Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 2A, Ligonier, Noble County, 16 March 1920 — Page 3

Farm Loans BEST RATES Terms Obtainable | ~ 1f yom are in need of funds, write for full infermation or ~ we shall be pleased | te have you call at our office. - straus Brothers Company. Ligonier Indiana

S H,,;,\lngnf::::rx:l and Harness, Rebes, Blankets, Whips Ete, Goodyear. Welt Shoee . Repairing, Automcbile Curtain Repairing. Men’s and Boys' Weoek Shoes sold. Ligenier, Indiang

Hanry Schlotterback Trustee Porry Township Office Day, Satur day " et Mier State Bank CHARAS V. IVKS AND SON - Dester in B dicg Srenc Verae i;o Gavie LIGOKIBR

GLASSES - i Mrs. L. P. Wineburg E R Kurtz Wreres eso e¢ Wt

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|, | ' | ‘ — . ~ See B. B Kirkland for reliable lite im L : R T The Banner and Ohkio Farmer one ear $3.50. .. 46btt The Banner and the Thrice-a-Week New York World, per year $3 76. For sale, destrable bdulldizg lot. Sidewalk and sewer. Rube Deeter. WANTED—Operators at the Ligoniler Telephone Co. 49atf

For sale, winter top for 1917 light Bix Buick car. : Rube Feferman. la2t For Bale, Reo ttmrht‘ ng car 1815 mo. del guaranteed in good condition. W. 8. Schioterback . -Ibtt Wanted A good gir! for house work. Call Mrs. Chester Joseph, phone 188, . . o o I " ‘ForBale—A few articles of furniture. also 6 room brick house and’ barber shop. Inquire.of Peter Regula Ib2t Wanted, marriéd man to work on farm by the year. E. D. Mcintire, Topeka, Ind. 1b 3t For sale, one 50-dozen egg size cycle incubator and a hand vacuum cleaner. H. H. Decker. ib2t - There will be be a stated convocattion in Nable county chapter No. 42, R. A. Masons Monday evening March 15_ 1920 at 7:30 p. m. all members please attend. By order of the H. P. ~Myron A. Kirkland, Sgc'y

For Sale, good brood sows, due to farrow soon. George Ramsby at Weir & Cowley's store. _ latt Wanted—Man to work on firm. Single, good pay phone 16A : C. L. Chamberlin . . 48btt Shirt factory wants girls and women to learn sewing. $8.60 to start with rapid advancement. - . ‘ Kahn Bros. Co. Two pure bred _Durdc-.lersey boar pigs sired by a grandson of Orion Cherry King. Price right. Howard C. Herald. . ol '- . & . - - 7 FOR SALE—B-room all modern house, two lots, barn and garage, shade and fruit trees. Dwight Wolf, 908 S. Martin street, phone 349. -50 bit See Mrs. Wes Cunningham for hemstitching and picot edge work. boLr FOR SALE—The U. B. Treash residence on Martin Street. For particulars inquire of Mrs. U. R. Treash. Blb4t

For sale, registered Duroc Jersey gilts and sows, immune from cholera. Bred for March and April farrow. Chester Rice, Wawaka, Ind. IlaBt FOR'SALE—Four Barred Plymouth Rock Cockerels. Also Barred Rock eggs for hatching. : : .. Bd Yonker : =~ it J ——— For Sale seven room house two lots, barn, fruit and shade trees and two acres of ground at a bargain. Inquire of Frank McDaniel at Postoffice : : S2att WANTED—An Agent in the vicinity of Ligonier for one of the best selling concrte stave silos on the market. Address all inquiries to the Fair Silo Construction company, North Liberty, ‘lndhum o s xe Eeate - WANTED—Hundreds of good office positions are open in South Bend for the business trained. Begin preparation now by the home study plan and later enter the resident South Benld Business College, South Bend, Ind. Write for catalog.: © - b2alm

