Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 22A, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 July 1926 — Page 3
’ Figure It Out For * Yourself If opportunity to get ahead finds you with no funds--you LOSE. If you have a growing Savings Account with this bank---you Better “be Safe than Sorry” and start your account to-day. : 4 per cent Interest on Savings The Farmers & Merchants Trust Company “THE BANK OF SAFETY AND FRIENDMY SBRVICE.”
; ! A The Greater Hoover's new and | revolutionary principle of ? . “‘Positive Agitation’’ makes | €fi€7 obsolete every previous kind * of cleaning device. ‘ : You'll be amazed and delighted C eflfq 67/‘ at this newv homecleaning effi- & ciency. We'll demogstrate it on your rugs. Appointments ; are being made by phone. : ! ‘ Only $6.25 down igonier Electric Sho - Ligonier Electric Shop The GREATER : ' = et HOOVER f e " “59 ”[.;:f‘?
90— 9 $2.00 The Year
i e, o S 5 A 48 o 5 T=o R s 3 jx, ol BY eok ",’: - =asGood asitis , (%uf :‘! | POSSESSING an ease of handling tha(’s almost uncanny— ° t powerful enough for any emergency -. —as speedy as sane men care to drive : —comfortable as a tavérite chair—safe : as hydraulic 4-wheel brakes and clears : vision steel bodies can make it—this . newest and finest Paige wins the regard ; , of its owners quite as much with the : : « beauty of its performance as with the sy beauty of its appearance. § It's an extremely economical car, too. Its first cost is nearly a thousand dollars less . : than former Paiges— -and it costs no more : : to maintain than many less capable cars. : Paige is not the only quality car built a _ today—but a comparison of Paige specifications — better still, a comparison of : Yo ngepcrformaneewithanyotherm-- : will quickly convince the most careful buyer that it is difficult to conceive of a : greater dollar-for-dollar value than that afforded by the newest Paige models. A - , | demonstration—with you at the wheel .. ~—entalle noobligation whatsoever, i D e s< Gl o 1 185 Cabriolet: Roadst . 827 " T 4 "r ’;: Gk mfi; ;‘,mfim ,;rk\ RN eo J B4| %, ALES ] ANy . i pCIII IR e s S e g
THELIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA
: Sues For $3OO Gets $l. - : ~ In the ‘trial of Pred Smith of LaOtto $3OO damages a jury in the DeKalb circuit court Thursday awarded ‘the plaintiff b#t $1 damages. | Smith claimed that Wells was responsible for a collision that took place near the intersection of the Lima road on a gravel road extending east and west a mile south of LaOtto on December 14 last. As a result of the collision Smith’s car was badly damaged and he was forced to pay $ll2 to get the machine repaired. 200 Attend Farm Bureau. The Farm Bureau commuiiity picnic held at the Elkhart township North school proved a delightful event for the 200 present. A long low fire was built and willow switches were used to toast the weiners. A feast of sand, wiches, ice cream and cake followed, Music was furnished by the Gaby trio including George, Charles and Roy Gaby., ‘The entire occasion was thoroughly enjoyed by' all and will be repeated at some future time.— Wawaka Correspondent. J
Stored in Garage. A Ford * coupe with both front wheels smashed was found abandoned in ‘a ditch along the’ angling road north west of Kendallville Friday by State Highway Patrolman William Donavan. The car bore Indiana licence plates but no identification card was found. Patrolman Donovan ordered the machine brought to a garage, ; : Staae Prisoner Escapes. A dispatch tells of the escape from the state prison at Michigan City of Frank Dawson 38 who was sentenced from the Elkhart circuit court by Judge James S. Drake in November, 1925 for the theft of automobile tires,i ‘He was a trusty.. s .Dies at Cromwell. o Mrs. Maude Shadiker died at her home in Cromwell after an illnes last ing several months. She was aged 48 years. She leaves her husband, one son Richard and one daughter Mrs, Glenn Henry of Whiting. Funeral was held Tuesday. ' : : / Sudden Death. : William Knappenbarger more than 70 years of age and for many years a resident of Ligonier died Thursday at South Bend and the remains were brought here and buried Saturday. Surviving is "a sister Mrs. William, Vondersmith.
