Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 42B, Ligonier, Noble County, 14 November 1929 — Page 4

COMMISSIONERS ALLOWANCES The Noble Coumty Board of Com missioners met in regular session November 4 1929 with the full Board present; present” Chas. W. Bender. John W. Long, *Noah F. Smith; present also, Edwin Smith, County Auditor, and Chester Vanderford, County Attorney; present also, John Singletofif county sheriff. The Board was duly declared in session by the said.sheriff, | In the matter of allowing bhills: Frances M. Beane salary $ 200,00 Frances M. Beane clerk’s office 5.00 Georgiana Erwin clerk hire 100.00 Edwin Smith salary 28250 Edwin Smith auditor’s office 1.60 B R Matteson aud. office 1.00 Wallace C. Harder salary 200.00 E L Adair treas. office 15.00 Frances G Kuhn salary 11666 Frances G. Kurn rec. office .60 John Singleton comm. court 8.00 John Singleton salary 183.30 John Singleton sherif office 2.00 E L Adair sheriff offce 3.00 H. H. Mortorff salary 233.32 B B Bortner sur. assist;{nt 60.05 Harold Hanes same \ 150.(»}) ~linton Gard same 16.00° élaire Mobley same - 1.60 A Merriman sur. office 2.00 Typewriter Inspection Co. same 95.00 H H Mortorff milage 29.60 'Roma L Milnorsalary 200.00 Roma L. Milnor supt. office . 3.04 Roma L. Milnor traveling exp. 450.00 Roma L Milnor deputy hire 6.00 Herald P Shew coroner inquest 20.00 Dr. W. H. Hays salary 30.01 E L Adair supplies 10.00 Eunice Baker health con. nurse 200.50 “Anna K Prickett salary 81.00 Anna K' Prickett att. officer exp. 23.05 H. V. Mentzer c¢. h repair 180.00 Harvey E Kapp same 3500.00 1, Castator same . ° 2.060 Smith Bros. same : 16.10 Henry Coe c. h. employee 75.00 Michael May same 76.00 B E Smith same 2.00 } 'S A Merriman c. h. supplies 1.00 Albion Water & Light same 98.80 L L Edwards jail employee 5.00 Smith Bros. jail repair 6.75 Dalton Rhodes jail employee 5.00 American Disenfecting Co sup 68.60 Acme Chemical Co. same 1 20.69 E J Parker same : 2.51 Albion Water & ight same v T Chas McCammet c. f. employee 45.00 Mrg. Chas McCammet same 44.29 E J Parker c. f. supplies .75 Abshire oil Co. same 20.40 S A Merriman same ° 4.25 E. E. Prickett same 4.50 J W Bherns same = 22240 Columbia Hog & Cattle Powder Co. same 37.20 Albion Water & ight same 30.39 Dale Schwab same ; 23.10 Eagles & Son same 281.40 The Roy K Riddle Co. same . 9.87 Dr. John Raenscroft same 14.50 Forrest Heniney burial Isoldiers 150.¢0 Berhalter Bros. same , 75.00 E L Adair printing 36.14 B R Matteson same 34,20 The Avilla News same ' .90 Chester Vanderford employee 105.00 Home Tel. & Telg. Co. telephone 81.48 H. H. Mortorff Larson road 22.20 H H Mortorff Bordner Road 34.50 H H Mortorff Wiley ditch 106.50 H H Mortorff Crothers ditch 134.00 Irene Byron Sanitorium patients 540.00 Allvin Mawhorter refund taxes 13.10 Gary C. Mayfield same - 520 Yost Bros. con. bridge No. 24 840.80 John Bender & Son Baird road 1199.34 H. H Mortorff Mawhorter road 12.20 H H Mortorff Cook road - 780 Baker & Dun same 100.00

