Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 6B, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 April 1922 — Page 2

Gravel Road - M/unicipal Bonds and ' other Tax-exemp_/t | = . Securities E o Citizens Bank

- Under New Management Blazed Trail Garage: = s Ligoniey, Indiana . ‘Now Owned and Operated by ~ three Skilled Automobile .= - o ' | Me;hanics o Will Meet All Demands In the way of Tires, Tubes . ~ and Accessories; : Special Att-ention to _Repéiir Work THOWS, PANKOP & WINEBRENNER

If your child is 7 years of age it should take up the study of piano? DO YOU KNOW? No home is complete without a musical instrument. DO YOU KNOW? If you haven’t a musical instrument where to find " your children when night comes? DO YOU NOW you will find you children at the neighbors where - they have music? . | DO YOU KNOW your children go from home to find the pleasures you ghould provide for them at home? . ; DO YOU KNOW your neglect may cause a life long regret. : DO 'YOU KNOW you should do this now before its too late. DO YOU KNOWwe are selling good Honest piano from $275 to $350. Victrolas $25 to $250. Player Piano $450 to $550. 8000 Victor Records from which to make a selection. All instruments sold for cash or easy payments. Drop us a card and we will come and talk it over with you. o ” - L Yours for over fifty years Musical Service. ; . <:.e : - : South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana

CRYSTAL THEATER Thursday and Friday, ~ April 6th and 7th = Mary Pickford “Through the DL T 92 - Back Door ~ Recalls to us how warm and ,rieal and lovable and divine a thing it is to be just human and happy. : Just the charming type of picture that made her ~ Admission 15, 20 and 25 Cents . TwoNights7:lsand9ls , - - ,'anda Monday, April 9-10,

The Ligomer _Banfier} ‘ : .:ntA—#Hl:D' el u | ' & Published by : "he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor Foreign Ad : & [ eA e rsstarion. | | o Published every Monday and Thursday and entered in the Postoffice at Ligonier, Ind., as second class matter.

To Prevent Oats Smut.

«Get a pint of formaldehyde from a druggist for every 40 to 50 bushels of oats you are going to sSOw, you cap put this in a hand sproy pump o with a sprinkling can. If a small amount of seed is to be used, get less formaldehyde. Fifty bushels can be ireated in 15 minutes. Soamae g, Pile the oats on a clean floor, tarpaulin or in a wagon box. Make up a solution of one pint of formaldehyde to 4 to 5 gallons of water. As the oats are be'ing shoveled over apply this formaldehyde solution slowly with a springling can. The last of ‘the solution should be put on just be%fore the last, of the oats are shoveled over. If every two shovelfulls of oats are given one sprinkling the solution will last throughout the pilé. After the treatment the pile should be covered with a canvas, burlap sacks or a blanket for at least five hours. Covgring for a much longer time will do no harm. While the grain -is coveréd ‘the water applied ‘will “be entirely absorbed by the seed with a appreciable swelling. i If the grain is" to be sacked immediately after the treatment and left in the sacks for a week or more, the pile of grain should first be uncovered and spread out for at‘least 24 hours to allow ‘the gas to escape. If however, the grain is to be sown right away then there is no need of allowing the gas to escape. {

Wawasee Whiffs.

Chas. quh-am‘J of the Goshen Veneer ‘works visited his cottage on the north shore this week.! Mr. Gorham is a principal stockholder in‘the proposed Wawasee Inn Hotel project he displayed a wvery meat set ‘of ' blue prints and thinks that this lake needs another good hostelry. Anything at all would be preferable to the present ruing. . e o '

Jim Whistler “Sunny. Jim” is just completing " his new ,v‘ct'%tage one block from the Sargent hotel. The property is modern and has 8 rooms and bath. Mr. Whistler is employed at the Marine Supply and will be on the job even when asleep. e Wawagee 'is wet, it’s the wettest town we know of for the reason that it catches much of the rain fall, it is gradually rising and is 4 inches higher now than at any time last spring. If it d%esn’t»-water log the bass no harm done, s 8 A

