Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 21B, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 July 1923 — Page 4

7. “Theresa Reason. . v ‘Wherf you 'neéd a -DoCtbf——'Yod want the best. - ~ When you need a Lawyer—You want the best. . When you need a Bank—You want the best. 1s t’li'e__'v'outstandilng' kfinancia‘l\instivtution in this vicinity with the Largest Deposits and Largest Total Resources of any bank in Ligonier and more quick assets than any bank of its size in the state. The MIER STATE BANK is conducted by men who have been in the banking business all their lives, tully conversant with prevailing conditions and giving freely 'of their knowledge to the service and good of the community. L

“Grandma’s Boy” at Crystal mnext week. e ' Let Kiester look after your bat-| tery. ; ‘ e == 19aif Miss Frances J. Snyder is spending the week end at Norwalk Ohio. ‘Miss E. Marie. Snyder is the guest of Miss Josephinpe Hill at Indianapolis Wanted dress' making to do, Call phone 293 Ligonier. 20b4t Get your transmission and differential filled at Kiester’s. ~l9axf Miss Bonnie. Hicks has been a guest ‘this week of Miss Carrie Vance in Goshen. 2 . , For Rent—Modern 7 room house with garage. Enquire Blanche Shobe, 217 E Third St. Phone 178, - . ; o 19btf ~ There will be a big time at Freed park Saturday July 28 when the farmers of Perry and Elkhart townships ‘hold their joint picnic. Mr. and. Mrs. Walter Stage a drug:gist of Adrian, Mich., came Wednesday and visited,at the home of Mr.. and Mrs. L. M. Stage. ; e Three new keys on a ring were found and broufght; to the Banner ofrice Wednesday. The oWnef may recover the. property by calling. | 2 \ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Schlotterback and Mr and Mrs. J. W. Klick vigited the first of the week with Mr. and Mrs. Marion Schlotterback at Brim: el - G e e | Mr. and Mrs., James Kinnison attended the funeral of Mrs. George W. Kinnison at Goshen Monday. Ed Kinnison of:St. Joe, Mich:, joined them there. , | , L It is understood that Charles E. Clark traveling representative of N. ‘Wertheimer & Sons has taken: over the Herbert Brown property and will ‘make it his residence, ~ e ' Mr. and Mrs. Clark Hamp of Elk‘hart visited the first of the week with their daughter Mrs. Arthur Ferguson. Miss Dorothy Morrow of Toledo was also a guest at the Ferguson home. FOR SALE—Studebaker touring ear, equipped with new battery, gooi tires with an extra tire and cover, spot light, windshield wiper and bumpers. Car is in good condition and goes at a bargain. John Hays. 19btf

THURS. JULY 19 - | e . _RODOLPH VALENTINO in “THE YOUNG RAJAH” This is his last - pleture and one that will please yow. Also a Christie Comedy; ; e FRL AND SAT. JULY 2021 - e . “IHE FLAMING PASSION” with Ruth Stonehouse and Geo. Larkin ~a tale of the Oregon lumberlands also a cartoon and comedy.. = SUN.ANDMON JULY 2228 " o ~ “THEIR FATAL MILLIONS” with Viola Dana a splendid comedy drama in which a girl rides in a ljmonsine on'a tin wagon pocketbook, - - slso Bull Montana in “The Two Twine” a real oy of @ program. . zm&mafmmr"g% W - Harold Lloyd as “DR, JACK” He I 8 the lad who makes the world laugh! - ~ Warning to patrons! If your heart 1s wobbly or you get high bldod pres- .

