Ligonier Banner., Volume 70, Number 41, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 November 1936 — Page 4

OUT-OF TOWN NEWS J

The annual gne-act play .of Wawaka high school will be given in the auditorium Monday evening. November 9. Three plays will be given “Hig First Shave,” “Not Such a Googe” and “Pumb Dera.” The Dlays are given under the direction of Director B. BE. Heever.

" A delightful masked ' Hallowe’en party ‘was given Wednesday evening by the Pythian Sisters lodge. Mr. and Mrs. C: C. Ullery are home’ from a visit in Fort- Wayne with Mr. and Mrs. Horaee J. Ullery and family and Mrs. Hazel Foulk. ' Mr. and Mrs. Hary S. Burger of Colorado Springs, Celo., came Wednesday and visiteg mntil Friday with. their sister, Mrs. O. W. Dowell. They came from Celorado by train and at Flint, Mich.,, got their new Buick car, motoring to Qhio to visit., They left Fairview farm to drive to Colo-’ rado Springs in order to get home in time to vote. The annual roast goose supper was held here Thursday evening in the Dorec-Aid hall and was well attended. The Church of the Brethren. Ladies Aid held its meeting Thursday with Mrs. Floyd Jette and was well attended and enjoyed by all. +Mr, and Mrs. Homer Lantz of near Wawaka announce the birth of a daunghter born Tuesday. The baby weighed nine pounds. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Burket M.

and Mrs. Fred Burket Miss Marie Burket motored to Leganspert Sunday and visited Mr. and Mrs. Elger. They found Miss Ruth Mault of Chicago a guest in the Elser home and she .came home with them fer a wisit.

. Mr. and. Mrs. Jlra Snider spent Tuesday in Topeka. with their son A!l--vin and family. Russell King: went to: Ghicago Wed nesday.

Mrs. Mary Frick of Ligonier visited Mrs. Ruby Riddle from Wednesday until Friday. \ Clarence Priest of Albion was a recent guest ~f Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crago and family. Mrs. Ernest Nichols and little Edith Louise left Tueaday for their home at Medford, Okla. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gard and daughtey Wilma Jean Mr. and Mrs. Cary Gard were in. Albion Monday. Chas. Prolla spent from ' Friday until Sunday night at Kalamazoo

with his sisters Mr. and Mrs. Lel Lantz and pamily. Mrs. Eliza Hefner motored home with him. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Crago and daughters Lucile and Helen were recent visitors in Kimmell. There will be a large class in the BElkhart Township Health club as so far this month, 20 new members decided to join. The new ones are all high gchool girls and all over 15 years of age. About November 15,

the health club ang club leader Mrs. Faydith Stienbarger with Noble County Nurse Miss Brittie Baker will hold a get-together party at the

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‘Wawaka gymoasium. A marshallow and -weiner rost will be a feature of the party with games and stuntg interspersed. : . Mrs. 0. 'W. Dowell had as guests Mrs. Bert Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Dundag Parker of Auburn and their guests Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Burger ‘of Colorado Springs, Colo.

Selemons Creey News

The Ladies Aid gave a Hallowe’en party Friday evening Oetober 30th. The party wag beld in the basement of the church. The Christian' Endeavor met with Rev. Ward at thep arsonage for their menthly business meeting last Wednesday evening. :

Their regular meeting was held at the ‘heme of Audry Juday, Sunday evening with 20 present. ‘

The Home Coming here was well attended Sunday|. There were 150 prsent at Sunday School and about 175 .ate dinner. The visiting- pastors present were Rev. and Mrs. McCloe, from Churubusco, Rev. P. L. Mast and . family of Nappanee, who . were

..ators of this church and Rev. and Mrs. Bailey of the U. B. church of Syracuse. A program was given in the afternoon with talks from the visiting pastors. There were several plays and special music. ; Mrs. Ward returned home Saturday, .afiter spending the last week with her mother at Dayton Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Dern Sheline and family calledq on Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert George and family of near Waterford. :

Betty Leist of Benton spent Sunday with_Phyllis Darr. Mrs. Sarah Juday is visiting her daughter Mrs. Ben Zimmerman and family. . : : Mrs. Allie Darr has been visiting Jer son,.John and his wife.

Simplified Metho% On Reports

A simplified method governing compensation reports has Dbeen adopted by the state unemployment compensation division, Clarence A. Jackson; head. of the division, said. The plan sets up two classes of and ‘“nonapproved’ employers—Jack employers— “approved” employers son explained. “Approved .employers’ will not be required to send the division detailed reeords concerning any of their employes until such time as an employe is separated from employment under the: terms of the unemployment compensation law and the dues of the board,” he stated. 5 Nonappreved employers must make weekly reports to the division. " To._ be. approved, employers must keep pay rolls records for at least four calendar years, plus each current year. The records must contain spegific information set out by the rules so that the department can readily compute the employes benefits and the length of time to which the is entitled. to benefits.

