Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 39B, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 October 1929 — Page 2

To Pay Taxes - You Will Need CASH! LOAN CO. . I 8 ) € o > A Friendly Office . You enjoy a feeling of “security” when you place your business with us. Why? Because we are human—in sick ness, adversity or l_m_sinw; slumps—we loan money instead of ‘“tightening up.” By giving you our deferred paymeént plan, along with small payments to start, you may feel safe to borrow, thought out of work temporarily. v Auto-Furniture-Livestock Loans Established 1888 In ofiice of Kiminell Realty Co. 210 Cavin Street, Ligonjer Phone 800 : Open Tuesday and Saturdays 9 am. to b pm.

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Very likely your competitors is! He knows that when people need anything or want anything done, they’ll look through the | ADS IN | ~ His offer being in print--he gets the busi- ‘ ness and prifits : , Silence won’t bring you any ' customers, it takes | ADVERTISING!

*w . . T'he Ligonier Banner listablished 1856 Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. W. C. B. Harrison, Editor M. A. Cotherman, Manager

Published every Monday and Thursday and entcred the Postoffice at Ligonfer, ndiana, as second class matter. ’

; (CHOOSE WELL. A word to the voters of Ligonier. I'o:the men and women in husiness or professions, and those who toil with their hands. - . Do you desire to have the city grow and prosper?. What are the. prospects ? ' . ’ . : ILigonier is just where it was eight years ago. . Not a new factory nor a new industry to employ capital or ahor, » ' The ¢'ly cannot afford four years no e of inactivity. What it must have f it exy scts to expand i an aggressive, en regctic administration, one ajuble of doing something. : Ihe majo:ity of our citizenship are ot satic fied. They will vote for 4 “henge i 1 order to better things. It is u» to the progressive men and wonell ol Ligonier to see that a change i 3 made. 7 : The o.ly guestion involved in the coming eléction is what is best for Ligonier? Which set of candidates Jre nise most for the city’s advancement? ; The vifers know all the candidates hergonally: they know the record of lie past two administrations as combarod w 'h the two previous demioralic aaministrations and they know whot to look forward to if they grant

the party now in power a four year extension. : Vote for your own best interests and those of your fellow citizens by casting your ballot for the candidates on the democratic ticket. k%

The Sheltering Arm

By A. W. PEACH

s - AfGopyrighty = =o2 MARJ ORIE LAWTON looked at her ‘ handsome, - disturbed lover with amused yet tender eyes. *“You and father and the whole family cannot understand why I enjoy this settlement work, why I am willing to: live out the years down here in the slums —and it is useless of you to try to understand,” she said quietly. Duke’s face was white. “But my dear Marjorie, I simply must have you! Tl do anything for you! Come —be sensible—and help me make a home !” ; : Her gray eyes were wistful. “Dick, I do like you, but you see I want to do things with my own hands—and that makes all the difference!” His jaws set. %I don’t see it! I more than half believe you are in love with Senter—a ward boss!” “Don’t be rude, Dick, He ils a good friend.” Returning to the office she found Senter waiting. He turned toward her and his blue, steady -eyes brightened and shadowed. “Marjorie, there lis to be a strike In the factories, and that means trouble. I wish you would give up your trips into the ‘Kitchen.’ Don’t go down tonight.” She laughed. “Just when I am needed you want me to quit. I have just been invited to quit for good.” “T see, Duke. If I lose you—" He did not finish the sentence. : _All that Duke and Senter had said to her came back that evening when she threaded the maze of the section known as the “Devil’s Kitchen”— Duke’s request, Senter’s warning. Danger lurked in every shadowy _corner, but she had gone safely by it for months. She was sorry, nevertheless, that Mrs. O'Rory had had to choose such an evening to call for aid from the settlement house. Suddenly, as she started up the stairs, her arms were pinioned behind her firmly, something was thrust into her mouth and a voice said softly in her ears: “No noise and you will be safe!” She was carrled swiftly down the stairs to a waiting car. She was lifted in—and then her courage broke, but before she could endeavor to escape three forms shot from the sidewalk, and a low, throaty voice said: - ; “Hold on; what are you doing with Miss Lawton?” .

