Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 23A, Ligonier, Noble County, 30 July 1923 — Page 4

" Theres a 2 Hemson'w @~ o ‘When you need a Doctor—You want the best. ~+ When you need a Lawyer—You want the best. When you need a Bank—You want the best. is the -_o'utsta,nd‘ing.' financial institutifon- in this vicinity with the Largest Deposits and Largest Total Resouirces 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. - i TR

Let_Kiester look after! your' battery. ; =y e Dr. Jack will be at Crystal Tuesday. and Wednesday only. . % ? f L : v'! ' For sale cooking and eating apples. ‘Call at 118 Grant street. - : The . Cromwell chautauqua opened - Friday and js jat its best. ; . @et your transmission and differ,ential filled at Kiester’s. ‘ 19atf 3 Eflood codking and eating apples I‘.ox . sale transparent vagiety at 118 Grart 5 J. Piégot; drove: to Rome Cicy ‘with ‘his family S__unday‘ and spent a pleassnt day. -« @ - 1 For Rent—Modern 7 room house with gearage. = Enquire Blanche - Shobe, 217 B Third St. Phone 178. - = ' L 19btf - Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Longenecker /moved today into the Tyler hbuse ‘made vacant by the removal of the Craig tam;ly to Columbia City» See Dr. Jack he khows just what you need and his favorite prescription is laughter at Crystal Tuesday and Wednesday July 31 and Aug. Ist. Land listed for sale in all parts © fthe county and the city of Ligonier. John Himes office under the Banner office. ; e 23ati Wilbur Draper the electrical man from Ligonire was in Goshen on Friday soliciting trade from the business men of Gosfien.—Goshen News Times ' Friday. = ‘ ; \ _ Rev. and Mrs. Harley Baker son and - two. daughters and Dr. Longenecker, of Eaton, Ohio were Sunday guests at the Louis Marker cottage, Diamond lake. e T T .FOR SALE—Studebaker touring . '@ar, equipped with new ‘battery, good tires with an extra tire and .cover, ; ®pot light, windshield wiper and bum“pers. Car is in good condition and - @oes at a bargain. John Hays. 19btf

MON. JULY 80 o :, \ ' “THE HERO” with Gaston Glas and Barbara LeMarr an extra fine story wiheh shows a youth doesn’t ave to go through the fire of the trenclies to prove his courage. ..We recommend this picture to you. Also an Al St. John comedy. . & - Also Baby Peggy in a good comedy i “TUES. AND WED, JULY 31 AUG, 18t ONLY - _ - Harold Lioy as “DR. JACK” Consult Dr. Jack. ' g Wf yow've lost your prescription--Try the latest brand packed in Cellu. - Hloyd. It’s guaranteed to cause more laughs, rattle more ribs and roeck moYe sides than any fonle hottled. or otherwise you ever saw or tasted. -~ Two days only also a comedy Ly . ‘ . P ees. - _ *FHE WOMAN OF BRONZE” with Clara. Kimball Young and Joha - Bowers. A story of a wiie’s fight for the love of her artist husband. : RS fi “SAWDUST” with Gladys Walton. A story of the sawdust ring of the Mg witlte tops and the ups and dowss of elrcus life. Extra fine. Also s SUN. AND MON. AVG.SANDS Js a veal gem. The story of Madam Butterfly showing wonderfull Japanesc _ jj*rdens In matoral colors, This is a real novelty, Don’t miss it. = SR e D e Y e e e iBL S e