Go to Kiester's place for gasoline and olh .. 19atf Use artificial pure ice. Phone 100 for prompt delivery. = : 10bit - Modern hofne for rent call at the Carney ' Clothing Store. 19btf ‘Kiester lia§ " tiirés tubes and auto accessories call on him. 19atf White slippers big cut in p'ric:fl Newtons Shoe Store. . .21a4t;‘ George Miller 'is"seiling harfies;: apples at 4 cents the pound . " Lost—A long flat key to a '“Ca.vin;' street store room _Finder please re ! turn to Banner office. - | Mesames Glade Rupert and Chester ‘Vanderford i}nt'ertained a circle of the iM E. church Tuesday. -=~ ‘ Don Hunter spent several days at !Diamond lake this week a guest of ‘George Robert ‘Harrison. ' 4 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller of Fort ‘Wayne are at the Ullery cottage, Diamond lake for a few days. : ’\ Miss Do‘nnabelle Billman left Tuesday for Winona where she will take a six weeks busifess course. ~ Miss Ethel Reed, of Wolf Lake, submitted to a tonsil operation in Dr. Lane’s office yesterday ; . Mrs. Cha_r,l.esy Cornelius after an extended visit with her daughter and igrand‘child at Adrian, Mich., is home. ~ John H. Hoffman and Miéé Maude Middleton 'Wednesday drove to Auburn’ on business. They settlled up an old estate. ' " Rev. Harry Thompson and family of Decatur are here visiting = old friends for a few days. They like their new home and.work. = _The Leland Thompson family of this city and the A. R Edgerton family of Cleveland are spending a week at the Weaver Wawasee cottage, . _ Dr. Lane reports the birth of a soh to Mr. and Mrs. Ray “Doc” Gordon Wednesday and .the little fellow. will answer to the name of Ray, Jr. Among the guests entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Harry Fahl at a big |chicken dinner one day this week . were Mr.” an@ Mrs. Ed Sisterhen of Tdgonier: - - . e

LIOONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIENL.

Warning to Auto Drivers.

' Some thoughtless persons no doubt un familiar with the law are in the habit of parking their cars in the alleys - obstructing the driveways and blocking traffic. The practice must be stopped and after this public notice anyone found guilty of the: offense will be vigorously prosecuted. " All persons will observe this order or suffer the consequences. L Werten Engle, Chief Police Ligonier July 91928, . - 5o 20a8t

Provocation was Really ‘Gl‘eait.

Crowing of a rooster every moraing was the cause of the qhooting to death of Eugene F. Griffith, 42 years old, according to police;, who have Charles H. Ferguson, the ~alleged slayér under surveillance at Sioux Falls, South - Dakota. = Ferguson might better have shot the rooster, Harold Lloyd is the King of comedy See 'him as “Dr. Jack” next week. _Cut price on all shoes and oxfords at Newton Shoe Store, 21adt _For your health, for your happiness see “Dr. Jack” at Crystal next week. Mrs. John Kenney is a patient sufferer ' from . rheumatism of long standing. | ; i Mrs. John - Stellar was called to Marion by the serious illnes sof her brother. : . Herman Sack wil Iplay with the Butler ball team against Garrett Sunday at Garrett. = L Miss Hélen.Céi‘fie_ay made a trip to Fort Wayne yesterday to have a violin repaired. : s Mrs. Mollie Smith who had been a guest of Mrs. Ed Sisterhen returned to her home in Goshen. : o City‘élerk Jeanneret ‘was in 'l‘)eg troit Monday and Tuesday procuring repairs for his Ford sedan. The, management of the Crystal announces that “Dr. Jack” will demonstrate his sunshine methods, locally next Tuesday, Wednesday and’ThutS; oS e . e e v -Théjx"'e is_ a v,{re'lll( groundedé report tha¢ there will be a big strike in the steel mills: of the country begininng August i, - i

Price a Trifle High.

J. W. Draper made a trip to a num:* ber of huckleberry marshes today to purchase a supply of the fruit but when he learned the price was 4b cents a quart he did not buy.. .

. _There are all kinds . of cheap printing—butnoneofit isrealIy cheap—at least not on a basis of value; Cheap stuff is usually worth alOur printing fsn't the cheapest you " can gdet, but it’s as - good as the best.

CHEAP BOOKS NOT LOKG AGO

Time When All the Best Literature of . the World Could Be Obtained o for Small Sum.

