Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 18B, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 June 1922 — Page 3

Look! Listen! United States Casiné and U. S. Tube for the price of a casing. All Sizes We put tl)efn'on the amn | Nuf Sed . LIGONIER GARAGE

O.A. Billman Aermotor Auto Oiled Wind Mill Oiled} ()ply once a yr. Gas Engines, - Tanks, Pumps - and Pipes Water supply systems, Well supplies and well drilling Phone 333 . - Ligonier, Ind.

Plumbing and E . \?. ' Heating ~Done By . H. E. ROBINsON Phone 218 . Ligonier . - - Ind.

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Sealp' Massage - Manicuring, Shampooing Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing Marinello Toilet Preparations - i W e - ER Rurlz ~ Auctioneer 2none No. 65, Ligonier., ~ SCALP TREATMENT v Shampoeing and Manicuring , Emma C. Taylor Dr. 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 N Bothwell & Vanderford "~ Lawyers - Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana Ac f-‘raiey and Scieifiifica!ly‘ Fitted. Broken lenses

Mrs.L.P.Wineburg Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q Ligonier . ~ Indiana CHARLES V'INKS AND SON S Dealer in} - x Umun. Vaults, _-Tombstones, Building Stone . . W.H.WIGTON = ~ Attorney-atlaw : Office in Zimmerman Block - LIGONIER, I[ND

- . > w i“ - ' Kodak Printing. Hiebers. 16btf ~ For ‘r’ent a -brick modern house on Mcl.ean street. Inquire of Ora Dill. , i | 10btt WANTED—MAID FOR GENERAL HOUSE WORK IN FAMILY OF TWO. PHONE NO. 419, : _For Sale—l 6 foot Motor boat with 3 h. . motor all in excellent condition Frank Raubert. 17b3t

- For Sale—3 pieces chair, rocker, settee mahogany fimish. Cheap. Phone 385. - - , - 17b2t - Wanted to sell a top buggy good as new at a bargain. Also light spring wagon. . Joe Miller. - 12atf Lost—An automobile crank between Joe Smith’s farm and Ligonier, Decoration day. 16atf ‘Lot plowing and ash hauling done on short notice and at reaSonable terms. Frank Sprague. See either deliveryman, - . - .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* - R . . Wanted, :

Poultry hides and all kinds of junk I will pay the: highest market price. ~Call Joe Miller Telephone 2 on 433 Ligonier. . - 12ats Office Hours. o " T will be in my office at the Mier State: Bank every Saturday evening from 7:00 to 8:30 o'clock for the {ransaction of city business. ' . Karl E. Franks, City Treasurer ' , 10btf Christian Science services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and every Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the hall over Weir & Caowley. Welcome. : it ~ 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 Karn, New Carlisle, Ind. ¢ 10atf - 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. - 4btf Kiester Battery Service.

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 frcm 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. " Bothewell & Vanderford . o AW I Wiston ) o 15btf ‘ Profanity Charged. ~ Public profanity is charged against Mrs. Bernice Hire, of Syracuse, who recently accosted Special Police Officer Bert Mabie on the streets of Syracuse and profanely beraited him for a period of several minutes while a large crowd collected. , v - Tries Suicide. ; Louis ‘Weatherwax 55 despondent over ill health and financial matters attempted suicide at his home in Goshen by throwing himself in front of a N. Y. C. fast train there Tuesday. One eye is gone and a foot severed and the ‘man is in a dying condition in Goshen hospital. : ‘ ' o . Cromwell Couple Are Wed,

-'W. K. Gregg .Jr., and Miss Corrine Pollack both of Cromwell were married Sunday in the Lutheran church at Albion. The bride was graduated from the Cromwell high school in 1918 and has since been employed in the Sparta State bank at . .Cromwell. The bridegroom is a draftsman of that town. : »

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. NEWS NOTES , - Mr, and Mrs. L. L. Keon were Kendallville visitors Tuesday. | The condition of Mrs. G. M. Zimmerman is considerably improved, J. A] Mason 69 is dead at Fort Wayne the result of a fall. ”[ ' - | £ There will be matinee horse races on ‘the Goshen track July 4th. :

( Harriet Galloway of Cromwell has been granted a pension of $3O a month Wanted I want to buy corn. C. L. Chamberlain. Phone 861 Ligonier 18bt{ Mrs. Orrin Sisson died at Kendallville and the fuperal was held Wednesday. - The 17-year locust or cicada as it is more propertly called may; be ‘expected this year. - i Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Cooper :wére over from Albion visiting relatives here the vrst of the week. h _ Miss Gertrude S.tewartfand Don Mg Donald of Brimfield went to Albion and ‘were married. L A new s'o'h,_ has arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McClellan at BEagle lake farm. = = L\ The new .Methodist. Protestant church church at Kendallville when complet-’ ed ‘will cost $25.000. = '} |

