Ligonier Banner., Volume 71, Number 42, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 November 1937 — Page 3
7 oy Signs % ligns % - of the, T;mflé o c ts, Politically and SRt on Psent Doy Topfat g =By RAY E. SMITH==
~ In the 1936 campaign Governor Townsend told voters that if he were elected. Governor he would share the responsibility of government with the other elected state officials. He wanted the people to know he would not give then a one-man .administration. Mr. Townsend has Kkept his ‘word. Every few weks the elected and administrative officials of state gather in the Governor’s office and discuss administration problems. It might be said that these officials are the Governor's cabinet for they make suggestions and express themselves on governmental policies, In carrying out his promise to hold such conferences, the Governor has proved again his willingness to take advice. and counsel. g egl4 _'
The Governor is very generous with his time, but his generosity in this re spect is not confined to him alone, Mrs. Townsend, too, is over willing to meet the people. Since she became the First Lady of Indiana last January, she has attended 3 number. of women’s Democratic meetings. throughout the state. Whenever it 1s possible, she is glad to meet with Democratic women. She never. speaks except sometimes, tp say a few, words of appreciation, but she lls charming and women like her. Like her husband, Mrs. Townsend has led a simple life ard her greatest interest is her home and her three children. She talks the language of the average woman—abhout cooking,
sowing Suring Cor ohiidomn meh el ing a garden. She makes a helpfu? contribution to. the. popularity eof kflovemor Townsend. %
Cold chills must have run down the backs of reactionary editors when they read recently that Senator-elect John E. Miller of Arkansas had telegraphed the secrétary of the Senate ‘asking to be seated with the Democrats. “I am a Democrat”, declared former Congressman Miller in his tele‘gram. Miller, you will remember, rwa.s’ elected on an independent ticket, ‘defeating Governor Bailley and Republicans saw in the Miller victory a defeat for the New Deal. Now they know differently, Commenting on the Arkansas electionn. The Saint Lgugs Star and Times said, in part. “The Arkansas delegation in Congress voted almost solidly in Congress ‘on every controversial bill before the last session of Congress, and Congress man Miller, on every recorded vote, ‘was part of the majority In the delegation. He had practically a perfect record of support for New Deal leglslation. That puts him in the same class with the late Senator Robinson, who also was a conservative at heart.”
Largest Corn Crop Since 1932
Private crop forecasters estimated the 1937 corni crop at 2,636,000,000 bu shels, largest since 1982 and an increase of 75,000,000 bushels over the estlxpabe of a month ago. lAt the same time the winter wheat acreage was estimated at. 56,059,000 acres slightly less than the record breaking 57,000,000 acres planted In the fall of 1936.
Following an fillness of several months, Stephen D. Rinehart, age 84. resident off Noble county many years died at the home of his = daughter Misg Beulah Rinehart in Fort Wayne.
::;e4.5 . ; e i . u A | NOTICE: TO. TAXPAYERS OF NOBLE COUNTY. ~ Notice is hereby giveh that the Tax. Duplicates for State, County, Township, Schools and Corporatioris of Noble County for the year 193 7\and payable in 1938 are now in the hands of the County Treasurer who is ready to receive the Taxes charged thereon. The:following table shows the rate of taxation on each $lOO.OO worth of taxable real and personal property, and each Pollin the, several units. , Due Jan.. 1, 1938—First installment delinquent after first Monday in May—Second installment delinquent after first Monday in November. k Forrest H. Parker, Treasurer Noble County
