Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 7A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 April 1922 — Page 2

* Gravel Road ,‘ ‘ L i Municipal Bonds and other T a'x-'-.ex‘empt o . S;;hrities e Citizens Bank

Under New Management Blazed Trail Garage Ligonier,-lndiana o Now Owned and Operated by three Skilled Automobile ‘Mechanics Will Meet All Demands In the way of Tires, Tubes - and Accessories; o Special Attention to Repair Wm;k THOMAS, 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 plveasures you should provide for them at home? _ ; . 3 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 $260. 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. : : ; Yours for over fifty years Musical Service. - ‘ South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana

Satisfactory Farm Loans We make loans secured by first farm mortgages which do not exceed 409, of the land value, excluding improvements, at 6. L _ , Where loans exceed 404, and are less than 50% of the value of the land and buildings, the rate is now 639, | Our terms and conditions are attractive. For complete information, call at our office. i ' ~ LIGONIER. INDAINA

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The Ligomeér Banner

© ESTABLISHED 1866.% i % Published by : "he Banner Publishing Company ~ W.C. B. HARRISON Editor, orelgn Ad Repr [ot Fasseoy | Published every Monday and Thnriday amd entered in the Postoffice at Ligoaier, Ind., as second class matter.

Held as Murder Suspect.

Otis Olwine, aged 37, who is married and lives with his wife at Benton, was taken inte custody by the Elkhart éounty officers Thursday and Jocked up. ‘The arrest was made al the vequest of Mishawaka police who suspect Olwine of being implicated in the murder of John-Kolakis, 26, a Greek, .wealthy Mishawaka restaurant owner whose dead body Wwas found in the St. Joseph river several days ago. Kolakisis disappeared January 4th and all efforts to locate him failed until his body was discovered last Monday. Four Greeks are being held on suspicion of implicatiom in the murder. Olwine’s wife is a Greek and he is known to have been in Mishawaka Isidore “Shorty” Pappas, former partner of Kolakis in the restaurant busineSs; Gus Hondrakas, a cousin of the murdered . man, Alex Hazires, whose motorcycle is said to have been attached by Kolakis' attorney, and John Dimitratis, owner of a Reo speed truck,. said to have contained a 25-20 calibre rifle, similar to the one that shot the bullet which caused Kolakis’ death were all arrested on warrants charging them with murder. . : :

Notice to the Public.

- My attention has been called to the fact that in a number of instances vacant city lots are'being used as & public dumping ground for brush, tin cans, garbage and other unsightly and insanitary waste. ' This being a direct violation of our state laws, all parties are hereby notified that anyone dumping objectionable refuse =of this description within the city limits or permitting same to remain on his property will be subject to arrest and fine.

C. E. Denning, Mayor.

Noted ‘Singer Robbed.

A dispatech from Los YAngeles, Calif., says the girl robbers who escaped with $45,000 worth of jewels belonging to Amelita Galli-Curei, haye escaped to Mexico, authorities there believe, : D

Mexican authorities were asked to institute a thorough search for the thieves across the border, The theft was engineered by an ieastern erook who has‘f)een associated with a band of international jewel Lthieve,s, investigators believe. -

Orange Farmers Meet.

The Farmers’ Federation of Orange township held a meeting in the auditorium of the new school building Wednesday evening. A potluck supper was served after which moving pictures and. some very interesting discussions and talks were enjoyed by all present. - !

Both in Hospital.

Word received from the bedside: o

I. M. Kann, who submitted to an operation in a Fort Wayne hospital, is to the effect that he is improving nicely, Mrs. Kann, who has been at his bedside constantly. is now ill in the hospital suffering K from an attack of tonsilitis. ! L

To Speak at Kendallville,

Mrs. C, C. Warington, state proba. tion officer, is to be the distinguished speaker at the next meeting of the League of Women Voters, to be held at Kendallville soon. She will speak on her work over the state. .

Six Lives Lost in Air,

The Paris and London “aerial expresses collided in mid-air-Friday afternoon over the village of 'Thienlloy, 70 miles north of Paris. The pilots of both airplanes, three passengers and one mechanic were killed in the wreckage that fell flaming to the ground. ' ]

Hurt in Fall,

Mrs. Henry Hire while attending the M. E. conference at Elkhart Fri. day, was quite badly injured in a fall. Mrs. Hire was visiting the Y. M. C.. A. building angd* making a mis step fell, striking her head on a chair, cutting a gash in the scalp. A surgeon-dressed the wound, '

Mr. and’ Mrs. A. E, Wysong very bleasantly entertained a pedro party, Friday evening at their home on Lin. coln Way West. Dainty refreshments were served. The party consisted of eight and progressive pedro was the order, ¢ SRR Y

