Ligonier Banner., Volume 59, Number 7B, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 April 1925 — Page 2

The rigomer Banner lESTABLISHED .18¢0.§ : . Published by j “he Banner Publishing Company ~W. C. B. HARRISON Editor * Published overy Monday and Thursday exnd entered iz the Postoffice at Ligounier, Ind., as second class matter.

Three Noble County Boys.. With vacation time fast approaching applications of high school and: college students to enter the Citizens’ Military Training Camps are being received in inereasing numbers at Fifth Corps Area Headquarters Columbus Ohio, according to a.rmy authorities. . ' Among the Noble county young men who have recently made appliéatipn to spend the month of July in one.of the two C. M. T. Camps which are to be held at Camp Knox, Kentucky and Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana are: €. A Thrie aud B W. Offord Avilla; M. C. Knox Cromwell. - She Talked Too Much. First violence in Chicago’s bitter municipal . vote cqntest was d‘eported Tuesday when Mrs. Barbara® Gileson 29 a campaign worker was f()_un_d beaten and gagged with an ether 1'1{;:. Mrs. Gileson was actively engaged in opposing the proposal of the ¢ity to buy the street car and elevated system. . Was Former Treasurer., John J. Forker aged 76 years lifelong resident of Kendallville and extreasurer of Noble . county died Monday afternoon at his home three miles west of that city. where he had practically alwayvs resided. Death followed a short illness resulting from é{'mn}’)l,i’ozn’ions his: condition for several days having been critical. M. E. Conference, - Complete plans have been made for the annual meeting of the North Tndiana conference of the Methodist Episcopal church which will be held at the First Methodist 'Flpiscopaf church in Anderson April 14 to 20. ; ~For Sale—High powered ° Titan iractor specially adapted to belt’work. Shuman-Turrell Co. . .

PRIL SALE! - Kpds saturday, April 11 @ Stansbury’s Yellow Front Dept. Store Readthe hand bills of this adv. for full particulars of the Big Sale = that starts Saturday, April 4th, and ends Saturday, April |lth, Get your share of the money saving bargains. Come early and get the best.. ..~ . ’ _ .

GET READY FOR HOT WEATHER GAUZE UNQERWEAR DEPARTMENT 25 dozen Men’s Gauze Union Suits with high neck, short sleeves ankle length a winner 98¢ 30 dbzen Men’s Fine Quality Union Suits in three styles, long sleeves, short sleeves, ankle, knee or 3/ length only .................... $1.39

' LADIES GAUZE VESTS . Now is the Time to Save Money. ladies Veels . ... .. ... . 1% Ladies’ Fine Mercerized Vests, the Queen oty nly ... -. . 49, Other Vests at ..........25¢, 29¢, 39¢ and 59c

LADIES’ UNION SUITS — 30 dozen, all sizes, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and dd Thesemuat voat . ... . . 19¢ Tight knee, loose knee, bodice or built up - shoulder. - - Other Union Suits at 59c¢, Hoe, 3119 8129 We are agents for that high class Athena and Royal Mills; , . ; . Also Boys ’ar}d Girls’ Union Suits. - Eiffel Kumfort Suits for, girls, checked dimity, with elastic knee only ................50¢c

: YES! YES! GENTLEMEN'! We will give you the best shirt for the money Blue Cheyiot or Chambray only ............ 69¢ UNBLEAHED MUSLIN. GET IT NOW! 36 inch Unbleached Muslin, worth 15¢ at 13¢ 36 inch Unbleached Muslin .....................11¢ 36 inch Bleached Muslin, Daisy, a fine quality for underpayments ... .. ... 155

81 INCH BLEACHHED SHEETING 81 inch Bleached Sheeting linen finish at thigspecial agle ... .- = Jg, 40 inch Pillow Tubing get plenty ‘of this Smooth Linen finish only ..................... 88¢

