Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 47B, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 January 1922 — Page 5
Notice of Final Settlement. State of Indiana, Noble County SS: In the matter of the etate of Robert E. Jeanneret, deceased. _ No. 2328 : P . In the Noble Circuit Court January term 1922. - : _ . Notice is hereby given the undersigned as Executrix of the Estate of Robert E. Jeanneret deceased has filed in said court his acccunt and vouchers in final settlement of said Estate, and that the same will coma up for examination and action of said Court at the Court House, at Albion,‘ Indiana on the 23rd day of January 1922, at which time and place all persons interested in said Estate are required to appear in said Court and, show cause, if any there be, why said‘ account should not be approved.. And the heirs, devisees and legatees | of said decedent,, and all others interested in said Estate are hereby required at the time and place aforesaid; to appea and make proof of their heir-! ship or clagim -to any part of said Estate. ; Louise Ada Jeanneret, Executrix. Posted December 31st. 1921, William ! H. Wigton Atty. ‘ 452 w | Get a Coney Island Red Hot 5 cents! sandwich at American Cafe, 47a9t
: P < X : , _ The Nail N , Hammer That .\§ _- N \\"{.J‘ o . Makes Hard o g ~ ~ ?"iw“@p \,l: . N\l Work Easy | f;j*‘s e Can you find these things in the hammer you are using? - The head drop forged from .‘crucißJle steel which will not mushroom or chip. | ' A hammer carefully designed and perfecfly balanced for a hard true blow. i The handle of second-growth hickory with just the right springiness. . : ; Claws that will pull a headless nail in any position. o : ' an “interlocking wedge”” that absolutely prevents the head working loose. o Every Winchester hammer has all these points -« of superiority. The most exacting workman could not ask for a better hammer. ‘
~ WEIR & COWLEY Establishe_d 1864 _ ‘ | v 2 . 'Teiephone |67 T tur WINCHESTER srons e
Come On! Come On! ___—- The direct way to reduce your living expenses is to come to the Old Reliabll St_ore---ThePeople’s Store_ | Stansbury’s Double Store
: . GROCERY DEPARTMENT ~ omall Corn Plekes .. iau.. ot o kot 106 Sbrge. LCorn BIOROS il 156 Shredded Wheat BiSCuit ..o 13¢ Wuaker Holled Oate small ... ... lic 1% Ib. Can Dark Raro Syrup ... 106 5 Ib. Can Dark Karo Syrup S it e L s o BDC OBt TORUNE SIORIL. ...l st ) 108 POst TORBUHOR lATHE .covpisinosiigmaiso 158 LOnnel. BB ithe il indonmiiisn sigibsirin,. 108 JOBBBEE PORE o S e CEnNed. TOMBBGR o i ih s A —— American Family Soap per bar ..o, e 6 Bars Kirks White Flake ...........cccoivnin 2fc 5 Bars Fels Naptha ......ciiisonitiniinn... 32¢ 5 Bars Grandmas White Laundry ................... 23c 10 DBP CIBIEE ..ol g, 380 1 Ib. Can Calumet Baking POWAET ..., 27C I.lb. Airgo Gloss Starch sesnsens st 9C
_ Stansbury’s Double Store
’Getj'a hot dog sandwich 5 cents at Amerjcan Cafe. . 47a2t I have contracted 5,000 muskrat hides to be ~delivered before New eYars. Do not sell but see me and get more money. T pay more for all other furs than danyone else. - Do Joe Miller ~ 40att Wanted—Young . women to take a short course in nursing. Pay while learning. Address Dr. Bonnell M. Souder Hospitall, Auburn, Ind. 47a6t For rent, good farm of 290 acres. with eveérything furnished. Enquire of 'W. A. Cochran or George Goshorn. | : ; , 46btf The Five-Cent' Sandwich. " First time in Liganier for five years D. J. Lowe of the American Cafe is’ putting out Coney Island and Hot Dog! Sandwiches for a nickle. He has spe-; cial equipment for making and serving. ; : Lo 41an * Young men, women over 17 desiring government positicns, $l3O monthly write for free list of positions now open R. Terry .(former Civil Service examiner) 1401 Continental Bldg.’ Washington, D. C. 46a3t*
