Ligonier Banner., Volume 66, Number 9B, Ligonier, Noble County, 17 March 1932 — Page 2
The Ligonier Banner ~ Established 1856 Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING (0. ' W. C. B. Harrison, Editor M. A, dotherman, Manager Published every Monciay and Thursday end entered the Postoffice at Ligonter, Indiana, as second class matter.
- Wawaka News - Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Rider and Mr and Mrs E G Resler spent a delightful week-end in Indianapolis sy The senor class play “The Purple Tantrum” is being rehearsed and will be given March 18 Mr. and Mrs, Fred Goldepy of Chicago were here recently guests of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gard Mr and Mrs. Fred Goebel of Fort Wayne and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Galbreth of Elkhart were recent dinner guests of Finley Galbreath
Mr. and Mrs. A. Snyder plan to occupy their new home about Easter on their farm adjoining the Henry Burket and C. C. Ullery farms. Mrs. Irma Shumaker spent the week end at AJ\gola
F. Waddell of Charlottee Mich.. spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Trowl. ;
John Cotner and son of the River Bridge farm were business visitors in Ligonier Thursday
Mr. and Mrs. Charles ILake Spencerville were here Thursday. Lee Landon ill for some time continues about the same. . Mrs. Carl L. Ball of Albion was the recent guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Will Schick Miss Gola Schick was out of school last week on acecount of a hard cola April 8 Arbor day in Indiana will be observed here at the Wawaka high school, Supt. John L. Tierney in charge and at the Elkhart township centralized school Prinecipal Thurlow Holcomb in charge. Both places will have tree planting programs commemorating the George Washington bi-centennial. <
Mrs. Lena Keasey, Miss Katherine Keasey and J. F. Evers of Kendallville visited Mr. anq Mrs. Henry Burket Friday evening Joe Smith attended the Noble County Taxpayers association officers meeting Friday evening at Albion.
Willis Gerver has been quite ill with heart trouble.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Resler are suffering with hard colds. ¢
A. B. Rider is only recently home from a three weeks’ business trip to Florida
Mrs. J. H. Steinbarger spent Friday in Kendallville. e
Miss Edna Peterson shopped in Fort Wayne Saturday. A surprize party was given Friday evening at the Mr. and Mrs. Walter Johnson home which was well attended.
The sophomore class held a delightful party with the- Misses Virginia Altimus and Cleo Swartzentruber as + hostesses.
Tuesday afternoon the Rlkhart Township Home. Division met with Mrs. Marie Rose Mrs. Ruth Jett lead er. Response to roll call was the naminp of a favorite quilt pattern. The essay on “1932 Styles for the House and Housekeeper” was given hy Mrs. Ella Helwig. The subject of “Nutrition” was given by Project Leaders Mrs. Lois Fulk and Miss Mary Neufer. B. B. Dowell newspaper man and author of “Fun on the Farm” well known here is at present engaged in reorganizing at Paulding 0., the Nebraska Indians baseball team which opens May 1 at Johnstown, Pa. 'Fred Hartley’s nephew and niece of Coldwater Mich., were here on business Wednesday. : David Dunlap and assistant of Ligo nier were here Wednesday on business. ¢
Mr. and Mrs. Charles DeWest Chicago were here Wednesday. ; One of the outstanding social events of the pre-Easter season was the delightful surprise party given in honor of Kenneth Wysong at the home of his parents Friday evening. Games social visiting ang refreshments featured the event.