' ALL LINEN CRASH Stephens all linen Crash 16 inches wide 19¢ Only 5 Bolts. _ ,

- 36 INCH COTTON CREPE . 36 inch Cotton Crepe for gowns and undergarments in all colors pink peach orchid yellow and white only ... . a 9, 27 inch Cotton Crepes all color only ........ 27¢

| EAT THIS. IT IS GOOD ‘ /3% Ib. Package Hawpatch prepared BuckWRent L e

- Harold Lloyd Says ) “1 want my comedies always to contain clean fun—l find it is what the public likes best and longest.” ‘Harold Lloyd’s comedies have always ‘been clean in idea cléan-cut in ideals and-clean in humor. And his kumor overflows with the exuberance and joy of clean-living, clean-think-ing wholesome youth. : ‘ "His fun is universal in its appeal. It has that human touch that makes the whole world kin and grin His comedy is so simple that a child can laugh at it; so clean that old-fashicned grandm# chuckles over it without blushing;fi‘ yvet so subtle that philosophers chortle. Harold Lloyd causes the laughter waves that radiate around the world!

Mrs. Julia Winebrenner whose death at the age of 84 years near Merriam noted in Monday's Banner was an early settler. : . Mrs. Winebrenneris {mrmns, whe were Mr. and Mrs. Ott came to Ind diana about the same year the Oti family settled .in -Benton township which was during the late twenties.

- On a charge of failing to dim his automobile lights .B. S. Spreuer o f Shipshewana paid a fine of $5 and costs Monday afternbon in the city court folloWing an arrest by County Highway Officer Knisley on the Lincoin highway near Benton.

- Warsaw Bible Thief. At the rest room in Warsaw. threc good bibles at separate times have been stolen. After each theft some good person has replaced the stolen bible. Seemingly the thief makes no discretion as to the size but simply walks off with the latest edition.

To Vote on Daylizht Saving.

Because residents of ihe city seemed equally divided on the daylight saving plan the LaPorte ccuncil acted to put the question to a vote at the primary election May 5.

Mrs. John Todd of Syracuse underwent an emergency operation for ':} ruptured appendix Tuesday morning in Goshen hospital. : :

C. R. STANSBURY

old Resident.

Fails to Dim Lights.

I'ndergoes Gperation,

. TOILET PAPEEE ; . Just a special : . ' 4 large Rolls of Toilet Paper .............. 18¢

DO YOU WANT A GOOD CUP OF COFFEE A fresh roasted, fresh gro'und Sahtos Cofiee [0 Dol .. s . Ahe Try a pound. ' s .

START YOUR CHICKENS RIGHT Buttermilk, grain and bone starting feed 10 saee ..... .. . 5O 5 Ib fine fhick Feed ... - ... . ... 923 sl vl eed . . 18¢ 50 Bolld Oaes . 20 ol Gt (ate . 0855 The quality of this feed is the best 6n themarket . Try it. - Will pay the highest prices for Eggs, But--ter Lard and Potatoes. - e i

4 bars Palm Olive toilet Soap ......#% . 29c teach ' . . . . ... - lon Kirks Olive Toilet Soap ‘ . Kirks Cocoa Hardwater Soap . L Kirks Jap Rose Soap !

1 40c box 20 Mule Team Borax Soap Chips e 250 1 30c Box 20 Mule Team Dish Washing lowroe . 0.. 16

- _ CHIPSO, CHIPSO - 3. boxes Chipso ely . ... om

MATCHES MATCHES . - 12 Boxes Barbers, Best and Cheapest match only o 0 srreevssnin,. 15C

HERE IS ONE. GET THIS ONE l 10 gt. Grey Enamel Stew Kettle worth 50c O e i b B 8 4 qt. Stew Pans Grey Enamel worth 20c for Only a limited number.

LOOK AT THESE MONEY SAVING IN "THE GROCERY DEPARTMENT . Large 25¢ package of Rub No More Soap plakes. . . 44 Large 25¢ package of Rub No More -Soap Powder L e s S

Find Booze in Fort'Wayne, Prohibition agents: visited . Foit Wayne club rooms Thursday and found liberal supplies of intoxicants in all placés visited. The matter will come before the federal grand jury for further investigation and it is entirely probable that many :indictments willibe returned. . W. O. Holman of Indianapolis conducted the raid. 'The places visited were the Turnverein Vorwaerts thg Fraternal Order of Eagles amnd the Elks. Edward Stoner éustor.]iajnv'of the Turnverineé Vorwaerts and Philip Ritter custodian of the Eagles club room were arres?ied on chargest of viclating the prohibition laws and for maintaining - a Ruisance. They are out on bond of $2.000 each. .

