Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 10A, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 April 1928 — Page 3
SR ) ‘ TPt Sl [ if\v_s“ eI B 1' e 4 E i || - ~lfl 4 ] e UM e s 4 s : ’! ! C‘Ag | A Battery R . X ' Without jars / The new Gummite case; an exclusive feature with . Exide Batteries, is : moulded all in one piece, . : including compartments tor the cells. Thus, indi. vidual jars aru done ! away with, % Gummite is practi- . cally indestructible, will ; not warp, and is not affected by temperature; : acid, or water. Let us . show you this ideal bate tery cas®, ; v ALED TRAIL (GARAGE .
Foßretz tor Glasses e | -7 Sharp Eyes A For T o w7k Sharp Work L 7 o W ety All eachanies |22 e ase Rees MATE, relirafl woule, ; ¥row are isols of the mind and wusi v sharg to do good work and it (hs wear of oonstant use, ‘et ns sha sight W :ur:znz‘ax_fg ‘su:}:’ mwfll ek yoe '» swe clearly. ba What : - Ao chw‘ ‘ i Nevin E. Bretz Uptometrist and Opticiam 132 S. Mzin St QU2
Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers Yhone 156 Ligonier. Indiana
* O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc. Well Drilling Phone 333 LIGONIER - Next door to Ford Garage
Howard White WAWAEKA, INDIARA AUCTIONEER Phoue 2 en 1 Wawaka
Harry W. Simmons frustee Perry Townshsp Office at Farmers and Merchants Bank Saturday Afternoon and Saturday v Evening
W. H WIGTOR Attorney-at-law ' Offide in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, ND
Dr. Maurice Blue ~ VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. Phone: Ligonier 857
VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing} and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind
Harry L. Benner Auctioneer Open for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley - County Phones
A ' PN #! There are all kinds | of cheap printing—- @! butnoneofitisreal--2| ly cheap—at least 2! not on a basis of 2| value, Cheap stuff 3 2| is usually worth al- | most what it costs. i #| Our printing fsn’t |5 >l the cheapest you |% ;3 can det, but it’s as |5 ®| dood as the best. E:
Wawnka News.
f An interesting and enjoyable meeting to which all farmers of the community are invited will be held at the ‘Wawaka high school auditorium Tuesday April’3 at 7:30 o'clock sharp. The program will be sponsored by the ‘Wawaka Shippers association and the Elkhart Township Farm Bureau, Lee Highlen will speak on the subject of “Livestock Marketing” and a home talent play will be presented by the farm bureau members entitled “Aunt Charlott’e Maid” There will also be a musical entertainment and refreshments will be served. Earl Stuff Elkhart township farmer suffered a painful injury to his hand while assisting in ringing a male hog. While helping to hold the hog it grabbed his hand tearing the flesh badly. The lockjaw anti-toxin was administered by a phyvsician and it is believed there will be no serious developments. The wound bled profusely and caused intense pain.
New Factory at Kendallyille, Through the efforts of the Kendallville Chamber of Commerce that city has gained another industry .the Lang Blectric & Manufacturing company headed by W. S. Lang as president. . The new corporation is to be controlled by several local people. The civic organization has Jleased a factory building in the old gas plant, which has been renovated overhauled and the offices redecorated. The new manufacturing plant is expected to start actual production of the Lang automatic electric water heater by Aprilkils. '
Dies in Hospital,
f Elmer Ewing 23 of South Bend died iin the Luthern hospital at Fort Wayne Wednesday night of injuries received Tuesday when his truck crash ed into a ireet on the Lincoln highway near Churubusco. The body was sent to Sonth Bend. The truck overturned pinning Ewing underneath and caught fire. Before he was able to extricate himself from the wreckage he was badly burned about the face and hands. He also suffered a fracture of the right leg.
May ldentity Body.
The badly decomposed body of a man found hanging in a woods north of Goshen in July 1926 may have been that of Kdwin Devoe of Laporte according to a letter received by Sheriff Thomas M. Long from Mrs. Devoe. The woman says her husband disappeared about that time his automabile being found at Buecyrus O.
Warsaw Man Fined.
. Abe Magazine of Warsaw was fined $lOO an dcosts and given a suspended sentence of ninety days at the penal farm whe nhe pleaded guilty to possession of intoxicating liguor.
Lucien Hayden and family of Ligonier spent Sunday with Lester Hayden and wife at Topeka.
