Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 14A, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 May 1922 — Page 3

STOP! Look! Listen! United States Casing and U. S. Tube for the price of a casing. All Sizes We put them on the rim.A g Nuf Sed LIGONIER GARAGE

O.A.Billman

Aermotor Auto Oiled ~ Wind Mill Oiled only once a yr.

Gas Engines, Tanks, Pumps ~and Pipes

Water supply systems, ‘Well supplies and well drilling

Phone 333 Ligonier, Ind.

Plumbing and J ‘ Heating ane By o H. E. ROBINSON l " Phone 218 Ligonier - Ind. -

Harry L. Benner Auctioneer ' Open for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley - County Phones '

Accurately and Scientifically -+ Fitted. Broken lenses - peeed.. Mrs. L. P. Wineburg

: e < & F % © ¥a e % R !%»" S ; AT o 5 ] [EEEEEDEETR AN e SO, ot : Y Pf it 4 ¢ +\ }eé e \ P L ?¢ v 9 B(9 }& , i R N 2 S .e Ly — ST T CR) M - L _ ‘E'}".’.':',‘-fiiiifiiézii ) A 'o‘.’o’:’:”-.’-'n.'c';{ ; SG| = R Y 7T S i - SRR\ Sty B//7% \H‘.’ Sl s jiia - S e e . - 1 W S Ry oSy [ = o N l’ A "‘4'l‘ i e e 8 e 1 Y A,.."‘:'.'_’.“A’O'. "7,' "'.’ £! S \ q\.i;v i ST N Ml '\ ee/ "t S {nresned- )| %g X 1K RIS~ \ ! e ":-;.=:».=.-.u..u.-.‘.,v:.. eoz ‘:’ - >

How I made a hit | - with my husband “THE porch needed new furniture and I hated tospend themoney. Afrignd suggested that I - see what Du Pont Colored Enamels would do. ~ Without saying a word to my husband, I got ‘a can and tried it out on a batteredold chair. Why, it looked almost new! And it really dried hard—not a bit sticky. So I renewed every piece of fur- . - mnitureon the porch and the woodwork in the hall, too. It waseasy and I saved a big furniture bill, which didn’t hurt my popularity with my husband at all.” - ‘This little story applies in _many ways to many ~ homes. How about yours? o ] - Wier & Cowley | : ‘ : ' T i p—— j | met made for every M- e Grar Chomiest e |[P dustry. . A e 1@ i | 2 [l G el [ Colored |

Open - June sth - Hieber ~ Studio "‘At'l Your Service” - Photographs Work of 'Qua’lity.

E. R. Kurtz Auctioneer

Phone No. 65, Ligonier.

EARL WOLF Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere ~~ Phone 16000 Q Ligonier Indiana

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage Manicuring, Shampooing Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing - Marinello Toilet Pi‘bparations o ~ Hair Goods '

W. H. WIGTON

Attorney-at-l.aw

Office in Zimmerman Block - LIGONIER, IND

Bothwell & Vanderford

Lawyers

Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana

© . SCALP TREATMENT . | Shampooing and Manicuring Emma C. Taylor Dr. Gants Residence, One Door South of Presbyterian (Church. Ligonier, Indiana

CHARLES V'INKS AND SO N ‘ Dealer in] Monuments, Vaults, .Tombstones, 5 Building Stone : -

HERE AND THEES

Large line of rubber bathing caps at Griffith’s Drug Sto;'ei’ 14a4t

Mesdames W. H. Bender and Myron Kirkland were Goshen visitors Thursday. - . She ]

_ John Robinson’s circus will be in Elkhart June 6th with a free parade two miles in length. L

W. H. Reed nestor of the printers of Churubusco died suddenly Thursday of heart disease. S 0

. The Riley Smith | home at Albion was damaged to the extent of $lOOO by fire the other evening. _

/, Milton Loeser of (Fort Wayne a traiveling salesman paid his Ligonier relatives a visit Friday.. '~ .

