Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 26A, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 July 1929 — Page 4
THIS SPACE RE'SE;RV.ED_F OR AMERICAN sy i BANK Largcsi* Bank in Indiana in a Town the size of Ligonier.
Cars washed $l.OO. SKouth Sid.fsl Carage. .Telephone 4SBO, Zhatt Mrs. Jennie Drain spent Saturday with relatives:in Bristol. Walter Epert of Chicago spent the week end with friends here. i ‘Bernard Baughman of the Americal State bhank is enjoying a two weel's vacation. : : : . = Murder—a woman on trial-shail she pay? Crystal Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. : Miss Helen Woll is enjoving a week's | vacation with Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Rex in Chicago. Miss Meldred Smith. nurse in the Sturgis hospital is ill and a patient of that institution. o Leatrice Joy on trial for her litea dramatic sensgtion--{rystal threc days starting Tuesday. - John Lott of Muncie and Burl Taylor of South Bend spent the week end at the Eari Taylor home. ~ Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Grigson and family of Whiting spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Weeks. Miss June Best of Nappanee arrived here Friday for a visit with her aunt ! Mrs. Rollin Olinghouse and family, . | BTtol o i s ‘ i The Gleaner class of the Christiani church will hold a bake sale at the Sack Bakery Saturday, July 27th. | : ' 24h5t Mystery! A beautiful woman' A knife thrust in the dark' Thrills! Crystal Tuesday, Wednesday and Thu_r‘s-' day. - - Mrs. Edd Banta went to Benton Harbor vesterday where she will spend two weeks taking treatment for rheumatism. : . Mr and Mrs 1, 1. Lightfoot and family of Toledo spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Snyder and daughter Marie. .
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hile and Mrs. Karl Taylor and daughter Mary spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kern at New (arlisle at Hudson lake, Misses Eva Cook and Hallie Goshorn are on a motor trip through Michigan. Miss Olga Oliver is taking Miss Cook’s place at the American State bank. ] Mr. and Mrs. Fred Link of Rast Liverpool, Ohio, Theodore Zimmerman of Chicago were guests several days last week of Mr. and Mrs. Henrv Burkett and family. i Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Kline of Detroit were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles K. Graham. Mr. and Mre. Floyd Middleton of Benton were dlso Sunday dinner guests at the Graham home. : - Card of Thanks. : We take this opporunity to thank our neighbors and triends for the many kindnesses and heartfelt sympathies shown us in the death of our baby girl. ' ; Mr. and Mrs. Russell Baker. Obituary - Mary Elizabeth Thompson daughter of John and Susan Pancake was born March 29 1851 on the homestead:where she passed away Tuesday morning at p:2O July 46 1929 - - = . . o She was married to Elzy J. Thompson Jan. 14 1886. To this union was! born two children Jennie Ellen Thomp son and Frorest Pancake Thompson both of whom survive their parents. Their father having died Mav 2 1899, Mrs. Thompson's half brother Elias Douglas Pancake died Dec. 19 1883, and her only sister Margaret . Ellen Pancake died Mar. 2 1911 ‘ Funeral services were held Thursday afternoon July 18 at 3 o’clock from the late home Rev. C. W. Anderson: of the Ligonier M. E. church officiating. Burial was made in Oak Park cemetery. i’ ' Card of Thanks We acknowledge with grateful appreciation the many thoughtful acts of ! kindness shown us by neighbors and friends in our recent zreat bereavement. L gy v et Jauntle EMpson_ i S Forrest P~Thompson i
tir. and Mrs. William Swickard of Elkhart were here over Sundfig}'. : Y¥ir. and Mrs. Jaies Holin recently entertained relatives from Florida. Spaulding McMann has moved from ('smwell to Ligonier = lir. and Mrs. Car! Nowles and sen Evorette were recent visitors with Syiacuse friends. ! _Hrs. D. M. Geither and daughter ofi Detroit are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wiil Sharp. Mrs. Geither was form- | ei'ly’ Miss Lena Moore, a daughter of Miras, Sharp. . : Sale Notice Here we are boys once more-I pomised you one more sale when I gof hoime and we will huvg a regular cocumunity -sale Thursday afternoon Jaiy 25th at 12 o'clock central Standazd time. This will be the only sale until this fall we will have 20 fresh cows, some grass and butcher cattle, 2 zood voung bulls, 40 head of sheep and lambs, will try to have some hogs (Hogs wanted) and 100 gal of house and barn paint. Set of new farm harness, and 1 suppose the regulay anount of household goods and small articles. This is a busy time but try to be here once more. Call me and ligt your zn;f,i(:lvs you have to spare, | will try and arrange for a. good rain l dneosday night. . George D). Foster, Manager. ; Mames of Cloud Formations g Tl idea of giving names to various kinds of:cloud formation was first attempted in the early part of the Nineteenth century by a man ‘named Lamarck, but his terms were not well chosen, "A simpler form was devised about 1803 by Luke Howard, which seemed to answer the purpose and was generally accepted. Howard clossified clouds according to their appearauce, recognizing three primary types--cirrus, cumulus and stratus—and four derivative, or compound forms — cirro-cumulus, ecirro-stratus, cumulo-stratus and cumulo-eirro-stratus, or nimbus. Thus, he defined seven varietles.