Go to Kiester's place for gasoline and oil. : ' ' 19atf Use artificial pure ice. Phone 100 for| prompt delivery. 10btt Dr. Jack at Crystal Tuesday and‘ Wednesday only. ; ~ Modern home for rent- call at the Carney Clothing Store. 19btt . Kiester has tirés tubes and auto Tacces’soriefi call on him. 19aif White As;lip’pers:‘ big ' cut in price. ‘Newtons Shoe Store. oy 21a4t Mr. and Mrs. 1: H. Haley, of Adrain, Mich., are guests of the El mer Klotz' family this week. : Cliarlesé S.Wickard drove over .tc Goshen Saturday and visited friends oyer Sunday returning home to Diamond lake today. gy ' iMrs. J. L. Dunning is confined to her bed at the "Wawasee ‘cottage and is being cared for by her daughte: Mrs. Robert Singlair. o . Word comes from the hospital ‘where she is benig treated for her automobile injuries that Miss Jessie Fritz is rapidly recovering. : Miss Elizabeth Dunning is dangerouslyill ‘at:the home' of her sister, Mrs. Wilbur Draper. A trained nurse and a physician are in attend: ance. ey o Roswell Earnhart spent Sunday at the home of C. R. Stansbury returning to Chicago in the evening.:{ Mrs. Earnhart had been here severai days with her’parents, 1 See “Dr. Jack? for you, for everybody—he prescribes smiles giggles laughs roars and howls. All kinds of Joy for all kind of patients at Crystal Tuesday and Wednesday. . = The véondit_ioxi of Beulah Mayfield, who was struck on the head with & plate by a girl companion at Hetel Ligonier, is satisfactory although she will be-confined to her bed for somc time. o e e e

~© Obituary. Frances Hannah Freeman was born in Preble county Ohio, October .26 1846, - i e : She came to Noble county Indiana as a child and grew to womanhood in the same neighborhood where she spent the most of the remainder of her life. - , ' She was united in marriage t¢ Israel Eden Billman January 11 1865 at Sturgis, Mich., soon after his return from the Civil War. They. be: gan their, married life on a farm northwest: of Lig&nier and resided there until the death of Mr. Billmau May 31 1897 To them were born six childrea three of whom survive. Maud Wy song, Henriétta F. Milner and Ralph W Billman. She united with and was baptized in the Methodist Protestant faith at Salem soon after her marriage and later united with the Methodist Episcopal church at Ligonier where she has since been a devoted and stead fast member. ‘ S : Her’'s was ever a life of kindness and sacrifice and she beleived that to do unto others' as you would be dong by, brought to one the greatest measeure of happiness and comfort. May her memory be an inspiration to live our . lives in such a way that when the final day comes, we may rest assured—our work was well done. i

The Goshen chautauqua opens Wednesday of this week. Mr. ‘_and Mrs. Guy Calbeck are in Fort Wayne guests of relatives. They drove over Sunday. : Mr. and Mrs. Will Snider visited the Louis Marker family at Diamond lake Sunday evening. : : : James Lavey of Goshen is spending the day | with Manager Kilopfeastein at Hotel Ligonier. . s Mrs. Fred Duesler fractured her right arm cranking a Ford car at Pleasant Hill the other day. @ ‘.—""——'7" ' Mr. and Mrs. Mel. Jackson arrived home Friday evening from an extended trip thr9ugh Michigan, Canada and Ohla, = % b e Miss Alice Vallance and mother and Mrs, L. G. Cooper, left Thursday for New York state where they will visit relatives. e Friday night the K. K. K. ‘robed in their uniforms ' burned a big cross in Albionfcausin’g a fire alarm to be turned in. - Hod Ullery ¢ame from Fort Wayne and spent Sunday at .the Ullery cottage Diamond Lake and-his family returned home with him Sunday even ing. e o ~One hundred eighty-eight inmates of the penal farm suffered from ptomaine poisoning after partaking oi rotten ‘milk. The matter should be investigated. e p _ Mrs. J. Loehr, Mrs. Anna Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Motsinger and son of Kalamazoo, Mich spent the Week end at the home of Mr. and Mrs. .-I.,_a‘w;pmee‘ Contad’ o . _ Mr. and Mrs. W. R. DeVoe and Wfit@fvmflflmfym"watgm mont, Mich,, and Miss Bila Joray of Ligonier lett Sunday for & motor trip mefi 4 Gunte e e s L e b aey B o “4{%u~‘»‘mw“'§&4@n§h§f L g wg‘