Kendallville merchants will suspend business Wednesday in order to enjoy a weekly half-holiday.

Valspar varnish used for all purposes. lenoleums, floors, and all interior and exterior surfacing. 14a4t

0. G. Bowen made a business trip to the home office of the Indiana & Michigan ‘Elec"t_ric‘ company. in South Bend. | S é :

“Ten Nights in a Barrom” has reformed mbillions see it in a thrilling picture at Crystal Tuesday and Wednesday. ’

Mr. and Mrs. Mifflin Hunter and son Don are in the state capital visiting relatives and to take in the races at the Speedway. e

Mrs. Myron Baker is quite ‘ill of an ear ailment and a. daughter Mrs. C. M. Priest of Albion is bed ridden with a: similar malady. i

The graduating class -of the Pierceton high school will present the play “Who’s Who” at 'the Cromwell opera house tomorrow evening. e

- The countyy board of review will meet at the court house in Albion next Monday June 5.. J. L. Dunning of Ligonier is again a member. y

Mrs. Amos Jeffries and son Carey are on an automobile trip to Lima, Ohio, to visit relatives leaving for the Ohio city Saturday morning. i

A heavy wind and rain storm visited Noble county Thursday ‘night and showers continued Friday. Farm work was again interrupted. -

Mrs. Eliza Cotton for many :years a resident of Noble countyy, died at Churubusco. She was 82 years of age Wilson Knox of, Albion is a son.’

With a robust icarbunkle on his neck Will Wade finds littl rest day or night. The big boil was" lanced Thursday evening but the -operation gave no relief, - ;

The Churubusco Truth notes the recent attendance of Mesdames Charles Wolf and Albert 'Weaver at a.party given by Dr. and Mrs. F. B. Weaver in that town. S 2

Miss Theora Benner, who is spending this summer in Ligonier with her aunt, Mrs. O. W.: Christie, was home over the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mps. Chas./ Benner.--Syra-cuse Journal. b Sl

The Millersburg Grit has -entered upon the 31st year of its publication and from a modest beginning -has grown into one of the! best weekly newspapers in this section under the management and editorship of William B. Barnard. The Banner wishes its neighbor continued porsperity.. . .

. Labor, Capital—the Lawyer - H. P. Sisterhen thinks a good purpose may be served by printing the following in the Banner. After 'the harvest was gathered Capital and Labor fell to disputing. ‘You would not have heen able to reap without me,” said Labor, “so I think I should have all the harvest.” “There would have been no harvest to reap without my foresight my land and my machinery,” replied Capital. “I toek the risk and when I have paid you -for your work I am through.” " N Being unable to agree they consulted a lawyer. far a 8 / ‘Labor has, ' the most voes,” marked this wort’hy; “and so deserves the harvest ;but Labor cannot be trusted with seed, corn in.these days of silk shirts.” : . ; Accordingly he divided the grain into three piles.’ “There,” said he, pointing to the smallest pile, “is Capital’s share.. This, “indicating the mid-dle-sized pile, “is Labor’s wages.” “What is the big pile?”’ asked Capital and Labor together. S | * “That,” replied: the eLarned Man, “is economic loss due to friction in the relations of men.” = And he bhegan to shovel the large pile into his wagon.—George Martin in Life,

Caesareran Birth,

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Foster, residing east of Kimmgll, are the parents of a son, born in Goshen ' hospital Thursday mornin?,' the result of a Caesareran operation. The mother and child are reported in good condition with every indication of. the sspeedy recovery of Mrs. Foster. The Foster family have ipany relatives in Ligonier, ! ;

Dies of Spinal Meningitis, : Mrs. Tome Beezely, 32, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Fetters, of Noble county, died in a Fort Wayne hospital, from the effects of spinal meningitis. The husband and five children survive, the youngest but two months old. She was first taken ill Wwith the mumps three weeks gg

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

ALMOST WORSHIP THE MANGO

Natives of India Have Good Reason - 'to Think Highly of That Really ‘" Wonderful Tree.

