Ligonier Banner., Volume 64, Number 4A, Ligonier, Noble County, 17 February 1930 — Page 3

SERVICE A special characteristicfof»our service is the careful attention given every detail no matter fhozv small. | Stanley Surfus Funeral Director Phone 495

Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp - Office at Farmers and Merchants Bank - Saturday Afternoon and Saturday Evening :

O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Efc. : Well Drilling one 333 - LIGONIER

Dr. Maurice Blue " VETERINARIAN

Office: Justamere Farm

Phone: ligonier 857

H. E. Robinson - Plumbing . Hot Water Steam Heating Phones: 453 or 218 Ligonier

Harry L. Benner

Aucti neer

Upen for all engagemends - Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley County Phones

W. H. WIGTON

Attorney-at-law

Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONILER, r ‘ND

Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER

Fhone € on 1| Wawaka

IRA J. SHOBE

GENERAL INSURANCE Phone 132 LIGONIER, INDIANA

. My aim ‘ “BEST PROTECTION AT LCWER

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 T. J. Spurgeon Phones: Ligonier 834 or Topeka 3 ond 40 Do You Need Any B Today? If So, Send or Phone Us Your Order NOW If you believe in home trade—in a home newspaper | —in boosting your town—advertise in this paper We can also do your job work quickly and satisfactorily

Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers o 2hone 156. Ligonier. Indiana

VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing , and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind

Kenneth Gorsuch General Hauling Dayor Night = Phone 832 ~ Ligonier

" DOROTHY DARNIT

W ‘MM : s iBI » .‘o -‘;_,7 , : ~1 | [HELLO | f[DONT GET FreSA'( | ‘- 2 NUMBSEKULULL® | lIS T A _ e SMART AS YOU ‘ i .2 : it f 7, s e a 7 0 Lo % " ";, _(/: @ e _C J Ip&’ /’.";‘»‘:t? (‘:\ 7 » :__:‘:‘;?; ; 5 ‘:.l : {/’../,‘ \;’{:/\/_> \} "If s ;:.' My e | \-(’, i, /q\ai » g I ::;. 2 . A ) . Z ' _- i ? . | s eLb = |

| Obituary : - Mrs. Mary Holzworth, daughter of Ulrich and Ana Sontchi was born in Stark County, Ohio, February 5 1843 and departed this life at the home of her daughter Mrs. Forrest Gill at 7:30 A. M. December 30, 1929. Her age was 86 years, 10 months and 25 days. She was united ,(in marriage fto Henry Holzworth March 23 1876. To this union four children were born, three daughters and one son. The son and.one daughter had preceeded her to the Great Beyond. At an early age she united with the Center Lutheran church of Allen County and lived a faithful and devoted Christian life. She loved to read her bible daily and attended church as long as her health permitted.

She leaves to mourn her departure two daughters, Mrs. Forrest Gill of Noble County, Indiana, Mrs. Flora McLallin of Albion, Indiana and one neice Mrs. J. H. Steinbarger, of Noble County, Indiana. Mrs. Steinbarger came to her home after the death of her mother when she was but two vears old, and enjoyed the home life as one of her daughters. She also leaves three sisters Mrs. Sam Weaver of Wawaka, Indiana, Mrs. Sam Crawl of Harlen, Indiana, and Mrs. Caroline Emrick of Fort Wayne Indiana besides five grandchildren and six great grandchildren. No sleep like hers, no rest, In all the earth to-night! Upon her whiter breast ; Our roses lie so light. She had no sins to lose, . | As some might say; S But calmly keeps her pale repose, . Till God’s good day. '

The bereaved wish to thank the many friends and neighbors for the beautiful floral offerings assistance, and kind expressions ?'of sympathy during the illness and death of their loved one, Mrs. Mary Holzworth.

Married in Fort Wayne

....Miss Hazel Schutt of Fort Wayne formerly of Albion was united in marriage February 1 to J. Elmer Quaintance of Lafayette. The single ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. Wm. E. Clark at the Wayne St. Methodist parsonage their only attendants being Miss Mildred Baker and Ora Ice also of that city. :

The bride is-employed in the office at the International College of Fort Wayne The groom is a machinist at the General Electric. For a few weeks they will reside with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Wiley at 1231 W. Wayne St. Mrs. Quaintance is a niece of J. B. Schutt of this city :

Sheep Breeders to Meet

Shropshire Sheep Breeders of North Eastern Indiana will hold their annual meeting with: Claude Harper of Purdue University at the office of U. C. Brouse Kendallville on next Friday afternoon February 21 commencing at one o’clock. Lamb elub work in Noble County will be the principal subject for discussion. W. E. Hovarter of Helmer leads the organization.

