Ligonier Banner., Volume 61, Number 11B, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 April 1927 — Page 2
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You cannot afford to drive a ca: without carrying full coverage insurance. We represent the State Automobile Insurance Association, the largest and strongest recipracal company in India;xa. We are in better fiositirm to render quick and efficient service ,than any other insuran'i agency in Ligonier. A claim agent visits Ligoxnier every Monday and takés care of all claims that have accumulated during the week. When you buy automobile insurance of us you buy service at the same time. dive us a call before placing your automobile insurance. LRI Kimmeall Realty Co. Office First Floor Citizens Bank Building, Phone 800 LIGNIER, INDIANA
Form your own opinion of the quality of printing we tum out by looking over the samples we will be glad to show you. There ia nothing in this line that we can'’t do to your =, entire gatis- ~ faction. Migh- ~ @ ciass printing . fl creates a good T ==z sion for N[ P you XU == A.,_ .&F 4 business. | \I Consuly ’ V¢ Before » Vou Send oW l Vour Work N\ Ourof
Ligonier Hatchery SPECTAL PRICES ON HIGH GRADE CHICKS Bamoee .. R DEAVY BRREEDS . 2 i Custom Hatching $3.00 per 100 eggs. Phone 502 : KELLY BOWLES. kSanitary Plumbing] and Heating®; ‘ Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind lFoßretz tor Glasses :5 = \ Sharp Eyes Ao For | P g Sharp Work AR mechanion lke t use kesm “Lpd, partect tools % Kyve orv toolr of the mind and must be sharp to do good work and rogiel the wear of oonstant use. it us eharpen gour sight ¥y faraishing glasses that will enchle yox t» wa clearly, I What Cepditice L eet et » . » Nevin E. Bretz Optometrist and Optician 130 S. Main St
There are all kinds of cheap printing—butnone of it is really cheap—at least not on a basis of valuwe, Cheap stuff is usually worth almost what it costs. Our printing isn’t the cheapest you can det, but it’s as dood as the best.
Ll AT 1927 April 19 ' e2B E 1 2 Do s B 7.8 5 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17, 13 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 V 7 2 27 AR AT ‘///'/;/ S/ oy 4/ o’ / 7 // N 7 A £ < L S KN /7 snL A L O Y 2 Sl LU~ Y 7 ST B s Conen | s BT S e The Ligonier Banner Established 1856 . Published by ; TIE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. : wW.oe. B Harrisqn, Editor M. A. Cotherman, Manager Published every Monday and Thursday and entered the Postoffice at Ligonier, Indiana, as second class matter.
: Beath of Sol Baum. Sol Baum of Avilla age 76 years died Tuesday following a week’s critical illness of heart trouble superinduced from an attack of influenza. , Mr. Faum was one of the county’d prominent citizens and for over twenty years was cashier of the Merchants & Tarmers bank there. He retired two vears ago and was succeeded by Glenn Ilines when the bank was reorganized and the name changed to the Aviiia State Bank. Mr. Baum ha( been a resident of Avilla for many yvears and was an active worker for the betierment of the community, Fraternzlly he was affiliated with thg Masonic order. reath of Clyde Meeks. Clyde Meeks age 47 years native of Ohic late of Rome City and often spcken of as ‘“the blind man with a million friends” died Monday evening at Lakoside hospital Kendallvilly where he had been a patient sincs March 2:. Death resulted from dropsy and other complications with which he had been sericusly illL The docedent who had suffered thgq misfortune of blindness since an in, fant was born on a farm near Hicks) ville, 0., the only son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mesks. : ’ Teacher Placed Under Arrest. Parents of pupils in the fifth grada at Plymouth are angry over the allegs ed action of R. C. Kirk teacher. It iy alleged Kirk punished the pupils with a piece of garden hose for not mems; orizing ‘The Village ' Blacksmith.” Several zirls aged 10 are said to have exhibited welts at a doctor’s examinas tion . Kirk faces charges of assault, made by the parents, in the court of justice of the peace. -Kirk who ig 20 years old came from nis home near Washington, Ind. o
