Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 29A, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 September 1922 — Page 4

President Bryan Bread- ~ casting Memorial Message

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@ On a recent trip to Washington and other eastern cities iii the interest of a campaign to construct three new buildings on the campus as a memorial to Indiana University’s soldiers, Dr. William L. Bryan, president of the university, used the radio in broadcasting his memorial message to thousands of

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Three new buildings are to be erected to relieve congested conditions at the university. The buildings planned include a $250,000 women’s dormitory, a $500,000 auditorium and men’s uniou building and-a $250,000 athletic stadium. The goal originally set: by the alumni for this purpose was $1,000,000. In a recent campaign ovened among students by Gov. Warren T. McCray, $400,000 was raised and the total has since been swelled to

- Will Serve Noble County. Miss Laura Goodwin and George Helwig, of Kendallville, have been appointed as directors of the Indiana niversity war memorial campaign among former students .of the uni-

Miss Helen Carney will arrive home this evening from a five-months tour on a Redpath chautauqua circuit. The season proved very successful for the accomplished Ligonier musician. = ’ _ For sale, white reed baby cart good as new. Call Telephone No. 345, Ligonier. / : ~ 29a2t The annual corn school celebration opens in LaGrange, October 2nd and continues until the 7th inclusive. . The Allen county fair opens tomorrow at Huntertown . to run the balance of the week. :

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alumni and former studentS of the university residing throughout the United States. He spoke from the postoffice radio station and was heard in many parts of the country by the alumni who' at- that time were holding celebrations in honor of the 102 d anniversary of the founding of the institution.

nearly $600,000 by subscriptions from citizens of Bloomington and Monroe county. -In/ their annual meeting, the alumni reaffirmed their original decision. to raise $1,000,000, which automatically increased the total fund sought to $1,600,000. b . " The campaign imong alumni for the raising of funds will bé cpened this fall. An organization is-now being perfected for this work in every county of the state and in every state in the union,

versity in Noble county, according to an announcement from Bloomington. Both Miss Goodwin and Mr. Hel‘wig are former students of the state university and have taken an active part in the alumni association.

Mrs. John South returned home Friday from a visit with her daughter Mrs. Lula Johnson of Defiance, Ohio. A big barn on the John Chandler farm near Oliver lake was destroyed by fire one day last week entailing a heavy loss. : ‘ Firmer Hull aged 19 of South Whitley drowned while swimming in TriLake Sunday. He was attacked with cramps. The next reunion of . the Bailey family will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Bailey the Sunday before Labor Day in 1923.

Lyric Theater

‘MONDAY SEPT. 11 , Lo ‘Just Around the Corner”, a Cosmopolitan production, starring Margaret Sedden. A very good picture. TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY. | . “Bonnie Brier Bush’” by Ivan MaeLaren, a Doanld Crisp production, a Paramount, also - Johnny Fox In “Speed ’em Up”. . : - THURSDAY AND FRIDAY - “The Woman God Changed” a wonderful picture—this is a good ones; see -it sure; also a comedy “High Flyer”. < : SATURDAY ONLY ' : Marie Provost in the “Married Flapper”, aiso Chapter Six Robinson Crusoe, : i SUNDAY AND MONDAY, SEPT. 17.18 “The Lane that Had no Turning, {featuring Agnes Ayres, also Lee Moran in “Ten Seconds”, If its Paramount it is the best show in town. ’

The Benton school opened Monda;e with 88 pupils. ~Ml"s.~vC. E. Unger of Goshen was ¢ guest of Mrs. Charles Shobe Thurs: day. - i ‘ Rev. B. E. Hoover of Rome City is the new pastor for the Wawaka U. B. church. . : ; Harry'\" Gilbert on his return from Indianapolis resumed fishing in Diamond lake.‘ ' : | . ‘‘Reported Missing” is a picture that will add to the gayety of the nation. It is simply great. See it, sure.

Paul K. Harp of Noble county recently took for his bride Miss Edna B. Chamberlain of LaGrange. The Ladies Aid Society of the Burr Oak church will have a social Thursday' evening, September 14. o The Chamber of Commerce - will meet Wednesday noon in regular session and lunch at the Philadelphia. Eugene Scott of Indianapolis formerly of this city and a brother of Frank Scott is dangerously ill the result of two severe attacks. of the grip and it is feared he cannot recovyer. He has been ill a long time. be e v ; Wednesday, Thursday and Friday hold the heat record for the summer. Saturday was a close trailer. | Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Brunk and Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kelley were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Maggart at Cromwell - L o Mesdames Lillie Menaugh and John Green came in from Diamond lake Thursday and spent the day at the Dora Butchel home. i