“Go wan with ya,” the man in front ot her said. “This aln’'t her!” The car started. A dark form leaped in upon the driver and the car Stopped. A revolver flared and banged near her. Curses broke sharply. - “Hold on! Hold on!” a voice said. “We give up, Blake. It's a joke, anyway.” :

“A joke?" a sharp volce said. “Well, Keeli, you'll have to tell that to Senter. Take her up, Grif.” She was stunned and dazed and hardly heard the arguing voices beside her and around her. Only when she found herself facing Senter in the office of his tenement flat did her old independent self rally. ~ He came to her suddenly, his face tense. ‘“My dear, what does this mean?” She saw in his eyes his sense of the danger she had met. _ - “Keeli can tell you,” Blake's cold volce said. i Lt

Keeli looked troubled. “It was a ‘Joke, that’s all. Old man Duke’s son, Dick, put it up to us to give this girl ‘a good scare, and we was doin’ it when Blake bobbed up—that’s all.” Senter’'s jaws were lined in white. Marjorie looked up and smiled. “It was some wild scheme on his part, Glenn, to cure me. He was pretty desperate this afternoon. Let them gO, please, and then take me home.” She realized in that moment how weak and weary she was. At his nod the men filed out, and he turned to her, putting a reassuring arm around her shoulders. “I will take you home and then you must promise me to stay there until the trouble is over, for I may not be—" He paused. ' “What, Glenn?” she asked, some sense of what he meant dawning upon her, and with it coming a thrill in her warm heart that Duke had never stirred. “Well, {t’s just this: you are a beautiful girl and there is never a day when you have not been in danger__” s ¢ “And your men have been keeping watch over me,” she added, softly, and she remembered hundreds of incidents which showed how faithful that watch had been; his love had been with her like a sheltering arm in her fearless journeys where the other settlement workers would not go. She drew his arm around her waist and glanced up at him, trembling a bit as she saw In his eyes the tremendous meaning of the love he bore her. If she but sald the word that love would be hers—that strong, faithful arm would shelter her to the end of her days, and he and she would spend the years in the toil that ‘was dear to the heart of each. “Take me home, Glenn, and then some day, if you ask me nicely, perhaps I'll come and stay—with you—always! Now—don’t you kiss me— Just—" She felt his lHps on her halr, %I know, dear,” wsas all he said, and she knew that Just as he knew then how weary she was with excitement and shock, so would he know and understand through the happy years to come, e

Pay your Banner submcriptions.

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

WARN MOTORISTS

Intenfsive Drive Is Being Condu(ft,éd By Indiana State Police Against ‘ Auto Drivers’

' The intensive drive now being coirducted throughout Indiana to enforce }the new automocbile drivers' license law will not necessarily mean the ar’x‘est of every person who had not !signed the license properly, OUtto G. gFif‘ieldi secretary of state has an‘nounced. o - oy [ Because .of a misundertanding among many motorists about the I'Droper place on theé license far the "]icensee’s ~ signature, hundm:is_ of motorists have either . signed in the i wrong place or have.not signed at all. What has been termed as aleifect” in the printing of the license, *but ‘which Fifield contends is not a flaw, i sthe fact tha: hardly enough ‘space was left on the front of the li- | cense for the aifixing of the signature, !Consequeufly licensees wlho read the !printod matter “Void uniess -sizied in ink” they have signed thie coupons on the att:u-he'd_ slips' ,which are to be sighed only upon arrest. . Firi¢ld pointed out that the signature can be placed either at the bLottom of the front of the license or on |the yellow space above ' the word “county.” He termed much of the published . matter concerning the license as “bunk’ and asserted that the instructions were not confusing. Fifield said that while the proper signaim'e were a very important part of the enforcement of the taw, that arrests would not be made .for that point allone until the public has had time to acquaint themselves with the proper form. - ' - John G. MecCGord judee under the new law has issyed a warning to motorists that failure ‘to sign the’ licenses renders the drivers liable 1o arrest. - e

