Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 22B, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 July 1926 — Page 3
Special for Saturday Fancy Ripe - Cantaloupes 10c each Sack’s Bakery
| = e ML v Economy Chain Grocery ® ! Extra Specials for € ‘ : this Week 100 Ibs. Pure $6 O 5 Cane SUGAR for e Certo for making jellies, b0tt1e.................25¢ Mason Fruit Jars, pint 5............... ...........64c Mason Jars, quarts, "dozen ... ......72¢ Parawax for canning, p0und.................. 9¢ Can Rubbers, extra heavy, red or white | dpackagestor -. . 0. e Cider ¢Vinegar, pure, per gallon 25c¢ Fig Bars Fresh, perpound ..............5 .. 12¢ Ginger Snaps, good quality, p0und..............yl 5¢ Kirks White Flake Soap, 10 bars .. ... ..39¢ Pillsbury Floar, per sack only $1.22 Perfect Turkey Red Flour, per 5ack......51.12 Toilet Paper, American tissue, 4 r0115.........25¢ Brooms, exceptional quality.. . .37c, 59c, 79¢ Try GREEN CIRCLE COFFE it can’t 39 be beat for the imoney, per pound C YOURS FOR QUALITY ADVERTISED BRANDS OF GROCERIES AT LOWER PRICES i Economy Chain Grocery
. is thé buyof the year/ - isthebuyof theyear/ NTER you've seen this Brougham, and . driven it—you’ll agree with the many thousands who already own it that the same money simply cannot buy more real automobile value anywhere else. There, is a growing and deepening conviction among those who know motor car values that this Brougham is the b .outstanding dollar-for-dollar value of the year. - The Brougham has the same powerful and ; capable motor that powers the most expensive = Seed Pfiiagmdels. It is a beautiful car. It is one of the easiest cars to handle. Its acceleration is ‘ instantanéous. Its Paige-Hydraulic 4-wheel ~ brakes insure safe and positive braking always. Its wonderful roadability and comfort would = do credit to the costliest car built. - . T e - The Brougham is larger and roomier than ~ mostsedans—it isfinishedintwo tonesof gray ; polished lacquer; } ; upholstered in soft, lustrous - ~ and long-wearing materials. We want youto o wflf%hfi:flywimfl Maifngfi"&%fifi e, tax extn, Paige-Hydraulld 4 Wheel brakes inchided. LR s ) s 5‘5 Ligonier = gfi%%&n ff“ L CRone 301 e s~g§§ o %?@ffifig a 0 DVe TR
; s T L TR S R RS T SRR | loma Maud Starks was born May |7 1881 in Ligonier Indiana the daus |ghter of Kathryn and Isaac Slabaugh “{deceased. A e | She was united in marriage to Avery |B. Starks February 22 1900 at Ligod nier Indiana. To this union were born |two daughters Mrs. Earl Braginton {dand Betty Starks. . A | Mrs. Starks passed away July 15 11926 at the Goshen Hospital Goshen, Indiana. Those of her jimmediate family circle surviving her are her husband two daughters, one grand daughter, Gloria Jean Braginton her son-in-law Earl Braginton one sister Mrs. Rollin Young of Wawaka, Ind., one brother Alvan Slabaugh Lengbhy Minn., and her step-father Jacob Wor-/ tinger. The greater part of Mrs. Stark’s life was spent in the ‘community of Ligonier where by precept and example she established a place of high esteem for herself and her family. As a daughter she was dutiful, as a wife she was loyal and understanding eager ever to co-operate with hen husband in thep lans made for their home, and family. As a mother, shd. was untiring in her efforts to securd for her children life’s better part. As a member of the community she wasg kind in thought, charitable in speech, and generous in deed. Many there are who will remember always the} cheer and the capable willing hand of this good friend. : “Little self denials, little honesties little pasing words of sympathy, little} nameless acts of kindness these arelf the threads of gold which when woven together gleam out so brightly in the pattern of life God approves” This| pattern did Mrs. Starks'choose. The life she lived sends back this]) ‘message to those who must carry onf for her in the little world she had} ‘made her own—- “ Give us to awake with smiles ‘ Give us to labor smiling : ! As the sun lightens the world so let ] our loving kindness make bright thig house of our habitation.” Rev. G. H. Bacheler officiated at thaj funeral held Sunday afternoon July|' 18. :
He Has His Nerve. ‘ ~ ““Hasn’t he got his nerve?” | This is what 200 or more cottagers on the shores of Lake Webster arg asking one another and others. | The “he” is George O’Donnell of | Cromwell owner of a mill property located along the lake. oO’Donnell has gotten “in wrong” with lake cottagers because of a notice which he has’sent them within the last day or two de; manding that they pay him rental if they use boats on the lake, or fish in this body of water or even take g swim. : O’Donnell bases his right to make the demands on the assumption that he owns the bottom of the lake and naturally the water above. He declared that after searching records in/ connection with his purchase of theq ‘Willliam Yohn mill he is sure that the bottom of the lake is included in hig deed, as well as all the water. The’ fish in the lake are his property, he declares although he has not signified his intention of charging them a rental. ' e 1 e ~ Many cottagers who have received the letters are taking them seriously Boat liveries report business slowing down and visitors at the lake fear arrest if they gJ boating swimming or fishing. O’Donnell demands $lO a year of anyone who uses the lake for boating orother pleasures. . = Sheriff Maloy of Kosciusko county visited the lake region and is said to have advqised the cottagers not to take O’Donnel’s demands seriously.— Kendallville News Sun. — -
