Ligonier Banner., Volume 63, Number 48A, Ligonier, Noble County, 23 December 1929 — Page 3

SER VICE, A special characteristic of our service is the careful attention given every detail no matter how small. ' Stanley Surfus l Funeral Director Phone 495 RRSo e R A e

igonier Shippers’ Ass’ Ligonier Shippers’ Ass'n. MARKET YOUR LIVE STOCK CO-OPERATIVELY ““In the Hands of a Friend From Beginning to End.” WHEN YOU HAVE LIVE STOCK TO SHIP, CALL \ “3 N T. J. Spurgeon : PPhones: Ligonier 834 or Topeka 3 ond 40 j - v ! g’ Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Oirice at Farmers and Merchants Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday ' Evening . :

O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc. | Well Drilling 0ne333 LIGONIER Dy, Maurice Blue | VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. Phone: Ligonier 857 H. E. Robinson Plumbing Hot Wates Stearn Heating Phones: 453 or 218 Ligonier Harry L. Benner : Auctioneer - Open for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley v County Phones -Sk W ;"‘vl.ttorney‘abl.aw ‘}tice In Limmearman Block LIGONIER. ND

Aladss Bdifad S 0 ObA A A § WWe are m 8 position ? to give all i Printing. Prompt and Careful Attention = l 1] i | | [ | \ matter is l*&ff\:l © your || S at tumes t [ | Lt oy creicrne

RBothwell & Vanderford Lawyers ¥hone 156. Ligonier, Indiana Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER = Fhone 2 en 1 Wawaks

VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind Kenneth Gorsuch General Hauling Day or Night Phone 832 _ Ligonier

How Caeser, the Janitor, - Enjoyed His Christmas TI!E Barrows family was having a gloomy Christmas. Mrs. Barrows, depressed by recent misfortune, made little effort to enliven the atmosphere, and Mr. Barrows, resenting ber gloom, became gloomy bimse!’f. Robert, home from college for vacation, was blue because a sprained ankle kept him from the holiday dances. So it was only ten-year-old Mabel who was in tune, and even she felt rather wistful as she looked out on the snowy street, Suddenly, she gave a startled exclamation: : *Oh, mother! Here comes Caesar! 1 forgot to tell you I'd invited him to dinner!” . “Caesar! The colored janitor at the church?’ ecried Mrs. Barrows. “Yes; the other night when | asked him where he was going to have Christmas dinner, he said, ‘No place honey:.l ain't got no mo’ home dan a alley-cat!” and so 1 told him to come here. I forgot to tell you.” Mrs. Barrows, who could always rise to a social emergency, sinothered her frritation, and hurried to the kitchen. and when the glorified Caesar, in well-brushed suit, shining shoes and red necktie was ushered into the din ing room he found a small, well-ap-pointed table set for him in one corner. : : “Dis suah is great doin’s!” he exclaimed; and throughout the meal he kept up a stream of jokes -and reminiscences which set the family at the big table first into chuckles and then roars. : : When the dessert was finished, Robert asked Mabel to bring his banjo down from his room, and for an hour he played and sang college songs and negro spirituals, while Caesar chimed in with his rich baritone until the room rang with melody—and bhar mony; too, of more kinds than one. When the plaintive strains of “Go fng Home” were ended, Caesar said: “Wal, I nevab did hyah dat tune befo’, but it seems lak I knowed how to sing it jes’ by intermission, as day say. Ah reckon dat tune is a purty good one to go home on—an’ I've bothered you-alls long enough anyway.” ' “No bother!” exclaimed Mr. Barrows heartily. “You've done us all a lot of good.” “Yes,” said Mrs. Barrows, “you’ve cheered us all up immensely.” “Hyah! Hyah!” came the rich negro chuckle, “Ah reckon you-all don’ need much - cheerin’ up.. You's 8 mighty cheersome fam’ly.” Angd Caesar departed, leaving echoes of langhter and song.—Mpyrtle Koon Cherryman. ' © (©. 1929 Western Newspaper Unlon.) og )<@

