Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 1A, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 February 1923 — Page 3
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Mrs. Elizabsth Lamby Elecirical ¥Faeial and Sealp Massag - Manicuring, Shampooing | Hair Tinting and Halr Dressing . - Harinello Toilet Preparations - . g Halr feols - - Accuratéy and _Scien’ifigza‘.{fz Fitted. Broken lenses . o 5 peblaced. | Mrs. L. P. Wineburg CHARLES V'INKS AND SO N’ C Dpalerdn - O . Monunjene‘s; Vfiulfs,‘ Tembstones, : > 'Bufldipg;SVt‘one Gengtiie Bothwell & Vanderford code o Lawwers -G Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana
Fredf - = .- - Candies, - : ICE ;5. ‘ Cream, . v Esbme Eo e - o Sundeas, ot A Boas
VICTOR Records ~each month - " Braginton & Earll % > Phope 7l
; i He y There! How about your letterheads, billheads, statements, envelopes, cards, etc. Don’t wait until they are all gone and then ask us to rush them out in a hurry for you, Good work ~ - - Tequires time and ourmotto N - is that anyT i 2 VN ,t,lnn.g..tkats_ YV worth do- : st RS : » s _ g o . ingisworth ' e LA N g R ; 4L Y) doing well. Nl / @ * /. S O /] 3 ‘ & ,’ £ "gg {,,‘M:‘ ! EG o 2 Y XX ,J;q‘:g('fi # = g : gsf RN . o » e .ud%,fim,( ’iff’ fi
~ € » e ¥ s - - GLASSIFIED ADS Lovers of ice eream will find a superior article at the Candy Kitchen and at the right price. e Christian Science services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and every Wednesday evening at 7:30 at tha hall over Weir & Cowley. Welcome., e i gL Wanted . o To®buy corn and oats. €. L. Chamberlin. :' - Phone 861. | 'K 34btf Aet e eB ¢ 5 G 0 Caes Truek Line, 0 - The Cass Auto Truck Line operates vn and. out of Ligoniér bétween Fort Wayne and South Bend. Local and. long distande hauling done at reason able rates. R BB - FOR SALE-—XNew modern house, one square éast Citizens Bank. ' Will seil on payment plan to responsible pariy. 217 E. Thirg St. Phone 178, T e For Bple. i o - The undersignéd will sell for cash ‘the House’iof Mrs. Ji J.. Wills de‘eased, For further information see ‘Mrs. Hattie ‘Emmitt 153 N Cavin St. Ligonier; Infl, =~ " IROy (eihTi # s_?'*,?_______;__‘__‘___ 2 Btk . Fruit Trees and Shrubbery, © Al kinds of nurgey stock sold at ‘thel owepst prices with a guarantee for iSiX yeérs to grow bloom and bear. All )‘ dead - stock replaced. | Write to or cali-me at Ligeader. Chauncey Wag;oner. L e L BOBE
Wanted,
© Poultry hides and all kinds of junk] I wiill pay the highest market price. Call Joe Miller Telephone 2 on 433 Ligonigr. o S loner o For Sale—Ford triek with cab and platform, i good as new, one 10-foot fioor countér. case two"s foot floor counter cases ‘all with plate glass tops. : The Stam "‘G'r()de'fy‘,' .Ligonier, Phone 49. . Lz e A - Christian Church Services. + ~ Sundby school at 10:00 . ~ Morning worship' at 11:00 i - Evening worship at 7:00 v ‘The public is ecordially invited to these services . © 70 . 4gatt o 5 e ——— o : FOR SALE—Modern, hduse seven rooms, and good basement on ‘Lincoln Way South in paved distriet: Anyone interested may secure a ‘bargain. Fiue shade and fruit trees.. Call phone 133 Elmer:iK,‘lotz,‘ :;I,,igopije'i'. i 7 52adt
Sales Men Wanted |
~ The Atlas Oil'.Co,, Cleyeland, O, - marketers since 1556 gumality Lubricants and Paimbds desires permanent representation for this and surrounding counties. Farming experience and broad a®quaintance with farmers _desirable. ‘Musk: haveown auto for solicitation.’ Liberal commissioin with weekly drawing | account, balanced nionthly, Several convenient shipping ‘points. Writ . fully for - interview. Porl s e SA e . Office Positions in South Bend may be secured by a short mt&nsivea%‘m in the Soutly Bend Business Coilege. Hitlier resident or Home Study Coiirses Typewriters 'furnished ‘home study Students. _ Write for Budget: No. R o GRI s ‘Pévamgmrfwm@vwe ,ments in' the aßnner must haye their Teß TR e €opy in by Saturday for the Monday ey ge A J:?"r‘mg GST issue or Wedne yday . noon . for - Thursday's paper, It isia physical imGiE oo ReSN DR N &-A@anfi* %" pTess ?fifi Gl "'%, 9btt el e e e i%%‘f 8 m%“v’*”gfi%@#%w oo pdltng o all kKindsodene in - a At ory S &e T
To Open Branch Store.
