Ligonier Banner., Volume 61, Number 19A, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 June 1927 — Page 2
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A Battery > b ¢ Without jars Tne new Gummite case; =n exclusive feature with Exide Batteries, is moulded all in one piece, iocluding compartments sor the cells. Thus, indi~ vidual jars arz done away with, : . GQummite is practically indestruetible. will not warp, and is not affected by temperature; acid, or water. Let us show you this ideal bate= terycas®, - BLAZED THAL GARAGE
! Ve &g giizz ea a;fiosition i EL’ o Job """‘""’i !Prmtmg ; Prompt and Careful Attention i
By o eads other printed matter is l'{/el\pfid o your business. e are ready at all simes to give you the benefit of our expericnce.
Foßretz tor Glasses % Sh E s R P ST ‘*‘s‘% " FOr 3 ihe— B | i g Sharp Work Tl e 21 mobanioy like te use keem wipusl pwrfect tools. <y wre tools of the mind and @t b gharp to do good work and yust tha waar of constant usa. P 5 m’!’m t " m-mfvmif; glasses Mm'fl:lt‘hw grs Sm Bad o&mly. 9 lu What Conditien ' Are Yeur Egusl . : Nevin E. Bretz Optemetrist ané Gptician 130 S. Main Su GOBTI=N
Mr. Business -~ AL
g—_w____.__. " WHY notfmake your appeal for patron. fie through the columns this newspaper? With every issue it carries its message into the homes of all the best people of this community. Don'tblame the people for flocking to the store of your competitor. Tell them what you have to sell ngahnd if your prices are right you can get the business.
VERN B.FISHER . Sanitary Plumbing] * amnesmg T Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind
Harry W. Simmons Crustee Perry Townshsp Ofiice at Farmers and Merchants B&nk .- Saturday Afternocon and Saturday Evening eoe i 1 U B e Dr. Maurice Blue * VETERINARIAN ~~ Office: Justamere Farm, _ Phone: Ligonier 857
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3 . . The Ligonier Banner Established 1856 _ Published by THE BANNER PUBLISHING CO. W. C. B. Harrison, Editor M. A. Cotherman, Manager:
:hlished every Monday and Thursday i« entered the Postoffice at Ligonier, diana, as second class matter.
“Inside” Information. - A slight scorch may frequently be remedied if moistened and hung in the sun to bleach. S Whe npancakes stick to an aluminumm griddle it may be because the recipe does not include enough fat. Add a little more and the trouble may be corrected. = . Cranky prejudices about certain ‘oeds increase the burden of the mothc? who must plan the meals. Train the children to like and eat all good wholesome foods. /ny true mayonnaise made with egg ¢il acid and seasonings will keep as jong as a week in a refrigerator. It's a good idea to make up a sufficient guantity to last a week. : Learn how many servings can be expected from each kind of food you buv, and you will go a long way toward economigal management of {ig tocd supply. Buy by weight or numnber when you can. : When steaming a pudding in a coffee can the lid must be securely fastaned on, but is a small hole is pierced in the top to let steam escape {here will be less need in tying the lids on and the pudding will not becorae too moist. 4 freshly spilled liquid should never »e rubbed from a carpet or rug because this only drives tne liquid irto the fabric. Instead cover the ligpid with corn meal talcum powder blotting paper torn to bits, or any other ab, sorbent material * which will take it vp and prevent its spreading. Butterscotch flavor is made by melting together cup of brown sugar end 2 tablespopns of butter until the mixture is waxy. It can then be used, to sweeten and flavor many desserts such as ice cream, cornstarch puddinz custards or gelatin. by
Works in School House
A dispatch from Rapid City South Dakota where the summer White Tiouse is located says o “President Coolidge went to work in a school hopse. ~ “Ordering the white house motor car early the chief executive came down from the hills to the new two-story high school building where his offices have been set up, and prepared to handle the business of the nation.”
Joseph H. Robb Dead
.Joseph W. Robb 84 years old was found dead in his shoe shop on East Franklin street “Elkhart when a customer called at the shop. Robb was seated in a chair with his head in his hands. Death had. been caused by heart trecuble. He had been a resident of Elkhart for sixty years.and is survived by a son Willmm Robb two granddaughters and two great-grand-children.
The’re Off.
The third annual € M. T. C. took to that old Hoosier Army home Fort Benjamin Harrison Ind., will get under way Monday morning June 20th, when nearly 2000 cadets from Ohio, Indiana and the Panhandle district of West Virginia make tracks for this encampment by rail, motor and sundry other modes of travel in response to the Government’s promise of a 30day sojourn of bracing drills, athletic sports shooting hiking swimming etc.
Mother and- Children Die.