Gus Busch for many years a resident of Ligonier but now of Toledo, Ohio arrived in the city Friday on a visit with old friends, : September—2s is the last day for dissatisfied tax payers to- file with the county auditor a declaration of appeal to the state tax board. . W. A, King, Dr. F. W. Black of Ligonier and Mrs. F. H. Ellsworth and son King of Detroit visited Sunday with Mrs. H. W. Black and Miss Ethel Black.—Topeka Journal. Marshall fN’ée, the Kimmell poet, who says he has been the victim of lies, claims a vindication: “Would John Keats have suffered the same as I had he lived in Indiana?’ ask Noe. “Reported’ Missinig” is a perfect combination of comedy and drama—it is filled with thrills and loaded with laughs—at Crystal Thursday and Friday. ) : ;

.Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Head and son Ellis, Mr. .and Mrs. Walter Burroughs and son Walter, motored to LaFayette and Delphi and visited friends last week. : _ ? Mrs. Cora Hess, of Kendallville, .is keeping the Gaby house in this city while Postmaster and Mrs. Gaby are enjoying a week’s outing with Mr. and Mrs. James W. Smith of Elkhart. J. W. Waltmédn leaves today. for Clearfield, Pa., to join his little daughter who makes her home in that city. = The gentleman will spend the winter in Pennsylvania, - \ e ———— A daughter was born last night to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Eckhart of this city. According to a report by Dr. Lane a daughter appeared the same night at ‘the John Reed home near Woit Lake, G

An- advance warning to Ligonier business men has reached here concerning a bogus check worker. The man claims to be connected with a Chicago store and utters checks for ‘ $5 and $lO. : ; - Mrs. Sarah Mutchler and daughter Mrs. B. F. Deahl and son 'Albert 'Deahl, Mrs. L. L. Burris of Goshen and Mrs. O. Froelich of Kokomo were }guests of Miss Hortense Christner and other igonier friends Friday evening, o ‘ e . Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Brubaker and little son John are now pleasantly located at 7200 Jeffrey awenue, apart ment 2, C?lé‘agfq.f * Mrs. Brubaker ~,vgm;a that she desires to be remems bered to the many good friends fn

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, s:+aracaivA.

T s g P A e e g HAVE SLANG ALL THEIR OWN Phrases introduced by College Students Keep Modern Lexicogra- ' phers on the Jump. When Sir E. Bulwer Lytton penned his inspiring line on “the bright lexicon of youth,” that lexicon was an open book to sages. But lately the junior lexicon has become mo#e complicated, If not brighter. It is & puzzle even to college presidents. * ‘Snuggle pupping,’ ” President Marion Leroy Burton of the University of Michigan remarked the other day, “is & phase of college life of which I am ignor ant.” :

No one can blame g college president for being stumped by “snuggle pupping.” Only the youngest and most alert lexicographers can hope to cope ‘with the campus vocabulary, and they only if they take their duties very seriously. “‘Necking,’” writes one of the youngest and most serious of the Jjunior lexicographers, “1s a Harvard-Yale-Princeton term, about six years old, which has displaced ‘petting’— aged about twelve years—as a deseription of what our grandsires used to call ‘spooning.’” , ' A rule that will be helpful to elders groping among these complexities is to remember that, while there are many terms in the campus lexicons, ‘there 18 only one topic. For “snuggle pupping” and its successors, look up “spooning.” : :

HER ENUNCIATION IN DANGER Woman Was Beginning to Feel the Strain of Prolonged Conversation .With “Foreigners® The Woman was visiting the family on the event of the engagement of the youngest daughter. The family was Bostonian by birth and tradition, but the two eldest girls had married several years before and had left their native city. One of them married a Southerner and the other a Westerner.

Each had acquired the accent of her particular locality and the children of the Southern couple had a perfect Southern drawl, while the other sister’'s children had the broad Western accent. =

The effect was startling and the Woman could scarcely follow the conversation. It almost seemed that these sisters were from strange countries, each speaking her own tongue. The mother of the three girls was most confused, When she addressed her Southern daughter she unconsciously affected the Southern dawl and when she talked to her Western son-in-law she nearly perfected the Western accent. i it In the hall later, as they were leaving, the mother clutched the Woman’s arm, ‘ “My dear,” she breathed, “I'm ruining my enunciation trying to talk to these foreigners.”—Chicago Journal. : HERE AND THERZ »

Leo Longenecker is here from Chicago. s . : : Mrs. Emma fiailéy was a week end Goshen visitor. Sl “Where it may be had_lndiana coal retails at $9 the ton. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lockwood visitedover Sunday in Toledo. Miss Rosie Hieber visited Elkhart friends several days last week. { lgrs. Leslie Yoder came Saturday from Toledo to visit relatives. . - Mrs. Arthur Ferguson' spent Sunday ‘With her parents in Elkhart. Miss Blossom Batt of Marshall, Texas is a guests of Miss ‘Rose Selig.

