Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 45B, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 January 1922 — Page 3

BLACK EYED ' MEN AND WOMEN

NEVER SUFFER WITH . STOMACH TROUBLE ; : If they take /Dr. Richards Famous Prescription. Don't suffer with gas, dyspepsia, indigestion, heart burn, etc. Don’t deprive yourself of the good things you want to eat. Start taking Dr. Richards Famous Presecription, it removes the cause of most stomach trouble. Kat what you like don’t take artificial digestives. = Dr. Richards Famous Prescription is not

SLASHED TO THE I These tires have been tested by | myself in the taxi business and |} will be personally guaranteed by myself that the Edison Tire Co. will:give you a reasonable adjustment against workmanship and | material for 7000 miles. Prices quoted are for cash only. | Cord Tires in Proportion 30x3 Non=Skid, $ 8.75 - 30x3; * . oas _32x.§; & 1200 L v igke o “ 16.00 23z D 7 Dh 34X4 66 ‘ (}6 't.17.25‘ GEO. D. FOSTER * LEPIRD’S BARN

TR B R e (B (& || R 3 @ : I@. e r: ',? s‘\"’?‘ 2\, }(;«:: = — B Swe) UG (B (8 \HR) | REG\ B | b 3 % FoN BRC Bo) el R o Gt D\ »t‘ 83,445 S 33k :’Q“;‘ lfi ’«J’f;'r !”' il ey (05| \) | e DY (& )| PR e : $ 20 F 5T & FH s THE YEAR-'ROUND MNUT MARGARINE o oS \\?‘ g O Qs A s v, Periect the year —&% A S 5 " - around E .9 Brednut is the fruit of 20 years’ { .i\“ie/ ; % o experience in making nut mar- ‘ ‘\ LN garine. Itis churned dailyina N SRR , spotless factory under the direc- \ e /A tion of experts. It is delivered R / N direct to your dealer. A ‘ ™ Brednut is just as whole- e Yfl ] ' 4 (H some and delicious as the Afl 4 , = 7 most expensive spread for : \L‘f‘ iM/ e bread. It stays fresh much e\l LR / longer.. It does not :} Rey I 8 Zy / become oily and sticky A\N g/ A 1 from room heat, or get NN AR (0 bohe o /AN (L || 1 . | ; AR Ny / | M. PIOWATY & SONS /s\\\%p ALt a ,‘ ’ Wholesale Distributers ( S \\}Ar /“/ J’” Gy // Byl e 526 Scott St. South Bend, Ind. Q\f \ gl / B {/‘ I« 4'/ e (SN (oscaT ey PR - f ”‘w__ k ¥ 1,/ '/ 4 & B ---""’s I:[‘;»{ ) g}// NN "// NG GAHBLs it | Bfwgfi’l'",f. I, )\ T /,{/) ST g :j: do /.r:.‘v‘(;?:‘” \ : N ’%v g B o ;.“ lieamies 1\ o 4 g H :.nunl' 78 . . 3 e \’L"!‘” o \yfl,.iél rs A A Q ‘ : ' K S \\Q«M‘{f, el A e N A A e T W

Have Cut Prices Now on Dyed Garments Clothing Dry cleaned énd Dyed is not a luxury but ah art o practical economy. c e And with our new equipment are able to give the best or service leaving your ;garments free from odor. v hE i Will be woth your while to loek us up or PHONE 86 when in want of such service. = o e - .Dry Cleaning And Dying =

Read The Ligonier Banuer J

a digestive- but acts as a wonderful tonic to the digestive organs. If these organs are in good working condition artificial digestves are not mneeded. Dr. Richards Famous Prescription will put them right and keep, them right. It is gold and recommended by druggists everywhere. In Ligonier by Cecil S. Griffith. Rl Don’t fail to get a bottle of this wonderful medicine today. It must pleas® you or you get your money baek . L

n2o e % Anyone desii‘ing accommodahiqns may secure board and room at 128 Jay street. Phone No. 382, 44btf For Sale—Two bed blankets dne wool .$3.50 one weol and cotton $2.50. Will Gibson. ‘ *44b2t If you have a good fresh cow or gpringer I want it, if you want a good fresh cow or .springer I have it. [George Foster,Lepird barn. Ligonier. ' £ 44btf Good 90 acre farm for sale one mile ;nm'th and three fourths mile east of Kimmell, Indiana. Inquire of Charles A. Wolf, Ligonier, Phone No. 271, ek : 43btf Wanted lady dish washer in Basement Resturant. W. J. Grover, Prop,, ; 43btt The wise automobile owner will store his battery for the winter with Kiester’s Battery Shop where it will receive the proper care. 42att FOR SALE—Attactive building lot on West Summitt Street. 66 ft. frontage and”a depth of 132 feet to alley. Reasonable terms. Inquire of The Straus Brothers Company. 42a6t ,_Wé,nted, girl for general ;hous‘e-' work by a family of two. Phone 419 : 49a2t To The Public—l am prepared to. make and fit stove pipe and set up stoves for the winter. Also stove repairing. D. M. Rench 30btf

