Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 26A, Ligonier, Noble County, 23 July 1928 — Page 4

MON. JULY 23 : F 4 . rench Dressing An extra fine comedy drama with 4 Great Stars. See it. Also a good comedy. TUES. WED., THURS,, JULY 24-25.26 The Actress Starring Norma Shearer. She’ll take vou behind the scenes of theatrical life! ; Follow beautifui Norma Shearer behind the scenes where Life’s drama mov.s thriliingly afier the curtain deSCEIUL o to her came laughs and tears and love in a romance strangzer than any she playved back of the footfcotlights. The story of the actress and the scion of wealth made moving and glamourous and charming by the star's

finest performance to date. FRI. AND SAT. JULY 27-28 On To Reno " Adandy comedy drama starring Maric Prevost and Cullen Landis tlso a Seunett comedy. SUN. AND MON. JULY 2230 . - - Telling the World Starring William Haines ‘as a slai reporter whose zest for news and romance will give vyou a thousand wars and gasps. Its Haine's best pic ture also a news and a “Ham" comrdy. TUES., WED., THURS,, JULY 31. AUG. 4 AND 2, : . Starring George DBancrofi a great story ot a detective's battle to oust a deadly hi-jacking gang from the city. Mae Tinnee savs “Its Great.”

Guest Coupon Good With One Paid Admission on Monday

TUES., JULY 24 ONE DAY ONLY Ligonier Ball Park WAIT T REAL SHOW » IT COSTS NO MORE THE SHOW THAT'S DIFFERENT ! KETROW BROS. X « \‘A% P 2 1 P " r\ Nig 3 gl ?fi ==

ANIMAL SHOW

R 2 -- PERFORMANCES -- 2 » Rain or Shine ftumwn and Night Doors Openat 1 & 7 p. m. Performance One Hour Later FR E E STARTLING e S ENSATIONAL OUTSIDE EXHIBITION ON THE SHOW GROUNDS BRE. s FORE EACH PERFORMANCE® Admission 25c¢-50c For this day and date only

| : oOld Friends Gather. ,‘ A group of neighbors and relatives of Jesse Gage and Elmer Herald:from Elkhart township met together at Diamond lake Sunday to help them celebrate their respective birthdays. Each family came with well filled baskets and all enjoyed a sumpteous picnic dinner. During the afternoon the party loaded in cars and went over to the beach for a swim. After which a tub of ice cream was waiting for them. The party consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Gage and son Clare and Charles, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Herald and nephew Buzzie Lepird Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Gallup Ira Gallup, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Gage and !song Mrs. Helen Compton and - children, Newton Pancake, Mrs. Mary Green and Mrs. Emma Stewart, the out of town guests were Mrs. Mae Walters of Amarallo Texas who is visiiing the Jesse Gage families, Oliver Reese of Toledo Mr. and Mrs. Reck and family and Earl Franks of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gage of Mishawka Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gappinger and son of Albion and Walter Gage of Sturgis. Christian Scienee Churches “Truth” was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all ' Churches of Christ Scientist Sunday July 22. The Golden Text was frcem John 8:31, 32, “If ye continue in my word, then are ye my disciples indced; and the truth shall make you free.” Abong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following irom the Bible: ‘““Pilate therefore said unto him, Art thou a king then? Jesus answered, Thou sayest that I am a king. To this end was 1 born, and for this cause came I into the world that 1 should bear witness unto the truth. livery one that is of the truth heareth my voice” (John 18:37.)

The Lesson-Sermon also included the following passages | from the Christian Science textbook, ‘‘Science and Health with Key to the Scripturey by Mary Baker Eddy: “Prayer cannot change the unalterable Truth nor can prayer alone give us an understand, ing of Truth; but prayer coupled with a fervent habitual desire to know and do the wil lof God will bring us intq all Truth. Such a desire has little need of audible expression. It is best expressed in thought and in life” {p. 11.)

