Ligonier Banner., Volume 66, Number 9A, Ligonier, Noble County, 14 March 1932 — Page 2
The Ligonier Banner Established 1856 Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. W. C. B. Harrison, Editor M. A. Cotherman, Manager Published every Monday and Thursday end éntered the Postoffice at Ligonter Indiana, a 2 gecond ciasg matter.
Wawaka News Mr. and Mrs, J. E. Herald gave a roast chicken birthday dinner honor ing Floyd Growcock of Ligonier Sunday Other guests attending were: Mrs. Floyd Growcock, Mrs. Leora Lepird, Darrell Bragigton Miss Helen Le pird and Claire Lepird all of Ligonier it wasz Mr, Growcock’s 24th hbirthday A delicious birthday cake was bakea for hirn by the hostess. Mr. «nd Mrs. Harold Gard and fam ily entertained Sunday for Mr and Mrs Charles Butts of Kimmell, Wilma Jean Gard suffered a bhad bury on her hand recently when she came in contact with the hot stove.
Mr. and Mrs, Joe W. Smith attended the funeral of Mrs Shqwalter in Ligonier Sunday
Lee Landon continues ill, Mr. and Mrs, Charles Blake Sturgls were here Tuesday.
< The Senior class play ‘“The Purple Tantrum” has been postponed until Friday evening March 18. . Mrs, Lena Keasey, Miss Catherinc Keasey and Joe F. Evers of Kendillville were guests Sunday evening of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Burket,
‘Last week oats were sown around Albion. :
Donald Nesbitt son of Mr, and Mrs. Claude Nesbitt ill with scarlet fever is better.
Roads were drifteq shut pas the Walter Trowl farm Monday and Tues day. Rush Cunningham and a force of men opened them up Tuesday even ing. Charles Ramsby brought coal to the Trowl home as they were entirely out although they had plenty of wood. Their furnace was out two days. . Mrs, Edith Weirich is recovering from a bad cold.
Mrs. Lena Couts president of the Elkhart Township Home Division of the Farm Burean and other officers attended the Noble County Federated Clubs meeting at Albion Friday. Fenton Waddell Charlotte, Mich, here to attend the Dora Conley funeral at Rome City is a guest in the Mrs. Leora Lepirdq Mr. and Mrs. J, E Herald and Mr and Mrs, Walter Trowl homes.
Mrs. Jessie Schwab will be the next hostess to the Dorecas class. ’
Kimmell News
- Miss Maisie Nobles who has been a vigitor in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Clark for several weeks is now visiting with friends in Hastings Mich Mrs. Lloyd Goudy who has been ill of tonsilitis is improving. Mr. and Mrs. William Schlabach and W. O. Schlabach were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Smith in Elkhart
M. J. Beer is now delivering mail on a rural route out of Cromwell and will move there soon. - Mr, and Mrs. William Tooley of Syracuse will soon move on the White tarm two miles south of Kimmell. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Harlan Mrsg Ott Mrs. Zoe Fausnaugh Mrs Mildred Poyser and William Schlabach were in Albion Monday attending the funeral of Mig. Don Favinger. , Mr. ang Mrs. Fred Bell have moved into the Murray property with Walton Murray. ‘ R R Charles Johnson and family will soon be residents of Kimmell occupying the Martindale property. Misg Evelyn Shew has been absent from Cromwell high school several days with an attack of tonsilitis.
Miss Helen Hall is now employed in the Master Garment company office in Ligonier, : L e Miss Beryl Clark and Mrs. Ella Baker were Sunday visitors in Albion. After visiting in the home of parents Mr. and Mrs. Harry Loy returned to Fort Wayne Sunday. Owing to sickness Mrs. Eveln McCartyteacher of the first and second grades is unable to teach and Miss Vera Galloway of Wolf Lake is teaching. i
Home Realty "and Investment Co. J. L. HENRY, Mgr. INVESTMENT = .. |SECURITIES ;| Real Estate and ¥ Farm Loans -- INSURANCE -- AUTOMOBILE | Cyclone and Fire. Health - and Accident and Emi BLT ~ Suretyßonds Reoms 3 andd Levy Bldg. . TN NS
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Dismal News
Lon Burley attended the funeral of his sister at Conroy 0., on Friday and spent Friday night with his son Bud Burley and family at Van Wert 0. He returned home Saturday.
Clee Green and Brant Koher of Cromwell have been doing carpenter work for Claus Bobeck. Edwin Lung of Fort Wayne business college spent the week end with ais parents Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Lung
Amelia Clingerman called on Mrs Nelson Bobeck and daughter and Mrs Don Burley Tuesday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Burle of aPulding 0., and M. L. Snepp of Monroevillle are spending a few days at the A E. Burley home . Dean Carlson wife and daughter Delorma of Topeka were Thursday din ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dora Cling erman. Mr. and Mrs. D B Brown call 2d in the afternoon
Frank Burley attended the basketball tournament in Kendallville Sat urday.