State Rates
County Rates
Township School and Library Rates
Corporation _City and Town Rates
Total Rate
- Poll Tax
STATE OF INDIANA NOBLE COUNTY; SS:,
Noble .County. Tax - Rates for Year s . Payable in Year. L G AN e
rorre
1| State General Fund .0285].0285|.0285[.0285|.0285 | .0285[.0285 | .0285 | .0285 0285 .0285.0285] 02850285 | .0285.,0285],0285].0285|.0285] 1 2| Confgmon Sehipol Fupd 82 107 [.07 [[o7 107 [.07 ,1.02...1.04, (|O7, 107 100 .07 ;.1.00 .07.. |O3« |.07:].08- [.07 [.07 | 2 4?"Sta§g fr,,; Fg ~1.002 [.002 [.002 [.002"[.002 [.002 ].002" [.002 |.002 |.002 [.002 |.002 |.002 [.002,].002 |.002 |.002 |.002 |.002 | 4 5| State Board of Agriculture 1.0035].0035].0035[.0035].0035].0035].0035].0035].00351.0035].0035].0035].003 o 0035 | 00354.0035{.0035|.0035| 5 6| Teachers Retirement Fungd / 024 [.024 [.024 [.024 {.024-].024-[.024 {.024 [.024~].024:/.024 [.024 |.0247].024 '1.024°].024 |.024 |.024 |.024 | 6 rMQ%%Wm”LM. 02 [.02 |O2 [.02 [.02 ].02 .02 |.02. |.02 |.02 [.0z.,.0z,,1.0z,i.0z.. .02 |O2 [.02 |7 8| Indiang Wolf Lake Park .002].002 ].002 [.002 [.002 [.002 |.002.].002 [.002 [.002 [.002 |.002 |.oo:z::.ooz\|.ooe | .002 }.002 {.002 I.ooz : 3 | State Tax, |35 |25 (35 |l5 |25 (5. (25, 0.15, (.15 (.15 (.15 (.15 [.AS- [lB-./.18 |l5 (A 5 |l5 | l—_sefi : : A 5 115 1.15 IS 70.18 °T.IB "[157 [.IS L 115 §.15 % |l5 1.1 18] 15 |.15 [.19 [.1a.1.18 [.15" [ 1 2| County Unit Road .20::.1.20., [.20 1.20 , [.20. [.20. . [.20 |.20.1.20..}-20 -1.20 - [.20-. [.2o}-.20 - |.2o¢+ |.20~ |.20: |.20 |.20 | 2 3| County.Bridgeßonds. [.004..[.014 [.014 [.014 |.014 [.014 [.014 [.014 [.014 [.014 |.014 [.014 [.014 |1.014.].014 [.014 [.014 |.014 [.014 | 3 5| County Welfare ~ BT As .13 13,113 1134 [13...1.13; | |23 - [ 13- -}.l3¢- 1,13 . 1:18) -Jl@on] 130nif sl Fea 1@ <428 2113 | S 8| County Fair .006../.006-;| .006" [.006-|.006- |.006 |.006 |.006 |.006 |.006_ |.006.|.006..006 {.006 |.006 |.006 [.006 .005.1.00 s | - Total County Rate, .58 .90, (.50 [.50 - [.50 [.50 .[.50 [.50- [.50 [.50 [.50 .50 [.50; §.50 [.50 [.56— (.50 |.50 |.50 | 1[ Township Fund .=~ |.075"[.1752].05 .10, |.145.].08, .08 |.0675|.069 |.ll |.lO |.0225]|.08 |[.175 |.075 |.069 .08 - |.0225].0675] 1 |2| Township Poor Fund = .M'm“{ussm:{.oo .11 ].105-].115-1.09" [.04 [.225 1.00 .14 [.0975].084 {.857 |.04 [.225 [.09 |.0975/.04 | 2 4| Township Dnit Road Bonds. 245 |.036.].065 |.17 '.268; 103 [.OB "[.105 [.224 [.26 |.07 |.19 |.082 ||.086-1.245~|.224~{.08— |.19---|.105-| 81 Dcheot Doy~ AR~ 19g4 fsbin gO9 ) l | | | I.os l | | l.lo] |~ [Yo .06y [.283:][.100 [.21 | 8 91 Tuition e beol9g ol 967831 (U 207 [217°135 115 1.255 10125 140 1.04 . 1.56 F §.207 128 12167 |l7 [3B }56 | ¢ 10| Special School Tax " 1.4850-].365..735 |[.30.. |.442. |.382-].35. |.3725|.48% [.57 [.70:- [.58 [.154 [|.365..|.48... |.485.].43. |4B . |.75 |lO IR e Lttt e [ Ty L legn ISETRNSIE g' & o o o ek P 8 T 1103008 | KE P 05 (0851 | |.00%i[.10 -~ |.10:-]1 _| Total twp. Schiool & Library, _ [L.a%1.69 |1.25 |Bl [L.2I [lO3 |B5 .87 |1237/119 [I4T (103 111 | "‘”fn Leoil b R ([ [T Mg o [ o 0 [ [ ||-SS&SFaEs|6B" [B3 |.lO . [.7875] 1f 2| Hotpital Tax. o- | | e ki e P e T R mchai e e Tl TT Tl eRI ke —_-== | Total Corporationßate, !—.___ __|-CRABR .74 |BB |lB _|.9475] |gl sWeARLT ke ey o ‘?’fi‘jm AR [ A 3 [ : E m oA 1 £O/1 720 ) 'RO 9"7 _| Eachinstaliment | .98 /147 .95 | .78.] .93 |..84. .70 | .76 } .94 | .52 |1.03| .84 | .88 |1.50 | 113,131 [1.31 | L1255} | State School . . = [0 (100 [l.OO [l.OO [l.OO |l.OO-4/1.00.:(2.00 [lOO [lOO [l.OO |lOO |l.OO |lloo 100 [l.OO ~fa.00: {lOO [L00; [ 2} (4l Tuition -~ = &~ 0 |eiiee | (100 [.as 125 [lOO [[ " [leo.] 75| 50| 50 [aieeeluser afis o |o2ke oFf ] ap s["SpecigiSchool = = s fise | ae [75 fi2s | [ 100 (106 | .75 |so| 50 (180 e|.Bo, |OO (108, (200 ||| P e e Tk T T e e e IM%M?}W?"&E fie%“---— Thede e oo P | et e} | Total Poll Tax = | 2,50} 4.50] 1.50] 3.50| 3.00/ 4.00] 2.50| 1.50| 2.50| 3.50 3.00/ 2.50| 2.50| £505. 250! i2-50L. 4.281 4.004:1.504. |
