Ligonier Banner., Volume 70, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 7 May 1936 — Page 3
% " Former Winners Have Chance to Set S : i . t . - New 500-Mile Race Records May 30th ml N [ A ) o . B e sl O oo\ | i ) o 4 ’ .e\ ’{’ £ G 5 N 4 i o [N N R R B | RMy ] oo N\ Ni o T R s e B NY R N\ NG R SRR e|44 S B A BRI M e S 0e e o ?:# A RRUTR & B 7 Ul BIrL '\-:-i' LY g\* ‘;T,,EyI g CUMMINGS : Ay = WRNMEYES ey | \\\M ¢ W T - = E gSOR AT B \ o~ (1 W R e . : £=B T, :L::i/‘; — - e S o tape : — q\\\\\ (629 T BEr =\ = « JEBYeS Ry R \Q EPTE Tn 3 v N QMW A Y oW NAT oy \é’ .2 P s % : FrED O N AP Wl Froap g S :
INDIANAPOI4S, Ind.—Tour former winners are schedulél to start in the 24th running of tha snnual 500-mile automobile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speadway oa May 30 and at least two of them have the opportunity to make racing history. Kelly Petillo, ex-truck driver who set a new average of 106.24 miles per hour in his victory drive last year, may be the first pilet to win suc{:essive races. The “King of the Ridge,” a sobriquet the smiling young Italian picked up while driving a fruit truck over the .difficult ridge route in-California, will be a favorite in this year’s vace if he elects to step out as fast as he did last year. - . Louis Meyer, only active two-time
- MEETS ARRANGED To Discuss New Developments At ; ‘Three Sessions On May g 18 ' ' Farm folks who will brood chicks this season can profit by attending at least one of .the chick meetings to be held in th county on Wednsday May 13. 'These meetings are bz2ing held to discuss new developments in feed ing and brooding chicks. Prevention of disease losses will also be con
sidered. With a lower price level for both eggs and poultry meat, costs must be lowered or efficiency increased if a profit is to be made: M. A. Nye Noble county agricultural agent has announced that William B. Kohlmeeyr extension poultryman of Purdue university will assist at the meetings. The numerous cointactg and wide experience which M. Kohlmeyer has had in this section of Indiana will enable him to make worthwhile suggestions to pouliry raisers in thig county. . _There will be thre meting sduring the day at the following places: 9::30, H. G. Barnhart farm two miles south and three and one ha'f miles west of Albion. 1¢ 30: N. Gorgaware farm first place west of abcve stop 1:30: Frank Hosford farm two and threefourths mileg north of Albion. Feeding, management and sanitation will -be discussed and at ‘eacn
Automobile Insurance Old Line Stock Co. No membership fee—No assessments—Premiums payable in monthly payments if desired—All claims settled promptly =~ KIMMELL REALTY CO. 108 McLean St. Phone 800 . Ligonier, Ind. i
‘o ° e e Ly I Ligonier Shipping Ass n.l MARKET YOUR LIVE STOCK CO-OPERATIVELY ~ “'{n the Hands of a Friend From Beginning to Bnd.” The Manager and secretary.are bond ¢d by the Massachusetts Bonding.and Insurance Company for protection of sur patrons. - i WNIIEN YOU HAVE LIVE STOCK TO ' SHIP, CALL ‘ . .Howard Herald Phone 711 Ligonier g 'ti; ' for 1 COLDS 4 Liquid, Tablets " price i «~Salve, Nose Drops 55,c, 10c, 25¢ .Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers e - Phone 156. Ligonier. Indiana w Dr. H. B. WOODS -~ Chiropractor and Physio Therapist ' Cor.2nd and Martin Bts. : Lady Attendast .
winner of the Decoration Day classie, with victories in 1928 and 1933, may become the only three-time winner if he gets the fortunate wave of the checkered flag at the end of his day’s work. A consistent but daring driver, Meyer is always a serious contender. g
Wild Bill Cummings, winner in 1934, came within striking distance of first place last year, pulling in a good third. Most popular of the yovamg .drivers, he will carry short odds.
The veteran campaigner, Fred Frame, who won in 1932, is also scheduled to be present and can always be counted high up in the money if his motor holds together.
farm the operator will describe his methods and system of management. These ‘meetingg offer an oppertunity to see how other folkg meet their chick raising problms. Information brought out at these farms wll veint the way to reduced expenses and greater efficiency. : :
May Go Free
Whether Milton K| Jacobs former vice president of the defunct Noble County Bank and Trust company will again face trial on banker's embezzle ment charges ig said to lie with the county council. Should the council appropriate gufficient funds for another trial, procedure probably wil! be brought against Jacobs who is now a resident of Chicago. ‘ Since the acquittal in March of Walter Gillian, who once was convicted on a similar charge and then won freedom it is possibzl that the case may be dropped as an ecouomy measure.