Fertilizer Meet Next Wednesday

|Fertilizers will be discussed at an all day meeting sponsored by the Indiana Farm Bureau in Albion on Wednesday February 19th Otto Voil and M. J. Brigs of the State Department will be on the program. Dinner will be served by the ladies of the M. E. church. This-is a county meeting.

01d Physician Dies. G | Dr. Isaiah E. Lawrence 84 the oldest practicing physician ‘in Whitley county died suddenly at his home in Columbia City Friday alternoon.

NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT i State of Indiana Noble County ss: In the Matter of the Hstate of Maurice L. Latta Deceased , No. 3124, In the Noble Circuit Court March Term 1930. . Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned as Administrator of the Estate of Maurice L. Latta deceased ‘has filed in said court his account and ‘vouchers in final settlement of said Estate, and that the same will come | up for the examination and action of gaid Court at the Court House, at Albion, Indiana on the 3rd day of March 1930 at which time and. place all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause if any there be, why said account should not be ap-. ‘proved. h ‘ 3 | And the heirs, devisees and legatees of sald decedent and all others interested in said Estate, are also hereby required at the time and place aforesald, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. e &

‘Farmers & Merchants Trust Co. & Administrator ‘Posted Feb. 8 1930. :

Temptation Too Great . | for Presiding Officer A bachelor, who is the best maker of decoy ducks on the south shore of Boston, Is also the presiding officer of the board of trustees of his church. When a street widening demanded a strip off the front edge of the church property, a meeting of the trustees was beld to consider it. - . “Well, madeé a sale, did ye?’ next day asked one of those curlous citlzens who want to know. A “Well, 1 don’t know,” sald the ehurchman. - . “Why, they going to take the land, anyway ?” . “I''m not exactly sure.” “Held a meeting last night, didn't ye?”’ : : X = “Oh, yes—held a meeting, all right.” “Warn't you there?” “Yes, I was.” W “Well, then—" - “I'll tell you,” said the decoy maker. “lI took the chair, and opened the meeting, and then 1 got a chance to ride home, so I left, and I don't really ‘know just what they did do.”

Romance From Missives . : in Cavern Post Office

In Wind Cave National park, south of Custer, 8. D., is a cavern serving a unique purpose, Some 200 feet under ground, the cavern ts called the post office. : .

_Here tourists and sightseers leave tneme'nt_os, usually their names and addresses scribbled on the back of an envelope or some other piece of paper, and stuffed into one:of hundreds of box-like formations on the rock walls. These natural crystalline formations suggest the idea of the post office, . A perusal of the “mail” reveals some interesting things, One finds names and addresses from every state in the Union and from foreign countries. It is permissible to take these, and many a miss or youth has visioned his er her future love as a half dozen or more names were selected. :

Much Bacon on This Hog

The fossil skeleton of a giant hog which stood seven feet tall is. mounted in Morrell hall at the University of Nebraska. The terrible pig in his prehistoric day was as high as the tallest modern motor car and had a wheel base of about 40 inches.

The fossil was dug up in Sioux county, Nebraska. Only two of the giants have ever been discovered, the other being smaller than the university's specimen, , The pig, scientifically termed Dinohyus hollandi, lived during the late Oligocene or the early Miocene age, which would give him an antiquity of some 12,060,000 years.— Kansag City Star’s Science Service,

Better Left Unsaid

Sanders meant well, but somehow he was always putting his foot in it. At a dance he was presented to a young woman whose proportions were anything but meager. Sanders asked her for a danee, ‘ :

“l can only spare you a one-step,"” she replied, “and I can’t actually guarantee that, because I'm afraid my friends will be leaving before it takes place.” “Oh, how empty the room will seem when you're gone,” gurgled Sanders.

Unearth ‘Ancient Whale ~

~ The enormous skeleton of a 5,000-year-old Greenland whale was found at Kistinge, near Halmstad, Sweden, by workmen digging a ditch near the ‘seashore. A monstrous jawbone meas‘uring about thirteen feet in length , was unearthed. On account of its size it was first taken by the workmen to :be a part of the hull of .an ancient . vessel. The bone has been examined by archeologists, who estimate the ‘whale to have lived at the end of the 'lce age, about five thousand years ago.

Where Criminals Hung

" The little triangular garden at Ken« ,sington gate, London, was once known :as Dead Man’s green and has a some'what grueSome history. Tradition ‘avers ‘that Dead Man's green, as it lused to be called, was the site of tha 'Surrey gallows, whete many a high,wayman and less romantic scoundrel . met his doom in the Eighteenth cen.tury. Here, to 6, some of the Scottish followers of Prince Charlie wera ‘“hanged, drawn, and quartered” after ‘the rebellion of 1745, '

o That’s. the Spirit! ' . Several women were 'belng ‘sent {rom the Home for the Aged to Yo;semite for a vacation treat. One who ‘had no godmeother to pay her way sent .the following mote to her under‘taker: o :

. “Dear Sir: Sometime ago I depos;ited with you a sum of money for the ‘cremation of my body when 1 die, : Please refurn it to me so I can go to

; .| THE LIGONIER BANNER LIGONIER, INDIANA.