Victor Metzger and Tom J. Reece of Auburn were guests of Mrs. 0. W. Dowell Sundy M. Reece remained
Home Realty and Investment Co. . J. L. HENRY, Mgr. INVESTMENT Z=. . ISECURITIES = Real Estate and & Farm Loans ; -- INSURANCE -- AUTOMOBILE ' Cyclone and Fire. Health ahd Acddent van,d. Em- 4 Surety Bonds Rooms 3 and 4 'l."e,viy. Bldg. 1
- - Odd—but TRUE ; e I e uum;sj ol 3 4HE POPULAR NOTION, IN st - e i RELAND, 'S THNT WiEN sawr e il l‘ | | PATRICK WAS PREACHING THE—' £ I ?‘ . DOCTRINE OF THE TRIN\TY TO { . h } \il THE PAGAN IR\SH, HE ALWAYS : T ‘lfig; g( {lt ith USED THE SHAMROCK, BEARING v B e THREE LEAVES ON ONE STEM, ; ' AS A SYMBOL OR ILLUSTRATION " OF THE GREAT MYSTERY/HENCE . THE CONNECTION OF THE SHAMROCK | 3 m | WITH SAINT PATRICKS DAY R | ' i - . * 4 ANDERION — i @‘W W GOQD PONY. : : nmc.m ~ =\ _WENTOM, e { woTcHA . / 5 ÜBk £ =/ @ & T oSN " NINE OUT OF b @ i - F=Ur—= R ‘ 75, /ANy 5) s - TEN WOMEN N J })\“ ‘%l PN ( i;’\\\i‘ : . SOUTH AFRICA 2 NN Y\ ) =( [ | g /S el = /%) W | ARE NOW WEBRING oo NS Yo el I 3 * AMERICAN MADE ,//i‘%\ ; 5 : | SUK STOCKINGS o > X : WHEN CHIEF LOUIE OF THE PLTE INDIANS !m ; o ‘r REPORTED THE THEFT OF WIS WORSE RECENTLY, ;,::j:j:j:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::Z:::::::::::f:;:::;:;:i::" AL ] ST WAS DISCOVERED, BX QUESTIONING, THAT THE e era A vl A] | NRAMAL RAD BREN STOLEN VL YEARS AGO .n-w...m-'-““‘ R A : | , e | J h Z ‘A UTILE \SLAND WNOWN AS = g /% TRISTAN DA CUNHA, LOCATED 1N /‘, THE SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN “Sxd 5 /7/7/ HAS A POPULATION OF \3O —— T MRS, , Lt e s = (PEOPLE \WHO HAVE ABSOWTELY oSO e R e NO CONNECTION WITK THE s22] “v = OUTSIDE WOR\D —— “—_ 3§ o = e ' Lo o e B P T
at Fairveiw farm until he is called back to his position as trimmer in the Auburn automobile works Mrs. Dowell is higs aunt.
Mrs. Lena Couts chairman of the Elkhart Township Home Division of the Farm Bureau attended the regular meeting of the tuberculosis association held at the office of Rev. M. F. Kretzmann at Kendallville Monday.
The Elkhart Township Farm Bureau will meet at the Wawaka high school next Monday evening and be entertained by the Noble Township Farm Bureau.
DTy Forces Are Worried
For the first time in the history of federal prohibition dry forces are worried,
They do not admit defeat is possible. But portents are appearing all around which disturb them deeply. Technicallly they still feel secure in that 13 states can block repeal or revision of the 18th amendment Yet evidences of increasing dissatsifaction with federal prohibition are piling up, and those dry leaders who look closely now realize there 1s a possibility the time will come when a majority of the country might favor a change. This is a realizedq would alter their situation, '
President Hoover is the only candidate drys feel sure of at the monxet;'t. And even they are disturbed by a movement which reaches as high as his own unofficial campaign manager, Postmaster Walter F. Brown, seeking to pledge the republican party to a prohibition referendum
Can’t Enforee Airplane Law
State police have no authority to enforce the 1929 state statute providing for licensing airplanes and pilots Captain Howard Smith said. Smith’s opinion was given following receipt of complaints from chamber of commerce and airport officials due to the increasing ‘number of unlicensed pilots and planes. Arrests can be made Smith said, only by officers with full police pow ers which state police do not have.