Lewis at Fort Wayne. | Noble county will be represented at the banquet which will be held this evening at the Shrine Temple in Fort Wayne with Hon. James Hamilton Lewis former senator of Illinois, as the chief speaker of the evening, The meecting has been arranged unjy der the auspices of the Jefferson club of Fort Wayne and many leading demq crats frcm all parts of the state wil) be present. ‘ i : Nearby Deaths 2 Mrs. Sophia Hoffman 58 complicas tions, Decatur Corwin Harrison 76, Kosciusko county ; Mrs.:A. Newcomer, 79 Warsaw; Mrs. Edward Moore 27 diabetes Warsaw; Warren Ifer, 5T heart disease Wells county; H. T. Nt; tero 75 cancer, Wakarusa, Mrs. Barj bara Kehr, 85 paralysis, Goshen; Mrs Lucinda Wyland 77 complications; Elkhart. , Woman 85 Granted Divorce Mrs. Eliza Jigler 85 years old of ¥\’a§{gington township Whitley county was granted a divorce from James C Pigler on the ground of desertion by Judge Biggs of the Whitley — circuit court. The defendant did not appear. Ha is a non-resident of the state of Ins Qiana. ¢ it
Meeting of Calf Club What gives promiseof being an interesting as well as an enjoyable event is the meeting of Jersey Calt Club planned for Friday evening April 29th at 7 o’clock in the office of County Agent J. B. Cunningham at Albion. The meeting will be open to club members their parents and friends. ; ... N. Y. C. Retrenchment. Retrenchment orders from the N. Y; C. lines west general office at Cleveland caused the cessation Monday of work at the westbound gravity yardg at Elkhart and put 45 men out of work. : : They Go Visiting. Mr. and Mrs. Clair W. Weir drove tq Monroeville Wednesday to visit hey parents Rev. and rMs. J. F. Lautey, Mrs. Weir will remain for a week. = First Presbytertan Church. | Cavin Street = ’ s Rev. G. H. Bacheler, Pastor Residence 318 W 3rd St. ‘ Telephone 345, ... Bervices : Sunday School 9:30 A. M. ' ‘Preaching Service 10:45 A. M. - Vesper Service 5:00 P. M. . Y. P. 8. C. E. Monday 7:00 P. M. | - Mid wogkk service Wed. 7:15 P. M. - % AYt i o ¥
GOT HIS “THINK-TANK” GOING Mexican Farmer Proved He Was Capable of Invention When Object Was to Save Labor. That the Mexican farmer is not the* slow-thinking, lazy person the avemgel stranger imagines is illustrated by an ingeniously devised well constructed by a farmer living near a little town Just across the boundary line. The natives seldom go far away from their homes and they have very primitive ideas and customs. This well is about 50 feet deep and the owner has built a curious device for hauling water from it. If this Mexican had been an educated man he might have been an inventor. - e .. A tree flourished mnear the well which had two branches growing out of the trunk. These boughs separated into four branches higher up. The Mexican cut the branches in such a way that they formed a perfect rest for a long well sweep. He fastened the sweep to a crossbar laid across the two upper branches in the middle, 'using stout thongs for the purpose. Then. he fastened a weight on one end of the sweep and a long rope to the other end. The bucket is fastened to the end of this long rope, and all he has to do is to lower the buckets into the well. The weight of the stone pulls it up again, brimming full. NAVAL SALUTATION VERY OLD “Dipping the Flag” One of the Most Ancient Forms of Greeting of Which There Is Record. The salutation given when a vessel lowers or “dips” its flag is one of the oldest and most honorable of ail forms of marine greeting. This form of salute has always been demanded by English-speaking seamen, and its exaction has warmed the hearts and used up the powder of generations of naval commanders. ¢ In the old days, for a foreign ship, whether merchant or naval, to enter an English port without veiling topsails or dipping its national flag was to run the risk of war, although peace existed. Without warning or argument, the shore defenses or a man-of-war would send a round shot across the bows or between the masts of the foreigner, and if the offending flag did not instantly come down the insolent intruder was brought to her senses by being raked through and through. Salutes are essential matters of naval etiguette, and are exchanged on an elaborate code fixed by the maritime powers. The number of guns to be fired in all circumstances is minutely stipulated.