Sam Cox is seriously ill at his home on Jay Street. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Martin paid Fort Wayne a visit Friday. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Chiddister of Ligonier are the parents of a tenpound son born Friday. Miss Dorothy Pancake of Convoy, Ohio was a week end guest of thg Roy Gaby family near Brimfield i e S 7] " Norma Shearer’s greatest success “The Actress” She’ll take you bes hind the scenes of stage life at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. Word was received from Roger Coss and Bill Reed that they had reached North Platte Nebraska and are having a fine time. They expected to be in Colorado the next day. Members of the W..R. C. will meet tomorrow morning at the hall at 9:30 to attend the funeral of J. B. Noe atv Kimmell, Will those who have cars please bring them and take as many as possible. '

Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Coverston and three children of Fallon Nevado stopped here while on their way to Toledo Ohio. They visited with Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Stait. They are visiting friends and relatives in Indiana and Ohio. Mr. Coverston formerly was a resident of Ligonier but has been away since 1907. : Famous Woman Inventor. : - Miss Margaret E. Knight, who died recently, is an example of woman :whose brain could work as readily on /mechanical lines as on household flines. It is said that Miss ‘Knight ;patented 87 inventions and that heg ‘picture has been hung in the paten office in Washington. { . Miss Knight may have been thJ }youngest inventor among women, q :she invented, when she was twelve f’yearg old, a stop-motion device foy (preventing the steel-tipped shuttles of] ;mill looms from falling out and in 'juring the operators. L)

- One may invent hourly, and yet pros duce nothing practical, but the tr 11.13 test of Miss Knight being a succes 'ful inventor is answered by the fac 'that most of her patented inventio jwere taken up by manufacturers. A’ ;machine she invented for making and 'folding square-bottomed paper bags in: /1871 is still in use, and a tin can which! ‘she invented only a few years ago,'(was at once taken up by several canjners. Most of her inventions related ito rubber, cotton and shoe machinery; —Women Lawyers’ Journal. %

. Gone Two Years, Dog Reappears. . The happiest fox terrier in the world today is Gyp, but he isn’t any happier than the household of hlsi ;owner, Edward Sayre, of Orangeburg, ;N. Y. If the family had been glvenj to wall mottoes it would have hung up one that read: “What is homej without Gyp?” but after the call of 8 thief two years ago the home was without Gyp. ; The family was at dinner the other. day when a whining and scratching was heard at the door. Dorothy Sayre, six years old, opened it and in walked" Gyp. The dog was gaunt and too weak to bark in his joy. He wore a license issued in Mechanicstown, 00! miles from there. : Pay your Banner subseriptions. |

'NOT SUCH A BAD OLD WORLD Glimpses of Light Easy to Find Even to Those Confirmed in ¢ , Pessimism. : It does not require battles to bring out the finer side of human nature—the side always nearer to the surface of the individual than the cynic is willing to admit. ¥ In the everyday round we see frequent exhibitions of it. Here is & sample sent me by a Philadelphia business man: ' “I was walking with my wife in the, country on the outskirts of Burlington, N. J, last Sunday, and we noticed ahead of us a man leading by the hand a little boy. : “The little boy wore one of those metal braces, running from his hip to his foot, and the poor little fellow was hobbling along as best he could, with the help of the man. As we caught up with the pair, the man stopped and did something to the brace and then told us in broken Italian that he found the ‘kid’ lying in the road crying, and had learned that he wandered from home, about a half mile, and while playing he had fallen and broken his brace. “Then he told us he had ‘fixa d’ fixa' as best he could and was taking him home. “Then they started out and the little beggar reached up his little hand to the poor Italian and they started off together. The man said, ‘Take it easgy, son, we got lots o’ time.”” From fields of war to roadsides of peace the story is the same. Where the smoke of battle darkens the sungot and where the thin stream that curls upward from the home fireside beribbons the evening sky, the heart of the average person ever is ready to respond to the call of human sut—! fering, even though it ecome from ox‘xfi who an hour before was despised | an enemy. With all its faults and shortcomings—which are our faults and short-comingsl-—this is a pretty good world.

BRINGS DEATH TO SWIMMERS Cold Water Penetrating the Ear Dey clared to Be One Source of . Great Danger. Sudden death of swimmers has nevs er been explained satisfactorily, but it 18 generally assumed that it is due to cramps that affect the respiratory muscles. The Medical Record says there is another theory that “has never had the attention it merits.” This is that cold water penetrating the ear sets up an irritation in the delicate passages of the inner ear. It cites an address delivered by Doctor Guettich before the Berlin Otological society, in which he revived this theory. ¢ The irritation of the labyrinth of the inner ear by cold water might cause sudden paralysis, just as a shock to it through a sharp blow on the chin will cause a “knock-out.” The symptoms of the swimmer and the fighter are similar; they can make motions but cannot direct them; they may become temporarily unconscious. In the case of the swimmer, of course, drowning follows unless some one helps him. The Medical Record says that persons with perforated ear drums are those chiefly menaced by this accident, although it may occur to others. And this in spite of the fact that children with large perforations of the ear drum often swim and dive with impunity.