( WINCHESTER STORB
Get the New 1922 Prices
: DRY GOODS DEPARTMENT Start. your Sewing now. : - 36 inch fine bleached Muslin S ieaa e 170 36 inch fine Unbleached Muslin ... . . 13¢ It.inch al] Linen Cragh .50 o 00 e Shanch Blon Cragh oo b 0 e 17 Inch Cotbon CRBED .o iinviii iy 36 inch-all Dark and light Percales ... 17c —— e . . HOSIERY DEPARTMENT ; Ladies fine cotton Hose S i 8B rle Wino Hloge: .. si e 25¢ and 30e¢ Boy's Henvy Hese ... o 26¢ and 30c Liadies’ Wool HOBR ...t $l.OO and $1.25 9-4 Bleached Sheeting st s 60C 42 inch Pillow Tubing bs e 66 inch Table Damask setrresnsnsssissmsans it 69C ' BLOOMERS AND UNDERWEAR . L Ladies’ Sateen BIOOMETS ......iu..uisomeesmmrnn $l.OO Ladies’ Sateen Skirts estissssesenssinnsnsssssesssssussssssinsss $1.50 Ladies’ Union Suits .......ciminiissennss $l.OO and $1.25 plans Unlas Bultsl o $1.39 - Blankets Must be SOLD, Let us Quote Prices
Get a Coney Island Red Hot 5 ¢ents sandwich at American Cafe. = 47a2t For Sale: I have a good heavy overcoat size 40 good as new cost $4O will sell for $lO. Lap robe cost $2O will take $B. Lots of other bargains. J. W. Himes. - 43a4t
fore you 0'(161’1 ‘ SALE BILLS
These Superior *Nail are priced right. Come in and see them. 7-oz. Hammer $1.20 13-oz. Hammer $1.30 16-oz. Hammer $1.40 20-oz. Hammer $1.50 A Good Hammer . for 50c¢ duar:inteed Half Hatchet 75c¢ - Othér Tools at the Right . Prices . Comein and Inspect Our Display of Fine Tools
L.IGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
'SEEMINGLY UNHURT BY ,GERI:d Old School Readers Must Have Har. Bored Myriads of Them, but “Kids" : Did Not Suffer. In those simple days when men now elderly turned with boyish thumbs pages of their copies of McGuffey's First Reader microbes were known only by laboratory workers; at least they had not begun to worry boards of education. Public school children did not receive textbooks free of charge, to pass along, after fumigation, to new classes of pupils just beginning to spell out the mysteries and delights of McGuffey’s First. Then one copy of a textbook to a family served each generation, unless the encroachmfent of dog ears, missing pages, broken backs, compelled purchase of a new copy for a late arrival in the family circle. Even then the oldest child in a family was llkely to hide away his battered copy unless his mother had already hidden it among the treasures only mothers keep, Textbooks were not then taken from school daily for home study; school hours were longer, study hours were all in the school, other hours were all play or for the performance of domestic dutles modern youngsters know little of. Prom beginning to end of terms buoks slumbered in desks when not on parade. o . ' Microbes, germs of all sorts and evil conditions, how they must have peopled thousands of McGuffey’s Firsts, with never fumigating storm of gas to trouble them! Were children stronger, sturdier then that they repulsed attacks of unseen inhabitants of. textbooks; or, not knowing that the enemy was there, did they and their teachers thusygearn the bliss of Ignorance?—New York Herald.