Robert A. Brown, former clerk of the supreme court *of Indiana and grand keeper of records and seals of the Pythian lodge died at Indianapolis Thursday. ¥s was known to Ligonier Pythian members. e

~ The Wertheimer and Loeser families attended the fumeral of Mrs. Weil, a relative, who died of paralysis, in Fort Wayne Thursday. The deceased was a sister-in-law. of Leo Lioogbt” F

Venued to Noble County, The case of Merle Coe vs. M. Rankin and son of Garrett, for damages for personal injuries, has been venued to the Noble circui—t,c'eurt. L

AF Sl TS A Mrs. George Ecker, wife of the well known farmer and sister of Charles Swickard, 'who has been ill a long time is in a dangerous condition,

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

DO MORE THAN GUARD SHEEP

Dogs .of Scotland Are Also the Com"_panions and Protectors of the i Crofter Children.

The sheepdogs of Scotland are guides and defenders not only of the sheep flocks, but also the children of the crofters. Were it not for these shaggy, intelligent fellows, born shepherds of the weak and defenseless, it would be unsafe for the children to go far from the lonely and isolated crofts in the outlylng districts. The schools are far distant and it is a long, rough journey across the moor from home to school and back again. And so the sheepdog goes along with them and safe-conducts them to and fro. Moreover, he must carry the books for them, for the little folk would be unequal to the task of carrying any extra weight-in the long tramp. Over the dog’s back the books are slung and no one need worry for the safety of the childrén or -their belongings. 'The sheepdog knows his duty and is proud and eager te do it. ; The rural libraries established by the Carnegie trust are also using the dogs in distributing books among the homes of the crofters. In fact, it would scarzely be possible for the inhabitants whose crofts are so far from the library .centers to share in this great benefice, were there not the sheepdogs to act as librarians. Good literature for the elders as well as the children is dispatched and returned on the sturdy backs of these reliable dogs. 4

IN SHADE OF HIMALAYAS

Mg jestic ‘Panorama Displayed When * the Gray Clouds Break and Rei veal the Great Mountain.

Northward from Darjeeling the view of the Himalaya mountains is inspiring. When the gray clouds break, they reveal crystal ramparts, lifting far to east and west, and a majestic panorama of range beyond range in the blue distance. The primeval forest no longer extends to the snow line. There are bare spots and grain flelds and hundreds of tea gardens. But. the ~“farther mountains are clothed with great trees and with a tangle of ferns and creepers, bamboos, ¢limbing palms and wild flowers. The hill tribes living in these solitudes are very dissimilar in features, dress and habits, but alike in their half-supersti-tious awe of their great mountains and in their quiet friendliness. Sometimes a woman from the Himalaya forests appears in the Darjeeling market place, bearing on her back, it may be, a bundle of fagots for firewood, a burden less beautiful to western eyes than armfuls of scarlet rhododendron = blossoms or strangehued orchids would be, but no less precious to the heart of a dweller in a land of unceasing rain—From “In the Darjeeling Market-Place,” by Marietta Neff, in Asia Magazine.

From the coming of Heremon, husband of Tea, to the desolation of Tara in the Sixteenth century, 120 kings of the Scotic or Milesian stock ruled from their palace on the famous hill. In the annals of the Four Masters we read of the fortieth-in the list of Irish kings, the ‘renowned Ollav Fola, who instituted the Feis.or assembly of Tara. His real name .was Hochy, the title Ollav Fola, or Doctor of Erin, being given him because of his extraordimesy learning. The “feis tara” was the na: tional parliament of the Ireland of its day, and met triennially for one week at the period known as Samhaintide (three days before and three days after November day). The -meeting was held in the open air in fine weather and, in the banqueting hall in wet. This hall was 800 feet long and from 60 to 80 feet wide, and had six or seven large entrances 'on either side. The site can still be traced. - The last king to reign at Tara was Diarmaid, and no king after him, even when called king oi Tara, ever dwelt upon ‘‘the beautiful nill.”

Girdlee Reminder of Ancient Times.. Girdles eof . metal, adorned with brilliant ornamepts, now quite commonly used largely for purposes- of ornamentation in women's dress, is a reminder, or the revival of a custom of ancient times, when they were worn by both men and women to con fine to the person their long flowing garments, - They were not always of metal, but often of linen or leather The girdle also served as the support of weapons, utensils, bags or pockets, etc. In the Middle ages books were sometimes bound_ with a strip of flexible stuff hanging from one end of the volume, which could be drawn through the girdle and secured. joeid Among some people, even in this day, the girdle is put to practical use. Being large and loose, the scabbard of a sword or long dagger is passed through the girdle instead of being hung from it, a hook or projecting button serving to hold -t in. place,. o : - :

Chinese women wear practicallythe same clothes in winter as in summer. In the most severe weather, however, they wear heating baskets under thelr eloaks. s ; X ‘These baskets are plain wicker ones, such as we use for trash. Inside the baskets charcoal warmers are placed. They will radiate. heat for hours. The charcoal is mixed with chemicals that generate oxygén, ahd thus the charcoal will burn constantly, even though it is sealed in the containers, ‘The Studebaker company marufactured 13,000 cars during the month of March. . RSI o The city council of Kendallville has voted to pave five streets the com Mg summar.. . 0 LT

Tara, “Beautiful Hill”

Chinese ‘Wear Stoves.