Z. A. Andrews, ‘better known. as Charles, one of the proprietors of tho Philadelphia Candy Kitchen of this city, while in Decatur the other day purcahsed a two-story brick ‘building in the main business district of that city and will open there one of the finest confectionary stores in Northern Indiana. Andrew Brothers have been very successful during their residence in Ligonier, buying the brick building here in which the Philadel+ phia ig located. oo : . .Mr, Andrews made the| Decatur purchase while on a visit with Rev. Harry Thompson the cother day.: Possession will be obtained May 1, Mr. Andrews will devote the greater part of his time to thie Decatur store aftce i is opened and refitted with the finest’ fixtures to be obtained. :
Bandit is Identified.
~ Four Hartford City men testifying in the trial of Harold Gonoud, Toisdo . bandit, charged with complicity in the-‘attempt to rob the Montpelier postoffice more than a year ago, identified Gonoud as the man they saw with George Bolton, Toledo many kilied in the attempt, in that- éity a few hours before the ropbery ' attempr. One of he men shot by the robbers was Deputy Marshal Engle, afifc’dusin of ' Police Chief Engle = of Ligonier. The wounded officer although ‘piercea thirough the body with a bullet survived and, is now in his usual health.
Sgip Subsidy Dead.
‘What was known as the ship subsidy bill pending in the senate and backed by President Harding with ali his force is dead according to =advices from Washington. The congress was called in special sessiou by the president: to enact this pariicular bill, but since then an election has so changed the complexion ot things politically that such a meas: ure would have no chance in the nesc congress. The people are opposed to ship subsidy in the form presented.
Dr. Rager Buys Home.
Dr. O. M. Rager, Ligonier chiro: practor, has purchased the '?r.'Gants residence property one door south of the: Presbyterian church on South Cavin street. The consideration is not giveh, but it is understood to have been $3,000, Dr. Rager, who has quarters over the Weaver Hardwarc store, will use her new property for a home and office. Her acquisition, is considered a bargain. : The home i 3 of brick construction and modern.
Dunning is Recognized.
"J. L. Dunning, civil war veteran and prominent progressive republican of_L,igon%er, will serve as door keeper in_the ‘state senate during this week, beTing recommended for the place by Senator Hertzell, of Fort Wayne, representing Nobie and Allen counties: Mr. Dunning left for the state capital Sunday night. The pay is. $6 a day and the legislative session closes .in one more week. L
Very Short Session.
One of the shortest sessions of the city council on record was held last Thursday evening, . After the allowance of claims the meeting ended. Mayor Denning, Clerk Jeanneret, City Attorney Vanderford, Chief Engle and Policeman® Bowen and Councilmen Hostetter, @alloway, Fisher and Bender answered roll call. A. N. Wertheimer was absent,
Odle Rebreaks Leg.
Frank Odle is again confined to his home. Mr. Cdle, manager of the Farmers 00-operative Elevator company, while at: the plant the other day fell and rebroke a leg. The gentleman suffered the first fracture in gz fall some weeks ago .and was able to get about on crutches when the second accidéht occutred, He will be laid up for some time. ,
Inn Closed at Milford.