Mango trees line ‘the roads on the hot Indian plains which itretch out level “like the palm of a hand,” as far as the eye can see. These trees, about 40 feet in height, clothed in ‘thick, heavy foliage, not only afford a welcome cool shade in the hottest day, but .a variety of fruit which is said to have no rival In sweetness, flavor, deliciousness and food value. Under these trees the village school is’ kept in the forenoon, and the village children learn to love them from their childhood. @« - Nature is very prolific in the tropics, for' one mango tree may yleld almost half a ton of fruit in one season. The mango is a fruit varying in size from a small pear to a large coconut. The thick skin protects the fluvor, and except for the stone, the entire fruit is used in many ways. It is eaten raw, or rather sucked, cut in slices, made into jam, pickles and mango cakes, and is used as a flavor for both sour and sweet foods. ! : - Mango ice cream is a very delicious food, but, perhaps, of all the tree’s products, mango chutney is the most famous. Mango is also used as a medicine, and. is a specific for sunstroke, which it cures almost instantly. The poor Indian peasant loves this tree to almost adoration -because of its wonderful qualities. :

BEGIN “GOING” AND KEEP ON

Life’s Prizes Belong to Those Who Get a Good Start and Refuse to o Be Sidetracked.

It isn’t a good thing to see everything. Make “this one thing I do” your motto and keep on going. A few extra criticisms’ will only smart you up a little and supply the grit that keepsfolks going. ' ' And hearing everything won't help you to advance, either. Suppose folks do complain. Remember, they wouldn't feel happy if they didn’t have something to whine about. Let them whine. You're too busy to do anything but to keep on going. i : If you're ever going to lead, you must start going now. Every fellow is going to wear the blue ribbon one of these days. To excel, you must begin as a youth to make good. Old-age prodigies are scarcer than hen’s teeth, The habit of success ‘will spare you many a heart-ache. Thoughts of failure are the best means of insuring it. Vision that sees only life’s promise, and will that thinks only in terms of victory, rises from what threatens defeat able to cope with ‘any circumstance. It keeps on going.—Grit.

Elephants on Rampage.

" Stories of how an elephant occasionally upsets a circus are not uncommon, but one rarely hears of an orgy of destruction like that which oc¢curred in the Malay peninsula. A herd of wild elephants attacked a railway station, pulling down the stationmaster’s kitchen and bathroom. They did the same to the clerk’s quarters and then tackled the station while the office force looked on from trees. One elephant took off an automatic weighing machine as a souvenir of the raid, but finding it heayy, threw it down on the track. One of the elephants trumpeted the recall and they all went back into the jungle excepe one who fell in a well and had to be got out by human aid, but was not detained. By the time help arrived after a genéral telegraphic alarm the huge beasts had entirely disappeared.

Fireworks Development.

Few industries have shown more development ' within a century than that of making fireworks., The fireworks makers have not only made important contributions to the art themselves, but have taken advantage of many discoveries and Tefinements made by others in-chemistry and mechanics. : ; ' The colors given to fireworks are produced by mineral salts, copper being made to produce green and blue; barium, green; sodium, yellow; ealcium, red, and strontium, crimson. These salts are arranged in combination with meal gunpowder and the recipes for star compositions, rockets, squibs, roman candles and the fike are almost without number. Among the “set pieces” are portraits, lettered designs, “fixed suns,” fountains, palm trees, mosaic work and ships, :

First Method of Advertising.