Salesman Robbed of Jewels

. -Irwing. 8. Geedman Indianapolis jewelry salesman reported to state police he>wag:forced from his car on U. S. Road 31 near Tampico Jackson ‘'county and -robbed of $15;000 in jewels: Goodman said three men in a car forced his automobile to the side of ‘the read-and two bandits entered the car, forcing ‘him to drive for half an ‘hour while the third followed in an -other car. -

He .gaid the robbers finally tied him up and left him at the roadside near Speeds. After freeing himself he said.he foun dhis car nearby lock ed and’ the keys missiong. ~ Goodman was robbed of approximately "$35,000 in jewelry on June . 5 .in Chicago.

Crash Injury Proves Faal.

~ Bam Lauber 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Lauber of. Archbold, O, died at ‘Camerson. hospital Angola of injuries- received.in. a. motorcycle accident. - :

‘While Lauber and: Ruthford Runkel of Archbold were riding on U. S. road No. 20 east of _Angola their handlebars became entangled and Lauber was thrown into an approach ing automobile driven by Mrs. Williamy Becker of Toledo. :

The main office: and faectory of Penn Electric Switch company, East 20th and Walnut streets, Des Moines, la., which+«employs between 350 and 400 workers will be moved to Goshen within the gext 65 days it was announced at Des Moines by Albert Penn, presidet of..the company. . NalliPaper—Enight's Drug Stors

Many Products Derived From the Coconut Palm The coconut palm is truly a ‘“‘tree of life.” It gives man food and drink, fuel and light, wood for the walls of his house, and a thatch for his roof, a sleeping mat, all the common utensils of his household, and, at the end, a funeral pyre in some countries.

There are as many as 200 products derived from the coconut palm, states a writer in the Cleveland Plain Dealer..

The ‘“cabbage” or unexpanded leaves and fruit are used to make a vegetable, a preserve or a pickle.

The cocoaut as a nut is familiar to everyone. Copra, the kernel dried by the sun or by artificial heat, is exported to Europe and America in thousands of tons annually. From the nut is extracted coconut oil, used in the manufacture of soap, candles and margarine, and in the preparation of cosmetics, medicines and a cattle and poultry food. . A light beer of tropical countries consists of the sweet juice obtained from the fruit spathe. Fermented and distilled, it yields an equivalent of gin and whisky. The trunk of the coconut palm is scooped. out and used as a water trough for live stock. The fiber of the husk is spun into yarn and used for making matting, door rugs and mats.” e Buttons, cups, spoons, ladles, and a variety of toys are made from coconut shells. The shells are burned to form charcoal, which is employed for purifying wines, and as an ingredient in gas masks.

!’lants of Herb Garden Are Source of Perfume

In the old days, both in England and colonial America, women were wise enough to make their own perfumes, sweet waters, washing balls, pomanders and sweet linen bags from the leaves and blossoms gathered in their own herb gardens, writes Elisabeth E. Poe in the Washington Post. When perfumes came into high favor in the days of Queen Elizabeth that astute monarch turned to her herb garden for her pet perfume, i. e., sweet woodruff. Its leaves were gathered by the queen and her maids in the dawn, carefully dried, under royal supervision, then placed in sandal wood boxes and later dispensed with a not too lavish hand to those who met with the Queen’s pleasure. ! The perfume. of sweet woodruff is of an elusive, dainty variety which lingers about the leaves for several years, it is .said.

A noted herbalist writes: ‘“‘ln the herb garden fragrance depends more on the leaves of plants than on the flowers. One secret is soon discovered. It is the walue of leaf scents. ‘Flower scents are evanescent, leaf odors are permanent.”’ Out of the herb garden comes the material with which to make this home-made sweet water which dates back to the Seventeenth century. :

Girl Founded Seminary

Founded in 1742 by a sixteen-year-old girl, Benigna, the daughter of Count Zinzendorf, the Moravian seminary at Bethlehem, Pa., claims to have been the pioneer school in this: country dedicated to the belief that women:should have equal educational opportunities with men. After the Revolution this doctrime, in practice at least, had prominent adherents. Daughters, nieces and granddaughters of generals and statesmen so besieged the seminary that at one time it had to close its admission lists for eighteen months. President and Mrs. Washington and General Lafayette ware among its visitors,. and the daughters of John Jay and General Greene as well as the grandnieces of Jefferson and ‘Washington were. its pupils.