Jakie Franks writing, from Detroit Mich.,, says he expects soon to wvisit his old friends in this city. i The Ainsworth Bassett and Arthur Longenecker - families will motor to toledo and spend the Fourth. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Dale Waldron Elkhart township, have: been entertaining relatives from Montpelier, Ohio. Congressman = Fairfield speaking campaign was cut short by vhi!s recall to his official duties at Washington. _ Arthur E. Kelley who spent two months in the New England states on business for Lyon & Greenleaf is home, : v Lightning struck the steeple of the Baptist church in Goshen ‘Tuesday during a storm. But little damage resulted. ' e : Rev, S. W. Adams, pastcr,E of the Reformed church, Goshen, has resigned his job and asks to be relieved at once, o iy Each harvest season appfogimately 200,000,000 Ibs. of binder twine is used in binding the small-grain crops of the United States. o

Charles Lieberthat of Los Angeles, Cal., accompanied by his parents Mr. and Mrs| Dan Lieberthat and daughter of Defiance, Ohio; will arrive in b}o’ city Saturday to be guests of Mr. ahd Mrs. Ferd Ackerman. The engagement of Miss Lieberthat and Joseph Ackerman has been announced. Don’t Use Downey Brome. ... " What is know as downy brome grass has been, received for identifi‘cation a number of times recently by the Purdue university agricultural experiment station. Several farmers have asked if the plant can be used for hay. 0 ' Downy brome grass should not beé used for hay under any circumstances, since it is a dangerous plant,” says A. A. Hansen associate botanist-agri-cultural' extension -department. : - Will Take Outing. - Next Tuesday, July 4th, business in Ligonier will be pretty well suspended while proprietors of stores and their clerks will také an outing at nearby lakes. : | Holiday, Hours Observed. - Regular holiday hours will be observed at the Ligonier postoffice on Tuesday, July 4th. = . '

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA,

DECLARES AUTO CHASED HIM

More Than That, Indianapolis Citizen - I 8 Prepared to Make Affidavit f THe DM

A dweller in Washington boulevard is a witness to‘the truth of the proposition that the age of mysteries is not ‘gone, remarks the Indianapolis. News. He solemnly has asserted, in the presence of neighbors and friends, that an ‘evening or two ago as he was driving toward his home he saw a small automobile of not unfamiliar make standing at the curb, deserted, and ill at ease, for it was belching not only smoke from the exhaust, but living sparks and occasional jets of flame, like a small volcano tipped over; to horizontal. The /good citizen slo-\\% down ta observe the wonder'at clos ‘range, and finally stopped his own -car near the curb, and a rod or two ahead of the modern Moloch, which was still spitting like a demon. But the good citizen had no more than stopped when he, was persuaded to start again. . The persuasion came from: the empty car which—as he affirms and is willing to attest by affidavit—suddenly lurched, groaned like a live creature, and started toward him. He escaped from its path; he looked back, saw it climb the curb and scramble half way acress the sidewalk. Then three men came running,] from across the street and seized and stopped it. The good citizen did not réturn to inquire into the wonder. He had made one narrow escape; he was alive and still clothed .in his right mind, and he knew when he had seen e!nough for one short_ day.:

BROTHERS IN COMMON CAUSE

Matter of Rank of No Consequence in ) Belgians’ War on the Hated S . Invader. Al

.When Brussels was under 'the yoke of the invaders a notable Belgian one day went to the convent of the Jesults and asked secretly if it were not possible to get a letter forwarded to his son, a defender of the Yser.' : “That’s extremely difficult,” they told him. “We are spied upon. The (lermans are move vigilant than ever. Still, we'll see,” : o . A few.days later the father of the soldier saw a workingman coming to his house. = ~ :

“] am sent by the Jesuits,” he said to him. *T'll try to cross the lines, Give me your letter.” Bl “Here it is. Take this for your trouble, and let’s go to the cafe and drink to the success of your mission.” © “With pleasure.” e

A week later the workingman came agaln. He brought the soldier’s reply. Delighted, the Belgian kissed him, and ‘the two again went to the -cafe to drink; this time to victory. After which the Belgian hastened to the Jesuit Fathers to thank them. G “rd like to see the superior,” he said. ;