Sentenced to BaStile
Lawrence and Agnes Nichols owners of a roadhouse patronized by Notre Dame students and situated less than a mile from the university campus were found guilty at South Bend of liguor charges hefore City Judge A. 'W. Hosinski. 5
Nichols was fined $lOO and costs and sentenced to serve 30 days in the county jail. His wife wag placed on probation for six months.
DFive Is Bringing Results.
A real estate dealer at South Bend belives the national campaign against idle money must be having some effect
C. H. Winkler the real estate dealreported a middle aged couple made a cash payment on a home with $B,OOO in the old large size currency. The payment was in bills ranging from $5 to $2O.
Business Shows Upward Trend
Railroaq freight business iis on an upward trend it was reported at a meeting of the Anderson Traffic club.
R. C. Bradford Qgncinnati saig that freight traffic on the Big TFour is heavier than at any other time in the last three years. Several division and freight superintendents made similiar reports. 3
Married 50 Years
Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Walter celebrateq their golden wedidng last week at their country home near LaGranga where they have lived since their marriage fifty years ago. Relatives and friends were entertained during the day. ; S
To Make AnnounCement
~ James M. Ogden attorney general said at Gary Tuesday he would make a formal announcement next week of his candidacy for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.
Difference in Waking ~ and Sleceping Thoughts ~ While you are awake, you like to feel that your thonghts are your creations, that they stand apart from you as objects which, so far as you can make out, anyone ought to see. Waking thoughts are abstractions, Dr. Jesse W. Sprowls writes, in the Washington Star.
When you are dreaming, the situation is reversed. Your dream thoughts are ‘your own. They are a part of you. You express your personal self in everything you dream about. You put yourself in the center of the dream picture, and countenance only those thoughts that correspond to the picture. It’s impossible to think in dreams without thinking in pictures. And It’s impossible to get away from your image of yourself. In dreams your thoughts are activities, not abstractions.
It is not hard to discover why you have these two kinds of thoughts. Your waking hours deal with a world of reality. And reality is always the world that lies about yon. Your business as a waking thinker I 8 to manipulate this world of externality. So You regard your waking thoughts as mechanisms merely. ; But when you are asleep, you have withdrawn from the world of reality. The “you” of yourself, which had to take a minor position in your waking world, now has its moments. Your fancies have full sway, and you fashfon all sorts of Imaginary pictures that place you in command. That’s why you sometimes experience a shock when waking suddenly.
Here Is Either Heresy or the Profound Truth At the recent meeting of the Millionaires Club of Contentment and Happiness in the green Verdugo hills, one of the neighbors quoted an old saying which runs as follows:
“There are three things that ean never be recalled—the sped arrow, the spoken word and the lost opportunity.”
- The neighbor who brought the matter up expected that the meeting would he deeply Impressed and that the saying would lead to a historie discussion. But, curiously enough, nobody Seemed to be at all impressed, and the discussion was exceptionally brief, -
To begin with, the millionaires said, what is one sped arrow more or less, anyway? There are plenty of arrows in the world, or at least there used to be when arrows were in use. As to the spoken word, it Is usually a thing not worth recalling. And in regard to lost opportunities, why, the thing is not to regret them, but to hustle and find new ‘ones. And thus again what has been accepted "as wisdom proves to be mere waste of breath.—John Steven MeGroarty, in the Los Angeles Times.
Psychology in Drawings : Bold and shy children may represent two fundamentally different pSychological types. :
W. Lemcke, German psychologist, has made a study of the drawings of second and third grade children class!fied by their teachers as belonging to these groups. Im every case it was found that the *“shy” youngsters preferred the brightest eolors, used complementary colows end sharply delineated the objeets in their drawings.