Turtle Egging 0!d Spor’,

Early histories reveal: that turtle egging, the sport of hunting these nests and gathering the eggs, is one of the first American sports practiced by the:Spanish explorers who landed on the Florida peninsula —the early French Huguenots who struggled for possession-of this vast wilderness—the aboriginal Seminole Indians—and later the pioneer settlers from northern states. One and all, for various reasons—some to relieve hunger, others to have a thrill.

An Old Jewish Law

As Jewish dietary law prohibits ‘the contact of meat with milk and ‘milk products,. they must not only .be eaten hours apart but cooked -and consumed with separate utensils, states a writer in Collier’s Weekly. Thus the truly orthodox family keeps two sets of pots and pans, dishes, ~silverware, cruets, tablecloths, napkins and 'drying towels. In wealthy homes there are -even. separate cooking ranges and Kitchen sinks. 3

“Most Intellectual Oity”’ Situated. at the geographical cen-

sterof:the continent, all roads lsad “to Leipzig as they-oncededito Rome. ' - Mére than 700 years ago the caravans erossing Europe paused at this cross roads for mutual protection and the exchange of goods. From this- simple beginning the great modern city of Leipzig has grown and to this day it is called the “most intellectual city in Ger- , maay."

Samuel Hufy aged 86 years, pioneer resident of- Noble county and practic ally a lifelong resident of the Brimfield community died at Lakeside "ospital where he had been a patient the past three weks. Death resulted from complications incident to senility. :

THE LIEONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

: 7!55 LB Ifi['“!;&, Fzoemoeosossesasoscestiie. ‘. < g ’ . : z o ? $ R et Y 2\ § i &?@%«; oo S ?/‘"?*".gq.\'}%& S * g 4 . SN Te T ; B 0 L SRR T i ¢ | R - 3 L =1 ; % | P Re e e 2 s | RO e ! - . i L | 38 B SN T | = | j et ASR G 2 ,s\ / T T : ' s s = q s 3 o ! 1 o | TWELVE TEETH IN S e ‘ | ELEVEN MONTHS—PauI Sl : | Bartiett, of Medford, sy | | Mass, started teething @0 === ‘ | at the age of three £Li Y sOMETHING NEW l g A A o IN SHORTS! 1 ‘ A ~—Pretty Prisciila Lawson looks as | : Vg & if she’s just stepped out of » sports || | V 5 : : || Fire-Chief CastinHol- & = AT .| lyweod for their Sun- 4; M ‘| network broadeast. B : . o e ! : Top Row — Jimmy 3':4,:,‘{;‘»?1.:?- R *‘ g | | Wallington, Parkya- &SI b | karkus. Middie— Jac- & NN e lques Renard, o P TP ooAN T | “Mayor” Cantor. ] i o , Bottom Row — ¥ P : i{ Bobby Breen and Rt Xty i Deanne Durbin, e v, regarded as the v : %& y “find” of the new 3 R oy saia ok i Be . S IR LS PR ey e P G R PR SR : 'fi‘ IR T i g R 2 PR SR R R SR B b, 3‘@““%.& 18 TSRS R ESE . | ¢ BEGNRR RN ' Pttt ans |&B i o 15 o ; e { 3 - % : % g % L A 5 & ¥ o gl o \ 3 N T & o - 253 P A 8 3 i g e P ‘*'v , = g %w T| | B SRS ot SOOI ... M SSRGS, ] | WILL CHOOSE 193 STAR FARMER—The executive committee { of the Future Farmers of America met at Washington to start se- | i| lecting from high school students taking vocational Agriculture § i} courses. Left to right: William H. Johns, Chairman, of New York; | 'l Owen D. Young, General Electric Company and R. H. Cabell, Presi- | i 1 d>nt of Armour & Co.

75000 PUPILS STUDY SAFETY.

Motor Club Acecident Prevention Work in One Hundred and SeventY-Five Schools

More_ than 75,000 school children in northeastern Indiana are reached by the safety education program being carried on continuously throughout the school year by the accident prevention department of the Fort Wayne Motor club, according to figures compiled by the motor club for a nationa] survey being conducted by the American Automobile association it is announced by J. P. Hutchins, secretary-manager of the motor club The motor club program, which was started in 1928 -.and had been steadily expanded, now includes 33 cities and towns in the 17 counties of northeastern Indiana served by the Fort Wayne Motor club, according to the survey. The complete safety education. program is carried on by the motor club in 175 schools, including public, parochial and rural grade schools and high schools,. School safety patrols, compsed of boys and girls who guard dangerous interesections mnear school buildings and who serve on school busses In rural areas, have been organized and are equipped agd maintained by the motor club. The patrols on duty daily comprise 1,620 boys and girls, the survey shows. The patrols are constantly supervised by the motor club in co-operation with_ police departments in the various communities. Monthly reports are made upon the efficiency of each patrol member. Belts and badges are supplied

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by the motor club to all patrol members free of. charge. Another part of the safety educational program consists of the furnishing by -the motor club of large, brightly colored safety posters to each school room in the territory. A total of 1,900 such posters are sent out each month by the motor club. These are displayed in the rooms and are used by teachers to teach safety in. connection with many subjects in the regular school curriculum.

