Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 14B, Ligonier, Noble County, 31 May 1923 — Page 3
Repair Work, Guaranteed Test Olfte /m% chs ; ‘)'&1 k’ ROBINSON ELECTRIC SERIVE
To Bretz for Glasses 1y é%\ Attractl\‘{e ‘ S R . A’/ Older Folks A happy expi'essfi'”on and contented mind are the inevitable results of correctly focused and fitted gtasses. We take special care.in examin; ing the eyes of those advanced in age and ‘assure accurate resilts in ,:evgzyv case. | ¢ : Our. Admirable Service Will Surely & Please You. . . . . Nevin E. Bretz ~ Optometrist and Optician 130 S. Main St. t GOSHEN : W. R. JACKSON Trustee Perry Townshsp Office Mier State Bank, Ligonier ) Accuratey and Scientifically w: Fitted. Broken lenses (i | replaced. A Mrs. L.P. Wineburg E. R. Kurtz ~ Auctioneer Znone No 65, Ligonier. 'CHARLES V'INKS AND SON » s Deslarin Monuments, 'v.;lltl. ;Tombotonei, Building Stone ;
Dr. Maurice Blue | “VETERINARIAN | Office: Justamere Farm. Phone: Ligonier 757 ‘W. H. WIGTON Atto"rnqy-ahlaw ’ Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, INP Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage Manicuring, Shampoojng Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing - Marinello Tollet Preparations ; Halr Goods Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers® Phone 156, Ligonier, Indiana S ! Harry L. Benner Auctioneer =
: i Open for all engfgemends 1 » [ §§ Wolf Lake, Indiana | Both Noble and Whitley County Phones : W 3 o - g ; - . = | £ o > . ; » ‘ ‘T. Py E e ¥ & & TK " ‘ ) t s g ! v & B e ? o '%l | \HE bind of printing thet v :, ,‘»”ar.g% g W”‘i‘(fl' o e o 20 PR Tvr R T T e wi‘w;%v&m:, ’ A T & B i o sy - - The- quialk F & : ~afdogtragip . P & - o ~~.;«;v“fi“ ol ”; ohle ey i": .\.{;‘ T Y :u' 2 3 iiy £ S el T e e ;‘ wm,"‘ ."' R 2 L I R BB oot pmr Ao ciquipt-Somss gl y N rd eies M v W es § G e Waitrapgwres 14 f&eo<; o M§ TR i k-8 %Y % W 8 T B R e ikt X % R B ad | J s s ] ] > 4] Y g R P e ‘ ; '4’l PSRRI L . r .-y W S o s -_; 7 ; 4 Bames s & AR ETN Re Y . s B&ee | E e g R i e o ,*,“5'.‘5 gidate B ¥ oo i x. :%éjf’ga -~ 4 b Ae e b R Y 5 ; L
; l : jNEWS NOTES o YoJr; last ‘chance to . see “Back Home‘ and Broke” at Crystal tonight. For Sale, oak dining room set, six chairs, table and sideboard. Mrs, Tom Kelley. e © 18b4t ' Tut] Frutl ice cream. Something new &t Philadelphia. Fruit is im‘portodl. i ~ Sattf Frank W. Zimmerman had business -which‘took him to Fort Wayne Tues-: day. | ; ‘ | ; : W Wanted to rent furnished rooms for light #ousekeepinz. Leave word 'at Banner office. ; 14a2t ~ For |Sale or rent modern house on Second street Inquire of Henry Hire or W. A. King. v . 14a2t Ed' Stutsman of Kendallville was visiting old friends in Ligonier several days this week. o
Bert Sisterhen, G. M. Zimmerman, Myron Kirkland attended a Masonic meeting in Elkhart Monday evening. For| SBale—Mahogany dressing table 20x36| French plate mirror and one full 1 drawer under top. Enquire atwthm“ : 10btt Lo‘\%is Marker today had his Diamondlake cottage placed on its foundation and the structure will soon [be ready for occupancy. " Mr., and Mrs. Henry Freed and child%en Richard and Virginia came from | Wakarusa and spent several days jat the Harrison cottage Diamond lake.{ L o ; M;‘]% A. D. Gray who had been visiting her daughter Mrs. Leland Thompson and family for a few weeks left for her ltome in Topeka, Kansas. Monday evenilng. _ ‘ e : | o Saturday Mr. and Mrs. John Kunkalman and daughter Lenore will leave for Washington D. C., where Mr. Kunkalman will attend the national conclave of Shriners. 1 | ,; s ‘“While Satan éleeps” based on Peter B. Kynes famous story ‘“The Parson of Panamint” is full of vital punches, physical and emotional one of great popular appeal see it at Crystal Sunday and Monday.