'HORSE DISCLOSED RICH HINE’ Uncovered Treasure at Rammelsberg, " Where the Devil Is Said fo Have = . In the Tenth century, so legend hafi it, Otto I, arriving at his castle in the Harz and finding the royal larder short of venison, sent his hunter Ramm out to the forest to kill a deer. The wintef snows were on the ground, and the hunter soon found a fresh track which he followed far up into the mountains. As the way became steeper he was forced to dismount from his horseé, which he left tied to a tree, and to follow his quarry on foot. The chase 'was a long one; and the highspirited ‘ steed, left alone in the cold, impatfently pawed the ground, secraping away the snow and earth and laying bare the rock benesth. : When Ramm returned from his pursuit of the deer he was astonished at the glint of metal beneath the hoofs of his horse, and he hastened to collect pieces of the ore—the first specimens to be taken from. the Rammelsberg. The delight of King' Otto at the discovery was great; and he re warded his hunter by giving ‘him a golden chain, worth 1,000 ducats, and by naming the mountain “Rammelsberg,” to perpetuate his retainer’s name, y ; Miners say that the devil once really worked in the Rammelsberg, and the “Devil’s Pit,” as it is known, may be seen there today. i

RECORDED : FROST IN JUNE

Remarkable Occurrences in the Year 1816 Are Recailed by a New : York Newspaper. : The year 1816 has gone down into history as the year of *“eighteen hundred and froze to death.”” - Not much authentic information exists concern: ing it, but the popular name suggests 4 great deal. A paragraph in Thompson’s “History of Vermont,” declares that frosts occurred every month of the summer and that snow fell every month of the yegr. June 8 snow fell to a depth of five or six inches and ice nearly half an inch thick formed on shallow ponds. Another report declares that a great many head of stock perished. ; In middle and northern New England crops of all sorts were severely injured or destroyed. In the middle Atlantic states there was great damage, but statistical information concerning the extent of damage is not atb hand. -~ .~ o ' The cause of the cold spell Is thought to have been the great amount of volcanic dust that filled the air, intercepting the heat of the sun, and inasmuch as the years 1812-1816 were years of great volcanic ‘activity this explanation is plausible. : A dust haze intercepts a great deal of the ‘sun’s heat—New York Herald. o

Charles Dickens’? Dags.

In a recent article on “A Dickens Zoo,” Mr. L. R. Brightwell points out that in a vast array of books about Dickens it is rather surprising to find so few references to animal characters. . The great novelist was, of course, an ardent dog lover. His letters. are full of references to his canine friends, and his home at Gads Hill was never without at .least two of them—usually- dogs of imposing stature and deportment. We find several references to Turk and Linda, and some amusing passages about the liftle terrier whose troubles parasitic will be a source of sympathetic merriment to every dog lover. Scarcely a volume of the novels and essays is without its ‘*doggy” hero—Gyp in “David Copperfield,” Lion in “Little Dorrit,” DiogeneS in' “Dombey and Son,” Sikés’ nameless cur in “Oliver Twist,” Boxer in “The Old Curiosity Shop” .and “Cricket on the Hearth,” Merrylegs in “Hard Times,” Jerry's dogs in “The Old Curiosity Shop,” and “The Uncommercial Traveler” is rich in dogs of all sorts. 3

Testament Ignores Hen.

" Poultry and hens’ eggs were late additions "to’ the human cuisine, in spite of the large part they now play in our dietary, says H. G. ‘Wells, in a footnete in his ‘“The Outline of History.” The hen is not mentioned ‘in the Old Testament, although there is allusion to the segg in Job, nor by Homer. Up to about 1,500 B. C., the only fowls in the world were jungle denizens in India and Burma. :The crowing of jungle cocks is ‘noted by -Glasfurd in his accounts of tiger shooting as 'the invariable ‘preliminary of dawn in the African jungle. ..oy Probably poultry were first domesticated in Burma, says the author. They got to China, according to reeords, only about 1100":B.:©. They reached Greece via Persla before the time of Socrates. In the New Testament the crowing of the cock reproaches Peter for his desertion of the Miaisger; Ot SRR R eAI Breathing Exercises for Adenoids. _ An,ltalian, Doctor Brisette, ¢ontends that the value of ‘br‘edth%’g’ ‘exercises both before and after ,operation for adenoids is not sufficlently recognized. He gives data showing, as tested by the spirometer, the great improvement in respiration which follows & course -of special bredthing ‘gvmmastics, Before the exercises he instills.a few drops of mentlioldted-oil into the nostrils. His aim ig<to ‘,Q}.‘QW;%HOII to the necessity of ‘carrying. out' appropriate exercises if the best results are to be got from the remgval of ddenolds. especially between the ages of B NsDYoL - . Your lips will, grack at Dr. Jack He's not %. (;:t%ckflw?ongfilgaug?s he’'tl stack. See Dr. Jack Sifpiiis # Louls, !gafinafi ved homd from had heen purchasing goods for the| Jasi b S T e L e