i Bad News v Jenking married, and in due course bis wife presented him with a son. His friends flocked round to tender thely congratulations and, incidentalIy, smoke Bill’s cigars, Jones was on his way to the house when he met Browning returning. “Where are you going?”’ asked the latter j “Oh, I'm just going round to see Bill and wish him luck with that younuster of his.” v “T'ien you're too late.” , B “What?” Surely it hasn't died? ¥ No, the youngster’s all right, but the cigar box is empty.”—Pittsburgh gun: Telegraph.
: Camels in Australia Many camels are used in Australia a 8 beasts of burden. For instance, from Wyndham in northwestern Australia the cattle stations are served by camel trains which carry supplies for hundreds of miles into the interior. “The camels are driven by Afghans,” says the National Geographfc society. “Camel teams are fagiiliar sights in the streets of the Mtjl'e township. hauling in the great wagconloads of firewood from the outlying distriet. The first camels were broucht to Australia for the use of the early explorers. Later a fine type of dromedary was imported for breeding purposes.” :
This Means You, Mr. Merchant!
DID you know that you and this paper have an interest in common? Y our success helps the communityas a wh'o?e ‘which in turn is of benefit fo us. When a merchant advertises with us, he is investing his money, which is returned with interest. thow Your Geods in the Windows oad Advertiss Then In This Paper
Unerring Instinct Is - - Nature’s Gift to Seal Seals are possessed of most marvelous instinets, says Gas Logic. They know, for instance, exactly where to bore the ice to mal\;e their bobbing holes and never waste time or effort on ice too thick to be penetrated. They have some mysterious way also of knowing the width of a field of ice that must either be swum gnder or passed around, ' . A mother seal will leave her pup on an icé floe, slide off into the water. travel for a great distance and be gone for hours fishing. Meantime the ice floe, carried by winds and currents. drifts far also. Yet when “quitting time” comes the mother unerringly returps to the right floe, comes up throuzh her own bobbing hole and at once finds her waiting child. Seals normally travel through the water at about 20 miles an hour, but on occa sicn will “bolt” for a short time at a rate of about 100 miles an hour. They cannot remain submerged withow drowning for more than about 20 minutes. ' A mother seal among a swarm of seal “pups” is said to be a very curi ous sight. Many of the *‘pups” soli¢it her maternal attention. but she an grily repels them all, finds her own baby and nurses no other. The seal voungsters all look precisely alike to man, but her nose knows!
