Ligonier Banner., Volume 70, Number 29, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 August 1936 — Page 3
LOUT-OF-TOWN NEWS
Wawaka News Mrs. Vera Brill, Mrs. Mel Jourdan Rev. and Mrs. Floyd Johnston, Mr. and Mr.s Homer Boyd were at Eddy Thursday attending the WNoble-La-Grange Baptist quarterly meeting. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Magnuson and family of Albion, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore -Magnuson and family of Auburn were guests Wednesday night of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Magnuson and family. Mrs. Nellie Lichty and two children, yyho have been guests of her gister, Mrs. Elmer Magnuson aud family, returned to their home at Allegan, Mich., Thursday. 4 Mrs. Nellie Lichty and children of Allegan, Mich., visited Mrs. Wil! Butz anq family Wednesday.
Mrs. Edith Weirick Mr. and Mrs. Willis Weirick received word of the death of Mrs. Elizabeth 'Weirick of Helmer, aged mother of the late Manager Chester Weirick of the Home Telephone company here. Jun Astervjlle of Canton, 0., was here on business Wednesday. Robert Lower, Chas. Krippner, Chas. Shannon and Howard Inks are at Camp Knox, Ky., enjoying military life. as members of the Fort Wayne military band. Word from Millershurg relatives tn Mrs. Modell Brill, daughter of Mrs. Ruby Schwab postmistress, is thet she ig gaining rapidly.” ; The first family of hal'f grown pheasants was sighted Wednesday forenoon between the Snider and Ullery farms. Mother hen and 17 chicks made a pretty sight. Elkhart Township Home Divisiion booth .will picture “Old and New in Gowns”, at the Noble County Fair. Project leaders, Lucille Crago and Alberta Richards are getting fine response from those solicited for treasured growns of the past. FElkhart township will have a fine showing. Mrs. Ella Resler spert Wednesday with President Lena Couts of Fik-
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‘ Listeri to the Voiée of Firestone = featiiring Margaret Speaks, Saprano, with the Firestone Choral : Symphony, and William Daly’s Orchestra—ecvery Monday nightover N. B, C. Nationwide Network ~ Ligonier and Kimmell, Indiana
hart Township Home Division. She was a highly efficient former officer of this organiation. ; Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Butts of Kimmell, spent Wednesdav with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gard and familv.
Chauncey Bowman of Ligonier transacted business here Wednesday. Misg Catherine Keasey who spent her vacation here with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Burket and family has return ed to Kendallville: :
Miss Marie Burket has Yeen quite ill for several days. Mrs. Sara Brill has heen at Miliers burg assisting care for Mrs. Modelle Brill past few days Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Brili and fam ily of Zionville are spending this week at the Brill cottage at Hunter lake. They were joined Wednesday by Robert Brill. His. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Brill,. joined taem Saturday for a few days’ outing.
‘Mr. and M:s. Fred Burket mgtored Thursday morning to Greenup, T, to spend the week-end wita her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wiliis Ozier and to celebrate her birthday in the home of. her childhocd. iy
Mr. and Mrs. Joe W. Smith spent Wednesday night in Kendallville. The Elkhart township demonstration team in 4-H healta club for Noble county fair demonstration chosen here Wednesday at the mee:ing at the Mr. and Mrs. Jesse LeCount home, is compoased of Miss Catherine LeCount and Miss Roberta Lower; alternale iz Miss T.orita Johnston. Miss Brittie M. Baker Noble county nurse will be back from college Sa‘urday to coach the demonstration team.
RiChville News
Mr. and Mrs. John Emmert and son Junior returned home Sunday from a weeks visit in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Ott and Farrell Ott and family attended the Ott reunion Sunday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Ott near Syracuse. . - Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Granger spent Sunday at the J. Stettler home. Mr. and Mrs. Linval dire and M. and Mrs. Richard Hire and family of Zion City spent from Friday until Monday with Mr. and Mrs. George Hire. - Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Shatfer and family spent Sunday near South ‘Whltley. : | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bender called at the D. L. Blue home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Treadway and family and John Stettler called on Mr. gnd Mrs. George McDaniel Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Richard were Goshen visitors Monday afternoon
Solomons Creek Newg
Rev. and Mrs. Dobbins entertained Mr. and Mrs. Carbaugh and son Fort Wayne Sundy. ; Mr. and Mrs. Van Horn and daughter Artith, Battle Creek, Michigan Marian Deßrown, Kalamazoo Michigan; and Esther Cook, Kendallville visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fisher, Sunday. : Mrs. Orpha Lockwood and Hattie Routsong called on Mrs. David Holtzsinger one day last week. Mrs. Guy McDowell Elkhart visited Mrs. Chester Firestone last week.