i Gen'y DeHpf Auditor of i - i b S » Gerry DeHpff, Auditor of Noble, County, hereby, certify, that the above i Levi ' i LA e » hereby, certity, , is a correct copy of all T i ' - inthe year 1938, - eo e e Nip s comect sopy of all Tax Lavies for St FPASRIIAN
THEE LIGONIER BANNER. LIGONIER, INDIANA
" “Adam and Fallen Man” was the subject of‘'thé Lessou-Sermon in all ‘Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, November 7. ) ' The Golden Text was: "It is the spirit that quickenth; the (lesh profiteth nothing' (John 6:33). *" Ameong the citations which com. ‘Prised the Lesson-Serfaon was the following from the Bible: “Look unto ‘me, and be ye saved, all the ends of the earth: for T am God, and there ‘is none eise. In theLord shall all the seed of Israel ‘be justifiea, and shall glory” (Isaiah 45: 22, 25). “As is the earthy, such are thuy also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they 'also that: are heavenly, And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall al‘Bo bear the image of the heaven1y (I Corinthians 15: 48,49). "Forl as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God” (Ko‘mans 8: 14). i 1 The Lesson-Sermon also included ‘the following passages from the icmgmw Science textbook, “Sci‘ence‘ and Health with Key to the ‘Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eday: “If man were dust in his earliest stage of existence, we might admit the hypothesis that he returns eventually to his primitive condition; ‘butkmm was never more nor less than man” (p. 244). “Divine Science rolls back the clouds of error with the light of Truth, and- lifts the. curtain on man as never born and as never dying, but as coexistent with his creator. Popular- theology takes. up the history of ‘man as it he began. materially right, but immediately fell into. mental' sin; whereas revealed religion proclaims the Seience of Mind @nd its formations as. being in accordance with the first chapter of the Old: Testament, when lGod, Mind, spake and it was. done"” (p: 657). '
Albion Elkbart Green ]efférsQn Noble Perrjr ' Sparta ' Swan Washlngton Waync otk Albion Avilla Cromwell | Wolcottville Kendéliville Ligonier Item No.
INSTRUCTIONS ON OCORY LOANS
Grain Must Be In Cribs Iroperly
County Agent M, A. Nye has re. ceived instructions on the new AAA corn loans and gives the fellowing advice to Noble county farmers. ' Corn grojyeps who wish to {ake advantage of the corn loan provisions provided in,the 1938 agricvitural act
should make arrangements now wlle cribbing their corn so that the provisions :( the act may be met. The loan will be from 44 to 50 cents per bushel on sealed cribs, but a crih that is eligiblg to be sealed must Le well ventilated on two sides or mere. Tt must be enclosed and must have a roof that will not blow off aand one that will. turn water for two yerars at least. No corn can ve Sealed that contains more than 20 per cent moisture and deduction for moisture will be made for corn with more (han 4 per cent. " The loans will be made for a period of eight months with the privilege of Irene\wal for ten months =or more. Tenants must have the “right to store” from their landlords. The grower must furnish an insurance certificate that the corn will be insur. ¢d. The maximum cost will not be ‘more than one cent per bushel.
Ban On Gambling
* Goshen police have launched a drive to end gambling in that city. Etforts will be made to curb petty gambling operation of slot machines punch boards, tip boards lottery pools and other forms of chance.
