Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 18A, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 June 1922 — Page 3
- Son Look! Listen! United _States ' Casing and U. S. Tube for the price of a casing. " Al Sizes We put them on the | rim. - N;uf_Sec‘l."\' e LIGONIER GARAGE
O.A. Billman ’.‘A'e.rmot'or,Auto Qiled . Wind Mill Oiledj only once a yr. Gas Engines, Tanks, Pumps - and Pipes Water supply systems, ™ Well supplies and ~ well drilling -~ Phone 333 ~ Ligonier, Ind.
Plumbing and - - . Heating Done By . H. E. ROBINsON Phone 218 [',igo'nieflr: - md'
Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Faclal and Scalp ‘Massage ~ Manicuring, Shampooing : Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing Marinello Toilet Preparations Halr Goods ; E R Kurtz ~ ‘Auctioneer | ~ Phone No. 65, Ligonier. - "~ SCALP TREATMENT Shampoeing and Manicuring - Emma C. Taylor = . Pr, Gants Residence, One Door South of Presbyterian Church. Harry L. Benner | Auctioneer = Open for all engagemends ' Wolf Lake, Indiana - Both Noble and Whitley . > County’ Phones .
Bothwell & Vanderfé)rd‘ » ~ Lawyers . Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana Ac ~uratey and Scientifically Fitted. Broken lenses Mrs. L. P. Wineburg
EARL WOLF Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q Ligonier @~ Indiana CHARLES V'INKS AND SON . Dealer in} ¥ MV&&!&. :Tom&topu, : . W Weton ~ Office fn Zimmerman Block . LIGUNIER, IND
s ‘:». ' st . 5255 iy E ’ Kodak Printing. Hiebers. 16bif ~ For rent a brick modern house on McLean street. Inquire of Ora * Diil. , o 10bts WANTED—MAID, FOR .GENERAL HOUSE WORK IN FAMILY OF.TWO. PHONE NO. 419. S Wanted to sell a tdp' buggy good as new at a bargaim. Also light spring wagon., ' . Joe Miller. = 12atf ' Lost-—An automobile crank between Joe Smith’s farm and Ligonier, Decoration day, Lo haite
. Lot plowing and ash hauling done on short notice and at reasonable terms. Frank Sprague. See either deliveryman, . - Tatf -~ Young People—Come to South Bend and grow with our city, A South Bend Business College education will put you in on the ground floor. Write for Special Budget of Infomation and date of next term opening. 14a8t* ) . | Wanted, | Poultry hides and all kinds of junk I will pay the highest market price. - Call Joe Miller Telephone 2 on 433 Ligonier. : od2ate i Office Hours, - I will be in my: office at the K Mier State Bank eyery Saturday evening from 7:00 to 8:30 o’clock for the transaction of city business. . Karl E. Franks, City Treasurer e L 10btt
~ Christian Science services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and every Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the hall over Weir & Cowley. Welcome. = | - e For sale nice residence property on West Second street. Good house, barn fruit and shade trees. A bargain for some one desiring to purchase a home, Address Jesse Ilern, New Carlisle, Ind. i ' 10att . Why would you buy a battery guaranteed ‘one year when you can buy a Cooper guaranteed two years for the same money. See me before buying. . e : 4bte - Kiester Battery Service. . For County Treasurer. . Glen S. Rimmell democratic candidate for treasurer of Noble county to be voted on at the electioh November 7 will highly appreciate: the support of the people and if.elected promises to conduct the office with fairness to all the people. - Albtt
Notice to the Public. From June 15th to September Ist our office hours will be from 9:00 a. m. to 4:00 P. M. except Saturday when they will be from 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. ~ Bothewell & Vanderford oo AR T Wigton . - 15btt ~ The Child Was Saved. ~(Wawaka Correspondent). | - Vision of a “little white coffin” flit-.l ted before the eyes of five horrified men when three of them in a high powered car “coming from. Ligonier and two of them driving a big lot of cattle towards Ligonier met in the road just oppobite the Mrs. Graves twenty acres of land, and a little child apparently unaware of anything but its play in the center o fthe road -met their startled eyes. The driver, with an inward prayer steered for the sidgwalk while -the elder of the cattlemén ran ahead of the stampeding cattle and reaching down grasped the infant and ‘hurled it out of danger. "It is not 'yet known+to whom the child belonged. All men relieved their minds afiter seeing the child safely on the sidewalk . - :