Mr. and Mrs. David Holtzsinger attended the Brock reunion at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Brock Sunday. There were 95 persons present.
Golf at South Shore Course.
August 15th 2:30 CST Joe Kirkwood will give his super golf exhibition and lecture at the South Shore Golf Course. There will be an 18 hole maltch, Joe Kirkwood and Bruce Wilcox verus Pug Allen and Johnny Watson. Price $l.lO. This includes golf for the day. - August 25th at the same course at 9:00 CST The Annual Ladies Invitational Gol¢ Tournament. Last year over 100 ladies played. Lunch will be served after the game, fifty cents. % wall Paper —Knight’'s Drug Store
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. THE LICONTER: BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA
',' ; I/ i i) ; winig k. ' ' UUIC . : ~ 3 / KENDALLVILLE; IND: ‘AUGUST 17 to 21, 1936 i Three Big Days and Nights—Wed., Thurs., Fri. ‘A great combination of Agriculture, Stock Show and :‘_4-H Club work. Special Attractions Day and Night -Gus Sun Circus with 50 people and 20 dogs and ponies You will see a real show in front of the Grand ; Stand each night. FRIDAY NIGHT ONLY ... we will give you a real thrill by putting on the most colossal display of firewotks ever given in Northern Indiana 1 We have revived our speed list by increasing the purses, assuring fast and exciting races. ‘ Bring your tamilies and friends to the knowledg that ‘every exhibit is educational in character and every g attraction of an edueational nature. : - SEASON TICKETS Season Tickets good for two persons ' AR S Season Tickets good for two persons and automobile all week........... 51.50 SEASON TICKET SALE CLOSES AUG. 15 Regular admission to Fair each day 50c: night 25¢c. Automobile day or night 25¢. Grand i Stand day or night 25c.
How To Grow Thrifty Pigs.
Pigs farrowed in early fall may be raised 1o marketabhle weights as economically as spring pigs. according to County Agent M. A. Nye, who has received a list of precautions on raising fall pigs from John Schwab, Purdue University anima! husbandry extension specialist, who ig widely known to local pork praduce-s. Fall pigs sho:l¢ not be farrowed later than the thicri week in September, if they are to Le profitably fed to marktable weighte. This permits the minimum amount of time for good pigs to grow large enough to be thrifty when winter hegiuns. The gsows should farrow their pigs in the field or pascur2 away from infected feeding places or old Lkog lots. Portable, individual houses are rocommended for Tfarrowing guarters but- they should bs -vell scrubbed with bolling lye water about a week before they are needei. After cold weather has started, the east wes: and north sides should be tightly closed to prevent drafts whick might caase pig flu or other iang trouble. ~ The gows sghoanld be fed. lightly for a day or two after farrowing and then fed liberally with an abundance of pasture. After the pigs reach the age of two weeks, they should be fed a pig starter of 70 pounds coarse1y ground corn, 2) pounds coarsely ground wheat and 10 pounds tankage. This mixture ghea'd be fed until the pigs weigh 76 pounds or more. : A self-feeder suitable for young pigs is recommenled strongly by Schwab. He savs that no other me—l thod of feeding seems to produce the growth and te “maintain the health of the nigs as satisfactorily. The feeder shoun.d be located in a creep, and a fountain of -water should be placai near ft.
Every indacemeta should be given to the pigs to Lte-une as large it possible befo'e wintry weather begins. The p'zs and their mothers should be kupt away fromm worm infested lots until tha pigs weigh 75 pounds or :moic. After this, with con tinued good feediag, they are not seriously stintei oy turs: parasites. When cool nights come have sleeping qua.t2 . ipat a : ro.my, dry and comfortat.a, i AR
Elkhart Twp. Schools Open Sept, 4.
The Wawaka and Elkhart township schools will open September 4. On September 7, Labor Day will be observed. :
Teachers of the Wawaka high school and grades follow: Principal J. L. Tierney, Rev. B. E. Hoover, Harold Jgnes, Mrs. Irma Shumaker, Keith Krippner, Misseg Thora Franks Ruth Schwab, Helen Tice, Virzinia Pepple, and Virginia Burgess. The latter is the only new teacher. She will teach a commercial course.
Teachers at the North Centralized school are Thurlow Holcomb John Todd and Mrs. Audra Stuff.
Kroger Loses Fight.
