Ligonier Banner., Volume 68, Number 32, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 September 1934 — Page 4

. Children Eat 325 Pound Sandwich at Chicago Fair

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' Chef Ed Grauel (center) and John R. Thompson, Jr., were kept busy serving portions out of this 8-foot . square ham sandwich last Children’s Day at the | World’s Fair. The sandwich weighed 325 pounds. ' More than 260 pounds of dough, containing 5 pounds of yeast, 15 pounds of shortening and twelve gallons of milk, and 60 pounds of ham and 10 pounds of butter madc up the sandwich, It was impossible to esti-

TAX LAW CUTS WORKERS WAGE

Gross Income Tax Nullifies. Much of NRA Accomplishments, IS Charge

The operation of the gross income tax law in Indiana is in direct contravention of the objectives of the NRA committee in discussing the measure.

The NRA seeks to facilitate the manufacture and sale of commodities in order that more employment may be available to the unemployed, he pointed out, and adds thati the gross income tax law penalies production taxes distribution, and retards economic recovery. :

In explaining his statement he e¢m phasized the fact that the New Dzal was pointed towards the workers and their welfare primarily; that higher wages were sought to increase individ ual buying power; that shorter hours of employment were demanded (o give more people jobs; and increased production sought to make more jobs ayailable.

The jgross income tax he says, pen alizes the workmen and forces wage reductions, according to a survey on this subject recently made by Columbia University. He cited numerous instances where stores and factories had been forced to reduce wages to the minimum demanded by the NRA to help counteract the heavy losses caused by the gross income tax. “It is unusual to find salaries in excess of the minimum today when formerly it was the common thing,” he declared. “When a merchant is operating on a margin of 1% per cent net profit on each turnover of stock and 1% is taken from him in taxes, he is fore ed to find some means of counteract ing this 66% deduction. : “He cannot reduce his rents as in most instances, he has a lease; he has no chance to make it up ‘out of insurance, heat light, advertising pro perty taxes, repairs, or other simi-

' LINLSUAL FACTS REVEALED -, Movi sposighr”

4 i 1 gl v o & J"‘: : e ';:7 usd” i ;‘ | | OURING THE FOLg’ 9 L ,r.‘f’, i 'qy IR go B R | WAN EXTERI . = . 4 % RTI | XENE OF "BLIND Ve il eX\ & ! oAre'! NEIL HAM ILTC())N >;E A 8 -'/ : ;{,_,fii *1"’:’"" - S | AUNG HIS TOPCOAT ON =N SN : =F.SOME TIME [ Be e N . A TREE. SON HAT = @,; S, £ 1 | LATER HE FOUND T =»g A )’f" -\ 5 AIRD HAD STARTED 4 | ab » : , By « s e | | il \ f e MORE THAN 600 ISR o & g | <R POLENES R ™ S | Lole N=— COOKED DURING , g N | ‘/\' '7 B OO O Ly I | |C o m%ggf p— ?ng\/?zfi}q /iztsz:_sr N ;} i}%fi . 9 |&= 2Fd = bicTire N \%i‘%"z'f"’! e St S\ oot ] / A 1 s 3 ¥.o {‘: .> / 2 ;' ANN SOTHERN SPENDS ~ —serdu¥l ~ flaf\ ] | HER SPARE TIME IN N AN - TUDIO COMPOS— |‘g . N 2 d L l‘ THE S : e :':/ (\._’“:‘,‘ 4__}2l‘%&,,- £ \} NG MusiC s vl | ¥/ /| A - | /é?; ’»”s*4”’“ I Ry /%/ A - B \\» N/ 1 v \ ~" 9 ~}.:, .‘ RTeet S -4 7 ' }@‘ /\ . : 3T < 4 AT = v /A 5 K 1 e \ z,/ W ¥ i '-«-»— R = z ‘Qs\;,.{* . ROY WILLIAM Vs ‘ ' P = . WSPAPER CORRESPONDENT-. IN - ANE WARS BEFORE JOINING © | LAL R FOURTEEN WARS £ , | iy ;’ ‘ - 3 imE MW,E}-“ : .”u.wh-mm 4

matc the number of individual sandwiches it made, but there was such a mob of children clamoring for one that Chef Grauel had to cut ‘em mighty thin even to begin to go around. There is always some special and unique stunt arranged for every Children’s Day (Thursday) when admission to the Fair, and almost everything else, is only a nickel.

lar items of expenses” he continued, “Jeaving his payroll representing approximately 57% of the total as the only place he can go for relief—and he goes there too!” : Unless a commercial 'businessg call pay all expenses and produce a reasonable dividend, it must necessarily go out of business. Indiana merchants are confronted by interstate competifion, if they increase prices, with no source of making up the deficit except by cutting the payroll.

