Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 26B, Ligonier, Noble County, 25 July 1929 — Page 3

SERVICE’ A special characteristic of our service is the careful attention given every detail no matter how small: : Stanley Surfus Funeral Director Phone 495

' See ¥ : DWIGHT MOCK for i Vulcanizing and Acetylene Welding Battery Charging and Repairing Row Boats, Motor Boats and Canoes South Side [.ake Wawasee on Cement Road l’lmne} 501{“_‘w o :S;y‘l:;l_('llstLigonier Shippers’ Ass’ igonier dippers Ass . ~ MARKET YOUR LIVE STOCK CO-OPERATIVELY “In the Hands of a Friend From Beginning to End.” WHEN YOU HAVE LIVE STOCK TO : SHIP. CAIL , T. J. Spurgeon ’ Phones: Ligonier 834 or _ Topeka 3 ond 40 Harry W. Simmons ~ Crustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Merchants Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday B Evening . Wind Miils, Tanks, Pumps, ' Water Systems, Etc. Well Drilling® phone 333 - LIGONIER Dr. Maurice Blue - VETERINAKIAN Office: Justamere Farm Phone: l.igonier 857 VERHN B.FiISHER Sanitary Plumbing and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

Do You Need Any OB PRINTING Today? If So, Send or Phone Us Your Order NOW If you believe in home trade—in & home newspaper —in boosting your town—advertise in this paper We can also do yvour job work quickly «nd satisfactorily

H. E. Robinson Plumbing Hot Water Steam Heating Phones: 453 or 218 Ligonier Harry L. Benner ‘ Auctioneer Jpen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley County Phones L e v Attorney-at-l._lw Oftice in Zimmerman Block - LIGONIER, (ND Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTION’EER, : _ Thone 2 on ‘l Wawaka Bothwell & Vanderford ~ Lawyers ~hone 156. Ligonier. Indiana

' Long Railroads . = The longest railroad in the world 1s the Transsiberian railway, which runs from Leningrad to Vladivostok, a distance of more than 5,500 miles. The largest system of railways operated under a single management is the Canadian National, with a total mileage of 22,000. The largest railway system in the United Stutes is the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul, with a total mileage of 15,000.—Pathfinder Maga-

Hotel in a Mountain

"One of the most extraordinary hotels in the world is on the Jungfrau. "It is on the shoulder just below the crest of this Swiss giant; and was excavated rather than built, as most of the structyre, which has five stories, is actually within the mountain. Everything in the hotel is worked by electricity, and access is gained by a tunnel from the terminal station of the Jungfraujoch railway.

Colonial Smugglers

In colonial New England there were smugglers, men who brought in goods in defiance of the Dritish, robbed his majesiy's government of needed revenue and helped materially, in the long run, to detach the American colonies from Dritish rule. Boston, Providence, Newport and Salem all were ports of call for the carriers of contraband.— Kokomo Lribune.

‘“Vitamin” or “Vitamine”?

The pronunciation of this term depends on the form of spelling used. Two forms are in use, vi-ta-min, giving the first “i” the diphthongal sound that it has in aisle, and vitamine, pronounced vi-ta-meen. Of late, certain medical men have introduced the pronunciation vit-am-in, a pronunciation that is not yet recorded by the dictionaries.— Literary Digest, i

Stepping Heavenward or (?)

Aceredited scientific observers are telling us with im're:tsi'n.g plainness that under the new ideas of today which have translated liberty into license multitudes of girls, to say nothing eof doung men, are being swept away into open and notorious im mortality.—New-York Journal.

Grades in Wool

Half-blood sheep means half of one breed and nalf of another. Half-blood wool is the next grade coarser than fine, but is commonly considered a fine wool—that is, tlie fibers have smaller diameters thin these of the wool which is comtonly ecalled “medium wocl.” S “Probation” and “Parole” Quoting Judze Kavandgh: “Probation lets one who has been adjudged guilty of erime go from the courtroom without auy punishment at all. Parole: means forgiving the rest of the punishment after a guilty person has suffered a part.” : Tomorrow The Secriptural injunction, “Take no thought for the morrow,” must not be taken literally. The correct translation is, “Be not over-anxious.” That does not exclude making provision for the future by saving and insuring your life. : Spacious Vessels ' The total deck space of a 50,000ton ship is equal to about eight football grounds and in the British battleship Hood it is possible to run a hundred-yard race straight away on the quarter deck. Paper Wheels Not in Use [t is about 60 years since compressed paper wheels were used for railroad cars; they were discontinued with the advent of improved steel and iron wheels and heavier equipment.

Sharing Happiness

The souvenir postecard with *the scrawled line “Wish you were here,” has been laughed at and ridiculed but just the same it is an echo from the human heart.—American Magazine.

