Ligonier Banner., Volume 58, Number 2B, Ligonier, Noble County, 6 March 1924 — Page 3
L 5 Vi A 'WARNING . TO CAR OWNERS Don’t let your battery run down during the winter, even if you are not using your car—it will freeze if discharged. : : Our Winter stofa'ge service removes this danger and takes al respensibility off your shoulders at a very small cost. . . H&G Battery Service . WWikiard J
There are all kinds of cheap printing—butnoneofit isreally cheap—at lepst not on a basis of value., Cheap stuff is nsually worth almosé what it costs. Qur printing isn’t the cheapest you can get, but It’s as good as the best.
IF YOU WANT Real Service
with pertect satisfaction - equip your car with Federal Tires We haveva large stock at real prices. ~ Also other tires to chose from When in need of tires, tubes, batteries or accessories see us first and save. some money - ‘Have vou tried our gas? Once tried alway used ... Shill Gas | Lincoln Way West .
-.\"'% Tt : 'l'w gl "1 S gl W ¥ A Y Nl A S s § B Vo a Ny MM"TE? A Battery Without Jars " The new Gummite case, an exclusive feature with Exide Batteries, is moulded all in one piece, inciuding compartments for the cells. Thus, indi~ vidual ‘jers dre done v away with, : Gummite is practi- ¢ - cally indestructible, will | not warp, and is not af-’ | _fected by temperature, " acid, or water. Let us show you this ideal bate tery case, " . BLAZED TRAIL : GARAGE
Bothwell & Vanderford - Lawyers Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana " "CHARLES V-INKS AND SON L ~ Dealer in N Monuments, Vaults, Tombstones, _ BeldingSione W. H. WIGTON o Afiomey-at-iaw . Office in Zimmerman Block - LIGONIER, IND Dr. Maurice Blue ’ VETERINARIAN . Office: Justamere Farm. [Phone: Ligonier 757 ‘Harry L. Benner o Auctioneer : " Open for all engagemends - Wolf Lake, Indiana , Both Noble and Whitley ~ County Phones
l * Period of Mourning Ends. = | © Flags on American vessels in all parts of the world on state and federal government property and on: pri} vate buildings and ’residlences wh‘ic?u have been flown at half staff in honot of former President Woodrow Wilson may now remain at full mast again. The official period of ‘mourning fox Mr. Wilson ended Monday midnight. ' Shift in Residences, - . ‘Mifflin Hunter will next week remove wit hhis family to Indianapolis The Hunter family has made a host of friends during a residence of twc yvears in Ligonier and the best wishes of many people follow them. The house vacated by the Hunters will be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Arthu: Longenecker. -
Creamery Meeting March 15 The annual meeting of stockholders of the Topeka Co-operative creamers company will be held March 15. There are about 150- stockholders and much depends upon the action at the meeting as to whether the company wil! locate its plant in Ligonier.- e Drink to His Health. L Three bandits entered the cabare! of Henry; Rippe at Hammond and robbed Rippe . and seven customers .ot $4OO. Before committing the robber), the bandits heartened themselves wit} several bottles of Rippe's near-beer. . Badly Scalded. Mrs. Max Roegele of Elkhart wasl badly scalded while working in g restaurant when she tripped and feii while carrying a pail of boiling water, KEye glasses protected her eyes from injury. ' . - Debt Piling Up. : The general fund of the state is now, overdrawn to an amount of four million dollars, will be further depleted This condition is in line with Gov. MecCravs financial tacties. i
Changes Farm Resideneces. , Frank Fuller has moved from th John H. Hoffman to the H. C. Erwirn farm and a tenant by the name’ of Blake from LaGrange county will oz cupy the Hofman place. - Butchers Big Porker. Tuesday Frank Cornelius butchered the prize porker of this county. The hog weighing 810 pounds and Mzr. Cornelius now has pork enough tg supply the city trade for a week. ! Open Drinking Fountain. Howard Fisel and Police Chie) Engle have opened the public drink) ing fountains on Cavin street which id an indication that the severe wintey weather is over. ‘ L ~ Mrs.-Ed Keasey is again employec as cashier in the Indiana & Michigan Electric company offices. , : William C. Beckner has removed with his family to a farm near Brimfield and the house he vacated will be ocepied bxv the Shelly ‘Boles family Rev. Parker received a telegram from Rev. Daniel Robinson that he could not appear-here to preach in the U. B. church until a week from next Sunday.