Johnsten’s King of Fire, the greatest remedy in the medical world today of Ats Kind and merits and is guaranteed to cure burns, bee stings, tooth-ache, pneumonia, colds, :bronchitis, asthma, cuts, sprains, bruises, boils, carbuncles, dlood poison, pimples eczema and croup. This has got to give satisfaltion or money refunded. Just try & bottle. On sale at all Drug stores. e J. M..Johitiston, Goshen,lnd. ‘ : : b2ast

Wanted, farm hand. Inquire of Charles Wemple. Ib3t e e R I wish to announce that I will be candidate for Cotinty Surveyor of Nohie County, Indians, on the Republican ticket, subject to the will of the | ;%m from Purdue University, , in the School of Civil’ Engineer&nm in the Hugineering rps, U. S. army Oectober 1917. Discharged July 1919. Served ten months in Frahce as second Lieutenant with . Now ‘employed as. Deputy County Surveyor, Allen county Indiana: © ° ' NOAH B. HULL

e :Fon_Sale. _ Desirable building lot nieely located on West Third street,766 ft. frontag: 133 ft. deep faces south. Good grade mo Alling -necesary.. Cement aidewali !down and paid for. Good properties \ww This lot is offered for quick sale at $3OO. Easy terms will be granted if desired, vis, $6O, down, balance payable in monthly installments of $lO and interest, Inquire of Citizens Tasls | E s »‘»v,--,..m i I |

Arthur Fox, aged 62, died Friday at Kendallville. o T . Mrs. Graham Lyon was & guest of Goshen friends Fgiday. ' The Seligs vfli»‘dllfid\mwan eastern market Saturday, Mrs. A Larson spent Budu in Auburn with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lar. - [ S . ~ Mesdames S. C. Sackett and W. J Bolitho visited friends in South Bend R. B. Miller of Sotth Bend and R. H. Miller of Elkhart came home to spend Sunday with their parents. .~ George Bryan ’Vund Wiliam Deusler _were in Detroit this week and brought home a Ford sedan and a touring car. Easter falls on April 0 . The windows in the stores are beginning to show gmpum_, of seasonable goods. Open Ford cars advanced 850! and closed ones $75 in price recently. Henry needed a little extra change no doubt. : '

Glen E. Thrapp of Avilla has filed his declaration of candidacy for prosecuting attorney for the Noble-Whitiey court circuit. - = Seagley Brothers had many visitors from the farms at their warerooms Sat urday afternoon in reponse to their advertisement. . 7 I P A . David Fiandt of near Rome City who spent the winter in Texas stopped on his way home and visited Miss Ruth Wolf in this city. - P R. ©O. Rench located at Ogden Island, Wawasee, spent Sunday with his parents her Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Rench and returned Monday. - e i Goshen is considering plans for a sanitary or trunk line sewer to cost $150,000. It - would be taxed against all the property in the city. - - Joe Workman, the Elkhart county tax ferret, is out of a job. The present board of county commissioners refused to renew his conmtract. - Gov. Edwards of New Jersey, refusedto go into a struggle for the presidential delegates in Nebraska, the home state of W.J. Bryan, o Twenty-five years ago according to the Nesw-Times wheat sold at Goshen at 53 cents a busrel. Farm lands were worth from $5O to $76 an acre. . The Kings Daughters will hold a bake-sale in the Dunning Block rfext Friday. In the evening the members will be entertained at the F. P. Wood home by Mrs. Dukes.

H. E. Bause, superintendent of the Trittipoo school, is still confined to his home by illness and Mrs. Robert Shobe is filling his position until he becomes able to resume it. ; The Social Hour was entertained Friday evning at the-home of Mrs. Lester Lepird. The assisting hostesses were Mesdames Maurice Bruhaer, Roy Ferguson and W. J. Bolitho. The states of Delaware and®Washing ton vote on the woman suffrage amendment March 22 an dif they ratify the thing is done and the women may vote at the November election. Jacob Hofer is placing contracts for new buildings on the Straus farms. Lumber is high and carpenters scarce and the building program will be restricted to the most urgent needs. The republican papers of Indiana are donating-a lot. of valuable space to further the presidential aspirations of Gen. Wood or some one is spending a lot of money for advertising.

