‘to have taken the full charge of a 66,000 volt circuit. : - ‘ Hurt in Crash Near Goshen Mrs. Aldertus Van Ark wife of Dr. Van Ark Toledo® 0., dentist is in the Goshen hospital suffering cuts and briises received Saturday evening when the machine in which sh 2 was riding with her husband tnrned over while traveling along state highway No. 2 just east of the Pine Tree-Inn The Teason for the accident couid not be learned other than that fthe ¢ar skidded and turned over. ' : - Dies in Sanitariam. - Miss Clara M. Walters age 39 vears of Celeveland 0., died Sunday noon at the Kneipp sanitarium near Rome City where she had been a f)flt,iem’ for the past several months. - Death was due to tuberculosis and complications. Miss Walters had been a patient at the sanitarium since October 1928 and for the past several days had been under the care of an eastern specialist. o _ : Arrest (heck Forger A man who registered as Frank Fuller age 23 at BElkhart has been arrested on a_charge of check forging. He attempted to cash a check for $6.80 which he later admitted was \\'ol‘tllles§' In his room were found other fraudulent checks and a bottle of morphine Police say he has admitted he is a dope addict. i

Granted Divorces at Albion.

Mrs. Gertrude Sefton was granted a divorce from Blaine Sefton now of Fort Wayne in the Noble circuit court at - Albion Monday morning by Attorney Loomis Foote serving as jud;:e‘ pro tem. Mrs. Dorothy Bauman was also granted a divorce from John Bauman. Reprimands Dry “Informers™ A'slzlp at the facties of government liguor “informers’” was taken at South! ‘Bend by Judge Thomas W. Slick in U. S. district court when he fined “"{ll-1 ter Schultz 30 Fort Wayne §1 without. costs on his plea of guilty to selling whisky and ordered ‘his cnnfiscated‘ automobile returned. ‘Munecie Boy Critical. Ralph Frederick Riff 10 son of Frederick Riff of Muncie remains in a eriti-. cal condition at the McDonald hospital at Warsaw suffering from burns and a fracture of the skull as the result of an explosion of a toy canon at Batlee lake on July fourth. < ; Last Surviver Gone The Fifth Indiana volunteer cavalry which captured Morgan’s raiders during the civil war lives only in memory today Irvin L. Clifford 86 last survivor of the famous troop died at his home in Rushville after a short illness. < : Investigate . Drowning : Authorities today opened an investigation into the’drowning'qf George Mc Divitt Richmond whose body was dragged from White river near Brownstown a sandbag having been attached to his neck. & ° . Newlyweds Home ; My. and Mrs. Garth Stoltz have returned from their wedding trip to Washington and Niagara Falls and are taking up housekeeping in Castro Hoverstock’s residence in Topeka.

GREATEST _SHOW ON EARTH . i COMING TO THIS SECTION

Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey | - Cireus Announces Early Appear- ‘" anee Only Five Ring Cireus in ' the World Thousand and One ; Wonders to he Seen

E After all there is but one great cir,cus. ‘And now comes the announcement that Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey's “Greatest Show on Earth” will soon visit this vieinity with all ‘its myriad _of wonders when it exhibits ;in South Bend Friday July 19, ‘ The advance advertising car herald‘ing the appearance of this wonder of iwonders is now in this territory and its gaily colored lithographs blazon !for'th throughout the countryside. :' Coming on 100 double length railroad cars carrying its entire complement of 1600 persons and 1000 ani‘mals . The Big Show will exhibit such ‘stars as Zachinni, “The Human Projectile™ fired bodily from the mouth of a cannon; Goliath, the five-ton Sea Elephant; the combined Wallenda‘Rellimut Troupes, daring artists of the !high wire; Con Colleano greatest of ?t.ight wire performers; Miss Lillian Leitzel most famed of all female :am'iulists: the Flying Codon'as, led by the intrepid . Alfredo Maximo . the i’funniest of wire acts; the Rieffenachs and Ernestos' greatest of equestrians éand many others from these and foreign shores. ; | There are more new foreign acts ‘than the former New York Giant and !and performances dazzling with splenEdm- and magnificence are presented ’twi(?e daily.. .The Ring]ing-lmrnuinj ;(‘in-us is the ,_only five-ring gircus in] the world. S

Andrews Head of B. P. E.