Baker & Dunn same . 2067.20 Ft. Wayne Printing Co. bonds 225.00 Shively & Sons Dicken road 2546.46 Earl J Rimmel same 96.00 Brown-Brant Chev. Inc. rd repair 10.30 American Tar Products C0.5ame254.40 Bilt-Rite Steel & Iron Works _ same } 145.40 A M Geiger same 300.00 Frank J Ott same 2.25 Kiger & Co. same : 19736 Ft. Wayne Pipe & Sup Co same 16.3 s Auto Electrict & Radio Equip. ment Co. same - o 10.43 J D Adams & Co same 1115 Noble Motor Truck Corp. same 641.1% Noble Motor Truck Corp. same 529.9" H H Mortorff same 83.3¢ Albion Water & ight same 8.24 Root Spring Scraper Co. same 86.0( The Mossman-Jarnell Co. same 12.60 W A Riddell Co. same 30.34 Ebel Hoist & P%mp Co. same 22.7. G. E. Hillsman: Co. same 78.51 W. H. Heign same - 38.85 Lind Air Products Co. same 8.50 Cockrell Tractor Co. same 3175 McCount Ignition Co. same 108.80 R R Drake same ' : 21.13 B H Burnworth same 5806.5¢ Red Fox Petroleum Co. same 2574.2. George Uhl same . 639.0: A B Goodrich same 585.1( Albert C. Sprandel same 17.75 The Roy K Riddle Co. same 3.0¢( Eagles & Son sawpe 627.3¢ Albion Hdw. Co. same 91.64 Indiana Truck Corp. same 360.9" Indiana Truck Corp. same b 1 Alec M Rénnie same 437.9 R A Wilkes & Co. same 64.0¢ Calvin Black trustee same 25.04 Piston. Service Co. Inc. same 37.1¢ jLeona Smith clerk hire 64.56 Karl Bender road repair : 28.94 Ferm Bowman employee 2.0 C Taken to State Institutions The number of guests at the Elkhart county jail was reduced by six Monday morning -when Frank Powell and Paul Lockmonday both of Elkhgrt and Luke Riley of New Paris all convicted of liquor charges were taken to the state farm at Putnamville. and Charles Hughes and Clifford Wise were taken to the boys school at Plainfield and Robert Vohris of Elkhart was taken to the reformatory at Pendelton. : : Pay your Banner subscriptions.

FOCEE uCOOOCCfiuD@OO@@O@)@@@' ] 3 The Peach S o % % o ® - Specialist ol o) 80818 Be Berßesferd ®' By RUBY DOUGLAS 8l TOM CRAFT of the famous Craft l: Orchard farm- sat back in his chair and pulled at his pipe. : l ‘ “Yes, mother,” he said to his wife | who sat opposite him, “I have asked 1 Frank Hazen, my old school friend, | to .come out and spend the .summer. : He is a government fruit. expert, a specialist in peaches, and I'd like to | know what ails that new. orchard out there. He has not been so well and | the knock-off and rest will do him | good.” ; i , i This was such a long speech for | her hwsband to make all at one time | that Mrs. Craft looked at him over the rim of her glasses to see if he | were quite right. | “Where'll we put him?” she asked, |- after a minute, ' The old house was small and the | Crafts had invited a niece to use the | front parlor and little adjoining room used for a tearoom for motorists, Tom pulled at his pipe. - “Why | eouldn’t Julie move upstairs and let TFrank have her back room?” he | asked. ; 3 ~ “I—well, I wouldn’t like to ask her |. "to do that after the way she. has. fixed things up for herself.” “Put—tut—Julie’d understand. Tl ask her myself.” And suiting action to words, he called Julie in from her own' little | quarters where she was arranging a | menu for a luncheon party of motorists on the following day. : In her. cretonne apron, Julie Henderson probably came nearer to being pretty than she ever did in any-: thing else. : “What now, uncle?’ she asked. : “Your uncle is going to ask you toi| give up your little room to a big hulk, of a man, Julie,” began Mrs. Craft. . Julie looked from one to the other. “But—of course,” she said lamely.. She was beginning to make expenses and was more than interested in her, business venture. - ' ? “Oh—not the tea room, child,” said: Craft, hastily. “No—no—the little] room off.” i ol Julie breathed freely again. “But: I'd give them both up, gladly, uncle.' You and A%mt Jennie have been good” to let me have them as long as youw have.” ; Mrs. Craft’s eyes filled with tears.: Julie was always so unselfish. She! would have hidden her deepest desires| from either of them if she thought! an expression would worry them. As ber uncle explained who Mr. Hazen was, Julie’s face brightened. : “I think it is perfectly lovely, Uncle Tom, and I'll fix up the room to suit a man. Now it would give him a nightmare—it i 8 so feminine.” - “You’d make a home out of a hydroplane,” said her uncle when he was called to inspect the room his guest was to occupy. : Frank Hazen arrived and was duly welcomed. He was a quiet, rawboned fellow not much interested in anything but his work. : The four had & country supper prepared by Julie and her aunt and afterward they sat on the back porch and talked until the moon came. up. ¢ As the days went on, Julie learned to see beneath the weary veneer that | ;years of tripping about from farm to farm and from problem to problem {m fruit blights had painted over ’Frank Hazen’s personality. : + Night after night he sat with her | i‘on: the porch, the honeysuckle vines tJust letting the moon peep ‘through ! {when it chose. ; ' . Julie’s tea house business flourished :and Hazen had found the trouble in ° .the new orchard. The summer waned. ! i As it grew time for motorists not ! to need a country tea house Julie | Jspoke of going back to the city, where | ;she earned a meager living doing odds ! 'and ends for a woman's exchange, : ~ Hazen knew that he had rested. | §He knew that his usefulness as a Jpeach expert was over for the season. . i " But neither one wanted to leave !'the homelike atmosphere of the old@ Craft orchard. : : .