¢ /» CANNED FOODS IN THE DAILY DIET ) S 7‘ \o = 2 - | G, Ny - By E. V. McCollum, Ph. D., Sc.D. . o : Author of “The Newer Knowledge of Nutrition,” “I'ood, Nutrition and Health” ete., Professor of QNG : Bio-chemustry, School of Hygiene, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hupkins University.
DURING the last twenty years a remarkable advance has been made in our knowledge of quality in foods, and of the nutritive nceds of the body, We know in terms of chemical substances what constitutés an adequate diet. We know, in the case of nearly all of our more common and important foods, and with a fair degree of accuracy, which nutrient principles are abundant or deficient in each, It has been found, as our studies have pro%rcssed, that most of our ordinary foods which constitute the staple articles of our diet are one-sided 'in composition. One will contain an excess of certain essential food elements, and lack a sufficient amount of others. It has become evident that we must not condemn any food-stuff because it is not in itself a complete food. If two foods, or several foods, each lacking in one or more indispenjable food elements are combined in the proper proportions, one may furnish what another lacks, and so the mixture may be an excellent diet.
Foods Must Be Varied
" All this is by way of saying that a diet restricted to a few articles, and monotonous in character, is likely to be unsatisfactory for the maintenance of health. The keynote to successful nutrition is the proper combination of foods. There are many illustrations in human nutrition of people suffering from ill liealth as a result of subsisting during the winter months on a diet of poor quality. Such an experience was common a generation or two ago when the middle west was being settled. Ready money was very scarce and the great objective of the farmers on their new homesteads was to produce crops which could be sold so that farm equipment, fences and buildings could be purchased. Often they subsisted during the winter season principally on refined wheat flour bread, molasses, and fat pork. Those were the times when everyone felt ill in the spring. People thought their blood became impure during the winter season and that they needed blood purifiers and other spring medicines. They took the patent medicines offered them by numerous quacks, but at the same time as sgring advanced they hegan to eat & better diet, for wild herbs were gathered for “greens,” the hens began to lay eggs and the half starved cows, when they began to get green grass, produced milk. The better food supply was sufficient to make everyone feel better, but credit was always given to the medicine which had g,ee'n swallowed, and go, year after year, the same practice was repeated. Wkat these
THIRTIETH ANNIVERSARY
R>ion of 157 Regiment (Studebaker Tororoy Wil Be Held at Auburn nond 5 diay Oth
Major Kuhlman President of the 157th regiment Spanish American War Veterans has sent out invitations for the 30th anniversary reunion to be held at Auburn Sunday May 6th and he desires to reach every member and every widow. He wants all interested in the organization to bhe present. President Kuhlman's invitation reads in part as follows. “Tigers,” 'Tenshun! Yoy are now reading the announcement of the 30th Anniversary Reunion of our Regiment, to be held in Auburn, on Sunday. May 6th in charge of Cgmpanies “I" and “K’ assisted by the undersigned. : “Y'!)u all remember what a wonderful meeting we had at Smrti Bend last November as the guests of Colonel and Mrs. Studebaker. . j “Well now, we don’t want to appear as trying to outdo the Colonel and his . splendid wife, as -entertainers, but we're tempted Lo suggest in our modest way, that this 30th Anniversary is “gonna” be a thriller unless all signs fail. ! “Colonel Studebaker will respond to the address of welcome by our Mayor Lige, and will receive in behalf of of the .Regiment the “Silver Key To Our City’s Gategs." “Chaplain Medbury will pay tribute to “Our 30th Anniversary” and you ought to come just to hear his voice if for no other reason. And we will! have other items on the [irogram in-’ cluding music galore. “Dinner 7 ? ? Well, we hope to have a few “crumbs’ and they will be getyed in the Commereial Club hanquet room just across the street from our “Headquarters” in the splendid DeKalb County Court House. “Blanche Moor, President of our Ladies Auxiliary and incidentally wife |
of Sergeant “Free” More, of Co. “1'2.225.000- buhels of wheat were ‘de-
will be Chief of the "Cooks and Bottle Washers” and will be assisted by as fine a bunch of girls as ever bobbed their head. : “If you don’t get enough to eat, you are at liberty to = “‘talk turkey’” to Blanche and her bungh of girls. “We can seat 300 at one time, and expect to “‘set” the tables three times. While the first detachments are eating the rest of us will be entertained by music in the Assembly Room of the Court House where there will also be an informal musical program during the forenoon for the ladies and those Comrades who tire of “circulating” in the lobhy. , o “After all have dined we will assemble in the splendid new Court Theatre for our regular programi which we feel sure will please vou.” The company reeryited 'in .Liguuier..’\ and Noble county will have its survivIng members and widows of mem-bers‘ present. : | During the 30 years since the Span-
