Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 25A, Ligonier, Noble County, 16 July 1928 — Page 4

Sce Blllie Dove as “The Ameilfican Beauty” tomight. : ' FUR RENT—Pasture for cows and sheep also corn for sale. Phone 271. " All the highways mnear Ligonier were thronged with automobiles Sunday.

Mrs. H. A. Bowser of Chicago came on a visit to her sister here MNMrs. B W. Black. : “Chic¢ago” a big sensational melodrama Tuesday Wednesday Thursday at Crystal. Mrs. Walter Zimmerman of Kendallville visited Ligonier relatives last woeek. : Mrs. A. L. Baughman of Albion visited her son Bernard and family here last week. : Mrs. Agaes Miiler of Denver Colorado is in Ligonier a guest of Dr. and Mrs. George O. Smith. :

Mr. and Mrs. Merle Henney spent last week in Portland where they had business to look after, [i*. Black and Mrs. Rollin Lailey bronght Bessie Bailey home from a Fort Wayne hospital. Mrs. Sarah Nusbaum of Wakarusa is on a visit with her daughter Mrs. W. C. B. Harrison and family. Eugene ince came from LaGrange Illinois to spend Sunday with Mrs. Ince at the John H. Green home here.

Mr. and:- Mrs. Charles Bowersox of Syracuse visited Mr. and Mrs. . E. Schlotterback in this city last week.

James son of Jesse Weddle of near Benton had his tonsils removed in the emergency hospital of «Dr. Black. Mrs. Laura McDonald and granddaughter Eunice Sack are spending 2 week at the McDonald cottage Wawasee. : Verne Wolfe of Cromwell uuders went an operation in the Goshen hospital Saturday. His condition is very serious. ; : : : . Mr. and Mrs. Ed Williams and little son Ross were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gilbert at” Diamond lake. o ~ Misses. Anna Brothwell and Jonnie Pancake of Elkhart were recent guests of the former’s cousin Mrs; Nettie Moore. g

Mrs. Wm. Bolitho and Mrs. R. K. Earnhart of Chicago and Mrs. Carl Frick of Ligonier called on Mrs. \Walter Kegg at Syracuse.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Longacre of Millersburg were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. James. T. Latta at their country home. Bert Grubbs after a visit with his mother Mrs. C..C. Ullery dat their Diamond lake cottage has gone to Traverse City Michigan.

Mrs. James E. Sullivan and chiidren of Detroit are here to spend a month with her parents Mr. and Mrs. James T. lLatta. -

Mrs. Mellville Hutchison and daughter Martha of Ligonier were guests Monday of their cousins Mr. and Mrs. Perry Fisher at Rome City.

Mrs. Elma Stuart and son have returned to their home in Moosehart li4 linois after a visit with her parenis Mr. and Mrs. James Kinnison.

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Brady and daughter, Mrs. Marie Brady and son Alfred of Ligonier spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. William Wyland.

Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Weir son John and Mrs. Ollie Simmons drove to Findlay Ohio Sunday and brought Mrs. iC. K. Hoagland home with them.

Miss Ethel Black of Topeka accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Black of Ligonier to Lansing Mich., and spent the day with tehir cousin 3irs. Ellsworth.

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Essig and Mr. and Mrs . Ed Brown came from Fort Wayne and spent Sunday with the Earl Kilmer family at Diamond lake.

Miss Mary Gard has returned home from Fort Wayne where she has been visiting the past two weeks with her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. Alva Gard. :

“Chicago” the most sensational picture production of the season. The hit of the year in New York. See it Tuesday Wednesday Thursday at Crystal. :

For Sale or trade for northern Indiana or Southern Michigan farm coftage and two lots on Papakeechie lake near Wawasee. Carl Walker Syracuse Ind.. | »

See “Chicago” a dramatic story of a jazz crazed vixen wife who laughed at law and justice. Starring Phyllis Haver at Crystal this Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday.

Mrs. O. S. Compton of Fullerton, Cal., who is visiting here Mrs. Hiram Berkey and Mrs. Emma Hafer spent the day in Ligonier the guests of Mrs. Hafer’s brother 0. L. Bowser and his wife—Goshen News Times, Friday. & 2o iik Pay your Banner subscriptions.

