Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 19A, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 July 1923 — Page 3

‘RepairWork, Guaranteed o> ~ N Jest (e : \‘xb';e* S, | B st | S ELECTRIC B sRE

To Bretz for Glasses ‘s 75;‘;“”\} % ' ; ' ; , =0 “ " e St)’llSh,‘ > » & ‘-’g . ‘,4;(: . * *- ; B “-’jg- % Distinctive Remember that glasses are an important factor in your personal - appearance, - : Carelessly fitted, they detract from your looks. . 3 - AdJjusted with the precision that : characterizes our’service, our glass-es-will add distinction to your appearance ‘and bring real comfort te your eyes. { We Welcome the. Opportunity of Serving You. _ Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist and Opticlan » 130 8. Main St. : : ‘GOSHEN

One Minute a Day - A _Prevents Baldness R A sure, safe way to =)\ overcome falling hair £ ¥ and baldness is to reA 3, move the infected Seia % B bum. We give you a y AR\ signed guarantee with - BEENNSGEE) VAN ESS to remove : dandruff, stop itching and grow hair. . VAN ESS has grown hair on 91 . out of 100 heads. Falling hair stops in two weéeks. : i ‘ VAN ESS Liqyid Scalp Massage feeds hair-growing medicine into the scalp through rubber nipples. It's the marvelous new-way massage. You get satisfaction or money < back. Keep free from the curse of falling hair and baldness. Get VAN ESS today. : C. 8. GRIFFTH : e T T W. R. JACKSON Trustee Perry Townshsp ~ Office: Mier State Bank, Ligonier Re e e eR S Accuratey and Scientifically wx Fitted. Broken lenses [ ~ replaced. ; ® : : : Mrs.L.P. Wineburg m E. R. Kurtz . 4 » ot Auctioneer . o©none Neo. 65, Ligmnier. Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb ‘Eleetrical Facial and Sealp Massage Halr Tinting and Hair Dréssing Marinello Teflet l’npmtl‘oy

Bothwell & Vanderford Phone 156. Ligonier, hldlana

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More June Weddings

A pretty church wedding one of the charming events in that locality for the closing days ef ’th:_bridal monta June was held Thursday morning at thé Immaculate Conception church, when Miss Helen Hornet became the bride of ‘Herbert Graham. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Hornet and the bridegroom the son of Mr. and Mrs. Menzo Graham all of Kenadllville, v : i Miss Talitha Blanchard daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Blanchard of Wayne township Wednesday morning at 10 o’clock became the bride of Harry J. Braum son of Peter M. Braum of Fort Wayne. The cere mony was performed at the rectory of the Catholic church at Kendall ville’ with the Rev. Father R. J. Halpin. officiating., _ : Dstrict Epworth League Officers " Rev. T. 8. Haddock of Milford was elected president of the Epworth League. of the Goshen district of the M. E. church at the annual convention held at Warsaw last week. Other officers ‘elected were: First vice-presi-dent Charles Troyer, Milford, second vice-president Clarence Smith, Warsaw; third vice president, Margaret Price, Mishawaka; fourth vice president Charles Haab, Middlebury; secretary, Vidor Anglin, Etja {Green; treasurer Harley Poor, Etna "Green; superintendent of the Junior depart. ment Mrs. R. J. Hutsinpiller, Rome City. ~A.x.m‘j

Shores Estate Judgment.

A 8 a result of a hearing held recent ly in the DeKalb circuit court Judge Endicott has decided that Trevor Shore administrator of the estate of ‘the late A. C. Shore is entitled to judgment of $3OO the amount of a contract and. for $7O as attorneys’ fees and the mechanic’s lien on the William and Myrta Witt farm in Union township DeKalb county be foreelosed, } g - 'Was Former Ligonier Resident Miss Alma Hoffman and Edward ‘Pankop were married Thursday at Kendallville. Mr. Pankop is a former ‘Ligonier resident being a part owner of Blazed Trail QGarage while the bride is a niece of Mrs Clarence Wemple of this city and has visited here. Mrs. Wemple and daughter Mss Louise attended the ceremonies. . 1924 Conventon at Mishawaka The annual Epworth League con vention of the Goshen district came to a close Wednesday evening at Warsaw following a banquet at six o’clock and a program afterwards. It was voted to hold the next annual conyention June 1924 at Mishawaka. - Long Honeymoon Tour. Travelng by motor and camping on the way Mr. and Mrs A. S. Watterwarth of New Orleans La., on their honeymoon and enroute to Toronto, Ontario passed through Ligonier last Thursday after camping at Freed park.. . £

Pup Tent Stolen.