pioneers needed was a more varied and better food supply during the winter months. :
Science Comes to the Rescue
Science has comie ta the assistance of mankind in providing ways by which foods may be preserved for months or even years, thus making it possible for people to have a greater varicty in the diet the whole year through! Canning, dehydration and cold storage are the principal means by which foods are preserved during the season of excess production, to be used mainly during the part of the year when otherwise we should be reduced to a simple and monotonous diet. A long list of fruits and green vegetables are most effectively preserved in a wholesome and attractive form, and for an almost indefinite period if necessary, through the process of canning. Several kinds of fish and meats, milk, etc., are also best put up in this form. No other method serves so well to conserve the delicate flavors of fruits and vegetables as does canning by modern processes. : In the early history of the canning industry, before methods were fully understood, there was considerable loss due to inadequate processes., Some canners used preservatives so that inferior products could be packed without danger of financial loss. Canned foods came to be looked upon with suspicion by many. That day is now past. There is no industry with which we are familiar which has been more alert in the study of the science underlying the packing of foods in airtight containers, so as to send to the consumer products of the highest quality than has the canning industry. The National. Canners’ Association has invested large sums in research in some of the greatest universities, and it has for years maintained a research laboratory which has been conducted on the highest ethical principles. : A Clean Bill of Health Canned foods are safe ta eat. There was a time when‘there was a tendency te ineriminate canned foods ify possible whenever anyone suffered from food poisoning. Today one rarely hears such an accusation, for it is now known that, in general, food poisoning is the result j of improper handling of meats and a few other foods in the home or by ~ ?ersbns who handle these foods be- { fore they reach the home. During | the last twenty years close attention | has been given by health afficials ta | tracing out the sources of faod poisoning, anjdfeaa“‘s}. a m&k of these 1 studies canned foods have received
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA. |
ish-American War about 400 members }of the 157th Indiana Infantry Regiment have passed to the “Spirit World and near half of the remaining 900 have drifted away from their war-time homes and are “lost” so far as their correct addresses available are concerned.
Women Are Organized
The only organization of its kind in America where the farm women are organized for social activities and educationn! development is in Indiana. They are organized as the Social and Educational Department. of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation. It is proctically a new department and is now in its second year. Development has been rapid and progresive. Great numbers of new social centers in rural communities of Indiana have béen organized and are working to develop !the social side of country . life and strenghten the ties of cooperation in farm activities that better conditions may result and that the Youth may be retained in agricultural -pursuits. A recent communication from a woman leader, received by the Social and Educational Department o fthe Indiang Farm Bureau is a fair illustration of successful results throughout the state. “Before we decided to have a social and educational department in our township it was considered a good attendance if we had 10 or 12 women present. At our last meeting recently there were between 400 and 500 women in attendance.” ;
$550,000 Distributed to Wheat Poolers. r‘ A total of $550,000 was paid to Indiana farmers through the officers of the Indiana Farm Bureau Federation Indianapolis last week. Farmers in parts of Ohio and Indiana shared in the distribution of the sum. It was the second pavment on wheat of 25c per bushel, distributed by the Central States Soft Wheat Growers Association to the wheat poolers. . Approximately 10,000 farmers received checks. The first payment was made when the
livered. It was 75c per bushel. The third and final payment will be made as the balance of the wheat iz =old this spring. Selling is neow im progress and will proceed as rapidly as possible,
Cress Resigns Joh.
Forest Cress engineer at the Ligonier water works submitted- his resignation to the c¢ity council at its meeting Thursday night to take effect Mouday Aprl‘l 12. As yet no one has been e¢mployed in his place. Mr. Cress has been in poor health for some time. '
Trial of Blackburn Opens
" The c¢ase of the state against Hobart Blackburn c¢harged with manslaughter in connection with the death of Velma West 13 following an automobile accident on the Lima road on July 5 1926 will go on trial before a ury in circuit court at Fort Wayne.
