Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 15, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 July 1909 — Page 1

22 00 PER YEAR.]

e .. \ . . - ; YOUNG fellows who have their own .'::-: _ . . * . ideas of smart, catchy style will find ' “full of FNER & our store full of HART, SHAF § ‘ 5 .-v . = . ’ » . ; MARX fine clothes; and a very treasurery e*@ X 2 ) . of style and new /4 ?‘: » _"{‘*‘t‘j‘: A S \"fff:_";zt eX = . : /‘:‘gkw ‘,; A~ fié". ) ’\., _ ld(‘a?. . W‘C Want w) o \ every dressy young f ~ "*— 3} ' N\ fellow to look 1n LS eNI @ AN on the special prof ’/f *w [-to~ ‘Q | visions we have % ;{ Al ~"f} ";'g: flo " fi . Vi 3 made for the propf ‘?\‘ . { {M‘ { ?{‘ z»w ‘ “er clothes forfithem { ,f" B | *‘?\ f_ ‘ i 3 coats; some high cut collars e ‘,‘i_ e :- p‘b: ; ih a greal vanety x:»fv new « (xl—--',;:Z . _“’ - ; fif&j onngs and ;»f;}h*rns;; s a njx b\‘*\ ! / G\ £ ~”? = "\-;;;; % \'\}'fw got i“l(‘nh' ol y i i . T . . : s Ny ~“ni- 5 » . "?? } mg! - ,“{. ' - k\“%fi good things for older men, Mfixfl . % - \'ff;';; ol !?w“satnr}.us% make. y } £ { ‘ = : ;i o Suits | ek il sloto $25 i|& i ' ;1% W . il Overcoats U ¥ /') sloto 25 : ' : : ; : i 3 “r', 3 {)fsf’ }-':";'lz(‘ nf .; : . ; ‘ S ; : Fart Schaflner &AN clotes - \Tmmmaiye M. Jacobs

["The Things | Want To Do For You | I want to give you a standing invitation to visit my store. You will be welcome whether you come to look or to buy. | [ want to give you a chance to know how fully I am prepared to meet all your dress demands. I want to offer you proof that I have not spared time, trouble nor expense in getting together the choicest stocks I could, in every department. ~ I want to give you the assurance that I carry nothing that I cannot recommend, nothing that I ~will not cheerfully replace should it go wrong, nothing that I do not think of good quality through and through. | ~ | want you to know that I am running this store primarly to please you. In no other way can I ~make a business success. | L EXCLUSIVE AGENT FOR WOOLTEX

The Ligonier Danner.

LIGONIER, NOBLE COUNTY, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1909.