In Old Testament times, when the countries bordering on the Nile, the Euphrates and Tigris rivers were the center of trade, the Carthaginians used to sail along the Mediterranean with a boatload of their manufactures which they would unload on the coast of Lybia, and having lighted a bonfire near the goods, returned to their ships. The inhabitants, knowing by the bonfire that the Oarthaginians had something to sell, would come out of their city to inspect it. Then they would pile up gold near the merchandise and retire into the city. The Carthaginians would land again, examine the gold, and if in their judgment it was equal in value to the goods they left, they would take it and sail away. This bonfire custom is the first method of advertising of which history tells. G Sl s

" Worth Trying, Anyway. -Cheerful smilés not only help those who see them, but actually help those who smile them to accomplish more, TYY it. frhite st i ¢ ey

Indianapolis Gets Presbyterian Meet. Next year’'s general assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U. 8. A, will be theld at Indianapolis it was decidedipy the commissions Thursday morning at Des Moines lowa. The assembly will open on the third Thursday of May and continue for ten days,

FLOWERS FOR ALL PURPOSES

Some Simple Ruleg the Observance of ~ Which May or May Not Lead to ‘ Popularity,”

' “What you figuring on?” asked the florist of his advertisjngeswriter, ; “On an’ elaboration into details of our plan to say it with flowers. I have arranged to state that the man who wants to smile at his wife should use smilax, that the man that wants to growl at her ought to say it with tiger lilies or dog-tosth violets, that the bird who wants to sweeten her up without the ‘expense of a box of chocolates may use candytuft, that instead of giving her a wrist’ watch you can present her with a bunch of four o'clocks, that he who wants to serve notice on his spouse that he is out of funds needs only hand her a cluster of touch-me-nots, that when the larder is low and the grub money gone he can slip her some butter-and-eggs plucked from the roadside, that if he is bewildered by his ‘love for the sweet young thing he can express his feelings by sending around a nosegay of love-in-a-mist, that if he thinks his girl is a cat and is afraid to say so otherwise he camn endow her with a vase of pussy-willows, that if she has a lowdown opinion of him she can have a corsage bouquet -of skunk cabbage delivered at his house—that’s about as far as I have it worked out now.’— Retail Ledger, Philadelphia,

NOT FOR PUBLIC PERUSAL

New Y&rk Girl Who Kept a Diary . Found Means to Hide Homo- : comings From Mamma,

Ruth was approaching her nineteenth year and she considered herself old enough to remain at social affairs as long as she pleased. Her tolerant mother contended that a girl her age should be home at 11:30. - ‘Ruth kept a diary. When she came home one night after mother had gone to bed mother took the liberty of reading her daughter’s diary. ‘To bed at 12::156 a. m.,” she sald, the New York Bob peys, . : When Ruth returned from the office that evening mother and daughter had a quarrel, It was n(iggfig‘l afterward that Ruth agaln camel home from a dance after every one had gone to bed. Faithfully she sat down and wrote in her diary. Mother arose next morning earlier than the remainder of the family and rushed to_the closet which held the diary. Quickly she turned the page until gshe came to the last contribution. , : “Arose at 7:30,” she read “and went to the office. To lunch with Al, my country Romeo, Home to dinner at 6. To dance at the Centgr with Flossie at 8:80. Fine time, Home——" And then mother could read no more, What followed was written in short: hand. (s '

Drama Democratic.

‘lt is the good fortune of the drama that it is the most democratic of the arts, since it must direct itself to the people as a whole. Yet this appeal to the mul¢itude has never debased the drama. “Hamlet” and “Tartuffe” are most popular plays; and they are also masterpieces of dramati¢ art. Shakespeare and Moliere did not condescend to the public; they gave that public the best they had in them, but with the utmost care' to give it also what they knew it retished. Of course, very few pieces have ever had the breadth of appeal of “Hamlet” and “Partuffe’ ; and the modern dramatist, when he is bullding his play, is likely to have in mind some subdivision of the throng—either the larger segment that craves tNe flerce joys of melodrama or the smaller cross-section that is ever eager to discuss the problem-play.—Brander Matthews. ;

Rubber and Maple Sugar.