FINE “SENSE OF PSYCHOLOG

" led Wlth a Didap” Knowliign" ™ » __of Human Nature, .~ T o — a‘ b ‘,;'?: . L . An Indianapolis ‘woman tells the fauom, story: | MbET & Sl ~ “The family was spending the sum‘mer in Brown county in'the most wonderful log cabin. The immense, roughhewn: logs' told of pioneer days and ‘even now the spirit of dreams and of. rest pervaded the place, From early morning: till -early evenitig: hundreds of birds took turms in singing of the “The sheer beauty of it §0 charmed us that we were oblivious to the. crudity. of our practical makeshifts and settled down to living as we found ovi3 ! : i “One of our findings ‘'was thatthe bathing facilities, although adequate, were primitive. A galvanized iron tub Stood' in a corner of the jmmense _porch, .quite ‘sheltered by ‘the woods -and an end of the cabin, but not so -well proteeted from family intrusion. A bath was a game of catch-as-cateh- : can. « 5 % | “David had: arisen very ‘early, filled his tub from the kitchen pump and was -enjoying a relaxed sense ‘of security, - when .he heard the gentle ‘ thud, thud, on the stairs above, which _could mean none other than the footSteps of ‘hig six-year-old sister. We believe David is destined to become a leader of men. ‘Nothing but . a deep understanding. of huthan reactions could have inspired him, Raising his voice to the n’th power he called out: ‘Don’t look! Don’t look! And don’t look to see why not!"” e

HONOR RESTORED TO FAMILY

Barl of Mar and Kellle Allowsd to ‘Resume Office Which His An- . cestor Had Forfeited.’ :

After a lapse of 208 years, the office of hereditury keeper of Stirling castle, the ancient residence of the Stuart kings, has been restored by King George to the earl of Mar and Kellie. This office was conferred on an ancestor of the present earl in the year 1370 and held by, the family, with one break, until 1715. The then earl took sides with the Stuarts and, being defeated at Sheriffmuir, .was deprived of his tifle, . 4 . At the ceremony of restoration the earl presented his royal warrant of office to the military commander of the castle, and received in return the key on a red velvet cushion. Taking over the key, the earl sald that King George had forgiven the act which had deprived the Erskine family of an honor - highly prized by it, and which had now been restored.—Christidn Science Monitor. S / . “Bat-Wing” Airplane. Builders of the “bat-wing” airplane designed the craft to overcome the resistance ¢f struts, wires and fuselage that in the usual type of machine consume almost three-quarters of the engine power. The improved design is a great double-chambered aerofoil that terminates at right and left in the conventional ailerons angd that tapers In the rear to a ‘tail that has the usual elevator and rudder. The aerofeil measures (100 feet from tip to tip. and swells In the front to a thickness of seven feet. In that bulge is a cabin 80 feet long, eight feet wide and six feet in height. This plane 'is an intérnally trussed cantilever structure covered with woed veneer so tough that the wing surfaces can be walked upon.—Washington Star.® = ;

Malays Emerging.

- In the past it las been a customary and true thing to say of the Malays that they took very little interest in local politics or questions of government. The same thing ‘might have Been said with similar- truth of India —speaking . generally ‘-‘— twenty-five years ago. But just as public opinion In India has of late exercised itseif a great deal with pubHc affairs and has shown an Intention ‘of viewing thoSe .affairs through- the ‘Spectacles of western theories and teaching, so, In a small degree, we think.we can discern the growth or a similar dispogition among the Malays.—Singapore Hree FIeAR . = = oo

Understanding Dimmed.