DANGERGUS EXPLOSIVE PLACED UNDER EVANSVILLE, IND, CAR L PERILS CREW. : PITTSBURG STRIKE SETTLED Mayor Aids in Bringing Union and Street Railway Officials to Agree ment—Emplioyes Get Valuable Concessions. : ' : Evansviile, [nd, Juse 30 —Dynamit Mg hae begun in Ihe Evanasilie street Car strike A car rap over s large stick of green drynaniite it failed o ex {;;j«'nr}cr : “The potive took the stiek and pade A test to ssceriain s pdoney. When It went off the exploslon was tersitic) and experts sav that it was suflicient to have hibwn the car with the molor man and conductor into atomm There wete $o assetpre on the car whes it ran over the drnamite This is the third dynamiting i the last three nights Pittsburg Strike I Settied, Pittsburg, Pa. Juve ZO--Wilh rous ing cheers Trors bolh strest car men and bundreds of Pittaburgers, cus wWere ran ot of 1B sarioas harce of the Pittsburg Rallway Company . Three bours later every divigion Wi in fuil o ration and schedoles belpe maintained . The snding of Lirenter PRabhure ¢ first 4 i")!l‘;flir"'—“ plreel car striiie wasg ag sudden as the beginning While the troable was adiuxted by Mayoer Magee with a ceom prousise agrecment favorable to the men. concessions were granted by the unicn and company Exiapting one point which will be arbitrated laier ever differvnce was setfied delinitaly at the conference held in tie mayors office at 10:30 at night ; Basis of Settiement, . Following s the basis of setile ment: That the number of “short runs” shull be reduced H 0 per cent the men withdraw thelr ohiection 1o smergency runs; that Sunday runs ghall not be longer than the weéek-day tchedulcs; that Motorman Ashiord, discharged on: charges of drinkiog while in uniform, shall be reinstated, pending arbitration: that Condudtor Halboth, suspended on charges of re. fusal to help renove an obstruction to traffic, be paid in full for the time of his suspension: that Conductor Mo Gibbony, who lost seniority, be reslored. : ; o With the expectation of walking o town or riding in a wagoen, thousands of Pittsburgers were astir early to day. - Rioting Had Begun. The threedayold strike already bore signe of bloody results, and reis titlon of the terrible Homestead strike geenes were feared. Riots had broken out in more than one car barn - At two places shots were fired between officers of the city and countly - and what nre alleged 10 have been union AYmipathizers, 3 Two county detectives missed death by a narrow fmargin when a crowd of persons around the Rankin street car barns set upon 14 girikebreakers The officers attempted to pacify the fighting men. The crowd dovoled attention to the officers mand altor beat Ing them unmercifully dragged them to a high bridge over & ravine near the car baros and threatened to throw thém over the rail if they relused to prouiize to keep out of the clashes be tween the strike-breakers and the friends of the strikers. The tinely arrival of the police saved the officers from probable death. ' Rioting also reached the downtlown secton. _ Theaters Threatened by Bombs. Barcelons, June 30.-~llombs were exploded in two of the Bafeslona thea tera. Oone of the playboases fortunate. Iy was empty, but the opiher was crowded and/the audiénce was thrown into a panie. One mwan was f(atally wonnded, » TOO FAT FOR ROBBERY. Lawyer Will Attempt to Free Prisoner . at Sing Sing on Novel . Plea, White Plains, N. Y., June 30 —lgwyer Benjamin Fagan of Ossining will file a notice of appeal to the appellate division from the conviction and sep. tence of William Green. who is t,ht_; fattest convict in Sing Sing prison, for robbery alleged to have been committed at Ossining. - Green, who weighs 358% pounds, was sentenced to prison on Febrnary 27 on the charge of having dragged Frapk Baker through an alleyway 9% inches wide between the brick building at Ossining, and then robbing “his victim of $lO. ~ Lawyer Fagan said that in the appeal he will contend that such a fat ‘man as Green could not have squeezed ‘tthrough that alleyway. ; : Boy of 12 Commits Suicide. Elwood, Ind,- June 30.—Chester Robbins, 12 yedrs old, committed suiride yesterday by taking carbolic acid when he was reprimanded for taking -2 bicycle pump from a neighbor’s bome. The boy’s father directed him to return the pnump and get a buggy whip from the barn. The boy fell dead almost at his father’s feet, Two Killed on Railroad. Deerfield, Mo., June 30.—The bodies of Charles Brown of Wichita, Kan., and Allen Wilson of 4589 Evans aveaue, Chicago, were found alongside the railway tracks near here. It is believed they were struck by a train

¥%i " " K STILL ASK: WHAT'S WHISKY? STRAIGHT E{%WK DISCUSSED President Taft Labors with Vexing | Question—Neutrai- Spirit Ils De § clared 1o Be Bogus § Washington, Juus 30-—ln the tvl’di tering heat of the cabinet room. flled | with capert whisky men and lawrers, | Presidest Taft jabored again with the question which the Roosevell adminis | tration found wo vexing-"what I 8 iwhinky ™ » { The entire time of the presidest provions fo the regular cabinst el Ling was consumed insPstening to ar Pgument on the exception made to the Copinlon of Solieitor General Bowers eovering the vartous phases of the | coOnLroYeTaY, e A . The Tstraight whisky” fepresenta i dives had thelr inning af the hearing | They were Johin P Carlisle, former L govretary of the treasury, and mfim%@fi W, Tavier of Prankfort, Ky. Wihila they agreed with Mr. Dowers that “peutral spirit Iv sot wkisky, they di irected thelr principsl arguments ' agalnst his conclusion that neutral (Epirits mixed wilh wsbhisky may still Lbe sold under the pure food law 1o {the publie as whisky - | They maintained that such In imita i tion whisky and that. if the decision of Lthe solicitor on this polnt be upheld by the president, It would be sold on | the market under a misapprebension, i notwithetanding the intention of con igress to lepislate agafost all whisky | that s mot gemnine Mr. Cariisle do { voled most of his attention to review. fing the lgzal decislons in support of i his ;«’»zit%{,&; Une of those gpon which istress was lald was the ophilon of { Attorney General Taft, father of the | prestdent, to the effect that aleobol in not whisky . i Prof Willlam Frear, state chemist iof Pennsyivania, asked that the pres. {ent rules and regulations of the govjernment be maintained, unaltered, on {the theory that the states had ad %jn.@-!:\d thelr administration to the enttoreement of them. : : ! The hearlpg was then adjourped, ibut permission wss given for the fillng fof briefs up to July 10. Ten days will (be given after that date for the fling {of reply briefs : o | ATTACKS NEW BANK CAW.: i e SR | Nebraska Guaranty Act 1s Unconstl i tutional, Declares Lawyer in ; ' the Federal Court. P . ! Lincoln, Neb., June 30.—Before Judge Willla Vandevanter of the Eighth cireuit and Federal Judge T § €. Munger, J. L. Webster began the (attack onm the bank guarautly act | pagsed by the last legislature. Web- { ster alleges that the act Is unconstii tutional because it drives out private ? banks and forces their owners, i they | wish ta continue to mcarmr'sw. [ { San Francisco, Cal, June 30.—The i direct primary law enacted at the ‘late session of the legislature was : held 1o be constitutional in an oplnion rendered by the state supreme conrt | The =uit was by theé Soclalist party { against the election beard. - ‘ '“UNWRITTEN LAW" -DEFENSE. % 3 e 3 - %Quution Asked of Jury in Detroit [~ Murder Case Shows Plan of § : Prisoner’'s Counsel. E Detroit, Mich, Juse 20-<Whether | they belleve in the "unwritten law” | as & defense for murder, was squarely | put up to the prospective jurors by i Prosecuting Attorney Van Zile, while i they were being exnmined as to their | qualification to sit in the trial of Dr. | G. K. Boyajian, for killing his nephew | Haratoon. - Gastanian, while the i nephew was being arramgned in police P eourt for alleged misconduct with | Mrs. Boyajlan, » : | Judge W. F. Coanolly, who presides At the trial indicated that “unwritCten law” meets with little favor in | his eyes. ' o 2 mey Por Lie-Saving. i There are no half méasures about | the law. If it means to be absard, ab i surd it wiil be. The Lee coroner was I about to hund five shillings 10 & bargeman for pulling a woman out of the water, when it was pointed out that }m.- woman was ulive when rescued lAz a resplt the man gol o reward {Had the woman been! dead he would ;lmvc- been givan five zhillings.—LonE dou Mail, e .