‘We poke fun at the age of the penny dreadful and the dime novel, the golden age of the mewsboy story and of Nick Carter, Yet that age was the golden age not only of these, but also of the book lever. Not, of course, of the biblophile, but of the lover of books. It is a mistake to think that the cheap old books were all trash, declares the Nation. In the Seaside library of Munro, for instance, one could buy in the guise of the dime novel the works of Balzac and Hardy; one could buy “Don Quixote” and “Faust” The firm of John W. Leovell printed at 10 cents a volume all the works of Carlyle, Ruskin and Emerson, of major poets and historians, and issues, in the same series, all of Morley’s “English Men of Letters.” From England Cassell sent his marvelous national library of little papercovered books in which many & man first read his Plato, his Bacon and his ‘Johnson. To have a quarter in those days was indeed to be free to enter all the realms of gold. Well-bound reprints of all the world’s great books comld then be had in such series as the Salem edition, issued by Houghton, Mifiin & Co., and the priceless Canterbury Poets and Camelot Classics exported to us by’ Walter Scott. The Everyman Library at 85 cents a vol‘ume was the culminating point of the great age of cheap and handy English books. - . ‘ .

VARYING OPINIONS ON LOVE From the Selections Made, Soms Will Disapprove and Some Will Head : With a Smile: ‘i The Married Man—Love is an illusion of youth, which only time, a wife and ten children will dispel. = . The Bachelor—Love is a mythical emotion which was first foisted upon the world by a sap-headed novelist in need of ‘“copy.” o The Debutante—Love! Search me; I can't tell you, but-it’s nice. - The Old Maid—Love is the heavenly reward of all who withstand the temptations of this life. If it isn’t, I've backed a loser. = =0 - The Cynic—Love is only experienced by fools and babies. Neither are qualified to give opinioms. i The Married- Woman—Love is like expensive face cream. It wears off quickly—but cannot be renewed. The Chorus Girl—Love is an ideal way of getting ready cash, and a sure way through a breach of promise suit to single happiness. . [ : _ The Average Young Man—Love is the most expensive form of gambling, with all the odds against the man. ~All the World—Love is an emotion ‘everyone seeks and no one is satisfled’ with when found.—Passing Show, London.. : e : ] T

Collie Dog Saved Youngster. i !A shepherd’s collie found a boy of two ‘and a half years of age who had been “lost in the hills on~the Scottish border for four days. ‘The boy was the son of a shepherd. He had been taken by his mother on & peat cutting expedition about a quarter of a mile from their cottage home ‘at Kerrhead, on the Solway firth. While the mother worked at the fuel the child lay down and fell asleep. But when she had finished her task the boy had disappeared. A three days’ search failed to find him. On the fourth 'day, a shepherd from the neighbbring farm of Chaighouse &teads, was recovering some sheep which had:strayed when his dog ran off, The collié replied to his master’s whistle, and, looking up at him, again went off in the direction from which he had come. The shepherd, realizing that there was something to account for the dog’s behavior, followed. He found the misging boy asleep in a bunch of rushes.-

Combating Pinyon Jays.

Pinyon Jays, inhabiting Rocky mountain states, are birds of the same family as crows and about half their size. Between nesting seasons théy rove in large flocks, often containing hundreds of birds and cause ‘serious damage to grain crops. Successful experiments in methods of control of these birds when attacking corn were made by the biological survey of the United States Department* of Agriculture in westcentral Colorado, and a leaflet containing directions for using a simple but effective poison fermula has been distributed ‘in that territory. During the wheat harvest control measures are not so successful, and in large fields, where the birds can find ample food, the use of poispned baits is not found profitable. : = Nl Strange Experience. - ‘ Not long ago 1 was visiting at my sister’s home. Her little boy, a child of two years, was playing in the living’ room one afternoon when the rest of us were in the sewing room. Suddenly I called him very sharply. “What's the matter?’ asked my sister. I blushed. I did not know why I had called him. I had no reason at all, for the child was not doing anything naughty. “I don’t know,” 1 answered her, trying to think of some reason for the sharp summons, = In the medntime the little one ran to me. He had no sooner reached my side than the ceiling of the room in which he had been fell, Everything In the room was either broken or badly scapred.” Had the baby been there he would certainly have been killed.—Chicago Journal. ' Tim Beeson Locked Up. | _Tim Beeson is in thec ity jail to inswer a clisrge of public intoxicaton, e was found by Officer Bowen asleep on a platform at the Lyon & Green-| e e | Job Sharp has gone to Nappanee to bt wilabe s 7o D e