Visits 01d Friends. ; Mrs. Hazel Hull formerly of this city who has been employed at Elkhart for the past nine months was in Ligonier and Cromwell calling on old friends and relatives last week. Mrs, Hull is expecting to leave for San Diego California in a couple of weeks She expécts ‘to be abgent somve‘gfne, SEE WHATS IN IT. AN\ ] %‘ P S Z a 2 -, I\""Qi 2\ <L o -_::,r ¢ 5 1 R ».:‘- 4 po~ L! \,/ = s’r" ] AN B ONFRSound in every Ares‘pSéc't’is our prosy position to buy a farm now while thae price is low and the other fellow wants to sell. You can buy two acres for the price you would have been obliged to pay for one & few years ago. Prices of farm products are good. We can gét you a long tinheg farm loan through the First Joint {Stock Lank Bank of Fort Wayne and i you can pay itofiatthe rate of only w:o ! 3 - one perecent per year and only charge vou E% Wistast. No bommlkalon S 0 A e e No red tape. No delay, No stock tq buy. We have nwm&%fig Pt - gy WL 1t 36 N siiaboutdt. & o . 0 Aot Nl e e e
Last Saturday 376 officers belonging to the Medical Reserve Corps of the U. 8. Army completed a two weeks’ course of instruction at the Medical Field Service School at Carlisle Barracks Pennsylvania. These officers came from most of the states east of the Mississippi River. ' . From' Ligonier was Doctor Glade E. Rupert Captain in an interview with the Banner Dr. Rupert said. - 'The Medical Reserve Officers attending the sch?ol . numbered 229 physicians, 77 dentists.( 13 Veterinarians 5 chaplains, and 52 specialists, such as laboratory experts, sanitarians, and medical supply officers, There were also 380 medical students belonging to the Reserve Officers’ Training Camp the R. 0. T. C.,, who will be commissioned as first lieutenants when they graduate from their medical dental or veterinary schools, The Medical Field Service School isg the West Point of the Medical Department of the U. S. Army. It traing -professional men for all branches of medical service and during the early summer it conducts a six weeks course for“R. O. T. C. students and camp courses of 2 weeks duration for physicians and members "of other branches of the medical reserve,.
Injured in Saving Child, | Hubert E. Elliott of Goshen sustained painful injuries ta both feet, Sunday afternoon but succeeded in saving the:life of a little child who 'had started across a water slide at ‘Oliver Beach near LaGrange. i Elliott and a girl were riding on one of the toboggans down the chute and as they neared the water a little girl started to walk across the lower end of the slide which is nearly horizontal Elliott put his bare feet on the slide and succeeded in Slowing up the to-‘ boggan sufficiently to avoid striking the child. Both feet were badly torn and cut and Elliott is confined to his home. : ‘ ?
. France's difficulty lies in this: That - she is endeavoring to maintain an overseas empire with conscripted troops.—#ir lan Hamilfon. . Laughter is often the right way to correct error, to unmask imposture, ‘and to bear the minor misadventures of life.—Dean W. R. Inge. Like a snowball running down hill, a reputation grows with uncanny speed; and, like a snowball, too, it melts away in a moment unless it is solidly molded.—Nellle Melba. . WISE CRAX . Bad times may be good times for jthe clock repairér—Truth (England). . Some girls show mest everything but ‘a little commen sense.—Oincinnati{ EnquAßer. . .oa a . One thing that cem’t be preserved ‘in alcohol is a secret.—Columbia in : r.d. - 7 . _Hew poor Eve ever managed to dress witheut a mirror, the devil only . imows.—Femina (Paris). ‘ | All men are born free and equal, but some of them grow up and get mar|rled.—La Hsfera (Spain). ' You never see a flapper arrested for vagrancy. They all . have visible ‘means of support.—Seattle Star. : - Thestrical people are pecullar. } They work when they play and play ’ when they work.—Dalgety. (Australia). A apple ¢aused a man's first down‘fall, but peiches have handled the ‘business since that timie.—Newark ' Ledger. £, :
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 7:15 .- Mid-week Service Wednesday 7:15 o3t . Notice ‘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. o Bothwell & Vanderford W. H. Wigton .~ 16atf Notice of Sale of Automobile, - To M. D. Ritman. A e Toledo, Ohlo; : And all others who may be concerned: ~Notice is hereby given that the undersigned H. Clayton. Erwin, Paul Thomas and Charles Winebrenner, doing business and operating an automobile garage in the clty of Ligonier, ‘Noble County, Indiana, finder the firm name and ,etzleafl,rdti.fiffilazéflifl?taiél.fler-%] age,” will on Monday, August 2, 1926 at ten o'clock A. M., and from day to day thereafter at said hour until sold, offer for sale at public auction to the highSst and best bidder for cash, at of .Ligonier, the following described motor vehicle, to-wit: Columbia Road- | number sermflémberkitm {the property of the sald M. D. Ritman to sati ’.f fd ch @!‘S§. Mih ereon in Bet s B L e e e e, sum of $24.5; B & e hRS [ciaimed by said owner and all charges
