Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 22A, Ligonier, Noble County, 25 June 1928 — Page 4

3 Y 8 3 1‘ MON. JUKE 26 3 : : e - Across to Singapore Gtarring Ramon Novarro and Joan Crawford a story of the sea. ’ TUES.. WED.. TEURS,, JUNE 26-27-28 The Rough Riders “Remember the Maine” :\,(:.-ugulcrfui story based in the life of Theodore Roosewelt, Starring Charles Farrell, Noah DBerry and Mary Astior. “IThe Rough Riders” is a human story so human that it hits something inside of youa and makes you #ay! «vphis is real’”” A story that leaves one breathless with Jaugnter; ! that prings a catch to your throat with its pathos that makes you feel ithat you too, were one of those who went through the trials and tribulations of this wild-west regiment is A mismanaged war glad to do it all and more too, because of T. 1. It’s one of the few pictures that will live forever. A real big produc tion. Adm. 20 and 35c¢ FRI. and SAT. JUNE 29-30 : No Place to Go

Starring Lloyd Hughes and Mary Astor. She wanted to make a cavoeman lover out of a go!f bug so she took him to a cannibal isle. its the sea son’s brightest comedy drama. SN, and MON. JULY 1.2 . : Flying Romeos Starring Charlie Murrgy and George Sydney. The skysthe himit for laughs at this aviation comedy. A mile a minute non-stop coinedy. TUES. WED. THURS, JULY 2-4-5 -0 o " Partners in Crime With Wallace Ber'x;}.’ and Raymond [Hatton. Beiter and entireiy differvent than anvthing this pair of joy spreaders has ever done.

Guest Coupon Good With One Paid Admission on Monday

AR SRR e S OSSP T St LIRSS : B 2% R A s @M;-”‘ii37?3'153:3:';":.-. RS TR ALt RRT L R S G S R }1;:';:5;;;/:;:?'_'_‘._::.;;g-'-» TR ’@fl,"\i AT Te T ihx o T e £ a2t ib e e '33 ? ?s;%__@;«'.{ e e eAR RSN SR e R e R S it LU i KA {sy B Eeke SRR T S Tad :;:érE:Et';:Z:E:E:Z:::E',Z;i;;,.A foie R MOST people know this absolute entidote for pain, but are you careful to say Bayer when you #t? And do you always give a to see Bayer on the box the word genuine grinted in red? It isn’t the genuine Bayer A.sfi:n without it! A drugstore always Bayer, wflL the proven directions sucked in every box: ) / \\\\ /N B ~ )e, 7;3 b/ <;. wlsor s o) ¥ / N \J - & ’/ k " LT ‘ /( i ‘_' R £ ) Aspirin is e S, gl the trade mark of B A Bayer Man gaetfi of Konoaceapscl ter of Balicyilcacid

Hey There! How about your letterheads, billheads, statements, envelopes, cards, etc. Don't wait until they are all gone and then ask us to rush them out in a hurry for you. Good work ; requires time and our motto is that any- : thing that's A . worth do- “ ingisworth ~> e > W~V 7 f’f\ % z‘f//:‘— - Pt /—a Dy ! / T e e oi oy I B oy e o

Loments Pessing cf ' the “Good Old Tiracs” Times have changed and people Tave grown so serious that the old delight in holidays has vanished, is the complaint voiced by the writer of an editorial in Liberty Magazine. “April Fools’ day was one of the bright spots of the year,” points out the editorial. ‘““There was a brick under the hat;_ the stuffed pocketbook; with the string tied to it. Breakfast, muflins filled with cotton were a rare| Jjest, and o was candy shot through' with cayenne pepper. It was a long time anpticipated and long remembered, as were St. Valentine's day, Christmas eve, Halloween, and the night before the Fourth of July. On Thanksgiving we went to grandmother’s house and ate gorgeously. There aren’t such srandmothers any more, or such cranberries.