His Second Oifense.

Harry Dragoo of Auburn has been arrested on. an affidavit signed 'by his wife éharging him with driving an automdbile while intoxicated. He pleaded not guilty when arraignéd. Hd was releaded on $2.000 _bozT'd. .Dragoo was arrest:gd on a similar (,-,hm;;’:o last Septemhm‘fi’i,and sapved Six nm_‘hths at the state ;éenal farm. o -

Topeks Pupils Win,

Mae Steele a student in the . high s'(*hoo,.l at Topeka won first plaof’) and prize in the LaGrange county high school m'atoi;'ic@ . contest at the Methodist Episcopal church in LaGrange. o o Louise Hoverstock also a student in the high school at Topeka won £irst henors in the ‘contest a yelr ago.

Next Convention June 1

The Captain Ray P. Harrison. Post of the American Legion of Columbia City will be host at a district uleeting of the American Legion em's)r:;:,c} ing surrounding counties thfi‘t‘ will be held there June the Ist 1925 {The meeting was secured for Columbia City by a number of legion men who attneded the district meeting at Auburn Wednesday. L

or Sale—Heavy three year old mule. Shuman-Turrell Co. FFor Sale—Fordson tractor b(}mp]et—ly overhauled same guaraniee as on a new tractor Special . easy terms. Shuman-Turrell Co. . -

TOILET SOAP

WASHING POWDER

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

How Frofit Is Found | in Builying a Bully -Fighting is a brutal business. There is no denying it. A man in a fight is very busy. He must meditate concerning methods. He must inflict considerable punishment and do it promptly. Because fighting is brutal and tends ‘to _disarrange the face’ and burden emergency - wards already taxed to their capacity, it should be avoided svhen convenient, argues a writer in the Kansas City Star. o - One way to avoid it is not to seen: too eager to avoid it. Men who are afruid to fight have trouble thrust upon them. Of those who uare afraid very few are craven by reason of wounds; excessive caution is caused by want of experience. ‘lgnorance is the fatlier of fear. A boy of tender years, being a primitive, has frequent occasiongto do battle. If parental authority denies him the privilege of gaining experience in this wey he will bear no scars; but he will develop into a man afraid of a fight. If he is privileged to fight when the need is urgent he may not be so fortunate s to triumph; but even'if he is whipped he will profit. He will learn that a whipping is the lesser of two evils and that to receive bruises is less painful than to be a coward. It he is whipped he can reguin his selfrespect, but he neveif wilf be able - wholly to. forgive himself if he runs. . If he is denied experience of battle ‘manhood "will find him handicapped. Before a blustering bully he will talk small and surrender his privileges and rights. ‘ . ~ But if he has fought often and therefore feels no dread of combat he will get to his feet In preparation for hattle and before thescold light in his -eves tlie bully will become calm and placid, L ' The bully may have an uncontroilable temper, but tempers of this kind usuali ly funetion best when the odds are on their side. They peter out quickly in the face of an adversary who has 1 knockout in both hands and means ‘business. : e ;

Kiln-Dried Spanish Cedar

Theres is no reasom—why Spanish cedar could not be kiln-dried suceessfully, though it is more - diflicult to dry thick. slabs than it is inch boards. The trouble is to aveid “case-harden-ing’—l. e, drying the surface before the moisture has been driven from the heart, which causes it later to check and crack very badly as the inside moisture breaks its way outf, says a contributor to. Adventure Magazine. - The slabs would have to be put in thé kiln and subjected te steam until all the moisture was vaporized; then the steam must be gradually replaced by hot, dry air. But it seems to me there would be no special object in placing the wood on the market gn»»;’%xbs'ratller than in squared logs. \(“Aearly all Spanish cedar is utilized for cigar boxes, ete., in very thin boards, which are made by the sawn-veneer. process, where the thin sheets are cut by extremely thin-gauge circular saws. Some i 3 produced by slicing from a thick flitch which has been steamed: In either case the manufacturers want a thick flitch or square, so as to avoid the delays of mounting and demounting from the ‘carriage. There is also less waste from using thick slabs than from thinner ones. ; !