a remarkably clean bill ‘of health. Canned foods are, generally speaking, the safest foods which come’to our tables today, except the kinds of vegetables which arc thoroughly cooked. :
In recent years there has been much interest shown iu the effect of the processes of canning on the destruction. of the vitamins. The earlier studies in the vitamin field showed clearly that vitamin C, the antiscorbutic principle, is not found in dry foods such as the grains, dried fruits and vegctables, or in most foods which have been heated to the boiling point of water or even less. Even the pasteurization of milk, a process so necessary to safeguard health, destroys most of the vitamin C which it contains, although the heating is only carried to 143-145 degrges Fahrenheit. Cooking of ‘fruitsj'dnd vegetables, meats, etc, in the ordinary kitchen practice is known to destroy in great measure the scurvy-preveming properties of these foods. The natural inference was that canned foods would also be found to have lost this vitamin, Recent researches by Kohman and Eddy have brought to light some very interesting facts about the nutritive values of several canned foods. They have shown that there are certain features about the canning processes which make them far less.destructive of vitamin C than ordinary cooking:
That Important Vitamin C
The major factor in destruction of vitamin C during cooking is oxidation. It has been shown that in canning, after a ccrtain amount of preliminary destruction, subsequent heating has very little effect in the way of further destruction. In the canning of tomatoes, Kohman and. Eddy found no destruction of vitamin , or at least of too small magnitude to be demoristrated by animal experiments. With apples and peaches it was shown that aiter a preliminary treatmjent of the fruit in which it was immersed in water until after the vespiration procegses had used up the oxygen dissolved in the juices, canning could proceed with no demonstrable loss of vitamin C. Lemon juice has been concentrated and heated to as high a temperature as is employed in processing canned foods during several hours, without destroying any demonstrable amount of the vitamin. In commercial canning is 18 eustomary to place the cana filled with fruit and sgmfi. in an exhaust box, and to aragq ly warm them to a temperatiire at which the oxidizing ferments cease to function. As the fruits are warmed, the rate at which
_ Cromwell News - : By Harry Hussey. s Cleveland McDowell has bought the William Weade residence. : ~ Claude Fulton of South Bend was here Tuesday. : i Mrs. Glenn Watts .and children of Coburg were visitors here Sunday . . Miss Blanche Harmon of Anderson was a visitor here Monday. Mrs. Mattie Rick of Elkhart was bere Sunday. ; Harvey Galloway was at Ft Wayne Saturday. ' e
B. Hunt and family of Florida are here for several weeks’ visit. - Clark Myers of Wilmot, Norm Metz of Etna Rufus Mundy of Chicago Arthur Lewis of Gary Mrs. Franeis :Golden of Peru Miss Ethel Eagon of Wabash were visitors here Sunday. Dane Secrist was at Columbia City Saturday. - : Mrs. Ethel Rockey will move to Kimmel]l and occupy the James Inks residence. v - Walter Johnson of Indianapolis is here. . : : Ted McMann of Auburn is home for a visit. L Milson Ruby was at Fort Wayne Sunday. Logan Bly of Avilla was here Mouday. ' Mrs. Ward Rimmell was at Albion Monday.
} - Dailey Names a Condition. . Frank C. Dailey candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor ,asserted Wednesday that unless he received a plurality vote in the primary !he would not permithisname to go before. the Democratic state convention. . P : The position of the former United States District attorney was made in the form of a public statement issued by him today. It was pointed out that if Demaocratic candidates for Governor shbuld assume a similar attitude the state convention would only be called on to ratify the primary choice.
Nearby Deaths,
Mrs. Malinda Large 93 one of Goshen's . oldest citizens complieations ; Mrs. Delia Neer 65 heart trouble, Garrett; John Spangler 32 tumor an brain, LaGrange: Mrs. Addie Royd, 74 complications ineident to broken hip Waterloo; Hurby Walter 31 tuberculosis near Auburn; Charles Guy, 70 dies of injuries sustained when he was kicked hy a horse at his home near Piereceton. ] : i
| Robbers Fail to Open Safe. Robbers failed in an attempt to open the safe in the Stiefel department store at Anola. Th erohers gained entrance through a basemen; window. They broke the combination dials on the safe and opered one door but failed to open the steel strong box in which the money was Kept.
- L. F. Shultz and his family drove over from Wakarusa and visited Ligonier friends.
oxygen 1§ used up m tissue respiration 1s greatly accelerated, and the dissolved oxygen is quickly used un, It has been demonstrated that alter tids voint-is reached the canring process can be carried out without further destruction of the aitiscorbutic vitamin €. The vitamin C content of commercially canned fruits and vegetal.les appears, theretore, to be much greaier than that of fresh foods whiich are cocked in the usual manver, viz.,, by promptly heating to cooking temperatures without the preliminary treatment which would cause the disappearance of dissolved oxygen in their substance, By ordinary ceoking this vitamiin is essentially all destroyed, yet by the special trea‘ment previous to strong heat treotment the destruction may be aveided, ‘ : What we have said regarding ordinary cooking of foods probably at'lso applies to foods which are home canned, although no studies have as yet been conducted which would show the extent to which vitamin C is destroyed in home canning. The heat is-in general probably applied too rapidly to permit of saving the vitamin from destruction.
