Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 20A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 July 1922 — Page 3

Look! Listen! United States Casing and U. S. Tube for the price of a casing. | All Sizes ‘We put them on the ) rim. | " Nuf Sed ‘ O.A. Billman Aermotor Auto Oiled iiNed M. Qiled] only once a yr. Gas Engines, Tanks, Pumps and Pipes Water supply _systems, Well supplies and- - well drilling Phone 333 e e ”Ligonie'r, Ind.

Plumbing and - Heating ' ane By; : H. E. ROBINSON Phone 218 Ligonier ' - Ind.

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage - Manicuring, Shampooing Hair Tiating and Hair Dressing Marine 110 Toilet Preparations 5 Hair Goods ~ e e ee} E. R. Kurtz J € i Awuctioneer : 2none No. 65, Ligonier. SCALP TREATMENT Shampooing and Manicuring Emma C. Taylor Dr. Gants Residence, One Door South .of Presbyterian Church. * Liggonier, Indiana

‘Harry L. Benner | Auctioneer . : Open for all ds PWolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley ; County-‘lPhoqes Bothwell & Vanderford : Lawyers ; ‘ Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana GLASSES = Accuratey and Scientifically . _Fitted. Beoken lenses Mrs.L.P. Wineburg

EARL WOLF ; . " Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q Ligonier Indiana CHARLES V'INKS AND SON _ - Deslarin] o " Mesumenwm, Vaults, ‘Tombstones, 2 ""’mfl’“ i e el

Kodak Printing. Hiebers. * 16bif 5 -————-——‘ Wanted I want to_buyflcorn. C. L. Chamberlain, Phone 861 Ligonier 18btf For rent a brick modérn house on McLean street. Inquire of Ora Dill. ; 2 10btf WANTED—MAID FOR GENERAL HOUSE WORK IN FAMILY OF TWO. PHONE NO. 419. 1 For Sale—l 6 foot Motor boat with 3 h. . motor all in excellent condition Frank Raubert. 17b3t

Wanted to sell a top buggy good as new at a bargain. Also light spring .wagon. Joe Miller.. 12atf ‘Pure Milk and Maple Row cream delivered to all parts of the city. Earl ‘James. Phone 831. “ bbtt Wanted lots to plew, ashes and other refuse to haul. FPrices for this work very reasonabls, . ‘Chauncey Wagoner. Gatuf For sale two moline mowers cheap inquire of Farmers Co-operative Elevator Co.. o 18e For Sale—Christian church parsonage. Apply to Rev. Thompson oOr George W. Brown at the Brown & Son: furniture store. bt 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. ~ ; 12atf . Office Hours. : I will be in my office at the Mier State Bank every Saturday evening from 7:00 (o 8:30 o’clock for the transaction of city business. - Karl E. Franks, City Treasurer e 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 & Cowley. Welcome;y & For sale nice residence property on West Second street, Good house, barn fruit and shade trees. A bargain for some one desiring ta. “purchase a home, Address Jesse Kern, New- Carlisle, Ind. . L 10atf Why would you buy a Dbattery guaranteed one year when you can buy a Cooper guaranteed two years for the same money. See me before buying. ; B : 4btf Kiester Battery Service.

A Warning.

The scandal circulated about Miss Gussie Gockel is not’ true and who ever continues to slander her will.be prosecuted. ; = = - : : M : e N ; , . Bank Buys Bonds. The Mier State Bank purchased the city improvement bonds. issued by the city of Ligonier through Treasurer Franks. The issue was for $3,700 and theb ank paid a premium of $l5O. Theb onds bear 6 per cent interest and are non-taxable. The investment is regarded as a good one. The bonds go toward. paying the cities share of the street paving. . : 0

Poison Gas to be Barred.

The League of Nations disarmament committee discussed the advisability of extending the Washington conference treaty governing.the use of poison gas in warfare to all the nations belonging to the league. The committee decided to postpone the action until the gignatories to the poison gas treaty had been notified that all the powers represente.] at Washington had signed the treaty.

Makes Generous Contributions.

The Farmers Co-Operative Elevator Company- through Manager Odle ‘has generously centributed: boards out of which to construct benches for Freed park and the work of con‘structing the seats is being done by Mel Rodgers the baker. No residents of Ligonier have a higher appreciation .of Freed park than Messrs, Odle and Rodgers.