QUIETS WORRIES OF MONEY MEN

Announces the Refinancing of Nearly Two Billions Will be Made In Usual Way

The treasury quieted the worries of bankers and citizens who have feared inflation was in the air by announcing that it would refinance $1,724,700,000 in securities in the usual way.

While the announcement said nothing about inflation, it was reassuring to investors because it mean that at least for the present, the treasSary would not discard time-honored meth ods of financing the government. The treasury said that it would offer new securities in place of those which fall due September 15 and October 15. This ended reports that the government was planning to use part of the 2,800,000,000 “profits” on its gold write-up to pay off the debt. If that had been done financial experts said the operation would have inflated the currency to whatever exitent the “profit” was used.

The grand champion steer of the 4-H Beef Calf club owned by Howard Unzicker of near Goshen was sold at public auction at the Elkhart county fair to Roy Rensberger owner of the Goshen Auto-arket stores. The steer weighing 955 pounds hrought $l5 per hundred or $43:50. :

State Hatcheries To Grow Feed Plans for the growing of daphna for feeding game fish fry at the state fish hatcheries solving one of the chief feeding problems in the problems:in the propagation of fish, were announced by Virgil M. Simmons commissioner of the department of conservation. iSpecial tanks for the growing of daphna are to be added to the equipment of the Bass lake Wawasee, Tri-Lakes and Avoca hatcheries. SR ' Daphna which is a minute, crabshaped gnim‘al is related to the crayfish and shrimp families. It provides a natural food supply for the newlyhatched game fish and tests during the past months show that daphna can be produced in sufficient quantities for feeding the young fish at the hatcheries. Concrete tanks, having a surface area of approximately 140 square feet and divided into three compartments will be installed at the state hatcheries for the daphna propagation. iSeveral experiments in producing natural food for game fish are being carried on by the division of fish andgame at the state hatcheries this summer as a means of increasing the efficiency of their operation. :

Albion Man Appointed Twenty county and city chairmen who will assist in ofrganization of local committees in the federal housing program were named by Fred Hoke state director. ; The chairmen included: DeKalb county—E. O. Little, Au‘burn. Noble county—M. H. Spangler, Albion. ' Steuben coutny—Archie E. Jackson Angola. \ Whitley county—Arthur S. Norwiels Columibia City. Hoke issued a bulletin to all chairmen asking them to warn applicants to take tax duplicates when applying for loans. : :

Fuel Problem Met by Hardy Swiss Woodsmen

The hardiness of the Swiss ‘people is traditional and this hardiness is due to the terrific physical hardships under which a large portion of the population exists, The rugged slopes up and down which they toil, the year-round snowcapped mountains and the lack of many of the, conveniences to which peorle of our country are accustomed make of the peasant folk of Switzerland people as rugged as the mountains among which they make their living. -

Fuel is oste problem which takes the natives back to elements. There is no coal of any sort in Switzerland and the cost of bringing it in is prohibitive so far as the general run of the population is concerned. This puts the question of warmth up to the woodsmen, the hardiest among a hardy race,

The snow and steep hillsides, problems in many cases, come as a blessing to the woodsmen., He is able to fall his logs during the open season and then when the snows of winter come he is able to slide his logs easily along the upper levels and shoot them with no effort down the steep hillsides. In the lower areas, where the streams are not so turbulent, the logs are made into rafts and floated downgtream to the larger (_:enters of population. The roaring logs in the huge fireplaces add greatly to the romance of life in this nation of the mountains, —Washington Star Sunday Magazine.

Few Records Preserved for Future Historians

It is pretty safe to predict that almost all our books, and practically all our bound files of newspapers and magazines, will have crumbled to dust long before the lapse of another thousand years, for wood pulp paper is short-lived. Even by going to the trouble of interleaving all its newcpaper files with sheets of tissue paper the New York Public . library has no expectation that they will be handleable for more than about a hundred years. _ . .

oOdd though it seems, it is certain that the student of a century or two kence will be able to consult plenty of legible newspapers dating up- to about 1850, for they are on rag paper. The papers, however, chronicling man’s subsequent conquest of time and space, the dawn of the eras of flight, wireless, electrification and television, will crumble like ashes at kis touch. Already the file of 8 weelkly London journal of only 50 years ago, preserved in the British Muséum library, has met with that fate.—London Spectator.

