Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 33A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 October 1921 — Page 3

' Sunday Praises Gov. McCray, . John L. Cavin handed the Banner the following clipping concerning a letter written by Billy Sunday to Goy. McCray: - : *Dear Mac: : = : v lam a Hoosier. I live at Winona lake. I am proud of you.” So began n letter fßceived at the office of Gov. McCray yesterday from - Billy . Sunday the evangelist praising him for paroling a life term*Grand Army veteran from prison for five days to enable him to attend -the recent

national encampment. : ” “It was one of the noblest, kindest, manly sympathetic acts I have ever heard of your paroling that old soldier for five days so he could attend the reunion at Indianapolis,” said the letter. - adlighe “I have a sneaking feeling I woull harve said “Old Pal, you Eo home and stay there, you are 76 years old and it won't -he long before you're mustered out and lips sound ol,taps for yon : 5 ~ “The*Lord blesss you Mac.” Sunday concluded. ' o ' ] ~ Resolutions of Respect. Whereas, in the death of Otis C. Batt, this lodge has lost a valuable member and Exalted Ruler, his familv a kind and loving husband and tather, and this community a highly respected citiden. ‘Therefore, bhe it resolved that we deeply mourn the dgeparture of our esteemed bhrother and convey to his family our sincere sympathy in their great bereavement. - e s\ In the few yeArs he lived in this city he endeared himself to every one who knew hini by his kindly nature and good-fellowship; and .in his passing away Ligonier has lost one of her best citizens.

Ligonier Lodge No. 451, B. P. O. E. ; 0. . Bowen S : J. L. Dunning Abe N. Wertheimer Ligonier, Indiana October 7 1921, . Mrs. Commings Divorced. Hazel V. Cummings was granted a diverce at Goshen Thursday from Frank® Cummings on the grounds of non-support. She takes her maiden name, Hazel Stark. The parties formerly resided in Ligonier. ¢ ; Kimmell Poet TIL ; Marshall Noe the Kimmell poet is ill suffering’ from a gsevere attack of arthritic of “the knees. - He spent some weeks in a wheel chair at a Battle rCeek sanitarium and secured some relief but he still gets about’ with . great difficulty. b Lt . . ~ Harlan Gibson Il : Harlan Gibson one of the-old and highly respected citizens of Ligonicr is confined to his home with an attack of asthma and at times is very ill. He is greatly missed among his old friends. i . ) To Build Another Cottage. . Contractor Ameling has .completed the Ott Rench cottage a Wawasee and reurned to his home here. Mr. Rench expects to build another cottage next year. : e - . A Kissing Drunk. Riley Riggld of South "Whitley ' fried to kiss all the girls in hfs home tewn while intoxicated and Kkissed himself into the county jail. -

All our skill, faeilities, and lifelong knowledge of the ’ finest tobaccgs are concentrated on this one cigarette— CAMEL. L : | ' _ ' Into this ONE BRAND, we put the utmost quality. - Nothing is teo good for Camels. They are as good as it’s possible to make a cigarette. ; x 0 ' Camel QUALITY is.always maintained at the same high, exclusive standard. You can always depend on the same mellow-mild refreshing smoothness—the taste and rich . flavor of choicest tobaccos—and entire freedom from cigaretty aftertaste, : ‘ \ ' ’ And remember this! Camels come in one size package = : only—2o cigarettes—just the right size to make the greatest | , saving in production and packing. This saving goes - straight into Camel Quality. That’s one reason why you .. can get Camel Quality at so moderate a price. | Here’s another. We put no useless et B\ . frills on the Camel package. No ‘‘extra A% E wrappers!” Nothing just for show! : : 5— = E iy Such things do not improve the smoke {Zfi% ,}*y é L _anyjfi_}ore than premiumsor coupons, And § e ——"\ their added cost must go onto the price asl = é{;fl “‘{ or come out of the quality. B X &L ~_ One thing, and only one, is responsible , S ,_ A% for Camels great and growing popularity -\ S 0 e —that is CAMEL QUALITY. ; e “h‘ ei‘ ; } £ ,“ ;.}} P " <2 ‘: .' e ! jF }flflktj%";fl?;) : ;’\‘ ; ;,i M;, “‘: Q, ’ e IR s T Efifi%fi%ffi%fi?}fi&’}%W&%’gfi%fiwii

GREAT SHOCK AFFEQTS HAIR Well-Authenticated Cases of Sudden Whitening Over the More Impor- ’ tant Nerve Centers. There has been some interesting correspondence in tHe Scientific American about the possibility of a person’s hair “turning white over-night,” and now Elmer G. Still of Livermore, Cal., contributes a letter from the viewpoint of a_phrenologist. He asserts that there are many cases ol record in which a great shock to a specially sensitive emotion was followed at once by whitening of the hair just over the region of the brain in which this emotion Is situated, . :