“Christmas now means bills to meet,” continues the disillusioned writer. “Independence dayv has been made a Sane Fourth. We no longer zet any fun out of Aprill Fools’ day. Tho=e unoflicial childish bolidays were a kind of possession peculiar to the past. They are not the same now. We are grown up and serious, and times have changed.”

Odd Contradiction in ' Behavior of Mankind

When a man goes into a field to devote a day’s work to producing food crops for his needs, he labors with inteliigence, and accepts world experience. There is an agreed time to plant and harvest, and he follows this knowledge ; in everything, while in the field, he works as effectively as possible. He naturally accepts all information. that has been tried out in the centuries. He finds truth an asset; folly troublesome and egpensive.

But when the same man goes to church, or lodge, political convention, or social affair, he changes his attitude; he believes in sentiment, and denies fact and experience in half he does. A man must pe a strange creature to- God, who does all things well.—E. H. Howe's Monthly. ;

Safety Organization

The National Safety council is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization for the promotion of safety, sanifation and health in the industrial, public and home life of the whole world. It was founded in 1913, when a little group of employers, appalled by the useless and unnecessary sacrifice of life and limb occurring every year, determined upon a relentless fight against accident causes. Today the council has a membership of over 4,500 industrial concerns, government departments. insurance companies, schools, libraries, miscellaneous organizations and individuals. Its influence is felt throughout more than 10,000 workshops and among more than 10,000,000 workers, whose lives are safer because of its service. Its scope has grown from national to international. '

Origin of Basket Ball

In 1891 a lecturer on psychology in the training school of the Young Men’s Christian association at Plainfield. Mass., speaking of the mental processes of invention, proposed the example of a game with its limitations and necessities. The same night James Naismith. & member of the class, worked out basket ball as an ideal game to meet the hypothetical case, and the next day in the lecture room it was put in practice with the aid of the members of the gymnastic class. Thence it spread to other branches of the Young Men’s Christian association, and in two or three years to other athletie clubs and to the general public.

Fingerless Families

The story is that the great-great-grandmother, . when she was young, told a lie about an apple, whereupon her parents threatened her with a curse that her children later on would be born with deformed hands. Whether it is true or not, the 'famil'y of whom the story is told have for' four -generations suffered from .a curious ‘ deformity. Ten members have had something wrong with their fingers, ~some having only two joints instead of three in some of the fingers, others “having no finger-nails, and one or two being without fingers at all.—London _Tit-Bits.

Her Point of View

- John Bull, M. P., was determined to wake up his constituency. In particular he resolved to tackle a certain -baronet’s wife who, though she might +have been a power for good in the ‘ district, preferred auction bridge to -deeds of charity. . “Doubtless, Lady Biankspace,” he -said, when he called upon her one ‘afternoon, “you have noticed the time ‘that is wasted at bridge parties.” _ Lady Blankspace agreed heartily. . “You're right,” she said. “Some ‘people take years to shufle and deal, ‘don’t they?’—London Mail. ;

One Is About Gone

. The fisher, most closely related to 'the marten, is exclusively American, .inhabiting a rather narrow range from ‘Nova Scotia to northwestern British Columbia, and in the Alleghenies, ‘Rocky mountains and Sierras-Cascade ‘ranges. It was mever a common Species, says Nature Magazine, and the effect of settlement and unrestricted trapping has been its virtual extinetion over most of its range; yet it still .has little protection, and the high ;price that the skin commands insures it continued pursuit. O :

Mrs. Joe Eckhart of this city visited Millersburg friends one day last week’ ‘

l ‘Mr. and Mrs. Dick Weyer Frank [Swihart and Miss Florence Snyder of Warsaw were callers Sunday of Mrs. lSimon P. Smith on Martin Street.

Obhituary. Mary E. Domer, eldest daughter of George and Elizabeth Domer was born in Elkhart township Noble county, Indiana July 8 1844. ; She was educated in the public schools and taught school for several years. :

She was united in marriage to John C. Lane May 17 1880.