When at Lake Wawasee Come to - BRUNJES PARK . - Fora Chicken Pie - Dinner Special attentior; paid to . Parties MR. AND D. H. BRUNJES

Strictly one Price

Celebrate the Fourth

In a Schloss Brothers Wash Suit.‘ We have just gone over our stock of ladies and misses was suits and find we are broken sizes and 1n order to clean up and make room for our fall suits, vou can buy any one or two piece suit wash suit in the house for the small sum of $3.98. This also inclides those fine lace tnmmed Princass dresses for the house. Just think of It, any summer suit or dress in the hou,se, value up to $7.50 f(;:»r nn]_\‘ $3.98. You cannot afford to go without one. They are worth the money to save your wool clothing to say nnthing of the comfort. You could not get them made even if you had the cloth. They are all nice, nobby garments; they fit- well and look well. Nothing like them ever offered in - Noble county for the money The season 1s yet before you to use these garments, son take advantage of this wonderful o;“)portur-xit}.-'- at once; remember, “hrst come first served”. Come while the assortment 1s good. | . - C e, v | - | ) 1.4 o P () S V 7 o 7 EE &7 (/l VST awo 5“0“ , - - -YT ‘ : One Price to all, TBA!'; the lowest . _ s R Gi e --( ePt e e e P eP 3

WOODILL SLAYER STILL IN DOUBT, SAYS IJURY Verdict Declares Eastman to Be Mun derer or Accessory—Falls to Fix : Biame for Crime, 8t Michaels, Md., June 30.—The question whether Kobert E, Eastman really was the siayer of Mrs. Edith May Woodill I 8 not answered by the compromise verdict of the coroner's Jury which says bhe either killed or was accoessory to the murder. The manner in which the woman mel death probsabiy pever will be definiteiy known. - Four of the 12 jurors who listened to the testimony at the reopened in quest refused to sign the verdict and the words “or scoessory to the crime” were ‘.'-,:-fiézd to the draft, ap proved by the majority, which blunt Iy avcused Eastman of the murder. None of the four dissenting jurynien would - say that any olber person than Eastman was respoasible for the woman's death. : The letter left by Eastman for his wife In which he declared that Mrs Woodill had been killed by a woman in a jeplous frenzy was pot read to the fury. The officials seemed to take it for granted that all of.the evidence unearthed since the finding of the body was well known to the residents of the community and that it was unpecessary that it should again be rehearsed. oy The jury sat for a time in a lonely bungalow itself, within sight of Eastman's unmarked grave not G 0 feet away.. Mrs. Eastman had visited the place earlier in the day and had stood dry-eyed for a time beside the newmade mound. The final theory of the authorities is this: - o That Eastman was n need of money; that he probably had been getting money from Mrs. Woodill for some time; that bhe undoubtedly knew something of her past life and that he bad been blackmailing her; that be attempted to continue this practice’and that the woman rebelled, intimating that she, too, had found out certain things about Eastman and that if driven to it would expose him. Eastman’'s dread of serving a term in the penitentiary is well known. His wife has said that he told her he would rather commit suicide than be confined in prison. The pawning of Mrs. Woodill's jewelry the authorities set down to the desire of Eastman to get away. When cornered the man decided that his race had been run and that he had better make an end to it all : : : e ——————— ik Elson's Advice - My treatments are theembediment of recent scientific research. As an aid to beauty I advise you my full course of progressive facial scalp all massage treatment. Alsoconsult me for manicuring, shampooing, chiro. pody and all kinds of hair work done Office 'phone 72, residence 'phone 1¢ e ANOLD ELSON..