George Sisterhen says no sooner than an advertisement in the Banners invited the purchase of a small tent than ‘he had one stolen. He wonde.s if there is any connection | 3 A R T SR & For sale a barn. Call at Banner office. i I3att . Bport in Ancient Egypt. | ~ Egyptians were the oldest admirers of sport. From the pictures on temple walls and tombs one learns how they spent their days im work, religious rites or pleasure. Giris played ball, sitting on the backs of their girl ‘friends. They also danced to the rhythm of songs, which were accompanied by hand clapping. Boys ran races, balanced on beams or stood on their heads. They tried their skill in throwing pointed sticks at a wooden stump and had themselves bliridfolded, beaten by their conmades, and then ‘guessed wh‘o*}wn_l beating them. - Fencing was done with a light wooden saber; a shieldlike plece of wood was fastened to the lower arm during the combat. Pictures of wrestling matches along the tomb walls " of Beni Hassan would Ilustrate a modera textbook of wrestling.

Earily Architecture.

Imhotep was the earliggt architect te put up a building of stone masonry. He flourished just after 3000 B. C,, and his name deserves far greater fame than those .of the early kings or conguerors themselves. 1 The erection of Imhotep’s tferraced buildings was but a step toward the construction of a pyramid. A .generation later, so rapid was the progress, the king's architects were building the great pyramid of Gizeh (2900 B. C.). From the earliest plece of stone masonry to the eonptmmon of the great pyramid less than a century and a half elapsed. Most of this advance was made during the Thirteenth century, B. . Such rapid progress in control of mechanical power can be found in no other period of the world’s history until the Nineteenth century. Put Reference Books to Work. In many a household children seem entirely ignorant of the ugefulness of reference books of all sorts. One ~housewife made a discovery not long ‘ago, one which she passes on as a “help to parents whose children are in school. Here is her story: ~ “After the son of the house had ‘aaked his father the mesaning of four different words the father asked why ‘he bad bought an unabridged diction ary in ten volumes'if he must still go ‘on deflning words, % Lao e e _shelf so tight that I can scarcely drag Tt it pard .55 1w B

GREAT “GOLD BLUFFS” HOAX Reported Finding 'of Yellow Metal Caused Intense Excitement In .. San Francieco in 1851, : To San Francisco in January, 1851, came a tale thil set even its excite-ment-jaded pulses a-throb. ‘Briefly, 19 prospectors had proceeded in the steamer Chesapeake toward the Klamath river, and near this stream the seashore for miles was composed—half, at least—of pure gold, writes Eugene Ounningham in Adventure Maga zine. . : -Digging was not required. One had only to raise a 8 much as he wished of the golden sand from the beach. Small wonder that San Francisco went mad. RBight vessels prepared to sail for “Gold Bluffs.” " Then the bottom dropped out. It was rumored first that the gold was mixed with black and gray sands; that because of its exceeding fineness it could not be separated from the sand. Worse still, the sea washed through huge piles of collected sand and floodtide brought none of it back. Working ‘“Gold Bluffs” promised a reversal of ordinary mining-—gold went into, instead of coming out of, the ground. So the greatest excitement of the decade was done. But it was a {hriller’ while it lasted. :

FELT THE BISHOP WAS SAFE

Woman’s Apprehensions Disappeared With Her Increasing Confidence , in the Small Boy. - When Phillips Brooks, the great “low church” bishop of Massachusetts, made his‘ visitation at the Church of the Advent, Boston, celebrated for its elaborate ritual, the rector considerately inquired if the bishop would like the usual service simplified. “Ob, no,” was the reply. “Turn qeverything on!” A young but well-trained acolyte was told to attend the bishop, and before the towering figure paced, with impressive dignity, the small red-cas-socked Ilad. i y A lady, who knew and admired Phillips Broeks, but knew little of ritual, regarded the situation at first with anxious face, but soon became serene. On leaving the church after service, she remarked: - A i “In the beginming I was dreadfully afraid the bishop would not know where to go or what to do, but I felt perfectly safe about him when I:saw that little boy knew a great deal more about it all than the bishop did, and was taking good care of him »—Harper’s Magazine, Lkl

An Inventor at Seventeen.