~ Miss Frarnces Milner has gone to Bloomington to attend Indiana university. _ W v Dorothy Slabaugh is one of the Ligonier high school graduates ato enter Indiana univeirsity.’ 2 Ed Bourie and family came and spent Sunday with his parents Mr, and Mrs. Wesly Bourie. : . Charles Shobe the veteran horse dealer is rapidly recovering from his recent attack of indigestion. _ ; - Mrs. Calvin Heffner and children of South Bend visited over Sunday with the Fred Heffner family. - 1 Mrs. Roy Purl and children came from Goshen and visited her parentsj% Mr. and Mrs. Charles Olinghouse. - ' Mrs. Ira McDaniel visited relatives in Elkhart her mother Mrs. J. H‘ Cromb- being in a hospital there. = Mr. and Mrs. Ed Culver and son George of Elkhart were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Culver, Mr. and Mrs. Clebourn Hussey and itwo ‘children of Toledo are guests of his aprents Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hussey. : : e Harry -;Bénnér fa"nd Ch"arléfi V. Inks of Wolf Lake stock dealers shipped three car loads from Ligonier Saturday. The Seligs also made big abiphients. e o s

- Ward Hill, who had been superintending.. the erection of a 360-foot iron . bridge for the Highway - Iron Products of-this city near Cheybogan, Mich., arrived home Saturday after “completing the job. .- A ~ Hal Green who had his tonsil§: rer moved some days ago in South Bénd has had quite a serious time fPom hemhorrages. " He visited ' the bank where he is employed a short time this morning. = . e

Feremgr s sl Ber ooy e S T e RIDE PILLION ON MOTORCYCLE Fair Riders Said to Be Deserting Saddie Horses for the Fastenr ‘ . Gaited Machine. s Have you seen the “pillion girl”? Not the demure, coy and shrinking -?nlgefn‘ot years gone by, who rode “gide-saddle” behind her swaln on borseback, but the rollicking, daredevil knickered girl of today, perched precarisusly astride the extra seat on & motoreycle, bowling ‘along the road at a 40-mile-an-hour clip. - Despite the wide dissimilarity in the style of riding, the name has per‘sisted ln England and the “pillion girls” have become so numerous in that country that recently the department on taxation and regulation of road vehicles sat in solemn conclave to decide whether the “pillion girl” is a source of danger to the general public, the New York Sun states. : It is not ¢lear whether “general public” includes the piillon girl herself, ~of whether the term comprises merely the motorists of the opposite sex whose eyes are unaccountably distracted from the road by the sight of a pretty girl on the rear seat of a motorcycle, fiaunting graceful, silk-clad legs, Ber hair filying in the wind. In any event, the committee reports there is no appreciable amount of evidence to ingicate that the practice 18 a source of danger to the general publfe. They are of the opinion that no case has been made out sufficiently strong to justify the prohibition of the practice. : ; ; On this side of the Atlantic the “pillion girl” is apparently safe from molestation. In fact, each year sees an increasing number of women operating their own motercycles.

LOSE INTEREST IN SERENADE ' ——— ; ; Masculine Spaniards Saild to Have Turned From Romance to the More Prosaic Football Game. * Sad, indeed, to lovers of the picturesque i{s the news which comes from Seville, Spain. The serenade, from time immemorial the quintessence of romance, 1s passing away and will soon be known no more. Worst of all, it 1s being destroyed by nothing else than ‘modern and unromantic football. This game 1s at present in full vogue in Spain. Everywhere young men-are passionately addicted to it, In Seville as elsewhere, 8o that the young Sevillians have no longer time as formerly to cultivate the. song, the guitar and the mandolin, Football engrosses them. ‘ Soon one will not find a single lover capable of playing a . serenade under the balcony of his Dulcinea. If Rosina opens her window Almaviva will not be there to declare to her his passion. But lately, on Saturdays, the young Sevillians “assembled and ' wandered through the streets of the town singing to-the stars. Today they go to bed early so as to be’ the next morning in good form for thefr favorite game.

Services to Prevent Robberles.

Sclence, which has rendered us so many services, has now attacked a new problem. Inventors are pitilessly hunting the burglars of Paris. Many are now in search of means of defending the‘stores and banks against crim. inal attacks. One of these most curious inventions consists of a pedal situated in the interior of the store. The burglar, if he watches the hands of the man, cannot at the same time see where he puts his feet. Then the pedal starts an electrical clockwork and at the same time ,an illuminated plate calling for the police appears on the outside of the store. Among the other inventions there is an overcoat with a ‘special pocket for carrying a revolver. The weapon is so placed that when the attacked person facing the burglar raises his arms, the revolver is brought into position for firing and the act of raising his hands pulls a string. which discharges it. .