: Killed Near Angola. | Thomas J. Luckey, 67, Grant county attendan(‘-'e officer, was fatally injured when his automobile swerved off the road and ran into a tree four mil-y es south of Angola on state road 27.! Mr. Luckey died in the Cameron hos- | pital shortly after one o’clock: »wherej where he had been taken, suffering from a-fractured skull. Several ribs were torn loose and an arm was broken in the wreck. :

Major Clayton Discharged,

Major Edwin Clarvion, who was recently seriously injured in an auto mobile accident at the Midway ,nortl ot -'Coshen, was discharged from the hospital there and taken 'to his home in Grand Rapids in an ambulance.

LINCOLN-CH EVROLETY . G, B Whittuker, Prop. Phone 145 : ligonie

At Flint ';\{-i_chigzlu b 0 picked youths between -the ages of 16 and 19 vears will soon begin an educational course in which books will he conspicuous because of their total absence. Thoy will attend class in overalls, and drait ing board, micrometers, vvrénvhofi 2nd screw drivers will take the place ot fountain pens,. blackboards and note books. Salaries will supplant credits in this the \vor]d.‘s most novel educational plant. ! . It will be an institution end>wed by Chevrolet Motor Company aud its faculty will be composed: of hardheaded production men with years of factory experience. At the head "ot the school will be .C. F. Rarth, vice president in: charge of m;nmt‘;u}nu*ing one of whose life dreams will be realized when the first class is held. Here it might be well to explain that this unique training place is not a school. Tlle word ‘“scboel” is one which Mr. Barth wants perniaently dissociated from this newset Chevrolet undertaking. It is definitel: a shop, operated umder shoyp digcipline, and maintaining shop hours. It is io be known officially as the Chevrolet Apprentice Shop. o - There will be many features to this novel training place, but It s doubtful if any are more interssting or more»significant than the reason for its cbncéption. ~And no one ean make this more clear than Mr. Barth himself. - i ; :

“The Apprentice Shop is actually a necessity,” he told his; visiter last week. ““Chevrolet Motor Company, like all other'large.l[m_anufa.cture‘rs has

for several years past noted 2 decrease in good-all around mechauics, When the automobile industry started there was no such -shoitage. . The founders of the industry were tlepselves super mechanics, and in every instance they surrounded themselves with oom'petent all around men. “The opportunities for training men in the early days were relditively easy. shop forces were much smaller and every ambitious worker had the opportunity of working at as many iobs as he chose. ok

“Then volume production came along and specialisfts were developed, In order to get sufficient cars to the public each man had to be master ot one operation. Changes aboaut were dangerous because precision workmanship such as Chevrolet employs can take no chances with the novice. _“Because of the scores of gcorl mechanics who got their training in the pioneer days of the industry no shortage, was actually felt until recently, Now it has grown quite apparent Ithroughvout the industry at larce. . “Chevrolet by taking this step, has !taken the bull by the horns. Because of the growth of aviation and the inspiration of Lindbergh the country has thousands of youths who have -become instensely interested in mechanics. i i

, Jail Youths For Thefts, Homer Rosenagle, 19, is lodged in the Whitley county jail at Columbia City charged with a series of thefts in Whitley and Noble counties. ' The young man who resides near Loon lake has confessed to taking two bushels of heans and two bushels of potatoes from: Perry Shoutz. He claims he sold the beans to the Hart grocery- store at Albion for $5. ‘‘The notatoes, he said, he sold in Fort Wayne. . i - He is also charged with robbing the coops of William Rusenogl'e., of near Burr Oak, this county, escaping with two dozen chickens. He alsé toon six‘dnzen hens from Mandy \\’ulhurn of near Suand lake, this. county. The poultry was sold at the Martin & Buckles store in Etna. . ' : The youth admitted taking a quantity of mint oil = from the George Crumm home but-said he returned it, He implicated another lad in . this case. Ile algo admitted taknig an automobile tire from ‘an Albion junk dealer. ' o « .- Fishermen .Warned. - ‘ CAttention has heen called by George N. Mannfeld. sxmvflmvu‘dent of the fish and game division of the state departnient of ‘conservation, to the closed period of taking ke trout from Lake Michigdn, whieh started October 20 and eloses November 22 Mr. Mannfeld also "points out hat the law also holds it unlawful to remove whitefish from Lake Michigan fromi November 5 to December 15, both dates inglusive: - : These rules, affecting .the activities of northern Indiana fishermen are set out in_ the state laws protecting fish, game, bur-bearing 'unim‘éxls and birds, with notes on Federal laws; for 19291930, copies of which are issued by the state department of conservation.