-~ Why People Attend Theaters. .The playwright is never and will never be bettered by watching plays, but by watching audiences. People go to the theater for the same reason that they go to church, concerts, picture galleries or the opera—for relief from the stress of real life. Let the young playwright sit among playgoers, not among other playwrights, and get to understand how he may contribute to the relief of the vast army of tired men and women. He will find that what people ask of the theater is not the real—people rush to the theater to escape from the real. He will find that the theater is most powerful and its attendance greatest when audiences are given plays in which the real is invested with an idea—which is all that any of us ever mean by the word ideal.—Charles Frohman. Housewife in the Making. Miss Emery had given little Tim a simple problem in addition that he failed to work out. ‘“Numbers are dry,” she reasoned with herself, and determined to make the lesson more interesting. : “Suppose,” she began, engagingly, “your mamma sent you to the store to buy three pounds of lamb, two pounds of potatoes, half a pound each of carrots and turnips, and one pound of tomatoes—what would you have then?” Tim shook his head, but Marybell, only a year older, raised an eager hand. : . “Well, Marybell?” said the teacher, with a sorrowful glance at little Tim. “Stew!” said Marybell, sweetly.— Youth’s Companion.
Inexpensive Monotony. “When I got the order to design a big wholesale house for a firm that has stores in five cities besides New York, naturally I was elated,” said an architect. *°‘l'll plan a building that is bound to be satisfactory,’ I said to myself, ‘and then they will give me the commission for those new stores ' they expect to put up in those other five cities.’ “Well, T did turn out a splendid store—a store ‘that was admired by everybody in the wholesale trade. My patrons were pleased, too, but instead of giving me an order for those other buildings they simply used the same plans over again and built all their houses alike. That’s what I call playing a low-down trick on ‘a fellow.” Bygone Chivalry. ; “It 18 mo use deceiving ourselves,” she thought. “There’s precious little chivalry now! Men don’t idealize women as they used. They’re grown far .more suspicious—and harder. Perhaps because women have grown so critical of them! Anyway, something’s gone—what is it? Poetry? Illusion? And yet!-—Why i it that men still put us off our be.arice—even now—that they matter so much less, now. that we live our own lives, and can do without them?”—Mrs. Humphry ‘Ward in “The Mating of Lydia.” _ Christian Secience Lecture. : - First church of Christ Scientist Go,. shen Indiana announces a free lectura. on Christian Science by Rev. ‘Andrez| J. Graham C. 8. B. of Boston Mass., i,y Jefferson theatre Goshen Thursday evening May 65 1927 at 8 o'clock. The public is cordially invited to attend. |
THE LIGONIER BANNEK, LIGONIER, INDIANA. THE LIGO! 3A lER, ,
PURPOSE IN HIGH MORTALITY?
Writer Asserts It Is in the Nature of a “Purification by Fire” of the Human Race.