%5, He cites one case of a man with a large bump of cautiousness, who was upset from a sail boat and clung all night to its bottom. In the morning his hair had turned grey in two tufts the size of a half dollar on each gide of his head, right over the centers of rautiousness, ' :

‘Another was the case of & woman whose-hair fell out over the region of conjugal love while her husband was undergoing a serious operatiou. The hair grew in again, but quite white. The region of conjugsl love Is sitoated about two inches directly back horizontally from the meatus of the ear. Another is that of a man.with a triangular tuft of white hair just below the center of the back of the head, over the region of philoprogenitiveness, or love of children, and on inquiry Mr, Still found that he was @ man remarkably fond of, children, |

BELIEVE THEY HOODWINK GOD Chinese Seemingly Have Little Respect for the. Intellectuality -of Their Deities. One of the strangest things about the religion of the Chinese is the reverence they hold for their gods, despite the belief that the gods are gullible as a man of inferior intellect. Instead of attributing infallibility to the deities they worship, as all other races have done, the Chinese resort to tricks of childish simplicity and are sure they have deceived the god. .

Usually the tricks employed are to make sure the god does not. betray the sins of a Chinese to the higher deities, An amazing example is the treatmient of the kitchen gpd Jjust before he is to start on one of his periodic visits to heaven.. Thig trip is limited, ‘because the kitchen god may be absent only seven days. The householder thinks he must prevent the god from reciting his sins to the deities. So it is the general custom, before the god is to depart on the seven day’'s absence, to prepare large hollow balls of the god’s favorite candy. The kitchen deity has a very small throat. When the candy, of which he is extremely foud, is placed before him, the Chinese say the god stuffs his mouth with it, being too gluttonous to leave any behind. His small throat prevents swallowing the confection, and thus when he appears before .the ruling deities he is unable to talk, and the householder’s sins remain a secret. : !

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

WORLD HEARS NEWS QUICKLY. But One Hundred Years Ago the Horse Wasg the Only Means of “Rapid” - Communication. A few ho?rs after Caruso died the clvilized world knew of it and was in mourning. A bhundred years &go Napoleon died, on May 5, 1821—and it was exactly sixty days before the world recelved the news, the New York Evening Post states. : Thoug® the English were expecting his death at any moment and had made every preparation to have word transmitted from St. Helena to England with all possible dispatch, it was not until July ‘4, that the news reached London, having beerr brought there by the sailing vessel Heron. In accordance with the spirit of the times, the message was not given out on the arrival of the vessel, but was first conveyed to the colonial office, an act which required approximately two ‘hours in itself. -

July 4, 1821, fell on Wednesday. On Friday, July 6, the news reached Paris. Messengers were dispatched from Paris to Germany, where the newspapers commented on the death of “General Bonaparte” for the first time on July 12, sixty-eight days after the event had taken place. And this notice was in a paper published at Mayence, then virtually a French town. : :

The Vossische Zeitung, founded in 1704 and then, as now, the leading German daily, contalned no notice of Napoleon’s death until July 14, and then it merely copled the London Times. Private individuals living in the provinces, regardless of their station in life, received the news much later. It was not conveyed to Goethe, then living at Welmar, until the very last. of July. He recelved it In & letter bearing a black seal. .

DEVOTED TO BRITISH CROWN People of the lsland of Jersey Have for Centuries Been Proud of fe Their Loyalty. : There {8 no part of the king’s dominions which has shown a more active devotion than the island of Jersey. The true Jerseyman still regards the king as the successor of the dukes of Normandy. Jersey elected to remain under the English crown in the reign of John, when the rest of Normandy reverted to France, It supported the Royalist cause during the Civil war and harbored Charles II when he was in exile; it banished Victor Hugo because of some slighting remarks of his about Queen Victoria, and during the late war it passed its own military service act, for which there was very little need. . Moreover, not once nor twice in this rough island story has. armed invasion by the French been successfully resisted. The last occasion was in 1781, when the Jerseymen, although surprised and outnumbered and deserted by their own governor, who was preparing to capitulate, defeated the enemy in a most sanguinary battle, fought in the royal square of St Heller—J.ondon Mail, =~ = ° One hundred two game violations are reported for September with $2,345.80 in fines ‘paid. :