l Colonel Walter Pemberton Andrews 'past exalted ruler of lodge No. 78 Atlanta Ga., Tuesday was unanimouslvelected grand exalted ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of ,Elks in the executive session of the ififith convention at Los Angeles California. S r :Qolonel Andrews in 1913 was appointed by Pvresidént Woodrow Wil’son to the commissioner-general té the Mediterranean and Bul‘kan,.’staw‘s in the interest of the Panama-Pacific exposition. : J. Edgar Master of Charlerei Pa., was re-elected grand secretary; Lloyd Maxwell of Chicago a life mémber of of the Marshalltown lowa Lodge No. 312 grand treasurer; and -A. Charles Stewart Frostburg, Md., grand trustee. ‘ Given Farm Sentence (‘harles Benner of Syracuse who was arrested by Sheriff Glenn P. Banks last week following an auto accident in which Benner figured due to his driving while intoxicated plead ed guilty in city court at Goshen to a charge of driving while intoxicated and was fined $5O and costs and sentenced to the Indiana penal farm for 96 davs. '

New Carlisle Man Killed

Deaf and unable to hear the frantic warnings of Western Union linemen, Martin K. Besall 75 was instantly killed at nine o’clock Sunday morning when he stepped into the path of a westhound Wew York (Central passenger train at the multiple crossing at New Carliste. . ;

Elkhart Driver Guilty.

Wilbur Sumerlott of Elkhart driver of the machine which crashed into the auto bearing Miss Frances DBeezley 18 of Wolt TLake and “Wayne Ridgley of Elkhart who were enroute to a parsonage in KlKhart to be married Saturday ‘evening was fined a total of $22.00 in Elkhart city court.

To Sell Bus Line

Hearing on the j)\'(ipose(l sale of the Purple Stages, Inc., to the Creyhound Lines of its ln'dgiuna property was held Monday bhefore Howell -Ellis public service commissioner. The liue runs through South Bend Elkhart Ligonier Kendallville Waterloo and Hutler. -

May Beautity (‘emfetery.

The American Legion held patriotic services at Cosperville Sunday evening. Legion membersg attended coming from Ligonier. Post 243 Ligonier ig taking great interest in Cosperville cemetery and it is reported will help beautify it. -

eDath of Mrs. Bushong

. Mrs. Jane Bushong 86 widow of Eli Bushong (Civil war veteran died Satur day at her home in Syracuse where she had resided for many vears.

Licensed to Wed

i pes s SEe e Noah Allen Fausnaugh Kimmell and Aubra S. Kime (Goshen were issued a marriage license at Goshen Monday.

Notice to Water Takers

You are hereby notified that water rents are due July Ist 1929 payable at the office of the city clerk on all rents due and not paid on or before July 20th a penalty of ten per cent will be added. All water rents for 1929 are now due and must be paid on or before April 20th. Office hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. The office will be open Wednesday and Saturday evenings for the accommodation of the public. - ‘ Joseph (. Kimmell, City Clerk ' o : - 23a6t . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETX Services in Weir Block. - Sunday school 9:45 A M. . Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Bverybody welcome. v Now is the time to pay your Banne) subscription—DO IT NOW!

FIVE “RADIUM VICTIMS" MAY 'LIVE ON T 0 RIPE OLD AGE

Doctors Now Admit They May Have Been Mis_t’aken in Their , Diagnosis.

New York.—[l'ive young women, suffering from what was believed to be radium poisoning and told by doctors: they had only one year to live, mas have endured the agonies of awaiting death for nothing. . The women whose plight attracted nation-wide attention received their death sentence oun June 1 In 1928/ Their work consisted of painting lumi nous numerals on watch dials. Al are still living and the doctors now admit they muy have been mistaken in their diagnesis. = - - They suggest the poisoning mu) have been due to a substance called mesothorium which i not necessarily fatal, and not to radium, If this is the case it is predicted the sufferers may live 'o see old age. Mesothorium |can' be gradually eliminated by the ‘human-system,. ! When they received their death sentence the women sued the United States Radium corporation for $250.000 each. The claimsAvere finally ser tled out of court for a cash bounty of $lO,OOO and a pension of $3O a month as long as they live, , How the women expended the money, in the belief it would be the last they would ever ha\(_e’. is revealed as follows: : L Mrs. Quinta MacDonald, the most seriously stricken of the quintet, has been the most unhappy. She quar reled with her husband and separated from aim after he quit his.job. Her money is invested 1n a trust fund for the benefit of her two children. : Miss Katherine Schaub bought an automobile and has heen spending her time taking .long rides in the coun try. Mrs. Albina Larice bought some small houseliold luxuries and has been traveling with her husband. . Mrs. Edna HusSman bought a play er piano and a radio set, - Miss Grace Fryer invested all ot her $lO,OOO and went to work in fa' bank ‘n Newuark. : ~ None of the five can adequately ex press their feelings at their appareni turn of good fortune. The terrible thing to them, they have said, was not S 0 much the imminence .of death, but the fact they had been told they must die within a stipulated time. Their eyes were glued on the culendar and the fingers of the clock. They felt like a person must do when he is caught in a railroad track and sees the train thunder toward him,