One Saturday morning; more than 80 years ago, writes Floyd L. Darrow in st. Nicholas Magazine, a man and a boy might have been observed stand ing over a plece of pipe in a machineshop in Scheneetady, N. Y. The /man was giving instructions to his fourteen-year-old son, George Westinghouse, Jr., as to how he wished this pipe to be cut into pieces of a certain length. George had wanted to go .on a hike with some other boys, but his father, a somewhat stern man, was assigning a task which, he assured the lad, would require all his spare time for several days to come. While his father had been talking, the boy had been thinking out a scheme tc escape this drudgery. In a few hours he had rigged up a combination of teols whieh, when attached to a power machine, automatically fed the pipe and cut it inte the proper lengths. In this youthful incident we have the first glimpse of the wonderful inventive genius of one of the most extraordinary men that Ameriea bas ever produced—George Westinghouse.

History ef Vaoccinatien.

Smallpox vaceinatien, generally regarded as a modern practice, dates back more than 2,000 years, adgcording to Dr. W. G. McCoy, director of the Hygeniec Laboratory of the United States Public Health serviee. “When the ancients noticed that recovery from the first attack gave immunity from others,” says Doctor McCoy, “they began inoeulating their fellows; first by exposing well persons to others 11l with the disease and later by inoeculation.” - Jenner, whe is generally econceded to have beea the father of vagcination for amallpox with cowpox, only “put vaccination on a rock where it would be immovable,” explains Doctor McCoy. . Records show that years be fore Jenner’s time men had been vaecinated with cowpox and then with smallpox to demonstiate their immunity. }

Rachel’s Tomb Jewish Shrinre.

Rachel’s tomb, about a mile from Bethlehem, is a sacred shrine of the Jews. It is the only spot of Old Testament interest to which the Jews ‘have exclusive rights, and the chief rabbi of Jerusalem has the key to it They assemble there from time to time for prayer. They do the same at He bron, where the patriarchs are buried, but in general they do not have ready access to the graves of their forefathers. The Moslems refuse this prive flege to them. ‘ : Wanted More information, ‘ The medical officer on duty in the eye, ear and throat department of one of the great London hospitals was about to examine a man who complained of severe pain. - ~ “Now; then, my friend, is it this ear that’s causing the trouble? he asked. : o . “This 'ere what? inquired the pa tient. . ' Lol Keep-coll by the use of a (leneral Electric fan bought from Arthur Furgeson. | ’ | 18ate SaEE : v : oo : . Mr. and ‘ng-s. Will Snider and Mr. ‘Buider’s mother drave over to| Alblon tho other day and. vsitd wims ol AT BRASRMD T

Use artificial pare ice. Phone 100 for prompt lenry St lotitt‘ See Arthur - Furgeson for electre s . . 18au Mr. apd Mrs. D. F. Keefer were sight seeing in Ligonier Saturday. Wanted to rent one or two um: furnished rooms. Call Banner of fice. e : . 17ate Mrs, Henry Marx of Toledo s visiting her sister Mrs. Arthur Ferguson here. : < The South Milford chautlauqua‘ opened today for a three day sesgon. | ? : Wade E. Libey of Kendallville has taken for his bride Miss Louise Davis ot LaFayette. o | J. F. Sampsel will clean out cisterns and repair them. Leave orders at Banmer office. | - Thut Buggy For Sale—We have a good single Buggy for sale. Ligonier Universal Sales Co. . 16pd - Miss Marie Burket of Elkh'a‘:rt‘ township has been visiting her sister Mrs. Nolen Keasey in this ecity. ¢ g OIS T | Wanted—Poultry and eggs. Highest cash market prices paid for same. Phone 261 Geo. Feldheiser. | *lBb4t