The explosion of a chicken brooder lamp at Port Hourn Michigan is blamed for the fire which burned ‘o death Mrs. Stella Maliske 34 and Ler three children Stephen 11, Mary 7 and Margaret 3. The mother had purchased the brooder and placed it in the children’s bedroom. When she and her husband discovered the flames he ran outside for help, but she dashed back into the flaming inferno to her death.
Ferty-Two Booked in Liquor Raid | The greatest cleanup drive in the history of the Calumet district was under way at Gary with federal prohibition agents and deputy sheriffs. bringing in one prisoner afier anotp'el;j all charged with violation of liquox laws, : : ! At one-o’clock 42 persons had becn booked before U. S. commissjoner. l The agents held 75 warrants. ‘ Howard Makes Predietion. | Mr. and Mrs. Howard Smith from cast of Ligonier were in Goshen on. Monday... He reports prospects good for all crops outside of corn, and ‘ieven. much of thec orn has a good color and with good weather there will be a fair crop.—Goshen NewsiTitmen: . g e ~ Bubscribe for the Ligonisr Banner.
- Entire Family Killed = - Five persons the entire family of of Frank Whippel 45-year-old farmer lost their lives when their automobile wa3 struck by a big Four passenger tran at a street crossin in Sunman Wcdnesday. ; i'‘he dead: I'rank Whippel i ? ~ liary Whippel his wife. - Ilomilda Whippel 19 Ifelvin Whippel 17 lilson Whippel 13 ,) }rs. Whippel and her daughter died alrrost instgntly. The father and the two sons died during the night. ; | "‘he family had left their farmhoize a mile and a half away to attend a medicine show in Sunman Thore. were no witnesses to the accideant and none of the victims regained consciousness to tell how. it happened. . ;
Spiritualist Medium Sued.
lilizabeth Husvari alleged spiritualist medium is made defendant in 2 suit for $5,000 damages brought ag.inst her by the wife of Charles Mollnar. at South Bend. Xiolinar, also filed a suit asking for the recovery of $6OO which he said he gpent over a period of a year for spiritualistic treatments. He charges that sie rerresented herself as a licensed physician whereas she was a “hoax and a fraud.” ’Mollnar’s wife said her husband became a drunken wretch after he became acquainted with the medium.
Given Stay of Executiion.
John Hall convicted in the Wikhart superior court of the murder of Louis Kreidler South Bend druggist and sentenced to die in the electric chair was granted another stay of execution by the supreme court. Hall had originally been sentenced tol be executed on January 21 but a stay of execution was granted pending the hearing of an appeal. The second stay was granted an dthe date of execufion is now set for November 4.
County Agent Out.
Due to the fact that the Kosciusksg county board of education composed of the 17 township trustees and the president of the Warsaw school board has neglected to confirm appointees for county agriculture agent the majority of the members of the county council have indicated that i making up the next budget they will omit an appropriation for a county agriculture agent. . ;
Another Suicide by Gas.
Mrs. Jane Stout 68 locked herself in the bathroom at the home of her son C. A. Stout in FortgWayne Thursday at ternoon turned on a gas heater without lighting it and died a short time later from the effects of gas fumes. Relatives said it was the second time she tried to commit suicide. Ili health is blamed for her act.
They Attend Meeting.
Dr. and Mrs. George O. Smith were at Tri Lake last Thursday attending a meeting of the Northeastern Indiana Vetlerinary Association. They will be present at a similar convention in South Bend Wednesday June 22.
They Visit Ligonier.
Mrs. Lucy Butt and Mrs. Herb King were in Ligonier the latter part of the week after a pleasant visit in'Toledo and Detroit Mich the guests of friends. They were accompanied by Master O. C. Butt and Master Dickie King.
Two Car Loads of Cows.
Ggorge D. Foster arrived home Thursday evening after spending two weeks inp Tennessee. While absent he purc{lased two car loads of mileh gows which were shipped to Ligonier and they will be for sale. :
Saves Self From Drowning.
