Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 23B, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 August 1923 — Page 2
o zLi)_a'ns to.farm,e'r,sdand stock,mgh are negot- 0 - " itatedby this 'ii;stitufion with the | _ . _least formality and greatest T , ‘helpfulness, ' | | .v ~ Applications for Farm Loans receive pro- " mpt and courteous attention- - 4 ,our rates are moderate; o . :~~ Terms favorable and facilities unexcelled. = ' Conference with our officers is »cordially o ~ dinvited, and kept in strictest confidence. ' - You will receive hereevery accomodation \ ~ consistent with sound banking principles. 3 ~ Wepay 44, on savings o e o e Rank an tbe Corner” | -
- 10 Days Commencing 0 o Saleday Having putchaéed the entire Wall Paper stock of Dale Earle we have decided to put it on sale in order to-acquaint the public with the new department we have added and also to clean up odds and ends to make room for new fall stock. So many beautiful patterns, just enough for one room that must be closed out, and with hundreds of patterns to select trom at the low unheard ot price of 23c, 3¢, 4c, sc, 6¢, 7c, B¢, 9¢, 10c etc. per roll. - o ~ Don’t miss this sale as it cannot be repeated. Remember Saturday morning and ‘mgke your selections early. ‘ Weaver's Hardware
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3co gl Keeps Children == Happy Those active youngsiers that romp and play so hard ! need plenty of real nourishment to keep up their bubbling health. i e Superior, Corn-Toy - Superior, Corn-Top ‘Holsum or Superior ‘Breads with all “the food value in the wheat left in” provide children of every age with real food--food that is wholesome and health building. , Their absolute purity and fine Fi ~?,,;,\ flavor makes them the favorite &Ny, el v. 4 ‘ fi&‘} 4‘ ‘M"mfl' i. g o «Ax ,{f”,f z‘:{ifii‘\\%}%' W = WollsGiocery ' 'BS 1:“*3»-#“ b R NSRS ) - Gunderman, Benton = | - “Sggsaanmily
The Ligomer Bannerl Published by ‘ "he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor : Published every Monday and Thursday and entered in the Postofice at Ligo‘afer, Ind., a 8 upou class matter.
Yorkey Family Reunion. Mr. and Mrs, John Yorkey of Los Angeles, California are here to spend a couple of weeks with his parents Mr. and Mrs. August Yorkey and to visit other relatives and old friends. Mr. Yorkey is prospering in the metropolis of the Golden state. While herfe he and his Chicago sons will attend the Yorkey familty reunion to be held at the John Warner farm Sunday August 12. - Ambrose Yorkey and his family will come from Michigan City and there will be four generat jons represented at the family gathering. » G : 0 ~ Sentence is Severe. Wallace G. McKinney. 22 of Goshen an employee of the Studebaker corporation at South Bend was given six months sentence to the penal farm and assessed a fine of $lOO and costs of $3O by Mayor George H. Rimpler in the Goshen city court Saturday night when found guilty of illegal possession of intoxicating liguor for purpose of sale. McKinney was un: der suspended sentence for a like of- | fense committed+«a year ago.
Still at Banner Office.
When the purchaser of a pair of heavy work shoes a pair for the babe. and two pairs of socks placed the articles "in the automobile of H. B. Burke ten days ago he left them in care of an i honest man. Mr. Burke brought the shoes and socks to the Banner office and this is the second time they have been advertised. Thc purchaser of: the articls evidently does not read the Banner. i | Threatens to Kill Constable, ~ In conducting a raid on a residence at Syracuse police officers found l“ChUb” Stough, Stella Hockensmith]| and Hattie Davis intoxicated amd con fiscated a jug of wine. Stough threatened to kill Constable Bert O Mabie. An affidavit is to be filed against Stough charging him with driving an automobile while intoxicated. i : Four County Institytes. - County school teachers’ institutes’ will be held in Noble Allen Sten ben and DeKalb counties August 27 to 31 inclusive. The superintendents of the four counties have: co-operated in engaging: instructors for the institutes an dedch speaker will de: liver ah addres§ at each of the meet: | ings during th€ course of the week. : . Was False Report. ' The report printed in the South Bend, Elkhart and Goshen papers that Mrs. Louis Schnoll of Eagle Point near Mishawaka had shot at her hus band was incorrect. It was other parties who were mixed up in a gun play in nowise connected with the Schnoll place of business. : :
One Day im Noble County.