Speech Defects

Stammering and other speech defects may be caused by malformations of the palate, tongue, ete. Various speech defects may be symptoms of a functional nerve disorder,

Proof of Nobility

If a man is compassionate toward the afflictions of others, it shows that his heart is like the noble tree that is wounded when it gives the balm.— Francis Bacon.

Only Noble Attribute

The origin of all mankind was the same: it is cnly a clear and a good conscience that makez a man noble, for that is derived {rom heaven itself. —Seneca. ! :

World’s Highways

. -Recently compiled figures show that there are 0,500,000 miles of highway throughout the worlkl, with 3,000,000 miles in the United States alone.

Anger in Vain Then

~ Man has his limitations. No matter how angry he gets. coming out of an office building. he can't slam the revolving door.—-Toledo Blade.

But Do We Know It?

Few of us have more judgment than we need right on our own premises.— American Mugazine.. ’ Water Power The greatest water power on earth is women’s tears.—Atlanta Constitution. = . CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETX Services in Weir Block. Sunday school 9:46 A M. . - Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Everybody welcome. Pay your Banner subscriptions Pay your Banner subscriptions.

' Proving Popular ’ Camvaimberlo,st is proving to be a .most delightful and popular camp to the Boy Scouts. John L. Anguish, ,Bcout executive, reports that 146 ‘Scouts have already used the camp !"and that 124 are registered to date to encamp for the second two-weeks 'period beginning next Sunday, July 21 'at 3 o’clock. The maximum to be ac’commodated at any timé is about 125. !The significance of these figures is ;more fully appreciated when it is reimembered that the "Scopts from the Anthony Wayne Area in camp during ‘t’he entire summer season last year itotaled in the neighborhood of 246. ‘ Going to camp next week are nine itroops frpm Fort Wayne, two from ;New Ha_ven. one from Garrett and one ifrom Lancaster center. i Many of the furnishings for Lim-ihex-lost cabin are heing donated. 7T (council acknowledges the following: | One bed room has been furnished iby Francis '(}'eorge and mother. Mr. George n ow a member of the U. S. !Navy was formerly a member of Scout troop 8 and assistant Scout master of troop 22. Furnishings for another bed-roomn ihave been provided by Merlin S. Wil{son, while troop 26 of the James H. ;Smart School has donated the neces isary funds for the purchasing of th 'furnishing of a third bed-room. - The curtains downstairs have been donated by the Scout mothers of Fo iWayne, south district. _'Curtains upistairs have been donated by the Scout ‘mothers of Fort Wayne southeast dis[trict, f It is announced that the following ;moms still remain to be furnished: { Two bed-roms, living room, dining room and nature museum | ‘ Other equipment has been (lmmtr;(‘:i as follows: - i ‘ The Mary Penrose Chapter of the Dy {A. R. and the Ruth Chaptér of thei !]). A. R. provided the flag and flag rpole. - The flag was officially unfurl- | ivd at the dedication, ' “ | G. Donald McKay gratuitously in-; ;‘s\"talled the electric. wiring and fixjtures fo rthe camp. : ' The Scout council announces that la substantial endowment is needed to gpel'peluam the wild flower woods and .natur-_e garden as a memorial to the late Gene Stratton Porter. E Everything is moving along nicely iin ther opening days of the (:amy._ It ii sdoubtful if there is anyv Boy Scout i(-amp in America quite so appropriate’ly a Boy Scout camp. New Paris ,Benton, Richville Metho- " dist Chuarches | New Paris—Sunday School at. 9:30, iR..A. Reynolds acting superintendent. ;“I{emember the Sabbath day to keep it holvi’ ' i Preaching at 10:30. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at E. V. church. Benton—Sunday Schoool at 9:30, Leonard Wysong Superintendent. : “Call the Sabbath o dclight, holy of the Lord, honorable” | Epworth League at 6:30, Martha i Leacock Leader. ‘ : l Preaching at 7:30. : W. H M. S. at the home of Mrs i(_‘hauncey Miller Thursday afterncon August 1. ' Richville—Sunday School at 9:30 {Mrs. Grace Harper Superintendent. |, “The Son of Man is Lord also of the Sabbath.” ‘ Quarterly conference in charge of | Dist. Supt. Dr. Croxall Tuesday even\ing July 30. ‘ i W. H. M. S., see Benton announcement. : : ; . Epwonth Forest Camp meeting will ‘begin August 4th Insfitute August 1218. , . Everyone cordially invited.

Students Enrolled

Noble county students registered at Indiana University for the summer session are as follows: : Cromwell—Janice Holderman. - Kendallville: Richard Misselhorn, Clarence Wertz. -

Ligonier: James B. Schutt (medical school,, Indianapolis) Margaret Wemple. : Rome City: Clara Burkett, Charles McCune, Mrs. Zenia MeCune. Wolcottville— Ferris MeCormick.

