Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 16B, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 June 1926 — Page 4
ey | 1 INCOMES ARE | Lo e BETIERTHAN| - = I ONE” . Earning Years - Should Be Investing Years Plan for two incomes—One from salary, one from good bonds. Set aside a definite portion of the salary check regularly for bond investment and re-invest the income Then, when emergencies arise or salary earnings cease the bond income will be there to fall back upon. - THEMIER STATEBANK ‘With its connections with J. P. Morgan, Kuhn, Loeb & Co., and other bond houses of first rank occlipies an unapproachable position in this community for the recommendation and furnishing of bonds suited to your needs. . The Mier State Bank | Ligonier, Indiana - We handle only Listed Securities, Municipal and Gravel Road Bonds. |
0 f . 80% of repairs on farm machinery due to one cause Lubrication—iack of proper lubrication is the cause of 80% of all repairs on moving parts. i How much is it costing you? You'll be money ahead if you equip your immplements with Alemite high pressure in place of grease cups. The same system used on motor cars. Adopted recently by lead- . ing implement makers, too. Alemite saves time, labor and costly breakdowns. Installed in a jiffy. Costs only a few cents per fitting. Ask us about it! for Farm Implements Seagly Bros. ~ Ligonier, Indiana
Did you see “Shipwrecked?’ last chance tonight. s For Sale Senco Moth Sticks. Cal} Mrs. Audley Green. Phone 361. 16a2y I will Laundry Blankets, Bedspreads and Table Linens. Phone 361. 16a2t Ben Glaser and Joe Kimmell, jr., made a business trip to Fort Wayne Tuesday. : The Perry township Farm Bureau will meet in regular session this evening at the Centralized school.
“Sampson Lung has changed his [South Bend residence address from, 1014 Sherman street to 1630 Lincoln Way East. ~ See “Watch Your Wife” the smartest gayest comedy drama of the season Sunday and Monday at Crystal. Strawberries -Strawberries In the near future.
I will open my acre patch of Strawberries located two miles north and one mile west of Wawaka, at the following price and basis 12¢ per guart and pick them yourself. Write Mrs. E E. Thompson Wawaka for reservations. : : 16b3t
Special for Saturday Good Sized Pineapples 10 centseach Dandy Big Cucumbers ~ ocenteach Baald) Dob.uii
Summer weather seems to have arrived at last. j : Learn how to dance the Charleston at Crystal Sunday and Monday. : Opal Heeter of this city is spending the week with Millersburg relatives. “Watch Your ‘Wife” a brilliant comedy drama with Pat O’Malley and Virginia Valli at Crystal Sunday and Monday. The Young Woman’s Missionary Society of the M. E. church will have a baké sale at the Star grocery Saturday morning June 12 beginning at 10 o’clock. : 16a2t
. Obituary. _ Addie Elizabeth Weade daughter of William and Sarah McKee was born May 15 1864 near Albion Noble county Indiana. She taught school in this county beginning at the age of 16 until she was married to Albert W. Weade Nov. 256 1887 to this union were born 3 children Golda ,Woodwaid and Ralph her husband and one son Woodward preceeded her to the Spirit ‘World, on June ‘7 1926, God saw fit to call her out of this world of suffering and care at the age of 62 years and 22 days she leAves to mourn their loss one son one ‘daughter one sister Mrs. O. L. Whan of Swan township, two brothers E. H. McKee of Swan Township and C. C. McKee of Avilla and a host of relatives and friends, but their loss is her eternal gain. She united with the United Brethren Church at Albion when a child and when she came to this community shq united with the Broadway Christian Church and has been a faithful member till death. She was a kind and devoted mother in the home always anxious that her children go with her to Sunday School as she was faithful in her atendance, ready to help in the church and community when ever need ‘ed.