|© . . Ligonier Markest i — L GRAIN (Corrected by Loyom & Greenleaf) 1 (Buying Prices.) NO. L. wheet . oY 400 R WHORE oo i imoramiveinesins § S iOats- e e ORI ‘Rye b set 30 ‘ : PRODUCE. { (Buying Prices) . EE‘" AR R 45 BRI o - BB Potatoes, per bushel ..........cceeeeeee. 3.00 Cabbage per B ....uveiircecae 09 Carrots, per bushel ........ccnccceee 1.50 Parsnips, per I .......veermcsnse 04 : POULTRY. (Buying Prices)

Chickens per pound e 26e Ducks per Pound .......ccociiimmccins 236 Geese per pound ......cocniiieenne 333 Turkeys per pound ... 338 " SEEDS & WOOL. (Buying Prices.) Corrected by N. Wertheimer & Sons. Clover seed per bu ........ $37.50-$29.50 |Alsike per bu . ... $36.00-$29.00 Timothy per bu ceseaperersesssssessssasasins $6.50 Wool medium per B ..ceiccccvcscens 68 | Wool Fine per I ... &8 to .72 Wool Rejects & Cotted per 1d.... 40-45 1 EATS |- - - (Buying Prices) i | Photographs at-Hieher Studle.

" THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

. . : < Novelty in Spring Blouses L: . : . ‘ By | o pragges- . by TG ST ST | ) | GSERN | L ik R g : ~ e B T : Fo« . . o FNR |57 ¢ oA W B ffl‘% R 2 1 § % * 3 2 I T 4 80l 15 L B Gl L\ A ! ¢ i 8 s ’cl’ : . N -l ——— S FE .\ S LAI & eRORN Y MR E O e G : . ‘_l 4\.3'”- o o e %\F fl; e s .' P . ’ : - Lal? |. . % P .. - s 4 " ¥ Yo k- : ,;:: . o .

N BLOUSES and smocks, a 8 in I'everythipg else that has been presented so far for spring, variety is a most noteworthy fearure of the displays; varmiety in styles, in materials, In design. It is probably due to the growing demand for “exclusive” styles on the part of many people who have grown exacting within the last year or two. They appear to be willing to pay long prices for “something different.” Blouse and smock designers, therefore, are following the lead of the miliiners and excursioning

into all sorts of by-paths that lead a little way off the main traveled road. But there is room for some generalizIng in summing up the styles. Blouses and smocks interest women much earller than suits and coats for spring. Many of the cholcest ones are made at home, and even when this is not the case, the assembling of blouses for spring and summer wear begins early and takes time. . - ‘ Short peplum styles and short sleeves appear over. the horizem Xor summer wear. There dare plenty o Russian blouse models and plenty of long sleeves—the latter greatly varied in design; there are many overblouse models, there are collarless and collared models—the former in the ma-

“Superb” Describes This Gown

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' ERE is a dinner gown which inH vites you to imagine it in com- - binations of black satin and black .chantilly lace, with either king's blue or jade greem ribbon—wide and of heavy quality. The bodice is one of those that is cut very low in the back, a style that .is vanishing but beautiful—that is when backs are beautiful. Perhaps it is because beautiful backs are rather rare that the newer evening gowns do not follow this fashion. To Support so abbreviated a bodice narrow strips of black velvet are used, and they serve a double purpose, for nothing will bring out the white of lovely shoulders more surely than black velvet. =

The satin skirt is draped beautifully and the artist in gowns delights in this particular feat of so draping black satin that we cannot forget it. It is natural to long to possess such a plece of artistry. Taking advantage of the liking for bouffant effects at the hips and back, big choux ot,theisutin are posed just below the waistline. One of them ends in a length of satin