The Lilly Bro’s Eli and Jo¢ manufacturing chemists of J ndianapolis have written. to R. O. Rench staling that their annual fishing trip will begin April 15 and-end proemptly on the 30th. This is an event which occurs every season and Mr. Rench is the chief guide having taken care- of this party for 15 years without a break. They will catch bass and enjoy themselves. : s KEugene Vatet of Muncie. drove up to his cottage Wednesday to go fishing when he arrived the old pond was acting up so naughty that Gene concluded there would be better days.: When the Bitterns start pumpir@g over time and the turtle doves begin to “jazz” we know that seasonable weather is upon us. They are tuned up now and “more power to them.” Very few people have ever given it a thought but if Wawasee lake w}sj to be raised two feet it would hdve 4 more real Islands in addition to it's one and only natural one at prseent. The same would hold if it should be lowered a¥few feet. There are many shoals which taking the June 15th dates as it’s normal depth would add many beautiful islands, v The South Shore Inn will open in April to house and feed the nimrods who come to angle, :

Mr. and Mrs. Louis D. Barnhart paid Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schlotterback a visit in Syracuse Sunday evening. I : !

For sale,Rhode Island ReMEggs for hatching. L. R. Marker, Ligonier. 6a4t

Improvement of Stock.

S. A. Elijah, of Topeka, announces that Mac Leroy .No. 150570 a pure bred Percheron - stalion, and Jess Willard No. 8033, a pure bred jack are now open for service. Mac Leroy sired by the famous Percheron Dunhan, of Wayne, 111, foaled in 1916, ‘weight now 1,960 and will easily make a ton horse. ' He will make the season as follows: : ‘Monday, O. V. Borger’s, . one mile north and one mile west of Ligonier, Tuesday at Clark Chiddister, -easli of Millersburg. : e e ol Wednesday, at his farm three miles south and one-half mile east of Tof peka. s Ak Thursday, Friday and Saturday. at A. E. Leming’s barn, north of court house in Albion., . it Jess Willard will make the seas¢n of 1922 at thé.same places and on the samre days as Mac Leroy. Jess Willard was bred by . V. Peak, Greejsburg, Ind., sired by Sam M. No. 5040, dam Bonita No. 3570, foaled Aug. [lO. 1915. He is black with white poipts and stands 15% hands high. H¢ is sound in every way, weighs 1,200 and de not- At > oo e g b ' This jack is going to he as good as there is' in the state of Indiana.] If you want to raise some good uiles it will be to your advantage to/ see Terms: /$15.00 to insure a Iliving colt. Owners parting with mare be. fore known to be in foal will be held responsible for fee. 6a2t |

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

WITH THE BUDDING AVIATOR

Beginner’s Tribulations That End With That Truly “Grand and ; Glorious Feeling.” -

Didya ever get up in a ship and when you’re high enough so that you can be trusted, the instructor says, “She’s all yours,” and you take the stick and'try to give her enough right rudder to overcome the torque and by that time the nose ‘s either up orn down, or the wings aren’t level, and by ‘the time you correct those mfi\or details she is drifting off sldeways, somewhere—didya? And after you sweat blood for a while and go from roften to rottener, the instructon grabs the stick and sets her level and directs you, in the name of all that's holy, to keep her that way, and you don’t and he makes a few choice remarks as to the amount of gray mat, ter you are endowed with, and th horizon gets the St. Vitus dance, ana ‘the wings absolutely refuse to stay put, and the instructor tels you you are a goof, which is superfluous, be, cause you've known that for some time, Just about then your instruc, ‘tor’s remarks are hot enough to scorch the tail surfaces and you -wish ye had a transmitter on the Gospox}: phone so you could come back at hlm, and you resolve to hide it somewhere tomorrow. Didya ever notice that just about then you get mad and puu yourself together and manage to hold her level for a minute or two and you find it’s not so bad, after all? Just then, if your instructor nods Ris ap- - probation—oh, boy, ain’t it g gran! -an’ glorious feelin’?—Carlstrom News,

TELLTALE LINES ON HANDS

According to Authority on Nervous Diseases, Idiots Have Marks Quite ; Definitely Designed.