Christmas CHRISTMAS seasons pass away. The brightness and the cheer merge into the drab of routine life. - The tokens of love and appreciation fade into dim wemories. The toys are broken, the 'candy and the nuts are eaten and the laughing chil dren go chasing other pleasures The burdens laid down, for the time, by older people are taken .up again; the stooped forms .go trudging on and the world forgets. ! But Matthew’s story of Joseph and Mary, the wise men and the star, with Luke’s story of the child, tlie angels and the shep herds stand out always bright ‘and clear unmarred or dimmed by centuries. : The star. will come again and bring the wise men. The angels will sing again the same old song. A multitude of children will sbare again like joys of other years. New pleasures, new hopes and new aspirations will ‘crowd another season. Matthew and Luke will tell again the deathless stories which give to Christmas immortality.—William L. Gaston. (©. 1929. Western Newspaper Union.)

BELIEVING IN A SANTA ' 4 s’ i : -'\"’// ‘2 0 o il 'j’ 7.~ [l TM il 2 "llllllll“ iz Po\ . ‘!{‘ \; l mu. / fimi IR 2 i B HIA e .i:\‘n\!.\wf7 t il | A .WJ]M itz 2 I '?‘i \ &lfi “m'!;ijéi“‘}{%}!}i]l}%}‘EWf : il A B R:it i ]’ I l’ ‘ i |Q‘ \ *Riiflfi!fil%fl“gfl,‘,‘a‘; I Il i A EHLH TR IR ; L .\1 AN ; . * 7 X N He—l suppose you still believe there’s a Santa Claus. She—l did—until you came along. First Observance of Christmas "~ The first observance of Christmas December 25, was sometime about the middle of the Fourth century after Christ. Until that time the date of His nativity was not settled definitely, since the early Christians considered the observance of birthdays a pagan custom,

Ligonier Banner $2.00 the Year |

. o Christmas | Candie

= ¢ZLOWLY, almost -reverently, //’|9'\ Nora Carney set the Christ- © mas candle in the window, whispering a prayer as she N A looked out into the cold, still 17 night. Bravely the liitle & flame gleamed out into the == darkness; a beckoning light to any wanderer that might be seeking shelter. :

“Mother, won’t you tell us the story of Christmas again?” little Michael asked. “Tell us about the coming of the Christ Child, and—and the reason they light the Christmas candle in Ireland?” i

Nora Carney had been born In Ireland. Now, her home was in the midst of a great western prairie, but, as her children gathered around her, she told them the story of the coming of the Christ Child and the reason for the lighting of the Christmas candle as her own mother used to tell it to her long ago, around. a glowing peat fire in far-away Ireland. “You know, children,” she began, “when Jesus came there was no place for Him. Joseph and Mary were so tired and so weary after the long Journey into DBethlehem, but every place they sought a shelter they got the same answer “no room.” People

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took little interest in them because they were poor; so they had to go out to that dark, cold cave, and there the little Christ Child was born. Angels were singing their songs of joy and welcome for Him over the hills of Judea, but in Bethlehem they sought a shelter in vain.” g

“I wish our house had been there, mother; we—we would have let them in,” little Mary interrupted. Mrs. Carney stopped to stroke the curly head with her work-worn hand, then went on: “In Ireland there is a beautiful legend that very often Mary, with the little Christ Child in her arms, comes back to earth on Christmas eve, and wanders around seeking: a shelter for herself and Jesus. And lest she might seek a place in vain, a Christmas candle is placed in every home to guide her.” “Oh, children,” she went on, her voice taking on a radiant note,>»*it is a beautiful sight to look out on Christmas eve and see every hill and valley in Ireland dotted with Ilittle golden lights; the whole country looks like one big Christmas tree.” She stopped a few moments as if memory carried her back over the years and she was looking on the scene once more; then, at the insistence of the children, went on: | “This was how the beautiful custom of lighting the Christmas candle eAL (G W NS (B -\ S B Vo RN Ol R ) SO N| AR e """‘\ : -‘/ Y“@ N s YT ), Iy

started, and it has been kept up through the years.” : . “But—but—" practical-minded Jimmie interrupted: “They—the mother and child don’t really come back—do they ?” :