OLD KENTUCKY COFFEE TREE Given Its Name Because Seeds Were Once Used as a Substitute for the Real Thing. 5 . SR ; Around some of the old homes in Maryland and Virginta one finds growing fig bushes, pecan trees and that other very useful tree of the early colonial and revolutionary periods, which our ancestors called the Kentucky coffee tree, because :its seeds were used in brewing a drink which was used as a substitute for coffee, the "Washington Star says. e The coffee tree is usually found in rich bottom lands in company with the black walnut, blue ash, hackberry, cottonwood, honey locust, red elm and the hickories. It is a native Ameriean tree and the name which the botanists have given it is “gymnocladus dioicus.” The first word 18 compounded of two Greek words meaning “naked branch,” and the second part of the name is also compounded of two Greek words meaning that the plant has both male and female flowers on different branches. . The coffee tree at maturity is from 75 to 110 feet tall and from two to three feet in the diameter of its trunk. The leaves are pinnate—that is, “feather-like,” from *pinna” or feather. The leaves are pink at first. Later they turn bronze green and then dark green above and light green beneath. In autumn its foliage turns bright yellow. Legumes hang on it all winter unopened. In the pods are dark reddish-brown seeds three-quarters of an inch long and ovate in form. These are the seeds or “berries” from which many early Americans made coffee.
Pepys Expert Shorthand Writer.
‘The most famous diary ever published was that of Samuel ' Pepys, which was written in the Shelton system. In this diary Pepys gives a vivid account pf the great plague and the great fire of London, with many intimate accounts of the court of King Charles 11. Pepys was an -expert shorthand writer, because he mentions in his diary that in April, 1680, he attended the king, by command, at Newmarket, and there ‘“took down in shorthand from his own mouth the narrative of his escape from the battle of Worcester.” - .
gt s Interesting to recall that Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to his friend Page, dated January 23, 1764, proposed that they should master Shelton’s system, the one used by Pepys, so that they might have something which was umintelligible to anyone else, He sald: “I will send you some of these days Shelton’s Tachygraphical alphabet and directions.”
Chautauqua. o Chautauqua is the name of a beautiful lake in New York state, 18 miles long and one-third of a mile broad, 7268 feet above Lake Erle, from which it 18 eight miles distant. On its banks is the village of Chautauqua, the center of a religious and educational -movement of large and growing linterest. 'This originated in 1874, when the-village was selected as a summer place of meeting for all ‘lnterested in Sunday schools and missions. - Since then the Chautauqua Literary and Secientific Circle has taken origin there, .consisting of a regular and systematic course of reading, extending over four years, and entitling the student to a diploma. The name Chautauqua is evidently of Indian oglgln. . A Bouguet of Thorns.
Hub—The biscuits we had for supper last evening were just like those my dear old mother used to make.
Wife—How kind of you to say so, dear. e W
~ Hub—l didn’t notice their similarity at the time, but I recognized the.old familiar nightmare that disturbed my _‘lnmba- ; T S S 3 RAS O 25T . 0 R A NSN RO
Sale == Bills o=~
WOULD PRESERVE RARE BIRD European Governments in Africa Unite - .in Giving Protection to the . Whale-Headed Stork. - Whale-headed, or shoebill storks are remarkably rare birds. The Afierican Musenm of Natural History has receivéd a skin and skeleton of one of these uncommon members of the feathered world. Only four other speciments of the birds are known to be in this country. They were all secured by Colonel Roosevelt and are all in the National museum at- Washington.
The whale-headed stork is a large African bird found only in the papyrus marshes of the Upper Nile and :along the northern edge of Lake Vietoria and on the upper Lualaba. It is uncommon, ‘even where found, and’ very wild. It is now carefully protected by all the European governments which have . colonies in Africa, special permisBion being required for hunting it. It is of scientific importance for the reason that ‘it may be related to the herons, and if so, constitutes a very remarkable link between two orders of birds. In appearance it is of gaunt, gray figure, some five feet in height. Its large head is surmounted by a little curled tuft. The expression of its eyes is scowling. Its huge bill, in shape similar to a whale’s head, is tipped with a formidable hook. S !
“OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS” Phrase in Such Common Use Today Can Be Traced to an Oid I Latin Legend. “To pour oil on troubled waters” means to smooth out a difference or to allay & commotion of any sort. The original use of the phrase was quite literal and goes way back to an old Latin legend. Utta, a priest, was sent into Kent for Eanfied, the daughter of King Edwine, who was to be married to King Oswirra. The priest went to the bishop to ask his prayers for a safe journey, and the bishop, predieting a tempest at sea, gave him a pot of 011, saying: “Remember that you ecast into the §ea this oyle that I give you, an anon, the ‘winds being laied, comfortable, fayer weather shall ensue on the sea.” ‘'The tempest came as predicted and the sailors and passengers' were expecting death every minute, according to the legend, when the priest, bethinking himself of the oil, cast it into the sea. In a second the waves became calm and the wind died down.. - From that time “pouring oil on troubled waters” became a popular -metephonn. . ; : Honor Belongs to Frenchman. More than half a century after the site of the present city of Rio de Janeiro in Brazll had been discovered by the Spaniards, Andre Goncalves, a Frenchman, directed the construction of the first house that was to prove the start of the capital of 'the great South American republic. | Goncalves had entered what is now known as the harbor of Rio de Janeiro on January 1, 1502. He thought it was the mouth of & stream —hence the name, “River of January.” .
_Jn 1556 Durand Villegaignon, a erfinch Huguenot, accompanied by a company of compatriots and co-re-ligionists, set foot on Brazilian soil. ‘He liked the country, and immediately founded the first colony of white men in that section of the world. 4
Set Up New Landmarks.
Satisfaction rewards every forward step by inspiring to( still greater advance. Limitations become matters of history as the modern spirit urges -Bouls to.their full possibilities. You have to be the director of your own future. You will do well to reverence the old landmarks. But you will 'do better to use them as means to establishing new ones. Cling to the old home if you must. Today more than ever the nation is looking for the .fellow who dares and does what conviction suggests. The whole world lies before you. Reach out and take hold of the great possibilities- that lie just beyond the reach of the old landmarks. “Let knowledge grow from more to more” and you reveal it in wholesome, inspiring conduct.—Exchange. ,
The Reason. A negro was brought up beferé the judge on a charge of disorderly conduct. “This man,” said his accuser, “was going on like a lunatic last night; cursing, groaning, blaspheming, kicking furniture, shrieking, wailing, Nobody in the neighborhood could get any sleep.” “What have you to say, Sam?’ asked the judge. “Jedge,” answered Sam. “Ah’s gwine ter tell de truf. Ah done got a slight visitation av religion. Arn’ if Ah done talk louder 'n mos’ folks it am bekase Ah sure am furder from de Lawd dan odder men,” '
Lemon Bath Luxury In India. In the West Indies a lemon bath is almost a daily luxury. Three or four limes or lemons are sliced into the water and allowed to lie for half an hour In order that the juice may be extracted. A remmrkable sense .of freshness is given to the skin, ?
" _Worth-While Acquaintance. It is always good to knowy-if only in passing, a charming human being; it refreshes one like flowers and birds and clear ‘books.—George Eliot.