- Wanted. - ‘ Hides and furs. Ben Glaser cement block building corner Cavin and Pigeon streets, Ligonier, Ind. 38atf Give hard water a jolt—break its mean disposition with Blue Devil. . i 45a2t For sale, 80 acres 4 miles south west of Ligonier. C, M. Campbell, Bement, Illinois. 45a8t Dish washing is a . different job—— with Blue Devil Cleanser. 45a2t Notice of Services. . ‘Christian Science Services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at The Crystal Theatre. : Welcome i 29btt : Men Wanted. To husk corn. C. L. Chamberlin, Bhone 16 A ' 36btf Full bloed rose comb Rode Island led cockerals for sale. See me before buying elsewhere. Prices reasonable L. R. Marker., . 49b3t : Wanted A janitor for the United Brethern church. A good job for the right person. Apply to W. A. Cochran or C. R. Stansbury. L. 23aif I have contracted 5,000 muskrat hides to be delivered before New eYars: Do not sell but see me and get more money. I pay meore for all other furs than anyone else. . - Joe Miller «40atf For Sale—Favorite hard coal burner 17 inch fire box good condition. A bargain. Call W. E. Lockwood, phone 128 Ligonier . , "~ For Sale—Fine Moyer buggy, practically as good las new. Chas. H. Simmons. - 44Db3t Give your skin a treat—use Blue Devil Cleanser. 45a2t " Wanted girl for general house work. Cal Phone 379. : 45atf

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage Manicuring, Shampooing | Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing ~ Marinello Toilet Preparations : - Hair Goods - : Phone 339

~ E.R. Kurtz Auctioneer Dates can be made at Weaver’s Hardware Store ‘Ligonier, Phone 134, or call my residence, phoue No. 65. _ :

GLASSES 3= Accurately and Scientifically Fitted. Broken lenses replaced. Mrs. L. P. Wineburg

EARL WOLF ~ Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywl_:e_re | Phone 16000 Q | Ligonier - | - Indiana

W, H.;WK'-TON i Aftorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block LIGUNI[ER, IND, -m&'mfimu A e

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA;

;’ -go ST rmer ehe o = b iaege: K i MMy e s THE LIFE OF GAS MANTLES lluminating Device Should Last 1,000 ~ Burning Hours—May Be Destroyed ~ In Few, Mom'en‘;. ‘ s The following facts abodt gas mantles are taken from Gas Logic, the house organ of the biggest gas company in New York. . . - “A good gas mantle should last from 500 to 800 or even 1,000 burning hours. “Breakage, however, is not always due to poor mantle quality. Turning the gas off and on and the slight explosion that sometimeS occurs when it is lighted is highly destructive of mantles, A mantle which, burning steadily, might last‘ for several thousand hours, may be destroyed in a few minutes by rough handling or in a few hours by unusual but unavoidable wear and tear. : : “Initial candle power is that measuréd when the mantle is first lighted. It is extremely high in cheap and’inferior mantles. But soon, often within a few minutes, the brilliancy of the light fades, never to be regained. The intensity of this initial light is a snare into which the unwary and unwise frequently fall in purchasing cheap mantles. “Sustained candle power is the messure of light given out by a mantle over a long period, and is, of colrse, the real test of a good mantle, The highclass mantle may not have an Mitial candle power equal to that of a eheaper substitute, but in the long test its superiority is demonstrated. “Some of the gas companies are now selling mantles with a guarantee of at least 90 days’ service,” :

THERE IS NOTHING QUAINTER

Marblehead Lanes Keep Visitors to Gray Sea-Town Puzzled as to Where Streets Will Lead. A rough .village of huts clamped down to the rocks and hugging its fine harbor, such was Marblehead for many years. - The huts grew bigger and finer, the narrow footways broadened a trifle, but kept the devious turns and abrupt ups and downs with which they began--so abrupt that even today many a Marblehead lane has to resort to steps to get itself and its traveler where it would go. .. . There is nothing quainter to be found in our country than this gray sea-town with its incredibly tangled streets. Never does a stranger know where he will end when he sets forth to follow one of them. Sister and I found ourselves walking briskly away from the place we wanted to go to oftener than not. Luckily the water exists, for when you strike it you have a chance to take new bearings, and in time we got so that we could lay a course by the tower of Abbott hall, which dominates the entire village. We would climb up to it to get a fresh start, and usually found that we were approaching it from another direction than the one we imagined. It was a sort of Alice In Wonderland progress, the thing being to go where “you knew you shouldn’t in order, to get where you wanted to be.—“ Old Seaport Towns,” Hildegarde Hawthorne. i

Race of Toothless Men in India.