Belated Honors Paid _ . First British Aeronaut - In honor of James Sadler, the first Dritish aeronaut, a memorial tablei has been erected at Oxford. - On October 4, 1874, he “did astonish the people by ascending into the at mosphere with firmness and intrepiditvis His balloon was 170 feet iln circumference, and varvied a small brazier, suspended under the envelope, in prder to maintain heated air to give the power of ascension. It shot up to a heizht of 3,600 feet, and was blown northwest, Unfortunately, Suadler dropped the fork used to bandle the fuel, and it is said he avoided coming down in a wood by using ours.” Eventually, after half an hour’s flicht, he had traveled about six miles. In his second flight hie used hydrogen, and in three minutes was lost to sight in the clouds. Twenty minutes later he came down near Aylesbury, 14 miles away. For 25 years Sadler worked as a chemist, engineer, and inventor, but when fifty-seven he returned to ballooning. In 1814 he ascended from Burlington house, Piccadilly, before a huge c¢rowd. Subsequently, *however, he failod in an atiempt to cross from Iraland to ineland Pipe to Cure Pain : The shiw.ann or doctor of the Wiyot Indians wore a puir of feather dust ers draped on ench side of the head, and carried o bundie of condor feathers, an elkhide belt and a pipe. Among the Wiyvot, unlike the ‘modern custom, doctors were chiefly women. Some of them diagnoged the Ills of their tribespeople by dancing or singing. others sucked out the pain through their wmagic pipes. The eon: dor feathers. were pushed down the throut, much as a sword swallower woirld handle a knife. A very complete shaman’s outfit which has passed from one member of the tribe té another for several generations, has been recently. acquired by the Museum of Anthronology of the University of California. :
Small Farms in India “India s essentially -a country .of small holdingsy” says Sir Verney Lovett, author of “India.” *“ln many parts of the country the land is held mainly by families of peasant proper ties. In other parts the bulk of the land is owned by lirge properties, but even in such cases the tenant in chief has generally been protected by a series of rent acts which not only insure him fixity of tenure during his lifetime but often grant the right of descent of the tenure to his heirs on his death: The disruptive tendencies of the Hindu and Mohammedan laws have profoundly affected agricultural economy threugh encouraging the minute subdivision of land.” Fragmentation is the rule. : : Ireland’s Famous Hill Tara is the name of a hill in County Meath, Ireland. It was here that the triennial convention of the Irish kings was established by Oiiam Fodlah, about 900 B. C. According to tradition the palace of Tara was 900 feet square, containing 150 apartments and 150 dormitories. The early kings of Ireland were said to be crowned here and tradition further states that Tara at the time of the advent of St. Patrick to Ireland wus the principal seat of Druidism in Ireland. It is said to have been abandoned throngh the curse of St. Ruadan, 450, on account of its idolatry. :
Amber and Meersehaum
© Amber can be made to burn when heated to a high temperature in the air. It is a fossil resin from trees of the pine family and is dug up from the shores of the Baltic sea and the North sea and a few other places. It ig a compound of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Meerschaum is a compound of magnesium, silicon and oxygen and resembles a white clay. It is ~found chiefly in Asia Minor, where it occurs in masses of clay. Of course, the only connecction between the two substances is the fdact that they are " both used in making pipes, ; e ~ Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Kinnison of Toledo, Ohio, spent the week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spurgeon. -Will the voung man who was seen taking the cushion off the poarch on the North Side Saturday night please return and save trouble.
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
Devil in Automobila Althuugh the autvmobile is stewd'y 1 gaining in popularity in the Fiji islonag it encountered great fear and sup: i tionr on the part of the natives v.n first introduced. ‘The frst selt rooe pelied=vehicle was used in the ¢ Ly in 1905 by an Ameérican, who Was - .iring th: islands. This car was vico with awe by the inhabitants. v .ug considered the contraption of u stide main, and conservative residents suge gested that the owner be deported (-~ 4 dangervus character. P ~ The second ear made its appen: @ in 1997 destincd for the wife ! Iha mayor of Suva A liveried chat ' e was' provided, and it i 3 oot ki n which created the greater stii. 'he veliele or its driver. One duy he owner tound under the machine - v eral bushmen, poking about -aui. Xe ploring the mysteries. Explan. . .3 reveated that the Fijians -had { 4 conference about the new vehicio it facked visible means of iocomotion 4 had concluded’ that the affait w 3 nothing less than a devil wagon; * tefore, partly out of kindness to tle owner and partly to prevent the s ciape of the devil into the hish o udinto the villuges, the “devil do @ o 3 ‘constituted themselves a commitic o Study this weird thing dnd to exterminate its concealed monster, , Aze Not Determined by . ‘ Number of Years Lived I muost confess that | have arrvived at the time of life when | de not iike to be asked how old I am. What in the dickens do the number of veirs mitter? . : Many of us old-stagers are cily as voung as the lads in the air ‘oice, At least. that’'s the way we for Youth is not a time of life "1 ig a state of mind. It is determ 'y how you think and how you fec: - Recently, 1 met a young - of twentyv-eiecht who was full of 3 lis brain had becowie sinti ‘2 secmed to be vaccinated again o “ideas: 1 am twice his agze, bu! = tend that lam younger than he - A few gray hairs don't mattc: A few wrinkles don't matter, esp v if they are around the eyes, and ot around .the mouth. . ‘ The main thing 1s not to have wrinkles on your brain. ; : Nor your heart. - Nor vour soul. ‘ ' ~As long as a man keeps golng and Jumps out of bed every morning with a smile, he is young. —Herbert N. Casson in Forbes Magazine, -