- “The superior? Why, he was in your house this morning.” : “PThis morning?” : ‘ ~ “Yes, this morning. He was the workingman who carried your letter to Furness.—New York Tribune. '-

, Restoring Ypres. . The ruined ‘city of Ypres is being completely restored at a pace astounding to the hordes of American visitors who have passed that way bound for the south of France and the Algerian and Egyptian resorts. The Cloth hall, that marvelous building of the age of guilds, is gradually assuming the light and delicate beauty which has made it rank with the loveliest of the medieval halls. ‘But many of the Americans who have dropped by Ypres have been highly amused by the mayor’s proclamation, in French and Flemish and then translated into only one foreign tongue, English, to the effect that the visitor is on holy ground, and that a stone or piece of gravel must not' be removed, since all will again be gathered together in the rehabilitated structures. -~ '

New Color Scheme for Maps.

Within the last few years improvements in the stereoscopic effect of relief maps have been attained by a unique color scheme. The effect is well shown ‘when a square is colored with the reds in the center, and the yellows, greens and blues ranged outside. Such a square appears to the eye to be raised in the center.

If the order of the colors is reversed, the central part of the square appears to be depressed. In arranging the colors the tints are varied by careful graduation.—New York Herald.

New Name for Galoshes.

Norman Karr, the five-year-old son of Prof. and Mrs. H. M. Carr of DePauw university, has heard so much about “bootleggers” because of the activity of Sheriff Sears of Putnam county, that he often thinks of them, even though he doesn’t know as much about them as the officer. Recently Norman and his mother were walKing through the campus, when the boy noticed these funny looking things called galoshes, worn by two co-eds. He pointed at the shoes and said to his mother: “Mother, are those the ‘bootleggers’ that daddy talks about?” —lndianapolis News.: S

Has a Sky Scraper. o) . In central Massachusetts, east of the Connecticut valley, is a ridge 0f hills, which after crossing into New Hampshire sends up a welkknown watch ‘tower known as Mount Monadnock, 3,186 feet, says the American Forestry Magazine. This range. continues northward, sending up an occasional peak like Mount Sunapee, the southern Kersarge and Mount Cardigan, ; ~ Wanted lots to plow, ashes and other refuse to haul. Frices for this work very reasonabla, N | Chauncey Wagoner. Gatf Pure Milk and Maple Row cream delivered to all parts of the city, Karl James. Phone Btfi D T

FIND OLD ROMAN CALENDAR Discovery of Immense Historical In- - terest Recently Made—Antedates . That of Julius Caesar. = . A most interesting discovery was made recently at Anzio, in the Roman Campagna. It was of a calendar made of ‘plaster and much earlier than the calendar as made by Julius Caesar in the year 48 B. C. This calendar evidently dates back to between 163 B. C. and 84 B. C, and is the only one yet found which antedates that of Julius Caesar. : e

- Some parts of it are missing, but the rest shows that it was based on a lunar year of 353 days divided into twelve months of 20 and 31 days, with’ a thirteenth month, called intercalary, of 27 days, interposed every alternate year after February. Under this syLstem the year had an average of 36615 days—that is, four days more thana solar year should have. . Gl e Inevitable confusion arose from this, and the college of priests had the right to intervene and correct it whenever they chose by omitting the intercalary month. It was because they often did it for politicdal reasons Q&zm Julius Caesar decided to reform’the calendar and intrusted the work to the celebrated mathematician and astronomer Sosigenes. He based his calendar on the solar year in place of the lunar, and made it one of 365 days. The year 486 B. C. when this took effect was called the “annus confusfonis” (year of confusion), because, In order to make the year 45 begin with the new sun, ninety extra days had to be inserted in the ygar.' The ancient calendar, unique of its kind, has just been published by the Royal Academy of the Lincei. =

FINALLY REACHED THE TOP

Result of Years of Striving on the -~ Part of Bottom of the Strawo berry Box. .

St. Peter was on his way down to thé gates to set them gjar-for the day for some people and to slide the bar in place for others. As he passed along the street he spied an object so small, so tiny, se microscopical in appearance that he stopped to gaze on him and inquire how he had come on high without passing the gate in the usual way. :

“How did you come to get so high as this?” :

“Just naturally. For years and years I've -been getting higher and higher, every year, closer to the top all the time, and now I'm this high.” <

“What are you—a soul?” ) - “Not at all. I;never had a soul and nobody who ever had anything te do with the makirg of me ever had a soul” - St

| “Well, I certalnly do not understand a_agt all how you could get here.” : |#l admit that I don't exactly belong in any such place as this, but when u know who and what I am you ill easily see this, belng the highest ace I could possibly reach, I simply dto get here in time. I just had to 0 out of sight so far as the earth is concerned.” ' ' “Would you mind telling me who or what you are?” o : ~ “I'm the bottom of a strawberry box.” v - e

And the spook editor says that if this did not happen it is about due.— San Antonio Light. :

Says World Is Too Busy.

