Ligonier Banner., Volume 53, Number 36A, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 November 1919 — Page 3
. = . j _x i . - : ~ ._ : - B GRNN e Al oA e ety - f*’_:»{;f;,)% A : RTT R A C o e . - - ey gy = T R B T I e TR & o N L 50 W S % s e B s BT y %) ) Tig B .oy il e , Al TS ) | e, | = 4 \\,‘y . " 11&} ' | ir light—i | & : | Stays Tight ? li:\"ERY joint in this re- " markable heater is double seamed—no putty joints to crack and leak air tDLE S | , Original Air-Tight Wood Heater | s guaranteed to stay Air Tight as long as used. Holds fire 36 |} ‘hours. Only the best and most | durable matenials are used inthe _ | - construction of this s /2 B wonderful heater. R : . 1! (@6!9%\ Select your size : i 1 e . lg and style now, S (339 ;" V» L Y » ! \4l{ i AR ] vm® e 1 3 és.; U aa il | | &
IFOR o L § : TWENTY YEARS e o w,wmz*\m—vmww Rate 6 per cent No charge for commission. No Charge for Inspection ‘ of Land. - No Charge for Examination of Abstract. ' Privilege of paying $lOO or any multiple thereof on the principal om any interest paying date after the secend year. Siiall payments on principal required. . ‘ ' - Best Loans Obtainable We also make loans for terms of 5, 7 and 10 years. i Send for Circular B. - IHE ' Straus Brothers - Company. K e - o] . DN : Esth. 1880, Cap. and Sup. $8,000,_000. Ligonier ~ Indiana
Harry Schlotterback Trustee Perry Township Office Day, Saturday at Mier State Bank e GLASSES Accuartly and Scientifically ' Fitted. Broken lenses ‘_ replaced. Mrs. L. P. Wineburg W. H. WIGTON ; Atiorney-at-law - " Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, IND. FARL WOLF Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q 1 Ligonier lndianafi Contractor and ~ Builder 405 SummittSt. Ligonier - CHARLES V. INKS AND SON M L e : Monnuenu. Vutlh. Tombstones, ‘Uornsr Fifth and Cavin LIGONIER
“BABY BONDS” OR W. S. S. FOR CHRISTMAS GIF Holiday Presents on the Government's Financial Counter at Bargain ' . - Rates This Month. ; Do yofir Christmas planning early! Do your buying now, and it will cost you less! Uncle Sam has the goods, whether you are man, woman or child. - You can buy off the same counter, whether you are rich or in moderate circumstances. .
The price of the new government “baby bond”—the $lOO Treasury Savings certificate—in November is $84.40. The recipient of that Christmas gift from you will have $lOO on January 1, 1924. _
. Then there is another “baby bond” —the $l,OOO Treasury Savings certificate. If you get in on that in November, it will cost only $844, and in five years the recipient will have a cool thousand dollars. ‘
This also is bargain month in War Savings stamps. The .price for November is $4.22. In five years that will yield five dollars. - - Then for the children there are the Thrift stapnps at 25 cents a throw. So, you see, Uncle Sam has on his holiday bargain counter something to suit men, women and children in all walks of life, . :
" To the person who has learned to save through war-time necessity a present of a “baby bond” or a War Savings stamp will be a welcome gift. Perhaps the gift of a War Savings stamp or one of the new Treasury Savings certificates will start the recipient on a career of saving that may lead to his or her financial inde pendence. , . / These government securities - are nondepreciable and nonfluctuating. The Savings certificates are issued only in registered form with the name of the owner on them. The registration records are kept in Washington. This protects the owner. The $lOO certificates may be purchased at post offices of the first and second class and at banks; the $l,OOO certificates may be obtained through banks. Certificates of either denomination may be ordered direct from the Seventh District War Savings organization, 105 West Monroe street, Chicago, 111. The price of the $lOO certificate in December is $84.60. The $l,OOO certificate in December costs $846. The War Savings stamp may be bought for $4.23 in December. ' . Do your Christmas shopping early and you will save money! WORK, SAVE, SUCCEED (W. 8. S.) REVISED VERSIONS
There was a little man, ' - Who laid down his little gun, v With its bullets all made of lead, lead, lead,. And he got a little book, And when in it he did look, ‘ Why many happy things he said, said, said. ' : / S 2 g O ~" > \~ fj}; ,- B ) : Ig 4 | NS i TR D So he took it home To_his good wife, Joan, : And bade her to sing and smile, , smile, smile, For a Thrift Stamp new, A War Savings Stamp, too, - He'd buy her every little while, while, while. ‘ Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall; Not all the king’s horses nor all the . king’s men ' ‘ Could set Humpty Dumpty up again. (For Humpty, you see, saved never a g cent; / The money he made he most carelessly ~ spent.) ' Now Humpty Dumpty sits on his wall As proud as can be and with never a fall. He doesn’t need horses, he doesn't need men ‘ To rescue and set him on wall-top | again, - - o For Humpty, you see, learned his lesson with care; War Savings Stamps cherish the change he can spare. : Hippety hop to the Government shop, .To buy a War Savings Stamp dandy ; One for you, and one for me, And ohe for Brother Sandy!