“I—l don’t know for sure, Jimmie, but I do know that very often others that the Christ Child loves are needing aid or shelter. Sometimes it is only a kind word, or a bit of encouragement, maybe, but if we give it, and give it cheerfully at Christmas, we are really doing it for Him and—and giving Him the shelter that they refused in Bethlehem long ago. You know the words He said when He was here: “Inasmuch as ye do it unto the least of these, ye do it unto Me.,” Silence fell upon the room after the story was finished. Even practicalminded Jimmie asked no other question. All the children seemed to be looking toward the little candle that was shining so bravely in the window. Now, after the story that they had listened to, it was no ordinary candle that they were looking at; it had grown” to be something sacred, something inspiring. o .~ And in the years to come, no matter where the Carney children might be scattered over the earth, always ‘the lighting of the Christmas candle ‘would bring back the memory of this hour, and for all of them it would al‘ways be a symbol of the love and de‘sire to help others at Christmas for His sake. { (©, 1929, Western Newspaper Union.)

Christmas Greens . The custom of hanging evergreens in the house at Christmas time originally had a purpose beyond decoration. 'n olden times, each kind of evergreen was supposed to confer special blessings on those who passed beneath it. To pass under holly insured good fortune for the coming year. , -

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

" LAND FOR NEW STATE PARK 3,556 Acres Acquired By Indiana Department of Conservation in Jasper and Pulaski Counties, Establishment of a state game refuge in Jasper and Pulaski counties, purchased with earnings of the fizh and game division was announced Thursday by state conservation depart ment officials. : A total of 3,556 acres has been acquired at this time and the commission proposes to increase this to &,- 000 acres providing adjoining lands to the present holdings can be acquired at reasonable prices according to George N. Mannfeld head of the fish and game division making the purchase. Establishment of the Jasper-Pulas-ki county - state game reservation is the third of a series of game refuges the conservation department proposes to locate in various parts of the state through the acquisition of waste lands. :

Wedding Anniversary Celebrated

Mr. and Mrs. Wm. I. Buckles 528 North 4th St. Mishawaka entertained at.dinner Tuesday night Dec. 17th in their home honoring their 26th wedding anniversary. The guests included their children and grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. Ely of South Bend, Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Jenkinson and daughter Yvonne; Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Davis and daughter Colleen and son Duane and Coe, Hilda and Clyde Buckles of Mishawaka A daughter Bertha and family of Lakewood Ohio and a son Wayne and family of Wolf Lake were unable to attend. The table and house were beautifully decorated in keeping with the holiday season. Mr. and Mrs. Buckles were presented with a beautiful gift by their children. The Buckles family were former resident of this city. o

Mail Planes Forced Down Here

Three air mail planes were landed at the Goshen Municipal airport last night because thé weather made flying hazardous. Pilots Walt Adams and Harold Knoop enroute to Chicago land 7’& at about three o’clock this morning. Efforts were made last night to open the road to the airport in order that the mail might be brought to Goshen and placed on trains. County Highway Superintendent H. A. Firestone sent trucks with snowplows but the trucks were unable to force a passage through the six foot drifts, and the caterpillar tractors were miles from the city. The attempt to open the road had to be abandoned.—Goshen News Times. , '

Bank of Southport Looted

The Citizens State Bank of Southport a suburb ten miles south of Indianapolis. was. held up Friday by two men who escaped with approximately $2,000 in cash. The cashier F. E. Wright and a young woman employee were alone in the bank shortly after it opened when two men both well dressed entered and threatened them with a revolver One of the men gathered up the cash The two robbers then ran to an automobile parked near the bank and egcaped.