PUBLIC SALE
The undersigned will sell at public auction 1 mile west on Lincoln Highway and 1-4 mile south of Ligonier. Sale to ecommence at 1 o’clock on WEDNESDAY MARCH 12 The following Property to-wit: Mare 10 years old weight 1400 : 3 HEAD OF CATTLE—Durham cow 7 years old will be fresh April 1 Cow fresh in December Bred Jan 30 cow 8 years old fresh in November bred Feb. 25. - . 17 HEAD OF HOGS—Chester Whit¢ sow due to farrow April 1, Red sow due May 20, 15 Shoats weight 80. tc 125 Ibs. : : v 300 bus. Corn, 100 bus Oats some Fodder. o MISCELLANEOUS—Spring tooth’' harrw, spike tooth harrow, 2-horse cultivator, 3 horse John Deere walking plow, 2-horse! Bryan walking ‘plow buggy pole, wagon, 1-horse bohk sled, double shovel plow, corn sheller grindstone ,cream separator, hand corn planter, 2 barrels garden plow. cross cut saw step ladder 14ft. ladder buck saw, forks, hog crate, hog troughs. : . HOUSEHOLD = GOODS— Radiant Home Hard coal burner good as new air - tight stove table, 2 bed steads L»and springs bed couch 2 stands, i rocking chairs and some other artilcles. ' ; : Also 24 chickens. :
Terms—All sums of $56 and under cash in hand, all sums over $5 a credit of 6 months will be given purchaser giving note with approved se: curity without interest if paid when due if not paid when due 7 per cent from date. 2 per cent off for cash. v W, A TYLER - E. R. Kurtz, Auctioneer : H. E. Hoak, Clerk.
W. R. JACKSON
Trustee Perry Townshsp AOfiice Mier State Bank, Ligonier
E. R. Kurtz Auctioneer Znone No. 65, Ligonier.
Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Fhone 2on 1 ‘Vawa_kl -
Bride Advised on How to Be Boss of Husband
Don't wear curl papers the first two rears—after that it will not matter.
Keep a set of Walter Scott in your ipartment to og:cupyw you in the hours ~vhen you are not on speaking terms with your husband. Some brides have yeen able to finish Dickens and “The Decline and Fall of the Roman Emsire” as well. | .
Teach him to cook before you are narried ; he will be unsuspicious then, ind they learn easier before than after marriage. S :
. Don’t believe him when he says he will take up dancing next winter. Make him sign a contract to this effect sefore the ceremony. : Don’t start him in on sweetbreads and creamed mushrooms; this will make the contrast too marked when you begin to feed him' on potato chips and cold ham. A hungry man will eat anything if you give him time; and he will be less likely to talk about the way mother used to cook if you train him In the first six months.
. Always be itaken {ll when your mother-in-law comes to visit you; after she has done all the work for a day or two she will'be glad to go back to her own home again. In the meantime you can have a good rest in bed. Any bride who follows these directions accurately can have as many husbands as she wants.—New York Sun and Globe. B e
British Officer Found ' Townships Too Big For nearly a year the British prisoners taken safter Burgoyne's surrender were held in Massachusetts, and then came from congress the order to march them to barracks In Virginia. The officers traveled with considerable liberty. Thomas Anburey, a British lieutenant, complained of the size of the townships in Connecticut in his reminiscences, first published in 1789, and recently published. “About the center of these townships stands the meetIng house, or church, with a few surrounding houses; sometimes the church stands singly. |lt is no little mortification, when fatigued after a long day's journey, on ihquiring how far it is to such a town to be informed you are there at present; but on inquiring for the church or any particular tavern you are Informed it i{s seven or eight miles farther.” | Anburey observed that most of the Connecticut houses were only half finished, the other half having only the rough timbers that supported the building. “Upon inquiry T learned that when a man builds a house he . .leaves it In this state until his son marries, when he fits it up for his family, and the father and son live under one roof.”—New York Herald.