Frequent safety meetings are held at various schools as well as adult meetings, parent-teacher groups and gimilar gatherings. Safety playlets for presentation by school children are distributed by the motor club and special color-in charts for safety teaching in the primary grades are given out.

On connection with the high school safety educational work, which has ‘been developed by the motor club within the past two years and which aims at educating high school students to drive properly and safely, the motor club has already distributed 300 copies of the outline Sportsmarnljke Driving, and an equal num‘bér of the first two texts in a series of five books. The complete set of texts will bep rovided by the motor club as fast as they come from the publishers, Mr. Hutchins said. tOne development of the high schoo] driving course is the inauguration by the motor club of the first scientific driver’s school, under the direction of A. A. Johnson of Logansport. Mr. Johnson is the first teacher in Indiana to complete the course in scientifice driver training taught by Prof. Amos E. Neyhart of Pennsylvania State college, Mr. Hutchins said. Prof. Weyhart has attracted nation-wide attention = through his work ‘in training accident-proof drivers. .

“The motor club believes that the only way to accomplisn real results in safety teaching is through a steady, consistent program carried out regularly.” Mr. Hutchins said, “Since we sgtarted in 1928, we have kept the program going continously. Results have shown that special cam paigns, safety weeks, and similap short-lived safety programs do little it any good.

~ *“The motor club spends several theWsand gdollars in carrying out, its safety program each year, thpough its full-time accident pre-. wention gdepartment in charge otj‘ R. BE. Morgan, -safety director. Thes results, as shown by the decrease in. accidents to school children, more than justify the expenditures of the money, time and effort.” 4

Boy Cyclist Hurt. Herbert Hulick living half a mile north of Kendallville on state road 3 struck and severely injured Sun day noon by an automobile driven by ‘Bowland Winwright of near Ligonier “The lad mouted his bicycle and start "1 to cross the road without looking. ‘Mnnght took the boy to a physician where his injurfeées were cared for. Winright was not held.

PLANS 87TH LIVESTOCK SHOW

Entries Pour'ln From Every State of the Unlon snd Canada

- Ameriea’s annual continéntal congress of agriculture, the International Livestock expositfon, will be held November 28 to December 5 in the mew Internstional amphitheatre

at the Ohicago Stoek Yards. It will be the 37th renewal of this largest annual exhibition of purebred farm animals and crops in the counntry ,and aeccording to the management, one of the biggest shows in its history. B. H. Heide, secretary-manager of the exposition, stateg that plans are now under way to house over 13,000 animals at the 1936 show. He reports that entries are pouring in from lead ing stockmen and garmers in nearly every state in the Union. and province of Canada, Hsting their prize herds and flocks for the competitions that wil feature more than 30 different breeds of draft horses and light horses, beef cattle, sheep and swine . o

Approximately $lOO,OOO will be paid in cash premiums to winning exhibitors in the various divisions of the exhibition, says Heide.

Entries for the livestock classes will close on November 1, with the exception of the car lot contests for commercial stock that are displayed in stock yard open pens. Feeders have until November 21 to reserve space for exhibits in this event. All of the purebred herds; steers, wethers and pigs listed for individual competitions, and displays of farm crops in the International grain and hay show will fill to capacity the seven acres of exhibit area In the huge new building constructed two years ago as a permanent home for the live stock show.

Finds Sister

Mrs. Robert Rumpf’s search for a gister from whom she had been separated since babyhood is ended at South Bend.

The sister, Miss Thelma ®ichols, moved to South Bend a few months ago. Mrs. Rumpf wearied from years of hunting heard about it and despite many heartbreaking failures on previous reports of the kind, decided to investigate. When she arrived in her sister’s neighborhood she stopped a policeman and asked him for possible aid. The officer, after hearing a description of the sister exclaimed: “Why I believe that young woman lives aoross the street from me.” The sisters were reunited quickly.

Get Suspended Term

Robert Nicholag and Kenton Becker arraigned in the Neble circuit court before Judge Rob McNagny on a grain stealing charge, were given a six months suspended sentence and were ordered to pay court costs. Becker and Nicholes were arrested September 2 after confessing to steal ing wheat from a DeKalb county parmer, thec harge preferred being petit larceny. S

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Car Handlé Cateles Owl

business man was driving west of Yoder he heard.ana object sfrike the side ot his car. Stopping to imvestigate he found a large screech owl impaled on the door handle. The ow! had been instantly killed.

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