James Whitcom Riley expresses the thought of the family, in his poem entitled ‘Alway” . , I cannot say, and T will not say That she is dead—She is just away! : With a cheery smile, and a wave. of ® her hand, She has wandered into an, unknown land; l - And left us dreaming how very fair It needs mwust be, since she lingers there; - ] And you— O you who so wildly yearn, For the old time step and the glad
return, ' Think of her faring on, as dear In love of there as the love of here. ‘Think of her still as the same, I say, iShe is not dead, she is just away. ' Funeral services were held Wednesday 2 P. M. at the Broadway church burial in the Sparta cemetery J. M. Hartman officiating. , :
. The city council meets in regular session tonight. o . Reginal nald Denny at Crystal Friday and Saturday. . - For rent, Wawasee cottage. Arthur Yeager, Ligonier e For rent a garage. 111 McLean St. ;Mrs. J. N. Denny. 14btt \ T 5 TG IO T ~ Highest prices for Poultry. Call 131. Wm. L. Reed. 14b8* For rent, modern house on Lincoln }Way West. Jonas Shoke. s 1 “Shipwrecked” is the big isipecial picture at Crystal tonight. : v p—————— ~ Leghorn Pullets for Sale. Enquire of Wm L Reed Phone-131. 16b2t*
‘Mrs. W. F. Kline is in Chicago for the week a guest of relatives. , “T'll Show You the Town” with Reginald Denny Friday and Saturday. . City Clerk Kimmevlzl had business which took him to Fort Wayne Wednesday. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hicks and family have been in Ohio visiting relatives. s The Chamber of Commerce will enjoy a luncheon and transact business Friday noon. : : Mrs. A. M. Kernesky of Chicago is visiting her oparents Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller in this city. e Miss Blanch Harsh was in Bloomington Tuesday to attend commencement at Indiana University. . ~ Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Ackerman have gone to Lima, Ohio to spend a few days with their son Joe and family. ‘Wanted, partner to operate hatchery in Ligonier or vicinity. No capita] needed. Address B. Banner Office, 1 . 16a2t*
James Summers has accepted the position as custodian at the Niier State Bank succeeding William L. Jackson. A. C. Shambaugh of Avilla a bro-ther-in-law of John L. Henry of Ligonier- is prostrated from a paralytic stroke. - . The Kinnison, Adairs, and Caldwell families enjoyed a picnic dinner at the home of their father Joseph Caldwell recently. e ‘Neighbor Clawson was here Tuesday from the Nobs near Topeka. He had a successful season trapping fur bearing animals. S Miss Olive Galbreath is in Indianaoplis to spend a couple of weeks with the E. Y. Brown family and Walter Kegg children. John Summers of Duluth Minnesota ‘a former resident of INoble county is here visiting his cousin James Summers and other relatives.
Arthur Yegaer is putting in a foundation for the Tom Wolf cottage at dation for the Tom Wolf cottage family now lives in Fort Wayne. The Werntz family reunion was held Sunday at the Wawasee cottage of Arthur Yeager. There were seventyfive present to enjoy the big dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Caldwell of LaGrange were Sunday visitors of his father Joseph Caldwell and also his brother Chas. Caldwell and family. Alva Matthews, who paid his old Ligonier friends a welcome visit has returned to Chicago where he is employed in the Pullman car works.
Attorney and Mrs. W. H. Wigton accompanied by their daughter Mrs. John I. Hurst and baby son Billy drove to Indianapolis Tuesday for a short visit. : : w For Sale—Leather davenport with mahogany frame, mahogany library table, square Oak table, Morris chair and an oak rocker. Cheap if taken at once. Call at residence of Mrs. C. R. Stansbury. Amos - Inninger an employee of the Adams county highway was badly hurt when an abutment of a bridge caved in and caught him. He sustained a broken leg and at first it was thought his back was broken. Auction Sale of Household Goods.