In the drawings of the bold children, on the othew hand, combinations of uncomplementary colors predominate. Blends ef wiolet-brown were frequently used, darker colors were generally prefetwed, the general impression 'ofr"fiw‘ms ‘was dark or dull and the objeets were indistinetly outlined,
‘The two types spparently see the world di“?t&"’enfiy—‘-'«gie ‘shy ehildren with a sharper'eye for detail,
Mrs. Louiga Mitehell a resident of Kendallville*since girlliood died ‘thete following a critical lillnes sof two weeks,
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
CANNED GOODS TO BE EXEMPT Will Cut Eleven Millions From Total Substitute Tax Is Being Sought |, The house ways and means committee voted to exempt most canned goods from the proposed manufactures sales tax. Canned fruit, vegetables, fish and meat were exempted. It was estimated these exemptions would cut $11,000,000 from the $595,000,000 which the sales tax was designed to raise. ‘The committee also agreed to bring in amendment exempting newspaper telegrams from the proposed tax on telegrams.
Majority Leader Ralney said the committee would meet in an attempt to find a subsgitute tax to replace the revenues lost through the exemptions agreed upon.
Says Athletics Are Ruining Health ~ College youths who overindulge in competitive sports for “dear old alma mater” or to maintain the winning record of a highly paid coach are ruining their hearts, according to Dr, W. E. Thorton medical director. of the Lincoln National Life Insurance “The recent growth of competitive sports in our colleges and high schools has been of too brief a duration for our insurance records to reveal definte statistics showing that excessive competition in youth results in a shorteneq life span; but most of our associates in the meidcal profession will probably back me up when 1 say that thousands of young hearts are being impaired if not entirely burned out, on our athletic fields” Dr. Thorton said.
“The training grind required for football is an excellent thing for building a sturdy body” he said “but too much ‘keying up for crucial games’ is likely to undo all of tha good that has been done on the practice field or in the gymnasium.”
New Low Prices at Crystal during March. Come and enjoy the splendid programs. :
Cook 2 or 3 things at once in this skillet! * B R N | o et ~ Heavy cast iron. ~ Easy to clean Lasts for years. Genuine Wagner Cast Iron Ware Made with dividers so as to enable you to cook bacon and eggs at one. time. The bacon will have that crip, browned look-—the eggs well cookq’d, but with no burnt edges. You can also fry your ham, steaks, etc. just as easily and nicely. ;,MAt this price they’ll go quickly—so telephone your prder if you can’t come in early. Anker-Holth Cream Separators Pertection 01l Stove With High Speed ~ Burners - Mnytag Washing Machines—New
Criticizes McNutt
In an open letter to Paul ¥. MdNutt candidate for Democratic nomination for governor of Indiana Harry K. Cuthbertson member of the Indiana public service commission, criticizes the gubernatorial candidate’s record and challenges him to name “just one constructive act” he has occomplished since the advent of hig “‘so-calleq public career.”
Cuthbertson whose ‘home is in Peru was named to the Democratic post on the commission following the expiration of the term of Calvin MacIntosh. - ;
McNutt in some addresses he has made said that if elected governor he would remove the entire present personnel of the ‘public service commission. Cuthbertson challenged him to a public debate some time ago but McNutt ignored the challenge and it was renewed in the 4,500 word letter mailed to McNutt.
Die sat Goshen
Edward M. Yeager 62 died at his home in Goshen Monday of pneumonia He wag the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Yeager and was born at Wawaka. He was married to Emma E. Marshall in 1900 and had lived In Goshen since. Surviving relatives Included the widow one son William a teacher in Latham 0., two sisters Mrs. Lloyd Fell and Mrs. James Fell both of Topeka; three brothers Arthur of this city, Ezra of Goshen and Joseph of Topeka. Funeral services were held Wednesday afternoon.
Agents Seize Another Still
A squad of federal prohibition officers from the South Bend office confiscated two large alcohol stills and arrested five persons last week on the farm of Cyrl Bobeck near North Judson in Stark county. The raid of the still with 165 gallons of alcohol and 29,000 gallons of corn sugar mash was the second of a series of still raids staged in Starke county within the past 10 days by the federal prohibition forces. ;
Funeral of Mrs, Geliger
~ Funeral services for Mrs. Vivian ‘Geiger age 57 wife of Joseph Geiger were held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Sparta Christian church near Kimmell. Burial was made in 'rthe church cemetery. Surviving relatives include the husband a daughter tEdria at home three sisters and three brothers. Morton Pollock of thig city is a brother.