Wheat Growers to Get 75¢ a Bushel Wheat growers will receive 75 cents bushel for pooled wheat this season it was announced today by 8.. B. ‘Benner Secretary-treasu,-rer‘of Central States Soft Wheat Growers association which operatcs the Indiana wheat pool in the offices of the Indiana Farm Bureau. ' This action was taken hy the association in order to 'lend cvory financial agsistance posaible (o farmers delivering wheat to the pool. “The initial payme:t of 75 cents per: bushel will be advanced on a basis of No. 2 wheat and any future changes in the advance bayment will he governed by market prices” Benner said. Nineteen thousand wheat growers of Indiana pooled more than 3,000,000 bushels of wheat in the pool last ybur. Several ilurt Ruring Auto Race While racing on their way to Wolcottville Darwin Peck Topeka and Wilbur Musselman Robert Stone and Belmont Ott of Millersburg met with quite a serious accident three miles west: of there. Several persons were injured and one car wrecked.~ Belmont Cti driver oi the Millersburg car started to drive around Peck when his car skidded in loose gravel and went into the ditch turning over three times. Stoner had an artery severed in his right arm. He was taken to the office of Dr. Rarick where the wound was dressed. Other oecupants of the cur were bruised, Ott’s car was demolished. ;

Injured in Fali

Charles Collins suffercd a triple break of his l'ig‘hi'lgg below {2 knee when the brake on the elevator on which he was being lowered with three other workmen failed to function and struck with a crash. | - The men are employed by G. B Miller &. Sons contractors who are constructing the Ashley school. Mr. Collins who was the most seriously injured was taken to the office of an Ashley physician and later to Sacred.‘i Heart hospital Garrett. ; i : Not On Lineoln Highway | . Residents of _Ligonier Goshen, Elkhart, Mishawaka South Bend and Laporte were surprised today when announcement was made that these cities Qhave not been on the Lincoln highway }since January 1928 whe ndirectors of: since January 1928 when directors of the route and saved nineteen miles by using United States highway No. 30 from Fort Wayne to Valparaiso. Go To Buiialo N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. R. Burley Miller and daughter Kathryn passed through Lig onier Monday enroute to their new home in Buffalo N. Y. where Mr. Miller becomes Director of purchases of the Pierce Arrow Motor Car Co. of that city. : Annual Pienic Supper : Thursday evening July 18th at the Centralized school building the Perry ownship farm bureau will -hold their annual meeting with a picnic supper and a program. o

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

ROCKET TRIP TO . MOON IS FEASIBLE Maeay Be Succeésfully Achiev;d,, Scientists Say. '

Paris.—A rocket to the moon no longer is a fantasy and one may be fired from the earth before another 12 months haye rolled around, according to members of the Societe Astronomique of France. - . .German, American, Austrian and French scientists have bheen-~collabo-rating 'with such eflectiveness that a voyage by rocket to the moon, to Mars and to Venus -at last is considered ' theoretically practical. But the astronomers have noft yet reached the point where they consider the advisabilify of inserting.a passenger into the rocket—even if they found sueh a willing person. The entire question of interplanetary navigation, which has been the pt'.eoccujmtionv of central European scientists for - many yedrs, reached a climax |at a meeting of the Socicte Astronomique, when the Rep-Hirsch prize of 5.000 francs was awarded to Prof. Herman Oberth for his researches in this field. : Pt‘of(}%.i;ur'(_)hm'th, who is a German and only thirty-five years old, has developed what are considered entirely feasible methods of escaping terrestrial attraction or gravity. The problem up to the present has been how to escape’ this attraction and yet not make the experiment prohibitive: by excess load of fuel. Professor Oberth has solved this problem by constructing a double-tube rocket, emitting hydrogen and oth gases at a speed of 2,500 miles a sgcond. This speed of emission of thoy gases and the .effect of the gases upo the surrounding atmosphere are cal‘culated to neutralize the pull of gravity and permit the rocket to get clear of the earth. L In view of the importance of this contribution, ‘Andre Hirsch and Robert Eshault-Pelterie, themselves pioneers -in interplanetary 4 navigation, and donors of -the prize, increased the award to 10,000 francs. » Qti’wr papers, submitted by Russians, Austrians and many Germans. contributed much liglit to the problem.- One paper went so far-as to discuss the method of landing on a planet, : :