i “It’s too bad we can’t all stay here,” ‘remarked Tom Craft one night when '!they had been discussing the separation, - ' In the twilight, Frank Hazen looked' across at Julie. He saw her sigh, It igave him hope of a dream coming ‘true. ' ' “Perhaps—if you and your wife: 'would slip off to bed eArly Julie and [l might—might find a way out of having to be separated,” he said, boldly. ¢ “Why—" gasped Julie. ' Mrs. Craft arose. “Come, Tom,” ghe Said, “I sort o’ felt that we were not jneeded. AGood night, dear.” e ; When they were alone -Frank stepped over to Julie’s chair. “Was ithat a. very crude way, dear? I am {not very fancy, but—l love You. Could ‘Wwe not make this little family per'manent? I can see that I am needed there on this big fruit prospect and-— ,'you could run your tea house—and ‘me, as well, couldn’t you?" ! Julie said a great many things that idid not have to do with the running of a tea house and at breakfast time there was no talk of a separatiom but of a rearrangement of the old house after the wedding. “I told you the peaches out here needed attention,”_laughed Tom Craft. “And—witness the blush on it now,”; replied Frank, squeezing Julie's 'hn,ndér beneath the cloth. S D (Copyright.) o

Ligonier Banner . S9oo4ke Year -

French Town Center of - World’s Perfume Supply] It is in the belt of sun-soaked flel stretching from Cannes to Nice, France, where the true flowers wage incessant war against the coarse chem ical odors of Germany. ' The French are the world’s expert perfumers. The little town of Grasse, tucked away in the heart of the Maritime Alps, is the most famous _centeri of the industry, where all the per-} fumes of Europe are born. From Jan-} uary to December the rustics work by a sort of floral calendar, for flowers bloom in their millions the whole year; through. _ ' { Violets, jonquils, narcissus, golden) mimosa, mignonette, spice-laden car-; nations, geranium, orange flower, lav-! ender, spanish broom, tuberose andl acacia with its blossoms of orange) caterpillars. \ Most of all, from May to July, the’ rose holds sway—then jasmine queens! it. Jasmine, the only scent that can-| not be obtained by a cunning mlxture‘ of other flower odors; jasmine, when; mixed, often produces profound de-! pression and exhaustion. ! There are gardens everywhere, wlthl millions of flowers for the making of scent, { The quantities are indeed stupen-t dous. During Sert‘2mber, anything up to a thousand tons of lavender, aspic and tuberose blossoms are collected and distilled. The average weight of blossoms gathered in a single sumumer! is about 6,000 tons. Several milliow flowers are required to make a ton, 8o that the total number of flowers may] ‘be anything up to sixty thousand mll-v’ lion! o ,

Caves Valuable, Apart ! ‘from Scenic Splendor: The limestone caves at Waimoto! in New Zealand bring tourists from: every part of the world to see the! extraordinary beauties of the glow-{ worm cavern with its myriad stars of; phosphorescent firee The Mendip. caves of Somersetshire and the Peak. cavern of Derbyshire, England, have thousands of visitors yearly, and so has the Mammoth cave of Kentucky. The Mammoth cave had quantities of saltpeter in it which were dug and carried away for making gunpowder. But many caves have a value apart from that of mere scenic splendor. In the busa country near Te Kiutl in Auckland a huge cavern ir which is a wonderful deposit of alabaster, has been recently discovered. Another cave called the Carlsbad cavern, discovered under the Gaudaloupe mountains, in New Mexico, has great beds of rock salt.- This place is sald to rival the Mammoth cavern for gize, one c¢hamber being half a mlle long, four hyndred feet wide and more than three hundred feet: in height. : :