! PROHI CONVENTION ENDS { E ! YWiid Scenses of Disorder Mark Sessfon After Varney Named Standard Bearer ' - The hosts of the prohibition party departed for their home after staging the most turbulent national political convention of the year at Chicago. Scenes of wild disorder marked the final sessions of the conventions at which Willlam F. Varney of Rock+ vilie Center N. Y. was chosen as the party’s standard bearer’ in the Noq vember election.

Among the highlights were the prlacing of Gov. Alfred E. “Smiih’s uame in nomination as the dry pariy’y candidate for president a fistic encounter started by an Oklahcma clergyman and the withdrawal from the convention of a group of delegates who charged that the party had “sold cut to Herhert Hoover.”’

Kidnaping Result of Family Spat. A Churubusco woman fleeing from ter husband with her two children started a kidnaping rumor in Elkhart Thursday night and caused police and detectives to scour ‘Elkhart county until well past midnight before the sit+ uation was cleared. v Late Thursday afternoon police received a telegram signed by Paul 13aler of Churubusco declaring that his wife an dtwo children had been “kidraped.” and giving a full description ¢f the three persons and the autoroLile in which he stated they were rid+ ing. At about midnight detectives halied the automobile containing Mrs. Raker and the children and they wcore taken to the police station to await the arrival from Churubusco of Mr. Ddker. s

Upon Baker’s arriva! it developed that a row in the Baker household had caused Mrs. Baker to pa(?k up «nd I2ave in the family automobile. I’o- - effected “a reconciliation at 2:00 ¢'clocl Friday morning and the “kidraping”’ wasghistory. Ford With Hoover Forces. Benry Ford has definitely aligned Linself with the Hoover forces for the forthcoming campaign having acs cepted the vice presidency of tha Hoover-for-President Enginers nas tional committee Chairman Work of the Republican national commitee anrounced.

Double Drive Station A double drive is now made pos<ible by late improvements at the Tyler oil and gas filling station at the corner of Union street and Lincoln Way South. A pit and alamito greasing system have been added. - Home From the East [ouis Sisterhen the city mail carrier has arrived home with his family from a tour of a month in his car through the east. ' Grand Circuit Races The grand circuit races open Tuesday to continue one week at Kalamazoo Michigan and the usual attendance from Ligonier may be expected. e ————— “Chicago” at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. Chester V. Joseph arrived home Sunday from Jacksonville Florida.

Dr. Black reports the birth of a son to Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mohler.

Huckleberries in the John. Savoi% marsh near Albion are ready to pick. 25a2t*

Marion Galloway and son left Sunday for a northern Michigan fishing trip.

Mr. an‘d_i\’flrs. Joe Hess of Danyine ‘lndiana, Mr. and Mrs. Claud Ber‘mett and babe of Indianapolis drove to Ligonier Sunday and visited Mr. and Mrs, Maurice HesB.

Mrs. F. A. Risley and Francis left Friday evening for Warren, Pa,, where they will spend Sunday with Mrs. Risley’s sister Mrs. P. B. Brubaker. Today they go to Findlay Lake New York where Mrs. Risley is instructor in Junior Methods at the Erie conference Bible School.

Hey There! How about your letterheads, lopes, cards, ebc. Dosr® 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 anything that’s A N O i ¥ =5 TR s D while we have the time to do Printing @ & ehouid bo dome,

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

',_—-—,,,?.T;T'—g.—',—'.'weg Where Alligator Lies in Wait for Its Prey ~ The rivers and estuaries of northern ‘Australia spread out over the counfry in great mudflats intersected by shallow creeks, while everywhere as a waterside growth one finds the eternal mangrove.