Using his bare hands to break away the glass after his- automobile had plunged into twelve feet of water at Logansport Harry Turnet 13 escaped drowning. : h
CRYSTAL ST SATRE MONDAY, JUNE 20th
~ Jesse James Jr “JESSE JAMES UNDER THE BLACK FLAG”
To the Public- . Do not misconstrue this picture with other pictures of the same name---THIS IS the new Breel super-attrac-
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THE LIGONIER BANNEK, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
Surely Some Occasions | When Lie Is Justified | The deepest recesses of the -hegn't.i grow warm toward the bishep ot' Southwell. This British ecclesiastic & justifies a lle which is uttered under certain circumstances. Tlere are few | human beings but do condone, in | themselves, certain untruths. And to have public approval of this bishop. expressed in an address to Nottingham (Eng:) teachers, is comforting to & tesree, ' The bishop of Southwell, however, does not go far enough, according to the quoted text of his remarks, in his justification of a lig. From the cabled quotation the bishop, seemingly would be prepared only “to exonerate a person who tells a lie to save an innocent life, ilf I thought it was reasonably - sure that not to lie would mean the loss of such a life.” . We believe the moral code of many normal human beings, laymen or men of the cloth, permits a wider latitude thans this. But, to the credit of the bishop, there are not so many who will admit any such feeling to thé public, even to the extent *of saving life.” What harm is possible 1n telling an innocent child that its father is ill, when one knows he is suffering from overstimulation? ' That certainly is a lie, unless we would quibble with words, and no life 'is involved. But the faith of a child may be at stake. The bishop of Southwell probably wvould not be willing to condone such a lie, as he “deprecated, for instance, ‘such untruth as ‘the doctor has brought us a new baby,” according to the news cable. Doesn't the bishop helieve very young children may kpow ¢OO much at too early an age for their own good? And, believing this, would lle ot approve the harmless employment of harmless fiction? Where teuth results in a disservice and o harm is done by expressing a lie, why tell the truth? This distinguished English divine «aid he did not believe in telling children legends about Santa Claus “in such a way as to make them believe “that the stories were true.” Why not repeat the legends surrounding Santa ¢Jlaus, when we all know they are :rue, and when a great many of os have ourselves seen the merry old coul? o
Just Dog A primary school teacher once made &n oral composition assignment to her third grade. The pupils were to discuss the subject of dogs. give the deseriptions of their eanine pets, names, uges, breeds, ete. _ One youngster whose name was James completed a long recital about Lis deg Tiger, but forgot to mention its stock. . : “Janes, you didn’t tell us what kind cf a. dog Tiger lis,” reminded the teaclier. ’ Y “Oh, yessum—l forgot. Well, he is part bull,” said the lad. “What is the other part?’ he was asked. - ; _ : The boy studied for a while and auswered: “Oh, just dog, I guess.”
Uphold Human Sacrifice
A youth who vanished feom his parents’ kraal in.the Elydsdorp district of the Transvaal, South Africa, was murdered as a sacrifice for rain, Witch doctors burned the body at night on a pile of medicinal roots on a hilltop. ‘The police were unable to make headway with their investigations, because rain fell almost immediately after the sacrifice. The parents would have lodged a complaint if the drought had continued, but now they glory in the fact that the sacrifice of their child *had the desired effect, and they have refused to divulge any information concerning the culprits. :
The craze to ere¢t monuments has in late years been extended to, cover memorial shafts to such- things as hogs, chickens, cows, oranges, corn, etc. But the first monument to the apple, it is claimed, was recently unveiled "at Cornelia, Ga. Incidentally, it is said to be the largest replica of that fruit ever made. The “apple” is of steel, measures 22 feet in circumference, and weighs 5,200 pounds. It surmounts a pillar. An inscription on the base reads: “Habersham County. Georgia, the Home of the Big Red Apple.” This odd monument was made possible by local apple growers.
Suzanne Lenglen, the French professional tennis champion, said at a luncheon in New York: : “l am very fond of golf, but when J took it up in Nice everybody laughed at me. Everybody said I’'d be a failure. “The first day I played at the Nice Country club T was getting ready to tee-off when Baron De Malpurgo ran out of the clubhouse and shouted excitedly : ‘ 2 : '“‘Mademoiselle! Mademoiselle Suzanne! Be sure to save me all the worms you turn up—l'm going - fishing.” i il s
Prisoners Have Journal