. Great mortality in itself is not nec essarfly a great racial catastrophe writes Vernon L. Kellogg in the At lantic Monthly., Indeed, it is, in the; face of the geometrical progression by which reproduction moves, one of the veritable conditions of advance in anl mal life. Throughout the kingdom of life, plant as well as animal, the over. production of individuals and their re duction by death to a fractional patri{ of the original number is' one of the basic conditions of progress if Dar winism is a sound explanation of or ganic evolution. For this death will be in the nature of things selective, and hence will make for the modifica tion of the species toward a condition of better adaptation to conditions of life, Indeed, the upholders of war ha:x{o used precisely the argument of wars high niortality as a proof of war’'s real beneficence to the race, Ammoz, for €xample, consistently de. velops this thesis, cold bloodedly to its logical extreme, and Seeck and nu. uiernug others. are attracted by it in certrin dearee. : However, the advantage of mortal ity depends upon the impartiality ol the applicaticn of its causes. Submit the whole population to a stress of living that resulis in a certain mor. tality, and this selection by death may well be advantageous to the race. It may weed out the weak, the biolog ically incompetent, the stupid or the depraved. 1t may be a purification by fire. :
DON’T WAIT FOR GREAT CRISIS Attention to the Daily Little Things . Will Go Fzr to Lighten Burdens and MNake Life Happy. It is in the small things of life that we make or mar its future development, declares a writer in the Chicaga Tribune. The big things usually take care of themselves. There is so little choice when the great crisis arrives. Usually tliere is no cheice but to rise in your might and triumph, or to bow and be crushed by the rush of events. It is just bere that so many women lose out. ’ ‘ They wait for the great moments, and when they come, like great rolling waves, cnly the most powerful swimmer is fit to do battle. ‘ Rut in life's daily current there is a trend;, an imperceptible flow, | easily fought against if perceived, easily bent to one’s will if desired, . This is the right time for action, for keen vision, for constant vigilance. : A The small current making for unhappiness cau easily be stemmed if the judgment is awake. Not to condemn, not to censure,-not to make a martyr of yourself, and not to seek to martyrize others are some of the rocky shoals to be avoided. To go with, to enjoy with, to cooperate with, to share: pleasures, and to lighten burdens constitute the fundamental spiiit of a happy life. | Tonsorial Enterprise. A barber who had no customer, and consequently no tip, for three hours rushed to the door and beckoned to a boy who lecaned wearily against a lamp-post. = “Guess who's inside here getting a shave and a lLaircut,” he whispered. The boy pcered past the barber at the row of chairs, but perceived ne familiar figure. The barber named a well-known politician. - “Jiminy! I1im?” said the boy, and hastened to spread the news among those outside. Instantly curiosity possessed the blcck, and men who needed a barber’s services and those who didn’t hurried in and filled the vacant chairs. One loiterer who had resisted the bait smiled. ‘When it comes to advertising,” he said, “barbers don’t miss many points. Never one of them that fails to work that promincnt personage scheme when trade runs low.” ‘
Great Firnancier Poor Writer. Illegible handwriting may prove an aid to prosperity. The late Lord Gos. chen said of his father: ‘“He has told me, half in joke and half in earnest, that. when he came to London he was obliged to found a firm be cause he wrote such a bad hand that no one would take him for a clerk.” Of lLord Koschen himself his biographer remarks: “In his latter years he might have spelt as -he chose, for no one could have affirmed with certainty how many ‘l’'s’ he might have { put in ‘although.” At length his.script became undecipherable even by Goss chen himself. He could not when speaking in parliament make out what it was that he had put on paper, and he thus came in later years to abandon almost entirely his old prac tice of making notes.” e it . Little Hand-Painted China, Decoration of china has been reduced to an art in Limoges. The procs ess of lithographic and decalcomania have replaced all hand painting, except for rich decorations and special orders. Another process f that of applying soft underglaze colors so as to produce fine effects, and it is prob-. able that very soon the leading styles of the best classes of goods will be decorated in this manner. The large manufacturers make their own decalcomania sheets, work out their designs, and control their decorations. They employ girls to apply the de- | calcomania lithographs on the china: After the paper has been removed ‘therefrom the articles are fired in the “moufleg’ to set the colors. - . Sally O’Neil in “Frisco Sally Levy” is a little slice of life a whirlwind of mirth with just a few tears at Crystal Friday and Saturday. =., . . Quality baby chicks, also custom hatching. Get my prices before plac: | ing your order. Phone Kimmell 58, W. W.'Collett, = bla2ot* .
"WE ONLY SELL A\~ STANDARD GRADE - OUR FIXTURES ARE THE ( i BEST g - x THATS ‘ MI}DE l@« ‘ SYR 4 : :!_;w," \ a 0 "-'-'f;'_".".' —ernß3-Fisters——— G ttte Plamber———. You won’t find anything but satisfaction in this plumbing shop. . Among the plumbing ‘supplies we sell you won't find a fixture that isn’'t constructed in a dependable mans» ner. We also want you to know that every job of plumbwe do pleases the person who orders it. Phone 210. Vern Fisher .Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind.