Tapestries of Raphael

Among the priceless treasures of the Vatican in Rome, which no money could buy, are the tapestries of Raphael now in the gallery of the Arazzo, which formerly were hung on the walls of the Sistine chapel. The ten pleces made in Brussels by Peter van Alst from Raphael’s cartoons represent scenes from the history of the Apostles. In the- sack of Rome In 1527, they were part of the booty of the soldiers of Chgrles V, and they tried unsuccessfully to take the gold from the tapestries by use of fire. They were sold and dispersed and then recovered, only to again be captured’ by the French troops in 1798, who disposed of them to a second-hand dealer of Genoa. After all their adventures they now rest for the world to admire. :

“Poor Richard’s” Power

The world listened to “Poor Richard” for 25 years while he published his Almanack and for two centuries afterward. And the reason, after all, is that he spoke plainly of plain matters to plain people. Not always wisely, but usually with wit and invariably with clarity. If he were here today he might prefer to renew the publication of his Almanack rather than to play an impressive part in politics or diplomacy. He would know from old experience and the second thought of two centuries that a handful of phrases and a hatful of homespun sense may have more effect on the affairs of men than was ever accomplished by -cleverness.—Philadelphia Ledger.

Colorado’s Great Gorge

The Grand canyon of the state of Colorado has a total length of about 280 miles from head of Marble gorge, near the northern boundary of Arizona, to Grand Wash cliffs, near the Nevada line. Its most impressibly beautiful part, 105 miles long, lles within the Grand Canyon National park in northern Arizona. The width varies from 5 to 15 miles, while the maximum depth is more than a mile. The chdracteristic portion so often seen in pictures is the point near the town of Grand. Canyon, Ariz., where the gorge is almost 13 miles from rim to rim. :

Corn’s Origin ynknown : The cereal variously known as maize, Indian corn or simply corn is lgxdoubtedly a native of some part of the New world, although kernels of corn found in ancient ruins at Athens and representations resembling corn plants in ancient Chinese books have led some to believe that this cereal may have been indigenous to Asia also. Some botanists believe that maize was ‘developed from the heavy-seeded grass known as tosinte, but the wild progenitor of corn has not been identified for certaln.—Pathfinder Magazine,

New Bus Service.

The Indiana Motor Bus eompany inaugurated service -between Goshen and Peru to replace passenger service on the Winona Railroad lines which was discontinued. The bus route will follow closely to that of the interurban company. - ——————— B——— - — ] YIS .

Fair Champ

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Here’'s a duck that Joe Penner could sell. For six weeks Rosemary has bzen laying three eggs per week ‘in her hideout at Wings of A Century at the World’s Fair where she appears in the cast. Lhampion ducks lay at the rate of tcur eggs weekly, so when one reflects that Rosemary must go on acting, her egg laying is not to be sneered at. The coming champion is pictured here in the arms of fdary Ann Pearl, a juvenile member of the cast.

Leniency Shown.

Pleading guilty to petit larceny when arraigned (before Judge Rob McNagny at Albion a number of Swan township residents were shown leniecy by the court. All received suspended sentences with the understand ing they make restitution of the stolen property. v - :

- Clarence Wood 38, was sentenced to one year at the state penal farm and his sentence was suspended as his parents are at the point of death. He was paroled to E. L. Young, Swan and was ordered to take the place of one of the nurses now caring for his parents.

‘Others getting a year’s suspended sentence are Wilbert Zolmman Mauice Mpyers, Rollin Parker, Walter Wood and George Whan. , Harold Young was given a 6 months sgsxpended. sentence and ordered to return to Florida with his parents. Morrel Cramer 53 was given a year’s suspened sentence on a charge ‘of receiving stolen goods. The arrests of the men followed a geries of thefts in Swan township.

Failed to Open Barbecue Stand

Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Pierpont, parents of Harry Pierpont, Dillinger henchman who is in the Ohio state prison at Columbus under sentence of death as yet have not open‘ed their restaurant and beer business in former Hill barbecue stand on state road 2 a half mile northwest of the Kunderd Gladioli farm. -

S U.S. & # g oV ) = WE DO OUR PART h & -'/ ~ » ) \ \ \_/ D . : .//’ : L |///j‘/ s | “ \1 / : ‘ =S ~ . LAR R A e sL S OMUER L Pt L CUEERE

“If You Want Folks To Know Who You Are ... Where You Are ... And What You've Got To Sell Then...” Advertise!