~ Right of the Kroger Grocery and ‘Baking company to sell milk under priceg fixed by the state milk control board was denied at Fort Wayne in a temporary . restraining order granted by Judge Sol Rothberg in Allen superior court. ‘ The KrKoger company argued that basis should be allowed to deduct a penny a quart for retail milk, in opposition to the state board’s regulations. d i HASSE < & :
GIVES MESSAGE TO YOUTH
M. Clifford Townsend Delivers Ad dresg to Young Demoerats at Gary
A call for young voters of Indiana to be enlisted in the Democraic war against privilege and for the duration of /tfi?\ntrugle to give value to human life as well as to stocks and bonds was sounded by M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic nominee’ for governor in his address to Young Democrats of Indiana. “We are enlisted in the wartare against privilege in any form”, the nominee said, “We are enlisted to guard the Indiana sector.”
Mr. Townsend recalled the sad history of Indiana’s experience under four former Republican Governors, gpologizing for introducing a note of sadness into the joyous gathering of Young Democrats. “Let that memry be buried,” he said, “beneath the monument to Good Gvern ent, Justice and Equal Opportunity created during the four years o 4 Paul V. MeNutt”. He charged the Young Democrats: “Yours is the duty to widen and broaden the path of liberty. Yours is the responsibility to see that there is never a retreat in human rights. Liberty calle for her sons and daughters to defend her.”
There is no hope for youth in the leadership and policies of the Republican party, Mr. Townsend asserted. In part, he said:
“Old age, guiding the Republican Party, shieks the warning of co‘wardice and timidity. Youth, holding the torch of the Democratic party points to greater heights and new achievemergs. What, may I ask, has the Republican Party to offer to the youth of America as a promise Zor tomorrow? What ideal does it hold forth for which you would be willing to work and sacrifice? To what crusade does it call?
‘lt is the sacred right of employers to send little children to factories and mines? It is the sacred right of greed to enslave in slums and tene ments? It ig the sacred right of Liberty Leaguers to impovish the many, that their daughters may purchase a foreign title with money taken from the payrolls of girls who are protected in thefr right to work long hours at counters? Ig it the gacred right of holding companies and Wa!l street manipulators to take the savings of the thrifty?
Yet this is what the men who really run, and have run, the Republican Party have refended and demanded. Noe mock claim to progressiveness can hid the hideous record of the past. The party kneels at a¢ mournors’ bench in deep repentance. Supporting it and financing it is very influence which has fought the brave and daring battle made for ,human welfare by our greatest of leaders Franklin D. Roosevelt. “They want power aand plunder, not progress. They are thé spiritu< ally unemployed appealing to the mental sleepwalker. “The youth of this country have heard a different note, a different doctrine a different appeal during the past four years. They heard the pledge that no one should m" when only starving banks were fed. They heard the pledga that menshould have the right to earn, notthe right to hunger. They have
beard the promise that workers shall have the right to organize, not the bludgeonsg before barricades of wire Zences. They heard the promise to children that they shall anct be sentenced to the sweatshops. “Youth has done more than lisen. It has ghared in the achievements. It has first hand knowledge of the difference between Hooverism and the Wew Deal. “What reason is offered for the young—not only young Democrats but young people, to be turned aside by yelpings from the cages of Wall Street and San Simeon while you follow the courageous, far-seeing humanitarian Roosevelt? “This is too joyous an occasion to to sound a note of sadness Yet it must be with sadness and a great deal of regret that we recall the record of four Indiana governmors. We remember that our State House heard only the voices of their masters, our Indiana Princes of Privilege We search in vain for a record of one act which protected the average man. We find only stubborn resistance t{ every suggestion that privilege and greed be curbed. We found government by groups not rule by majority. The people abandoned petitions for grand juries In the search for justice.
“Let the memory be buried Dbeneath the monumnt of Good Government, Justice and Equal Opportunity, erected during the four years of Paul V. MecNutt.
“It is, at least, suggestive that no Republicap, who has gerved as governor since 1920, stands well enough with his own party to be selected as a delegate to a National Convention. “No Democratic governor has aver pleaded the statute of limitations, All have gone on to higher honors, not to oblivion and [forgetfulness. They had faith in :he people. They kept faith with the people The peo;pl. gave faith for faith, confidence for confidence, loyalty for loyalty”
“Frosh” Orientation Period.