In the Hindu Amil ' community -of Hyderabad Sind, in India, there has been found a type of men who have no teeth. These men are further characterized by a bald head and an extreme sensitiveness to heat. They are known as ‘“Bhudas,” which literally means “toothless.” The following facts have been learned about them : : Gl

When such a man (a “Bhuda’”) marries a normal girl having both parents free from these defects, all the children, both male and female, are apparently normal—-that is to say, apparently free from the defect. o When the females marry normal males, their female children are apparently normal, while the male children are “Bhudas.” : No case is known in which 'a toothless man has married the daughter of a “Bhuda” v '

Windows Easily Broken by Blasts. - Bxplosions of powder or other similar materials often are very destruciive to windows, even if they are at a great distance from the point of explosion. When an explosion occurs air waves are thrown off with great violence. Sometimes these air waves are thrown back with such violence that buildings in the immediate vicinity of the explosion are destroyed. e

The force of the air waves acts in all directlons at the same time and with equal force. Very often these air waves are thrown for great distances and, while the houses in its path are strong enough to resist their violence, the windows are shattered because they cannot withstand the high pressure of air.—Milwaukee Sentinel.

“You must have made a few enemies in your long political career?” “More than a few,” answered Senator Sorghum. “I have forgiven them /I :

. “That is magnanimous.” “Not especially. By forgiving them I call their attention to the fact that they never succeeded in injuting me enough to earn my abiding resentment.” Vi

: No Luck.. ! Blackstone—Heard you had an accident with your car. Was it damaged much? Lo e S Webster—No such luck. The best I could get from the insurance people was a new _cpgi_g palnt. . ~

SCALP TREATMENT ‘ Shampooing and Manicuring - Emma C. Taylor Dr. Gants Residence, One Door Sowth of Presbyterian Church.

Delicate Revenge.

S g o e TAWT K bioBb ay @ P B o A AGPeay s P NATURE'S WAY WITH PESTS One Destructive Insect is Used to Fight | Another; Each Capable of . Useful Work. You recall the old nursery rhyme, “This is the house that Jack built?” The story of Nature’s warfare runs on very much the same lines. Thig is the fox that ate the squirrel that stole the eggs of the magpie that killed: the sparrow that devoured the fly that destroyed the caterpillar that spoflt the cabbage that grew in the house that Jack built! ‘Nature uses one pest to fight another, Each of the creatures mentioned is a pest; yet each is capable of useful work, R S 5 : i

Moths and butterflies lay hundreds of eggs at a time, so that if nothing preyed on caterpillars we should soon have not a single green leaf in the country. But we must have moths and butterflies to fertilize flowers. The chief foe of the caterpillar is the ichneumon-fly, which lays eggs in him as he crawls on a leaf. These eggs hatch into grubs and kill the caterpillar. . 9

The ichneumon-fly is eaten by small birds which do useful work in this way, though In other ways they are pests, for they eat the farmer’s corn. They are kept in check by cuckoos, hawks, crows, and magpies. ‘'These birds of prey, if their groevth was unchecked, would soon kill all the game in- the country. Squirrels and other birds keep them down by stealing their eggs. Squirrels are preyed upon by foxes, which, as we have no wild beasts in this country, must be kept In check by man, :

FINDS CURE FOR BLEEDERS

Paris Physiclan Successful in Treating Disease With Use of Blood | ' From the Horse.

“Bleeders,” as they are called, generally come of families with a history of bleeding. Such sufferers are rarely cured. But Dr. P. Emile-Weil of Paris reports in a bulletin of the Soclete Medicale des Hopitaux the success he has had with his treatment of the disease, which is called hemophilia. He relates the case of & child of seven, a pronounced bleeder, belonging to one of the classic bleeder families that have been written up in medical annals since the Eighteenth century. He gave the boy an injection of 20 cubic centimetres of normal horse serum—that is, horse’s blood with the corpuscles -extracted—eévery second month until fifteen injections had been given. The tendency -to hemorrhage seemed to be arrested, and after seven years there has been no sign of its recurrence. { Previous to this Doctor Weil had treated seven cases of familiar hemophilia with such injections, all of them successfully, but he never regarded a case as wholly cured until that of this boy. But the fact that he has been free from bleeding for seven years indicates at least that this disease is curable. .