Yote Reduction in Salaries
A reduction in salaries for all school teachers in the Goshen city schools was voted by the bhoard of education at a meeting held last week, The reductions will vary in proportion to the amount of salary being paid, those receiving nearest the minimum pay receiving the lowest percentage in cuts and those receiving the highest pay being given the heavier reductiong in-percentage as well as actual pay. The reductions voted range from very slight cuts to about seventeen percent. A slight reduction in the teaching personnel for the next year will bring the entire reduction in the tuition budget to about seventeen per cent it wag reported. The tuition budget for the current school year was $llB,OOO, and the reductions next year will save approximately $20,000,
Bridge Playing Husband
. Testifying that her husband know over Indiana as a contract bridge plag er angd instructor remained in bed until 'noon and refused to do any real work Inez Anglin of Milford was granted a divorce by Judge Lemue} W. Royse in Kosciusko circuit court. The defendant was ordered to pay $5 a week for the support of a minor child. .In her complaint Mrs. Anglin had asked for $4,000 alimony. On the stand she said that her husband refused and neglected to provide her with clothing and that she had found it necessary to procure necessities through her own efforts and through the assistance of relatives They were married September 4 1924 ang separated September 26 1931. :
License War Breaks Out Again
. State police in the Evansville section had orders to impound all trucks bearing Tennessee license plates with out Indiana licenses.
Grover Garrott chief of state police told patrolmen at g meeting that Tennessee is” the only state in the nation not granting reciprocity on truck licenses. Indiana he said will exercise the same measures against Tennessee truck drivers as Indiana drivers receive in that state. _ Garrott also directed patrolmen to impound all autos frod other states bearing 1931 licenses and to hold them until 1932 plates are obtained.
Fire at Soldier’s Home
The quartermaster building of the National Militay home near Dayton 0., a three story rambling- structure a block long was destroyed by fire with an estimated loss of $1,250,000.
The building contained food and clothing for the 3,800 persong resident in the home: Only enough food Temained for three meals. ; Qol. Fred C. Runkle governor of the home will hold an inquiry on the fire believed caused hy a defective wire or a cigaret. : :
Loses Both Legs
William Newton 27 formerly of Elkhart who was employed by C C. Conn Ltd., for several years until a few monthg ago is in Mercy hospital, Coun cil Bluffs lowa, suffering from serious injuries received in an accident Feb 27, It was found necessary to amputate both legs the right one at the knee and the left one at the ankle. News from his bedside is that his con dition is favorable although he will have to remain in the hospital for two or three more months
The young man who is married and has three children with his family lived in- Elkhart with his paernts, The father also worked at the Conn plant. The parents are now living at Portland Ind : In January the young man left the home of his parents to go to Lincoln Neb,, in search of work. He' was on hs way home to visit his parents and family when he was injured The wife Mrs. Margaret Newton is now living on rural route No, 4 Syracuse.
Methods to Put Idle Dollars to Work. Nine methods by which idle money can be put to work with beneficial results to any community were enumerated by Richard Lieber chairman for Indiana in the Citizens Reconstruction movement. They are:
1, By payment of just debts, bills and contract obligations.
2wlßy purchase of necessary family requirements
3 By adding improvements to real estate possessions 4 By investing in real estate. 5 By investing in good securities stocks, bonds and insurance ‘
6 By starting a legitimate business or investing in a sound one = 7 By opening savings deposits in banks or starting interest bearing Christmas and vacation funds
8 By spending money to get buslness
9. By purchasing short-time government securities if all other forms of investment do not seem more attractive :
Closes. Fourteen Cases
Fourteen cases were closed by the state department of criminal indentification during February and seven new cases were opened according to a report by E, L. Osborn head of the department The new cases brought to 94 the number being investigated by the department, ‘The report showed that 1,738 finger prints were received during February, bringiug to 86,216 the number of prints in the department’s files, Two bank robberies were reported during the month Two bank robbers were apprehended and four were sentenced in pr\‘son meted persons in which the department was involved wag 81, The number of identifications made by the department in February was 293.
1,250,000,000 Idle Diollars In U, S.