il~ Produced by, prisoners in Wakefield { | prison, Yorkshire, E‘ngland, a weekly £ | newspaper is being published. Its cir--4| culation is confined to the institution. 4| The paper is named “The Venturer,” and contains topical articles, life 8 | sketches, prison gossip and the gen- ¥ | eral news of the week, There is a # | correspondence column angd the pris- ?| oners vie with each other for literary ¥ | supremacy. “Wakefield prison is main- % | ly for 'young people,’” said a home of- ¢ | fice official, “and special training is % ;m’pbasizeq there more than is pos--4| sible in other prisons.”: 3 _ Mourists Injured. . Four of seven tourists traveling from North Dakota to New York were i geriously injured and their car' was badly damaged Wednesday when they. /were hit by -a trailer loaded with - structural steel on Platt’'s hill four. g miles east of Union Mich. <
Monument to Apple
Spoiling Her Drive
NOT EXPECTED---NOT THOUGHT POSSIBLE Yet NOW and Even Greater s = " NOW ON DISPLAY : = x sAT % g ",. s : TRk ‘L, l 9 _'.~ o G7' gy W ~ Greater power...more brilliant performance.... Roomier } ~ ..Finer and more luxurious bodies He is an unprecedented thing to do.” : : : Essex Super Six is the [outstanding success of . o sea?n’ W{th :ihe fmarfli:]?t(jstrnp ged v Efispx(i the vear. Its sales have topped all records. lts cars ‘a? tnousa:\ - dup % bor - on‘ a‘nd popularity with thousands and ten thousands of T wy owners has m"f‘de it the most brilliant accom- We are now showing the finest Essex value of all times. plishment the industry has known. ) Though factory production'is the largest in our hustory But Essex engineets,'have now created an even and has rece.ntly been greatly increased; your promytgreater and finer Essex Super-Six. ¥So startling “esls -ml ofder;l“g ak’ge Ca{: v ?fhv"y %’ead of the are its advantages that at the height of the sell- Re P ~ ESSEX SUPER-SIX Coach $735; Coupe $735; Sedan $835; 2-Passenger Speedabout $7OO - 4-Passenger Speedster $835 ~ All prices f.o.b. Detroit, plus war excise tax 1924 Ford C0upe..............574 1924 Essex C0ach...................5150 , And drive it away ; ; And drive it away 1924 Ford Coupe... .........$lOO 1923 Ford T0uring.............525 ‘ And drive it away . And drive it away 1925 Ford R0ad5ter.............550 1923 Ford Truck.. .. ... .....560 s And drive it away ;o And drive it away E e Roy Eljah Ligonier, Ind. . Glen Roe
To Hear Corn Borer Case.
June 20 at 10 a. m., in the Noble circuit court Judge Biggs will hear the argument of the attorneys relative to continuing the restraining order recently granted Earl Hoover and Forest Born i nWhitley county. .\Theréi will be. no witnesses. placed on the stand. If, after hearing the argument and looking over the affidavits the court decides to continue the restraining orders he will set a date for hearing and that hearing will be held in Columbia City probably the middle of July. Farmers interested in the case have expressed a desire ‘to attend the first hearing. i Studebaker Family Reunion. . A national Studebaker family reunion is to be held in South Bend on September 15 in honor of the founders of the Studebaker corporation. Membership in the reunion is open to all persons bearing the name Studebaker regarless of the spelling of the name and to all persons-related by blood or ‘marriage. . .
FOR RENT
That part of the barn and appurtenaces included in the llease between John Cass and George D. Foster and used by the said Cass in the Taxi and trucking Gas and oil business from June 1-1927 to Oct. 16 1931. Anyone renting same will be required to accept same under the terms of said lease umnless otherwise agreed upon. George D. Foster : : 16btf
" From this date I will not be responsible for any bills except those contracted personally. - : : ‘Ben Glaser 17b3w CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY Services in Weir Block. \ Sunday school 9:45 A M. Lesson Sermon 11:00 A. M. Everybody welcome. :
First Presbytertan Church. Cavin Street : Rev. G. H. Bacheler, Pastor Residence 318 W 3rd Z. Telephone 345. s o Services Sunday School 9:30 A. M. ; ' Men’s Class 9:30 A. M. Preaching Service 10:45 A. M. Vesper Service 5:00 P. M. : Y. P.. 8. €. B. Monday 7:00 P. M. Mid weekk service Wed. 7:156 P. M_
Notice of Appointment.
State of Indiana, Woble County, §8;: Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate of Michael Rice, deceased, late of Cass County, Michigan. Said estate is supposed to be solvent. i o The Mier State Bank, Ligonier, Indiana, Administrator of the Hstate of Micael Rice, deceased. W. H. Wigton, Atty. 17a3w
ANNOUNCMENT - ’ } We have installed a New Dramn Pit and Greasimg Room to take eare of ‘your needs in oil and ~ grease. We will oil and grease yourcar while you wait. Our pit is built so ladies can drive ‘ , on it with no danger of driving in the pit. ' . This is the only up to date driveQin greas- ‘ ing room in town. Give us a trial. Kiester Electric Shop Shop Phone 481 ~ Night Phone 298
Read the Ads.
Home Realty and Investment Co. 'ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. ; ! , ‘J. L. HENRY Manager -
{"F ARM and CITY properties handled to your i~ ,_ 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. v ~ INSURANCE. :.; - S—— FIRE, LIGHTNING AND TORNADO, WORKMEN’S ' ' CONPENSATION, AND EMPLOYERS’ LIABILITY L - AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE ey dac - FARM LOANS 2y 5 per cent FARM LOANS with exceptional ffivilege»vclause. Special attention paid to this/form of farm loans.
