Ligonier Banner., Volume 70, Number 33, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 September 1936 — Page 2
The Ligonier Banner Kstablished 1867 Published by THE BANNEE PUBLISHING CO. 124 Cavin Street M. A. Cotherman Editor-Manager Published every Thursday and entered the Postoffice at Ligonier, Indiana as gecond clasg matter, pidben e
‘.*&%# # » » & # > DEMOCRATIC ’ * TICKET . * *® =& * * " & H * * - NATIONAL TICKET For Presgident— FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT FOor Vicg President— JOHN N. GARNER STATE TICKET For Governor—- . M. CLIFFORD TOWNSEND Lieutenant Governor— HENRY F. SCHRICKER For Secretary of State—--7 AUGUST MUELLER For Auditor of State— LAURENCE SULLIVAN For Treasurer of State—- . PETER B. HEIN For Superintendent of Public Instruction— FOYD I. McMURRAY For Supreme Court, First District— JUDGE WALTER E. TREANOR FOr Supreme Court, Second Districi JUDGE CURTIS W. ROLL For Judge Apellate Court, Northern - Division— JUDGE FERD A. WEICKING For Judge Appellate Court, South~ern Division— JUDGE WILLIAM A. DUDINE RepOrter of Supreme and Apellate Courts— : . MISS EMMA MAY COUNTY TICKET For Congress— JAMES 1. FARLEY For Prosecuting Attorny— CLAUD V. BARKER For State Representative— THEADORE J. SPURGEON For_Clerk— HAROLD V. CURTIS For Treasurer— ELOISE REDMOND For Sheriff— ROSCOE RIMMELL For Coroner— ; : HAROLD A. LUCKEY For Surveyor—- - HAROD B. HANES For Commissioner Ist District— ANSON L. HUNTSMAN For Commissioner 2nd District—- : PAUL WEIMER
Steér Sells for $l6B.
The grand champion 4-H Beef club Hereford steer owned by Robert Marty was sold at public auction at the Tlkhart county fair to the Elkhart Packing company for $l6B. The steer brought $l7 per hundrerd. .
Landg 15-Pound Pike.
Arthur Steinmet of Garret§y hooked ang successfully landed a Great Northern pike weighing 15% pounds in Johnson’s bay, Lake Wawasee. It took him twenty minutes to get the fish. into the boat.
Mr. and Mrs. Burley Miller and daughter Kathryn of Buffalo, N. Y, have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Miller and Mrs. Albert Bordner.
Mr. and Mrs. Mell Culver and daughter Betty Lou and Mrs. Carrie Wade were on a motor trip through Michigan over the week end returning home Monday night.
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Weaver's Hardware
: NEWS NOTES 4 Mrs. Mary Calbeck ot South Bend is there visiting relatives. o Floyd Leming is ill and confined to his home north of the city. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Shoup are home from their wedding trip.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hoak of Elk hart visited relatives here over Labor Day.
Mrs. Ida Schrock and daughters of Seranton, Pa., visited here and at Syracuse last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Zur Smith of Chicago visited relatives here and in Cromwell over Labor Day.
Mrs. Robert Wigton of Gary was the over night guest Friday of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wigton.
Mr. and Mrs. George Raridan spent Labor Day with Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Lehman at Diamond lake.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Michael and son of Cleveland spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Eimo Weaver.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Willsey and children of {Hastings, Mich, sp2nt the week end here with relatives.
Mr. and' Mrs. Squire Robinson of Detroit are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Snyder and other relatives here.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Harper and tamily of Lafayete spent the week end with his mother Mrs. Leslie Harp er. : j Chester Hile went to Indianapolis Tuesday. He wag accompanied by Mrs. Hile and Mrs. Dave Bechtol who visited the State Fair. i
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hinderer and daughter Lucille were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Grimes near Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bechtol Sunday took their daughter-in-law Mrs. Howard Bechtol and gon to their home in Montpelier 0., after a visit here.
