Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 30A, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 September 1921 — Page 2

This Is Your ~ Security too Our many depositors have confidence in this bank because in all the 61 years of its business existance they have known that they could with draw all or a part of their money at any time. . . = v+ They appreciate the careful supervision which is at ' all times given the bank’s affairs. - Depositors are not only a.é,sured of ample security | : but they enjoy a truly heipful service as well. - You to will find this bank a satisfactory place o . deposit your funds. ' - _ Citizens Bank L Ligonier, Indiana -

We Have Receivedf’Large Shipments - & Hard and Soft Coal Chestnut, No. 4 and Furnace sizes l ~-in hard coal. Best grades of | - soft coal. Full line of Building Material now o jonhand - . { COMPTON & HOLDEMAN } 2 : i Successors to ‘ e . HOLDEMAN & SON , Straus. Wool House. - ; Phone N 0.279

Do You Wear Tailor Made Clothes If you do I am prepared to make you that suit or overcoat at prices based on reduced , cost in woolens = | it KADLEC (Ui Store for Men The Tailor ~ Indiana b Merchant Tailoring for Forty Years | .

Now is the Time - Te look for that new fall suit. We ~ are prepared to take care of yeur fall needs. We carry the celebrated Hart Schaffner & Marx and Campus - Togs. They are right in style, fit and o poce. " s e ao\ ' - i Carney Clothing Store {The Store where Most all the People Trade e s e e e e e R sS s e )

The Ligomer Banner ESTABLISHED 18ee.] - 3 Publishedby = "he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor

’ Foreign Advertising Representative I THE AMERICAN.PRESS ASSOCIATION !

Published every Monday and Thursday and entered in the Postoffice at Ligonier, Ind., as second class matter.

Kendallville Fair.

The Kendallville fair opens Wednes-‘ day with a good racing program. 3 A special attraction of the races will be the hurdle events each after-“ noon. The races will be % mie runs, and these events will close the racing prograth each day. i Of the races listed ~six are for purses of $4OO, the others with the exception of the hurdle races being for $350 purses each.’ A $2OO purse has been’ placed on the hurdle races Wednesday the “opening day of the races, will: have classes for the 2:14 trotters and the 2:18 pacers. Thurs day’s racing card will offer: classes fot the 2:24 and 2:11 pacers and the 2:22 trotters. Friday’'s events will be for the 2:27 and 2.18 trotters and the 2:15 pacers. Provisions which were instituted hy the fair board severalswhicrPPywsion the fair board several months ago, are apparent on the program prominent among which is that for 3 per cent entrance fee, with no deductions made from money winners. The lower entrance fee which was incorporated on the race card, results in a great change in the expenses of the horsemen and offers an inducement for the horsemen to enter. All races will he mile heats best three in five.

Skips After Auto Crash.,

Columbia City—Authorities are looking for Bernard Gallagher, proprietor of a soft drink parlor who played a leading role in an accident Thursday evening in which two persons were badly: injured. : Gallagher drove his automobile down the wrong side of Main street, made a sudden turn and ran into a horse and buggy driven by arvey Robbins in which Miss Rhea Workman was riding. Both occupants were thrown to the pavement and painfully bruised. the buggy was -demolished and, the horse so injured it had to be shot. . Galldgher did not tarry after the accident butd rove off as soon as his machine could be started, without offering any assistance. He is said to have figured in similar accidents before. P

Cut in Barbering j Ca\sh Couts the barber has departed from the established price of barbering in iLgonier and reduced the price of shave from 20 to 15 cents and hair cutting from 50 to 35 cents. . A barbers’ war is now threatened in this city by the action of Mr. Couts.

Will Eelect New Officers.,

‘The next meeting of the Nopble county medical society will be held at Albjon December 13 when new officers will be chosen: Dr. Black addressed the meeting at Kendallville last Tuesday afternoon. X

- J. C. Brunk of Ligonier led the singing at the older boys and girls confer:! ence at Rome City Thursday evening. Seventy-five boys and girls were present. | :

Entertains For Children,

Mrs. Louisa Tschabold delightfully entertained at her home in Elkhart township for her children and their families recently. The affair was a most enjoyable one. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Rendel and three children of Enid, Okla., Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Lindsey and son, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tschabold and son of Elkhart, Fred Bert and Dave T. Tachabold of Wawaka. = ~ Purdue has registered up to date 2,773 students an inrease of 100 over last year. e

E=3ONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

- The case of the state against 0. H. Link of Elkhart charged with defrauding many Noble county residents in the sale of a contract purporting to benefit automobile owners in the purchase of gasolene, oil and repairs, comes up for trial in the Whitley circuit court at Columbia City today. Link was indicted on several counts by a Noble county grand jury and the case was taken to Whitley county on a change of venue petetioned for by the defense. Lo ; Link, it is alleged secured thousands of dollars cash and notes from Noble county automobile- owners. It is alleged the cash and notes were obtainefl by fraud and many of the note signers have refused to pay.