Medical Society Meet

The Noble County Medical Society met in their annual meeting at the Allbion Hotel on last Thursday. The annual election of officers was held at this meeting and resulted in the folowing officers being eelcted: Dr. J. D. Seybert Kendallville president; Dr. J. BE. Lucky Wolf Lake vice president; Dr. W. F. Carver Albion, Secre-tary-Treasurer. Mrs Foy Messer and Hynes of Kendallville were taken into the society at this meeting. :

Basketball Tourneys

Sectional play in thé 1930 state high school basketball championship tournament will take place February 28 and March 1 it was announced last week by the Indiana High School Athletic assoeiation.

Regionals will be played March 8 and on March 14 and 15 the 16 survivors will fight it out for the title in the Butler university field house at Indianapolis. / ~

Had Big Task

Street Commissioner Banta put a large force of men at work shoveling snow from street crossings Thursday an dthe workers have since been kept busy. Much snow was hauled away in motor trucks. The plowing of sidewalk paths was no small task.

Warsaw Girl Badly Burned

Dona Hudson seven daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hudson of Warsaw was seriously burned about her back arms and head when her dress caught fire from the kitchen stove in the Hudson home. .

10 Cities Bid For Hospital

Ten cities including Indianapolis, Evansville Kokomo, Marion Columbus Carthage Delphi, Peru, Vincennes and Rushville are competing for the World war veterans hospital which the goverment proposes to erect in Indiana.

Marriage License

A marriage licenses was issued at Goshen Friday to Richard Cross Lake Ligonier and Kathryn Louise Swartzlbaugh Goshen. '

To Play at Albion

The Herman Sack orchestra will furnish music for a sorority dance at Albion Friday evening December 27th.

Christmas Mgtinee' at 3:00 at Crystal,

Joy Ride Comes Costly,

It turned out to be a disastreus joy ride for Marion Conrad and Rusdel Temple of Kendallville. They Wére brought before Mayor W. C. Atmah at Kendallville charged with “vehicle taking” vaived arraignment and gave each bound over to the Noble circuit court in the sum of $l,OOO. They were later taken t ojail at Albion. It was these lads who took the automobile owned by Thurlow Hovarter of near South Milford.

Man Loses Leg is Accident

Reuben Billman of Niles Mich., and formerly of Wakarusa was seriously injured severa] days ago at Niles, when he was struck by a freight train. Billman is a car inspector and was working when the accident occurred. His left leg was severed and he was otherwise seriously hurt. He is a brother of John Billman of Wakarusa and is related to the Noble county BRillmans.

Jail Delivery in Chicago,

Six prisoners in the new $7,500,000 county jail on the West Side in Chicago took advantage of the storom and fled over the wall into the snow to freedom.. The- prisoners seized a guard locked him in a cell on the fifth floor of the jail section of the “egcape proof” building gained the courtyard and went over the wall.

Bandits Sentenced

- Three young bandits members of a gang of six who allegedly killed Sergeant keo Fox of the Hammond police when he with other officers raided the gang’s hiding place in a Hammond apartment were sentenced to life imprisonment today. '

Meeting Postponed

- The Boy Scout rally scheduled for Thursday evening at the Kendallville high school gym was postponed due to the snow storm and the inclement weather. The date of the rally will be announced later. s

Snow Crushes Garage Roof

The roof of the Munson garage at Warsaw crumpled under the weight of the heavy snow, damaging fifty automobiles. hTe damage was estimated at $lO,OOO. ' -

Funreal For Mrs. Howe

Funeral services for Mrs. Edith U. Howe aged 66 a former resident of Kendallville who died at a Fort Wayne hospita] after a short illness was held Friday afternoon in Kendallville,

. Janet Gaynor and Charles Farrell lin “Lucky Star” at Crystal tonight all talking, = :

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Inserts show Mart as it will S en compiete i i ' : G P , and Andrew C. Weisburg who will operate restaurant.