' Harry Abrams and‘ son! Delores, Arby Hodge and son Bert, Gary Iden and wife all south of Cromwell Roy Banta and ‘wife of this city were Sunday guests of Mrs. Izora Iden and daughter Edith. :
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur . Kelley @and children, Helen James and Margaret, left in the family car Tuesday morning for Columbus, Ohio, to visit Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maggart at Whittenburg college. Mrs. Maggart was formerly Violet Karshner who made her hvome‘\with, the Kelley family.
The hot weather - of the Summer Is ILOW with us and you will be fionde’png what Stansbury’s Double Store fwill offer in the underwear Department, | Ladie_%’“ Fine Vests ... 19¢ Ladies:’ Fine Gauze Vests ............... 250“ Ladies{’ Fine Gauze Vest ............ 29¢ Ladies’ Gauze Union Suits onl ... 89¢ Ladie%’ ‘Gauze Union Suits only .... 50¢ Ladies’ Gauze Union Suits only ... 59 Men’s Gauze Union Suits 89¢, $1 $1.39 Boy’s. Checked... Nainsook.. Athletle Snfts! 50c and 75¢ Girls’ '..Cheeked ..Nginsook.. ..Athletic BRIES |oinicciiicniameiissrpoiissimasnisinmei, GOO Girls repe & Nainsook Bloomers 50¢ Ladies crepe. Sateen and tisue Bloomers'i all the plain and figured styles. Stansbury Double Store !Fdr lrle]x Rack Trimming Braids and i ! Window Shades i
S :‘ fb:‘? l‘ RPlhd ‘ fl!ff T | = ig""i | b ~ :\st' [ ‘ o i, A Battery ® ‘Without Jars ‘ The new Gummite case; | - anexclusive feature with . Exide Batteries, is { moulded all in one piece; | including compartments . | for thecells, Thus, indi- | widual *jars are done 1 away with, Jaas : ° . Gummite is practi- - | cally indestructible, will | :otwarg;' and is net af- | . fected by temperature; . acid, or water. Let us I ] el Ea e
In The Blush and ' Bloom of Springtime You willneed new Dres ‘ Goods, Corsets, Curtain Nets, Crasi Damask Bath Towels, Shirt Waists, Silk Sweaters, Face Powder, aphd Toilet ‘water Stansbury’s Double Store keeps the goods that gives the artistic touch to the Srpring Fashions gnd makes the wearer look ller best. ; fl)on’t tell any *mdy for we will sell y_;gon the best 36 *‘_nch percale light or dark for 17cents the yard for only :(ifie week. Stélnsbnry! tansbury! {yhy do you cut the price [on percale Uke that} ( v | Stansbury Double Store
; NEWS NOTES | “The Old Homestead” with Theodore Roberts at Crystal nbxt week. Freed park may now be |[seen at its best and its: cool shade is most invit g Sol Kann came from Hort Wayne and spent Memorial Day |at his old home_. : ; ; For Sale-—Good pleasuré launch ‘or. Wawasee. Call or”see D ight: Mock, Lake Wawasee. ‘ ‘ " Mrs. Sig Kann arrived home Tuesday evening from a visit| with. Fort Wayne relatives. : Theodore Roberts in |“The Old Homestead” is indeed a rdal treat at Crystal next week. Mrs. Evanna Smith is employed as bookkeeper in the Weir |& Cowley hardware store. = : At»torneirs Vanderford gnd Wigton, had business in circuit co rt Tuesday which took them to Albion.. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Smith| motored té Wauseon, Ohio the first ¢f the week and visited Mr. Smith’s |[parents. Mrs. Joseph Croop who| had beén vigiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Will Davis left Sunday for Goshen. Mrs. J. W. Morris and daughter Lucile of Elkhart were Memorial Day guests of Mr. and rMs. Conrad White
Used Tractors ff;r sale. |One International, one Happy Farmer and ohe Hercules. Ligonier Universal Sales Co. L . llatf Dr. W. A. Shobe who h4d been on the sick list for ten days ig able to be at his office and look aftet his practice. ! Messrs = and °~ Mesdas¥es Graham Lyon and Harry Dickinson drove-to Indianapolis and took in the Speedway races yesterday. T - Tourists are swarming through Ligonier on the Lincoln| Highway these days and the number will increase as the season advanges. While in Bloomington attending Indiana University Supt. Allen of the Ligonier schols will chooge a principal ,for the high school. :