Mrs. Ethel Hays and family of Hibbing, Minn., left for their home Sunday after a visit with her mother Mrs. Anna Summers and other relatives. i
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Keller Mr. and Mrs. Bud Miller of Chicago and Mrs. John Bowser of Syracuse were Sunday evening supper guests of Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Black.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Thayer of Toledo spent- the week end here with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Chidister. They were accompanied home by their daughter Jane who had spent two weeks here. .
Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Kegg Mr, and Mrs. Bud Mills ané Mr. and Mrs. Emery Brown of Indianapolig visited Mr, and Mrs. Walter Kegg in Syracuse over Lahor Day and called on Ligonier friends. .
Mrs. Gorge Foster, Mrs. O. . Bowen and Mrs. Carl Nowels attended a desert bridge Saturday afternoon at the home ot Mrs. V. G. Hursey in Milford. Mrs. Clark Ziesel of Chicago was a 8 houseguest of Mrs. Hursey. Mrs. Boweßr received the favor for high score.
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PAINT HEADOQUARTERS ¥
Mrs. Lester Nelson and baby have been ill this week.
Mrs. Clara Himes of South Benda was g recent guest of Mrs. F. W, Black.
“Mrs. Lon Brill of Millersburg has been suffering from an attack of the quinsey.
~ Miss Letha Todd of Detroit, Mich., has been visiting her mothey -Mrs. Thelma Todd.
Mr. al}d Mrs. John Calbeck are home from Fort Wayne where they spent a week.
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Miller and his mother of Fort Wayne called at the John Calbeck home Sunday even ing. :
Mr. and Mrs. S. K. Jackson of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Stayner of Toledo spent the week end with Mrs. Charleg Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hooten of Muncie spent the week end in Wawaka with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Hooten.
Dr. and Mrs. A. E. White Earl White Miss LaTiere and Miss Helen Bothwell of Indianapolis were guests over Labor day of F. P. Bothwell.
Miss Almeda Wingard age 16 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wingard was buried at Topeka last Wednesday she had been ‘ill for some time.
Mrs. Hilda Brown and son Wiibur of Chicago Mr. and Mrs. TFred Stoneg. of Millersburg were guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Borger Sunday evening. : |
DO YOU KNOW? - That ONE POUND under infla- . tion on a tire reduces the mileage on « that tire as' much as 122 per cent. i‘_:Dvyrive in today and let - us check your tires for you KIESTER'S Friendly Service LincolnwayWest ' Phone 481
THE LIGONIER BANNBRE, LIGONIER, INDIANA
O. V. Borger and John Damey spent several days at the State Fair this week.
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Spurgeon are spending the day in Indianapolis attending the fair. =
Junion Frick and Robert Krippner of Wawakg have entered college at North Manchester.
Frank Sack - has returned to his home at Bemus Point N. Y., after a visit here with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jones have returned to Wawaka where Mr. Joneg is engaged in teaching.
Mrs. Ina Bostian and daughter Ruth Pauline of Chicago spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Stage. :
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kollar and family of South Bend were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Vance and family. :
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Mangus and family spent Labor Day near Goshen with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Fred Yoder and Mr. and Mrs. Orlando Man gus, :
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Borger and children of Fort Wayne spent Sunday here they were accompanied home by her parents Mr. and Mrs. Gearge Lary who spent Labor Day there.
Miss Evelyn Wood of South Bend and Steve Murphy of Fort Wayne were married in Chicago Saturday Sept. sth. The bride is a sister of Mrs. Hascall Crothers of near this city and is well know here. They will reside i South Bend.