To this union one son Dr. Carles Domer Lane was born. John C. Lane the husband and father died July 22 1926.. : - She was a faithful member of the Methodist church of Kimmell and of the daughters of Rebecca. S?e»died Juue 21 1928 anged 83 years 11 months and 13 days. - Her life was one of sacrifice for others. -No path was too rough, no task was too difficult no sacrifice was too great for her to make for her loved ones, her church or community. _

" She experienced the hardships of the pioneer teacher, walking long distances over bad roads, teaching in poorly equipped buildings at poor pay. ~Notwithstanding her many handicaps, her labor was not in vain. Many live to testify that she shed an influence over their lives that will never be measured or appreciated this side of eternity.

She leaves to mourn their loss one son, Dr. Carlos D. Lane of Ligonier, two grand-children one sister, Mrs. A. G. Lautzenheiser of North Manchester three brothers. John and Benjamin Domer of North Manchester and Willlam Domer of Zanesville Ohio and a host of friends and relhtives. :

The funeral services were held yesterday afternoon at the Methodist Episcopal church at Kimmell Rev. Hutsinpiller assisted by Rev. Glendenning officiating. Burial in the Sparta Cemetery.

‘Pepys Kept Diary for : His Own Satisfaction Pepys born, 1633. “A very worthy, industrious and 'curious person,” says Evelyn. Family “pull” got him into the civil service. He proved a hard worker; quick at shorthand; regular at church; ~musical; lover of art—incidentally, yone of the first to collect chapbooks; -member of the Royal society; a most ‘respectable man who died credited ‘with all the virtues. , And a century later we learned that he had been—what had he not been? - “Scandalously overserved with diink ;” .a little tyrant in the house, who black;ened his wife’s eye und kicked the ‘cook: a glutton; a rascal with far too ‘keen an eye for pretty serving maids; none too particular about bribes. {“Worthy person,” indeed! .. Who gave him away? He hiself! For nine years he kept a diary. He never meant anybody to read it. Anywg¥, he wrote the bits his wife was not meant to see in shorthand, cipher, foreign languages or mumbo-jumbo of his own. But why did he keep it lying about for 34 years? Why didn’t he destroy it? What a disaster if he had.—From the Continental Edition of the London Daily Mail. _ ;

Less Bickering With' Fifty-Fifty Marriages

Work has replaced bickering in the home of the economically independent wife, according to at least one husband who calls his marriage a “fiftyfifty” proposition. Writing in the Woman’s Home Com‘panion he says that instead of destroying the home the maintenance of marriage as a union of two economically ‘independent persons causes the home to be even more appreciated than it +was under the old idea of mairimony. Since both husband and wife are away ‘from their home all day, it is his contention that both appreciate its comforts more when they return to it together at night.

“It seems to me that a fifty-fifty husband’s greatest reward,” says this fifty-fifty husband, “lies ih being married to a woman who, because she has found a satisfactory channel of expression, is a well-balanced personality. The fifty-fifty husband is spared emotional ‘erisis. I trace this to the fact that both of us are workers in the same world and there is no chance for imagination to function overtime.” When babies come, the writer concludes, his wife wiil remain with them until they reach school age and then wil¥ return to her work. e

'Watercress Good Food

' The list of foods the doctor says you .Should eat-has been augmented by a new one, watercress. This familiar garnish for meat and salad is a remarkably rich source of the vitamine ‘necessary for growth and of the scurvy-preventing vitamine (. Dr. Katherine H. Coward and P. Eggleton, of the University of London, have found. It contains small quantities of vitamine D as well in its small green leaves. The green shows considerable seasonal variation, however, in {its growth-promoting properties, the investigators have found, being more effective with laboratory animals in this respect in spring and” summer than in -winter. o

* Breaking Ocean Cables =" Researches with reference to the breaking of telegraphic cables have revealed the facts that there are parts of the ocean bed, particularly on ' steep slopes along the edges of the con- . tinents, where great changes frétjuent1y occur. The importance of properly gelecting the loeation of a cable is .shown by the faect, cited often in this _relation, that the military and naval reserves were called out in Australia - onke, when the simultaneous interruption of two cables cut off communication with the rest of the world for 19 days and gave rise to the fear that war had broken out in Europe. -