Along the banks of these creeks and across the mud-flats lie the blackfellows’ pads or paths, worn and kept bare by the constant passing of feet; and in some reedy bed or muddy pool beside these paths the cunning “allifiator” will lie waiting for its prey. It will remain thus, quite motionless, for days, but let some unwary creature happen along—a woman, a dog, a kangaroo—and instantly it is on the alert. With exquisite judgment the foul brute will await the exact seccnd for action; then a great armored tail lashes up out of the mud, with one tremendous sweep, knocking the hapless victim into the water. Quicker than a terrier worrying a rat the terrible jaws follow up the blow, and before the Iluckless prey, quite realizes what has happened the great teeth crush through flesh and bone and all is over, P

Many white men have been caught that way, and no experienced bushs man will walk alongside or camp close to a creek or waterhole, no matter how enticing the place may seem. At niglit the hungry brutes are apt to leave the water, and it would be a terrible awakening to feel the grip of those savage jaws as they closed on one’s hody and dragged one off to a hideous death.—Exchange. =

Modern Rendering of “Hickory, Dickory, Dock”

“Keeplng time, time, time, in a rhunic sort of rhyme.” . . . Thus the Belis, Bells, Beils. And the tock, tock, tock of tlie electric-driven clock keeps time, time, time with its chyme, chyme, chyme. You may listen to its tick when the night is extra thick, and know its liittle hand is the same throughout the land, for its motormade precision only has one wakeful mission . . . to keep the second, minute, hour, in a universal sameness, without a spell of lameness, on mantel piece and tower. So the tick and the tock of the motor-driven clock is the universal same as it’s read from block to block. ' And here 'is the sure, irrevocable morale, with which all other timers refuse to make quarrel: “Spin on, spin on, oh time in thy flight, and set me aright once again for tonight.”—Exchange.

New Breed

Dorothy had always wanted a dog. and at last a kind and sympathetic uncle gave her one.

There was a certain amount of discussion among the family with regard to the animal’s breed. The uncle de: clared the dog was an airedale. Meeting a friend of her father one evening while taking her pet for a walk, Dorotky had an anxious moment, “Whatever is it?’ the other had asked. “A pup, Dorothy? What kind, my dear?” The little girl tried hard to remember what her uncle had said. “He’'s a ne’er-do-well,” she replied, after a long pause. )

Depended on the Gas

It was his: first week in the city, and the things that interested him most were the motorcycles that whizzed by, so he bought a secondhand one and started out. Up one street and down another he went, going faster and faster, and waving to the people on the streets. They wondered, but got out of the way. Policemen rushed out and tried to stop him, but he kept on. In an hour or so he came to a halt, and an officer stepped up to him. “Why didn’t you stop when I ordered you to?” “Stop!” exclaimed the man. %I wanted to, but didn’t know how! I had to go till the gas gave out!”

Remarkable Fellow

Teacher asked the children individually to name the prominent persén they would most like to see. Some said the king, others Charlie Chaplin, and many of them mentioned famous athletes.

After a time, one small boy shouted, “Please, miss, I'd rather see my father’s boss.” :

“Well,” replied the teacher, %I should bhardly think ome would class him as a prominent man; but let us hear why you would like to see him.” “Because,” was the answer, “I've heard father say that his boss has got 200 hands.’—Montreal Star.

Cleaned Up Yellow Fever

The Rockefeller foundation in 1916 dispatched a commission to Guayaquil to confer with local and national officials relative to active measures against the yellow fever plague. A proposal was made in 1918. Thi® was accepted later by the Ecudorian officials and the propaganda was started shortly thereafter. The story has been told by scientistg that a bucket and tank brigade was started and it was only a short time when they cleaned up and drained the stagnant pools under the direction of General Gorgas.

Noise and Power

An engine that expends all its steam in whistling has nothing left with which to turn the wheels. And the same principle can be applied to man. All that we can save in noise we can use im power.—Grit.

~ Mrs. Frank Chalker and daughter Geraldine left for their home yesterday in Akron Ohio.

For Sale a span of farm mules. A little aged but good werkers. See J. Warren Moore.