41 Americans Acquire British Citizenship London.—The United States was one of the four nations which contributed the largest number of citizens to those naturalized as subjects of the king of England during the year 1928. The other three major contributors were Russia, Poland and Italy, Russia providing the greatest number of new DBritish citizens and the United States the fewest of the four {eaders. ; . Altogether 1,393 certificates of naturalization were granted during the year tol persons who had taken the oath of allegiance to Great Britain. Men accounted for 1,115 of the total and women for 278. There were 524 Russians, 118 Poles, 66 Ifalians, and 41 Americans in the list. Austria and Germany were on the tall end of the list, each supplying one new citizen to the British isles. Nineteen persons liad their certificates revoked. They .were all men, Ten were Germans, five Russians and one “each frém' Austria-Hungary, Greece, Italy, and Rumania. :

Transfuse Blood From

Dead to Living Person

* Cluj, Rumania.—Transfusion of blood from a dead person to one on the point of death was accomplished here recently—for the first time, it i 3 thought, Lo v . The doctors at a local hospital joined the arm of a gir], Rosa Jancu at the moment she bad died of in juries suffered in an auto obile acci dent, to the arm of a mun, George Morar, who had stabbed himself in the breast and lost most of hLis blood Morar, who was regarded as dying, is now expected to recover. :

Athletes Seldom Turn Criminals, Jurist Says

" Cincinnati, Ohio.—Athletes seldom are arraigned in criminal courts, according to Judge Edward Hurley, prominent jurist here. ‘Said Judge Hurley: “I've noticed this fact in the number of persons brought before me. The answer seems to be that participation in clean athletics builds self-reliance and character. A sound body usually begets a sound mind.” : 4

COOOOROCOCONCLOOLOLOOOE Six-Foot-Ten Scot & Picks Canadian Fruit i Winnipeg. — Andrew Kelling. & ; hap of Les Mathawgow, Scotlaud, @ ) height six feet ten and a half % ) inches, is not the tallest man in % ) Scotland but nearly the shortest @ ) brother of a family of six. Too S ) shy to vote for himself, he some- @ ; how got the prize for |being é ; Scotland’s tallest, and arrived as @ y such in Winnipeg along with g hundreds of other future Cana- g ) dians. The long Scotland man g g found himself adapted to fruit_- ) picking and chose to use his @ ) natural ability in Canada as a @ ) start toward the prosperity he @ ) has heard so much about. @

Ligonier Banner ~ $2.00 the Year

BEAUTY MATTER | OF CEOGRAPHY Standards Vary Widelyi Among Diferent Races |

Washington, D. C.—The open season for beauty contests is a reminder that the geography of beauty is as diversified as the geography of food or fashion. : ' : » “Often what one people may consider personal bleniishes are marks of beauty in other countries,” says a bulletin from the Washington (D, C.) headquarters of the National Geographic seciety., “For example, moles are considered ‘especially appealing iv Egypt. Blobs of flesh resemhbling huge warts are: supposed to bedutify the faces of the women of some Belgian Congo tribes. - | - “Many ot the ‘ugliest’ type&s of beau: ty, ‘according to Awmerican| and Eu ropean tastes, are tound among Afri can tribes. Particularly ugly are the female faces deformed by fcicatriza tion, which is acecowmplished by rub bing mud into open sores until they swell in permanent ridges. Cicatriza tion in an “oyster shell pattern on the .chin, cheéeks and forehead is supposed to enhance the appeal of the women of some Ceéntral African tribes. v Shampooed in Butter, ; “The most odoriferous of African beauties are the Ethiopian women who smear their hair with raneid buter. In hot weather they are attended ;msmml_v by 2 regiment of flies. Since the butter is ondy removed about three »:\imes a year, shampoos are negligible factors, : . “The beauties of the Mangbettu tribe of Central Africa adopt a hair: dress that resembles a Grecian urn lying on its side. They bind their hair in a tight coil and the hair that i 8 drawn back is iuclésed in a large flat disk. With this skin-tight "hair dress, into which long metal pins have been inserted. and their prominent features, they form striking pictures “The slant-eved sub-debutante beauty of Cambadia in Indo-China also af fects a distinctive coiffure.. Unti womanhood is reached, her hair is cut cff, with the exception of a single tuft on the top of her head. This tuft is inclosed in a litile wooden or metal