Prehistoric Shavers of o _ Metal; Copies of Flint .were were close copies of the older flint ones. In the Early Dynastic period | (about 3000 B. C.), there was used a rectangular razor with four bevelled edges. An older form, found‘in Late Predynastic times, gives the appearance of a broad, doubleedged knife with a short tang. Most such razors seem to have been sharpened only on one side; for example, the specimen found in the tomb of Queen Hetep-heres. . In Europe, at a date comparatively not much later, states a writer in Pathfinder Magazine, razors had a long blade with slightly concave sides, and a strange indentation at the lower end.The most reasonable explanation of this in'dent is that it was used to allow the forefinger to feel the skin while one shaved. In Western Boheniia, about this time, the blade was broad and double-edged, with an openwork handle cast in one piece with it. During the Late Bronze and Early Iron Age (about 1000 B. C.), the razor, in Upper Italy at least, again assumed the rectangular outline.
The early British razors K were shaped like a maple leaf. There was a tang projecting from the base of the blade to take the handle, and often it was continued downwards by a midrib along its face.
Tea, Coffee as Beverage, Traced Back to 350 A. D.
The use of tea among the Chinese, from whom it has extended to all parts of the world, cannot be traced with certainty any further back than to 350 A. D. or approximately that time. This use did not become general in China until about the ninth century. Tea was introduced into Europe by the Dutch in 1610, says a writer in the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
How long coffee has been used in Arabia, its native country, is not certainly known. It was introduced into Egypt in the sixteenth century. The first coffee house in Europe was established in Constantinople in 1551. The first person to make it known to western Europe seems to have been Leonhard Rauwolf, a German physician, a great traveler. Once introduced, the use of this beverage spread rapidly. Coffee houses sprang up in all the chief cities. The first one in London was opened by a Greek in Newman's Court, Cornhill, in 1652; the first one in France was opened in Marseilles in 1671; the first in Paris in the following year.
Finding Happiness
Big pleasures and great happiness are but many little ones bound together as a loaf is many crumbs in an aggregate. True happiness is the art of finding joy and satisfaction in the little privileges of life; a quiet hour in the sun, instead of a far-away journey; a little outing in the nearby woods, instead of long trips away; an hour with a friend instead of an extended visit to relatives; a few pages of a book instead of hours of reading at a time; a flash of sunset, a single beautiful flower, a passing smile, a kindly word, a little thoughtfulness here and there as the day slips by—these are the crumbs of happiness. Do not despise them, lest when the evening finds you, you be hungry and disconsolate and wunhappy. Sir Launfal, after traveling the world over in search of the precious cup, found it, you will recall, in the hands of a needy beggar at his own gate.—Writer Unknown.
Royal Wrestlers
France's king, Francis I, twentysix, and England’s monarch, Henry VIII, twenty-nine, met in 1520 upon the ‘“Field of the Cloth of Gold,” between Guines and Ardes, for the most expressive wrestling match ever held. A gorgeous palace was especially erected for the occasion and furnished with gold dishes, gilt furniture and rarest ornaments. The most beautiful women and distinguished men gathered in magnificent dress. More than 2,200 sheep and other viands in similar proportions were prepared for the feasting that followed, Altogether $5,000,000 to $10,000,000 was spent upon a bout at which nothing was at stake and entrance was free. Neither of the kings was a good wrestler.
President Andrew Johnson
Andrew Johnson was élected vice president in 1864 and became president upon the death of Lincoln, April 15, 1865. He was impeached in 1868, and his trial before the Senate began March 13 and ended in his acquittal on May 26 of that year. He had been spared by one vote, and continued therefore to sit as president until the inauguration of his successor, Grant, on March 4, 1869.
Three Legs Coat of Arms
* The Isle of Man in the Irish sea is known everywhere for its Manx cats that have no tails, its romance celebrated by Scott in his “Peveril of the Peak,” and for the “Arms” of the isle, which consist of three legs. Folk lore students think that ~ the early Manx sea robbers brought ~ the coat of arms or legs back with them on one of their trips to the Mediterranean. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Shambaugh of Plymouth picked up J. M. Richmond of Bremen for'a ride to Waterloo oa Labor Day to celebrate the birthday anniversary of Mr. Shambaugh and his isster Hila, both formerly of Wolf Lake. ~
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