Design Long Followed The ratio 1:1.618, said to be the mathematical basis for beauty, has been used in reaidential designs for 3,000 years. It was applied in building the pyramids, and is considered the ideal proportion for living rooms, window openings, glass lights in windows and so on., It is used by all designers in determining length in proportion to width. , This number, 1.618, is a puzzle. If you multiply it by itsdelf, the result is 2.618. - Multiply this by 1.618 and the result is 4.286. Is it coincidence that this last power of 1.618 is equal to the sum of the two preceding? A series of successive powers of this number carries out this same truth, any one power being equal to the sum of the two preceding. - Biblical Unicorns : In Latin and Greek literature the unicorn is a fabulous beast having the head and body of a horse the hind legs of an antelope, the tail of a lion, and the beard of a goat. Its chief feature was a long, sharp and twisted horn set in the middle of the forehead. Obviously the word “unicorn” as used in early translations of the Bible refers to a different animal. It prob,ably refers to the Urus, an extinct species of buffalo. The revised ver.sion uses “wild ox"” in the places where ‘the King James version employs “uni- | corn.” . :

Old Lady Scored One Point The devout old lady was doing her best to stand up for the vicar against a group of hestile parishioners. ““He never preaches the same sermon more than once!” she declared. “He does!” contradicted one of her opponents; “I've heard him preach one sermon no less than four times.” Tears welled up in the brave little woman’s eyes. . “Well, at any rate,’ she said, “he always thumps on the pulpit in different places!—London Tit-Bits. s Rare : The famous KEnglish divine, the bishop of, Swansea, expressed himseif as amazed beyond bellef at the feverish rush’'of America. “You work hard and you make hard work of play,” he declared and added with a twinkle in his eye: “I fear that in -America a day of leisure, spent quietly at home, would now have ail the charm of nowelty.” ' Advanee Preparation : "~ Seventeen bog took the course in cookipng in a Buffalo high school. Most of us learn to get breakfast after we're married—~Morrigtown Jermymne - N

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

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Not a factory reduction but a local clearance sale in preparation for the new Hudson-Essex 1930 models. The buying opportunity of the year--stqcks are hmited--first come, first served. Clo e ' Ligonier, Ind. ~ Roy Elijah

The marriage of Miss - Virginia Knapp daughter of Mrs. Daniel E. Garringer and Harry Spry son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Spry both of this city took place Saturday evening at 7:30 o’clock in the parsonage of St. Mark’s M. E. church. The Rev. I. R. Godwin read the ceremony. The bride was attired in a brown crepe dress with ha tto match and carried brown and white chrysanthemums. Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Spry attended the couple and Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Stultz and D. E. Garringer were guests. The groom is a decorator at the Gortner-Jones plant and the bride is employed by the Goshen Floral Ce. They Plan to reside on ‘North Sixth street.—Goshen Democrat. Mr. Spry formerly resided in this city and attended the Ligonier .schools he is a brother of Mrs. Lloyd Willlamson of this city. : ; - (Close Call A stranger whose name was not ‘learned is thanking Providence. He crossed the tracks directly in the ‘path of the Broadwiy limited on the ‘Pennsy lines at Columbia City. Just as he was about over the locomotive clipped his spare tire from the rear of the motorist’s car. The tire was hurled for twenty feet. _ Indiana. Day. ' Wednesday December 11 is Indiana Day; the anniversary of the admission of Indiana into the Union. This day was designated by the General Assembly of 1925 as the official state day to be observed by a proclamation of the governor and by appropriate exercises and addresses at schools and public meetings. L “The Show' Boat” from W.L.S. at Crystal next Monday—one night only.

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Now Saving Hudson Coach $995 $2lO Hudson Coupe - $lll5 $l9O Hudson Town Sedan $1195 $290 Hudson St'd Sedan $1095 $l9O