The Kimmell Realty Company will sell at public auction at the residence of the late John Sparrow deceased on ‘Grant Street in Ligonier on Saturday June 12 1926, Sale to begin at 1:30 fo'clock. The following personal property. : ! 4 bed steads, 3 mattresses;, 4 sets of springs, bedding, 4 rugs, carpets, linoleum 9x12, lounge, cushions, 2 extension tables, mirror organ, set of dining chairs, set of kitchen chairs, 3 stands, 2 rockers, center table, library table, buffet, dishes, 3 commodes, 2 dressers, wardrobe, couch, ‘matting, matting rug, hard coal burner, wood stove, cook stove, copper boiler, cupboard, kitchen . cabinet, clock 4 burner oil stove with oven, canned fruit and jelly, porch swing, steel ofl barrell and many other articles. Nothing is reserved. Everything Terms will be made known on day Kimmell Realty Company, Managers e N
Miss Kathryn Bolitho who graduated from Indiana University with sach high honors the first of the week has been offered a place as teacher in the Ligonier and LaGrange schools if she cares to accept. - Named to Teachers’ Board. Thomas C. Howe former president of Butler College was reappointed by Governor Jackson to the board of board of directors of the state teachers’ retirement fund. The term is for four years. | Sarah Anns to Meet. The Sarah Anns will meet this evening with'Mrs. Frank E. Miller and enjoy a supper and social sessions.
WAVED FAREWELL BY PROXY
After This, Who Shall Say English Business Man Is Not Full of f e - Resources.
~ The other morning, as a departing fransatlantic steamer was casting off fts lines and swinging out into the tream, an elderly business man hasttly embraced a lady who was one of ,tha passengers, and rushed down the gang-plank to the wharf, says the London Answers. - Going hurriedly up to a melancholy loafer who was watching the busy crowd, the gentleman drew him behind a pile of baggage and sald: * “Want to earn a shilling or two?” -~ “You bet I do.” . “You see that lady in black on the bridge there?” said the elderly one. ° ~ “Certainly.” . e . “Well, that’s my wife going abroad. Now, of course, she’ll expect me to stand here for the next 20 minutes; ‘while the steamer is backing and fillIng in, waving my handkerchief and watching her out of sight. D’ye see?” ~ *“I do, sir.” - i
" “Well, I'm too busy to humbug about here; stock to buy, biz to attend to. iShe’s a little near-sighted, so I'll just .engage you to wave this handkerchief Anstead. It's a big one, with a red border, and as long as she sees it she'll think it’s me. Come up to 202 Bangup ‘street when they are welt off, and I'll ‘pay you.” e
! “S’posin’ she looks through a teleiscope, or somethin’?” T : “In that case you’ll have to bury your face in the handkerchief and do ‘the great weep act.” :
* “That’ll be extra payment.” : “All right. Time is money. Look sharp, now. You can _kiss your hand :a-few times at, say, a penny per kigs.” * And -closing his watch with a snap, the overdriven business man rushed :ott. : ; |HISTORIC FIND IN PALESTINE fChicagoan Reports Discovery of Floon i~ of Church Dating From Third or r Fourth Century. : ¢ Dr. George L. Robinson of the Me;Cormick Theological seminary, who -;has returned to Chicago after a year's -study of ruins in Palestine, reports :the finding' of an ancient mosaic floor ‘one mile south of St. Nebo. ' “The floor was discovered by an 'Arabian farmer 'who dug into the ‘earth to build a foundation for a -barn,” he said. “The floor was In one of the early Christian churches and was built in the third or fourth -century. : o “Flowers, animals and Greek inscriptions are inlaid in most artistic manner. The mosaic is in a perfect state of preservation and looks as though it might have been lald yesterday.” ‘As a result of his studies Doctor Robinson has come to the conclusion that the true Kadesh of Moses and the Israelites is properly located at Alm Kadees. Doctor Robinson said he belleved that the Catholics were correct in their contention that Zion is located on the southwestern hill of Jerusalem and that Calvary is under ;neath the church of the Holy Sep‘lucher, : « s ¥
American Invasion of Canada.