Marshall Noe the Kimmell poet has secured a position with the Thompson Feature Syndicate of New York City and will write under the . caption “Everybody Knows.” His features will consist ‘'of rhymes and squibs. . Here is one of them. Nobody Knows -= » | | Much abouf, “Miller’'s High Life” Everybody Knows . : He's Sadden “Bud Weiser”

Responding to a knock at the front door late Tuesday evening Mrs. Asa Rawlston who resides in the south part of Warsaw was confronted by a woman unknown to her and who placed a package in her hand and then suddenly turned about and fled. " Inspecting the package Mrs. Rawlston discovered that it contained an infant girl child. The identity of the parents is unknown. ;

The ‘Hebrew' Sheltering and Imigrant Aid Society of the United States has launched a campaign for a mil lion dollar emergency fund. The society has 150,000 members scattered all over the country The object in raising the huge fund is to relieve Jewish people in distress all over the world. : = .

- Frank Kelly a farmer residing south of Syracuse was assessed §9.70 when he became intoxicated at the Milford street fair. His bottle of white mule was broken when he engaged in a scuffle with Marshal Cox. For one night he was a prisoner in the Milford calaboose. :

“There is not a line man left of the Thirtieth Indiana volunteer regiment which met in its 38th annual reunion at Albion Wednesday,” said J. W. Milks of aLGrange county who has been visiting here and who was in attendance at the annual gathering.

Fatty Arbuckle the idol of the screen will be tried in three weeks in a California . court en a charge: of murder in the first degree for the alleged. assaulting of' Miss Virginia Rappe who was lured to his rooms in a fashionable hotel. The death bed statement of Miss Rappe charges Arbuckle with causing her death. :

Arthur Hedgline of Greenfield township LaGrange county was arrested by the sheriff on ac harge of stealing a pocketbook and placed in jail. Clyde Heign made the complaint. e

Harry Cornelius who is attending Indiana University at Bloomington is one of 2,246 students enrolled at that institution the opeing day. The enrollment is expected to reach 2,600. ..

Louis: W. Johnson and Hester M. Meyer both of Ligonier secured a marriage permit at Albion, and were united in the holy bonds. :

David Gale is considerably. under the weather being afflicted: with rheumatism and lumbago. He gets about with great difficulty.

Mrs. Amy Guthrie age 83 widow of the late! Rev. E. Guthrie died at her home east of aL.Ootto after an illness of several weeks. . :

Watson Butterfield died at his home in Topeka after a long illness from becoming overheated while working on a railroad: feioit SRS SR GRDVTIDERIPS 5 Cromwell Cream Station Closed. | at Cromwell until 'a suitable room to transact business in can be secured. The season for shooting wild ducks legally opened Friday Sept. 16. NOTECE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT State of Indiana Noble County SS: In the matter of the estate of Wilson S. Bilman deceased. : No. 2293, - : . In the Noble circuit court October term, 1921, o - Notice is hereby given, that the ufdersigned as Administrator of the Estate of Wilson: 8. Billman deceased has filed in said court his account and vouchers in final settlement of said Estate, and that the same wiH‘ (Come up for the examination and action of said Court, at flfil Qomrt;J House at Albion Indiana on the 10th day of October 1921 at which time ‘and place all persons interested in said estate are required t':: appear in said Court' and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not Be mpproved. . D e L __And the heirs of sai decedent, and all Wflnmm«dinwgfi%mw are also hereby required, at the time and place aforesaid, to appear and fmake proof of their claim to any part Posted Sept, 10 1921, 29azw! st P SRR Ro i s R B S B e

Link Case On 'Trial.

Marshall Noe Gets Job. )

"Woman Long One Babe.

To Raise Large Fund.

Syracuse Man Fined.

Not a Line Man Left.

Will Be Tried For Murder.

LaGrange Man Arrested.

Big Enrollment.

Get Marriage Permit.

David Gale 11l

Death of Mrs. Guthrie,

Topeka Man Dead.

HERMIT'S LIFE HIS cHOICE

Man Who Has “Flocked by Himself” | for Twenty-Five Years Will 7 Have No Other.

A hermir leads a fascinating life, So W. D. Clurk says, and he dught to kngw, for he has been a hermit in the arctic wilderness nearly a quarter of a century. / ; “Once a hermif, always a hermit,” says Mr. Clark. *“A hermit wants nobody's pity. He enjoys his solitude and wouldn’'t trade it for the:%epsures and excitement of cities. I have been in civilization a year now and I am going back home to thé wilderness as quickly as I can. There are no fakirs, swindlers and thieves there.” Mr. Clark’s home cabin is on theheadwaters of Peel river, 180 miles from Herschel island and 110 miles from Fort McPhegson, His nearest neighbor is 56 mil& away. They see each other once a year. With the exception of this man, Abe Schafer, Mr. Clark 'is the only human being in a thousand square miles of country. The Indians do not go that far north and the Eskimos .do not: come that far south, : ~ “I have seen 10,000 caribou in a ‘herd,” Mr. Clark said... “They go to the arctic coast in the spring to have their young and in September they return south to the edge of the timber, where they can finid shelter and ‘moss on which they:live,” The mercury goes 75 degrees below in' winter, Mr. Clark says, but it is the most healthful climate in the world. Old-timers up there, he declares, do not know what sickness means, ; o