CORRECTS TRUTH ITEM.

Ligonler Correspondent to Elkhart Paper Set Right a Middlebury, Seribe on Important Point.

- Writing to the Elkhart Truth a Ligonier correspondent has the following in last night's issbe of that paper: . - e P “The whiter wishes to correst ome statement in the very interesting arti: cle, “Middleburg—Gem Village,” in Saturday’s Truth Gregory McDougal the horse thief, was hung not in LaGrange county but in Noble county near Diamond lake, four miles southeast of Ligonier. The execution oc | curred Tuesday January 26, 1858. Mc: ‘Dougal was the most desperate char acter among the “blacklegs” as they 'were called. By his own confession he had with the asistsance of others stolen in less than a year 34 horses ‘had broken two jails; robbed four stores and two tanneries; taken the entire loads of two peddlers; besides a large amount of saddles, harness, buggles and other yroperty and had ‘passed large amounts of counterfeit money.” 0 i :

Annual Picnic Sunday

“The Christian Bible school and congregation will hold their annual pic- | ni¢c at Natticro Beach Sunday. The program will be as follows: "All to meet at the church at 9 o’clock and those that have no way to reach the beach wil lbe provided ways. Bible school will meet at 10 o’clock at the| beach. Preaching at eleven subject “Far Sighter Folk” Dinner at 12 o'clock. ‘The afternoon will be given over; toa short program and a social time. There will be no evening ser: vice. A cordial invitation is extended to all who wish to join us in enjoying the above program. This invitation is not confined to our own member-| ship but all who wish to pack their dinner and worship at the lake side with us. - S | : Ira C. Boyts, pastor . “To Know Her Was to Love Her” | . ‘When the long, long day is over and the Master Calls us away, could any words mean niore for us, than to have others say “To know her was to love| her?” - . Lor - ~ We, who knew her best realize most the shallowness of words in extolling our friendwho God has called from us | to join Him in His Heavenly Home. And while our hearts are sad, and memories of a sweet and beautiful friendship linger near we are resigned, for we know that all is well and that He has said*Well Done Thou Good and Faithful Servant.”. : From Her Friends Lo ‘Mrs. Mercy B. Bartholomew born March 23 1861, at Perry Lake county, Ohio. Died at Ligonier Indiana July Motsas ol n

To Selve Crossing Problem. A railway executive in a letter to the Hoosier Automobile association 'says;‘ o : : “I have given them atter of crossing accidents a great deal of thought and am. firmly| convinced that the only way they can be eliminated is to neglect maintenance on all highways for ‘a distance of 300 feet on each side oi the crossings and in thec ase of new hard-surfaced roads being built they | should be corrugated for the same distance on either side of the cross ing. A trainmaster once made the statement_to me that the only thing in the world that all locomotive engineers wil Itake their hats off to is a de-rail. I believe we can say there is only one thing that all automobile rivers wil Itake their hats of fto, and that ‘is a piece of real rough road. If the roadway on each side of every railroad crossing is in such’ condition that they can not drive over it faster then five to ten miles an hour I think we will find that we have solved our crossing problem.” o

May Have Free Chautauqua.