“Super-Plates” Needed

The need for photographic plates and films of a quality higher even than their present high standard was emphasized at the third Pan-Ameri-can scientific congress by Dr. C. D. Perrine, of the Argentine National observatory at Cordoba. As applied to the special problems of astronomy, plates of a higher speed than those now available would make existing telescopes the equivalent of ‘instruments of twice their size and many times their cost, because it would in‘crease their light-gathering power. He galso pointed out the need for the elimination of “graininess” in photographic negatives designed for technical work of extreme accuracy. He advocated special research for the purpose of producing such photographic “superplates.” L . :

Sight as a Handicap

Amos Cady, of Bolivar, Mo.; .could play six instruments simultaneoukly while he was blind, but now that he has regained his sight can only play one. He was blind 22 years. He played a harmonica held to his mouth with a yoke; a banjo with his hands, a bass drum beaten with his elbow, cymbals struck with his knees, a triangle and eight Swiss bells rung by his feet. His inability to play more than one instrument now- is explained by the fact that he cannot concentrate sufficiently to play six because the acute sensitiveness of touch and feeling that comes with blindness left when his sight was restored. — Indianapolis News -

Earn While They Serve

While serving a two years’ sentence at Atlanta, Ga., a prisoner invented a portable ice-making machine which is now being manufactured. Another convict devised a tool for making shoes and when he was released from the Maryland state prison he accepted a position at $5,000 a yeéar with a shoe firm. A banker was able to build up a lucrative investment business that netted him $3OO a day while in prison. A man convicted. of the murder of-a New York lawyer and sent to an asylum for the criminally insane nevertheless managed the investment of the $20,000 he possessed in -such a way that it gréw to nearly s2so,ooo.—Popular Mechanics., - ' :

Carload of Jersey Heifers,

A car load of Jersey heifers 28 in all from Greenfield, 0., arrived at Columbia City. The heifers were distributed among the members of the Whitley County Calf Club.

Mrs. Frank Qain hag been ill of the fiu for the pasg week, . =

GET RIGHT AMOUNT _ OF FUN FROM LIFE

Competitive Struggle Is Only Handicap. @

Sinclair Lewis is right; a lot eof Americans do not get enough fun out of life. o ~ The .young intellectuals challenge contemporary life and thought because it is regimented and standardized. Davenports are put in front of fireplaces, not. because the owners want them there, but because other people have them there. Mr. Babbitt installs a cigar lighter in his car, not because he thinks he gets fun out of a harmlessly glittering automobile accessory, but because he thinks it gives “class” to his machine. Doing things because other people do them, or doing them inzincerely to impress other people, ls‘ one good way of leading a dull life. | < Fun ¢omes by being one’s self. The exterior act should reflect. the one within. The davenport is in its proper, place when it is where you want it as & ‘being livinz your own life and not giving a fig for artificial mass standards. Colf is a good game if you play it because you like it.- But it is a poor pastithie when you find it but another way of doing what other people do. You might rather play marbles or hopscoteh, if marbles or hop-scotch better rejeases your fun instinet. \ The remedy for much of which the young intellectuals complain lies in questioning ourselves more as to why we do things. Have our opinions come to us ready-made from our parents, or from our environment, or have we thought things out for ourselves? DOQ we put cigar lighters on our cars for the convenience of cigar smokers or to acquire a sham “class”? Why not do more things, think more things, feel more things, that are really our own? That's one way to have funm - ' Men want to make things and do things that reflect themselves. They want to create, in the spirit of play, things beautiful or odd or interesting. They get fun out of life to the extent in which the things they make or de reflect what they really are. But as long as the chief business of life lles in coming out better than our brothers in the competitive struggle the brighter business of making life interesting and creative must wait.—Atlantic City Evening Union, :