We have often condemned as ‘.swlnq_i dlers the Gypsy fortune tellers who read our destinies in our hands. But, according to the latest researches of Professor Poll, which he communicated to the Berlin Society for Psychology and Nervous Diseases, there are to be found on the fingers of idiots Quite definite designs made up of fl'nq lines. These - designs, according: tq’ Poll's examination of 1,500 mentally diseased and 38,000 mentally healthy: persons, seem to result from the combination of definite dactylograms of the ancestors of normal persons. That means, from the union of two persons whose finger lines show the characteristic signs, that there may, under certain conditions, come offspring ‘idiocy. It will therefore be well for the maiden to look, not as formerly at the face of her chosen idol, but rather at his fingers; and he who wants to bestow his “hand” upon a maiden will above all want to search for the suspicious lines on her hand. It will also be possible to tell parents from the characteristic dactyl: ograms whether they will have off; spring with the finger lines denotin idiocy—if this should mot be perceivea otherwise.—New York Tribune,

My parents were entertaining a di:] tinguished man, a college presiden At the same time I had as my gu‘estd a couple of girl friends. . We spent the evening at a lovel concert and when we came home thfl rest of the household had retired. was so full of the memories of the ‘heavenly music I suppose that is wh _I completely forgot that the Qignifieg, president was to eccupy the gues room.* So I blissfully sailed in ang pushed the electric button by the doorfl preparatory to ushering my friends in 4 to their room. ' No light flashed up, so I went to the chandelier to turn it on there, when lo! from the depths of the bed came & big voice, “I think you are in the wrong room.”—Chicago Tribune:

The Woman was visiting some friends when the youthful heir apparent of the family came running in ‘with a cut finger. The Woman ofleredl to attend to it, as the lad’s mother didn’t appreciate the sight of gore. -Taking the child into the bathroom, she got out the iodine bottle. : . “What’s that?” he inquired, where- | upon the Woman proceeded to inform. him, ~ : v i “What's it for?” he asked as the Woman daubed the iodine on. “It kills the germs,” she told him. The lad oh-ed and ah-ed for a moment, then said bravely: “I'll bet 1" know how it kills them. It stings them' to death.”—New York Tribune, =~ ! - i } i Dolis: ' . 7- I It you want to filrt with death, try‘f ‘to take away the toy elephant that Santa Claus brought to Tony and Waddy, elephants in the Bostod zoo. They are as delighted with their toy as & little girl with her Christmas doll. = The parental instinct is the basis of all life. » : it “ Mothers, by teaching thelr small daughters to care for dolls as if they were growing children, can help shape the’ characters and careers of the third generation, as yet unborn.—Chicago. Post. ¢

In-a Wyoming ccal mine there is an electrical mine locomotive that is stifl going strong after 27 years. It has hauled 3,712,500 tons of coal an average of L 5 "miles. Many a mule has gone to.a quiet grave in that period; for mules may come and mulés may gO, but-an electric locomotive goes on all the time. : 4 : o A . Frank Roseil, of LaGrange started to drive to LaGrange from -Goshen and lost his way. A search for him found him in Kendallville. == = " Have you given up ever getting dirt ffom the wrinkleg in your hands—try Blu: Pl . - - Ba2t

We Girls Forget.

Sure Death.

Electric Locomotive Is Anclent.

NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS State of Indiana Noble County SS: In the Noble Circuit Court, : March 1922, Term . - Cause No. 7923 : “ - To Quiet Title - : Fred Kiester, et al. : vSs .

Erastus Atkins, et al . Be it known, that on the 23rd day of March 1922 the above named plaintitffs by Deahl & Deahl their attorneys filed in the office of the Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court a complaint against said defendants in the abhove entitled cause of action, together with an affidavit of a competent person’ that the plaintiffs have a meritorious cause of action against said defendants, and that the defendants *Charles Keister and Mary E. Keister are not residents of the State of Indiana. Said‘ defendants are therefore hereby notified of the filing and pendency of .said complaint against them, and unless they appear and answer or demur thereto "at the @alling of said cause on the 15th day of May 1922, the ‘same being the 7th Judicial day of the May 1922, Term of said Court to be begun and holden at the Court House in the town of Albion on the‘ second Monday of May mnext, and answer or demur to said complaint the same will be heard and determined in their absence. In Witness Whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court att he office of the Clerk thereof in the town of Albion Indiana this 23rd -day of March, 1922, (Seal) Isaac Deter, Clerk of - ‘ the Noble Circuit Court. Deahl &Deahl, Attys. for Plaintiffs. : : . = 4b3w

STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION ETC REQUIRED BY THE ACT ‘OF CONGRESS AUGUST 24, 1912, Of the Ligonier Banner, published: twice weekly at Ligonier, Indiana for April 1922. bis s § State of Indiana County of Noble SS:! Before me a Notary Public in and for the State and county aforesaid, personally appeared W. C. B. Harrison who, having been duly sworn, ac;cord-i ing to law, deposes and says that he is the editor of the Ligonier Banner. Banner Publishing €o., Ligonier Ind. Editor, W. C. B. Harrison. - Managing editor, W. C. B. Harrison - Business manager, M. A. Cotherman ~ Owners, W. C. B, Harrison and M. ‘A. Cotherman. : : *Known bondholders, mortgagees ’and other security holders, holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortages or other seéuritiesi .None. : | Average number of copies of each ‘issue of this publication sold or distributed through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months preceeding the date shown above not required by weekly papers. ‘ W. C. B. Harrison Sworn to.and subscribed before me this 4th day of April 1922. : Bessie A. White, Notary Public (My commission expires Aug 5 1923.

“A Well Dressed Man” You know what a lot of satisfaction you get out of it if you a 0 If you're not well dressed you \opug.httqbe e It doeén’t cost much here, ~ clothing sold by 'Carney wears so long that youll buy less Ao‘f.t’en than»')rou donow T T vt Carney’s Clothing Store

TIRE PRICES The Edison Tire & Rubber Company are a corporation organized under lthe_ state laws‘f)f Illinois, and are marketing a tire that is absolutely guaranteed in writing backed by the factory and with resources of over $1,000,000.00. I have used these tires in the . Taxi business since August 9, 1921 and they have proven almost 106_percent perfect. Out of 347 tires I-have have returned-five tires for adjustment and received five new tires for a total of $9.00. Come on boys lets go. : S sy FABRIC 7,000 _ - ~ CORD 10,000 - Miles Guarantee. ~ TUBES : Miles Guarantee. 20x3 .S (96 30x3 .. SIL7S 30x31%....515.50 30x31%.... "9.95 30x314.... 1.90 32x31%....( 20,60 32x314... 12.50 32x31%.... 2.25 32%x4 ... 26.00 31x4f1.... 13,50 3ilx4. ... 2,80 33x4 ... 2100 32x4 ... 1600 aaxd .. 260 34x4 ... 28.00 33x4 .- .=. 17.00 38x4 .26 32x415%.... 28.50 34x4 ... 1026 34x4 ' . 290 33x414.... 30.00 32x414.... 3.00 34x4Y4.... 31.50 " 84x4146..,, 810 - 3b6xb ... 38.60 - . 35x414.... 3.20 : ‘ : 36x5 i, .96 . Bxb o 410 e THESE PRICES ARE FOR CASH ONLY ' Subject to Change Without Notice. GEO. D. FOSTER X — , 1 2 L 5 LEPIRD’S BARN |

° ° ~ Silent Brigade 2:09 . Yearling record 2:26 3-4, two year old record 3:10 3-4, 2:10 3-4 world’s record for age, sex and gait when made. - Son of Silent Brook 2:16 sire of nver 100 2:30 performersincluding Jay Brooke 2:03, Billy Burke 2:03 1-4. Sold for $40,000, Shaw 2:05 1-4, etc. : : Dan Carietta 4, 2:18 by Directman, son of the ex-cham-pion Directum 2:05. Carrietta has produced 3 in the 2:1o list and 5 yearlings in the 2:30 list.” fag o © Pee for Silent Brigade 25.0 p to insure a living foal. In the stable of Harry Clemens, Fair Ground, Goshen, -Indiana. s ~ Roy Blug, Lessee