Marriage LiCenses
Lee J. Van Camp, switchman of Elkhart, and Vanchie Lauby housekeeper of Elkhart. Ishmael Brothers toclmaker of Sturgis and Lottie Vi»'a Marshall, factory employee of LaGrange. ' [Russel Delos Maggart farmer of Ligonier and Cecilia Alverna Warstler housework, o¢ Ligenler.
DR. J. S. WELLINGTON OPTOMETRIC EYE SPECIALIST Eyes Eumlned — Glasses Fitted Zimmerman Building Every Friday Evening 6:30 to 9 Phone 273 for Appointment
HARRIETTE WARSTLER will collect .accounts owing to Dr. J S. Weliington Arthur Claudon Crustee Perry Townshsp Office in the Mier Bank Building Office:Hours—Friday Nights, : by appointment only 0. A. Billman z Well Drilling - Water. Supply Systems Phone 333 ¢ = Ligonier, Ind.
W. H. WIGTON Atfimy-fl-hw ? 1 Ofce in Zimmerman Block UIGONTER, ND 1 Harry L. Benner Austionee: Upen (onfl%m | ds mfi"é{ “aut Whitle oth INoble ariél 8 " Abstracts of Title - Office in' Democrat Building Phone 41 | Albion
DETECTIVE RILEY
INPLUENCE OF THE DOPED SRR w:.r. - g _'_ .4.—-.... T ’ j b ety A % /B \Drinks 7, & L 1 // P ‘ e ’-“ z 3 '/’ 3 _ - ;2 g | /g/ - 2 1 ,‘__ o:: ;‘v,‘/-; ‘ "’ ‘ KN | =*" "E{"' <'{ |
The “Franklin’’ Announces: —io’l‘h’;toevel"{hm or woman u’l‘r with an income - gy ’tor a loan for any -&"&%- pose, “.p ‘to $3OO. ‘ —NO other SIGNATURE uired ether tgunrnu?gt bomw::.' —That rience has ta us that .l BeAx%S‘HID CUSTO% is our BEST CUSTOMER. —That all loans will be made the SAME DAY you apply. —That NO INQUIRIES will be made of friends, employer or merchants. —PLENTY OF TIME to repay. Payments extended in emergennmn%"? of monlat have came to ow_ first hand about our FROMPT, COURTEOUS loan service. Oall and "J Learn. No obligation. ‘ SECURITY Co. KENDALLVILLE, IND., PHONE 212
Checks Sent to Bond Holders Checks totalling more than $103,000 were placed in the mails Wednesday afternoon to holders of first mort gage bonds on Kendallville property. The payment wag made possible by a recent decision of the supreme court of Indiana, which held these certificates as preferred claims in the liquidation of the assetg of the defunct Noble County Bank and Trust Company. A petition for distribution was prepared and filed by Receiver Vermon* Finley with the Noble circuit court about March 29.
Th Indiana supreme court endec five years of litigation Mareh 4 in the case by ruling that the ertifcate holderg held preferred claimg in the liquidation of the bank. : ‘The bank had on deposit the =um of $126,000 enough to allow a fifty per cent distribtuion to all certificate holders and to take care of taxes insurance and necessary repairs on 14 properties belonging to the fund.
Notice of Final Settlement. State of Imdiana Noble County ss: In the matter of the estate of Effie B. Cooper Deceased No. 3895 ;
In the Noblg Circuit Court May Term 1936. .
Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned ag administrator of the estate of BEffie B. Cooper deceased has filed in said court his account and vouchers in final settlement of sald estate, and that the same will come up for examination and action of said court, at the court house, at Albion, Indiana, on the 18 day of May 1936 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 approved.
~ And the heirs, devisees and legatees of sald decedent and all others interested in said Estate, are alsp hereby required at th@ time and place aforesaid to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate, T Homer H. Cooper Executor PoSted April 25th 1936.
Notice of Petition to Vacate Street i and Alleys To the City of Ligonier, ‘
Noble County, Indiana and all
Citizens .of said City: You are hereby notified that the Board of School Trustees of the City of Ligonier, Noble County, Indiana, has filed in the Noble Circuit Court: of Indiana, its petition fo an order of said Court for the vacation of all streets and alleys platted in the plat of Woodlawn addition to the city of Ligonier aforesaid, all as set forth in said petition, and thus affecting all lots, streets and alleys in said Woodlawn Addition, and that said petition so fileq and all matters and things of issue in connecticn therewith are set for hearing and determination in said Court and will be heard and determined by the Judge thereof at the Court House 'in the town of Albion, Noble County, Indiana, on the 11th day of May, 1936.