Jority. There are tallored and there are unirimmed. types, but taken altogether it may be ynid that blouses and sinocks were neJer more beautiful than they are today, : _ . A bandsome smock of georgette crepe with . cipe collar Is designed in a way to set off very prettily the abundant embroidery in silk floss that adorns™ it. The collar, sleeve and skirt of the smock are encircled with this work, which usually is done in colors, one like that In the ¢repe and one contrasting. In _t»hev’smm'k pic tured -the sleeves are three-quar ters length—a safe cholce, since it is possible to shorten them for midsummer, and a novel feature appears in the narrow velvet ribbon threaded through eyelets in the embroidery. .~ For coufining the smock at the waist line the cholce lies between nan row girdies of the same materiul as the garment or silk cord and tassels like that -shown in the plcture, which seems an appropriate finish for @ smock. so richly embrotdered. ' s B

that trails some Inches on the floor, having for its companion the chou aad end ‘of wide moire ribbon which bears it company to the last. Either king’s blue or jade green make the best choice of color for this ribbon; both are beautiful with black, and fashionable. Very wide chantilly serves to veil the shoulders and to add further graceful drapery to the design, falling nearly to the battom of the skirt at one Side.. : o A wide-brimmed, droopy velvet hat, faced with crepe matches this superb gown in character, with sash and roses made of ribbon as a trimming. Plain black silk stockings and satin slippers support the rest of the costume in exactly the right way, so that altogether this is an ensemble to make any woman cast “one longing, ‘lingering look behing? when it passes by her.

You Ha!' © ‘e Your Shoes - Why Dot Retread Your Tires? Just as Practical Ford sizes $6.00 and $B.OO. Others .- according tosize, - - ALL WORK ABSOLUTF;.Y GUARANTEED o Me}fl ' Ligonier Repair Co.

; ;..T e ‘—_:T‘ “:—T‘.VT_—::...L:‘. e ———— “1’ | & - | 5 e ] 1,3& , A ‘ ’ 1 \ . fl b go, : I -' '~/ S I ( _, b i 1 o ’ : il fors A\ i\\ " . wbe | A Visit from Friends) ; | ’ A Visit from Friends)| ! Is Ahvays a Delightful Occasion, Here are two friends who il wish to call upon you regularly throughout the vear.. You | ll know them well—}.our Own Home Newspaper and Your Oun i I Home Farm Paper, - % Since both are working for the same ends as yourself—to M I promote the best interests of your home and- community life | il and to help you in your chosen work—You will be interested [f ,in the following special offer: : : ; gfi ed - f. J THE OHIO FARMER, One Year | ; e s ' | .Speclal Price to You| ;g Only $2.50, | E o i Their visits will be welcomed by every member of- your hame. | Il THE BANNER, o LIGONIER, IND. fi

Our Advertising Service N Means More Sales for You, Mr. Business Man When you begin advertising in this paper you start on the road to more business. There is no better or cheaper meWe can also provide Artistic Printing - of every description. ‘

%.:. : . ; Things are Settling Down and 5 % ® Prospects are Mighty Good We dre ready to help you. Tell us éarly what repairs you will need for your old implements whose serviceability can be renewed. Investigate our stock of high-quality new implements. Drop in any day and find out how well prepared we are to help make 1920 a good year for you. A new year, a new spirit and mighty good times ahead for the aggressive optimists! : | That’s the way-we look at it as young 1920 starts his career. <t 1 A few week ago things didn’t look so promising. Most of those who weren’t striking were thinking up pet remedies 1 forwhat ailed the world. There was too much scheming, too little doing, too much unrest. : : ‘ But now the unrest and the quack enconomic remedies are vanishing. The world is going to work. There is going to ber eal production in all lines where shortages exist. And that is all the world needs. It means better times for all of The prospect is especially improved for farm erop prices There is a growing stability in the market. The law ot.ur{» ; ply and demand is again beginning to prevgil. And a world at work will bring a healthy demand for a big supply of all food products. , , . : Get ready for another prosperous year on the farm. Weir & Cowley IRRQ4 LIGONIER,INDIANA 31Q1@

Zimmerman Block, Ligoaier OFFICEJHOURS: ~ 9:00 to 12 xnmmom:.m;ro ' . Telephone Res. 423 ‘ Auctioneer Will Amwer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q Ligonier Indiana