GHETTO’S GUNGA DHIN A TURK Fez and Baggy Trousers Give New York Drink Vender Potential ‘ Oriental Atmosphere, e Picturesque on hot days among upper East side peddlers is the Turkish lemonade vender, says New York Sun, He may be merely & native American in disguise, but he adds to tpe interest of what might otherwise be a commonplace ogeidental trade by going about garbed llke a Turk such as children are familiar with through the pages of their geography books. Across his back rests a tank as long as his body, and held up by a thick strap slung over his right shoulder and under his' left arm. A sort of Sam Browne belt encircles his walist, except that where on the Sam Browne belt would be a place for bullets he has receptacles for glasses. - You ask him for a glass of lemonade. He bows to you, and in so doing operates a mechanism which spills from the tank, through a bung hole near the bottom, some ice-cold lemonade, which falls into a glass he holds in his band. As the liquid nears the top, he straightens up, hands you the glass, and you give hitn two cents, A more frequent spectacle is that of the individual who is continually crying: “Helser arbus, heiser bubbas.” He is declaiming, in Yiddish: “Hot peas, hot beans:” His heating contrivance is in a four-wheeled cart he pushes by hand. For one ceut he gives you a small bag, for two cents a larger bag, and for five cents he sells you enough to give you cramps. The presence of the “Heiser arbus” man is a signal for the kids of the neighborhood to run to their mothers for pennles. .

LUNG BATH SOMETHING NEW Physician Recémmends It as Highly Exhilarating, Though Admitting it Can Be Overdone. = “We are all taking sea baths now,” said ‘a doctor. *“Lots of people take mud baths, too.” Stomach baths are prescribed frequently for dyspeptics. But few of us take lung baths as we should. ; S “You can swab out your lungs as one swabs out a room. FPure air does it. You:go out where the air is pure, throw your head well back; inhale through your nostrils as much of this pure air as your lungs will hold, and then expel it swiftly and forcibly. Do this 15 or 20 times—even oftener If you like. . Astonishing how (it will cleanse your lungs! Astonishing how good it will make you feel! _“Air 1s a great stimulant, and some of these lung bathers overstimulate. themselves, 8o that they get nervous, can’t sleep at night and so on. They do this by such tricks as breathing the pure air in through one nostril only, taking too many lung baths and that sort of thing. Such over-indul-gence is perhaps pardonable if you have a plece of hard mental work to do, but if it is made a habit of, 1t will break ' down the- health like' over-in-dulgence in cocaine or hootch ‘or any other stimulant.”—Detroit Free Press. - Audacious East Indian Bandit. The death of a robber Kking, Zarshah Shinwari, in. a private quarrel in his native village, has been reported from Simla, India. His most famous exploit was the robbery of the Calcutta mail, near Peshawar, in December, 1913, when, with a gang of thirty men, he killed the guard, driver, and fireman, and ransacked the mail-van, but failed to discover the cash chest. Not daring to return at once to the frontier, he hid in the hills near Attock. A cordon of troops, with police levies of every description, was drawn around him, but he evaded them, and with consummate impudence kidnaped the Hindu station master of Khairbad only two days after the. robbery of the mail. He retired to the | Attock hills with his {captive, whom he then, as a crowning plece of audacity, set on a‘donkey and marched at the dagger’s point along the Grand Trunk road to Peshawar, across the golf links, under the noses of 3,000 troops, and across the border 'into the Afridl hills. L hn

Sheep as Lawn Mowers. In Central park, New York, and in the parks of other citles, sheep are used in substitution for lawn mowers. These sheep are permitted to wander over thé:grass, in charge, of course, of a shepherd, and the nibbling. of these creafures serves to keep the grass nicely trimmed.- The cost of employing men to. terid the sheep is not more’ than that of hiring men ta run the mowers, and the pastoral effect of a flock of sheep grazing on the lawns is' certainly mofe pleasing to city folk.: ' :

It has been demonstrated by experience that sheep will maintain a lawn in firgt-class condition; and that the grass thus trimmed is as neat in appearance as any lawn over which the mechanical mower has passed.

Ancient Dye Too Costly, Tyrian purple, the most famous dye of antiquity, was so expensive that in the reign of Diocletian one pound of purple wool cost $240, which would make the dye itself worth about $5,000 a pound. In 1909 Professor Friedlander gathered 12,000 of the sea snalls from which this aneclent dye was made, and prepared a little of the coloring matter. His investigations showed it to be identical with a dye known to synthetic chemists, but not used on account of its inferiogity to other synthetic dyes which are both cheap and common at the present day. ;

William Hire and sister Mrs. ’Mbnree Ott were called to Lima, Ohio by the death of a ceusin. = Hand picked winter apples for sale. Several kinds bough(p in car .lots. Reasonable prices. See them Seagley Bros. .- - 3%t o e enn e i

&) CRYSTAL THEATRE & 'I" | Thurs. and Fri. Oct: 13, 14 ‘;' | | S N Jackie Coogan = A . Lo ' The famous “Kid” in L o'A . “nEaylc DAR DOAVY ' ~ PECK’S BAD BOY” One of the biggest laughing hits of the season. A circus for Pa, Ma and the kiddies. You owe it to yourself and children to see this picture, from the famous book by ExGovernor Geo. W. Peck of Wis. =~ A picture with a thousand laughs "~ TWO DAYS ADM. J. a 1 - -25 C