In witness whereof I hereunto subscribe my name and affix the seal of saild Court at said town of Albion, Indiana this 22nd day of April 1936. SHAL) HAROLD V. CURTIS Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court.
Youth Eat Wild Poke Root Physicians held little hope at Port land for the recovery of Marion Towell, 9, and his brother 11 who ate roots of the wild poke plant a po'eonoug herb at their graadfather’s
THE LIGONIER BANNFR, LIGONIER, INDIANA
AID TO BE WITHDRAWN
Work-Rellef Workers e Farm 305 75 L Ul WL
- Withdrawal of federal aid from able boded men who refuse private employ ment as farm hands in agricultural states this summer was planned by Works Progress Adinistrator Harry L. Hopkins. The situation became acute in the Midwest last year. Landownerg complained many laborers declined work to remain on relief rolls. Hopkins investigated. In areag where farm ownerg were not attemptng to ‘chisel’ down wages, he ordered state relief directors to withdraw emergnccy grants to force the workers to accept employment. The problem {s present again. North Dakota fanm operators asserted they could not compete with wages hours, and type of labor offered on workg prgress and rural resettlement projects. The state’s director of WPA employment announced federal =~ aid would be withdrawn from any workrelief worker refusing a bona fide farm job. He reportedly was acting with Hopkins’ consent. Hopkins adopted a broad program to make certain a plentiful supply of farm labor this sumer. Since midMarch he has been paring WPA work rolls at a rate to reduce project employment from about 3,000,000 to $2.300,000 persons by July 1. i
Hopking estimated 300,000 of the 700,000 discharged would be cared for either through farm labor or from food grown on their own plots of iand. If a family leaves reliéf rolls with no funds, welfare agencieg probably will advance money until the worker’s first pay-day. . The other 400,000 Hopkins believed could find enfployment on heavier work-relief projects starting this sp:ly/sfler the winter delay.
| Speed Kings to Aid | Road Safety Drive y . 0 oV “"(""f . . \\:§ Z-l i LR C| 1 p / . . 3 *you we VER i | FinD RACE . ! DRIVERS N ’ TRoUBLE ON® & ! THE HIGHWAY? % "‘"'—-- S @\ V) LL‘\> e A AN AN Wg, (N e fer® A ' & rns?;v“‘ eroP;.z .D’é'}v.sgcx f';’:arhkm Wilsy =NI kY FBOUT THE TRARCkY
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. —Speed kings will preach safety to motorists of Indiana this year. Co-operating with the Governor’s committee on public safety for the State of Indiana, T. E. “Pop’” Myers, for 26 years general manager of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, is enlisting the services of the nation’s greatest race drivers to spread the message of sane driving among the general public. “If the ordinary motoxgist observed the good judgment and courtesy that race drivers put into practice in the annual 500-mile race at the Speedway each May 30, we would have practically no trouble on our highways today,” says Mr. Myers. “Some people think that the race driver is tearing about the track, willy-nilly and in a hurry to get to the end of the competition, but such is not the case.” The good driver knows exactly where he is going all of the time and how best to get there. He never passes another car unless he knows exactly what that car is going to do in the turns and he always moves over when another car wants to f:“ him, regardless how keen he on victory. You never find race drivers in trouble on the highway because they know the d“fé{ of aimless driving and never do it. lamsm:etheboy-rfido syl £1 o St public safety campaign now being directed by éoy‘efi:pf gul V. uefintt.
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. William E. Grimes, a som, Norman Dean on April 26th. “Rorn, to Mr aud Mre. Thuran Radc’if! of Alblor a som, °n Apri Zsth.
Present treng of traffic accidents indicateg that 3,300 fewer persons will lose their lives in the nation's ~streets and highways this year than in 1935, the National Safety council Hochrod. E:
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S . FINE, MING / o =/ § NOW'S OuR iMis =P | CHANCE TO GET : fl:' ANCIENTE RID OF THAT L ANLESTORS’ 8 BIG WEADACHE #/ B] o X ee B 1 w ; sl 1 [ X i = Yo, % . 2 aanll 4 ‘ N <A =" H 1 37 s S @ < S ,/ 7 \ Wiy 4 seEE | VN, / ~ Z D A e T e R e T e
.Standard Of ny of Indiana z‘ spend $4 for expan sion " modernization during the coming year, Edward G. Seubert president revealed. ¢ Seubert who will attend the annal stockholders’ meeting at Whiting, also disclosed that the company plans to sell lts midwestera g;oung stations and retire from diect marketing. " *Success of the experiment in lowa where a chain store tax forced us to sell our stations prompted the plan to sell stations to private operators in other states,” Seubert explained. “Sales increased in lowa during the past year.” “Fortunately the trend to construct gasoling stations is retarding for he country has been overstoccked with them.”