Canadian farmers will spend a day in Noblec ounty the latter part of:Au gust probably Friday August 24 look ing over the way the farmers of this country do their work. There are twenty-five auto loads in the party and they are looking over farming methods in the Central states. 2 Attend Shobe Funeral. ‘Messrs and Mesdames George H. Evans, John Jackson and Mesdames Will Jackson and Mary Kane Goshen Mr. and Mrs. William McKee and daughter Beatrice of 'Otsego, Mich., attended the funeral of Charles Shobe Monday. i ; : : ‘ - & T E—— : ‘ ~ To Warren Races. George Foster' will. take . Ligonier race horse enthusiasts to ‘Warren Ohio today and Friday when horses owned in this city start. The_-Cunn-} ingham and Timmis steppers are en-1 tered. : . ‘ | % RS ST My 3 - Rusty Nail Causes Death. Ed 8. Baily 50 of Elkhart a machinist died of septicaemia a form of blood poisoning which developed af ter he had stepped on a rusty nail two weeks ago. Two ‘brothers and a sis ter survive. oy - - 3,000 Bushels of Wheat, Three thousand 'bushels of wheat were threshed on the B. S. Walter farm 26 bushels to the acre, last week in Whitley ‘county. The grain is of fine quality. : gt el
A dvertising? | | || ESsEE 1 - i Newspaper }
L3GONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
CLASSIFED ADS
Jackson will. paint your automobile | and make it -look like new. b2att Use artificial pure ice. Phone 100 for prompt delivery. . 10btg 'See Arthur ‘Furgeson ’gor electre fans, ‘ /. 18au 1 Christian Science services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock and every Wednesday evening at 7:30 at the hall over Weir & Cowley; - Welcome. - I am prepared to ciean chimneys. furances and stoves on shori notice and at reasonable prices. J. F. Sampull, Ligonier Call Banner office 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. : 48Dbtf Fruit Trees and Shrubbery. All kinds of nursey stock sold at thel owest prices with a guarantee for six years to grow bloom and bear. All dead- stock replaced. Write to or call me at Ligonier. Chauncey Wagoner. : bobtf Christian Church Services. | Sunday school at 10:00 ; Morning worship at 11:00 . Evening worship at 7:00 i ' The public is cordially invited to these services . 5 46atf
First Presbyterian Church Cavin St Rev. G. H. Bacheler, Pastor. . | " Residence the Manse 318 Third St.| Telephone 345 : e o - Sunday School 9:30 a. m. ik Morning Service 10:45 a. m. Evening services 7:30 P. M. ' - Prayer meeting Wed. 7 p. m. “The Church With a Welcome.” : Wanted., Poultry hides and all kinds of junk I will pay the highest market price Call Joe Miller Telephone 2 on 433 Ligonier. . i 12atg b Notice. = Until September Ist 1923 our office hours will be from 9to 4 each day except aSturday when they will be from 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. . e . i Bothwell & Vanderford " 'W. H. Wigton 15btt eete e e . Thousands in South Bend owe their success.- to a specializedtraining' received at South Bend Business Coilege. Write for Special Fall Budge:. ; : : ! ~ 20b5t R e s S es e e House, two acre truck patch with autg storage for rent there miles east of 'Ligonier. Inquire of Frank W. Zimmerman, this city. * o Alatt Kiester is particular with yom work. He wants it right as well as 'you do. A A ~ Call for Elder’s ice cream the crearm of quality. “For Sale by all dealers. Ligonier Artificial Ice Co. distributors. & e obut ~ For Sale—2 choice lots Lake Wawasee. ideal location. Wm. L.’ Nies Goshen, Ind. 22b3t
Attractive Subscription Offer. Ligonier Banner, twice weekly and the Atlanta, Ga., Constitution three times weekly all for $2.75 the year, payable in advanée. Old subscribers by paying one year in advance may take advantage of this offer. The Tri-Weekly Constituticn is 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 ‘mewspaper, in the country that builds a paper of interest to the reader irrespective of where. he lives ; o ; 22atf For Sale—lrish Cobbler potatoes grown from - certified seed. Market price. Floyd Lemming, 2244
g T- 1) N I : | F N §? fl,flxl‘. 4 | i mmmws |