Results of Nutritional Research
Canned foods have steadily grown in favor with the consuming public for many vears, mainly because of the excellence of the state of preservation and the attractiveness of their flavors and appearance. In no branch of the food industry has the results of scientifig investigation been more effectively applied than in the canning industry. . This is the reason why canned foods are as safe as any foads we eat, and safer than a number of common foods which are purchased fresh but are handled in the home in a manner which makes it possible that illness may arise from eating them wher stale, Now c¢omes the scientific investigator wha shows us the fallacy of hasty reasening from the analogy with ordinary cooked foods, which ‘have lost through destruction, most or all of their vitamin C, to the conclusion that canned foods, heated even nore thoroughly, have also lost their vitamin C content. Therg are special featurcs in the eanning process which- preserves a nutrient principle which ewrdinary cooking des stroys; ! ; e : Ws for the ether vitamins in canneéd foods, it may be said with confidence from data available, that ‘these are not destroyed in canrxinfi ‘to an appreciable extent. The high favor of canned faods among con sumers cverywhere Is justified by [_ the results of nutritional research.
Y SERVICE /g 7 , i . 2 '!A : : : ‘ » . @ IWe don't say you can't get it i clsewhere, but we do say you can get it here. (e Would you call a “Horse Doctor” if you had Smallpox? Of course not! Then why be in doubt as to the kind of service you are going to get-on your battery when our service is available. o , » We can furnish a new battery for _ any car or radio. - Kiester Electric Shop Shop Phone 481 - Night Phone 298
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’ @\E man buys gasoline “A” 5 L ” because it starts readily. 1l iR Another buys motor fuel “B” ; b because itis “umi-‘o«_;k." Stll another buys gaséline “C” 3 3 because it gives good mileage. B f . But if these men will try B 2 DETONOX they will find, in this ; y ene perfected gasoline . ~ . | s Iy ? ‘ ' | @l vwarved | . « £ | e o IR gTERD R 3 - . ] .& S ECRE | &L, o 8 E ; 1‘ I . : 3 i i o - .. ‘ i t gives touch-and-go srarting, : giant power, and more miles per , |8 fill. (These three good qualities ~‘,;"f‘ § - are seldom found in gne gaso- K P i line, but DETONOX combines - § 5 tuese and Joiir morel) : i ‘ i A bounding pick-up .. . free- RE. 4 dom from clattering knocks G 5 . . . better sever ways! s /s e S e TGT ; N N < A S h NS il A W an \ MG @/V | el 18 @ \ W Pine if 4 "Al 18R &N I o -.:i" oA AN R Y Y lel A R TS AaEeidhy” § S S B \NCASH | NE/ /e —p IS : iy Ty N s GA N L /ey CEEET N & OF 72T AP Ge — & Pyre O\L o £ { T ._:-;‘4- : S ;f«;“ N y ¢AT A TN\ eg T l;!..;,:_, eB~ A& A M F SRR AT BN ',) V*"‘;“!‘gfi:’f“f ;A A ‘ & ey RS E i e P PAN 'l ¥f[ 5 ;;r .-::_:-j?{gz,._-_.-.;:f_.-f::-if;.i-}' Pt & @fif»'\\\ ¥ e R /G |IR ~ . : ~.-:.-1-t:~:t Hlelnd | | | 7\ \' i{ ?-Z,' }\‘t:.‘_:.fi : Better 7 : aY§ ] EN T’; = oo R 'k/}\ A *‘:’l R 1. Non-detonating |l A ] 2. Instant stariing ! S T s | R e oo |Bl 30 Lighining pick-up i : SN\ AN 2 et S 2 8 &Rl 4. Grant power || P i R e . , : ' . R qENE| o D rleage | ; ‘ \‘\ YRS 6. Clean, less carbon || £ Sty \"fl\‘ o \:-'-V! : i WS L TR Your meter || TER I | P b S A- = === : = LAI g --,;,c.‘/_,‘é{. Look for the Red Gasoline "'. (V"% dmsbe™ Pure Oil Blue” Pumps - -
‘ - ED. TYLER, Distribuior; Phone 362 BUY AT THE FOLLOWING SERVICE STATIONS Albert F. Turrell, Ligonier, Ind. S Stroman Brothers, Ifigoniet, Ind. : M. C. Miller, Cromwell, Ind. = = | - Slabaugh & Son, Kimmell, Ind.