Violin East and West
A leading music house says: “We have no record of ever having ti - rd of .the Chinese making a &iolin ud the instruments made by the Jaj~ ~re of the very cheap commerclal qiiiiy. The violin took root in Japan ¢ 'ng the World war. Since the perc: {lira many and France have furnishe:d! ;: - tically all of the cheap instriic i 3 for America, and the Jups are it of the picture. We have no records of any well-known Russian makers I.ve ever, the violin is an extremely ' lar instrument all through easter: ilurope, and doubtless thousands of 11 :m have been constructed in Russin. and perhaps there are some good in:icrs there. None of them, however, scems to have been outstanding. ’--Washe ington Star. i
Art’s Definition
Shakespeare had not art? He was had by art; compelled and held b it. And by that holding. and comyi -en we gef a vision of what art is: ot a systenl, not a set of rules wiic, opa
chance Aristotle nright teach ©< or another Greek, but a changing. uiuivs ing form-compelling power that is ins dividual, but at its greatest oxpc -3 an. age. This was the great ase of English, never repeated in its n..res gate of color, wealth, diction and power of words. — Henps {hester Traey, in “English as Experience.”
The Foods We Eat
A commission man, “shoppinug” in New York city found spinach from Mexico, honeydew melons from Nouth Africa, fresh almonds from the iioly land, new potatoes from Florida. v cen peas and nspnrng.ué from Califsirnia, butter from Denmark, -eggs trom China, meats from New Zealand nd Argentina. ! o That's what medern transportation and cold storage refrigeration does for us.—Capper’s Weekly.
Down in Rio
- That a Frenchman in a new couns try will open a cafe, a German a ueneral store, and a Briton a bank has long been an axiom regarding tlhie men of those raceés in foreign lands. ‘That regarding the Briton might be amiended by stating that along wiih the bk goes -the Church ot England.. Hore in Rio, says a corr¢spondent, ghich is a city of churches, an English. ¢chu:ich has been the meeting place for the British community for 110 years.
Singing Promotes Health
“If you want to be healthy sing as often as possible,” advises a leench doctor, who has experimienicd with cases of everexcitement and sy aipas thetic nerves. . He says that wie o patients were kept in a- checrful niood, singing gay music, the equilibviun of the nervous system was restored an a. few weeks, and badly daniieed appetites began to Treappear awith fall force. 3
Ligonier Banner o $2.00 the Year
Can’t Assign Credit for Invention of Compass The origin of the mariner’s compass is obscure. By some students the instrument wak said to have been introduced into Europe from the East. Others say it was a Western inven--tion. It was certainly known to Euro pean navigators as earlyl as the Twelfth century. Guyot de Provins, whose satirical “bibie” I 3 supposed to have been completed in 1205, de scribed “a contrivance” of sallors which never deceived them. “They- have an ugly brown stone which attracts iron.” he wrote. “They mark the exhct quarter to which the needle points, which ‘they have rubbed on this' stone, and afterward stuck into a straw. They merely put it in water, in which the straw causes it to swim; then the point turns directly toward the (North) star, with sich certainty that it will never fall.” ‘Guyot wrote about the compass as if it were a new thing, but other writings reveal that the English in the Twelfth century had already mounted the needle on a pivot and so done away- with the straw and water.— New York Times. - i
No Prize Offered for “Mare’s Nest” Discovery “Mare's Nest” is a phrase which we occasionally hear and which we under Stand .to refer to almost any gort of a discovery which upon its face and at first. sight seems to be of considerable importance, but which subsequently is ascertained to be a hoax. By inference, therefore, a “mare’s nest” - has acquired the. meaning of soinething that does not exist, - Just how the expression originated is not clearly established. However, it is authentically conceded "that it was first employed over 300 years ago by John Fletcher and that he himself probably addpted it from an earlier phrase, “horse’s nest,” which, In the then vernacular, referred to any story worn threaidbare by constant repetltion. This latter is said to have been ficst used by Stanyhurst at the end of the Sixteenth. century. The line, “He's come apon a mare’s nest and is laughing at the eggs,” is frequently heard 'in Ireland to express derision at somebody who thnks he has discovered something startling when it is in fact something known to all. —Kansas City Times, -
- Swedes Lovers of Beauty To keep the S“’é’dish railroad stations cheery, the state-owned rallroads malntain a special flower garden and hothouse outside of StockLholm. About 50,000 potted plants and 100,000 perennials are annually distributed to the stations of the Stockholm district alone, and the big. central station in Stockholm gets not only huge potted laurel trees for the summer season, but fresh cut flowers every day. In the country practically every railroad station has its own flower beds, cared for hy the personnel bhetween trains and like the spotless buffets or restuurants inside, they add considerably to the joy of travel. Such . refinements. the Swedes call “trafik kulture.”
