Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 22B, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 July 1923 — Page 2
. Loansto farmers and stockmen arevn'egob . itatedby this institution with the ' e least formality and greatest - | .. ... . helpfulness. L .. Applications for Farm Loans receive pro- ' o mpt and courteous attention- - o _our rates are moderate; ~ Terms favorable and facilities unexcelled. - Conference with our officers is cordially +, invited, and kept in strictest confidence. o You will receive hereevery accomodation . consistent -with sound banking principles. - - : | We pay 49, on savings ' ' , ‘ “A“,The Bank on the Cé)rner” | ]
Everywhere -Royal Cords | United States Tires £ =N ;‘ Lo Saiian /| areGoodTires . - '. Py : : > ; : 4 :57/4/‘ ?i'_‘ THE growing number of. - /,;,///// Royal Cord Clinchers | fPU/Y 4 you see on the rouads gives [y & //,/ A/! an lidea of how : many car 5 //;/ 7 A% N owners there are who want fUR 11/f ‘ . the best tire moncy can buy. £ S I/// b ¢ Thereweren’t nearéenough {’ ey : i "Clincher Ruyals to go around f I/ Y 4 4 last year. S d g &g s i This year —even with the sl &’ . ‘ ¢ . , bos it 1§ A /, ¢ ,}{' productwnmqreman oub- [l 7 Feill | ; { led—you can best be sure of 1,l .’ ¥ | : ‘;;'1 them by taking them a¢ the S¥//§T)E _ - ’,{!j ;\momem. , o' " ‘__l e ‘ : W i Gl e o hi‘ : - [ 4 : d I'g Yin " e 158 AL B 1, " 2 . % : ((c '\g ‘2’\ o o ,}j o 33"&\5‘; £8 0 e 8 A Shiavin SN SR " G |“| I bt o" 81 el ST ol "-'? 8 KA ‘1::-«'\\W/ =il o rfl! ! L /& ST ; , ,"‘f}./,_.-v:;:f;/ eM\ . A i -\ A G aat e 35| | & T . i\ 1 R 0 R 1 &= Where o buy Us.77res 1] . e L . o_f ; ' : I Ligonier Garage Hode g fi&fl " Ben Glaser, Ligonier, Ind. | : . ' D. S. Armstrong; Wawaka, Ind. ; ~/ Johm' W. Zimmerman, Cosperville. Ind. . - |
Advertise in the Banner
; W STORAGE 48 , (Willard > : TRADE MARK REGISTERED ’ - . ™~ : : : : : We are now ready to rebuild and recharge all kinds and makes of batteries. Using the Constapt Potential System We are able ‘to recharge a battery in a - % very short time compared with the ~ old style charging method. Let - ' . usprove our method by your | : sl - patronage ' e LS - o ‘ o \;{}.‘ e o : R & y : 5 SSme 1 H. &G. Battery 3 i Service @ SBEE | Sccond Street - §” Inthe Weirßlock
The Ligomier Banner "he Banner Publishing Company W. C. 8.. HARRISON Editor Published every Monday and Thursdsy and entered in the Postofice at Ligoaler, Ind., as second class matter.
Must Be Change Somewhere . D. F. Boszor residing south of Kendallville commenting a little on the present wheat market says he was not growing any wheat this year and regarded himself as quite fortunate. He said the wheat was of reasonably good quality ‘and the yield of 20 bushels seemed about right but the market price too low for the price of farm labor and all manufactured commodities. “I well - remember,” ‘said Mr. Boszor “that for- years and years farmets figured that the price obtained for & bushel of wheat should 3 pay for a day’s wages of a man working in.the harvest, field. It certainly is different now with wheat at &5 cents and a farm hand in harvest asking all the way from $3 to $5 a day. Farmers cannot pay it and make money. There must be a change some where.” '
Demands Big Damages,
- Merle Gochenour of Warsaw an at: torney filed suit in the circuit court at Goshen against Elmer J. Culp a Goshen undertaker gemanding dam - ages in the sum of $lO,OOO for the death of Gochenour’s six year old Gochenour caused the arrest of Culp by Culp’s automobile. Last week Gochenous caused the arrest of Culp on a charge of manslaughter and the defendant gave $2,500 bond. - The tragedy occurred two years ‘ago tomorrow and the period of limitation' was nearly up when Gochenour sought redress in the courts. At the time of the accident Mr. Culp was generally held blameless, ] ] L The ¢hild was struck by the Culp machine when she ran into a street in front of it in eagerness to reach her grandmother on the opposite side. Pleasant Surprise Party - Mrs. Thomas Schlott’erback.’ was given a most pleasant surprise when many friends gathered at her home in Albion last Sunday. A delicious dinner was served on a table beautifully decorated with flowers and the afternoon was spent with music and games greatly enjoyed by all. The hostess ~was nga'd_e ‘the recipient of many useful and valuable gifts. Among those present were Mr.' and Mrs. Jesse Jack, Churubusco, Messrs. and Mesdames David and Cal King and children Hilda and Eldon, Mrs. W. Prouty, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Prouty and .children Rex and 'Donabelis of Bakertown, Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Sch-% lotterback and children of Ki’mmel” Mr. and Mrs. Willis Schlotterback -of, Ligonier. ; : S |
Many Raral Mail Routes.