bowl, around which the head is shav: en. When womanbood is reached, -the bowl is removed and the rest of the hair is allowed to grow. However it never reaches any great length and is stiff from repeated shavings in the past. ' o : “Coconut oil is (ke cold cream of the Samoan Istands. Unlike American women, who disguise the use of cold cream yith applications of powder. these South Sea sirens prefer shiny skins. Their brown faces glisten under their curly hair anl the wreaths of pawpaw blossoms or cowrie shells which they wear, Where Ferocity Lends Beauty, “The beauties of the island of Malaita, in the Solomon group, are ferocious looking creatures with huge. fuzzy mops of hair. Through the septums of their noses they plunge long skewers which are supposed to impart extreme beauty to their countenances. The skewers are made of various materials, gilt nails, strings of beads, small tusks, curved shells, tufts of dried grass and long bamboo or bone plugs. o " “Startling color effects are achieved by the women in other parts of the Solomon Islands. They bleach their kinky hair white with a paste made from coral lime. An arch of lime is ap plied over each eyehrow. Straight lines of lime cross: each cheek and meet at the chin. The coral paste adornment is uoseful as well as decorative. It destroys vermin. : : “Big ears are considered beautiful on the Island of Borneo in the Dutch East Indies. The women insert heavy rings in the lobes of their ears until they gradually yield to the weight and assume the desired character of jloug loops. These often hang below! fhe shoulder, and the beauties adorn thew with heavy rings.” : No Bathing Suit Parades "Cincinnati,—Lassies and lads of this city have been warned by the police that parading streets in bathing suits must stop or fines will be higher than the cost of beach lockers.

Nature Solves Flood 3 Problem for Farmer § Salina, Kan.—Nature has set- : tled the flood control problem of J. R. Jenkins, who owns a 2 large farm twenty-five miles : south of Salina. . ‘ : For years his farm house was .Imost on the bank of the % Smoky Hill river, but now it is Z a mile away. The stream which 3 formerly passed through the farm does not now touch it. The May flood cut a channel through another man’s farm and instead ‘- of a large bend in the river E the stream now runs straight north across the county, cutting EE -off a neck that makes the river about four miles shorter in its § course. Jenkins did mot object to the river when it was-normal, i but when it was carrying flood waters it™did considerable dam- § age to his land and crops: He says, however, he is satisfied with the present conditions. 0 e eAW U W9SO 0 b B RPe e b

R. L. (. A. Convention

i The Rural Letter carriers of Indiana held their 27th annual state conven.tion at Decatur, Indiana ‘July 6, 7 and 'B§th with -over, four hundred enrolled. !Monday was devoted to business with ta wonderful bdnquet at the noon hour and lunch in the evening sponsored by a number of Indiana .\‘gw;{papers and served at the Decatur Country: Clup which is a very beautiful place. ° A number of speakers were there from the different papers and: postoffices also a number of solos reaaing and music were rendered duriuz the banquet. The men had as their prindpél speaker on Sunday evening C. C. Wenrich of the P. 0. Department of Washingion {D. C. while the ladies Auxiliary had as their speaker on Monday Mrs. W. G. Armstrong ‘National Vice President of Niles Mich. - L Noble county had as their delegates Stanley Wright and Robert Maggert tof Cromwell Mr. and Mrs. Milo Renner of Ligonier. ' A lovely time was reported by all for Decatur sure gave them a hearty |welcome. , The next State Convention will e held at Bedford Ind. while the Na{tionalwill be held at Savannah Ga, lth'ellast_ week of August. o Treed By Freak Wind During the terrific storm that swept the central part of Indiana Sunday Dr. and Mrs. E. W. Ellis and W. H. Hawkins all of Thorntown literally were “treed’, hy a freak of the wind. ‘They ran into the storm. West of Covingtonn while returning home 'l'om Danville 111. e As the squall overtook them it uprooted a tree and flung it onto the highway in front of the Thorntown party . A few moments later another ltree was flung directlv. back of the { Ellis car, : . | The motorists were imprisoned. for two hours between the two fallen | trees. They discovered that their ma-i!c-hin‘e was only one of four to bße icaught in a like predicament. '