Accountants have estimated that 114 billion dollars is the sum of idle dollars in the nation and that if put to work it would provide employment at the wage of $lOO a month for 1,020,832 men, Richard Lieber Indiana chairman for the Citizens Reconstruction Organization said. _
Such a sum of idle dollars destroys 13 times as much credit according to treasury officials and at the rate of 3 per cent causes $37,500,000 to be lost in interest payments. '
. “National authorities ' have estimated that the money lying idle has cut off 10 per cent of the buying power of 60 per cent of the nation,” the state chairman said,
Minister Dropg Dead
The Rev. Eqward Haab 77 a minister of the Apostolic church dropped dead at noon Friday at his home in Milford. Death was due to heart attack. cal | | ’m.wcm’. B B e SR 3
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
Wanton Killing Had No Part in Military Code
Told by Maj. Gen. John A. Lejeune, commander of the Second division. United States marine corps, during the World war—in “The Reminiscences of a Marine:”
“It was interesting to watch the great care with which the French poilus instructed the relieving American soldiers. They explained every detail of duty with the utmost precision, including their own unwritten cod~s. The opposing German troops were old reservists, as were many of the French r that quiet sector. They had faced each other for months and had learned to recognize each other across the narrow ‘No Man’s Land’ which separated them. “I was told that the morning after the Americans had gone into line a German soldier climbed up out of his trench and sat on the parapet in fulf view while he cleaned the equipment of the officer for whom he was probably . the orderly. An American soldier promptly brought his piece to aim and was about to fire when his French comrade knocked it away, saying excitedly :
“ ‘Do not shoot! He sits there every morning to get the air and to feel the sunshine. To kill him would be murder, not war.’”—Kansas City Star.
Earthly Discords Laid - to Malevolent Goddess Discordia in Greek legend was #n malevolent deity, daughter of Nox, and gister to Nemesis, the Parcae and Death. She was driven from heaven by Jupiter, because she wasg there the cause of continunal quarrels. Whe&n the nuptials of Peleus and Thetis were celebrated., this goddess was not invited; and fhe neglect so irritated her .that she threw an apple into the midst of the gods, with the inseription of “Detur pulchriori” —*Let it be given to the most beautiful.” This apple—the apple of discord—was the cause of the ruin of Troy and of great misfortunes to the Greeks. Discordia is represented with a ghastly look, and torn garment. Her head is usually entwined with serpents, and she is attended by Bellona. She was supposed to be the cause of all the dissensions whick arise upon earth, public as well as private. :
Yes, the pupils.iu this- schoolroom were responding very. well to questions of the teacher, thought the visitor, particularly one small boy who snapped his fingers vigorously and loudly as each question was asked. The teacher admonished him several times: “Charles, if you don’t stop snapping your fingers, I won’t call on you.” At the close of the period, the visitor approached the enthusiastic young pupil and asked him why he had snapped his fingers so often. “Aw,” replied the boy. “I'm on to her,” referring to the teacher, “When 1 don’t know my lesson, I snap my fingers. She thinks I- do, but she won't call on me because 1 snap my fingers. And I get a good grade for knowing the lesson.” ;
No one can say definitely how the custom of wearing sleeve buttons originated, though it probably had some practical purpose at first. They may have been used to fasten the turnedup cuffs when these were rolled up for protection. There is another tradition that Frederick the Great put buttons on the sleeves of his soldiers’ uniforms to prevent his mer from soiling the sleeves in wiping the perspiration from their faces.. The buttons were first placed on the upper side of the sleeve, hut as they became part of the accepted style their position was shifted to the lower side.
- Willlam Mason 82 many years a resident of Corunna died near Garrett the family home for many years.
Strategy
Sleeve Buttons
" Taking Chances
The teacher of the history class had been telling her pupils of the ancient Roman custom in which the bridegroom lifted the bride over the threshold to prevent her stumbling and bringing bad luck. 3
Just at that moment the bell rang and the class wit, who happened to be a favorite with the teacher; paused at the desk to pass his customary remarks. ;
“Gosh!” he exclaimed, “it'd be tough on him if he got a heavy woman !
Rare Opportunity
A Butler coed's date was waiting patiently for the fair one to put the finishing touches on her toilet when the younger brother appeared and said: '
“I'm going to the drug store to buy sis a ‘new lip stick. Don’t you want to come along and pick out your favorite flavor ?”—lndianapolis News.
Young People’s League
The Epworth league got its name from the name of the town in Lincolnshire, England, which was the birthplace of John Wesley, founder of Methodism. The Epworth league was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in May, 1889, at a meeting of representatives of varicns young people's societies. .
Tree (rushes Farmer
Austin E, Jones 60 was ecrushed to death by a falling tree which he was helping his son Jasper Jones to cut down near Hartford City. The sou narrowly escaped serious injury.
A World’s Record
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MORE than three thousand births without a single loss of either mother or child! That is the official Piatt Counly record of Dr. W. B. Caldwell, in fifty .yvears’ family practise in Illinois. ;
No wonder mothers have such entire confidence in giving little ones Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin! If you have a baby, you have constant need of this wonderful preparation of pure pepsin, dctive senna, and fresh herbs. A child who gets this gentle stimulant for thé stomach, liver and bowels is always healthier. It keeps children’s delicate systems from clogging. It will overcome the most stubborn
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Here's the Big Ten of the 1931 Speedway Classics, as rated by the A.A.A. Contest Board, on the basis of points won in the five major races. These first ten drivars, all of whom won all their goints on Firestone tires, are as ollows: :
1. Louis Schneider, Indianapolis 500, Detroit 40, Altoona 72.5, total 712.6 points. Named official A.A.A, 1931 Champion,
2. Fred Frame, Indiznapolis 460, Detroit 20, Altoona July 4th 10, total 540, s :
- 8. Ralph Hepburn, Indianapolis 292, Detroit 70, total 362, * 4. Russell Snowberger, Indianapolis 300, Detroit 80, total 330. . B. Jimmie Gleason (died Sept.