Drink Habits of Cattle

Those who are acquainted with the habits of live stock in the more humid regions might be surprised at the way in which these same animals would meet conditions in the semi-arid regions of the west. The cow that slakes her thirst every few hours in tije succulent, stream-furrowed pastures of the East or Middle West, in a dry country would wait much longer before traveling several miles for a drink, says the Springfield (Mass.) Republican. v . ' Recently representatives of the buregu of ahimal industry, United States Department 0’; Agriculture, made observations on the number of times cattle go to water under different conditions in the range country. .The evidence showed that for most cattle it-is a long time between drinks, a matter of days rather than hours. The cooler or wetter the weather the less likely they are to go to _water more often than every second or third day. In dry, hot weather many of them go every day, but others go only twice every -three days, or ence every other day. In one region in New Mexico the conclusion was reached that for the best interests of range and. stock in level country, watering places should not be more than five miles apart.

* Important Naval Battle

The famous naval battle of Trafalgar was fought off Cape Trafalgar, Spain, October 21, 1805. The English fleet numbered 27 ships of the line, and were commanded by Admiral Nelson. The combined French and Spanish fleets, under the French admiral Villeneuve, numbered 33 ships. The allied fleet was signally defeated after a bloody contest; their three admirals were taken, and 19 of their ships were captured, sunk or destroyed. Nelson was mortally wounded in the action, and the chief command devolved upon Collingwood. The victory of Trafalgar crushed the naval power of France, and put an end to Napoleon’s projected invasion of Kngland.—Kansas City Star. :

Electric Dredges

Electrically operated dredges which reach down 60 feet below the surface of the water are now being used along the coast of the Seward peninsula of Alaska. These g]redge.§ can bring up 200,000 cubic yards of gold-bearing sand a month and it is expected that the placer gold output of Alaska will be materially increased now that such dredges are being used. Electricity for running dredges of this sort is supplied by electric generating stations located on the shore. The 600 horsepower of electrical energy necessary to operate a dredge is brought to it by - a special cable that connects dredge and generator.

World’s Deepest Well

The deepest well in the world was completed recéhtly by engineers near Latrobe, Pa., when they struck natural gas at a depth of 7,428 feet, or almost one and one-half miles, says Popular Science Monthly. Work on the well. was begun in 1922, and drilling continued for 30 months. The gas is now flowing at a rate of 500,000 cubic feet a day. The cost of sinking the well was about $200,000. |

Lewis Smalley, Sr., of Ligonier was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Smith at Pleasant View Sunday and also made a visit to his farm in Elkhart township. .

See Colleen Moore and Conway Tearle Sunday and Monday. -

I—. , V : .III“I‘II“"I i 1 . 1= [/ k. {\ V .. / \\:\3///:“ =N/ & /4 e i '-':. i. _ = ‘ © 1925 Hart Schaffpgr & Marx ; ~ DROP INTO CARNEYS 'STORE TODAY | Theres nothing like it! The : “Grand and Glorious Feeling” of ' being splendidly dressed. Next - Sunday is Easter-That is “Style | ~Day."' This is “Style Store and « . we have some REAL values in . suits’kahd'Top Coats. Our clothes are good, Hart Schafffier ~ & Marx makes them. ,'Our» name and - their name are back of them. ' | “ ’\l . Carmey’s Clothing Store | “Where Quality Counts”™ ’

. Beor Rent -~ The rooms in the rear of the Citizens Bank, formerly occupied by The Straus Brothers Company . ‘are for rent - " Heat and Light Fufnished ' ~ Inquire at Citizens Bank

a HAPPY DAYS INSIDE Winter days are “‘Happy: Days” inside the home if the temperature of the rooms is humid as a balmy June evening. Premier Warm Air Heaters add to Winter health and conforts. QOur method of installation assures you a job that satisfies for a lifetime. Wil you tell us when we can explain gthe Premier to you? o : j : ‘ B. E. RICKARD & SON - " Phone 453

For News Read The Ligonier Banner o A | ~Plfl')lished T’wice a Week