Sawmill at Burkett Burns. s A loss of $12,500 was suffered early Friday in the burning of the Gaskill saw mill at Burkett. The blaze started in the engine room. Ed Gaskill of Warsaw the owner announced hg will not rebuild. : Held For Accident. Wayne Hammond 21 of Shelby, Ind., is being held at Michigan City awaiting the outcome of injuries sustained by Mrs. Leonard Johnson who was struck by Hammond’s car. - Medies at Cromwell. The next meeting .and banquet of the Noble County Medical Society will take place in Cromwell tomorrow Thursday evening July 20. A good attendance {of members is expected. Pays $5O Fine ~ Jacob Levin owner of a fertilizer plant north of Goshen pleaded guilty to a charge of operating a public nuisance was fined $5O and costs. amounting in all to $60.75. . Girl is Burned. Adeline Pollom eight years old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pollom of South Bend was seriously burned when her clothing caught fire from a bonfire. ¥
To Attend Log Rolling. i Members of the Modern Woodmen of this vicinity will attend a log roll+ ing of the order at Columbia City Labor Day, September 6. It is a state affair. : Street Paving Completed. A street paving program at Kendallville has been completed at a cost of $lOO,OOO. Parts of 24 streets and 2 alleys were paved this summer. - Now is the time to pay your sub. seription to the Banner. :
| T - AT R Rl
When Planting Trees ~ PLANT : Best Grown In United tSates for 107 ‘ - ~Xears - Try the “STARK DHLICIOUS” or the “STARK- GOLDEN- DELICIOUS” apple and be convinced of their superi-| ority that cannot be duplicated by any grower, R : . -Stark Bro’s grow all kinds of shrubbery and ornamental trees besides every kind and variety of trees:that willgraw Toat, '~ . - s Free Stark plan of Landscape service | ~ Drop me a card and I will call DA e Er‘ i. 1 A, O: Jefinies
{|| Bat Less and Live | 118 Longer, Says Lawyer ’ s By W. W. O’'BRIEN- : (Ndl’:?d Criminal Lawyer of Chicago.) Business and professional men work{ing under high nervous pressure db not ~ live as long as S - men whose pur- |£ & W suits keep them | F “éw,& - out of doors and o active. Examine .== | longevity and you P will find that on e 6 the average the : | longest-lived men _ | are soldiers, sailR O §l ors and farmers, S v @ . all avocations RN LS which tend to 5 : keep a man at iw o his physical best. Man, in general, rolls down the hill of life fastest when his fignre is rotund. ‘“Leanness and longevity” is a good axiom for business men to remember, If office workers would eat a little less, they would add years to their lives. Overfeeding is as dangerous to adults as underfeeding is to children. Foods difficult to digest, or which overstimulate, should be avoided by persons whose work does not require any particular amount of physical exerclse. Yet thousands of business men eat as much as or more than men who do manual labor, -And, inevitably, nature rebels and sickness results. Many of the country’s foremost executives eat but two meals a day, breakfast and dinner in the evening. They seek to keep the organs of the body from becoming clogged. = Thoueands of other business men confine themselves at noontime to custards, puddings, soups and other sustaining dishes made with milk, or evaporated l milk, which is milk in its most sterile form, from which 60 per cent of the water has been removed by evaporation. ‘Such a dlet is lght and readily assimilated. There #8 no more necessary lesson to be learned by the brain worker than how to keep well and healthy by proper attentlon to food habits.