! C. E. Convention Closes, . A very successful convention of. the Goshen District Epworth League in which 200 deleagtes participated closed Thursday at Kendallville. Warsaw was chosen as the next place of meet-‘ ing. = . Following are the officers elected: . President— Conde A. Hile FHEtna Green. : : . Secretary—Angle Walker, Goshen Treasurer—Harley Poor, Etna Green : Al : Following are the 'vice presidents chosen:; Paunl Reir, Warsaw; Lula ‘Butt, LaGrange; Lowell Stump, Nappanee; Harold Holderman, Mishawaka Junior superintenednt, Grace Hostetler, Shipshewana. . . 0 Among the features of entertainment were two basketball games. "
Ends Life in Lake, - Amos Perry 60 a prominent citizen of Montpelier, Ind., committed Suicide at Lake George Wednesday when he jumped in the water and was drowned. The body was found in 26 feet of awter. 11l health is attributed as the cause of his act. He had been ailing for some years and had repeatédly threatened” to commit suicide. He had been brought to the lake in hopes of recuperating, = A note found in the victim’s hat on the beach confirmed the suicide theory. : d Pl
© $2,600 Pledged For eYar, Evan Williams of Fort Wayne will continue to act as field secretary for the Indiana Christian Endeavor Society his work Ilast year having been indorsed by the state convention held at South Bend. ' The members pledged $2,600 to carry on the work of the coming year. ' } e : e . : ~ Gives Fish Dinner., i ~ Mr. and Mrs. Joe W. Smith of PleasView fafm entertained at a fish dinner at the Lake Wawasee cottage for Louis Smalley, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kurtz, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil E. Todd and son Charles of Ligonier,
[- NEWS NOTES = - Miss Edith Iden visited relatives in Cromwell. s . S o ———ecr s ~ W. H. Bender is out with a fine new Studebaker sedan. : G Jacob Smalley is in Menio.né._ to visit. relatives a few days. ‘ ' Goshen has 20 applicants for the postmastership over there. - “Goshen women have a Bunco club. They should enter politics. ' The Cromwell chautanqua will start July 22d and last four days. | Jacob L. Sheets ¥isited Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Ke¢rner in Goshen Thursday. Mrs. Scott of Columbia City ‘ll3Bl been a guest at the A. E. Kelley hc me.' Children’s D_‘ay‘ exercises were held at the M. E. church in Cromwell last evéning, = - : o
iMrs. Orrin Sisson is dying at Kendallvilel the result of a stroke of paralysis. i ; ' The May term of the Noble circuit court closed Saturday. It was a busy session, ¢ ! S Anna Crull, a Fort Wayne wdinain was arrested at a Tri-Lake cottage for bootlegging. . i Policeman and Mrs. Bowen and Mr. and- Mrs. John Ferm were guests of Topeka relatives. - . The ‘Elkhart city council has appropriated $l,OOO for free band concerts:in that eity. =~ = e
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Yoder drove up in their new car from Toledo Saturday to visit relatives. e e * Lost—Between Ligénier and Edward Harper’s a brown suit case. Finder please return to this office. - Mrs. Earl :Couts~ of near Brimfield submitted to a serious surgical operation' at her home the other day. }oe e . » J. A Burgrier. of New Castle‘a prominent merchant of that town has been a guest of iLgonier friends. ' For Sale—-—lfi foot Motor boat with 3 h. . motor all in excellent condition Frank Raubert. : *l7b3t For Sale—3 pieces chair, rocker, settee . mahogany ° finish. Cheap. Phorne 385, o 17b2t