¥ bGounwras.. . IS THAT Sa7 You kKNOwW weLE | KiN DO, " YOUR A 3 CF) janY OF Your SLI [ LE SSow'S . : ¢ o T =i el e 7 2(T 7N \ : 2 . \ St & 4 \g * /fl % : ; .‘. $ : @/ fg& - 3 i Copyrigns il e Ve - ‘ :

Yosemite this summer. I believe it will do me more. good."—Pathfinder Magazine. : 5 ~

; 'The opal has not always been re‘garded as an unlucky stone. The ,Superstition regarding its bad luck be. “gan in the Fourteenth century at the ‘time of the Black death, particularly in Venice. At that time the opal was a favorite of the Italian jewelers, but it was said that opals worn by those stricken with the disease became suddenly brilliant and that their luster departed upon the death of the owner. Thus the opal became associated with ideath and an object of dread.

Christian Science Services

“Soul” was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ Scientist on Sunday February 16.' i . 4

Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the. Bible “Say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong fear not; behold, your God will come with vengeance, even God with a recompence; he will come and save you. Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame man leap as a harp, and the tongue of the dumb sing: for in the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams in the desert” (Isa. 35:4-6). ‘ The Lesson-Sermon also included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health With Key to the Secriptures,” by Mary Baker Eddy: “Sound is a metal impression made on mortal belief. The ear does not really hear. Divine Science reveals sound as communicated through the senses of Soul —through spiritual understanding” (p. 213). “If the medium of hearing is wholly spiritual, it is normal and indestructible” (p. 214).

The -wariness of the seller blocked efforts of the government to test whether the buyer of liquorais guilty of violating the prohibition ‘laws_at Washington. e T

With a man in court whom they described as having been arrested after coming from a speakeasy with a half pint of gin in his pocket detectives -east about in vain for a person who would admit selling it to him. Deciding that it required at least two persons to make a liquor transagtion they -changed the charge of - buying that had been placed against Joseph Patrick Carley to one of possessing liquor. : The case against Carley had been regarded by federal authorities as one which would determine whether they would be able to proceed under the present prohibition laws against buyers of lliguor. Hitherto there has ‘been no test which they look upon as Efurnishing a basis for future activities.

Pardon Board to Hear Plea

Petition of D. C. Stephenson for a 90-day parole will be considered by the state prison board at its meeting at the Indiana state priso¢n at Michigan City, Feb. 28 according to Paul Newman Gary, who filed the petition. - The board wil] consider the petition at 5 p. m. after the close of the regular business, Newman said. He will appear before the board to present arguments supporting the petition. . The petition asks temporary parole, so that Stephenson can investigate and prepare for proper presentation of some alleged new evidence which the petition says has important bearing on the murder charge for which the former klan dragon is serving sentence. : o

Alan Becker was found guilty Saturday in Justice Huffty’s court at Albion on a charge of reckless driving and running into a car driven by Roy ‘McLallin, injuring the latter and damaging the car. He appealed to the circuit court and was placed under ‘bond o $2OO, which he posted. . Watch the program of.the Crystal. Otto Ferris Released . Otto Ferris was released from the Whitley county jail Thursday upon _payment of a $lOO fine and costs totaling $144 assessed him when he pleaded guilty before Judge Arthur F. Biggs in circuit court to violation of the liquor law. ° : : y

- Fiiling Station Robbed Andy Kucela attendant at the Continental Service Co., filling station in Elkhart réportéd to the poliee that the station had been entéred and the sum of $16.54 stolen. -l L . See and hear “Show Boat” at Crystal Wednesday, Thursday.and Friday.

Opal Superstition

Can’t Try Rum Buyer

Appeals Case.

[‘can vOuU PROVE THE PROPOSITION THAT THE SOUARE OF THE HYPQTHENUSE OFA RIGHT ANGLED TRIANGLE 15 EQUAL TO THE SUM OF THE SQUARES OF THE OTHER ew | TWO SIDEST o ; | |\ @ 2 ..\ 1 DONT HAVE | T ZaeS . MAZ) TOo' PROVE 1T ez .e :_..__.1,...._._._]= s _ A ’ “e : - ‘ (& e | ‘ ol :fl’ A “ L) A ‘ A i

Urge Old Age Pension Law. . The remainder of 1930 will witness the most intensive effort yet made in Indiana for enactment of an old age pension law, it was announced by Otto P. Deluse, chairman of the state old age pension commission otr the Fraternal Order of BEagles, ploneers in the fight to abolish the poorhouse. Answering pension opponents, Deluse declared it was never: lnte}xded by the Eagles that pensions should be paid all persons on attaining a given age. He called attention to bills introduced in the last four Indiana legislatures, all providing safeguards to conserve taxpayers’ money. These related to length of residence, ownership of property and a record clear of felony convictions. ‘ 4

Killed in Elevator Crash

- Walter Ford colored 22 of Fort Wayne was fatally injured about 4 o’clock Thursday afternoon when he was pinned between the freight elevator and the first floor at the An‘thony hotel.