THE HUMAN TONGUE. It 1s Very Inguisitive, With a Stromg . Will of Its Gwn. - - * The curiosily of the tongue does pot cause the buniay lwing o u,'§‘~b-{n§§3-Gle 88 the curiosity of the eve, Bt tiu. tongue, whhin te lmits, s the most eurlons of all . P e Let the dentisg i::;i"’mr a change in the month, ot hlm remove 8 Wwoth of 1o pince with his sdmirabie ariifice one that has jong lwen -alsent, let him change the form of a tooth by round tng off a cormer or builling up a cavity, and see what the tongue will ‘do. It will search ont that place, taking vare fu! and minute sccotint of the change. Then It will linger nesar the place. - If it 15 eailed to other daties, §t dowmes taek a 8 soon o thes are discharged. and feels the chauged .place all over apain, as if 1t had nof explored and rumimsged there already, - i 1t makes no difference that these repeatisd iavestigations . presently capse annoyasee to Its supposed master, the man. The 16ngue (o nothing wmore than o this matter proves that it is an unruly member and wiil not be controiled. _ g s : It seems to Have an original wiil and consclousness of t own, and wothing will serve it except the fullest satisface tion of fts euriosity, It will wear fiself out, perhaps, but it wiil find out &l shout the strange -change. — Boston Transcript. ol et : . ;aa mecorg as regestrian. ) A farmer, whose death {8 reported near Tideswell, England, at the sge of 82. in early life regularly walked to Chester—a distance of 60 miles—{n order to catch a train for Bangor: He often drove his pigs all the way from Anglesey to Wardlow, a distauce of 185 miles. i G S

PRURIhaI Jee - ARCO:==PAINT Will Do the Work - And do it Right b See me for Roofing, Spouting,” - ; | Repairing Ete. - ~ Agent for the Marshal urnace FRANK M. CAIN|

VOL. 44--NO. 1o

The Store that Makes Good

i ‘“Terthing children have mofe or less diarrhosa, which ean be PG’= Laptied by giviog Chamberlsain’ Colte {Cholera and Diarrhosa Bemedy. All Tehat I neeessary is to give the prelsoribed dose after esch operation of {the bowels more -than uatural and Lhen castor ol to cleanse the aystem. (It is-safe and sure. Sold by 5. J. | Williams. ' L , : . *° Back to Nature Colony. i A very curious paraphiet {8 being ielreplated deseribing a new German j;’sfi.'a’t‘ whose whole creed is to go with%‘out clotlies. They do thils from sanlitm}' and moral purposes. They have ) extablished themselves g 8 n colony at i-a-clearing in a forest about 20 miies i from Rerlin, and in the immediate jvl(~§.:.}?-)‘~o,f this loneiy spot the stran- . ger will casually comie across men; women and children Bivested of every. i'rag of clothing. The police are disin'clined to Interfere so long as they : keep to a very limited area. . A very | high state of morality {s claimed, and {lt s dieclared that the rigors of 8 1 Prussian winter in no way affect these .. folk. who have growa hardy from exipasun- to wind and weather, and who i lead a very out-ofdoer existence. g. ) st e—— e v | When the stomach {als to perform |its functions, the bowels become deranged, the liver and the Kkidneys {songested causing numerous disnases. | The stomach ‘and liver must be reistored to s healthy condition and {Chamberiain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets can be depended upon to do ;it. Easy to take and most effective. ißold by 8. J. Williams. : > ¥ TN e s 3 sst I % ii - . Trustee Notice 1 will maintain an office at the | Farmers’ and Merchants’ Trust Co. and will be found there BSaturday of each week for the transaction of public business. . C.Exwis, e s o Township Trustee.