Rodney Duke of Nashville Tenn., is a guest of his brother Reginald at the F. P. Wood cottage, Natticro Beach.: - Olin Stansbury arrived home Saturday from Chicago universary and will spend a portion of his vacation at home. i ; : Adolph-»Br@?er 86 for many yea_rs a respected ;resident of Kendallville is dead. Thé widow{and one daughter survive. i Carl Howe aged 9 had a hand badly mangled Thursday while wunloading hay at the farm of an uncle near South Millord. = e e S ; Frank Evans, horse dealer was here from .Goshen and accompanied Charles Shobe to Fort Wayne on a business trip. A s * Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jepson and Mrs. Wilson Jepson came from Goshen Thursday evening and visited Ligonier friends. e ' Roy Johnson of Elkhart was picked up by the Wawasee officer for speeding near Syracuse and it cost the offender about $26. | ¢ ;
~ Councilman and Mrs. Harley Fisher were accompanied home ifrom a visit in Topeka by Edna Peterson who spent some days here.- e ~ Dr. and Mrs. A. E. White and little son of Indianapolis are being entertained 'by Attorney Bothwell at his lake Wawasee cottage. . Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hutchison, Miss Rama Clarke and Arnold Elson spent the week end at the Joseph Smith cottage Buttermilk Point. Pa Friends of the contracting parties here have learned of the marriage of Adrian D. Christie and Miss Railsback formerly of Ligonicr. - : Mrs. H. C. McDaniel expects to pay. distant friends a visit during the summer., She is now the possessor of a new Ford sedan and will do some traveling. ok e 'y | — et I Rev. and Mrs. Jesse Squires will leave Wednesday for Auburn where 'Mr;- Squires will become pastor of the Eirst Baptist church. The family has been residing north-east of ligonier, - 0. ol . .
C. C. Harris 79, a civil war veteran and a native of Noble county died Monday at his home in Kenton, Ohio, He was prominent in chur¢h and G. A. R. cireles, Only his widow survives. ; M Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ziesel of Chicago were here last week calling on friends. They had been spending their vacation with her parents Vernen Hursey and wife, at Ligonier.—Crom. well Advance. » . Claude Harper and family of LaFayetteJafe guests of his parents Mr. and . Leslie Harper. Claude Harper ighconnected with ' government work ahd his business took him to a meeting in Kendallville Saturday evening, e e
AP e WAGNGR \"-,' L / o 0 | 5 s : S (\ e _ ; Ne . 1 Jo . - /12‘2‘_( ,e. ' e : . ..‘i';.’:::'."ts”;":...' " ) 3 eU 4 T st A ' I,';.::&?‘_,' //""o',:?' % ! ) R s 3 [ & ,‘\ A & % Blessed is th’ home in which th’ man an’ wife don't want to read th’ comic section at th’ same time, =
Many Stockholdrers in Noble,
The Daniels Motor Supply Co. of Elkhart was forced into a receivership Thursday afternoon on a complaint by Brown & Bigelow of St.. Paul Minn. which firm allegs that the defendants are indebted to them on an account te the amount of $650. The complainant also avers that the Elkhart business iz in danger of insolvency because of its great number of creditors, rlts debts are given as $16,000 and its assets, as $22,000. There are many shareholders of the company in Noble county, o f
' Burned to Death in Church of God Mrs. -Frank Boggs of Argos was burnéd ‘to death|in the basement ot the Church of God following an explosion which occurred when in start: ing a fire, she poured gasoline in the stove instead of oil. - : E
At ‘the time of the accident which resulted in her death, Mrs, Boggs, with ‘Mrs. Simon Railsback was cleaning up the basement rooms of the church following a conference held there. i
Many Wool Biankets,
~Farmers of Noble county pooled 17,268 pounds of wool at Albion last week which has gone forward to the Ohio Wool Growers’ association at Columbus. Fleeces from every township in the county were receivéd by Chairman J. W. Harvey in charge of the work. It was announced that 250 pairs of blankets were ordered. L
Wedded :Amid Flowers.