THRIFT IS HABIT; GET IT. 1 _ “Thrift Is a habit. A habit is a thing you do unconsciously or automatically without thought. We are ruled by our habits. When habits are young they are like lion cubs—soft, fluffy, funny, frolicsome little animals. They grow day by day. Eventually they rule you. Choose ye this day the habit ye would have rule over you. The habit of thrift is simply the habit which dictates that you shall earn more than you spend. In other words, thrift is the habit which provides that you spend less than you earn. Take your choice.”—Elbert Hubbard. S id : George Honert has returned from Kendallville to reside permanently in Ligonier. He has taken his old position in the Ligonier Refrigerator factory and says it seems like reaching home after a long absence. Kodak finishing Hieber Studie.
- LIFE CRUSHED OUT ¢ Abraham Thoinpson Meets Instant ..Death Near Albion When Run - ~ Over by Auto Truck : Abraham Thompson, . fifteen, was instantly killed Friday on a highway near Albion when the wheels of an auto truck passed over his hesgd, crushing it. - The lad was riding with his father William Thompson from their home near Wolf Lake to Albion with a load of onions and seeing some corn in the road the boy jumped from the truck to pick it up. He stumbled and fell under the heavy vehicle and the wheels passed over his head before his father, the driver, could stop the heavy machine. The body was taken home and an undertaker summoned. Mrs, Thompson, the dead boys mother, died a few months ago. The father, two sisters and one brother survive. Bad Liquor Causes Death. Harry Greenfield, of Grand Rapids, Mich., died in a South Bend hotel of alcoholism. He drank bad whiskey procured from Dbootleggers and it poisoned him.
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDYANA
HIGHLY COMPLIMENTARY Banner Reader Writes to Express His High Appreciation of a Real Local ' Newspaper \ ' Will A. Cavin, writing from his office in Sturgis, Mich., under date of {Nov. 6th says: : Dear Mr. Harrison: . Enclosed please find check for $1.50 same being for iy subscription for the Ligonier Banner another year. Kindly send me receipt. o In justice to you I could not let this lopportunity go by without letting you |know how I feel about your paper. It is certainly the newiest sheet that ‘comes to my desk and it is always a great pleasure to read the great amount of news about the old home town. I do not see how you get’ S 0 muh real-news twice a week. With kindest regards and best wishes for yourself as well as your paper, 1 am, : XYours very truly, . ' Will A. Cavin. J. R. Dovel was at Millersbhurg Thursday visiting relatives. '
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OVERLAND 4 has been put through the " most thorough and severe test possible. 250,000 miles of mountain trails, desert sand, heat, cold, mud and dust, demonstrated the quality of every part of the car long before we began manufacturing. ~ Thisremarkable testshowed conclusively that Three-Point Cantilever Springs, exclusive with Overland, are the greatest improve= ment in riding comfort since the introduction of*pneumatic tires. o They protect the car from road shocks and prolong the life of every part. - ‘ " They enable the wheels to hold better to the road. They give \
Lincoln Highway Garage Company’
-Suit on Contract. Jacob Hougendoubler has broubht y(suit against Emilie Ennen, of Noble county, alleging breach of crop agreement. The case was originally. filed in Noble county and venued here. The plaintiff leased 80 acres of land and | -1 agreed to put out some wheat and oats '|and receive certain portions of the| crops. He alleges that on April 15, | 1918, before the lease expired he was | ordered off the place. He tried %o harIvest his crops but was not permitted |to do so. He claimes $214 for his share of the wheat and $345 for the | oats.—Columbia City Post. i] s s ‘ l j Fighting Over Chicken. { The C. 0. Taylor and Otto Longcor families at Columbia City have: re- | sorted to-the courts to determine the |ownership of a rooster. The bird is valued at $5O and when the legal battle promised is over it will be much |more expensive to the loser. | * Only Forty-Eight Votes. _ With but one. ticket in the field-re - publican-LaGrange cast but 48 votes} at the late town election. : :
100 inch Wheelbase
; ~ Established in 1871 i The old established and reliable firm of Rogers & § Wilson announce to the citizens of Ligonier amd § vicinity that they are now showing an excepuionally 4 fine line of ' Pianos, Player 'Pianos and Vicirolas On Very Liberal Terms OVER 4.000 RECORDS To select from inciuding the very latest are carried =1 | all times. When in Goshen you are cordisdly § invited to make this store your beadquarters - South Main Bt. Goshen, Indiana |
greater comfort under all road conditions. They do away almost entirely with side sway and rebound which twist and rack the - Diagonal attachmentof the Three-Point - Springs at both ends of a 130-inch Springbase gives the steadiness and smooth riding of the heavy car of long wheelbase. | ' Equipment is complete from Auto-Lite Starting and Lighting System to Marshall Divan Spring Upholstery. e Come in and see this car. Ask for Booklet. Overland 4 Touring, $345; Roa‘d—} ster, $845; Coupe, $1325; Sedan, $1375; Prices f. o. b. Toledo.