~Tourists Inn, the hoslelry at Mil~ ford has been closed by common con sent. Prohibition officers recently raided the place and found there 2 number of Warsaw youths under the influence of liguor, a circumstance which added no benefit to the rgputation of the house. / - :
Gets Compensation,
The widow of Clifford Getts; killeld near' Helmer about a year ago while cutting timber for the Sanders-Egbert company of Goshen, was awarded compensation amounting to $3,960 by the state industrial board. chs
M. E. Conference at LaGrange.
A conference of the Goshen district M. B. church is being hcld at LaGrange this afternoon and will coptinue in session threc days. Rey. J. F. Lutey of the Ligoniqr M. E. church is on the program. = .
Will Move to Fort Wayne.
- George Young, former auditor’ of Noble county and brother of Mrs. J. W. Houger of Ligonier, has disposed of his farm near Huntertown and will take up a residence with his family, in Fort Wayne. =~ = o
Fall to Death.
J. Harry Kelley, 47, drowned when knocked from' a bridge into a‘canal by a. locomotive at Mishawaka the other day. He attempted to cross the bridge ahead of the train and was caugnt;, e R
~ More Fire Zonme Cards. . 1 ~ Persons desiring fire zone cards ‘may procuresthem at the Barfi' office free of charge. When telepll®ning in a fire alarm be sure to give the zone along with the'name,. - = . Mome from Hospital. . Elnora, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. (Charles Stage, after six woeks in an | Elkhart hospital recovering from an dwimoxteéhtionwasbrflflam
CARRY MAIL DESPITE PERILS
Storms in the Arctic Often Endanger the Lives of United ?\ma . Postal Workers. | = | - Throughout the United States and its possessions the government has established one of the most efficient and greatest postal services in the world.’ fromptuess in delivery of the mails has always been its motto, as records of the post office department show. In the far north the “mailman” experiences the severest hardships, as evidenced by the history of the Alaskan vostal stations. = , : In the Arctic the “mailman” is usually not called upon to make extensive overland trips ‘more than once or twice in the long winter night. These trips, however, are fraught with immense hardship and danger. ; Working from the seacoast postal station at Tanana, ‘Alaska, from ‘which stations in the bleak interior of northern Alaska are served, the dog siedges which carry the mail must travel 600 weary, perilous miles overland to the “farthest north” office, at Point Barrow. One trip a winter to this office is a season’s work for the mailman on that route. ' L The trip means weeks upon weeks of the most arduous traveling, in utter loneliness, with only the savage, halfwild dogs of the team as companions, all the time under the pall of the long Arctic night, only relieved by the shifting, terrible - glory of the northern lights. : ' Many cases are, on record where aail carriers, traveling behind their dog teams, have been caught in deadly blizzards and lost. In almost every case the mail has been rescued by searching parties and taken through to its ~destination.—Joseph - Edgerton in the Washington Times-Herald.
WAX IS PRODUCT OF INSECTS
Important Export of Chinese Province Deposited on Trees and Gathered : in Its Season. White wax, one of the most important exports of the province of Szechwan, in China, is chiefly found in the distriets of Kiating, Chiewei and Ipin, and along the Yangtze river in :the vicinity’ of these places. It is a substance’ deposited on trees by insects known as wax inseets. Once a vear —in March—they are collected from the regions on the border of Yunnan by the wax-worm raisers, apd are placed on pollarded trees, either ash or privet, which are mostly grown in Kiating and neighboring distriets. ‘Speed is -essential in the_removal of these insects, or they would hatch out before they get to the wax districts, and would thus be wasted. Therefore,-the coolies generally travel in relays so as to reach the destination in time for the hatching. When the moulting period is over, the worms begin to'deposit the wax on the leaves of the trees. This process continues up to.the end of August, when the wax is collected. After dissolving in boiling water, it is usually moulded into cakes of various sizes and shapes.
Embraced by Monkey.
A horrible experience befell a letter carrier’s wife of Babylon, N. Y., when a monkey dropped on her shoulders from a tree and embraced her. She was riding in her surrey through a lonely stretch of road, between Babylon and Lindenhurst when something dropped as if from the sky and landed on the seat beside her. When hairy arms encizcled her neck she screamed and an unidentified rabbit hunter appeared on the scene and_ shot the monkey. The dead monkey was brought back to Babylon, where the woman will have it 'stuffed as a memento of her unusual experience. The monkey is believed to have escaped from a ship off the coast near Babylon,
Rifle and Shotgun Combined.