Miss Esther Paige of Columbia City was married Wednesday afternoon to ‘R. V. Hatfield of Indianapolis the ceremony being performed.in a maple grove surrounded by a green bough fence, while daisies. iris roses, hollyhocks and tiger lilies were banked iff the corners and elswhere about the lawn, i : il ‘
- | Youth Confesses Robery. Floyd Maggert Columbia City was arrested on a charge of grand larceny and bound over to the Whitley circuit court under $l,OOO bond. Maggert made complete confession, admitting thefts totalling $72.72. He was caught with a marked $5 bill in his possession shortly after he had taken it from the cash drawer,
To Attend Library Convention,
Mrs. Lena Stansbury Ligonier librarian left Sunday for Detroit, Mich., where she will spend a week attending a convention of the American Library Association. She will also visit O. C. Wolf a brether and Mr. and Mrs. Otis D. Nusbaum while in that city. In her absence her son Olin will be in charge of the libray here: ;
Rare Relies Stolen.
On the third floor o 'fthe court house at Fort Wayne a collection of relics of the early days o fthe county was on exhibition for the benefit of the visitors. Owing to ' the continual thieving by & class of relic hunters the commissioners were compelled to close the room to all visitors. |
To Change Position,
July Ist Virgil Todd who has been in charge of the Levy furniture store will accpet -a position as traveling salesman for the Klamer Furniture company of Evansville, His territory will be Ohio and Pennsylvania. Mr. "Podd will continueé tu reside in Ligonier. : . - %
Stifles Woman’s Cries.
_ Mrs. Charles Williams Fort Wayne, was choked by an early morning visitor while she was making an investigation of unusual sounds in ‘'her home. The burglar escaped through an open window after rendering Mrs. Williams unconscious. b
s Klotz Gets Good Job.
Elmer Klotz the contractor will assist in the comstruction of a tive-siory office building in Elkhart leaving for that city today. The job will take close upon a year to finish, The pay is 90 centgs an hour.” = . . :
'To Resume Qperations, The plant of the Huffman Bros. Motor Co. at; Elkhart which has been closed down for the last eigth months will .be in operation again within a few days, according to an announcement made there. L
Walb is Vice Chairman,
Clyde A. Walb of LaGrange chairman of the Twelfth district republi: can committée has been named vice chairman of the state republican com. mittee, Two women were added to the vice chairmanship. Lo
~ 'For sale two moline mowers cheap inquire of Farmers Co-operative Elewtor 00, .. o M
For Sale—OChristian church parsonage. Apply to Rev. Thompson or George: W. Brown at the Brown & Son furniture store, e D
JMADE MOCK OF SCIiENTISTS Man Emerged Unharmed. From Oven -in Which Chicken and Bsead ¢ b Had Been Roasted. - For a wager of $2OO a man named Martinez suffered himself to be practically baked alive some years ago in Paris in the presence of a number of ‘sclentists. He -entered a huge oven, Specially built, after it had been heated to g temperature of 312 degrees Fahrenheit, or about 100 degrees hotter than boiling water, o | . Then the door was' closed, and he was left alone for an hour, in company with. an uncooked chicken and an unbaked loaf of bread. Candles weré also provided that he might have light during his incarceration—or inciner--ation, as many people thought it would turn out. ; e ; ~ When he was released, however, he 'was found alive and well, with the chicken and loaf cooked to a turn. The candles had become Roiling tallow. Martinez afterward repeated his performance in Brussels, Milan and other cities, but there must have been something abnormal in his constitution, since of several would-be emulators of his feat none succeeded in staying out the full hour, while two, at least, perished miserably. . : ' Probably his success was due in part to the care he took to have every particle of moisture extracted from ,the oven before he entered it, since it is a /well-gnown fact that hot, dry air does ‘not so adversely affect a human being as hot, moist air.—Detroit News.