Liner Delayed to Save Llife. The value that we set on human lite today has been dramatically fllustrated by an incident on the Atlantic ocean, / . An explosion in the engine-room of a freight ship caused terrible in-. juries to the second engineer, a young man named O'Neal. There was no doctor on board, so the captain sent out wireless calls for assistance. Seven ships replied. In six cases doctors told the captain what treatment would be likely to give the best results. ot :

-But one passenger liner did more than this; it put 150 miles out of its course and sent a lifeboat with the ship's doctor in it, who attended to the patient and then had him transferred to his ship. When the liner reached Fngland he ‘'was comfortable and on the way to recovery. ! : *. : : TOoANERE IR o s Mr. Wampoodle was trying to ‘ex“You know what I mean. It's the play. where they have the witches' cauld'ron." : o e G ::.' “Witches Cauldron.” : M‘Yuh." ; e i “Oh, yes, 1 know.” e “Yeah! . 5 : ~ “You -mean the home brew. scene from Macbeth."—Louisville CourierJournal, oot

¢ Hubby and Wifey. e . “I've learned one thing from this mm trip” e ' - “What is that, desr? - :-“You will wait more patiently for, a cheap . fish than you will for your wife.”—Loulsville Courier-Journal. . Mrs. Willard Tyler formerly of this ity 18 8 owly ‘recovering from & recent surgidal operation at the family home neg#Byracuse. - . Mrs. 8. D;‘E mith who spent a month visiting relatives and friends . in Peoria, 111, and Youngstown, Ohio arrived home Friday evening. |

-I.m MONDAY SEPT. 11 P e s e - “DON'T EVER MARRY” a comedydrama with = Wesley Barry - and Marjorie Daw. Also a Lary Semon comedy. v s THUES. SEPT. 12 ONLY R - “A SPLENDID HASARD” see this stunning tale of mystery and adventure by Harold McGrath. - S e 'WEDNESDAY SEPT 13 ONLY P i ° Willilam Farnum in “SHACKLES OF 6OD” a 7 reel special, a powerful and finely -acted production. Also screen snap shots, THURS. AND FRL SEPT. 14.15 i , “REPORTED MISSING” the pho to play novelty of the season a load of laughs and a world of thrills. It ha's what the public wants plus and is the type of picture which has only o ne aim, entertainment. We have seen it and personally endorse it. i e SAT. SEPT 16. . e : | : - . “Buck” Jones in “ROUGH SHOD” it has the pep and dash, which you always find in his pietures. » SUN. AND MON. SEPT. 17.18 e .~ _Anita Stewert in “ROSE OF THE SEA.” ‘She wasted her love on a reckkless youth and was paid in full by his father a fine pieture also, Rudyard Kiplings immortal Classis ‘“The Ballad of Fisher’s Boarding House” a true feature in just onereel. COMING WED. THURS, FRI, SEPT. 21, 22 and 3. | NORMA TALMADGE IN “SMILIN’° THROUGH” positively -the finest picture ever shown iln Liglonier, Words eannof do it justice, ‘

' Will Take Place at - A Kendallville - Indiana ~ September 18-22 Positively the very best attractions ever offered by any fair in America - Every atiraction will be high class, the best money can buy. Splendid stock. Modern machinery. The Noble, LaGrange, Steuben and DeKalb boys and-girls feeding clubs which were started in April will close during the Fair and will be on ;xhibition and will be judged Wednesday, Sept. 0 ' , ' Trotting champions from everywhere, urged on to victory by dauntless drivers. ' Don’t fail to see the intensely interestlng conflict between the Monaschs of the Homestretch. Great agricultural display.. Everything pretaining to the farm. i ‘ : e - Inspiring Band Music Daily Ample facilities for parking autos, and competant men in charge to look afthe same, , For premuim list and entry blanks address the . ADM: 80c Children 25¢ © Autos 50¢

and Spend the ditference |

| ' 'A ¢ o SERVICE VY What It Really Means | It means Genuine Ford Parts, 50 per cent of which retail for j less than 10 cents. It means a Repair Shop where expert Ford ~ Mechanics perform the work. It means giving Honest, Cour- ~_ teous, Prompt attention to the ~ Ford Owner’s every need. It means to constantly supply i you with a Ford Service that i -..willv\makefzou-and_keep.,you.an | ~ enthusiastic member of the | ;fivfem M ml"ofémm alers, . We can supply you with any pro~ = .. SalesCompanv