' Gus Kumfert, 36, of Osceola, was Killed near Elkhkart as two five-ton tractor-trailer units collided. Cecll Rhoades, 33, of Detroit driver of one of the trucks escaped with a fractured nose. :
TOWNSHIPS
" Driver's Joke With Jeg Iron " An unidentified young woman, around whose Jeg a joking truck driver had strapped an anklet terminating in a 26. pound ball, waited in the F er filling station at the-junc-tion of U. 8 highway No. 30 and h‘fimfuo. 2 Thursday night until Sheriff Herman C, Holle of ‘Allen county searched Fort Wayne and found a key. The truck driver, who proceeded on his way after the sheriff had un. locked the grip, said he found the legpiece along the highway near Fort Wayne, Officials were at a loss to ex. plain its presence there. Unthoughtedly officials said, the trucker snapped the leg iron shut and it locked automatically. No key could be found, so another fitring the lock had to be obtained. -
Appeal Again Denied
The Indiana supreme court has denied an appeal of Rollo N. Walter of LaGrange convicted of embezzicment when he was secretary of the LaGrange Trust Company in 1934, from; a rejection of a writ of error coram nobis. The petition was his fourth since conviction Jan, 19 1934 for embeszle; ment of $1,300 in bonds owned by Mrs. Bebra Bogue. He carried his case to the United States supreme court in 1986 but the petition was dis missed for lack of jurisdiction.
Unexpected Gift.
Word was received at Goshen from Senator Frederick Van Nuys that the president had approved an allotment of $7,062 to provide employment for needy persons in the preparation of school lunches, to be furnished without cost to undernourished children attending school. Supt, O. L. Walter said he had made no demand for such service,
~ Working under orders of the board of safety, Indianapolls volice continued a “cleanup” of pin games despite the filing of a petition for an order to hailt seizure of the devices. . The officers confiscated 26 wmanrble machines Thursday making a total of 74 selzed. Wilbert Willlams who flied the petition said he was engaged In the operatign of marble tables. He contended the machines had been lileouod by the city and thecefore, constituted a legal business
Attorneys said = they considered the suit a test of the 1545 Indiana anti-slot machine law, ‘They point. ed out the courts had not been unanimous in decisions ‘on the inclu. sion of marble machines in the siot maching law. Williams said the suit probably ‘would be taken to the state supreme court. for an interpretation of the 1935 act.
Trench Silo. Counstructed
A trench silo, something new and different for this part of the country. has been constructed on the Mrs, E. W. Armstrong farm near LaGrange. Quite a number of these silos are used in the west but they are not seen in this region. il tngch silo was dug Into the hank not far from the barn, '0 feet wide, ‘BO feet long and six feet deep at the deepest point. The shredded silage kwu blown into the trench and wet down. The ensilage was heaped wp !qune high over the trench and covered with oats which will sprout, and a thick layer of straw. If all goes well the ensilage will be preserved in this ditch and will be hauled to the catile by stons hoat through the winter, %
Subscridbe: Now For The Ligontm Banaer
CORPAORATIONS
LaGrange Youth Sentemosd ~ Leonard Balyeat, 17, of LaGirange county was sentenced to the state reformatory for 1 to 10 years by Judge Donald Vanderveer when he pleaded gullty In the Kosclusko circult court to a charge of forgery. | He was charged with forging = }ul check. The meoney obtained was used as part payment on a secondhand automobile.
Find Man in Trunk. ~ Mrs. John Clayton's chaiee of a trunk lid for a seat aroused suspiciops of police, who read to her a warrant for her husband’s arrest on a charge of stealing a ton of coal. The officers opened the trunk and found Clayton who is a resident of Fort Wayne half-smothered and too 'cnmpodtom
To Baild Dormitory. - Work will start immediately on construction of an addition to the dormitory at Purdue university, contracts for which were awarded A, E. Kemmer, Lafayette contractor on his bid of $498,000. The addition will double the residence hall's capacity. making accommodations for 540 per sons by next fall
Oemetery For Sale
For sale—a cemetery. Sheriff Herman C. Holle said he would sell the Riverview cemetery in Eel River }townlhlp. Allen county to the highest bidder Nov. 18. The sale in connection with foreclosure action to I‘settlc .an estate, must be for pot less than $5,700 the sheriff sald.
Steals Watch; Sentenoced Robert Edsall, 17 of Goshen was taken to the penal farm to start serv ing a 45-day sentence when found guilty of stealing a watch from Frank Yoder.