First Magic Lantern,

I'akers ip the old days were no less quick than their present brethren .to take advantage of scientific discoveries to fool the public. In 1646, one Athanasius Kircher announced to the few German scientists of his day ‘that he had discovered an instrument which would throw- large pictures of any drawing or painting placed on it, upon a white screen. He wrote quite a treatise on this first magic lantern and called it the “Arm Magna Lucis et Umbrae.” = :

From -a scientific point of view Kircher’s discovery did not make a very deep impression. But half a dozen | traveling - magicians somehow: or other got hold of copies of the first magic lantern. They traveled far and wide through the country, and they not only scared the peasants and small-town peoples out of their ' wits,’ but by making a specialty of showing pictures of the devil, of poor souls frying in purgatory and other unpleasant subjects, they collected considerable sums in return for the promise to keep these evil spirits out of the homes of their victims, © . ¢ 4 :

; “Harum-Scarum.” 5 Harum-scarum is a perfectly good word used in connection with a ‘person whé is exceedingly wild, reckless or thoughtless. "Phe word probably originated from a combination of the two English verbs, ‘“hare,” to excite or worry, and “scare,” to frighten. Locke, in his “Essay on Education,” 'uses “hare” as a verb in this manner: “To ‘hare’ and rate them is not to teach but to vex them.” ' In this country, it is generally supposed ('that *“harum-scarum” is an Americanization, due probably to Washington Irving’s use of it in his “Alhambra,” where he wrote: - -“From a walk, the horse soon passed to a trot, from a trot to a gallop and from a gallop to a harumsearum Scamper.” ; Similar. L ~ “What's become' of Blithersby ?”. ' “He's gone where the wicked cease from troubling and the weary are at rest.” | : “Dead?”’ ; o 3 “No, indeed. He’s doing time in a model penitentiary.” : .

i . Just 80. Lo . “What are these?’. ' “Accounts kept in ancient Nineveh on clay tablets.” Ly _%“Ah, the'original loose-leaf ledger™ «Loulisville Courier-Journal.

CHARLES V'INKS. AND SON e Dealer in ' ‘Mo:nu,menu’. Vaults, Tombotogu. Byxil_ding Stone ‘_ Corpar Fifth and Cavin LIGONER

ANATOLIA A LAND OF PLENTY Food In the Greatest Abundance, but .. Woeful Scarcity of Water, ls : the Situation There. ' Americans who find life expensive would secure unbounded relief I they could go to Anatolia, in Asia Minor. - In the area through which the Greek army passed in its advance on Angora, lambs sell for 60 cents each, chickens for 12 cents, whole cows for $9 and eggs for half a cent. Everywhere food is found in great abundance and at prices such as America never heard of even before the war, . The fertile flelds of Anatolla rival those of the most productive Amerié¢an state. Wheat is the principal commodity of the thrifty Turkish and Kurd farmers. They raise sufficlent quantities to feed a continent. When King Constantine’s army made its advance into the heart of the Kemalist country it found hundreds of thousands of tons of wheat and grain. -4 The Greeks also found incalculable numbers of cattle and sheep. Cows, oxen and water buffalo swarm the plains of Asia Minor, while the famous Angora goats and Caraman sheep are so numerous that they sell for about. the price of a pound of ‘mutton i{n any American city. : Yo It is this great cornucopla that has made It possible for Mustapha Kemal’s army to subsist so long without outside .assistance. It is also this great abundance that 'has kept the Greek forces going., Their onward march to Angora would not have been possible upon the maeager food supplies they have been able to transport from Smyrna and Greece. The only thing scarce in Anatolia, particularly in the southern part, is water. The territory over which the Greek troops marched Is made up largely of desert land and barren hills, with water only at distant intervals. For days the weary soldiers had to march under the burning Asia sun without a drop of water.

HAD GREAT FEAST OF SALMON

Citizens of Bremerton, Washington, In Luck Through Error Made by Fish Coming to Spawn.