He was taken to the Methodist hospital in ‘Schone’s Sons ambulance where he died about 20 minutes after the accident. ST

York Township Farmer to Broadeast.

Again Noble County will be on the air, next Friday February 28th at 12:45, when Lae Crothers of York Township speaks over WLS on the subject “Don’t Put all your Eggs in One Basket.” Mr. Crothers is a successful onion grower producing an average of 30 cars of onions per year.

No Cigarettes For Girls

. Warsaw girls under 18 years old, will not be permitted to purchase cigarettes from tobacco merchants. The action followed complaints that nearly fifty girls have been in the habit of lighting cigarettes after leaving the high school. ; -

Many New Members

Commander Theodore Spurgeon of the American Legion Post 243 was out on a membership drive through ‘Elkhart township, Tuesday and was so successful that only three world war veterans are not yet in ‘the fold.

Drops Dead in Road.

. John Miracle 61 prominent farmer of near Columbia City dropped dead in the road while driving cattle from the home of a meighbor to his own home. Heart trouble caused his death.

Appears on Vsrc_hqdule.

. The advertised cold wave appeared here on schedule time, accompanied by a light snow fall Friday night.

“Show Boat” at Crystal Wednesday Thursday and Friday.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETI Services in Weir Block. Sunday school 9:45 A M. Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Wverybody welcomae.

The stuff that buys” wmat you need, that pays pressing oblioations, that sees you through the womt emergencies is YOURS! If favorable® rates, smallest pay- " ments, most complete service are what you have been looking for, you may be sure our money loaning system will meet with your é’pproval Our plan‘is to make loans as YOU want them--not according to some plan of our. own, “which ‘we require you to adopt. Loans of $lO.OO o $300.00 on personal property to any resident of Noble County. - 1n offies of Kimmell Realty Co. - 210 Cavin Street, Ligonier S samedpm

By Charles McManus

w : : : . ! i bgAT LR ! ‘ | ‘ R s j l | : i . E } ; gy L i -.”", 4 ‘ ‘,7’)':'l e X : 7 >~ Bt 4a7 ; AL . gTP aa-l:.x.g, _{‘ T : PRYIFI L 2772 1/.v',9'.‘.;<'l.,‘-- I2PITF I DITIIE DI ST IT NI Ry AT TRy T A\ IR AT P 0 l?“"““}{“‘, TR e S 2 - > Lt K >-~ = ‘ 2-- ? 5 ‘ aw, ¥ - - 3 \\ n’ Pl -~ 4" i A . — S— —— 3 B e e Sk a 7 S 2 S ! : > fi ==z PR B otk e } : i —— e - — - y [ ey, —— —— ' e SF i ZET e : : . —.——‘;’:-—. TEUEL L e—a—— < : eg-— : . ¢ e — ! : . t& b N . : S C:NC M

Radio Theft Ring Found. Seven negroes were arrested at Indianapolis and $2,500 worth of alleged radio sets recovered as the result of breaking up a radio theft ring believed to have operated in the middle west. A raido salesman, J. B, Messler aided in clearing up the theft through obtaining the serial number of a stolen machine, which was being sold in a restaurant, and reporting it to the police. : - See and hear “Show Boat” at Crystal Wednesday, Thursday and Friday,

Baby Chicks

Pure Bred @ Blood Tested Do you wonder why_ so many people insist on buying these big, strong, healthy “LIGONIER CHICKS” when ready to buy? | e | " . There’s a Reason for it! , “ WHY! Because they_-;‘raise a bigger percentage! They grow faster, and make big’ker profits - | | | : 'LIGONIER CHICKS are produced from well mated parent stock, carefully culled and blood-tested, and them hatched right in our Mammoth Electric incubators. Is it any wonder our customers are satisfied? OUR CHICKS ARE RIGHT—OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT. i"' : - ‘,fi ; ‘ ] ‘ | FIRST HATCH OFF JANUARY 30“1. Ligonier Hatchery - Lagonier Ilatchery Phone 502 ROY J. JORG, Manager .....Ligonier, Ind. e OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.

Read the Ads.

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