Radio Helps Capture
Three young men who stole an automobile at Auburn Sunday night were traced to Fort Wayne and captured by a police cruising car equipped with radio. Monday they pleaded guilty and were sentenced to one to ten years at the Indiana reformatory. They are Cyril Meers, 28 of Detroit his brother Harry 22 and Jack Nelson 19 of England. ‘ :
Dolores Del Rio at Crystal Friday and Saturday.
MONITOR TOP
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' Four men suspected of robbing the City National bank at Clinton lowa of approximately $106,000 early Tuesday weére captured three hours after the holdup. More than $lOO,OOO of the loot was captured. They paid ne attention to securities. -
The robbers wore~hoods and work ed with assurance. There were five in the gang. Each of the bandits was armed. No one was injured and ne shots were fired during the holdup.
The raiders fled in a small sedan and the warning was spreag a few minutes after they started by tele phone and radio. County vigilantes and the state department of investigation took up the chase that ended In their capture. ‘The bank is one of the largest in eastern Towa and had deposits of more than $5,000,000.
Cast-iron water pipe was experimented with at Versailles, France, as early as 1664, but owing to difficulties of production it could not be afforded by water works companies until 1735. It was introduced Ingo England about this time. The early American cities used log pipe systems, but after a number of breaks in the pipes Philadelphia ordered -cast-iron pipe from England. New York followed, and subsequently Baltimore. The superiority of the cast-iron pipe created such a demand that a foundry was built at Millville, N. J., in 1834. .
The “X-shaped” chairs of the Renaissance were known as the Savonarola and the Dante. Interlaced staves figured into the construction of the former, and the chairs could be conveniently folded and placed aside. They were first used as camp chairs by dealers in military campaigns. The Dante chair was the scissors shape, usually of walnut, elaborately inlaid with certosina, ivory or bone work, and decorated with luxurious brocades, velvets or leather on seat and back. .
The conceited young man had talked about himself till the girl felt she could endure it no longer. : “It costs a great deal more than one would think to Lecome a broad-minded and intelligent man of the world,” he remarked, serenely. ' * The girl saw her chance and took it. “I suppose so,” she said, “and 1 don’t blame you for saving your money.” :
Jack Nahas Michigan ex-convict was sentenced to 18 months in prison and fined $l,OOO by Judge Robert C. Baltzell of Indianapolis in United States district court at South Bend for conspiracy to violate the national prohibition act: : |
“Hell Divers” at Crystal next Sun day Monday and Tuesday.
THESE FEATURES plus
PERFORMANCE
w §Wlo° e BT 69 Qb | > - c’", . & \ o ~ A > ; L “‘({'l/ ) . o TS 1 et SN gAIAR AN Down Payment as low as $1 o ' ; Balance in 23 months ' | 3
RoPbers Get $106,000
First Iron Water Fipes
Renaissance Chairs -
Left Him Gasping
Given Sentence
WHEN ADVERTISED 1 IN THE ‘ . 'ARE SUCCESSFUL SALES Each spring and fall more farmers throughout this community are choosing tie 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 Bamner is nominal when results are considered. IF PLANNING A SALE If you are planning a sale, comée in and discuss the advertising with us. We will be glad to assist in any way possible. A SUCCESSFUL SALE IS ONE THAT HAS BEEN ADVERTISED ; PROPERLY } » 2 ; Ligonier Banner PHONE 13
6066 LIQUID - TABLETS - SALVE 666 Liquid or Tablet used internally and 666 Salve externally, make a complete and effective treatment for Colds. Most Speedy Remedies Known
Mr. and Mrs: E. M. Kolar of Chicago were guests the first of the week of Mrs. John Haller. _— :