Wine fax Codfish
Spaln and Iceland have made a trade treaty. The document specifies. that Spain is to grant most-favored nation treatment to dried "codfish from Iceland and Iceland is to exempt Spanish wines of not more than 21 per cent alcoholic content from _ prohibition. ' What a standoff! Now the Spanish internal economy may be lubricated and padded with portions of cod-liver 01l and the cockles of the Icelandic heart may be warmed with drafts of Castilian vintage. . The elevation of Bacchus to equality with the sacred cod is like to seem heresy to folk up Gloucester way. Wine for codfish. We lean for explanation on the ancient aphorism that there's no accounting for tastes.. But were we to choose? Well, the thing doesn’t seem real.—The Nation’s Business.
Way Out of It
The little boy was fond of nursery rhymes and fairy tales, and was always asking questions about them.
One day he asked his mother: “Why didn’t the man in:the nursery rhyme put up a notice to ‘Keep Off the Grass’? Then he wouldn’t have been cruel to the malden.” “Which man, dear?”’ sald his mother; “and to whom was he cruel?” ~ “Well,” said the little fellow, “nurse often tells me about the man all tattered and torn who kicked the maiden off the lawn!” . ;
Kills and Cures in Coal
Healing medicines and deadly explosives lie latent:in every lump of coal, and sclence is{ extracting one or the other in a thousand laboratories over the world each:day. Half the drugs in the pharmacopia probably are coal-tar products. While one laboratory may be extracting salicylic acid, for gout, for instance, or aspirin for congestion and rheumatism, another chemist will be distilling the products from which TNT is made or even lyddite, the powerful explosive first used in the Sudan.
Worth It
A newly rich woman, giving her first dinner party and anxious to make it a Success, was engaging the services of a certaln well-known singer. “My fee,” gald the latter, “is $50.” - “I agree to pay that,” answered the hostess, “but you understand that you will not meet my guests, don’t you?’ . “Oh,” came the quick reply, “then I will take $25.”
The Blunder
“Gentlemen of the jury,” said a blundering barrister, In a suit about a lot of hogs, “there were just 36 hogs in that drove; please to remember that fact—36 hogs—just exactly three times a 8 many as there are in the jury box.” That counsel did not win his case,
Don’t forget to pay your subscription to the Ligonier Banner. Office open Saturday evenings.
C. R. Stansbury the merchant will leave Sunday for Chicago on a business mission and to visit his daughten Mrs. Roswell Earnhart. '
SCANDAL IN GOSHEN
A Family Affair Which Involves Ligonier Like a “Tale of Two Cities” Thursday Mareh 20
The Goshen High School Band Concert to be given in the new high High School auditorium Gosher Thursday evening March 20th will be in the nature of a family affair. . There are five Goshen boys including the famous Geo. V. Roscoe direc tor who are regular members of the Ligonier band and have been since its organization., - i
The Goshen High School Band and the Ligonier high school girls is somc family. . : - : .
Those fortunate enough to hear this cbucert are going to be greatly surprised by the quality of the music given by these High School Girls and Bovs . :
Ligonier people will do well to attend this event. A superior entertainment given in one of the finest High School auditoriums in the state of Indiana with a seating capacity of over thirteen hundred people. i
Heavy Freight Patrons.
' More than half a million freight cars one-fifth the freight car ownership in the country are used annually by the ‘Ford Motor ‘Company’s main plants and various branches according to figures just given out. . The average freight charges paid through the Detroit offices direct to railroads that paid by branches on minor shipments, and freight charges on direct shipments made from manufacturing institutions to branches-ap: proximates $72,200,000 annually. Adding to this about $75,000,000 paid by dealers on shipmnets of autos received by them, brings a conservative figure of $150,000,000 paid every year in freight charges through the instruhentality of the Ford Motor Company.