Notice of Admimistration. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been by the Noble Circuit €ourt of Indiana appointed administrator of the estate of Brack B. Bowling, /deceased, late of Noble County, Indiana, and the creditors of said estate and all other persons interested therein will be governed accordingly, = | : : , Said estate is supposed to be solvent. o : Clinten K. Bowles, Administrator Bothwell &Vanderford, Attorneys, : : + LoD W b Great Clubbing Offer. New York World, three times a ‘week and the Ligonier Baner twice a week, all one year fer $2.50. Now is ;the time for new subscribers and old ;ones to secure bo;h these publications by paying one year in advance. ; f . : ~ 61b tf

Chicken Supper and Bazaar.

Ladies of ‘the Boardway Christian church -will give a chicken supper at the ghurch and hold a bazaar Friday evening, April 14. Menu: Chicken with dressing noodles, baked beans potato salad, cold slaw and eggs, pickles pie, cake, jello, jelly bread, butter and coffee. Price 35 cents.6b2t

Gilbert Buys Property.

Harry Gilbert has purchased the interest of Postmaster Gaby in his Diamond lake cettage, fishing smack and tackle. Mr. Gilbert is now associated with his old fishing partner John Green and both gentlemen were out Saturday beating the water.

_ Carter, sen of Dr. Paul, who for several months had" been confined to his home with ilness, was able tc come ~down town for the first tims Friday. He had a relapse Saturday and his condianion is again Serious.

‘Mrs. arry Savoie of near Albion is recovering from injuries she received when she was thrown from a buggy in a runaway acg¢ident several days ago. :

Lot plowing and ash hauling done on short notice and at reasonable terms: Frank Sprague. See either deliveryman, 7 Tatfx

Mrs. Viva Woodbury aged 54 died Friday at Rome City. She was a native of Noble county, The funeral was held Sunday. . '

‘Miss Zona Iden, clerk in the Stansbury store, is laid up with an attack of mumps.

B. W. Cowley has been confined to his bed by illness since last Thursday. He suffers much pain in his head and back. - oo

Edgar Sack, substitute, carried Louis Sisterhen’s mail route Saturday while that gentleman was having his eyes treated.

Weir & Cowley have a large display of Winchester goods in their store window. | i : o

DO THEY CALL e E YO “A Well Dressed Man” You know what a lot of satisfaction you get out of it if you s - . If youre not well dressed you oughttobhe =~ It doesn’t cost much here, clothing sold by Carney wears 30 long- that youll buy less _ often than you donow - e Carney’s Clothing Store

- The Edison Tire & Rubber Company are a corporation organized under the state laws of 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 100 percent perfect. Out of 347 tires ' lihave had returned five tires for adjustment‘and ; ~ received five new tires for a total of $9.00. Come on boys lets go. v E e ; FABRIC 7,000 ' CORD 10,000 Miles Guarantee. TUBES Miles Guarantee. - 30x3 .93 795 30x3 ..$1975 .. 30x8146..31560 . 30x3%... 9775 80x31%... 190 . 32x3i4.... 20.50 32x314.... 12.60. © 32x8¥%6... 2256 ' 32x4 ... 2600 . 3ix4 o B Sixd A 0 . Sk . 2108 i 32x4 . ... 1600 - 32¢d4 <. 265 34x4 ... 28.00 0834 17000, 33x4-... 276 3%cdic 9850 i 04x4 ... 17.26 34x4 ... 290 - 33x414.... 30.00 T 32x414.,.. 3.00- 34x414.... 31.50 : 34x41%6.... 3.10 - 35x5 ... 38.00 : " 35x4%%.... 3.20 s : 30%6 ... 898 . K : \ 37x5 ... 410 THESE PRICES ARE FOR CASH ONLY | ‘Subject to Change Without Notice. GEO. D. FOSTER . LEPIRD'S BARN \ Ligonier, - Indiana

® ° : : ; ° 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 over 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.* Fee for Silent Brigade 25.00 to insure a living foal. In the stable of Harry Clemens, Fair Ground, Goshen, Indiana. . Roy Blue, Lessee