W. B. Inks the monument dealer took in the Speedway rages at Indianapolis yesterday. He hgd a reserved seat with a bunch of bank officials Joseph McDowell an ‘old time resident and stock buyer of Ligonier arrived here Monday evening to wisit friends after an absence |of many yeml, o o bt Mrs. Robert Marshall C*li ago, Miss Gladys Kennell, Goshen, \and George Compton, Columbia City “re guests the first of the week of Mri and Mrs. Leland Calbeck. ] Herman Sack yesfi( day - accompanied the Kendallvill§ Reds to contest with a ball team §d Huntington. The Reds have been jinfortunate : H thus far this season. ' T ~ Mrs. Al Kansier spent thif past week visiting friends in Detrog. Tuesday evening thirty ladies gav -.SJ. party in her honor. Mr .Kansier wifl leaye tomorrow for that city to affend a convention of Shriners. - . ‘
y ; (] ¢ e4j : : s o ‘ , ' o 4 ; ) F ] ‘ /,A‘,// \ i ‘ B .y | - | L < ; R A -4/ 47 5V I / § XY Fa Nl 1 - @ "‘lf / 5 ; ‘59! it -t !s*.“} ' |Time - ‘o] .1“ 1 i - & , Liy i o Re-tire? ) : Buy Fisk) ! .‘!! K REQ Al § LYt ana ) -\\ | | s . : - s‘.\\ = P & “‘x : 3 Y % LT3\ AN * < :,:'N &= ‘ ; ‘ ‘ ;;, 7SI S i y p !‘ e -R R ¥noi i o i | a gAI ) ;‘."" . O ——— o w e
REALISM HAS ITS DRAWBACKS Principal in Carefully Prepared Sensation Balked When He Read j Reporter’s Glowing Story. It happened a good many years ago in a northern Indiana county seat and the actors were a newspaper man, now in a responsible position on the staff ‘of one of the great newspapers of the South, and an amiable ne’er-do-well with a police record as long as his .arm who may be known as John Doe. / ) :
The county jail was a great resort for the reporters of the town and ‘oae quiet afternoon the reporter in question was struck with the idea of -manufacturing some news. John, who was —doing one of his periodical _penances, agreed to assist. For a _consideration John was to improvise ‘a rope from his bed clothing and feign an attempt at suicide with the ynderstanding ‘that his reporter friend should arrive at the crucial moment and cut him down.
‘The. “story” ' was prepared with careful attention to corroborative detail, the type was set and the hour of the hanging was fixed[,-for press time, to keep the “news” from the rival paper. : : i . In the afternoon John took a notion, 80 to speak, to read his own obituary. A proof was given him and then the story blew up. | : L “If you think I'm golng to gasp and struggle like it says here, you've another think céming,” quoth Johd. The account of his attempt at suicide was too realistic and proceedings stopped right there. — Indianapolis News.' et N
WONDERFUL PIECE OF WORK
Few Realize the Amount of Material '~ and Labor in Audié-Frequency Transformer.
Littje does'the average radio novice realize the elaborate workmanship swhich enters into the usual audio-fre-quency transformer.. Indeed, the low ‘price of such devices tends to conceal their elaborateness, but the low price 18 due solely to a cut-throat competitlon which brings down selling ‘prices irrespective of quality and cost of man‘ufacture. Thus ene of the best known transformers on the market has 3,800 turns of No. 40 enameled wire for the primary winding. Glassine paper is used between layers, and a one-eighth inch paper projection on each end serves for mechanical protection. . The secondary winding iseseparated from the primary winding by three thick‘nesses of .005-inch moleskin paper, and has 13,300 turns of No. 40 enameted wire with the same insulation;and end iprotection. The primary and the secondary. leads are 16 strands of No. 38
bare copper wire stranded together and covered with one wrapping ‘of green silk. The coil is impregnated under vacuum process in a compound consisting of beeswax and rosin, and is covered with black pebbled bookbinder’s cloth. ' ' Jhn
Ridding County of Prairie Dogs.