Notice of Appointment

Notice is hereby given ihat the undersigned has been appointed administrater of the estate of Curtis Cole deceascd late of Noble County, Indiana. Said estate is probably solvent. : Edwin D. Smith, Administrator W. H. Wigton, Attorney. 27b3w

FINGERS! 21st Annual Fur Sale ‘ Chokers 1-4 to 1-2 off. Fur coats relined, glazed, remodeled and stored at 1-2 price during this sale. Your old turs remodeled into chokers, collars and cuffs, etc. Fur coats at 1-3 off. Terms or Cash. Look for Fingers Sign and Fingers Building Open Evenings 4 Phéne 2345 ~ Fingers Fur Shoppe 116 W. Jefferson : 'ELKHART

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

No More Second Grade Teachers

[ No more second grade teachers’ license will be issued by the state delpartm‘ent of public instruction it was decided at the- state education board meeting at Indianapolis. - H:. M. Whisler director of teacher ‘rtraining advised against further issuance of this class of license on the grounds there is no demand for second grade teachers, schools due to state board requirements demanding !that ‘their teachers have first grade certificates. . Second grade certicates were issued upon completion of 36 weeks !training for elementary and three Eyears for high school teaching. There are no high school teachers holding these certificates and only 405 township elementary schools employ teachers thus licensed it was said. These will be renewed. : ' ‘ A cadet teachers license was adopted, which will permit the holder to teach _twelve weeks in elementary and nine in <high school as training periods. b = : . Poor Farm Head Faces Quiz Charges that he refused - permission to visit blind inmates at the farm were brought vesterday againste Howard Walter superintendent of the St. Joe County infirmary. S The charges were made hy members of the South Bend Optimists club who are seeking to have the superintendent removed. _ Several investigations have been made on the place in the last two vears. A year ago another quster movement was afoot, but faded out before any action was taken.

Ball Game Here

The Fort Wayne Pirates the leading colored team in Fort Wayne and one of the strongest semi-pro nines in Indiana, are scheduled to furnish next Sunday’s diamond entertainment at the city park here. The Fort Wayne team defeated the Goshen Greys in a great game here on Decoration Day and are bringing the same team back in an effort to win its second straight. Doug Baird, ex-Pittsburgh Pirate in {fielder has been appoiuted field captain of the Greys and will play third base. The game will start at 3 o’clock D. S. T

To Probe Death.

Authorities today investigated the death of Mrs. Arthur McKevitt whose body was carried from her blazing home at Columbus after she allegedly had been killed with a hlunt instroment. \ . :

Although .a coroner's verdict had not been returned police were of the opinion that she had been killed previous to the fire which swept her home. Acid burns were said to have been found on thé body.

Warsaw Farmer Stung

Aaron Kincaid a farmer residing near Warsaw is seriously ill in a hospital there as a result of being stung by a swarm of bees while he was driving a team of horses through a clover field on a neighbor’s farm. He accidentally upset the beehive and the angry bees attacked him andthe horses. Before he could rid himseH of the swarm he was stung 200 times it is estimated. ; : :

Near-by Deaths

- Peter Steffen, 72 eczema °'Bluffton; Mrs. Nettie Spangler 58 heart trouble Adams county; Mrs. Louisa Deems 81, of near Butler died.on the farm where she was born; Fred Wiegman 63 gastric ulcers Auburn; Mrs. Frank Outhier 84 paralysis, Columbia City; J. D. Hendershot 83 complications, Auburn. . :

At Thempson Funeral.

Among those from away here to attend the Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. William Dickinson Mansfield, O.; Miss Verna Pancake, Miss Annie Brothwell, Elkhart: John Marker Toledo, O.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Burroughs Plainwell, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. W. H. McEwen Albion. e Kill 102 Dogs in Drive South Bend police have killed 102 stray dogs in the last week in a drive against rabies. - : The drive was authorized by the 60day absolute quarantine ruling by the state board of health. ‘ Several persons in South Bend have Lb'een reported bitten by stray dogs in the last few days. . . Read The Ligonier Banner. ;-