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

For sale, bull pups—Phone 140. 22tf VS."ANTED—-oSewing plain or fancy. Telephone 28. - 22atf Mr. and Mrs. Clair W. Weir and Dr. and Mrs. M. G. Williams -drove to Fort Wayne Sunday and visited the new theatre there. : : ' After a pleasant three weeks visit with relatives and friends in Indianapolis Miss Olive Galbreth returned to her home in Ligonier Saturday afternoon. . :

Col Roosevelt's “Rough Riders” at Crystal this Tuesday Wednesday Thursday the big punches of this picture are almost too numerous to men tion. You just got to see it. . .~ Rev. and Mys. E. N. Prentice of Canby, Minn,, Loyal Prentice of St. ‘}Paul, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. Priest and Charles Correll of Wilmot, ‘Prof and Mrs. James Sime and two children of Wolcott, ind.,, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Sisterhen and Miss Hortense Christener of Ligonier were Sunday. dinner guests of Mrs. Laura Low and Miss Lucy Prentice of Topeka. Notice of Appointment Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate of George W. Ecker deceased late of Nobie county, Indiana. Said estate is probably solvent. : Citizen’s Bank Administrator. W. H. Wieton, Atiorney | 22a3w

NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE The undersigned Commissiocner of the Noble Circunit Court of Indiaaa, appointed by said Court in the case of Ruphina J. Hire, et al, vs Charles L. Smith, et al., for partition of real estate, hereby gives notice that by virtue of the order of said Court, he iwili, at the hour of two o'clock P. M. on WEDNESDAY August Bth 1928 ;an(l from day to day thereafter "at

the same hour until sold, offer for sale at private sale at the law offices of Bothwell & Vanderford at No. 14) Cavin Street in the City of Ligonier, Indiana, the foliowing described roal estate ordered sold: by said Court, to-wit: commencing sevozir_v five rods west oft the center of section nineteen, township thirty five north range. eight east, thence north to .a point in the north line of said scction nineteen seventy five rods west of the north east corner of the northwest quarter of said section, thence west to the northwest corner of said northwest quarter oif said section, thence south the southwest corner of said northwest quarter of said scetion, thence east to the place of leginuing; also the north twenty acres of the west half of the southwest guarter of said section nineteen, township thirty five, north range eight east, all in Noble Countv, indiana, being the farm lands owned by Michael Hire at the date of his death.

Said real” estate will he sold upon the following terms and conditioas, to-wit free of all liens; at least cne third of the purchase price to be paid in cash on day of sale one third thereof in oneg year from day of sale, and the remaining one third thercof in eighteen -months from day of sale, the purchaser to execute his promissory notes for the deferred. payme:ils with six per cent per annum interest and attorney’s fees and parment thereof shall be secured by the first mortgage of the purchaser, or :he purchaser may .if he so 'desires, ypay the full purchase price in cash on day of sale. Said real estate will be sold for not less than the full appraised value thereof and subject to the approval of said Court. All grow ing crops and the tenant's rig'hts in the premises will bhe reserved. An abstract of the title to said premises will Be furnished. , ~ Chester Vanderford, Commis:iouer , : 9%a3w

g //gé ?fi I%\\\ . ‘ N VAT o WIL RUNNIN | NS A 0111 e - | )N (X i/( | ((z ;\ m‘a\}mw e Copdrem L NAE 10 0 ‘t ’@‘ "fl .\\w }; : /", :f ‘ng‘i.t ?Se dlstmct.advantages at no higher :\\ \\\\ §\\§§~\. \\‘ \\ &/ | /. // - \ See these priCCS \i\\\\§\. \= 7 / " 30x50051680 . ‘\X\\\\\\\\q\a \ \&\u_//// | , eee e I ruck $3 OTS \\Q* — e e NP Kiester Electric Shop e Lincoln Way West p

Joe W. Smith is out with a new truck. : The best fire works of all kinds at the Shobe camp. 22a3t* MRS s o e There ‘will be a social at‘the Burr Oak church Thursday evening. 21a2t ; A oo AN o e | There'll he a hot time in the old town tonight. ““The Rough Riders” lare here. Don’t miss them.