An interesting parallel has been drawn between the different varieties of rubber trees in the tropics and those of maple trees in this country. Out of about 1,000 varieties of trees, all of which produce more or less rubber sap, only forty or fifty have been found whose product is considered commercially valuable. ; When a ‘would-be cultivator of rubber goes to a tropical country and sets out a plantation of rubber trees, which the natives know do not belong to the right variety, he causes amused comment, such as would be excited by a South American who came to the United States and bored holes in soft maples with ‘the expectation -of obtaining sugar sap. Experience - has shown that excellent rubber {trees transplanted from their native habitat or other regions having apparent1y identical soil and climate may flourish in growth, yet lose their producing power. Rubber culture requires great expert knowledge. o ‘

Largest Known Coin,

Probably the largest coin in the world is one belonging to Farren Zerp«e, internationally famous expert on rare coins. It is a piece of stamped copper plate 10 inches square, and weighs 614 pounds. It has a value of “4 Daler” (the daler was a coin of varying value) stamped on it, and the date 1730. Such coins were commonly used in Sweden for some time during and after the wars of Charles XII. It is part of a collection of more than 30,000 specimens, representing mediums of ' exchange of all countries and periods from the earliest times to the present day, The total face, or original exchange, value of the collection is counted in millions, but no present walue has ever been placed on it.

NEXT TIME, BUY A Wo;@ A BETTER ;Azrém FOR YOUR <.:iAAR: - ROBINSON ELECTRIC SERVICE . _

67| THE | etity) | WINCHESTER weility) f v/ STORE &> S : Ve 224 H¥ \\\/\ £oip § [ (AR | = o W Bl 2" \y 5 ;:‘“f,“-’f-':::::::i fl e:‘ »»h“ ;>‘T 3 ‘Take a Flashlight w,K \ You ' Wherevenl you go this sumrher; with ihe automobile; on the outing or camping trip; you need a flashlight; the safe, dependable light for all emergencies. . For quality and practical service get a Winchester flashlight. It’s finely and durably made and has special features not found in ordinary flashlights. _ Winchester Batteries are scientifically made to give bright light and long life. They fit all standard flashlights. - o : : A |THE | R sTORE| e~ ‘ (Gifi:?;f’ : WIN CC/[f T[R | Giflhg/w yeitizy) mhones? | gty ) @ Lo i Handurare! = Ligonier’s Leading Hardware - &

e T G A s R pe N - 1 : = R TR, / s t I . "‘{‘\ g 1 AR H AT 3 j N g es%‘f%g:‘; v [ I ) Gy . F’i‘kfi Quickly Applied Egd By ‘j% 3=l The 'fiat.ented shoulder device .I 7_ W, Eral ‘:@ on the Vulcanite Self-Spacing h R .\g;gfflg x 4 Shingle allows automatic ap- ‘&\ ‘ b e ;‘:'Lg:’;;g% . plication. After the first shin- AN 3 ?Lfii‘&@ - gleis laid the succeeding shin- [N b {;;,%3& gles fit snugly to each other. N P ;‘J’i]\.’:\i-"_?fév (00l 5 a Fe ol ] o p &é@?’v’g&%@ This spacing device also allows &fi J’J"’*-‘Z'i‘:-”"%@’ : for perfect spacing and insures ERSN ’ ;zfi;‘%;‘i‘,’@zgy ’%\ a perfectly sealed under-sur- i 53'_';‘1. \W,,:fi‘.fifi%»%fi@ face. Rain or snow cannot be N LR 4’;;;%&,&%%‘, beaten up the grooves between fegXs . L] each shingle and onto theroof BER L/ 0 Youcanonly seoure il 2 ‘T‘E‘?E‘%}}’S i’f&?“@ this pat,ented.feamre s N U gf o in the Vulcanite Self- | ISV NN AL _zm;;w}y Spacing Shingle. We ' [6]S/NB§W ¢ ~ Y caryitinstock. Stop : | in any time to see it. | - See i ; E:fl_,ll ”]t I g a:t ~_*:*__,_\._,,___,« & J Compton & Holdeman : . Phone 276 '

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