. One hundred years ago an American :force of 720 men,.in command of Gen. :Duncan McArthur, penetrated 200 ,miles into Canada and captured nu‘merous prisoners and large quantities .of war supplies before beginning the return to Detroit. The raid was a part of a bold plan projected and part-. 1y accomplished by General McArthur ;with the object of conquering upper ‘Canada, and the total success of ;which was prevented only by the fail.ure of the forces of General Izard to ‘co-operate ‘with him. General McArthur was a distinguished soldier of ‘the War of 1812 and at the time of his daring raid he was in command of the Army of the West. In later years, following the close of the 'War, ‘he served as representative in con--gress and as governor of Ohio. His ‘death occurred at-his home near Chillicothe, 0., in . 1839. = .~ ¢
For Study of Aeronautics.
There are already six great aerodynamical laboratorles scattered throughout the world. . The oldest of these is that directed by Doctor Riabonchinsky, at Koutchino, in Russia; next comes that of M. Eiffel in Paris, a private institution where this famous engineer has carried out research work of inestimable value for years past. Paris possesses another laboratory, planned on an ambitious scale, founded at St. Cyr through the generosity of M. Deutsch and controlled by the University of Paris. At Rome there exists a well-quipped laboratory belonging to the Italian aviation corps, and finally there is the admirable aeronautical section of the national physical laboratory at Tedamglon, . oo e 0 .~ W.H.wIGfoON ~ Office in Zimmerman Block | "LIGONIER, IND s e
FOUGHT TO DEATH OVER Pla Possession of Porker the Cause of ~ Sharp Skirmish Between Ger | i - mans and French, HEven pigs figure sometimes :n the pews from the front and, as might be sxpected, in somewhat of a comical light. But, says a Paris dispatch, they bave caused.a tragedy also. One pig was the cause of a battle in which 30 Germans were killed and another was made to pose as a corpse to save him from the enemy.
In Ban-de-Sapt, north of Saint Die, both French and Germans from their trenches spied out a fine fat porker .n: & pen, just between the two lines. Both formed parties to go out and capture the porcine delicacy, but the French reached there first. They fastened a rope about the animal’s hind legs and dragged him back to their trenches with the Germans close behind. | ' So heated did the controversy over the pig become that it finally developed into a night battle in which thé Germans were beaten, losing, begides the 80 dead, a number of wounded. :
The other pig had just been killed by a farmer in Flanders when™it was reported that the Germans, always eager for such titbits as fresh pork, were near at hand. Determined to ‘save his property, the quick-witted Belglan took the carcass to his room, tucked it in his bed, placed candles over the sheeted form and was pray: ing fervently when a German soldier entered the room. The soldier tiptoed out when he discovered that he had come upon a chamber of death.
LEGAL POINT OF IMPORTANCE
#“Delusions” Sufficlent to Cause the . Breaking of a Wlil Must Be Along ¢ a Certain Line.
. The New York Law Journal tells of fwo cases recently decided which are pf some interest upon the contention quite frequently made that testators were victims of “insane delusions,” when, in fact, they had merely imbibed false Impressions or were strongly prejudiced or eccentric in their modes of thought. In re Alexander’s estate in the supreme court of Pennsylvania, it was lald down that a “delusion” of a testator, such as will invalidate a will, must be “an insane belief or a mere figment of imagination—a belief in the existence of something which does not exist and which no rational person, in the absence of evidence, would believe to exist.” It was further laid down that the burden is on a party relying on the existence of a delusion to invalidate a will to prove that such delusion controlled the testator’s volition and destroyed his freedom of action in disposing of his estate. The evidence ;was held insufficient to show that the will was executed in consequence of an insane delusion on the part of the testator, the petitioner’s father, 'though testator practically disinherit‘ed her and may have been mistaken in his judgment that she had been guilty of unnatural conduct toward ‘him and her mother. :
Made an Anthem of It.