The rural mail system was enlarg: ed in the last fiscal year by the addition of 304 new ' routes having a mileage of 8,346 and by thé extension of 2,597 old routes bring the total number to 44,454 with a mileage tatalme 1191268 . - oo : The new routeés and extensions ‘brought postal ‘facilities to nearly 6,500,000 families or approximately 130,000,000 citizens in rural regions now being: served by the system. | : e | Death of Aged Lady ’ . Mrs. S. P. Stewart 82 is dead at the home of her daughter Mrs. George Knauer at Avilla after an illness of four' weeks. She fell and fractured her hip a month ago the shock prov ing fatal. Born in Allen township she has lived there all her life. Survivi‘ng are the ‘husband two daughters Mrs. C. C, Lewis of Wilard 0., Mrs. George Knauer of Avilla -and one son John Stewart of Sturgis. ' L *, Johnson’s Big Plurality . ; Magnus Johnson chosen United States senator from Minnesota: in the recent election of the Farmier-Labor ticket received a plurality of 94,846 votes complete semi-official returns compiled showed. This is a remarkable showing in such a strong republican state as Minnesota :
Dies of Heart Disease.
Howard Stanley Lewis 17 son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Lewis died of heart failure while swimming in St. Joseph river Sunday afternoon at at ‘Mishawaka. ‘A brother rescued the b()?ly from the water before it sank, If the recommendation of Congressman Hickey of the Thirteenth district stands Dr. A. J. Baumgartner will suc ceed J. J. Littrell as postmaster of Elkhart July 28. i
Advertising?
Iflth{e-_ullg- you mt Bavst, It cliculstes B g has always been conTheFamily Newspaper EeEE l"’mfi’.m o
GLASSIFIED ADS
and make it look like new, = 52atf Use artificial pure ice. Phone 100 for prompt d’elivery-.;fi ¢ : 10btt See Arthur Furgeson for electrci fans, - 18alf Wanted, small tent or awning to cover small automobile. Call at Ban ner office. i, : 16btt e s s I 1 Christian Science services are h;i: every Sunday morning at 11 o’ck and every Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the hall over Weir & Cowley. Welcome. T te 1 am prepared to clean chimneys. furances and stoves on short notige and at reasonable prices. J. F. Sampull, Ligonier Call Banner oflqé Phone 13. : : Tatt . { : Cass Truck Line, The Cass Auto Truck Line operates in and out of Ligonier between Fort Wayne and South Bend. Local and long distance hauling done at reason able rates. _ 48btf Fruit Trees and Shrubbery. . All kinds of nursey stock sold at thel owest prices with a guarantee for Bix years to grow bloom and bear. All dead stock replaced. Write to or call me- at Ligonier, Chauncey Wagoner, ' ‘ - 60btf ’ Christian Church Services. Sunday school at 10:00 Morning worship-at 11:00 . : Evening worship at*7:oo - The public. is cordiall); “invited ‘to these services ~ == 46att First Presbyterian Churech Cavin S, Rév. G. H. Bacheler, Pastor. Residence the Manse 318 Third S'. Telephone 345 . : Sunday School 9:30 a. m. - Morning Service 10:45 a. m. | ~ Evening services 7:30 P. M. Prayer meeting Wed. 7 p. m. -“The Church With a Welcome.”
Poultry hides and all kinds of junk I will pay the highest market price ~ Call Joe Miller Telephone 2 on 433 Ligonfer, o gl " 4, ‘Notlce. T Until September Ist' 1923 our office hours will be from 9 to 4 each day except, aSturday when they will be from 9 AA M. to 9 P. M. ; : - Bothwell & Vanderford ; W. H. Wigton ~lsbte Thousands in South Bend owe their suecess to a specialized training received at South Bend Business Coilege. Write for Special Fall Budge*. ; i . 20b5t e —— o House, two acre truck patch with auto storage for rent there miles east of Ligenier. ' Inquire of Frank W: Zimmerman, this city. Illatt NSRS Be eI . : Kiester is particular with'! your work. He wants it right as well as you do. Hene o ~ Call for Elder’s ice cream the eream of quality. = For Sale by all dealers. Ligonier Artificial Ice Co. distribus, “10bte
Attractive Subscription Offer.