Arbitration Court in Spain. i “The most unique and interesting institution for the settlement of civil suits in Spain,” writes Thomas W. Palmer, Jr.,, in Case and Comment, the Lawyers’ Magazine, “is the arbitration court. All contentions or disw putes before or after the commencement of litigation, no matter how faq advanced, can be submitted to an arbitration tribunal by agreement of all the interested parties. The exceptions to this are those suits involving political and civil rights, etc., or those matters in which the state is especially concerned. The arbitrators, whose number must not exceed five, are lawyers of twenty-five or more years of age and in full enjoyment of civil rights. In some instances the arbitrators may be laymen (amigables componedores). Appeal is made from the arbitration direct to the territorial appeal court.’ This method of deciding claims has proved successful and is employed considerably.” \

Another Boston Claim. : Attention is called to the craze for championships now displayed by Bos+ ton. Having become enthused over the professional baseball champions and the Harvard football champions, the city of beans and biology offers for popular consideration the stay-away-from-church champion. He hasn'q been inside a church but once in 33 years. } It isn’t a proud supremacy, and it's very far from being an established one. Neither New York nor Chicaga have entered the contest.—Philadel: phia Ledger. ) Russia’s Submarines. : Of the progress of the Russians with their submarines little has been heard, I know,{however, that within 4 year and a half Russia let contracts for the construction of 13 large Bubnoff sub: marines—weighing 500 tons each, These were designed for service in the Baltic. and they have all been comploted by this time." Undoubtedly thay will be reported as being in acy tion before this war progresses much further.—Norman Draper, in Collier’s Weeakly.

Mell Culver and wife and Mrs. Carrie Wade spent Sunday with James Hire and family at Three River, Mich.

‘Mr| and Mrs. Harry Mcßride and son’ Robert of Solomons Creek visited with Mr. and Mrs. Karl Nowels of east of Ligonier. :

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

A new kind of “French Dressing” at Crystal tonight. ; Miss Qpal Weeks visited Syracuse friends one day last week. . ‘ FOR SALE—Canning pickles. Delivered. Phone 784 Ligonier. Lsh3t* For Sale fine wood {or cook stove. L. G. Cooper. Phone 283. = - 26atf Mr. Frank Harris and son Jack spent Sunday in Fort Wavie, i The Ligonier city council will meet in regular session Thursday evening, A Redhath, cha,utaudtm (O run a' week opened in Goshen Friday afternoon. Get a free sample of “French Dressing” tonight at Crystal. - Use vour coupon, : :

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Harding of this city a boy July 18 name Jerry. ‘For Sale at a bargain a light Ford truck. See Mrs. McDowell, Miller street. : 2 A. D. Newton has purchased a new motor boat to use at his summer humé Wawasee lake. : A “The Actress” starring Norma Shearer at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. v The Ligonier Chamber of Commerce will meet for luncheon at Hotel Ligos nier next Friday noon. 4Mr.' and Mrs. John D. Emerson res turned yesterday from a -two wecks outing at Papakeechie lake. L Ceremonies for laying the corner stone of a new Baptist church at Wolf Lake were celebrated Sunday. :

Mr. and Mrs. Hary Doll and Ruth Coss spent Sunday in Kimmell thg guests of Mr. Doll’'s mother. The Social Hour had a fine time at the Newton cottage Wawasee Thursday where they held a pienic. FOR SALE a Meiscer piano at a bargain. Mrs. Thomas Wagoner. Telephone 95. House Miller street. 26ast* The Loyal Women of the U. B, church will hold an ice cream social at the city hall park Saturday evening July 28. 26a2t ‘Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibson .and Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gibson and little son enroute for their home in Soutl Bend after a visit with Miss Mary Williams in Muncie spent a few hours Friady afternoon visiting Ligonier friends.