Frappers Heavily Fined.

Two muskrats trapped ou tof season proved costly -to H. G. Williams: and his father-in-law C. W. Henry of near Elkhart. Henry pleaded guilty to trap ping out of season and also to trapping without a license and was fined $66.50 on both charges. Williams pleaded guilty to having the hides in his pogsesgsion and was fined $4l. . Counterfelt Pay Deatts. = The local agent for the New York Central has been not'ried that counter feit pay drafts drawn on a non-evist ing bank at Indianapslis anl ;’-_lll'pm7ting to bhe issued by ansther jflil—road company are being c:ashed in some places. The drafts are . all drawn to the order of P. . cline in the amounts: of $684.30 each ;

“‘Abie’s Irish Rose” at Crystal next Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday.

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30x3 1-2 §/4 .95 at 4

334 ‘ at . s’9fss

Hudson-Essex Sales

Glen Roe

THIS RECORD STANDS ' @ ALONE e«s. Lhere are now more than 350,000 homesenjoying the convenience,economy and protection of General Electric Refrigerators—and not one owner has ever had to spend a single dollar for repairs or service,

The food he eats is the man he’ll be !

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g 2 BAU WTR NP TR T T e é - e pEa gt T AR *"g“ig,’ s ¥ *: :i‘ R e h 1 ‘irfi-fi ™ e = i A w; & &py Fy 4 f;m_‘t«," et ¢ £l : v ' g M & f gé«. A *r-‘?;;u ERENGRT e g A ; hey | K ot g She Shln 0, g e % S -3 g bk y Bt X AR e, % : § 0 b SN, WL S PR s W E g Le e A x 2 . ke S ey % s 0 B 4 (8L s |- o Bl e e |} t \ A F CE Y filf;”" Tey TS ¥ g T 4 L e e IR S 8 v "‘»"‘;""""\'év b Az"':‘:f'f 3\‘ ema b D o} . 5 e Aas 8 o ¢ 3 e e Gy 1 e i ‘ 3 O e S g W : B AR R ke e e o i T ;e b v.‘-i“:-‘.{g-.i'Ali‘!"‘ifi"’?a'i’é\%:k. RSO s I. LEWIS CIGAR MFG. CO., NEWARK, N. Y., MAKERS.

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30x4.50 $4°.95 ot $b

Ligonier, Ind.

e B LA s I L eonr o el | A = oa2 IS At o| | e 5 &3 &\ RS- ; v 7 | Erßa Rty = el Ol P ) e BTI S 2 N Yy b R e 17 - i - EP IR e | /D T 2 4 £ TF ik ~,?. .: i \L::. (e i kS . 4 o TR BN R P | Foh Db ERCSEERERT 47N 2 e Y W\;Q~ cih ¢ {": e~ | u‘§_ e o, San. g ; ) pEa | BN e TUT S ] o | o FEtng SV Bl L. G Y-\ BF e : N * el & £ . N 5 . 108 % Eod B I‘hziz;‘ b sy -P2 W B .‘{:i: o/ BB g ek PR | b i PR R 4 o e Ahks o “'(. . “{*" P SN L TR s

The General Electric Refrigerator has all its mechanism hermetically scaled in a steel casing, (uiet in operation, dustproof—never needs oiling. It ‘has an accessible freezing regulator. In addition it has the new ‘all-sti*b],‘Wa'rp-prm;f cabinet. Comé in and let us explain the cb!;vcniently spaced payment plan and the two-year guarantee,

30x5.00 5 Ao $B4B

ztlxfi.(.)o $ 1 3'35'

Roy Elijah