Eating Greater Cause of Death Than Drinking Drink is the second greatest cause of disease and death. Food comes first, then drink. Excluding alcoholic beverages, there are dozens of drinks on the market today whose effect is detrimental, particularly to children, Milk i{s the best drink for children. Not only is it drink, but food as well—the most nearly perfect food known to man. : \ Milk is ‘an -all-the-year-round drink and for this reason the children often rebel against drinking it. This condition, however, may be overcome by the Introduction of the mixed drink. Milk or diluted evaporated milk may, be mixed with eggs or used in fruit Julces or in some other way which; will disguise the fact that the drink contains milk. In the hot summer months when the child naturally drinks more than in cooler weather, It is wise to vary the ways of serving milk, 8o as not to create a distaste for this important food. ¢ ¥ ; i """fl'o“l ) I.).; \| i : g i BFo L LN Ni ‘
In connection with mixed drinks, the | following formulas for milk beverages may ald mothers in serving something ‘DOW S : i .lced Cocoa . : zgap. ©ocoB 1% cups evap- ! Bp. sugar orated milk #ooup hot water diluted with ! w grains salt 1% oups water v - ¥ tsp. vanilla . Beald the diluted milk In a double “boller. Mix cocoa, sugar, salt and add the hot water. Cook over a low flame from 10 to 15 minutes, stirring occaslonally to prevent burning. Add to the cocoa the scalded milk; return to the double bofler and continue cooking for 10 minutes. Add vanilla, chill before serving. Pour Into tall glasses which contalp a few small cubes of | foe. Berve rgl&!n or t;gmwlth whipped Qream gprinkled cinnamon. Serves four. f | 'qu-No?. 4 688 > dlluted with e b Pow gratings. oherry mogor ~__ putmeg - 8 tbsp. non-gleo--2-8 ocup cold holic sherry : - evaporated milk : - Beparate white from yolk of :‘g. Add salt to white and beat until s Beat yolk untH thick and lemon col.ored and add the fruit juices, nn.tm:g. and sugar. Oombine diluted milk with | yolk mixture. Pour into a t’al;rgg_s. l and put the egg white on top. 8 e | top with chopped nuts and serve at'! once. Serves ome. w 0 .. Orange-Nog. L “34 oup orange julce 1-8 cup evaporated &w ins salt milk diluted 3 1-8 2;. sugar “with ; e 1-8 cup cold water . Add sugar and salt to orange Jjuice ‘and pour slowly“into the diluted milk, stirring to mix thoroughly. Ohill before serving. One-half tsp. lemon im- .. Free Picture Shows. _ Cromwell residents are - enjoying | free plcture shows on the streets Of that town every Wednesday - night. | The expense is met by the business W uis W err at W nded the funeral of
“Winona Cdttage Burned. Fire of unknown origin destroyed one cottage and ‘practically burned another at the Winona Lake summer resort Thursday. . - : The Warsaw and Winona Lake fire departments joined forces to prevent spread of the flames. The loss was [estimated_ at $lO,OOO. £ “Increase Pension. = L.ocal postoffice officials have received communications from Washington, D. C., to the effect that the pensions of postal employees has been increased from $720 to $l,OOO. This action was taken at the recent session of congress. - : - . Not Superstitious. The Winona Assembly officers are evidently not superstitious. They will open their Bible Conference Friday August 13. :
_ First Presbyterian Church Rev G. H. Bacheler Pastor Residence 318 West Third St. : Telephone 345. : : ~ Sunday Services ) : ~ Bible School 9:30 Men’s Class 9:30 : : Preaching Service 10:45. _ Evening Services 7:30 . Y P S. C. E Monday 7:16 o ~ Mid-week Service Wednesday 7:15 s Notice b Office hours June 1 to Sept 1. 9:00 a. m. to 4p. m. except Saturday. 9:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m. : 4 Bothwell & Vanderford 'W. H. Wigton 16atf Now is the time to pay your sub. scription to the Banner. '