Would Cost $15,000.

Baltimore & Ohio railroad officials estimate it would cost $15,000 to make the fill and build a bridge on the south side of the B, & 0. from Syrécuse to ‘Jones’ Landing at Lake Was wasee. The Kosciusko county com‘missioners have gone over the ground and are thoroughly acquainted with .the projeet. : ; ) ~-~ . Blames Mother. j Chester Arkuszewski 11, blamed his ‘mother when drraigned in a court at Laporte on a charge of stealing a revolver from Clarence Smith. The youth said his mother had told him to take the gun. o v

Young People at Winona, 1 Between 200 and 300 young people from all parts of the middlc west are aftending the annual Presgbyterian Young Peoples conference being held at Winona lake, o Died at Winoma, | John Dorsey 79 died at Winona lake following an . illness of 'several 'months. He formerly resided on a farm near Oswego. . | Elkhart county reports a stock of S e priaes.. . - e L s e SR e s S

NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS State of Indiana, Noble County SS: \ln the Noble Circuit Court, October Term 1922 v : To quiet title : > - No. 8276 ' ‘ lona Wilkinson and :

Rosalie Dickinson,

v's = : John L. Cavin et al. : . Come now said plaintiffs by Both well& Vanderford, ' their attorneys, and file their complaint herein together with the ‘affidavit' of a competent person that the residence upon diligent inqury is unknown of the following named defendants, to-wit; Caddie B. Scott, L. D. Scott whose

christian name is unknown to plaintiffs, Perry McMann, Jane Bailey; that the names of the defendants are unknown and that they are helieV,ed] to be non-resiedtns of the state of Indiana, sued in this action by the following names and designations, towit: « “the unknown husbands and’ wives, respectively, of each of ‘the following named persons, to-wit: Dora Cavin, Perry McMann, Jane Bailey, then ames of all of whom are unknow to plaintiffs; the unknown widowers and widows, respectively, of each of the following named deceased persons, to-wit: Dora Cavin Perry McMann, Jane Bailey, the names of all of whom, are unknown to plaintiffs; the unknown children, descend‘ants and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors and administrators of the, ‘estate;, devisees, - legatees, trustees ‘and executors of the last will and testament, successors in interest and as.signs respectively, of each of the following named and designated deceased person, to-wit: Isaac Cavin, William Cavin, Mary Glant, Perry MeMann Jane Bailey, the names of all of whom are. unknown to plaintiffs; all of the women once known by any of the names and designations above stated, whose names may have been changed, and who are now known by other names, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; the spouses of all of the persons above named, described and designated as defendants to this action| who are married, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; all persons and corpbrations who assert or might assert any title, claim or interest in or lien upon the real estate described in the complaint in this actiq& by, under or through any of the defendants to . this action named, described and designate in said complaint, the names of all of] whom are unknown to |plaintiffs;” that the’ following named defendants to-wit; Dora Cavin, VictorCavin and Vern Cavin John Calbeck are each and all non-residents of the State of Indiana that this action is instituted to quiet title to real estate in the State of Indiana. that a cause of action exists against all.| of the: defendants named, described and designated hereinabove and that they are necessary parties to this.action; that each and all of the above named described and designated defendants are believed te be non-residents of the State of Indiana. The following real estate in Noble County State of Indiana is described in said complaint, to-wit: lot number sixty in the original plat of the town, now city of Ligonier: | This action is instituted and prosecuted byz said plaintiffs for.the purpose.. of quieting their title to the Teal estate above iescribed as ‘against all demands, claims and claimants whatsoever. . <

'Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants that unless they be and appear on the Ist day of October 1922 Term of the Noble Circuit Courts of Indiana, being ‘the 2nd day of Octobe® 1922, to- be begun ‘and holden on said 2nd day of October, 1922, at the Court House in the town of Albion, in said County and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. - | In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said. Court at the office of the Clerk thereof in the town of Albion, Indiana this 3rd day of July. 1922, i g Isaac Deter, Cletrk of the Noble Circut Court Bothwell & Vanderford, Attorneys for Plaintiffs, ' - . plaintiffs. 20a3w

Raspberries Are Scrambled.