Barber Awarded $3OO,
An Elkhart circuit court jury returned a verdict finding for the plain tiff against both defendants in the sum of $3OO in the damage suit of Frank Yoder against Ed Watsr and Eugene Cole. Yoder asked $5,000 dam ages from Waters and Cole, whoe he alleged maliciously conspired to have him suspended as barber under the 1933 state barber’s act.
Mrs. Beulah Kistler, 27, sulfered a fractured skull at Fort Wayne when she ran into the side of a car driven by Stephen Cernv, 36, of Cerny 0. Her condition was described hy St. Joseph's hospital attaches as eritical.
Contract to pave omne-nalf mile of West Main street in Batler was awarded by the state highwoy depart ment to Brand & Deal Blkhart on a bid of $35,682. ;
Better Pricesfor Pickles Call at Kline’s Grocery, Cromwell for your contract and seed LIBBY, McNEIL & LIBBY.
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“If You Want Folks To Know Whe You Are ... Where You Are ... And What You've Got Te Sell Then...”
Frank Yoder Paroled.
Frank Yoder former cashicr of the State Bank of Goshen convicté! In Elkhart superior court on chargrs oi embezzlement and larceny weg pareled Wednesday by the staty clexency commission.
He was sentenced May 17, 1935 to serve 2-14 yeary in Indians State prison on each of the charges. the sntences to runm concurrently.
Yodey allegedly used sicurities valued at $2,000 from the -atate of hi sward, Mary Yoder no relation to purchase speculative bonds valued at $5OO. He was paroled to Robert & Froetor Elkhart attorney. Nine other prisoners wer: Jenfed lenfency one was paroled an| the case of Elvin Carson Hamilton county wag continued. ‘ '~ Wall Puper—-Knights’ Drug Store
RECREATION ROOM INSTALLATION ) T}k Bst B Vl;‘ ; .’ 4 "‘".\ ” ’ 'z.,,"t"": ;" 37 & (7 o £ - 5%; . T ;fi 5 ' ; | 3". ,a.u-'rr{’ g BB AT 2 s gfizi :g g B |g b ' 8 i EET B hut iR ; : Lo R A 84 TR ‘4 sK& 3 " n ] K W ir, | o ? MODERN styling of the new antomatic electric water heaters maks - these heaters especially adapfable for installation in the bath- ! room, kitchen or recreation room of the modern home. The recre- ' ation room installation shown above is typical of the ease with which this important appliance may be fitted Into the deécorative . ensemble of the room. It is a far ery from the old-fashioned heaters usually found In dark corners of the basement, difficuit of access. ' The modern swing to all-electric homes has directed unusual atten- . tion to the convenlence and dependability of electric water heating, . which requires no attention after the heater s installéd, and insures . & supply of hot water at all times of the day or night. The heater shown Is a Hofgofnt fh white enamel. with black toim. 2
By Richard Lee
————————————— e+ X ;;’ \gru.‘ross ma:: St A’/' 'ER T”E s.b - b g R HWE'LL NEVER BE THIS WA~ /,,/4. M.ssgp/‘/ e TO BLOTF . \l4//-,,, ; d ’ DETLECT)S A s 7i‘ ; 7 778 < by | 7N e 7 : , : / - / /s g . 7 R R SILENTLY "LINK" LEONARDO l AND THE CHINAMAN TIP TOE Z TO RILEY'S CABIN ... L
Willlam Joe White 33 of Elkhart was sentenced to serve 130 days In the penal farm and was assessed $l5 by Judge Frank J. Treckelo In the Blkhart city court on a charge of having falled to suppor. his wite, Mrs. Edan White of Ligonier and their small son. White admitted that he had paid nothing to thei: suppost In the last fve years since he was given a suspended sentence in the Elkhart city court on a similar charge. Although he has never obtained a divorce, it was hrought out in tstimony that the defeadant had married another woman in West Virginia a year ago and had lived with her at Steubenville O, until the se~ cond wife was Informed that the defendant was still married "o Li 3 first wife, : Read the Ligonler Banner.
SIT back in silence and wait for that “hving” you think the “world owes” you and youll 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 PR!NTE“? 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? ‘then, but CONSISTENTLY in R s ‘ ) » e:‘ % “
Gets 150 Day Seatence