WORD HAS MANY MEANINGS

When One Mentions “Fish,” the Syllable Is Susceptible- of More Than One Construction. :

“All is not fish that swims” reflected the sapient philosopher as he beheld a summer girl taking to, the ocean. The sapient philosopher was formulating a great truth when he ‘came to that conclusion, - The -whale, for instance, although it unquestionably swims, 'ils more closely related to the cow than to the minnow. The seal is.closer kin.to the dog than to the fluke. : e : To a great many fishermen the word “fish”—see Latin “piscis” and Dutch “visch” (the same word)—possesses only the verb form, “to fish.” Catching fish is not a necessary part of the process of fishing. The thing is *“to fish,” and is not primarily to catch fish. (See fishermen on the banks of the Seine in Paris, “fishing” all day without even getting a bite from a minnow.) , ~ A famous Englishman by ‘the name of Izaak Walton was one of the most persistent patrons. of the verb “to fish.” The word ‘fish” was also extensively used during the war in an effort te save meat for the fighters.— Exchange. ! : _

: Bigamy for a Lodginq. A Le Mans signalman has just been condemned to two years' imprisonment for bigamy which, he avers, he committed in order to find in the present “crise de Logement” somewhere to lay his head. : He is a man of fifty-five and he recently married a widow of seventyfive who offéered him a room in her cottage on the firm condition that he should marry her. This he did, declaring that his wife was dea? - One of his wives was dead, but the police tracked down another, who deserted him some time ago. The unfortunate man has now had *“crise de Logement” solved for some time, at least.—Paris Figaro. sl '

Blackbird Fed Thrush.

A lady of Penzance who is a great lover of birds, says Mr. W. H. Hudson in his recently published book, ‘/Adventures Among Birds,” noticed that a blackbird and a thrush always came together to her lawn where she was in the habit of placing food for the birds. Then she noticed that the' blackbird fed the thrush, picking up the crumbs of bread and putting them into its mouth. Looking more closely, she discovered that the thrush’s beak had been cut off close to the head, probably by a steel trap or a sudden-death spring trap, such as the children in Cornwall, commonly use to catch or kill small birds. The thrush was incapable of feeding itself. 1; ' Osmiriduim in Tasmania. ~ ‘Recent exploration and development have revealed enormous deposits of osmiridium and gold-bearing gravels in the valleys of the large rivers of the western division of Tasmania, which is the sole producer on a large scale of peint metal osmiridium. For the first half of 1920 the production -was 1,093 ountes, valued at £41,642. In March, 1920, the local price reached £42 10s. per ounce, states the London Times Trade Supplement. -

A Super.-Hero.

’ ‘“Anything unusual in the court of domestic relations this morning?” “A young woman who married a bogus war hero wants a divorce.” , “That has happened before.” - ~ “But this fellow has large ideas. He claims to have won the battle of the Marne.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. / Reward of Merit. s ~ “What's the most attractive feature of farm life?’ asked the city dweller. + “Knocking off work on Sdturday and going to town in the flivver,” said the ‘truthful agriculturist. — Birmingham AERHerald oo 0 s ‘ - Thomas Meighen in “The Prince Chap” is the big super attraction ap Giyatal nextweek. - - -ooonil _ Orrin M. Conley ome of the leaddn st an Gesmianst of ri ik mfi: ssociation | came from Eikhart Friday to Ligonier on P e dpeile e e iegnl buwiness, o .

‘ \fl\'l‘ £ A 9 \ - ; - N e == A “ .— | el YO > =-"'*—~.==‘-‘g~ A 3 ) ——J LR —y T LB s AT © |, = F ‘ L o B LR AN o o R TAI ISP =C D/A AN For Cutting Up Your Wood All ready boys—uew Winchester tools for working up the winter wood pile. o : e Out in the wood lot Winchester cross cut saws bit their way quickley through, knotty logs. Winchester axes fell trees in record time. o ) : : 5 For the householder who wants to “warm up” we have other Winchester axes and wood saws made to save his muscles and nerves. ] WINCHESTER - AXES—Sharp cutting edges, thinly ground—Perfect balance. Second growth hickery handles: Patendd interlocking wedges. Single and double bit axes. T orwe el WINCHESTER CROSS CuT SAWS—-Hig}i grade steel. Teeth well-sharpened and correctly set. Blade thinner at back than at tooth edge prevents binding. W* ~ ESTABLISHED 1864 Y L . 'PHONE 67

A Reminder ‘ Don’t forget thet pi'em‘iu yeu ‘made "tho good Wito and daughter to buy a piane er Victrola. Come and look at stock of Muscal goods. We have what you want at the right Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas ' You can take the easy payment plan if you do net care to_ijp?ay eash. s : | - Yeurs for 59 years of Musical Service. e 'ROGERS- & WILSON South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana

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