An average of 860 car loads of freight are handled every day in and out of the Highland Park and River Rouge plants alone, and it is estimaied that on the Ford Motor Company’s account 50,000,000 pounds of freight in cdr load lots are handled every day in the Detroit district. -
Something New Something Different
A remarkable intimate and intense ly human study of the life of Paul the gredtest of all messengers :of the Christ, illustrated by splendid modern. protographs of the parts wherc he lived and worked. = :
Come and study these pictures and you will seem actually to walk by the side of this marvelous man through the streets of his boyhood home city and later along the camel trails ang great Roman highways over the plains of Syria and among the mountains of Asia minor. : :
Thrilling with the wonder of it, you will watch a whole city marching in procession with sacrifices, to worship him as a god; and the next moment you will see that worshiping hosi transformed into howling mob, stoning him.
Nothing quite like it has ever been offered before so interesting so helpful. Do not fail to see every picture. Starting Sunday March 9th at the Christian Church Free. . Ira C. Boyts Pastor.
Two Are Killed.
Leslie- Kasten and Hannah Tetzlofi high school pupils at Medaryville were killed Saturday night when an automobile in which they were riding overturned in a ditch near Winamac Elmer Paris and Lydia Sheedrow whg were in thec ar escaped unhurt. The party had been attending the district basketball tournament at Rochester.
Appendicitis Operation.
Floyd Tincher employed at the Refrigerator factory and a son-in-law of Robert Randall was taken to the Elkhart hospital Monday where he submitted to an operation for appendicitis under the care of Dr. Shobe. The operation is pronounced- successml. : -
Away From Horse Game.
Isaac Sutton the well known Topeka horseman while in the city the other day intimated that he was out of the speed game and would probably not track. any steppers the coming season. Mr. Stutton has developed some good ones in his time. ;
S. S. Boys Play Ball
The Ebenezar Sunday School basketball boys played the Methodist boys at Syracuse and the score stood 22 to 14 in favor of the first nameil team. Another game wil lbe played Thursday March 13. :
Rollin Bailey Tuesday was cheerad by. the sight of a robin and he says it was singing with apparent delightv.'
To Bretz for Glasses ' .g}* Sharp Eyes BE si~ ) o g o [ M Sharp Work " Al mechanics like to use keen .‘edged, ‘perfect tools. - Eyes are tools of the mind and must be sharp to do good work and resist the wear of constant use. . Let us sharpen your sight by furnishing glasses that will enable you to see clearly. . In What Condition : Are Your Eyes? - @ Nevin E. Bretz : Optometrist and Optielan 130 8. Main Bt. ; GOSHEN S ;
will continue through this week as advertised and will close ‘ ' Saturday night. , . o i ~ Throngs of satisfied customers have benefited by this sale. We are putting on some of the strongest leaders this week and intend to give you the best values for your money that ‘ has yet,been done. We want you here the few remaining A . days and assure you extraordinary bargains in merchandise are being offered. One unusual unhe: rd of bargain - 20 Dozen China Decorated Cups and Saucers value $3.50 set of 6 to go at 9c each cup and saucer | D.on’t,_forget our business is merc.han‘disil‘lg‘and to have what » you want at the right price. | - - ‘Weaver's Hardware - Phonel3s =