"Harry Goldstine of Benton Harbor, Mich., suffered a dislocated shoulder and was severely shaken up, and Israel Zweig Fort Wayne suffered a bruised foot and minor injuries when a& Ford truck driven by the latter hit the rail of the Blue river bridgc, three miles north of Churubusco and crashed into_a 15-foot ditch. About 100 cases of raspberries which the two were taking to the Fort Wayne mar. ket were a total los. The truck was badly wrecked.

Vietim of Celebration,

Mary daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C, L. Heffelfinger of Churubusco was taken to the Lutheran hospital in Fort Wayne suffering from a severe gunshot wound inflicted during the Independence day celebration in that town.

Several l_ll_bs . Broken,

Wallace W. Mehl suffered three or four broken ribs a sprained wrist and a sprained thumb while playing baseball at the Goshen college. i

- Tramped by Horse, f william Blosser 66 former Warsaw resident, was trampled to death by a horse near his home in -Gaston, Ind. Herbert Blue and son Ernest visited relatives in Benton township over the week end. Lan e .u-——-—-—-—— M A marriage license was issued Friday in REikhart county to Stuart P. Carney, Ligonier ‘and Miss Bdna E. |Kitson, Syracuse, | | Mr. an Mrs. James K. Bailan spon | several days with Mr, and Mrs, F. P. { Wood at thetr Wawasee cottage raess “\‘,»‘;,‘*hbw‘,w, G PlesE ol S o

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

HEIRS OF THE MIDDLE AGES

Artists of Today Are But Carrying On the Work of the Old Master 7 ~~ Craftsmen.

The art of the Middle ages is really the art of youth. It has' no finality, because that which it expresses can never be finished. It lives, with unmeasured potentialities still before it. Until the Renaissance, and men's subsequent concentration upon commerce and science, it seldom rested in the West, but grew from one stage to ‘another—as in our still living arts—of painting, and music, poetry, and the drama—we still.move and change and grow, 1 : y

- The Middle ages were the age of youth. I do not mean merely of young nations, but of men who were building up the future and had unlimited development before them. It was our youth, and we are growing from it. In so far as our art lives—the art of our intelligentsia—it 1s growing from that stem. In so far as it is dead, it is in those forms of art which have ignored their own parentage, such ds architecture, ornament, the crafts, and much sculpture, and have tried to form themselves from ancient models in the pedantry of the schools. They are cut off from the stem' and they languish. But painting, like music and pboetry, has gone on without a break and is alive today. . . . Let us take heart. We are the heirs of those old craftsmen.—Percy Dearmer.

ALL DOGS NOT COLOR BLIND

Belief That Has Long Been Held ls Now Declared to Be Entirely ~ Wrong Impression. . :

An eminent authority once asserted that all dogs were color blind. He quoted, in support of his statement, the case of two pug dogs who were unable to distinguish the difference in color of the plates from which they were fed. :

' The color sense may he entirely lacking in pug dogs, which are not renowned for their sagacity; but to assume that every other dog lis color blind is a deduction far from the truth. . :

Not only can dogs be trained to recognize color, but they possess the natural color sense in a very high degree. They can differentiate between various subtle shades and tones, and their likes and dislikes are’ strongly developed. R ’

A fox terrier has been known to follow at a distance a perfect stranger, solely because she was wearing a dress similar in color-to that worn by his mistress. Ohly upon approaching the woman did he find his mistake.

. Advised “Flying Ships” for Mails. More than 100 years ago when the United States mails were being transported by carriers on horseback, the editor of the Freeman’s Journal, now the Norristown (Pa.) Herald, suggested the use of “flying ships.” In the issue of the Freeman’s Journal of March 1, 1822, the editor wrote: “We would advise the postmaster general to avail himself of the novel and the very ingenious flying machine, invented by James Bennett of Philadelphia, by which we conceive, the mails would be transported with more celerity and their arrival at the places of destination be much more certain than is the case at present.” Postoffice records show that in 1833 a “wonderful feat” was performed in carrying the mail and news dispatches, by relays of horses every five miles, between Washington and New York, in 15 hours. -

“Bird of Passage.”