Four-barreled guns are a recent invention of an eastern gunsmith. They generally have two rifle and two shotgun barrels, although the arrangement I 8 occasionally varied. Two shotgun barrels of the same gauge are usually placed on top, while below them are two rifle barrels, one of high ecaliber and the other of low caliber. In some designs the rifle barrels are placed one above and one below the two shotgun barrels. This type of gun, it is thought, (will be of particular adyantage- for hunting in a territory where a wide variety of game abounds. The weight.of the guns is about eight and a half pounds. = | S
To Protect Plants.
Growers placed parchment cones over the hills of canmtaloupes to protect the young plants against insects at the suggestion of the county extension agent in Dona Ana county, New Mexico. Tt was found that the temperature under the econes remained from five to- ten degrees above that of the ontside air,.so that plants under themw, were not injured by a‘ light freeze which killed unprotected plants in that distriet. The growers stated that the covers pald for themselves in securing better and more uniform germination aside from the protection against insects and frost,
Utilizing Him,
“Obbahoogin! Labhadoogoon! Bluggablabble " cooe_dilthe infant. “Dear me!” sighed the young mother. “How I wish little Hubert would jearn to talk!” R . “Palk-—nothing!” shouted the prodigy’s sire. . “Gimme paper and pencil ! It he'll just keep on that way I'll soon ~have enough names for Pullmau: cars 0 win 68 a million dollars.”—Kansas _ Stuart P. Carney has been suffering ‘from’ an attack of tonsilitis and has been confined to his home, = ~ Dr. Black reports the birthg* girl babies to Mr. and Mrs. George Massey, Ligonier, and Mr. and Mrs. 'Harley Inks, Wawaka,
CAREER MARRED BY READING
Mark Twain’s Mumorous Story of Solemn Warning Against the Perils s e Leratuee, . At an early age Mark Twaln was solemnly warned against the dangers of reading. As a boy—so we learn from the diary of Mrs. James T. Fields, which the Atlantic Monthly prints—one of the first stories 'that he acquired after he had bégun his apprenticeship on a Mississippi river steamboat was the Fartunes of Nigel. He hid himself :.with it behind a barrel, where the master of thel 'boat found him and read him a lecture on the rulnous efféct of his act. *“l've seen it over and over ag'in,” he de clared.. “You meedn't tell me anythin’ about it; if ye're going to be a pilot on this river yer needn't ever think of reading, for it just spiles all. Yer can’t remember how high the tides were in Can’s gut three trips before the last now, I'll' wager.,” = . “Why, no,” replied Mark, “that was six months ago.” . : ~ “I don’t care if 'twas,” said the man. “If you hadn’t been spiling yer mind by readin’, ye’d have remembered.” So the boy was never permitted to read after that. “And,” Mark once observed, “not being able to have it when I was hungry for it, I can only read the encyclopedia nowadays.”. But, adds Mrs. Fields, that is noi true; he reads everything!—Youth Companion, ;
ENGAGEMENT “RING” OF SILE
Pretty Custom Which Obtains in Japd .1 When Young People: Have Made a Definite Choice.
In Japan there are many simple an@ sweet customs. The Japanese are & nation of lovers of romance and syme bolism. -~ Simplicity of thought and del icacy of feeding add to the charm and beauty of their many truly artistic customs. . | Even in love affairs and in court. ships this same sweet simplicity ig observed.. The thought is not losi in complicating realities and expense. The young man doés not have to save up so hé can perhaps spend more money than he should to give his fiancee an engagement ring, because in Japan they do not wear engagement rings. s Instead, after a girl has promised to marry the man of her choice he proudly goes to the best shop where the finest silks are sold. | Here, -with great care, he selects a beautiful piece of sllk and carries it lovingly to the girl of his heart. , { With this silk the newly. engaged girl makes a sash and wears it triumphantly, This is her engagement “ring. . : .