| 'Bdward Person 66 well known Pesi|dent of Atwood was injured perhaps |fatally Friday noon when he fell dowrd |a cellar stairway at his home alight, |ing on his head on the cement floor, |His skull was fractured. : ' . Notice to Defendants, B State of Indiana Noble County SS: - In the Noble Circuit Court, . October Term 1926 - - .'Cause No. ; To quiet title to real estate. ‘ Lewis R. Marker, et al. e oo » ' l Edgar Andrew et al. d Come now the plaintiffs by Bothwell & Vanderford, their attorneys, and file their complaint herein together with the affidavit of a competent person that the residence, upon diligent inquiry, is unknown of the following named defendants, to-wit: Edgar Andrew, Crayton L. Wellman, Almina A. Wellman, Enos [Fenton, Elizabzeth Fenton, Mrs. H. Fenton, whose christian name is unknown to plaintiffs; that the names of the defendants are unknown and that they are believed to be non-residents of the State of Indiana sued in this action by the following names and designations, to~wit: “the unknown husbands and wives, respectively, of each and all of the following named persons, to-wit: KEdgar Andrew, (Crayton L. Wellman, Almina A. Wellman, Enos Fenton, Elizabeth Fenton, Mrs. E. Fenton, whose christian name is unknown to plaintiffs, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; the unknown widowers and widows the unknown children, descendants- and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors and -administrators of the estate, devisees, legatees, trustees and executors of the last will and testament, successors in ‘interest and assigns, respectively, of each of the following named and designated deceased persons, to-wit: Edgar Andrew, Crayton L. Wellman, | Almina A. Wellman, Enos Fenton, Elizabeth Fenton, Mrs.~ E. Fenton, whose christian name in unknown to plaintiffs, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; all of the women once known by any of the names and designations above stated, whose names may have been changed, and who are now known by other names; the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; the spouses of all of the persons above named, described and designated as defendants to this action who are married, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; all persons and corporations who assert or might assert any title, claim or interest in, or lien upon, the real estate described in the complaint in this action, by, under ‘or through any of the defendants to this action named. described and designated in said complaint, the names of all 7 of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; | that said action is for the purpose of | quieting title to real estate in the} State of Indiana; that a cause of ac-| tion exists against all of said defend- | ants; that all of said defendants are | necessary parties to said action ‘and | that they are believed to be non-resi-| dents of the State of Indiana. 1 Th following real estate in Noble | County, State of Indiana is described | in said complaint, to-wit: the north} half of the south seventy five feet of lot number three in Wellman’s Addition to the town now city of Ligonier. This action is instituted and prosecuted by said plaintiffs for the purpose of quieting their title to the real estate above described as against all demands, claims and claimants whatsoever. e
Notice is therefore hereby given said defendants that unless they be and appear on the Ist judicial day of the October 1926 Term of the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana, being the 4th day of October 1926 to be begun and holden on said 4th day of October 1926 at the Court House in the town of Albion in said Woble County in the State of Indiana and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their absence. In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said court at the office of the clerk thereof in the town of Albion Indiana this 6th day of July, 1926. _ (Seal) Frances M. Beane, Clerk of the . Noble Circuit Court Bothwell &Vanderford, = ' Ligonier, Indiana ; Attorneys for Plaintiffs. @ 20b3w
Say Folks 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 acar. ‘We don’t want you to buy to hasty "and be sorrow that _you did ‘not see the New‘Day Jewett or JPaige before " You may be thinging of buy'ing a new car and we don't know it. Just phone 481 _and ask to see our new car, ~and we will call. - " Yours for better car service. * Kiester Electric Shop
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.”
~ Car load of fresh and close-up e springers will go on gle. .. Wednesday, July 28 at 7 o'clock at the Foster Sales pavilion Ligonier, Indiana Fine Tennessee Jerseys We will deliver all cattle sold free of charge anywhere within ten miles of Ligonier and a small charge per mile over ten miles. Remember the date and be here. 'GEORGE D. FOSTER, Manager
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This company, in promoting safety and good service, earnestly re- - quests that anyone seeing broken, loose or esanywhere, call us up b M atonce. . PHONE 220
Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.
Ouz - linemen in climbing = service poles; are protected - with speeial gloves and other insulating devieces, Without these, no one should eclimb a pole on any pretfext. - This 18 kite flying time, and a fine healthy sport if is, but the best place to enjoy this fun Is out on a vaeant ~lot or commons. There are no overhosd wires o Interfere with tho nfi& of ilmm or endanger the - young rescuer who .attempts to re-