The earliest use of the term “bird of passage” is found in ' eighteenth book of the Natural History of Pliny the Elder (23-27 A. D.), where -he says: *Phe bird of passage known to us as the cuckoo,” and the term has since been applied to birds which migrate with a season from a colder to a warmer, or from a warmer to a colder climate, divided into summer birds of passage and winter birds of passage. Such birds always breed in the country to which they resort in summer, that is, in the colder of their homes. The term is said fo have been first applied to sailors by Bacon who declared that the uncertainty, instability and fluctuating state of human life was most aptly represented by those sailing tifte ocean.

Vast Sum Spent for Food.

The people of the United States spend more than $49,000,000 a day for food, or nearly $1,500,000,000 a month. Nearly one-third of the money goes for. bread, potatoes, fruits, sugar and other food of a vegetable nature. More than two-thirds is spent for meat, fish, eggs, cheese and lard. The average householder hands over to the butcher more than one-fifth of his income, The people of this country consume in a year two and a half billion eggs and near ten and a half billion gallons of milk. But a large part of the milk goes to make 1,600,000,000 pounds of and 1260,000,000 gallons of ice' cream. ‘butter, 400,000,000 pounds of cheese —Philadelphia Ledger. ey

Rosewood Merely a Name. Rosewood, so much used in making fine. furniture, is not the wood of any rose tree, but is that of several species of tree and so called becauseiit has a -perfume of roses and a generally rosy ~color. One kind' comeés from Surinam and ig very fragrant; another from Brazil is the Dalbergia pigra F. All, according to Safnuel J. Record of Yale. There is ‘also a rosewood from Honduras which is considered the best in the world for xylophone bars. . Lost—An automobile crank between Joe Smith’s farm and Ligonier, Decotation ‘day. . 0 0 00w (TR " Lot plowing and ash hauling done on short notice and at - reasomeble terms, Frank Sprague. See elther deliveryman, . Tatt

POETS AND THE OPEN ROAD Observant Veteran Seems Somewhat Contemptuous of the Annual i “Call of the Wild” “This is the time of the great poet exodus,” remarked the observant veteran, according to the New York Sun. “From now on you can look forward with confidence to hearin’ announcements from' two or three thousand minor poets that they're leavin’ the deadly city behind and are takin’ to the open road. Several hundred of 'em admit for the first time it's their wild gypsy blood that makes ’em take this desperate step. - Others cry out that they can’t resist the gppeal of the open road ahother minute, except it was to take ten or fifteen minutes to -dash off another peem startin’ ‘Oh, ho,’ or words to’that effect. |

“Weakness, I call it. Spring is the season of sap and sapheads. Common sense is good enough for those vagabonds three-fourths of the year, and then their character goes to pieces like a snowbank under a March sun.

. “It's lucky they never quite get started. They might get away if it wasn’t for ‘the fact that one poem leads to another. So they have to stay In the heartless city and get on with thelr work. Othérwise the brakebeams of the country wotld be as congested as the East side, and the trunk roads would be cluttered up with hundreds of poets, leapin’ into-the air every. three or four yards, from the sheer joy of livin’, as they call it. “No, you expeet love poems at this time of year, and poems on the remarkable color the grass is takin’ on, and poems on the unprececdented tendency in trees to leaf out. But the next poet that asks.me up in his Eighty-ninth street piano-box apartment to listen to his ‘Sing ho! for the open road’ is goin’ to be glven assistance on his way.” Lo

MAY IMPORT ENGLISH IDEA

American Rallroads Likely to Adopt the System of Articulated Trains -2 ln Use There.

Articulated railroad trains devised to lessen the passenger rolling stock and increase the capacity are those in which the ends of adjoining caxs are carried on a single truck. They have been used in England for several years. The cars are “permanently” coupled together. Each train, says the Scientific American, whether of two, or five, or ten cars, forms a unit, the trucks of which are so disposed that the distances between their centers throughout the train are all equal. Trucks are placed under the outer eu{ds of each train, the other trucks being placed under the adjacent ends of the car bodies forming the system. Sets of five bodles on six trucks have been running for many years on the Great Northern; and there is no constructional reason or any other apparent reason why trains consisting -of 10 or 15 such cars should not be built, where the traffic calls for the use of larger units, .| : ] s

There are four principal advantages which have been proved in the experience of the company, with these trains. 1, reduced first cost; 2, reduced weight ; 8, reduced running cost; 4, Improved riding of cars. The last.is due to the fact that there is no overhang of the bodies beyond the trucks, and that the adjacent ends of the bodles are carried on a ‘common truck center.