k. Jacobs & Co., Inc. _ L Extra Special Dress Sale The good old Summertime is here and cool Summer dresses are in demand ‘ - We have a large stock of 78 | very pretty Summer dress- ~ ‘ ~ es for the hot days which Naigs - rvc wi~l.l sell at ver)éi special / / ’," - low prices. - » Ao 28l $650 Dr » ‘i{;;i\ Hithem 3500 JT 5825 Dresses QL * ‘» : ;fi:ssée:le at $575 Y - S 1250 D 4 \ 2\. i o;ezsafz at $9~75 % $1650 plain and ¢ A ’ c sprintedp3r“(:s::s $1248 AL/ ALL THIN SUMMER 8 DRESSES FROM e $l.OO to $350 All Coats at Half Price E. Jacobs & Co., Inc. La-ies’ Ready-to-Wear, Hats, Dry Goods, Rugs

~ Try “French Dresing’ ‘tonight at Crystal. . | " e Mrs. Nettie Shobe is quite ill at her home on McLean street. ; ‘ T e : | Chrise Rice paid Rochester friends a visit one day last week. : FOR SALE Cheap a breakfast set in good condition. Lincoln Cafe. 25b2t A Silver Lake ball team defeated a teaimn here Sunday! by a score of & to 3. ' ‘ = oe e e “The Actress” a giorgeous_ romance of stage life ‘this Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. ) : e = Ed D. Smith is negotiating for the purchase of the C. E. Dening cottagq at Diamond lake. | , Mr. ond Mrs. A. Bi Weaver Sunday drave to Canton Ohiol to visit their son lElmo and family. |

“The Actress” Btarring Norma Shearer at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. 3 : : — Willis: Kerr returmed to his homg in Chicago Saturday %after a visit with the Kerr family here. | Mrs. Charles Vector and children of Chicago are guests of her parents here Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller. : o FOR RENT—Cottake a; Wawasey between Oakwood and Waco. Mpdern. Call 410 Ligonier In@iana. o kv o e : Ben Glaser of Lig(inier has delivered a Pontiac coach:§ fresh from the factory to Odis Bmv}*n of Cromwell. .._....“...é..._.e A ' Now that the Bus:[.' Bee has added a frigidaire to its equipment the trade will be handled to better advantage. o i . 95bot

Helen Louise and Mary Beth Butz of Kendallville are the guests of Mn and Mrs. Clarence %Wemple for the week. - | Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Acton of Pheonix Arizona former Noble county residents are guests|of Mr. and Mrs Joe W. Smith. : | i - ~ Mrs. Laura McDonald Eunice Sack and Margaret Lake came home Saturday after a week @at the McDonald cottage at Wawasee. James E. MlcDDngild, manager of the leading newspa.pfexj of Marion, is here to visit his mdther Mrs. Laura McDonald and other relatives. Dr. and Mrs. A. J. Hostetler and daughter Marie of LaGrange and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. L. Smith were Sunday guests of the Edwin| D. Smith family on Lincoln Way West. |

gfl: BUY THIS NEW .B A i - B $135.00 =) s - . & ‘-I"' b, @ & N o L 8 i | 14| AT YOUR OWN PR SRI PRICE 1 e | P e ', 4 “fl {81! The price will be \flg £W 1§ reduced on this L= | R machine B | dud 0 ] 5 - .('\:', . : o each day until sold. This machine will be on display in our window until sold. Come in and let us show you. Here is your opportunity to secure a new wash ing machine at your own price. WT EIR,S

= 4O CRo, Y . @9 W 0&_ A 7 — X FEN fi.‘“x‘3;3'3's:-'355553:.%:'5:315553:5;;5;55;_::5::rV ( ¢ v - Always in the Lead with Red Crown Ethyl! , ‘ @

Up steep hills, some cars climb easily without change of gears. They are the cars fed with Red Crown Ethyl—fuel famous for the power it gives! , _ On the open road, some cars seem to be alive—like spirited horses, they will not be passed! They are the cars fed with Red Crown Ethyl —famous fuel that gives any car greater speed! . When the traffic signal changes, some cars shoot ahead out of the waiting line. They are the cars fed with Red Crown Ethyl — fuel famous for lightning pick up, swift acceleration, ever-cager, ever-ready response! e ‘ Cars with high compression engines use Red Crown Ethyl. This high compression gasoline made them possible! Other cars use Red Crown Ethyl to give them the advantages of high compression. TO BE ALWAYS IN THE LEAD WITH RED CROWN ETHYL COSTS ONLY A FEW CENTS MORE! , | . At Any Standard Oil Service - Station and at Most Garages

Standard Oil Company . (ndiana} LIGON?IER, mom;u .