U. B. Notes. : 9:30 Sunday School followed by the Junior church and a Christian endeavor program. Program elsewhere. 6:30 Christian Endeavor“~Raymond Price leader. ‘ - 7:30 Evening Service. , Thursday evening Mother and Daughter Banquet of the Women’s Miss‘onary. Association. Mrs. A. D. Shaf. fer Somerset Pa., who is now attending the National Conventicn of the ‘Association at Des Moines lowa wiil bring echoes from that convention. - ‘May" 8 Mother’s Day. The Junior church are bringing the message in a pageant. 1 Quarterly conference convenss Moida night. The most important meeting of the year. Presidents and treasures of all “organizations should have reports ready. ; Chicken. Thieves Busy. - While in Ligonier Tuesday Prosecuting. Attorney Lincoln conferred with Dolice Chief Wolf and Officer }Boyven over the theft of many chicken near Albion. Last Thursday night ‘4O fowls were taken from one coop and Monday night of this week Arthus Trittapoo formerly of Ligonier lost 30. Other farmers in the neighborvhood have been victims of the thieves The Ligonier officers are investigating. - Four Killed in Auto Crash Death of Richard Reese of Elkhart at a hospital at Gary brought the death toll of a train-automobile crash at Gary Monday night to four. Joseph Q’Connell ¢f Crown Point, Joseph Rekowski of Chicago and Joe Wylass of Melrose Park 111., were killed out~ right when a Grand Trunk passenger train struvek their auto. :
Death of Aged Lady. ’ . Mrs. Nettie Farr aged 78 years passed away Monday nidnight at the home of a daughter Mrs. Ernest Smith north of Cromwell. The remains were taken to lona Michigan %v Henney & Surfus for burial. A Near Death’s Door. iS. S. Whistler Goshen father of Mrs. Dick Deubler formerly of Ligonier is lying fatally ill at his home in:the Elkhart eounty capital. "~ Foster’s Next Sale. : Foster’'s -next community sale will be held Wednesday May 4 He will have the usual amount of stuff to offer, : ! Never a girl like “Frisco Sally Levy” She had an Irish mother a Jewish father and then a son Aaron and a son of Erin laid claim to her heart. You'll simply. howl with laughter. See it at Crystal Friday and Saturday. Subscribe for the Ligonier Banner
"¢y ColoGy sez: : 7 i N&77 . N X : 5, Wl .i ; 2 fil/f/ ‘\*s“ -' P\ - SUCCESS SOMETIMES BRINGS POISE--BUT MORE OFTEN ~AVOIRDUPOIS /o We're gaining right along—gaining in public guad-will. Ours”is a battery service station where competent battery men advise you and effect the necessary repairs.
| "Zwnein" for Service to LIGONIER ™" ,ummc SHop Ligonser, Ind. | ;
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Home Realty and Investment Co. ~~ ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR ’ LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. o J. L. HENRY Manager FARM and CITY properties handled to your . ENTIRE SATISFACTION We handle SECURITIES that will appeal to you from standpoints which are essential in the purchasing of any security. First the SAFETY of the issue and Second; the rate of interest. @ ; ‘ INSURANCE FIRE, LIGHTNING AND TORNADO, WORKMEN’S . CONPENSATION, AND EMPLOYERS’ LIABILITY AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE : .FARM LOANS 5 per cent FARM LOANS with exceptional privilege clause. Special attention paid to this form of farm loans. ‘SATISFACTORY SERVICE OUR AIM. , YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED.
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Individuality made Gilda Gray, who did an old dance in a new way and won fame and fortune. But when it comes to matters affecting
Ligonier Electric Shop
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I tant Noti We are Authorized Agents for Swift’s ~ Red Steer Fertilizers. We represent. in ~'this town the A.S. A. you have been - reading about in your farm papers. We sell Swift’s Red Steer Fertilizers ~ because we know they are good fertilizers——made right from the right kind of materials. e Come in and see us. We will be glad to tell you more about Swift's Red Steer Fertilizers. e o . AUTHORIZED SWIFT AGENT George Ramsby o aaikßionmer Ind. Bt
her kitchen, she is quite content to run along with the majority. Gilda is shown above inspecting the toothsome dessert she made in her first experiment with her new Frigidaire. e