- Viscount Kato of Japan is not only a nobleman; he is a philosopher. As evidence of this fact listen to a remark attributed to him by a traveler recently returned from Japan: “What's the matter, anyhow, with the world?” the traveler asked in the course of a conversation. - “Tbo many events,” said 'the viscount. ; i ' o

This, we submit, is a rich distillation from oriental thought. Isn’t part of the trouble that we are bestirring ourselves too frantically for our own good, and running around in cireles, and getting in one another’s way, and starting things we ean’t finish—instead of waiting In patience until Nature re-asserts itself and the world regains its health?—The Nation’s Business,

Color Blindness Can Be Overcome. 1 Late experience has shown that the color blind may be taught to name ordinary colors correctly, although they may not see colors as others do. - A conductor on the Southern railway was discharged for color blindness, when he began to study colored woolens and plants, and in five weeks passed a rigid color examination without a mistake. : J : » ‘Doctor Brawley has overcome the disadvantage of color blindness in other persons by a like course of color study.—Cleveland News-Leader. -

Mousetracks in Snow.

Prince William of Sweden obtained during his African hunting trip a fine zoological collection for the Royal Museum of Stockholm—l,ooo mammals, including 12 gorillas, 2,000 birds and more than 6,000 insects. In climbing great volcanoes to an altitude of 13000 feet hd found snow on which were the tracks of mice, although intense cold prevailed there.—Scientific Amer-

Daughter Succeeds Moth“?r\,\P Mrs. Ferris, the new mayoress of ¥he town of Devizes, in Wiltshire, Eng: land, is filling the same office as her mother did 20 years ago, thereby creat--ing a most unusual record. Also interesting is the fact that Mrs. Ferris’ grandmother is still alive and has thus had the unigue privilege of seeing both her daughter and her granddaughter occupying the highest civic positions. For sale two moline mowers cheap inquire of Farmers Co-operative Hilevator Co. e 16a tf ‘» For Sale—Christian church parsonage. Apply to Rev. Thompson or George W. Brown at the Brown & Sgn ferniture store . bt

|| THR | WINCHESTER STORE

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of beautiful glass, EMa’hogany finish serving itays; We have a limited number of glass, ‘mahogany serving trays both oval and oblong value $3.00 which we will put on sale for Saturday only at the special price ot only - | » ‘ SRS This is a wonderful bargain at this price. We want you to see these trays in our windows. This price is good only while our stock lasts, so come early and take your choice. No two alike. Electric Fans to kéep you cool in warm weatho - er. Every fan guaranteed. el e 6 inch $5.00 L Rineh $7.40 -~ 10 inch oscillating ~ $19.50 Gallon Thermic Jugs. Keeps liquids' hot and cold. Gallon size $2.50. - | o o Eel fis for fishing tackle. ~: e B |

THE WINCHESTER STORE | - Phone 67 | Ligonier’s Leading Hardware

2

108 PRINTING ~ at the Banner Office

< THE UNIVERSAL CAR ey e RO £ " e k : : . SO 4 PV el |LA ) ‘D ». il y j s 2% Yoot (2R s %“A A , X} 23 N o 8 T Sl | A%/;/ m’ 1 s A L 1 fi_s?__-‘-?;_‘—\fi‘ 8 ee , 1. 1 SERALIRS i i [ 3¢ - \ : A 4 r"‘" : { ! Pride of Ownership ! : THE Ford Tofiring Car has brought to the farm homes of the country more real pleasure, comfort and convenience than perhaps any other one thing. _ G - It has enabled the farmer and his family to ;ningle ' with friends, attend church, neighborhood functions, and enjoy the many pleasantries that - abound in country life. : * ‘Truly the Ford car with its low cost of operation ; and maintenance, its usefulness and efficiency, has been a boon to the American farmer. | Your order should be placed at once if you wish Ito avoid delay in delivery. A : | Ligonier Universal Sales S Company . |4 S .A\ p Y/ R . S.’ ' ; v' g Tae i s=- e TR g ‘4'l- S 5 AN CONS, N ] e «,-;,\T!t.g’-%w’727:x‘s,;\ B o 724 e ; fl‘w\m N,T " 2 1 /SV. NS «& LB T e W | [TV \J \VJ . Touring tnr r \CARRY I

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