Plans for the annual orientation program for freshmen at Purdue I'niversity were announced at Lafayette with publication of the detailed program. Orientation tests will begin September 12 and continue through Sept. 16. Registration for the sixty third year begins Monday, Sept, 14, concludes the 16th, and classes start Sept. 1. All new students will attend the opening convocation Saturday morning at which President Edward C. iElllott will deliver the words cf wel;come. Registrar R. B. Stone will lthen give the instructions concerning preliminary registration. and ;othor administrative officers o¢ the university will be introduced. <
Placement tests to be given during the orientation period, which Is intended to help bridge the gap betweeg .high school and colliegs, will include those in mathematics, English and psychology and for the girls certain home economics tests. On Satugday evening, the President’s dinner will be given at the Memorial Union Building for thef reshmen and also for all transfer women students. That night the faculty-stud-ent reception for all new students will be held at the Memorlal Union, with a student “mixer” or dance to tollow. Vesper serviceg will be held Sunday morning in Eliza owler Hall for newcomers and special rervices will be held in local churches that day. The mental tests and physical examinations will continue through Monday, Tuesday Ind Wednesday fer late arrivals, while registration is underway both for wupper classmen and for the freshmen as they complete their orientation tests. The orientation program has been arranged by a committze composed of Dean of Mep M. L. Fisher, chairman; Dean of Women Dorothy C. Stratton, Registrar Stone and Dr. H. H. Remmers. ;
Marriage Licenses
Marriage licenses were issued to the following couples during the past week.
FRlix Lyles, Indiamapolis , and Cleoral Delores Buckner.
Roy E. Smith, Fort Wanye and Marie Housel Fort Wayne.
Dale Kpister, Albion and Velma Trastgr, Kendallville. Lloyd Walker Waterloo and -Arletta Scott Kendallville.
To Make Alr Tour
Plans were completed at Fort Wayne for the annual northern Indiana air qruise Aug. 22. The 1936 tour, including between 12 and 15 planes will stop at Goshen, Rochester and Culver. Capt. Clarence Cornish manager of the Paul Baer airport at Fort Wayne, has been chosen cruise director.
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| Christian Sclence Services. “Spirit” was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Chuarches of Christ, Sclentist, on Sunday August 9. The Golden Text was: “Thon art my God: thy spirit is good; lead me into the land of uprightness” (Psalms 143: 10).
Among the citati'ng which comprised the Lesson-3:rmon was the following from the Bibie: “Great is’ the Lord, and greatly ?> be praised; and his greatness {* unsearchable. The Lord is nigh unto al: them that call upon him, to all that call upon him in truth” (Psalms 145: 3, 18). “And when thou prayest thou shalt not be as the hypocriies are: for they love for pray starding in the synagogues and In the streets, that they may have glory of men. Verily, I say unto you, they have their reward. But thou, waen thou praest, énter into thy close’, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to, thy Father which is In secret; and thy Fatheg which seeth in se-re: shall reward thee openly” (Matthew 6: 5 6.
The Lesson-Sermoa also included the following passages from the Christian Science textbook, “Seience and Health with Key to the Seriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy: “The Master's injunction is, that we pray in secret and let our lives attest our sincerity” (p. 15). “Our Master taught his disciples one brief prayer, which we name after him the Lord's Prayer. Our Master sald, #After this manner therefere pray ye,” an dthen he gave that prayer which coverg all human needs. . . . Only as we rise above all materfal sensuousness and sin, can we reach the heaven-born aspiration and spiritual consciousness, which is indicated in the Lord’s Praver , and which instantaneously heals the sick” (p. 16).
Notice of Final Settlement,
State of Indiana Noble County SSB:
In the Matter of the BEstate of John M. Reed, Deceased. No. 3738. In the Noble Circuit Court October Term, 1936. Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned as Administrator of the estate of Jobhn M. Reed deceased hag filed In said court his account and vouchers in Tinal secttlement of sald estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Court, at the Court House, at Albion Indiana on the sth day of October 1936 at which time and
place all persons Interested in saild estate are required to appear in said Court and show cause, if any there be,
why sald account should not be approved. And the heirs, devisees and legatees of said decedent, and all others interested in said estaté are alsg hereby required at the time and place aforesald, to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of sald estate. { ngmgnd Reed, Administrator Posted August 3rd 1936. ‘Wm. H. Kissinger, Attorney. Elkhart Has Bad Fire A spectacular fire at Elkhart destroyed two of the three brick buildings which comprised the old Sid-way-Topliff plant. The loss was placed at $25,000. Tons of paper stored in one of the buildings continnued to burn and firemen fought the blaze with eight lines of hose for many hours.
G O Jolo] 33 B WORDS 4 Ivish f had that - aulomotile Iniuvance Hdtamerine —the loag drawe gl o S cannot rightfully claim any sympathy, SRty forever eliminate them from your voabnhr{o:.md & cost that is se Walter Robinson Phone 241 or 43 Ligonier