An intoxicated man was ejected from a downtown -motion picture show. The manager accompanied him to the door. . e ‘“Don’t you ever come into this theater again in this condition,” the manager said. : SRR "The intoxicated man looked at the ground in' a puzzled, yet reflective way, and then asked, hesitatingly: _“Which condition?’ — Indianapolis. B s M R S

- Yellowstone Park Wolves. Game losses in Yellowstone National park through killings by predatory afimals reached a new low record last winter, aécording to'the Department of'the Interior. = Special efforts were made by the park ranger force to destroy predatory animals, such: ag the mountain lion, coyoté and wilf, with the result that 221 coyotes and 8' wolves -were accountedfor up to last May. © Lt s wida ! % Walk Underground. « ' = ‘An underground meving pathway for. P;’ggls s the, subject. of investigation I that, city, Thirteen plans were. submitted and five were retained for. work on the principle of parallel bands working at graduating speeds, and the, Temaining .one, slows down, for . each B e S pdeval The :Misses. Pauline .Oliver and Tafitha * Liords, of - Welcottville,. -are| guests of their aunt Mrs; L..L..K00n. thil§ week., = e gel s e | ~Wanted, immediately, G:gh‘ Bl sigts 6 i, oty OB fiy % JJ_A M&?wfl:mn__hm e gt |

f] =5 v \\;g-;,;x‘- av!.-rxf.-w sNOmYz o 4 : P R " Ifll f':;;-u | Are You Proud 1 ¥l Pocket Knife O\ 7 pocket? Has it any broken bla- | gt - CTOUGh to Cul? - . (D é;q '« Winchester . l ““N%fi‘: by, “';’“‘ - Pocket Knives =~ A vGt g ] : . : Wi o o ook b &\~ ¢ wwfl’ There’s a Winchester pocket = || stock offers a large vaniety from l {"" < \ A ‘which to select. - o e =\ Pearl Handled Knives—For the ; “ S i man in the office. A combmation of i, 4 || uulity and handsome appearacce. o e b | Pl - : \ R ) Gein . (RN ‘@'? : “&?}/&Kfigfi Jack Knives—For those who deiß AR A \%‘ ‘A’i\“ - mand a pocket knife which will stand =S AN Wi . 15 - ; ~§\~>\] ./%\ up under constant use. Blades that “ &‘g‘m Ny ) i . _=:4 Cattlemen’s Knives—Far the \_x\&\\/$ g farmer and cattlemen. The Wm- § ‘?‘e -~ round hole in a jiffy. Prices 50c up WEIR & COWLEY

The Lincoln Car Demand.

Orders on hand at the Lincoln division of the Ford Motor Company, which have been increasing for months, continue to be <considerably in excess of the production scheduler Quality car buyers in the market growing numbers are showing a de cided preference for the Lincoln and the leadership which is always has enjoyed among the higher priced motor creations is now more pronounced than ever. | : ‘ \ While manufacturing facilities have been greatly extended since the Lin: ‘coln came under Ford ownership and ‘while they are being still further enlarged, production- under. the expresesd policy of the company always will be more or lesy restricted beeajise of-the exacting high standards set for all details of Lincoln. constuetions’ .00 Rraan e ' So insistent is the company -in main taining every feature of the indivi‘duality ~and - distinctiveness whica characterizes the Lincoln that not in; frequently is production . slowed up that some new refinement may be added, for assurance is given the purchaser that the Lincoln at all times presents the utmost inautmobile constraction and (desighd! . i 4 it ' The Lincoln motor accepted gener: ally by automotive engineering experts as the finest of power plants. has been enhanced by a number of re: finements which have resulted in im-. proved appearance increasedf"fiaccelf 3 eration and smoother operation. |

Noble County Students.