. A rodent drive in Hat creek community, Niobrara county, Wyoming, fecently resulted in about half the cooperators' ridding . their land of every -prairie dog, while each of the others had, at the time of reporting, but four or five live rodents left. Not 100 live ‘prairie dogs, it is estimated, are left on this area of about 25,000 acres, which was literally alive with them six months ago. The work was started in April on a strip of land thirteen miles long and three miles wide, with twenty-two r-a}nchei's co-operating. Practically every man in the district isigned up to do his share of the poisoning. The county appropriated money to be used in purchasing poison for the state and nonresident lands, the biological survey furnished poison for the federal land, and labor was donated by interested residents.—Department of Agriculture Bulletin. v
Landed Heavy Bprat Catch.
One of the largest harvests of sprats ever recorded was caught by Deal fishermen -lately, and is estimated to: number 2,500,000 fish. Owing to the recent heavy gales the sprats became massed in abnormal quantities, and the fishermen had great difficulty in landing their catches, so weighted and choked were the nets. Many of the boats reached shore almost submerged. Thousands of hungry seagulls swept down on the floating nets and devoured many of the fish, despite the efforts of the fishermen to drive them away. The poor of the district benefited by the generosity of the Deal men.—London Mall. 2
War Paint Flower.
One of our earliest flowers is the bloodroot, or Indian paint. Break the stem of flower ‘or root ‘and you discover the reason for the name, for there immediately flows from the wound a reddish fluid which somewhat resembles blood and will stain whatever it comes In contact with, says Nature Magazine. It is said that. this juice was once used by the Indians as a war paint and, mixed with sugar, by mothers as a cure for their children’s coughs and colds.
" Alr Pressure Speedometer. - An Italian inventor’s speed indicator for airplanes is operated by the pressure of the air while a plane is in mo“tion agaifist a plate dt the end of a ever. o
s | ‘Beats Morse. Tt is now proposed to serd through the ether by wireless a whole pdage of a newspaper at a time, by the long distance photographic process. ~ J. F. Sampsél will clean out cisterns and repair them. Leave orders at Banner office. ¢ ' 7btt FOR RENT—The Brown house on cavin street 10 rooms and basenient. Modern. Newly papered, new turnace and garage. J. L. Dumning Ifadt Gl L
! baas ioTs v 2 I TP S eN T e % iDISEASE CAME FROM EUROPE 'Ne Record Of, or Name for, Malaria, ~~ Has Been Found Among the ! ; American Indians. ~ The slow diseases which sap vitality do not have spectacular records, but in i the long run the damage which they do is incalculably greater than that of epidemics, writes Herbert J. Spinden in the World’s Work. Malaria, for instance, is a greater obstacle to‘day to the development of the tropics ‘than yellow fever ever was, although ‘the latter| could accomplish much at one fell swoop. -For one thing the ‘effects of malaria red#ch around the ‘globe and into pearly all its habitable parts. - (g oy - The three kinds of malaria are described by the Greek physician Hippocrates and the names: which we use today are of Roman origin. The two-day fever is called tertian, or Athird, because the Romans counted both ends of any numerical sequence, and the three-day fever is called quartan, which means fourth. There is no good evidence that malaria ex~ ‘isted in America before the discevery. We do not find terms for it in American Indian language nor do we find any records: that the early explorers in Central and South America suffered from this disease, Flor instance Cortes led an army acx'"osg the base of the peninsula of Yucatan, through a region of swamps and flooded streams - where today malaria is rife in every village, yet we find no mentipn of this illness among any of 'his troops or Indian burden bearers. = @ i
CAN GO LONG WITHOUT FOOD Healthy Human Being, Drinking Plen- —— ty of Water, Will Survive Fast : of Forty Days. .. Some weeks ago a pig disappeared from its sty on a Cornish farm. Search was made, but the creature could not be found, and was given up for lost.