A Battery ¢ e Without Jars The new Gummite case; ‘ . an exclusive feature with Exide Batteries, is mglulg‘ed all in one piece, including compartments « for the cells. mndividual jars are done “W‘Y With’ By Gummite is practis .cally indestructible, will not warp, and is:not af- . fected by temperature; ' acid, or water, Let us _ show you this ideal bate = | BLAZED TRAIL ? . GARAGE
COVERING RAVAGES OF WAR
Belgians Have Accomplished Wonders in Restoring Devastated Areas —Public Edifices Rebuilt, :
By the end of the yeer, if building 1 goes on with the speed it has now| attained, the war wilderness of Flan-| ders not only will have resumed its prewar aspect in point of housing accommodation, but will have modera improvements unknown in 1914, | Motoring through the historic battleground today one is impressed by the capacity of production of the Belgian people. Shell-choked wastes have given place to productive pastures and extensive vegetable gardens, Shattered walls have been replaced by colfortable farm houses. Men and women are gathering sustenance from fields which were the theater of armies. , Almost 75,000 private dwellings out of 100,000 destroyed or damaged have been built, and most of these are occupied by their former inhabitants. Only ninety of the destroyed or damaged publie buildings of Flanders rel -main unrepaired. The reconstriction of private houses has entailed an expense of 685,000,000 francs. The public edifices have cost 125,000,000 francs to rebuild. Most of this work: has been done by the government through its speeial reconstruction degartme'nt. the Devastated Regions of-
DAD SURELY HARD TO PLEASE
“Hit High, Hit Low,” Old Gentleman Evidently Was Determined Not | to Be Satisfied. Ll
The /scfn of a Boston lawyer at the end of his fivrst term in college exulted in the fact that he stood next to the head of his class. “What! Next to the head?” exclaimed his father. “What do you mean, sir? ' I'd like to know what you think I send you to college for! Next to the head, indeed! I'd like to know why you aren’t at the head, where you ought to be.”. - The young man, naturally crestfall-. en, worked so‘ hard on his return to college that the end of the term found him in the coveted place. He went home very proud, indeed. ; ' The lawyer contemplated his son for a few moments in silence; then, with a shrug of his shoulders, re‘marked: ¢ : o “At the head of the class, eh? Humph! ‘That’s a fine commentary on Harvard -university "—Harper’s Magazine. ; : | ~ Peruvian Petroleum. ‘ Efforts are being made to develop more extensively the petroleum resources of Peru. . The known deposits of oil occur on a very narrow strip of land between the foothills of the Andees. and the shore of the Pacific, and much of this is flooded at high tide. Piles of railroad iron driven in the pure ocean sand, which varies in depth from five to fifty feet, are used -as foundations for the derricks. The shallowest of the driven wells is 180 feet, and the deepest 1,760 feet in depth. : There is very little gas, and the ofl is very heavy, so that it can be put into buckets with shovels, and it is carried direct to the furnaces to serve as fuel. -
Mango in Porto Rico.
It is reported that the climate of Porto Rico is favorable for the cultivation of what has sometimes been called the finest of tropical fruits, the mango. But although mangoes abound in the island they are seedling trees, and the frult is inferior to that of the famous Bombay mango, which is a grafted tree. It is believed that fine mangoes could be grown in abundance In Porto Rico by Importing the best grafts, and that the industry can be developed into an important one as ;Soon as the excellence of the fruit becomes known in the United States. e L - Looking for Oil in Spain., It appears that there are at present eight' companies engaged in exploration for oil in the Bilbao district, acconding to information published by the official chamber of mines at Bilbao, The denouncements of these companies in the Spanish Basque provinces alone of the Bilbao district cover many thousand acres of lands which have been favorably reported upon by the companies’ geologists. A number of borings have been made which have given favorable indications, but no resuits of a definite character have as yet been achieved. :
Frog Farming.