NIGHT ON THE AEGEAN SEA e e y Author’s ‘Beautiful. wbr'_d Painting of Marvelous Pictures Formed by oy the Lunar Rainbows.
Writlng of lugar rainbows, in his “The Opal Sea,” John C. Van Dyke says: “And what "pictures, never painted by master, ancient or modern, are to be seen by the weather rail at night when the lunar rainbow with its arch of subtle light-and-dark follows on thé ship’s beam, when the purple water flashes through the patches of the mist. The summer nights upon the ‘Aegean when the small island steamer sweeps you past Syrian ships becalmed—their hulls lost in the low-lying vapors, their’ sails looming above the drifts into the white moonlight—are never to be forgotten. They are only impressions of intangible lignt and color, momentary revelations of plctorial poetry without literary meanIng or assoclation; and yet very insistent revelations, very striking impressions. We do not readily defipe them, but we feel their effect upon us, nevertheless. It is an effect analogous perhaps to that produced by music—pale music in a minor key, dreamy music that moves in slow-heaving cadences or faints in realms of sun-shot haze or gleams in cherds of lustrous isilver.” =
Immortal Poets.
. The palm for exquisite poetry should go to Keats. In lofty ideas of death, Wordsworth and Bryant march hand in hand. Shelly, compared with the other three, seems immature. As to these four poets, it is curious to note that Bryant died at the age of 84, his death being caused by a sunstroke when he was giving an| address in Central park, New York, on the unveiling of a statue; Keats died of consumption in Rome at the age 25, and was buried there, in the old Prqtestant cemeteryi—the = following epitaph (which he had desired placed there) being-put on his tomb: “Here lies one whose name was writ in water.” Shelly was drowned when he was salling on the Bay of Spezia, before he was quite 80, -and was cremated (although his heart would not burn), and the ashes buried near the grave of Keats, and Wordsworth died at the age of 80, at Rydal Mount, Westmoreland. i Color Blindness. It is declared that people suffering from color-blindness often have better, clearer vision than people with normal sight. While 4 per cent of our male population suffer from color-blindness, only one-half of one per cent of the fe‘male population is affected. This imperfection of the sight is yery pronounced among Jews and Quakers. The origin of color-blindness is as completely unknown to sclentists as is the reason for thus attacking only certain sections of people, but women may be free from it, probably because their eyes ‘have been trained to color for generations, while Quakers are peculiarly susceptible; owing to the monotonous color. of their garments. Color-blind-‘ness runs in a family for generations, and, although it is always in the males, it descends through the females. The daughters of color-blind men invariably hdave color-blind sons.—The Sunday at Home, = . = % . :