Ralph Waldo Emerson Child of Merry Month

~ The month of May brought this country some men who were to become imuniortal. It brought to a house in _Summer street, Boston, from whose windows could be heard the tinkling of cowbells and could be seen stately rows of elm trees and Lombardy poplurs. a baby boy, the fourth child of the ininister of the First church. This child grew up “in an atmosphere of ‘leuers. quite apart by himself.” He was a spiritual looking boy in blue nankeen, who found more favor with his elders than with those of his own ace. He was serious, but he wis not énh'mn. - I l.ike his father, he became a minfster, but resigned his puipit after a few years, because he feit cramped in spivit by the orthodoxy of the day. He went to live in Concord and was called & sage. A sage he still is, and there are very few people the world over wlio have not read some of Ralph '\\'uldo Ewmerson’s teachings. - : ! How little he would have sympathized with the “Puritan of Puritans” who struck down the Maypole in 1628! Yor this is what he says of beauty: “All privilege iS that of beauty.- . . 'The question of beauty tales us out of surfaces of thinking of the foundations of things. . . . Beauty is the quality which makes*to endure” And he quotes copiously frany the Greeks to illustrate. From the pazan Greeks! What a long road he Bad traveled, compared with the litiited path in which Governor Endicolt solemnly took his way!—Exchange. : lJungle Monarchs Lose Ferocity in Daylight Many of the jungle animals bearing reputations for ferocity are exceedingIy timid dhiing the daytime. A resident of Indja studying in this country is_authority for this statement and he says that he has repeatedly approached lions or tigers at a distance of 50 yardg and instead of attacking him -théy have slunk away. At night, however, the situation is quite different. These animals seem to become: em‘boldened by the dark. Elephants rareply ‘attack a man unless provoked. A knmive forester riding over one of the paths through a jungle accidentally collided with a cub elephant, whereupon the enraged mother seized the forester and literally tore him to - pieces. Ordinarily the elephants will flee at the approach of a human or even if they detect the odor of a human. The elephant’s eye is poor, but his sense of smell is marvelously keen.

,-:'. T 4 R ) W. R. Thomas Store & @ o W\ B - >, - | . e For Bigger and ‘Better Vai:c - Ifihe W. R. Thomas Store at Ligonicr, Ind.. a 2 nounce A R Anlng 9 - inong ; : ! &b %“ ifié z & Goum : : v SR S 5 q}: e ! ‘.' Saturday, July 27, Store opens at 8 U.S./1. - SINCE OUR FIRST OPENING ON MAY 4TH OUR BRUYERS HA: :-Tm BUSY BUYING QUALITY MERCHANDISE TO OFFER THE PUBLIC AT ASAVING ANDIT - IS DUE TO.YOUR SPLENDID PATRONAGE AND APPRECIATION OF THESE SAV.INGS THAT WE WANT TO BE OF STILL GREATER SERVICE TO YOU. WE HAVE ENLARGED OUR STORE TO MAKE ROOM FOR OTHER DEPARTMENTS WHICH "ARE FILLED WITH QUALITY MERCHANDISE OF YOUR NEEDS. : THE W. R. THOMAS STORES IN SHOWING THEIR APPRECIATION TO YOU ARE OFFERING THE FOLLOWING SPECIALS FOR i e , - Saturday, July 2

Aluminium Specials . This lot includes dish pans, large ‘ketfles, covered kettles, water pitchers ete., values to $1 ~ Your Choice 49c v ; ) , Other Specials . Light House Cleaner 3 cans ........cccoeunnen 10¢ Ladies Silk Hose regular 49c¢ value pair .... 25¢ Ladies Knit Underwear 49c quality suit 25¢ Ladies Voile Stepins and Bloomers ........ 25¢ New Prints Fast Colors the yard ............ 19¢ Plain White Cups and Sateers ... 10c Dinner Plates to match each ................... 10c Table Oil Cloth White or Colors yard .... 25¢ Toilet Soap Large Bars 4 Bats ... ... 2Be Matches 2 Boxes ... ... ... .. B¢

VISIT OUR STORE OFTEN

New merchandise is arriving at all times. Meet your friends HERE! For Bigger and Better Values -

The W. R. Thomas sc¢c to $1 Store ist door South Crystal Theatre = LIGONIER

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Toilet Paper 10c¢ size 4 rolls .............cinii,.l23€C Jelly Glasses thodozen .. . e w 290 Can_RUbb’.:)‘s 2 Boxes 15» 10 q't; Gd_ix anized Pa‘ils_Hez’tv‘\," »sf‘ic.h b ]9\. Salted Peatius Uresh vper pound ...l 10¢ Fudge per pmmd T 10c Candy 'Kiss.és per pound 10¢ Wax Lunch Paper 10c size 2 rolls ............ 15¢ Olathes Pins B 0 for ..o uncaal 10 Gréy Granité Combinefs 79¢’ value LBk Window Screens 12 in. size each et S9E Cedar Oil Polish quart size bottle ............ 25¢ Small Congolum Rugs each ..o 90 Men’s Broadcloth Dress Shirts full size Silk Bridge Lamp Shades each ................ 49¢ Household Brooms 50¢ values each 39‘(_

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