o 'W. H. WIGTON e Attorney-at-Law Office in Zimmerman Block .~ LIGUNTER, IND. -
FATIMA WAS PERFECT WOMAN But, According to This, She Should Have Lived to See Her Name .+ on the Billboards. Fatima lived in the Seventh century, but by all rhyme and reason should have lived in the present day, when she codld see her name on the billboards and all the cigar store win~dows, remarks a writer in the Cinein‘nati Comumercial-Tribune. Fatima was the perfect woman of her time. Married to a nobleman, one of the great roues of lgypt, she bore three sons whose first names all started with Ali. Fatima was beautiful to -look upon and tried during her time to grab® all tlie best looking hoofers in. und about Mecca—which, like Fatima, is celebrated in cigarette lore. Fatimna was a daughter of Mohammed, ‘who wrote a number of riental spectacles and staged several others at the Arabian Hippodrome, hut who ~was shocked to death after sceing an American version. © Fatima shook her first husband and started in to win Bluebeard, not that the noted hutcher appealed to her, but she was curious to know what happened tc¢ so many women in Bluey's bailiwick, : Fatima was the symbol of feminine curiosity—in that, every time she heard of any local scandal, she said: “T'll look imto that? e | Fatima lived for 26 years, whichi was a long, long time when one considers the period In which she thrived—if she did thrive—and \,thei very fact that she lasted over the honeymoon period with Bluebeard is greatly in her favor. : She was one of the first eléctricians of her day, being associated intimately with “Aladdin’s lamp”—and lived to see her husband “lit up” several times during the dsrkest spells, T
SSOY BEANS Holly Brook Soy Beans for Seed. 2 Extra Good quality $2.00 PER BUSHEL ' ~ See Sarriplé and Leave Your : Or_dgr as Soon as Possible - SEAGLY BROS. Ligonier A " Topeka
~ THE UNIVERSAL CAR s, ‘/“ N Y 4 @ // / K\\\ \'\ Slxteen. /- / ot \ - G S Qe F A 3 e ’ : /) 2 \Sixty| & . | ‘ ; 1 = y,_,_,',,i :fi:—'-—::_f'?:t & { \ . " Y) a 7 oA TR o Lad o\ — . | I }\.fifl" i \.é_‘)BX\‘/J:"-U e % ‘ ,’/\\\\Y‘l‘/'/\J\ W\ N 1 N & = \ I/ 2K 4’ N o Y THE Ford car is so simple in construction, so dependable in its action, so.easy to operate and handle that almost anybody and everybody _ can safely drive it. | " The Ford Coupe, permanently enclosed with sliding glass windows, is cozy, 1 and roomy—modest and refined—acar that you, your wife or daughter will be . proud to own and drive. 7 ~ And of course it has all the Ford econ- ~ omies of operation and maintenance. ~ Call and look ;fir;the Ford Coupe. - Reasonably prompt delivery can be . .made if youorderatonce. = . ~ Farley & Kansier Inc. roe s Higonisr ladiane T o
e ~ Monster Goldfish. In his notes in’ the Birmingham Post “Pelican” has recently dealt with an extraordinary fish caught by a Coventry angler, Mr. A. G. Kendrick. ' This fish is “a golden carp, weighing only two ounces short of 14 pounds, measuring 2714 inches in length, 211 inches in girth, five inches in thickness, havIng scales two inches long and teeth (now extracted) over an inch iln length.” It was caught in a pool on the Walvey estate ° the Coventry Cooperative soclety, and as its captor was fishing with an eight-ounce rod ‘and 3x gut it gave a fight which lasted 45 minutes. That it was a golden carp and not an ordinary bronze specimen -there seems no doubt—*simply a blaze of red and gold,” is Mr. Kendriek’'s ldescription of it. Certainly we have never come across such a fish or heard of one. The biggest goldfish we remember were in a pond in Kent vears ago, some of which may have run to as much as three pounds, but not more. —From the Field, o The Yawn. | The amount of effort we make in ~yawning Is surprising. Dr. C. Mayer, writing In the Lancet, says there are three stages, and the whole process lasts about six seconds. In that time we widen the chest, lower the diaphragm, elevate the wings of the nostrils and the soft palate, draw the tongue upward and backiward and dilate the rima glottidis, the opening between the true vocal chords. :(We algo depress the lower jaw to its greatest extent, contract a number of muscles in the neck, shoulders and trunk, widely open the mouth, close the eyelids, feel the noise in the ears and have a feeling of pleasure and satlsfaction. We stretch the arms and extend the trunk. Altogether, it is a most complete performance.~Brooks bm Eagle, LR TR .£y et