Ligonier Banner, twice weekly and the Atlanta, Ga., Constitution ‘three times weekly all for $2.75 the _year, payable in advance. Old subsctibers by paying one year in advance: may take advantage of this offer. Tal The Tri-Weekly Constituticn - s published three times week ‘Tuesdays Thursday, Saturdays and is specially edited for residents of small cities and rural mail routes who do not care to pay $6 to $l5 a year for a daily newspaper. It carries the Associated Press and United .News dispatches and cables of the news of the nation and world and is the only every other day newspaper in the country that builds a paper of interest to the reader irrespective of where he lives , : S 22atf For Sale—lrish Cobbler potatoes grown from . certified seed. Market price. Floyd Lemming. 22a4
: :’.;?'?-fi N s i I N . 4 e ) Brpetek 1T WR o If (& &; .:’;\".:E '
‘A Battery Without Jars The new Gummite case, an exclusive feature with Exide Batteries; is " moulded all in one piece, including compartments fo; :::Ie cells. Thus, tilnoii.' : : jars are done :Zv_'_qywith. : . Gummite is practi~ ~ ~cally indestructible, wilt not warp, and is not af-' . acid,’or water, Let us tery case. e
Wanted,
JAPANESE ARE GOOD FLYERS
Head of British Air Mission' 'ls of ~ Opinion That They Positively "’ Have No Nerves. ;
A rather curious report current-two or ithree years ago with reference to Japanese aviation is recalled by an interview in London with the Master of Semplll, who has just returned after spending many months as head of the British air missien to Japan. The suggestion was that Japanese conld not be made into good airmen because of something in their early upbringing, ome point being that because they were carried pick-a-back. in infancy they had somehow lost their sense of equilibrium. In support of this it was pointed out that many accidents had happened in Japan, and even today it Is conceded that they have produced \ no outstanding flyers, % \ The statement, however that they do not make good airmen is disproved by the Master of Senmipill, who describes them as pupils leaving little to be desired and the standard achieved by pilots throughout the naval air force as being very high. In fact, one report of the interview credite him with the statement that it is higher than in the British naval -alr force. The Japanese are sald to be ready to try anything and to have no trace of nérves. All this makes a very different story from that which became common property ‘shortly after the armistice, and there seems now no doubt that hypothesis outran facts.— North China ‘Herald. = AUTO USED TO EXERCISE DOG At Least One Animai of High Estate Got Real Outing, Though i Novel Manner. ; ~The other nrorning the man who loves dogs was walking down'Fifth avenue at the hour when the servants of the rich take out on leashes for their matutinal promenade the pampered members of dogdom, the New York Sun states, - , v : ~ “Poor brutes,” be said to & friend. “A life of ease and luxury is theirs and there’s not ome of 'em wouldn't change with the raggedest cur in Christendom 'if he could roam unrestrained through country flelds. Why, ‘none of those rich QOgs ever gets de‘cent -exercise, A ‘big chap like that fellow (pointing to a police dog) should be given a chance to run.” And then round the corner appeared a limousine the owner of which evidently was a real dog lover. He had solved the problem of giving his dog a run every day. The chauffuer had one hand on the wheel, the other held ‘a long leash to which was attached the owner’s dog, contentedly running alongside at about eight miles an hour.
The New Psychology.
So long as all kinds of wrong conduct, or even wrong belief, were held to .be the expression of an evil wil subject to no causes outside itself, there was no way of dealing with them except by punishment, which was usually itself a mechanical reactlon and blind in its effects. But, as soon as wrong conduct and wrong : belief were seen to have causes that could be discovéred, their causes were sought, and sometimes found, with the best results. ‘The niew psychology is based on the assumption, constantly confirmed by experience, that there are causes for all error arid evil in the mind; and its great discovery is that the mind, when aware of these causes, will, with the whole of itself, resist and often overcome them.—Arthur Clutton-Brock in the Atlantic Monthly. B
Militarism In Miniature.
It would be ungallant to charge the grand duchess of Luxemburg with militaristic designs against the peace of the world. Yet it is a fact that she has enormously increased the size of her army by no less than 100 per cent —from 250 to 500 men. ‘ However, before this enlargement, hers was not the smallest in European armies on record. The prince of Lichtenstein in 1866 placed his entire army at the command of his ally, the emperor: of Austria. It consisted of seyen men and a drummer.. Nevertheless, the prince was a great warrior. He organized in his ecapital a war ‘museum, the prinelpal piece a pair of gloves which had belonged to Napoleon, all black from the smoke of battle. Unfortunately- the princess had them cleaned!