Lifts Mired Motortrucks.
~ For lifting motortrucks out of mud, sand or snow, in which they may be stranded, a portable attachment, shown in Popular Mechanics Magazine, for connection to a mired wheel, is in the form of a wooden foar-sided bleck, in length about half the width of the truck. About the middle of this block is an eyebolt through which a chain having a hook at one end is passed, The chain is long enough to encircle the rim of the wheel, against which it is made tight by slipping the hook into the link of the chain. ‘A tubular extension at the end of the block is so made that, when two blocks are placed on opposite wheels, they will telescope together.. The truck is lifted by the blocks when the wheels are rotated.
Wireless Hour Signails,
~ When a ship is approaching shore great caution is often necessary because of uncertainty as to the vessel’s precise position. It was some years ago that it was first proposed that wireless telegraphy bé utilized to send hour signals over the sea round England to a distance of 200 or 300 miles from shore, in order that the captains of incoming ships might thus be enabled to rectify their chronometers to Greenwich. time. The government of Canada thereupon established a system of this kind ,at Camperdown, near Halifax. Every morning the exact hour is sent out over the sea, so that all vessels furnished with receiving apparatus may pick up the true time from the air, ; S
Sandy Collects for Hospitals.
Holmfirth, in the West Riding, England, has a dog, Sandy, who has been making himself a name by his cleverness. ‘ .
-It was noticed some time ago that he had formed the habit of searching for coins and picking them up. The next step was that he was taught to put them in a collecting box for the benefit of .the local hospital. : Now people give him their assistance by dropping coins before him, and these he picks up and takes to the box, Sandy is sharp enough to remember which people have encouraged him, and to waylay them and solicit their continued favor. A
Hew to the Line.
Editor—The meter in your poetry is too irregular. You have to stick to one: type of. foot throughout. ) ) Poet—But the best poetry has to be somewhat varied in meter to avoid monotony. _ o : Editor—Qgite true, but one must first be able to write the best poetry before one is privileged to follow her rules.—Princeton Tiger. e e o il Matte, w o .~ “So Bill married that plump littie girl who used to giggle so much.” - “Yes. 811 l evidently believes in a short wife and a merry one” = o A T T i s bt = , .~ Will Meet Wednesday Noon. . Wednesday noon the Ligonier Chamber of Commerce will meet At Hotel Ligonier for a luncheon andito | H. 8. Kimmell, the veteran laurdryman of Kendallville is prostrated with paralysis, oo ol sl el e sl s s e e MW*M
OLD GRETNA GREEN PASSING
Smithy, Famous-the World Over, May . Be Removed in the Interests of ' 5 Motor Traffiec. .. . . The famous Gretna Green smithy, where runaway couples from England used to gét married, is threatened with demolition because ‘it blocks the motor traffic. Shades of lovers of the last century—of the marquess of Queensberry "and #rances Lovell, of Maria Grant and Richard Sheridan—take nefe of modern vandalism! No longer do the gallant and the maid on horseback or in coach, gallop through the muddy roads of England to cross the border into Scotland, there to become legal man and wife by the simple process of getting the blacksmith to witness mutual declarations to this effect. But the place ‘remains and all its traditions . are intact: Couples are still married” by :the blacksmith who works the forge, but he holds a government license as registrar. Entry in his book of records effects a binding union only if one of the couple to be married has resided for three iweeks in the parisa. of Gretna Green. During the war, when many thousands of workers were employed in a cordite factory near by, the blacksmith registrar was often busy. Now the cordite works are closed and registration duties are light. A ‘'medieval coach which is kept in a shed adjoining the forge, still attracts visitors from all parts of the world. The low stone shanty which is the smithy may make more horseshoes than marriages, It may be threatened with *demolition but its traditions last,
BLACK SEA LIGHT RESTORED
Tower on Serpents’ Island, Razed by © Germans, Was Built by the Rus- ~ ) ' giang in:1840. - s