From his backyard frog ranch .near Oshkosh, Wis., Emil Neuenfeldt ships 2,000,000 frog legs a year. The frogs are kept in concrete trenches 50 feet long and 6 feet wide, in which are refrigerated pipes and running water. | The cold water makes the frogs hibernate and silences the frog chorus, | 'When an order is received the required number is scooped from a trench and ; the frogs are placed in a tank of wa-'i | ter charged with electricity. 'This kills | the frogs, straightens out thelr legs -and makes amputation easy. — Knew All About It, i . William had become the proud ewn- | er of a pig, and insisted upon having all the care of it. After a few weeks, as the pig did not seem to thrive, his father said to him: i _“William, I'm afraid you are not feeding your pig enough. It doesn’t | seem to be fattening at ann” “I don’t want to fatten him yet,” an- | swered: the young stockman. -Te | | waiting till he gets as long as T want, then I'll begin to widen him out.” o | Miss Blanch Harsh atfer a vacation {of & week is back at her post in the [Ligir battabton. ¢ 5 and 10 cent store will take a vacaoo mpndiey St i it e
Have A Record @ @ | This Year | o ~ Mr. Farmer fin&_a My, Busiiess nine s yax 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 retum of your met income to the government next year or to de- ~ cide whether or not you are required to make the return. L _7 o ' It is'ntneccessary to keep an intricate set of books : to do this. Just open a checking account at thes ~ bank, make all deposits here and pay all bills by check. e g P - We'll do the bqpkkeéping— for you ‘and fumish the - checks without charge. -~ S | We Pay 4670 on Certificates of Deposit and o . Savings Account " Capital & Surplus $85,000.00
e |:4. o - | §| Make Your Trip More Enjoyable by a ° T s - Refreshing Night on Lake Erie . : (Your rail ticket is good on the beats) . Thousands of east and north-bound travelers say they woanldn't have mised fhat cool, comfortable night on one of our fine steamens. A gwod bed in a clean state. | room, a long sound sleep and an appetizing breakfast in {he morning! Steamers “SEEANDBEE” — “CITY OF ERIE” —*CITY OF BUFFALD™ e Daily, May Ist to November 15th : Leave Cleveland - 9:00P.M.} Ecstern {Le‘velfl - SHPM. Arrive Buffalo - 7:30 AM. § Standard Time | Arrive Cleveland - 7:30 AN © i ra F: ST o eeg ¢ G S A miintr iy, L ey The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Co, N u..-:"“"’"-._ - : -~ Cleveland, Qhio VR N - L - Be, --.’.‘.’-’g,rz:t;\c&; ~ o> e ; B e> o e 3 gl e Ny f s ißv e - — ei S e
} Ford Mvégeri’etos Chéfgéd While i’ou Wm - - Have a. . ‘Basch, K. W.. or At\"va'tet Kent Ignition System insalled on your Ford car L Studebaker Sales ;nd.Se.rvice,.' T xenyw Tiree L Ry BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE
| Home Interests e ; . A gw*}{%% If there is truth in this statement the offer beA £ . low is just the ome you are looking for—YOUR . B B 8 OWN HOME NEWS PAPER AND YOUR e M OWN HOME FARM PAPER. “ 4 S The Ligonier Banwer, 1 yr.... 3200 {IB ¥ The Ohio Farimer, 1 year $lOO L ‘--.-.(-&w-.-.u&'f\“:‘fW;t:-‘vx\-'\--:-;nw.sw our Spe ci al P - tO Y " m—Y ” eD G G S G O S Sw S— eee e, semew oey s S GH eee W G mm— The Ligonier Banner, Ligonier, Ind. - ; ) Gentlemen: Enclosed herewith find §...... for which send me your paper and The Ohio Farmer for onie year each. : Name cases e 00-000-voo.-. ;;-..' .-}---fl;onOOO).OZ. ;h - - ..,.. - | 2 -Town ..-..-‘..;....‘...’.'q;-r...R-«R‘o noo‘odo u..-.;‘.--.
i Daily Task, w'mw-d solve the printing problems forour ket apply to the next one. This is what keeps us iR you ask us to t ~specimens and quote
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