Valuables Left in Pockets. “A tailor’s life is one of great temptation,” said the man who runs a clothing pressing and repairing establishment on upper Broadway. “Few people realize how many valuables and the quantity of currency come into. a tailor’s possession through the negligence of his customers. A man sending his suit to the tallor just does not seem to be able to remove everything from the pockets. In the last year . I have found everything from an-indorsed check for $5OO to a bottle of a ‘on¢e common beverage. Among other things that have come into this shop in the pockets of men’s clothes in the past year are currency, police passes, stocks, bonds and other valuable © securities, enough cigarette cases to start a shop of my ownm, matches, coupons; handkerchiefs, fountain pens, pencils, fraternity pins, lodge buttons, wallets, card cases, watches, knives, and scores of other such articles which inen commonly carry.”—New York Sun. s s i ot i , Concreté Boats In ltaly. e Some years ago there was first broached the question of using comtrete for shipbuilding, and since that time there have been many, successful and practical applications of this Idea. Indeed, the inventor Gabellint has succeeded in inducing the Italian government to adopt it for. certain purposes connected with the navy. These boats have double skins and water-tight compartments, and, being craft of about 100 tons each, are able to withstand shocks by collision to a surprising extent. Their draft is little more than that of wooden vessels of the same size. A special advantage Is that they meither rot nor rust; and they are easily kept clean. Many canal barges of the same material are n use In Italy; and concrete has been found particularly well adapted for the constructing docks and cassions. Fish Choked Water Main. o James Littlefield of Dover, \N. H., blamed the decreased pressure in the water main to the drought, but discovered the real reason when the hose with which he was watering his lawn began fo squirt little fishes, The strainers over the outlets in the ressrvoir had disappear(?d, allowing the finny ‘creatures the 'freedom of the rity, i

Form your own opinion of -the | Qquality of printing we turn out by looking over the | samples we will be glad to show you. There is noth- ' ing in this line that we P can’t do to your entire Satiss faction. Migh- ~ I/ class printing " "‘) ' ereates a' good : _ impresN\ ‘,'i\sf’* sl % //@/f and your (NS /[ business. x\! v Consuls | .Vs Before : You Send ! " RF n Vour Work ‘, . -OQutof -@‘ e, Téhm;

Takes Over Alblon .Ford Agency Otto Runge formerly of the Ford Motor company, Detroit, Mich, has Just closed a deal whereby he becomes owner of the Ford agency af AR L i G N Gt S S e S e L B A S o S R

NSy R PR P L AR e I S SR S CRee /[C_ R MEEY QBT e A ';if"::gi‘if‘;, : R /;fl; e P 7 7 Y p - ot eEi ‘- g L ~?\ =t 2 Se ] - \,\t\g\‘\~ a_‘\\~ R e "‘—‘::!? e RS iy~ IS =R I S R N SR S RS T SN N —— ,;:T-‘-f.m;.i—.:*ifif: T eSS tg S R T < TR eSR gl OO Dont Put Your Money ma | t W JIOAD ° Keep it SAFE in Your | Hom m 4' 4“ ’V 'IWK~ Somé slick strfinger ‘mfght, come alohg some day and tell yon how you can make a fortune by investing your money in his alluring proposition. fu porecH : But listen! if his scheme was sSuch a good one, he wouldn’t have to go around peddling it.._‘ Some of the big financiers would have had it long ago. : v . : ~ Don’t send your money out of yourn own town to never come back. 5 Make Our Bank Your Bank We pay 4 per cent. interest on saving deposits and Saving Accounts. Farmers & MerchantsTrast Co

A Reminder Don’t forget that promise yeu made the goed wifs and daughter to buy a piane er Victrela. Come and look at stock of Museal goods.'Wo have what you waat at the right price. - : 3 Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas You can take the easy payment plan if you do net eare to pay eash. : e | ; Yours for 50 years of Musical Servies. o 8 S(fith Main St. Entabluhed 1871 Goshen, Indiana

Twoe New Roads Accepted. , The Stump gravel road in Washing township and the Stuckman road in Noble township have been completed and accepted by the county commissioners. : . Falls From Hay Mow. . Joseph Galloway is laid up at his home near Cromwell suffering from bruises received in a fall from his hay mow. He had just about recovered from a kick inflicted by a horse. -

Free Lodging House. - : - Goshen is soon to establish a free lodging house for the worthy wayfarer who visits that city. The house ‘will remain open only during the win(ter moNths,. . Y Harry Six head of the Carnival given here last week says weather ‘conditions are responsible for a heavy financial'loss. Ik“flwhsfififldfi“@%m;é bt naagi el Beel e e T

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