The new lantern installed on the lighthouse on Serpents’ island, in the Black: sea, which is in ‘the course of reconstruction, started functioning regularly from December 1, according to the Bucharest correspondent of the London Times. : e The tower of the old ljghthouse was built by the Russians in 1840, but no ligl;xt was installed on it till 1856, when by the Treaty of Paris the- island passed into thie possession of Turkey. The lighthouse was under the administration of the Ottoman government till 1879, and since then the European commission o fthe Danube has been. responsible for its maintenance and working. . il The tower and buildings were bombarded and destroyed by the German cruiser_Breslau on June 25 1917, since when there has been only a small temporary light on the island. The reconstruction of the lighthouse was begun this year by the European ' commission.of the Danube. The tower has now been erected, and the new lantern and apparatus installed. The characteristic of the new light consists in a group of three rapid flashes repeated every 15 minutes and its visibility is 20 miles. | S e
Cohverted to the. Metric System. Washington - Vanderlip, the wellknpwn prospector and promoter, was: tatking in New York about the Russians. s e !“Bolshevism will never penetrate into the mass of the people,” he said. “You can’'t teach an old dog new tricks, and the Russian race is old, very old—as old, in fact, as the Chinese, N e “One day in Moscow I gave a mou- - Jik a meter rule and told him to get the length of a certain casting for me, “The moujik, though unused to the metric system, strode off _,-/ca»lmly.,l When he came back he said: | =~ “‘She is as long as the rule, little father, plus this flask of vodka, these two million-rouble notes, ‘and my thumb from here to here”” = . ° . & ~ Carry Heavy Life Insurance, ~ Huge life insurance policies are held by J. C. Penney of New York, who cafries $3,000,000 en his life; Rodman Wanamaker, Philadelphia, carries: $4,500,000, and Pierre du Pont carries $4,000,000. John Wunamaker, who died recently, had insurance of $3,000,000. 'J. O. Pennes had only $1,500,000 until a few days ggo, when he bought $1,500,000 additioxal insurance. Mr. Penney now pays an znnual premium of $120,000. He ‘s forty-séven years .old. ' The corporation which bears Mr. Penney’s name and of which he is chairman is represented in 29 states by 371 stores dealing in wearing ap'-;] parel and known as the Golden Rule stores. Lest year the corporation’s business amounted to $50,000,000. - j
Eyes of Youth.
I was on ray wdy downtown with my little boy. - All seats were taken when' 'a party of women got on. @ . | Edward suid, “Oh, mother, now all the ladies have to stand.” == © “Yes, isn’t that too bad,” I answered, hoping he would not think any | ‘more about it. But then he shouted, “Mother, don't you think some of those ] men will be nice and give up their seats, go the ladies can sit down? Leti g wateh and'sée™” & - o 0 . 'The women laughed, but I felt much embarrassed.—Chicago Tribune. -~
‘ v Foolish. o Tobe was talking about Mose, who made a good cotton crop and spent the eniire proceeds for a grand piano. “That was foolish,” commented a hystamder: o o 0 o Tl e “You kin bet it was foolish,” de clared Tobes “He ordered dat piano without taking any measurements. When it cawme they couldn't gep it i CcHe bl dopel” . T S o World War Veterans of the 13th congressional . district will assemble in reunion at Kendallville April 6th. an aild prominent Noble county farW LT, .
Frinting
kind of g thos the quality of your : = inferior printing gives aa - i T 1> overeomeer whlls an wm oa i lotterhead -in oqlors, # you | % g St et wedk, sare : = eel l: users, Thet is the caly kind of printing thet
Pays ays
- e SEF 55 . BATTERIES - The best battery _you can buy is -the cheapest in theend. Blazed = oo rrailb | . Qarage .
~ W.H. WIGTON Oftice in Zimmerman Block " LIGUNIER. . 'RD
;/,“f’,/\\.i_\\\ ‘ 3 . ~ ':-; _';;.,:-:. , ::«:'_':, = K ZL. A ‘ '\K pac'i‘pu,cr -y | It can’t leak § I because it’s n, made in one | piece — that’s | why we guarit = antee satisfac- | tion or your ~ money back. o ,jnomgflcp,m e
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If it ls results ME'?‘ you ehl;tn!d use &i‘. {he majority of homes pases The Family & i %2 S