Baseball Follows the Flag. Baseball follows the flag, Wherever the United States marines have been stationed abroad the lure of the American national game has ‘spread like wildfire, ‘ : SR In China, ithe Philippines, the West Indies, and elsewhere native teams have been orgamized. Some of them blay remarkably. The Filipinos are experts. The Chinese and Japanese play the game well up to professional standards, and the natives of Nicaragua threw thelr national pastime of cockfighting into the.discard after they saw the game played by United States marines who had landed irfi\that coun- ‘ try in 1912 to suppress a revolution,
April Superstitions. April’s jewel is the diamond, which Is the emblem of success, and if worn ‘when going to some important appoint--iment it will bring you luck. The lucky flower for April is the primrose, and, whether natural or artificial, brings luck to those born In this month, April is a lucky month for marriages, but those no longer young should choose another month, for April brings luck to young people’s weddings only. S el NG & TN : ~ Good picking in' my huckleberry marsh- every day mow. Those who desire to may pick every day. John| BSavoie, Albion, oE o REbaY _ One of the heavies rain and thunden storms of the season visited Noblef
B Aoßig he-Yemr .- T . iMr.E?"al;mgr u‘!xd' Mr. Business man--this year you ~ should have a record of all sales and purchases, ,: - Interest payments, taxes and the like. . | - It will be easier for you to make a return of your . netincome to the government next year or to de- 1 cide whether or not you are requiréd to make the ; et T e ' It is'nt neccessary to keep an intricate set of books -~ todothis.: Just open a checking account at this bank, make all deposits here and pay all bills by ;heck. eae . We'll do the bookkeeping for you and fumish the checks without charge. S o W Pay 49, on Certificates of Deposit and Savings Account ‘ | . Capital & Surplus $85,00000
3 -M"M“W.————-————-——— e ' o ; E : 81 Make Your TnKMore Enjoyable by a : e ® E { 4 - | - Refreshing Night on Lake Erie . (Yonrnfltlcbthgoodontlrbqlb) : Thousands of east and north bound travelers say they wouldn't have missed that i ©ool, comfortable night on one of our fine steamers. A good bed in a clean state- § . ¥oom, a long sound slesp and an appetizing breakfast in the morning! ! Steamers *“SEEANDBEE” —*“CITY OF ERIE™ —*“CITY OF BUFFALO" § _ Daily, May Ist to November 15th : Leave Cleveland - 9:00 P.M.} Eastern Leaveßuffalo -.. 900 PM. § § Amive Buffalo . « 7:30 AM. [ Standard Time Arrive Cleveland - 730 AM. § C for Niagara Falls, Eas nd Canadian ticket agens § fltgt.;x"‘i:(t:t::::cgrfor ekets 3‘l';’c & 'fierl?i:c. ‘New T&‘AWW i ) Send - le ] Great Ship ; Great S;l?; f”rggu?:c‘fl;:%l B‘l,l‘(llzgz-ncah‘e?n b:ofkltet.he N “gl‘k" —the The Cleveland and Buffalo TransitCo, :\\ :g....""“““’"w o § . . Clev OQhio J B world. : - Bl e : i o .;‘l"‘* .‘-zfi?:‘i“i{) .2 ' ‘ b “‘.Mt e ———— - -
- Ford Magenetos Charged Whilf You Wait o fi:\»;-a e - Bosch, K. W. or Atwater Kent _lg_nitidn Syst¢m inSa-lled oh your Ford car Studebz;icer Sales ;nd Sefiice, 01, ; Keflywefl T‘m e b 3 E:udeßattenes ! BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE
T wam,% Jow is just the one you are looking for—YOUR | *\ i OWN HOME NEWS PAPER AND YOUR f W 8 OWN HOME FARM PAPER. N é ‘The Ligonier Banner, 1yr.... 5200 . W 8 ¥ The Ohio Farmer, 1 year 100 T Our Special Price to You ONLY $2.50 The Ligonier Banner, Ligonier, Ind. . SE Gentlemen: Enclosed herewith find $...... for which send me your paper and The Ohio Farmer for one year each = Name Fe . v-covou’o‘o-.. sssese ...‘.',..'...... °-BM W W e ee e e 1{ $ Town . ~.. “ee e .'.-..;oouocnottgn Fo D.---. u‘-:’-..'---..---'
Daily to songide 'r'-ndlolntln | printing problemsforour ocustomers, and eack one we oolnl{m us justeo much more experienceto L e . S S ‘best equipped to do your whfln&h‘ the way it It s e
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