A seething mass of silvery salmon was impounded in the big dry dock at Bremerton, Wash., when the revenue cutter Bear was admitted for repair. When the pumps had started to lower the water the salmon leaped up the steep sides of the drydock in.desperate attempts to escape into deep water. T

Navy yard employees, sailors and marines did not wait for the water to be entirely pumped out, but waded into the mass of silver sides, picking the best salmon, They are the fall or silver salmon, which make their appearance in Puget sound in late fall. It is believed the fish in seeking the mouth of a spawnIng stream, mistook the yawning opening of ‘the dry dock for one.

More than a thousand salmon were secured from the 1,100-foot dock, and there was an unmistakable odor of frying fish in the Navy Yard town for an entire day. e : : A few months ago a fox-shark or thrasher was imprisoned in this dock and gave dmployees some exercise overpowering It. He was vicious, falrly leaping out of the lowering water In an effort to fasten his fangs in his captors. <

Ban: on Fairles.

Fairy tales are no longer allowed to be told to children in Russia. The minister of education for Bolshevists has issued an order that fairies or princely heroes are not to be mentioned, and do harm, and g&re. therefore forbidden. e

Instead of fairies, children must be told of “scientists and leaders who have served humanity.” . Aladdin must not be misrepresented as a good-hearted prince who used his magic lamp for the good of all the people around him; he must be shown in his “true colors,” for he was a prince, and therefore “an oppressor and a despot.”

Chile May Soon Export Coal.

The coal mines in Chile have recently witnessed a great development, and. at present are producing about 2,000,000 tons per annum. - The old mines produced a rather inferior product, but the new developments are turning out very acceptable coal, and there is plenty of room for extending operations in that country. Virtually all of the coal mined in the country is being used by the manufacturing interests there, but there is no doubt that if the development continues at the present rate there will be enough produced- not only to care for the home market, but to allow enough for exportation. o Soundproof Bricks Float. Bricks that float are made from an earth found in Denmark, which is impregnated with the fossilize] remains of diatoms, a very minute form of life, : ! Brought to Celchester, England, the earth is baked into bricks, which are said to be fireproof and soundproof. Another novelty is the Frewen cavity brick, 1,800 of which take the place of 20,000 ordinary bricks. The hollow spaces in these bricks are linked in every ‘direction, thus providing. constant circulation of alr through the walls of the house. -

Three Instruments in One, . Played with keys Jlke a piano, a new musical instrument produces tones resembling a combination of that Instrument, a zither and a guitar,

Sale == Bills piv

- NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE Notice is hereby given that by virtue of a certified copy of a jud ent decree and order of sale to me directed from the clerk of the Noble ircuit Court of Noble Coutny, Indiana, in a cause of action wherein Iph H. Dygert is plaintiff and ‘Harry Burkhart is defendant, for the ! foreclosure of a lien agaipst a certain automobile being cause No.' 7999 in said court requiring me {to make the sum of Forty Seven 'and 50-100 ($47.50) Dollars with .interest and costs together with costs of thig sale. I wil lexpose and offer for sale at public auction jto the. highest bidder for cash on Saturday January 21, 1922, between the hours of 10 o’clock A. M. and 40’clock P. M. of said day at the north door of the City Hall in the city of Ligonier, Noble County, Indiana jone Ford Touring Car complete with four door body and one man top, to satisfy and discharge said judgment. Said sale will be made with relief from valuation and appraisement laws and for not less than two-thirds of the appraised value of said automobile. . :

- Charles Black, Sheriff of Noble County, qujana. : 45a3w

R A o o - S e '-z\:‘f’fi RO b i : >\ . *':-_’;,rg‘":—(\},_ <y < ; e ] Winter Storage : IF your car is laid up for the winter, let us store - - your battery. At a nominal - cost, you can have your battery cared for regularly all - winter. We will call for it and deliver it full of “pep? ‘ . when you want it again. ROBINSON’S ' ELECTRIC SERVICE ~~ Lincoln Highway Garage : : Ligonier, Ind.

Money to Lend .t - Fayms | Loans to be secured fi\; first mortgage not exceeding 50% of the present total value ot land and improvements. Conditions and terms are attractive. Call at our oftice.

; /N s B 3 S ) ' Ao} L ooy THE STRAUS ‘BROTHERS CO - Ligonier, Indiana _— Will pay Cash For , Some Used "Ford Cars ~ MUST BE , Worth The Money BEN GLASER ~ Ligonier, 'i@na Try Peppermint i ’ Healing Salve " The Universal Remedy for Colds, Catarrh - ‘ | ¢ ooreTheeat . and All Skin Diseases This remedy w«mm ~ others have failed. eRI h e T s oAR AR ?’%’@Wfi*”* LAT O A oGe S R