Al Kanser was called to Chicago Saturday on a business mission for the Ligonier Universal Sales company. : i ’ ' —— e Cleborn Engle and son Sheldon and wife drove up from Mishawaka Saturday and spent Sunday with | Police Chief Engle and family. ? A } j ‘Corn was shown to have grown fourteen inches in five days in some sections of Noble county. All corm is looking well in this@se’ctlon\ of the state. L i The police department at Kendallville has collected a large assort: ment of porch pillows and automobile cushions stolen from local regidents’ and a distribution is being made of the artcles. 1 ) For Sale—B room modein {house four lots with fruit and shade|trees, garage and chicken house good baru, cement floor and thre-acre re lot. ‘Will make great poultry |farm. Call phone 380 Ligonier, 16btt

FOR SALE-—Six and three fourths acres of land on West Union treet.l Brick house modern, barn, rage over 30 cherry trees, small pea¢h orchard just beginning to bear, | other fruit. Mrs. J. E. Culver. - 18btf .~ Cherries : Cherries for sale. C. L. Chamberlin. Phone 861. ik 19a4t | NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT State of Indiana Noble County SS: Notiece is herby given that the undersigned has duly qualified ag executor of the will of Abraham J. Copeland deceased late of Noble unty State of Indiana. I ~ Said estate is supposed to be solWilllam W. Copeland executor of the will of Abrabam J. Coljeland W. H. Wigton Atvy. B | NOTICE OF APPOINTMEN' State of Indiona Noble county 88: Notice is hereby given taht thp undersigned has been appointed administratrix of the estate of Louisa B. Stage deceased, late of Noble County, State of Indiana. : ; ; | ‘Sald estate is supposed to bg sol-i vent. ; ; | l Lillie Plank administratrix ¢f the estate of Louisa B. Stage decgased. ‘W. H. Wigton, AttYy. 17a8w ; i | Start Work On Ofl Well. | | Drilling for ofl on the NcNagny farm near Larwill Whitley 'codnty has been resumed. Work was abandoned last fall after reaching a gdepth of 1,600 feet. e

: : op g | ;.‘. | .® : . | : - . . : | Beautiful wpodwork, exquisite decorations and numerous other details which go towards making the house a real home lose their respective valueif theone - predominating factor, ELECTRICITY, that gives real convenience is omitted. - ~~ The architect and contractor can work out the details of beauty but the ‘Ele- ~ ctric Contractor puts the real enjoymentand convenience into your home with e eI R e ~ To do without this important factor is to deprive your home of the fullest en- - joyment and pleasure. ' The house that is wired for complete Electric Service "13 the home of complete comfort. Every home desires this comfortand every = . homecartiwei D oG T .If your house is not wired now, make a real home out of it by wiring at once. 2 Q Mlc Izal %‘ CCLLIC LOHlpPally Gk o b T

' Come on in the water 1s fine. _We\ are - showing the largest and best line of bathing suits we have ever shown. Suits for ~ the little fellow as well as the big one. ‘ ~ Boys’ Suits 75¢ to $3.50 ~ Men’s Suits slto $6.00 o One and two-piece’Suits = ' Palm Beach Gaberdine and Tropical . worsted pants ey .A~ Sun Hatst(')lr everybody. If in ne‘edr. ' - of a traveling bag or suit case for £y thatVacationsee,our line, |= . i Camey’s Clothing Store -

aHarry L. Benner Auctioneer o . Open for all engagemends - §) Wolf Lake, Indiana ‘ h Noble and Whitley - County Phones Dr. Maurice Blue - VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. " Phone: Ligonier 757 L i wisTeN | o Attorney-atlaw = ' ©ffice in Zimmerman Block - 'LIGONIER, (RD CHARLES V'INKS AND SON o unmi in

Ford Magenetos Charged While You Wait o i Havelim ‘, | Bosch, K. W. or Atwater Kent Ignition System'_-insalléd on your Ford car BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE

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