Mrs. Mae Carney will entertain her church circle Tuesday afternoon at her homée¢ on South Main street. ~ Mrs. Harry Giibert entertained two gisters a niece and nephew from Fort Wayne over the week end at Diamond lake. ' ~ We Pay $1.20 dozen sewing bungalowaprons at home. Spare time. Thread furnished. No button holes. lSend Stimp. Cedar Garment Factory Omsterdam New York. *

Baby chicks hatched to order. Custom hatching a specialty. Get. my prices before placing your order, } will save you mouey. Call in person or teleplione Kimmell 59. M. W. Colleit. Kimmell Ind. 2atf . . Party Presbyterian Church Tonizht at 7:30 pw losers will entertain ‘the winners of the Christian Endeavor contest. Come to the church parlors promptly and be prepared for a good time. We want 40 there at least to show our apprcciatfun and enthusiasm. All mem ‘bers come and bring table sarvice.

Ny 8.l A Y O &N = R e ' _ \:\\\<‘i\:«j§\% LT A M el T Gy Dl 2 o~ f Rl [~ £ This Instant Lighting -~ On All New ~ (Oleman | It lights instantly! = , . Just strike a match, open . valve and it’s going right |. now—generates the Coleman - Cooker Stove to full cooking | heat in less than a minute. i The speed with which this new invention operates, makes. possible gas cooking . comfort never before enjoyed in homes located beyond the t gas mains. This pre-heater i is new and different—used } only on Coleman Stoves. Be sure to see it in operation on the Coleman Cookers in our store. You will be surprised at its ease of operation and the speed with which it generates the stove to full .cooking gas heat. ‘

WEIR’S

Crystal

Tues,. Wed. Thurs. June 26-27-28 ‘ "THE ROUGH - RIDERS” STARRING CHARLES FARREL AND MARY | ASTOR

WHAT A PICITURE , Sponténeaus...Humcrous...Human,fl | The thrilling days \of '9B live once more. ‘The blowing up of THE MAINE. The embarkation for Cuba. ~ San Juan Hill. Fever and bullets.” A beautiful love idyll-two boys and a Texan belle. Ther'rs all here. - Show at 7:45 Adm. 20c¢c-35¢

& S : - vstS Fg g/ : ‘f’ ‘\ 2 ¢ 3\,,:;‘:*' W‘-.’.: ‘t‘; »“ —’fl, o oaid 535 - & ES "5 i 1o eROT% e 2 gl ety AR 5L (X /AT S\ RN BT~ e e “{t // i R e gg,s R ,} , 3 < | quups:’ entrain 1] cormome , A' , For Troubles g i i | due to Acid o R INCIGESTION 4 S “l ACID STOMACH 1 ‘ Omes 3 ‘;«,;54 ¢ i HEARTBURN : N, g i HEADACHE Ay “l GASES - NAUSEA ' s’}:“#% . . M 5

What many people call indigestion very often means excess acid -in the stomach. The stomach nerves have been ‘over-stimulated, and fovod sours. The corrective is an alkali, which neutralizes acids instantly. And the best alkali known to medical science ig Phillips’ - Milk of Magnesia. It has remained the standard wrth physicians in the 50 years since its invention. One spoonful of this harmless, tasteless alkali in water will neutralize instantly many times as much acid, and t’l;e,symptoms disappear at onmce. You

THEATRE Ligonier

will never use crude methods when once you learn the efficiency of this. Go get a small bottle to try. ~ Be sure.to get the genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physicians for 50 years in correcting excess acids. 26¢c and 50c a bottle—any -drugstore. s . : “Milk of Magnesia” has been the U.. S. Registered Trade Mark of Ths Charles H. Phillips Chemical Company and its ;»redecesaor Charles H. Phfilips since 1875, e