Z. A. Andrews better known as Charles who is now located at Deca-. tur ‘with a candy kitchen similar to the Philadelphia he established here ‘some years ago is-a strong advocate of a free chautauqua: for thé city of his adoption in 1924. Last:year ‘Mr. Andrews was among the strong boosters for a free assembly in Ligonier this year and he helped to put it over. In a letter to the Decatur -Daily Democrat Mr, Andrew writes: - ~“] notice that someone ig advocating a free chautauqua for Decatur for the year 1924. The chautauqua is a. great thing for any community and .one cannot spread its influence over too much ground. I was at Ligonier last year when the free chautauqua plan was put over and having had a part in it, I can say that the plan is thoroughl ygood, for instead of just a few people being able to enjoy the chautduqua it is open to everyone from far and near. Pm for it. | il st Yoummatealyy e b b e KRR

Notice to Water Takers. . You are hereby notified that water rents are due July Ist, 1923, payable at the residence of the eity clerk. On all rents due and not paid on or before July/20th, a penalty of ten per cent will be added as by ordinane: ;provi.ded,‘ W e s ~All water rents for 1923 are now due and must be paid on or before quly W e 8 e 0 ~ Office hours 9 a. m . to 6p. m. - T. B Jeanneret, City Clerk Lol e e .AL . Team Expeects to Win, . Doc. Rex- expects his ball teanr to clean: up on the Syracuse team in that town Sunday. ‘The schedule of & serles ‘of games with the. Columbia City Gray’s has not yet been arrang-

e N S s o . 3 , S INCHESTER ~ The Emergency Light ~ You can always depend upon a Winchester flashlight man emergency. [ts simple, sturdy mechanism insures an instantaneous flood of light when you needit. A _, Get yours this week . Just what you need to canry in “your car. o o ; : | e c Fon [ "Wy | Popular Flashlights &= v =': These étylgs are popular for general out- ; e ‘ '7{." & door use. Furnished in two sizes in nickel § E 3/:’\ . plated and fibre cases. Tested len and bulb E iy IHE - e : o . . i i : ;‘;(/. _Winchester Searchlight Type, Left. Gives §h, 7 i b a wide beam of ight. S [ 88l Winchester Standard Type, Right. Very l . MU = handy for the motorist. Fits the pocket -el in your door. , —— - For Best Results Use Winchester Battries =~

Read The Ligonier 'Bannef

Jet White Groceteria ~ Specials for the Week ~ 251 b. bag Cane Sugar for . $238 - 10barsP& GSaap . .. 4&5c | .- 10 bars Kirks Flake Soap . 45¢ - Columbia City Flour . . 80c W MoreFlomr: .. . . 98c ' Kellog Corn Flake, large = . Ilic - . Famn Housefoltee . . '[BBc - o ManuchCalee: 0 .. 386 . | Bonita Coffee 31bstor . $l.OO - Perfect Apple Butter No. 10 can 70c Broom Leader, 4 sewed . 48c We save you time and money 52 weeks in | ©oNN . v e © “WE SELL IT FOR LESS” - ¢ - Dringusyouregss | .- | Jet White Groceteria

B Home Interests P Come First %X"f*fb-i}j\%f;g ‘lf there is truth in this statement the offer be- @ | low is just the one you are looking for—YOUR ‘ § : T % OWN HOME NEWS PAPER AND YOUR B W The Ligonier Banner, 1 yr.... 52.00 R Our Special Price to You ONLY $2.50 '-.t.;;,"l.'he%i‘idgqnier Banrer, I-igqnfe;‘,; Ind. = : Gentlémen: Enclosed herewith find §...... for which send me _your paper and The Ohio Farmer for one year each. & Name sene s -v .a n ;:.,' 'u0..;;‘100.;;‘...:»'....‘.‘ o‘;q“..‘.i. = .-An - - ;:..-.-.-';, % G Tm o--o:- ._lo;g.‘o‘bi-:tc'uo-qlga.i?- D,.on-‘wt wbttnfihnf.’-

F ~ Ford Magenetos Charged While You Wait E . - _Have a. Bosch, K. W, or Atwater Kent _ Ignition System insalled on your Ford car