i Had Few Nerves in Teeth " { Study of the teeth of the .saber;»tooth cats and of the giant wolves ithm lived and died in prehistoric | times, has shown why these animals | and their descendantz knew no such [ things as toothache. : i Examination of teeth found in asphalt pits in California revealed that, in every- case, the teeth of an adult of the species had only a scanty supply of nerves. :As the animal grew up, the «root canal, which is the main route for the nerves into the pulp { chamber of the tooth, became’ com- | paratively shut off.—Popular Mechan- | ies Magazine. ‘ Entirely Too Healthy . | Little nine-year-old Jo .Ann came | home from school one day looking very much disgusted. Her mother ini quired as to the cause and Jo Ann { said: “O we had election of officers | today and I was elected vice president.” “Well, that’s fine; why the dowacast countenance?’ asked mother. “It would be fine,” said Jo Ann, “but John, the healthiest boy in our room, was elected president and he's " never sick, so what chance has the vice president?”
World Using Old Truths
The modern world is using, and using -up, the truths that remain to it out of the old treasury of Christendom; including, of course, many truths known to pagan antiquity but crystalized in Christendom. But it is not really starting new enthusiasms of its own. The novelty of modern ideas is merely a matter of names and labels, like modern advertisements; in almost every other way ft is negative—G. K. Chesterton in the Bookman. :
Admonition
An old-stager was taking a youth to task for betting all he had on a horse race. He pointed out the many mishaps that may occur between post and finish and called a long roll of sure things that had gone wrong “Now think, son,” he wound up. “how long does it take to rum the average horse race?” “Less than two minutes.” *There’s the point. It may bae 511 right to 'try te get rich quick, but that’s too quick.” :
White clover honey for sale. James Adams, Ligonier. _ i . 25b4t* Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Hite spent Friday in Fort Wayne. o - Joe Leavy, Jr, is in Goshen today | visiting his mother. 5 ; et e et e % Y, Miss Cora Black, ill a long time, is now able to get about on crutches, Cars washed $l.OO. South Side Garage. Telephone 480. - "26a4t . Mrs. Linville Myers of Wawaks was admitted to the Goshen hospital. ¥riday. ; : , " LOST—Between my nowe and the water works a ‘dark striped cout. Joha Kege. - Mrs. (Roy Kellam and children are at Knex to spend the week with relatives. L o Wanted-—Competent girl for general housework. Apply Mrs. Sam Selig. : N 26a2t Mr. and Mrs. Chester Werick atended a birthday dinner at Kendallville Sunday. o The Ligonier Chamber of Commerce iwll meet for luncheon at noon Friday July 26th. , : ' : e | ~ Miss Ella Houser who suffered a stroke of paralysis some time ago is slightly improved. Mr. and Mrs. J .C. Hite and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hartzler spent Sunday at Kalamazoo, Mich. - _ ' Miss Jeanie Miller has returned to Benton after spending a week with relatives at Ligonier. ' _ Mrs. Earl Creps will be operated on for goitre tommorrow by Dr. Fleming at the Klkhart hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Claudon and guests of South Bend vere week end visitors at Rome (ity. : o Mrs. E. W. Sorgenfrie, Mrs. Jolmv Reese and the Marie Burkett and Nina Stuff. spent Thursday in Fort Wavne. Mrs. Russell Maggart of Cromwell, took treatment in the Black emergency hospital here last week for a carbunkle on her ncek. . ; Earl Taylor, Harley Longmor, Reader Meroney and Ray Longcor attended the grand circuit races at Kalamazoo, Mich., Friday. : ;
Miss Rachel Schlotterback of Ligonier visited her parents Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Schlotterback of near ‘Mérriam over the week-end. Sl
Mr. and Mrs. Roswell Earnhart who spent a week here at the home of her father (. R. Stansbury left for their home in Chicago Sunday. e
Mrs. Thomas Schlotterback visited in Churubusco Thursday. She unexpectedly found Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Locke ill when she arrived. ~
Mr. and Mrs. John Baker of this city aud guests Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kendrick and son of Detroit, spent last week at Tippecanoe lake.