. TF PAYS! L WHEN you are in need of a STORAGE BATTERY either for your AU. TOMOBILE, HUOSE LIGHTING PLANT OR RADIO, call .4 WALX ROBINSON at the LINCOLN HIGHWAY GARAGE, PHONE 150. \ He will give you FREE EXPERT ADVICE on your BATTERY, STARTING and LIGHTING SYSTEMS and furnish repairs at the LOWEST COOSI POSSIBLE. ' : COLUMBIA and PREST-O.LITE BATTERIES either in WOOD o 1 RUBBER cases, also all kinds oi RADIO BATTERIES and CHARGERS
Baby Chicks. Low Pricdes this year. S. C. White Leghorns, Barred Rocks, S. C. Reds, Buff ‘Orpingtons. Oldest Hatchery in Indiana. Write today for catalog. Its free: Tells about our 73 acre Poultry Farm. Order in advance. Gosher Poultry Farms, Goshen Indiana. Ib&t Pay your subscription to the Ligonier Banner. Office open Saturday evenings. - ' I desire family washings to do. 1 will call for and deliver the work Mrs. Elethia Hoover. 100 Morton street, North Side. 42bte* Jackson will paint your automobile and make it look like new. b2atf R A S S R RIITY Pay your subscription to the Ligonier Banner. Office open Saturday evenings. ‘ , -
75¢ Records Special at ~ 38¢
Extraordinary March Event Superior Values to Prove Our Value-giving Supremacy
Special Sale of Women’s and Misses’ Newest . - Wonderful Values in this Group A stupendout offering of Women’s and Misses’ Stunning Dresses, of superior fabrics, that are shown in orginal and new styles. The colors are the scasons most popular. Exceptional valueg! ; | . - Smart new Sport Coats in mannish, swagger and straight-line styles; new fabrics in ' wanted plaids and plain colors; $lB.OO values in this group, specially priced, only The dresses areshown in $ e4\ B The coats are featured in Mah Jong, sleeveless, cape- 1 2 9 5 Reindeer, Oxford, gray, rust, back and other new styles, ‘ o o/ tanand other popular shades
New Spring Skirts Smart new Spring Skirts, in neat glzitecll styles; l:«ranted colors. values in this S m i 8208
| Unusual Offering of | - y . v 1 - Boys’ 2-Pants Suits Boys high grade 2-pants suits, that were secured at 'cdncessions ~ that permit unusual values. Single breaste.d,: belted styles of | Cassimere, Worsed and Serges, one pants in heat pnt‘-’ "~ tems. Graments that areworth $lO, at- the : e - markable low price of » o $7-95|
Home Realty and Investment Co. . ’l_ -l-‘lll .v = - Real Estate Bulletin ‘ Modern home in heart of Ligionier, 2fstpry 9 room house near public Library. Good barniwith cement ,fle"or. Priced- right. - : Modern one story 8 iroom house in Richmond Addition. Large lot, good barn and coal shed.: 7 e : 80 acre farm south west of Ligonier in good neighborhood. Good buildings. e : 5 e : in addition to the above we have 7 choice farms ranging from 29 acres to 258 acres, 3 vacant lots in Ligonier, 6 vacant lots and 6 new cottages at Lake Wawasee near Natticro Beach, 2 modern homes in Ligonier, a 5 room house and large lot in Rome City and a § acre poultry farm near Syracuse. ~ P e - : ) Th‘es"e properties wWill all bear the cldsést investigation and are priced to sell. Call at our office for full particulars. If we do not have what you wan we will find it for you. : : : : : 6% Monéy to Loan-on Farm Property . i Office Second Floor Sheets Building. - . Rooms 3 and 4 . : Ligonier, Ind. e
Read the Ads.
* "OPPOSITE THE COURT HOUSE g “STORES ALL OVER 4 | , Goshen's Greatest Undersafl:;r'lg'Stornfe
Ladies Sport Hose Womens Derby ribbed and mercerizled Lisle 'H.losiery, in sport colors. Actually 75c value, pair. . 59C
J.J.Clark’s - Cotton ‘Thread spool 2c
iWo’mén’s Blouses Large selection of womens dimityl blouses, éri ' 6vhite and tan values up to $2.00 f specially priced at $ l '39 ‘Men’s Spring Caps New light coloiings in Spring fabrics, best styles, silk finish linings. A regular ) $2 cap for ‘$ l 049 Boys’ 75¢ Blouses Neat striped and figured Percale Blouses, in non-fadeable patterns; 75c values, ! special at 55C