Say Folks . e Have you saw the New-Day Jewett or Paige yet? ' If you have not, you had better call us for a demonstration before you buy a car. ' We don’t want you to buy to hasty and be sorrow that you did ,not see the NewDay Jewett or §Paige ' before buying. _ You may be thinging of buying a new car and we don’t know it. Just phone 48l and ask to see our new car, and we will call. Yours for better car service. - Kiester Electric Shop Phone 481
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Car owners have never been able to buy tire mileage at so low a cost per mile as they can buy Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires today. And never before have they
been able to buy tires so comfortable, safe and trouble free. . ' This is possible because of the highly skilled research engineers who have developed special machinery and processes for manufacturing Gum-Dipped Tires, combined with economical national distribution through efficient. Service Dealers, many equipped with the latest Firestone methods of repairing High Pressure, Full-Size Balloon, Bus and Truck Tires. il ' Firestone’s long fight against the British Rubber Restriction Act has saved car owners millions of dollars. S : . We can serve you better with these wonderful tires and save you money. Come in today. 'MOST MILES PER DOLLAR
ALBERT IF. TURRELL & CO. Phonell4s = e . LIGONIER INDIANA l AMERICANS SHOULD PRODUCE THEIR OWN RUBBER. :fi f:fl &fi BAlong,
NS4 T i) 1§ QU el = S R e T e N [ e ;i By Y P TR S\ B 7 | ¥ 'At nGe &) > T ETa P ="§ :- wo\ AL BTN A 1 et e——etST |\ g Q 8 :':‘rm ¥y TN e el T e T C‘\ ee e ——— T (BN . ] > N 9 ceoaeanr= |T (R ;, 23 ’\] :‘“’v‘y TETE gi ei S ] e Qi SNt iy |A O\ A %‘3? F R LR~ ~ \ 08, : B LS ' MBESS e N A AR — o ..\\\\\\\ &% T - /\\, = ' / 2% R ESy] gol > S [ & ™A o« R - Q«‘\\ : .%} /| Mothers and 1 ®AO% / Fathers--Please! o )K " Tell your boys not to fly their kites . near electric poles or wires, and g 1 most important of all, not to elimb = our poles to free kites or strings that ; are tangled in the wires.
‘This company, in promoting safety and good service, earnestly requests that anyone seeing broken, loose or dangling electrical wires anyvs{here, call us up ’ at once. PHONE 220
Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.
welve Dazy /N vacation Trips & 7 -—,‘>==' 5 > ° , 2 . | See Niagara Fails this Summeyr Enjoy a cool, delightful Lake Trip on the Great Ship “SEEANDBEE"” Special Excursion Fare $7.85 Round Trip 932?1;3:% 'S,bz“—}'.‘i,.m Falls and return, starting July 9th, 16th, 26th, August 2nd, | Tickets good returning any time within 12 days including date of sale. ; Be’_ Side Trips at special excursion rates to Toronto, : Auto Rates '} == Clayton, N. Y., Alexandria Bay, Montreal or Quebec 4 $7.50 L. obtainable at our Cleveland Office. B’ _ and up ,1 [ ‘The Cleveland and Buffalo Transit Company i = ;it}(it, Q - E. oth St. Pier; Cléveland, O. : B S If,f{"**\“ ';\’4";;;! e, . Daily Steamers to Buffalo—9 p.nte BR T W ‘FARE $5.50
We Also Sell : At These Reduced Prices : 30x3 Fab. Cli ....$6.90 29 x 4.40 Balloon .§11.20 80x8% » v .....17.80 29x475 » .. .14.90 30x3 Reg.C1.C0rd..7.70 30x4.75 » .. 1560 30x3% » » o~ . .895 20x495 o .. 1645 80x3% Ex.SizeCl.Cerd 8.95 30x4.95 » .. .17.25 31x4¢ §.5.C0rd....1575 30x626 n» .. .18.15 3234 » w ~...1725 81x8525 » . 1905 32“% » ” evme 128‘35 o 5 32 X 6:“ ” o .22!95 | 335 o w .....2060 33x600 » ..24:00 ' Made in The Great Economical Firestone Factories - -and Carry the Standard Tire Guarantee
Our linemen in climbing service poles, are protected with special gloves and other insulating, devieces, Without these, no one should climb a pole on any pretext. ' This is kite flying time, and a fine healthy sport it is, but the best place. to enjoy this-fun is out on a vacant lot er commons. There are no overhead wires to Interfere with the flight of the kite, or endanger the young rescuer who attempts to regain it,