County Agents to Meet County agents from Indiana Ohio, and Michigan will meet .\ll'()ndu_v. and Tuesday July 15 and 16 at Potawatami inn. Pokagon state park. The conference will take up subjects regarding methods of handilng county agents’ work. A discussion of particular iiterest will be that on the relationship of extension service with commercial organizations. . ; : . County Agent Ccunningham of Noble will be in attendance. ' ~ Rochester Girl Badly Burned ' Jean Wilson age 6 of Rochester was seriously burned about the shoulders arms and back Monday afternoon when her clothes caught fire from a fire cracker which was being used in a belated Fourth of July celebration: The little girl with several other ciildren was playing in the vard at the rear of an ice cream coinpauy thei when a fire cracker thrown at her by a playmate whose name was not learn ed lodged in the back of her dress. Judge Biggs ‘in Tewn . Judge Biggs was in town Wednesday from his summer home at Tippéi-;moe lake. His health is much-improved and he seemed unusually cheerful. . -_',.f.,__._,_.; i Notiee of Sale of Motor Vehicle To (teorge Bradley, Flint Michigan, - - and all others concerned. | : Notice is hereby given tlrat at ten o’clock A. M. ‘Daylight Saving Time on Thursday July 25 1929 at the South Side Garage located on lot 22 iu the original plat of the town now city, of Ligonier, Noble County, Indiana, the undersigned will offer for sale and sell to the highest and best bi«hlm‘ for cash the following described motor vehicle to-wit: Willys Knight touring car motor No. 39123, serial No. 38141 to pay and satisfy charges due on said car in thé sum of forty dollars for labor thereon and storage ‘thereot, L nless said charges be fully paid withil said time. ; . : - July 10 1929 - , Lewis E, Schlotterback, | ‘Roy Olinghouse . i e doing business under the [irm name and style of “South Side Garago” i e Bdßow

Home Realty and Investment Co. : ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. ’ v . 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 LOANSSO" O with EXCEPTIONAL Privelege Clause /) S a 7 o SECURIBIRS The Securities that we have to offer, are of the highest type. GRAVEL ROAD, SCHOOL, PUBLIC UTILI: TY 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, - - R - -

' @ . . ’ & 9 Ligonier Shippers’ Ass'n. . MARKET YOUR LIVE STOCK _ . CO-OPERATIVELY “In the Hands of a Friend’ From : Beginning to End."l : WHEN YOU HAVE LIVE STOCK TO ; SHIP, CALL T. J. Spurgeon o Phones: Ligonier 834 or Topeka 3 ond 40 Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Merchants Rzak Saturday Afternoon and Salurda; g : Evening : O. A. BILLMAN -~ Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, ' Water Systems, Etc. : - Well Drilling: e phone 333 LIGONIER Dr. Maurice Blue ‘ } VETERINARIAN _Offic}e: Justamere Farm ' ~ Phone: Ligonier 857 . Sanitary Plumbing and Heating _ Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

Do You Need Any E Today? If So, Send or Pl :cne Us Your Order NOW - If you believe in hLome trade—in a home n=wsjaper ~ —in boosting your towm—advertise in this paper - We can also dc your job | work quickly aiid satisfactorily

H. E. Robinson Plumbing Hot Watcr. Steam Heating Phones: 453 or 218 Ligonier LSS LS “m—m—‘ ‘Harry L. Benner ~ Auctioneer _ Upen for all engagemends . Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley - County Phones _ | W. H. WIGTON : . Attorney-at-l.aw Offce in Zimmerman Block | LIGONIER, Rb Howard White - WAWAKA, INDIANZ - AUCTIONEER . o Phone 2on 1 Wawakn e T Bothwell & Vanderford : Lawyers _ ~hone 156 Ligonier. Indiana