LIGHT GRAZING iin THE SPRINGINSURES MiD-SUHMEK PASTURE WEISHT OF 50D YIELD OF DRY HAY gon; gl\icfh s:ilgd Pb::nmshed From enclosed acre . n 195 q. foo ture, in one season, ‘ 1993 LBS. : PASTURE 75 GRAMS T, Hlpvx‘gum( which hadl been T iy | retards voot HEAVILY GRAZED (oo Tl ",; growthand dimin previous years L S 3 ,’;. g |inishes the sub- - &S <AL K, ) sequent yields e ‘ - T 888 ID, \v , PASTURE 147 GRAMS ©5B %S’W"é which had been R 10 S not havm LIGHTLY GRAZED i A R “\g:m growth inprevious years e”{ % ]fl% R 22ty “&W Jotgsh fo iy G o sAt X , IS @ i s R, ) of ywid-summer L T eTR

MORE ATTENTION Tl PASTURE UREED

Over-Grazing Leaves Little ~ Grass for Dry Summer ' Months.

" The average pasture gets less attention than any other field on the farm, says the Blue Valley Creamery Institute. It is rarely ever limed, topdressed or top-seeded and in nine out of ten cases it is pastured too early in the season before the grass roots and top growth have had a chance to get “set”.into vigorous growth." The first growth of grass is mostly water. To cows, it is deliclously tasty, but it is not substantially nourishing. Grass should be allowed to get a good start before cows are turned into pasture.. Early grazing retards growth because it is only by exposed leafage that pastures are enabled to grow. The less the exposure of the leaves to sunlight, the less rapid the growth i

Bigger Profits Malte Good Cow Cheapest To Own 2 i e OGO EHRLEEREEEQ T ot 192 305 364 e 51328 ot 00l A | ’ St 50T 320proicedlBT oot o $5l R cost

PROFITS THE REAL TEST OF GOOD COW

Returns From Better Animal Invariably Make Up for Its Higher Price.

The value of a dairy cow is expressed by the profits she makes and not by her cost price, according to the Blue Valley Creamery Institute. A good cow costs more to buy than an average or a poor cow. It is true also that many good cows are worth considerably more than their cost price when compared to prices being paid for common cows. On the other hand, many ordinary er low profit-making cows are selling for much more money than they are worth for keeping in a dairy herd. Although the original cost

i HOME MADE FEED COMBINATION MAKES CHICKS GROW : \ MADE ON THE FARM, (>AND KEPTBEFORE THE i gmcstnugnmsmpp | xg} ii A rflg_nLTNG‘s ] fifi'm /\ {220 308 ECRNETOTRAE NNS 4 e |‘ (HK*.ST et f 5 ' Sty w;”,;OYSFER;SHEU." ,‘!g:l -l 5 5. MASH = | BRI SMERUARNII I M | ) {1 gty ox o WIS SI N IR R| <4 = ] = .-?’;z?{e'?e:‘..“.’,’n -fg e AL, g R T e f‘,'( : et an ) TTRR- U] 3 5 & N L | afl!d" | Wateris niot necessary, | _ATTHESAME ycoudhe Sive nothing but sour TIME FEED r:,(‘ i / :‘umuag o dvink T : 7 d #7% for the Aivst four to j uqL7 & S ! ‘@' -s”j (el ,“ D) 'six weeks. SKIM 1 T A 'lr( (20 - j o MILK - x:fcf«mmww‘»a‘.. " SN ) we oo o LT I ' . : 4 BU! VALLZY;CREAMERY INSTITUTE

GHIGK RATION CAN GE MADE AT HOME

Liquid Skimmilk Is Only Drink Included in Wisconsin College Mixture.

Vitamines aplenty and food essentials in abundance will be found in a simple ration for growing chicks that can be prepared at home, says the Blue Valley Creamery Institute, by combining milk, yellow corn, middlings; bone meal, oyster shell and salt in certain proportions. But no single ingredient can be left out, warns the Insti-

Read the Ads. and Shop in Ligon’iér_ '

wade. It will pay, before the summer is over, to keep cows off the grass from*three to four weecl:s longer than is customary in one’s lacality.