Chicago Merchandise Mart to Have Most Novel Restaurant in America to Cater to the World’s Appetites /i \HE world’s largest restaurant, with an interna--1 tional menu and accommodations for a whole town’s population of diners, will be located in the Chicago Merchandise Mart, the world's biggest building. There will be seating accommodations for 1,400 people at a time and it is estimated that it will be possible to feed 10,000 a day. More than 30,000 square feet of space in the Mart’s grand lobby, divided into four units, have been reserved for restaurant facilities. There will be many unique features of equipment and service and a roster of more than 500 eniployees. : : . On one side of the great 650-foot grand lobby will be the men’s grill and a general dining room for men and women. Opposite .these will be a coffee shop and lunch counter room and grill. These will be grouped about a huge kitchen in the center, enclosed by glass. It will be a visible kitchen so that the patrons, no matter in which of the restaurants they are eating, will be able to see the food prepared. : .This is the first time in America, according to - Andrew O. Weisburg, who has secured the restaurant rights, that the problem of preparing food in a mammoth restaurant in a manner which will absolutely insure cleanliness and sanitation will be solved. At all times the food handling and preparing operations of

Burke Still Eludes Posse Fred Burke gangster sought through olit the midwest may be smow bound at some farm house between Flin{ and . Datroit Michigan. - State police and deputy sheriffs watched roads of Genesee county in a driving blizzard after Mrs. S. H. Jarvis identified newspaper pictures of Burke as those of the man who spent Wednesday at her rooming house and drove off toward Detroit. : ‘The man and his.companion a pretty young woman, had been gone for ‘hours before Mrs. Jarvis chanced to pick up a newspaper. One glance at ;the picture of Burke and she fainted. ’ Rob Filling Station t = Lloyd Reutsch proprietor of a seri vice station at Columbia City was 'struck and rendered unconscious and his filling station on Road 9 was rob_bed of $52.35 by two_ bandits. ' !'?PL‘?L’IBE,},”‘““% at 3:00 at Crystal.

Home Realty and Investment Co. : ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR | 'LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. Real Estate, Federal Farm Loans and Securities - ALSO Ufficial Indiana Auto Licence Branch . 1930 License Plates will be on sale at this branch, December 16th---come early’ __ and avoid the rush. Ample Room for Your Comfort and convenience. o | J. L. HENRY Manager |

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the restaurants will be the subject of scrutiny by tha patrons. , Mr. Weisburg, owner of the Hotel Oliver, South Bend, Indiana, is a nationally known hotel and restaurant man. He is now touring Europe and the Orient in search of new ideas for equipment and service and to acquaint himself with the favorite foods of other nations, that he may be able to cater to the palates of visitors from abroad, as well as the American ‘business man, when the Mart opens in May to the merchant buyers of the world. : The Mart will have a total floor area of 4,000.000 square feet of about 100 acres, and a display space on each floor of 250,000 square feet, or around five acres. Each of the 18 display floors of the 24-story structure, two city blocks in length, will bave sales corridors 650 feet long, veritable “business boulevards.” Bordering on these great corridors will be hundreds of lines of merchandise exhibited through stores having six and one-half miles of window display. : i Bringing the buyer to a great central market mste:%,g%taklng the merchafdise to the merchant is the mérchandising principle of which the Mart stands as an institution, and this plan of concentrated markets means a new era in more economical and efficlent distribution of merchandise for the manufacturer and wholesaler and less time in buying to giva more time for selling to the merchant buyers of the country, declared Mr, Welles, - o

APPETITE - IMPROVED e QrUICKLY RTERS| Esjoy the Taste of Feod “ If you have no desire A for food, and vou feel "W | out of sorts, and degressed, stimulate your digestive organs. Try Dr. Carter’s own formula. These pills taken after meals will ald digestion, relieve the gas, regulate the bowels, expel constipa~ tion poisons and arouse appetite, Al Druggists 25c and 76c red pkgs. B IRA J. SHCRBE GENERAL INSURANEE Phone : 132 LIGONIER, INDIANA - My aim “BEST PROTECTION AT LCWER