Sterilizing Instruments. : After trying many plans, 1 believe | that the best way to sterilize delicate cutting instruments is to lay them in pure carbolie acid for ten minutes, then rinse them off in sterile water, place them in 95. per cent alcohol for 15 minutes, and finally lay ‘them in a tray of sterile water, writes Dr .Edwin B. Miller, assistant professor of opthalmology in the University of Pennsylvania in an article in the New York Medical Journal. In the bottom of each tray there should be a sterile gauze pad. They are then laid out on a table covered with a sterile sheet in the order in which they are to be used in the operation. This saves confusion and aids the assistant to pick up quick: ly the needed imstrument. They are then covered with a sterile towei! tintil the surgeon is ready to use them. * Wanted lots to plow, ashes and other refuse to haul, Frives for this work very reasonabls, - ~* Chauncey Wagoner. 6atf : # 0 e TR o - o ~ Pure Milk and Maple Row tream delivered to all parts of the city, Earl L.nune::, Phone 831. .=~ . &btt
72 i)
ces RS WINCHESTER . STORE
Wash Boilers . -1 IWe have just received a - large shipment of the fam- . ous Lisk wash boilers. These ~ boilersare known to every - housewife and are recogniz- - ed, as the leading boiler. - When you buy Lisk you take _‘nochance. The sprices are also much lower. - No. 8 all copper $4.50 No. 9.a1l copper $4.75 . ~No. 8 copper bottom $2.35 ‘ oNS - $2.50 s | No. 8 Galvanized $1.75 = : oo N 9 - $2.00 o - Note the above prices andremember that .* S the above are Lisk boilers, ‘ - Electric Fans $5.00 up - | = 8 b We Want you to ;know thaf EleCtrlC I'rons-, we are selling the Domanico iron for $4.50. This high quality iron at a. low price is made possible by large production. A fully guaranteed iron. A NEW IRON FREE if the heating elements ever burns out. Remember that the price is only $4.50. Also the Hot Point and Sunbeam irons. We furnish you with hardware at the market price. = Eant ~ Ice Cream Freezers All Sizes ' 2 Qt. Galvanized $1.50 4 Qt. Freezer $4 75 = 8 Qt. Freezer $725 69 ‘ ~ °”‘ $5.75 | 10 - i 3 $9OO ‘
THE WINCHESTER STORE ‘" Phone 67 Ligonier’s Leading Hardware
Gifts> ity
DAILY BETWEEN CLEVELAND & BUFFALD
Ny e “ : : o » 3 MAGNIFICENT STEAMERS '3 | . The Great Ship “SEEANDBEE” — “CITY OF ERIE” — “CITY OF BUFFALO” § T I S S S BETWEEREN ———-—————_—'—_- 3 . CLEVELAND — Daily, May Ist to Nov. 15th —BUFFALQ ) g ane%gxuxo . 9:OOP.M.§' | EASTERN Leave Burraro - 9:00P. M. § Arrive ALO - T:80A. M, STANDARD TrMe { Arrive CLEvELAND = T:3OA. M. & " Connections at Buffalo for Ni?m‘Fafln and all Eastern and Canadian points. Railroad tickets & reading between Cleveland and Buffalo are good for transportation on our steamers, Ask your X ticket tllfent or. tourist agency for tickets viz C. &B. Line. New Tourist Automobile Rate--§lO.OO & Round Trip, with days return limit, for cars not exceeding 127 inch wheelbase. : - R ‘@ Beautifully colored sectional puzzls chart of The Great Ship “SEEANDBEE" seat on recointof Bt five cents. Also ask for our 32-p-g:pictn:ial and de.criptiv% booklet free. UIR o The Cleveland & Buffalo : ; _ 3 Transit Como%?ny . N 58 = 2 Cieveland, o ; i \e, =5 0 v The Great Shi 8% . % z 5 5 «szs.«mn"tn- e N . ~the largest most costl: TAW RN : . pu-engerSuuneronhhnX‘ N i\‘ P\\\x'fi% waters of the world. Sleeping (S pmSRItIE NS AR JEY. \\\‘A‘ ' eapacity, 1500 P cLe .t;“';gi_“’_ e Ll\li_"::‘.:g ‘L'\hi! ) % 5 —-m % SSe FRfadd 2T - wor ":3%s3?&;\“‘3!{l;\‘%;——' m——— i ANOGEs ‘, .;\-_:*:"":T."f‘_ l.— 'L?’:‘i' [ s wok ' BT To B o 5 t"“‘»;: m : : ST BDR o S YSN(2 SV O SRR B
Read the Banner
Special Prices on Tires Sizes: ‘32x3+ 32x4 33x4 34x4 32x45 o oooAxe) a 7 All U. S. Fabric Tires of the above - sizes, Usco, Chain and | Nobby Tread 33} Off List Prices These prices will last only a short time and ' buyers should take advantage. These: Tires are all firsts and are BEN CLASEN NS
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