Over-grazing early in the spring cuts down on the grazing caqacity of a pasture. An experiment {conducted by the Wiscounsin Agricu{ltural collega shows how heavy-grazing hinders sod development and .diminjishes the production of grass and gnass hay. Two adjacent pastures were selected for the trial. One pasture had been heavily grazed while the ()Jher had been lightly grazed for a peériod of years. The results obtained showed that a square foot of sod from the heavily grazed pasture weighed| only 75 grams after the soil from ar¢und the roots had been washed away.| Sod from the lightly grazed pasture weighed 147 grams. Acre portions of each pasture lot were fenced off earfir in the spring and the grasses in the enclosures were permitted to mature.| The pasture that had been heavily grazed averaged only 1,993 pounds of d(;y, grass-hay to the acre, while the pasture that had been lightly grazed |yielded 3,445 vounds of dry grass-hay. Close grazing during May and June leaves little grass to provide pastures during the drier months of mid-summer.

price of a good cow |is higher than that of the general run of dairy stock, this difference is soon made up by the greater profits made from the sale of milk and butterfat from the better animal, P

The real value of a good cow was expressed recently in)({,he records of a Minnesota cow testing] association. A cow, costing her owner $175, produced 364 pounds of butterfat in 192 days since freshening at a profit over feed cost of $113.J7. Another cow in the same association, having a sale value of $5O, produced 187 ppunds of butterfat in 365 days andi made a profit above feed cost of $51.20. The lowerproducing cow made less than half the profit of the 192-day yield of the better cow and it took all of her milking year to do it. A goad dairy cow is the.cheapest to own. |With good feed and care, she make# a good. profit while the ordinary lcow under the same conditions does not make a worthwhile profit, the Institute declares. e 3

tute, because-it takes all of them in combination to produce the best results. : ooy g

Splendid results ha\ie been attained on this particular mixture, especially In Wisconsin where |its proportions were first formulatedg by the State College of Agriculture; This excellent home mixture consists of 80 pounds ground yellow corn, 20 pounds pure wheat middlings, 5 pounds chick-size raw bone, 5 pounds chick-size oyster shells or high-grade limestone, and 1 pound = salt, all "mixed together thoroughly and nothing to drink but sour skimmilk for the first four to six weeks of the chick’s life..

The dry mash can be made best accessible to the chicks by keeping it in a small-size, constantifeeding pattern hopper. Liquid skimmilk is the essential part of the ration and can be kept, soured, in small wooden troughs.

g “Chicago” at Crystal Tuesday Wed‘nesday amd Thursday. , eet ei o e . e Mr. and Mrs. Carl Decker drove to Chicago today where they will spend the week. : s : | Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Smith and daughter Jane of Toledo were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Doll. - - Mrs. Myron Kirkland vevntert.ained the last meeting of the Sewing so|clety of the Presbyterian church this afternoon. o ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Bailey "desires {to thank those who donated money for the assistance of their two chiljdren who were in a hospital.

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Smith and Mrs. Clara Drain and Mrs. Selesta Glant spent Sunday in South Bend the guests of Mr and Mrs. Harry Drain. “Chicago” a story of a woman who got away with murder. A scathing indictment of legal shams at Crystal this Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. e ' Mrs. Harry Green and Mrs. A. O. Shearer entertained Friday several friends for luncheon at the t‘ormer'.s Ogden Island cottage in honor of Mrs. Frank Chalker and daughter Geral!dine. : ; .

- The Union service was held in the U. B. ¢hiurch last evening. The whole service magnified the Christ and Rev. Grisso delivered an excellent sermon. The quartette's message was time for those absent as well as present ‘Make Room for Jesus.” : _ Pay vour Banner subsecriptions.