Had No Lieense
Mat Leech, Gary was made the vietim of the jaw that he formerly was charged with enforcing. He wag formerly an investigator for the drivers' license division of the secretary- of state's office.
‘At Rensselaer Leech was taken into custody by State Police Lieutenant Walter Wilson for failure to have a driver’s license, He was not arrested however, but warned to obtain a lidense immediately.
T/ Be Tri-State Head
George G. Neihous dean of the engineering school at TriState collge was elevated to the position of presi= dent of the college to fill a vacancy which will occur with the resignation of president C. C. Sherrard who an-~ nounced last week that because of ill. health he will uit at the close of the present term March 21.
Boafd Undetided
Members of the Elkhart school board announced that no decision had been .reached in regard to teachers’ salaries for next year. The board is expected to reach a decision before contracts are given out this spring. Elkhart teachers received no cut. in salaries this vear. e
Mrs, Charles Dull Dies
.Mrs. Opal Dull age 42 wife of Charles Dull died last week at her home in Fort Wayne of double pneuumonia Among the surviving relatives are the father "Simon Burger of 'Cromwell and a sister Mrs, Charles Hicks ot Wawaka. :
condition of constipation. It builds them up, and is nothing like the styong cathartics that sap their strength and energy. A coated tongue or bad breath is the signal for a spoonful of Syrup Pepsin. Children take it readily, for it is really delicious in flayvor. Taste it! Take Syrup Pepsin yourself, when sluggish or bilious, or you are troubled with sick headaches and no appclite. Take some for sseveral days when run-down, and see how it picks yeu up. ,
It is a preseription preparation which every drug store has ready; in big bottles, just 2sk anywhere for Dr, Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin.
12th), Indianapolis 185, Altoona July 4th 90, Altoona Sept. Tth 24, total 229,
6. Shorty Cantlon, Altoona July 4th 50, Altoona Sept. Tth 170, Syracuse 76, total 296. 7. Ernie Triplett, Indianapolis 200, Detroit 90, total 290. - 8. Lou Moore, Altoona July 4th 120, Syracuse 129, total 240. :
9. Chet Miller, Indianapoli 88.75, Detroit 10, Altoona Sep?. 7th 107.5, Syracuse 60, total 216.5. 10. Bill Cummings, Detroit 80, Altoona Sept. Tth 107.5, Syracuse 4, total 191.5. :
‘Louis Schneider is a little more eautious than he used to be, but when driving on mile tracks or larger is always a threat,
Girl Dies in Fire
Betty Silvey 4 daughter of Mr. and Mrs; Bert Silvey was burned to death at Peru in fire which destroyed the family home : The child was alone in tre house when the fire caused by an overheated stove, broke out. The father had departed for work; Russell 12 had gone to school and Mrs. Silvey had gone to & neighbor’s home to visit
WHEN ADVERTISED - INTHE© ARE SUCCESSFUL SALES Each spring and fall more farmers throughout this community are choosing the Ligonier Banner to carry the message of their farm sale. / THERE IS A REASON They have benefitted by the experience of others—have learned that no other newspaper covers the Ligonier community as thoroughly as the Ligonier. The cost of .sdvertising your sale in the Barner is nominal when results are considered. IF PLANNING A SALE If you are planning a sale, come in and dis_cuss the advertising with us. Ve will be glad to assist in any way possible. A SUCCESSFUL SALE IS ONE THAT HAS BEEN _ ADVERTISED ( PROPERLY ¢ Ligonier Banner PHONE 13
066 LIQUID. - TABLETS - SALVE 666 Liquid or Tablet used mnternaily and 666 Salve externally, make a complete and effective treatment for Colds. Most Speedy Remedies Known
“ Russell Snowberger by his point-winning has probably done more than any other racing driver to bring the stock car up to real competition with first string professional ecars. Ralph Hepburn won many road and hill climbing records as well as a high rank on the Speedways. Shorty Cantlon is always pushing up front, never giving up. Off the speedways the outstanding figure for 1931 is Chuek Myers, who piloted his Firestone equipped Studebaker Hunt Special around the switchbacks and hair-! pin turns in the Annual Pike’s Peak Climb in 17 minutes, 10.3° seconds—3l.3 seconds unhder the previous record. : i