Opera at Labor Wages.

An excerpt from a Dresden paper bewails the exodus of first-rate opera singers In Holland, Sweden, Spain and Amerjca, and describes the state of affairs in which the Dresden opera company finds itself. So hard up is Dresden for talent, the paper says, that guest singers must invariably be asked from Leipzig or Berlin to fill' in for others who have left for foreign shores. On. one evening ‘alone, four guests sang, and as much as 4,000 marks, and even 7, 000 marks have heen given out on such occasions as honorariums to guest ‘singers. Dividing by the .200 marks which it takes, these days, to make an American dollar,’that makes $2O to $35 for an evening’s aggregation of guest singers.

Iron Ore Discovered In Argentina.

Iron has been discovered = pear Necochea, in the southern part of the province of Buenos Aires, Argentina, in such quantities that government officlals say a proper exploitation of the field will free the republic from dependence on other countries for its iron supply. s S The iron was found along the coast in the sand dunes that extend from the south of Patagenes to Cape San Antopdec - o 0 ; This is the same region in which petroleum indications were found recently and ' concessions have been asked for the working of both iron and ofl fields. — Cleveland’ NewsLeader. i it

Speed of Passenger Elevators. The office of public buildings and grounds says that the elevator in the Washington monument makes 100 feet a minute. As the elevator shaft in the monument ig 500 feet high, it makes this distance in five minutes. The two elevators In the Woolworth building which operate from the ground to the fifty-fourth floor rise 700 feet in one minute and these are the highest rise ‘and fastest traveling elevators in the world. . Although elevator service is provided in the Riffel tower, Paris, to. @ height of nearly 1,000 feet, three lifts. must be used to reach the top, the highest rise of a single lift being about AR foel - e E

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Gifis> ety

Lo TR WINCHESTER ~ _STORE

. Lt KR IMNER HEAT weet ./% 3 & Suseoul'e!e‘:tgc-% . 1A Gy "WV A sure guide to a c i ’J :K o) e day. Wehave awide j ¥ e awids 'L / \“u Y T variety of dependable - ”"S\g “Peet fans which we will be o \”\‘? ‘\\’ @ pleased to showyou. All \%%i . are fully guarant@ , e /’ . 6in.fan $5 8 in. $7.50 @5B 10m Osclating fan Hoon TTR L e % For service and ‘convience RB ISR : ‘ use one of ourelectricirons. (o) o We want you to get acg- @ VAN uainted with the electrical ';{ ! merchandise carried in our S g store. We take pride “in e our fine line of dependable 4Ff# el | electric irons. We are pleas- S oy T ed to announce a reduction in price of the Sugbeam iron—the worlds best iron. You can now buy this iron at the same price you have been paying for other irons. In the Sunbean you get the best iron made at small expense. ' Call and see it ~ Price now only $6.00 T ~ Also the well known Hot Point iron $6.00 ' Also the Domestic iron guaranteed at the low pricd $4.50 . - Electric toasters and grilles. The 'W well known Universal line of -up.l I ‘ ‘:, : . ¥l‘ ."_" “ right toasters $6.75 to $8 - 1!“’ \!;Ilfi " Sunbeam grille $8 » AR“M) ‘ :.ArmstrOng table Stove $12.50 ' " ———=d Electric hot plates $1.95 & $2.95

WER & COWLEY

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

Gift> leitity ) iy

LA T Je= @ P ‘ /25 ¢‘\¢ " ”-—s};.'! /4 B¢/ , A 8 . - R % o - BRElrih & ' AVERY good tire at a very low . price. Just another instance of Fisk extravalue. As true withthe Fisk Premier Tread as with the Fisk Cord —compare with competitive tires and you will find extra size, strength and resiliency in the Fisk. Comparison proves Fisk Quality; it also proves common-sense buying. T There’s a Fisk -fin of extra ?m,b every size, _ for car, truck or speed wagon =

f 3 1 30x3). FISK PREMIER TREAD $lO. 85 \ W T 1 RS S D

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