SPENDS NEAR TEN BILLIONS.

Peßice Time Records for Expenditures s Set by tho"npmvelt Ad- - ministaation. ; President Roosevelt neared the 10,000,000,000 mark last week as the’ treasury sought to refute any charge of “extravagence” in use of public funds. - From inauguration to August 27, treasury figures showed the federal government had actually spent $9,663,319,689, a peace time record. It was about $540,000,000 for every month President Roosevelt had been in office. ~ Against this, the federal government collected in taxes, customs and other income a total of $4,379,357,341, leaving the government so far under Roosevelt $5,314,462,248 ““in the red.” All of the nearlyq $10,000,000,000 expenditures do not represent actual cash outlays by the government as it includes $367,000,000 of debt -retirements by the government out of income. In making allowance for these retirements the government shows a net deficit of $4,947,462,248 since President took office. The net deficit represents what the government spent above its regular income. It was made up by borrowings from the public which carried the government’s debt to. the present record peak of 527,1000,000,000. In refuting charges of government extravagance, Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau, Jr., points out that | the government has made a “profit” of $2,800,000,000 in writing up its gold holding which ultimately could be applied against current borrowings of the government. He also declares the real assets amounting to $1,861,000,000 have been acquired. Treasury officials figure only a small cost for the new deal to date if the “gold” profit and new assets are applied against the present Roosevelt defidit of $4,947,462,284. The gold “profits” and acquired assets are figured as worth - $4,661,000,000 or nearly the amount of the defiajt. . Nearly half of the total Roosevelt spending of $9,693,819,589 or roughly $4,500,000,000, represnts the normal cost of running the TUnited States government. These operations cost on an average of about $3,000,000,000 annually prior to the Roosevelt administration. 2 The balance of the $5,000,000,000 spent under President Roosevelt was for recovery purposes, of which treasury officials figure $1,861,000,000 is ultimately recoverable because it has gone into loans to business and banks and government stock purchases. -

Girl Is Saved From Drowning

Martha Mulholland daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Mulholland of Kendallville was rescued from probable drowning at the city park beach by the quick and efficient work of Walter Whiteman, beach guard. Martha was sitting on the edge of one of the piers engaged in fishing when she lost her balance and fell into the water. Beach Guard Whiteman realizing the girl’s inability to swim rushed to the pier jumped into the water and lifted the girl gafely from the water, :

The 61st annual' Elkhart county fair closed Saturday with new attendance records for each afternoon and evening session. Friday’s attedance was estimated at 8,000, while Thursday attendance>was above the 12,000 mrk; : T

Ligonier Shipping Ass'n. HARKET YOUR LIVE STOCK CO-OPERATIVELY “{n the Hands of a Friend From : Beginning to End.” The Manager and secretary are bond sd by the Massachusetts Bonding and insurance Company for protection of sur patrons. NHREN YOU HAVE LIVE STOCK TO SHIP, CALL 3 Howard Herald Phone 711 Ligonier

W, H_WIGTON Attorney-at-l Law Office fn Zimmercaan Bloek ‘LIGOUONIER, ND

Hascall Crothers frustee Perry Townshsp Office in the Mier Bank Building Office Hours—Saturday Nights by appointment only

=g il i i ] || [T will pay |8 tgi‘e" 4 you to ict i ili| our prices be- |H i¢ f e il | fore you order |§ i SA. L E g | BILLS | l't“ ' n) | L e i

Harry L. Benner - Auctioneer Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley County Phones

Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers ' vhone 156. Ligonier. Indiana

SIT back in silence and wait for that “living” you think the “world owes” you and you'll be a mighty long time waiting. = For, the _public beats no path to the door of a man it doesn’t know even exists. And how, but through the ‘medium of the PRINTED "WORD, can it find out? How better, but through intelligent use of NEWSPAPER SPACE, can folks be informed of a ‘man’s . wares or services? | ADVERTISE! Not mow and then, but CONSISTENTLY in THE LIGONIER BANNER. ~Call and let us help you plan a * PROFIT-PRODUCING CAM- - PAIGN. Lowest Space Rates. 3 ity

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