This 'is the thirty-fourth annuai summer session of the Indiana state university. Its growth in enrollment has continued from y‘eaf_'t’o year until last year it ranked among’ the twelve largest summer schools in the country. ‘The summer seéssion - consists 'of eight and twelve weeks courses with work scheduled part of the time on Saturdays. The -eight weeks course closes August 10 and th 2 twelve weeks course Aug. 29. ‘Noble county students attending Indiana university this' summer arz | as follows: HE T Ra Albion—Beatrice Baster” -’ Avilla—Fern A Guthrie 'Cromwell—Henry L Greider " Kendallville—Carlisle 'O ' Burden: | Margaret Beckman, Florence ' Kirlin; Ralph W. Probst, Trevor Shore. . Ligonier—Raph E. Allen, Gladys b e T | Rome City—Floyd B Chapman. i i | ‘1 Pplek Up—Set‘Down | ' “Tom Cass removed the 0. M: Cralg‘ Hotisehold effects’ to " Columbia City last- Friday without a bobble. ~Mr. | Cass picks up household goods re | moves them in his big van and sets then. down where they belong in the ‘new location saving the work of packit ong S ——— ¢ . o i {.« Big Family Dinner, * ' ' .. A Dbig family dinner marked the celebration o fthe fifty-seventh an‘niversary of ‘the Dr. G ‘G. “Keehn's birth at Freed park Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. 0. D. Nusbaum of Fort Wayne: ‘were among the out of town guests. e e bt | Pay Chautauqua Pledges. | Subscriptions for flufh#w hingiaagus _Afe now, duc SHE Wiy *fi Bhe banks des's. ifi:g;i gfiifi ofitication sent arifat, F, s Al 5 PO o e he, Gommittee iik o ST Nke o ovening, the contrac %%xé éwfi?fifi‘a%f tle Goshorn Bome, |

Injured at Albion Chautawgua.

The Albion Democrat says: ~ : “Henry' Hullet an employvee at the Chautauqua tent was sericusly imjured Saturday evening by falling upon a stake. A seetion of the seats had ‘fallen down-wherein Mrs. Legan ‘Winebrenner and Miss Kidd were in jured and others bruised amnd frightened and in hasteing to the sceme Mr. Hullet stumble and fell upon a stake crushing his breast bome ama suffering other injuries. He was im mediately rushéd to the Garrett hospital for operation if mecessary amd ‘medical treatment. While seriously injured it is réported he will recover if unforeSéen complications ‘de met cause further trouble. Howewer @ may require a long time for the injuries to heal. Mrs. Winebrenner and Miss Kidd suffered the ligaments being storn torn -at the ankles in thei fall and will be confined to their homes for some time.” : Temporiry Injunction Gramted .+ Attorney C. A. Lincoln representing Josie Kingdom ownér of the [Churubuscb' light plant was in fhis city Friday afternoon making srrangements to obtain a temporary imJjunction to prevent the Indiana Pablice. Service Corporation from completing an electric line they are building from Fort Wayne to Blue Lake Attorney Lincoln states that his action is based on am alledged contract between Josie Kingdom and the Indiana Public Service Corporation in which the corporation agreed met ic. build a line in Churubusco if Churs- - busco took their surplus power amd light from them. Papers were issued in Ligonier where the judge issued the injunction and the papers wene served upon the foreman of the corporation’s gang which is just comDleting the line from the lake to the town. . s % s i

l Two Auto Crashes. A family by the name of Tawlor from ‘Eria, Pa., driving a Nash car was hit and turned over om the Limcoln Highway near this city Sunday evenign when struck by a Ford driven by a man from Defiance, Ohio. One of the three children in the Nash machine wase quite badly injured and 'was cared for in the Dr. Lane emer gency hospital. The cars were guite ‘badly damaged. 6 4 - Henhy Musser sent his Ford imtc a car of similar make driven by Dean Hite at the Corner of Mclaega ami Fifth streets Sunday night. One whesl ‘was torn from the Hite machine but the drivers escapeg imjury. @~ =~ LU e—— e W L. Chamberlin Phone S6l. S3%her

’ WATCH YOUR - . = BATTERY " ' | 1 forget your battery” o lowiistdinvite dameSE oo iins Ll St 2 g & 'Gi=BATTERY e ok s OIS . e goginr . . o