' Twenty-four days later a man passing an old mineshaft heard something below, and made a search. There was poor piggy, some thirty feet down, quite unlixurt, and it was speedily, got out. SRI |
It waé thin, but otherwise not a bit the gmfx‘se, and at once started feeding ravenously, says London Answers. It takes a long time to starve a fat pig, ‘which' can actually lose half its weight before it dies. Most full-grown animals can go without food for a'long time, and can lose as much as two: fifths ofi their weight before succumbing. An'exception is the mole, which, when d?prlved of food, starves to death in less than 48 hours. . | | :
A healthy human being can fast 40 days if he or she takes plenty of water. A case is on record of a woman going 43 days without food, during which fime hér weight decreased from 143 to 99 pounds. L o ~ Children cannot fast for long without fatal consequences. They collapse after a fast of three to five days, d4nd lose a quarter of their weight. =
Snakes, of course, are the champion fasters. The big python in the zoo recently went more than two years without -2 meal. | e i
How to Get Used to Noises.
“What I like about the neighborfiood,”kinsisted the enthusiastic resident of Brooklyn Heights, “is the quiet, No trolleys, no elevated roar, no heavy trucks thundering through our ‘streets, no seund from the subway. Why, I think—? = Meie
“Just a minute,” objected his friend from across the bridge. *You live so near the harbor that your back door is virtually a dock, and yet you have the nerve to tell: me that yours is a quiet neighborhood. What about the tugs and harbor craft that go tooting up and down the bay all inight?"} _ “Well,” admitted the Brooklynite, “I do remember hearing a 'toot or two the first few nights I lived there. But I never hear ’em now.” ' - : “Exactly,” said the Manhattan man. “Just what I thought. Used to ’em now. That’s just the way the elevated and the two-tor trucks affect me now. Any neighborheod’s quiet if you lve there long enough.”—New York Sun.
A Quack Quacks.
A quack cure for the evils of reckless driving. is.: offered| by a psy¢hologist, who says the slow, nervous driver who has in his mind or his subconsclousness the vision of a wreck is the one who goes headlong into a crash. “Instead of a vision of the aceident and how it happens the driver must have a clear vision of how to drive correctly” in critical situations. . Every seventeen-year-old driver of a light delivery truck proceeds with perfect self-confidence, proceeding in many . cases without regard to the rights of other drivers, feeling that the impressive displacement of his vehicle in the atmosphere ahead of the driver of a passenger vehicle will warn that \driver not to stand up for his rights, has a clear vision of how to drive. He sees himself hogging the road and getting away with it.—Louisville CourierJournal. : : e
True Sacrificial Spirit. - Dad was having one of his economical fits. Bluebelle received a solemn caution to cut down on expenses. Dad ‘pointed out’ a number of things the government was taxing and declared 'that more would be added to the list. Hp sald he had even heard it rumored that the authorities were contemplating slapping & tax on bridge games. The girl was not greatly disturbed. _ “All right,” chirped Bluebelle. “I'm willing to play bridge all day long for Y ety : ~ FOR SALE—One Span mules. Ligonier Universal Sales Co. = Ilatf . For Sale—Geese and Duck feathers Phone 261. Geo. Feldheiser. *l4aét i Fatw%mmz: { ‘£ood 8 ngw, Call phone 220 10t
~ Real Estate Bonds. ~ Yes, You Can Buy ~ One Hundred Dollar Bonds BThe many investors w‘hb‘ ’b';uy hundred dollar bonds from us believe as we do, that the foundation of a permanentfincome is in a safe investment, These bonds are easily within the reach of the most modest investor, whose demand is a fair re. turn of interest on his investment. And with US the investor of a $lOO bond receives thesame consideration as the $lO,OOO invesror. We are at your service for any amonut you desire to invest. 'MAKE OUR BANK YOUR BANK
.~ SPECIAL LOW PRICES ON . ~ FROM MAY 18 TO JULY Ist, 1923 ‘ Leghorns and Anconas, éach - e Burred Rocks, White Rock, R.I. Reds - 11¢ White Wyandottes, Buff Orpingtons - 13¢ = : Odds and Ends{mixed) - - '- 8¢ This will be a splendid obp’ort‘u'nity to get some pure bred chicks at a low price and at a tiine of year when they are easy to raise. : Write for circular and special letter on |‘How to Care for Baby Chicks’. You can order direct from this ad. . e : £ - - Terms:—Cash in Advance . References:-Farmers & Merchants State Bank, Archbold, 0., Citizens bank Pioneer 0., First National bank Wauseon O. . | L %If ye cannot fill your order pfbmb.tly, m_i will advise you when we can ship. or refund your money on request. s : - i o - Archbold: Ohia > = | - | -
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