FOR Sale North Side residence ajt modern except furnace good garage, pcultry house and garden spot. Price right. ~ Call 523. 25H3t*
Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Weir, Mrs. C. E. Hoagland and Mrs. Ollie Simmons drove to Findlay, Ohio, Sunday and spent the day wit hrelatives.
Pauline and Robert, children of Mf. and Mrs. Earl Keefer had their tongils removed this morning by Drs. Black and Shobe at the Black emergency hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Logan of Warsaw had as their Sunday dinner guests M-, and Mrs. Edmund Summers and daughters, Mrs. Fredanna Barnhart, and Mr. and" Mrs. Earl Orr and daughter of Pierceton. -
Ralph Allen, Edward Fisher and mother Mrs. Harley Fisher will drive to Chicago tomorrow. Mrs. Fisher will visit @ brother in a hospital there who is suffering from a broken back and Mr. Allen an dMr. Fisher will spend several days attending ball ganies.
and a New Location - On Monday morning the Meigs Optical Shop opened for business in their new quarters, 130 S. Main St, a few doors South of their former location with the Sorg Jewelrv Store. Larger quarters, The most modern eye exzminztior. cqugment. Facilities for quick repairs and the making of glasces, Private room for the adjusting of hearing devices for the deaf. 7 Bear in mind our work is not to sell glasses but to give your et ¢s a thorouzh examination—such as you will admit shows you and us their true condition and to furnish glasses, if needed only when we can promise definite satisfaction. Feel free to consult ns any time. You have one pair of eyes {o [ast you a lifetime. There is no “trade-in value” on them when they are worn out. [t isour business to keep them for you. ' Eyesight Specialists - A C.A. MEIGS b _ J. S. WELLINGTON Dr. J. Wellington at Biak’s, Ligonier, every Thurs. afternoon and evening ] ~ lndiana’s Rellable and Largest Optical Organization -
BN, WWIX 2 The Cohens and Kellys at Atlantic City The laugh riot of the year. A riotous farce -of the famous Irish and Jewish screen families who carry on their laughter making amid the Dbathing ‘beau‘ties of Atlantic City. The beauty pageant at ‘America’'s most popular resort and a superb cast make this a real - hit. : TUES. WED. THURS. JULY 23, 24 and 25 . The Bellemy Trial The two most exciting bits of daily news—a crime mystery and a woman on trial. They're both here--not a thrill missed inis th film novelty of the season. Leatrice Joy and Betty Bronson in the trial of the century and the greatest courtroom drame of all time. - COMING : . { The Office Scandal : . With Phiyllis Haver. Also comedies and news reels.
Guest Coupon Good With One Paid Admission on Monday
When The O=k . v . ccasion Arises That you need a funeral di- ~ rect, it is then you will appreciate the more that. heside heing able to pro(:uro the nec- - essary furnishings at:an expense to suit vou wishes -the ° appointments . will be high ~ class, and the obseques corried out with that dignified ! solemuity so desired and yet ~ so lacking is some presentday funerals. We have the ¢ . reputation of being without a . --peer in carefully considered equipment -‘and sympathetic : ~ 1 and appropriate’ procedure. Brown Funeral Home LICOXNIHR bl : - Phoges: : “Office 115 tesidence 120
South Side Garage
We are now ready to do machine and repair work of all kinds. GIVE US A TRIAL. - Cars Washed sl' Cars .washed with power washer: cleaned inside with vacunn cleaner, polished and Simoniz~ed if you wish. Duco paint spray for painting and retouch wqu. . Cars called for and delivered: Schlotterback & Oli chlotterback & OlingPHONE 480 .
aj;:[ EN inneed of J Printing see - what we can o do before you ‘ go elsewhere,