. It is pleasant to hear that the stern business of drilling has its Jight side, as well as most other things. In a kcertain territorial regiment, I was told, fot many miles from London, one of the newest recruits was awaiting his fturn on parade to be inspected. Presently to him came the youthful officer 4n charge. He has what is known as ghe varsity accent, and by those who Mo not know it outside the stage it Ely easily be mistaken for facetious-
;- The *nut” officer stooped and inBpected. Then: *“Ha, ha, no shave,” E: sald. “He, he, no razor,” replied e new recruit blithely, thinking that go had met a sociable soul with a leasant way of reprimanding. The result was, of course, disastrous to the recruit. But now, when the regi. ‘ment is mdrching and “Tipperary” is getting a little overdone, the monot;ny is varied by the front section sud{denly calling out in full-throated unftson: “Ha, ha, no shave,” which is E:mnuyurepued to from the back with a stentorian roar of, “He, he, no razor!”"—London Daily Mirror.
: Tries on Shoe; Breaks Ribs. - When John Bartlow went into Wil fiam Grittner's shoe store here he found a pair he liked, but they fitted R little tight, and he could not get into one. i : QGrittner seated himself on a low , took hold of an upper and bade gl!‘:“cnstomer “push hard.” He did, pnd Grittner’s hold slipped, the heel f the new shoe striking him a hard :low over the heart. : : ‘When the doctor arrived he declared that Grittner had suffered three bro:hi’x-’ ribs and possibly other internal fnjuries, and directed him to go to bed.—Turbotville (Pa.) Dispatch Philpdelphia Record. G
: _One Professor Missing. : It takes more than book learning to e a success as a doctor. He needs a fot of common horse sense, and in all this chatter about higher education pnd a new curriculum—which is one way of freezing out competition in the medical college trust—l haven't s¢en mentioned any professor of common pense.—Providence Medical Journal.
¥ More “Explanations.” . *l've just been reading a new white book sent out by the German government.” SRET :
~_“What is its purpose?” . . “To make things look black for Eogland” ~ : “Watch Your Wife” She's smarter than you think. e Mr. ad Mrs. Chester C. Smith will soon leave for their new home in Indjanapolis where Mr. Smith becomes g department- manager. for the Straus Brothers company. e
AT o : Vi< - For wives only
IP your husband had to do the washing every week he wouldn’t be without a washing machine five minutes. And when you go on putting such a drain on your strength, health and spirits with this once-a-week task, you aren’t being fair to him. For he can afford to buy you a washing machine. Any man can, once he understands the real situation. A small deposit puts the Easy Wuher in your leome—leu than
you probably pay fora hat or a pairof shoes. Andoncethereyou can pay the balance as you use the machine, in small monthly amounts that you scarcely feel. Why not let the Easy take all the dirt out of all the clothes and all the hard labor out of washday for you? Its famous Vacuum Cup Principle is the ‘only washing method that
~ The EASY wasHER = PC N % WEIR'S T g WEEE S E——nt WINCHESTIR stote—x
Special Prices on Meats of all Kinds at - SATURDAY, JUNE 12th Al beef roast per pound ...........................20¢ Beef boil ribs per p0und.......................15¢ Veal steak or chops per p0und.................35¢ Nl e Veal for Pockett per p0und....................20c Lean hamburg per p0und....................... 20c B e e e hver o o 3D Picniebamslean -. .. 1o - IB¢ faood bacon chunk. ... . ... . 2D€ Lard 5 pound hmlt‘|6c Dressed Chicken, Cottage . Cheese, Butter, Egg, Fresh Fish
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cleans the clothes so thoroughly and so gently. Its solid copper tub holds ten single sheets which take only a few minutes to wash. A flip of a cloth keeps the tub clean-and sanitary. A special feature of the. Easy is its gas heater, which keeps the water always hot. The Easy is as simple to operate as a vacuum cleaner. - A child can run it. And so precisely and care: fully-is it made—just like a fine auto-
mobile—that it runs quietly, smoothly, and lasts for years and years. Talk this over with your husband. And then phone or write us for a free Home Trial Demonstration. Without the slightest cost or obligation we will send an Easy and a demonstrator to your home on your regular washday and do a week’s washing free. !
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