JON. JULY 18 , American Beauty Starring beautiful Billie Dove and tlovd Hughes. A very fine picture. TUES. WED., THURS,, JULY 17-18-19 Chicago Starring Phyllis Haver and Victor Varconi. ; - She had become a headliner in the newspapers as ‘“The Most Beautiful Murderess”—and the publicity she joyed. deified her shame and made her a soulless woman who laughed at justice and law-—but cdme the day when-- e ;

Adramatic tragic fascinating story relieved by comedy—the best picture production of the season. . . FRI. AND SAT. JULY 20-21 1 Dare Devil's Reward With Tom Mix and his horse Tony. A real thriller also a Sennett comedy, SUN. AND MON. JULY 22.23 French Dressing A combination love s:’:lad——flavored with romance—peppered with thrillg —spiced with delicate situations and smothered all over French Dressing! It’s the most delicious dish of movig entertainment served this season with H. B. Warner, Clive Brook Lois Wily SOM. : TUES, WED., THURS,, 24-25-26 ' - The Actress Starring Norma Shearer and Ralph Forbes. ‘The story of the actress and the scion of wealth made moving and glamorous and charming by the star’s finest performance. .

Guest Coupon Good With One Paid Admission on Monday

Millions of Families Depend on Dr. Caldwell’s Prescription

When Dr. Caldwell started to practice medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a laxative were not as great as they are today. People lived normal, quiet lives, ate plain, wholesome food, and t plenty of fresh air and sunshine. fit even that early there were drastic physics and purges for the relief of consti%ation which Dr. Caldwell did not believe were good for human beings to put into their system. So he wrote a preacription for a laxative to be used by his patients.

The fl‘ewdption for constipation that he used early in his pra.ctioe,P:nd which he put in drug stores in 1892 under the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, Is & liquid vegetable remedy, intended for women, oh%ldren and elderly dpeople, and they need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stimulant as Syrup Pepsin. Under successful management this Ees‘crlption has proven its worth and now the largest selling liquid laxative In the world. The fact that millions of bottles are used a year proves that it has won the confidence of people who needed it to get relief from headaches, billousness, flatulence, indigestion, loss of afipetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and fevers. Millions of families are now never without Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and if yeu will once start using it you will alse always have a bottle handy for emergencies. : It is perticularly pleasing to know

. Notice to Water Takers. You are hereby notified that water rents are due July Ist 1928 payabie at the office of the city clerk on all rents due and not paid on or before July 20th a penalty. of ten per cent will be added. All water rents for 1928 are now due and must be paid on or before July 20th. : : ‘Office hours 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. The office will be open Wednesday ang Baturday evenings for the accommodation of the publiec. 24a4t i - - Joseph C. Kimmell City Clerk

- Gossard Corset Sale Buy your foundation garments at greatly reduced prices 10 to 20% discotint on all goods in stock. Including completes, Corseletts, Lacing Corsets and ‘Wrap-arounds. Lot of Brassiers at 25c. Sale begins July 14th to 28th on Wednesday and Saturday at Smith’s Chocolate Shop. ' 24h2¢. . Ethel M. Black ~ Se¢ Beautiful Billie Dove tonight at Crystal. ; Jotjm Bussing desires to purchase a good milch cow. - WANTEDGirI 6r woman for general housework. Mrs. Lee Loeser. 252 t Use your Guest Coupons tonight. They're good for one admission. FOR SALE—Willys-Knight sedan at a bargain. Phone 84 or see Lee Loeser. : * 2padt*

Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Sinclair entertained some friends Saturday at their Wawasee cottage. _ The Beacon Light Quartette from Indiana Central College gave a splendid evening’s entertainment Thursday evening at the U. B. church. .~ Mrs. Charles Shell of near White Pigeon Michigan drove over and spent Sunday with her father Joseph Caldwell at his Diamond lakefarm.

LIGONIER ALL THIS WEEK "IN THE BIG TENT Thé Show KY.;:)OL:V Know You GUY STOCK CO.

' Tuesday Night - “Let Jimmie Do It” Wednesday Night -+ Feature Play “Which One Shall 1 Marry” Thursday Night - “Cheating the Law” - Friday Night “Dr. Jekyll aud Mr. Hyde” Saturday Night ~ “Andy and Min”

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that 'the most of it is bought by mothers for themselves and the chii-: dren, though Syrup Pepsin is {ust as' valuable for elderly peo&l)e. All drug stores have the generous bottles. We would be glad to have gu prove - at oursexpen;e how much Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin can mean to you and yours. Just write “Syru Pepsfi” Monticello, Illinois,mdwewnf send you prepaid & FREE SAMPLE mm{n.