Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 23A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 August 1920 — Page 4

Last Week we made anl Extraordinary Offer on 1 .. Electric -~ ‘Washing ‘Machines You can yet avail ‘yourself of this offer. A small down payment and balance in weekly payments, of no more than you would pay for some one to do the work. See us for everything electrical. A.B. Weaver Phone 134 j

| How about.your letterheads, billheads, statements, enve- . lopes, cards, etc. Don’t 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 ~ worth do- ; ing isworth ” \ 7P " / ; ] e e Prut O . Let us have that order N-O-W while we have the time to do Printing as it should be J::' , CHARI&} V. INKS AND SdN ; - Dealér in . 'Moauments, Vaults, Tombstones, Building Stone ornsr Fifth and Cavin LIGONTER W. H. WIGTON e Attorney-atdaw Ofice in Zimmernran Block . FIGON(EB. IND. - Harry Schlotterback Trustee Perry Township Office Day, Saturday at Mier State Bank Dr. C. D.Lane >Zlmmermnn Block, Ligonier FFI CE HOURS: , 9:00 te 12 1:00 tos»ogm::oolt;:zoo Telephone ge.., 27 m ~ Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere - Phone 16000 Q Ligonier Indiana

R R ERRERERERREER N Come In and seeusthe | are in need of | good printing | specal '+ —h thekind /" G\fq” f: ‘ ’43{{4) | Awa ] e all | N

N T ———— - S ——— - : - LOGAL HAPPENINGS | ~ Michael Nicholi, of near Syracuse, is dying o!m his parents in LaPorte. . ' Mr. and Mrs. Li. l&mmm from a visit in Rome City. : Miss Pauline Kiser is in Elkhart spending 4 week with friends. : Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Wood will spend most of the week u'wm Rooms for rent, nicely furtiished at Balley Hotel. C. H. McClish. 23atf ‘Mrs. Luther Scilver, of Mishawaka, was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Vannette, & < §

Mr. and Mrs. Mel Rodgers drove over to Mishawaka Sunday and visited friends. , o George B. Slate, of Goshen was over and spent Sunday with his family at Diamond lake. : T ‘Mrs. Frank Kogin, of Hudson is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. McClish at Hotel Bailey. . The Will Casey and Thomas Wigner families motored to Wawaseé Sunday and ex_i)oyed the day. - M}. 'and Mrs. Frank Cummln(i. ol Elkhart, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Cummings. * . Mr. and Mrs. Will Ramsby of Goshen were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Ramsby of Ligonier. . Mr. and Mrs. Milton Ury, of Bloomdale, Ohio, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Ullery at Diamond lake. : See “Lombardi Ltd” at Crystal Thursday and Friday and enjoy a picture that is absolytely different. ~ Miss Helen Harris of Elkhart Is a guest of her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. George Ecker out on the farm: Otis Nusbaum came from Detroit and joined his family here and will remain . on his vacation until Labos S ; o

Mrs. I. Zimmerman was called to Ligonier from Kendallville by the serious illness of her brother -George Bradley. ’ ; ' Dr. Lane took Mrs. Daniel Musser to a Fort Wayne hospital Monday The lady will be operated- on for goitre Thursday. : o Daniel Dull, formerly of near Ligonier is lying very low at his home in Kendallville. -He has been engaged in_the dray business. ‘ ; —_-T'“ Headquarters for Indiana veterans at the national encampment of the G. A. R. in Indianapolis Sept. 19 to %5 will be at Hotel Lincoln. ' An infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith was hyried Saturday, Rev Thompson officiating. The remains were laid in Oak Park cemetery. If you need a new roof or an old one repaired, with best of material and workmen see S. C. Sackett. ‘ 23 a 4t Elkhart Roofing Co.

Fred Byers, of Kewanna, a former service man, was a week end guest of Mr. .mg}m. Henry Hire. Miss Mary Ann Tulley of Goshen was also a guest at the Hire home. s ‘Miss Mildred Davis will accompany Miss Marian Lombard home to Detroit Wednesday. Miss Lombard has been visiting in Topeka and Ligonier for about ten days. Master Jack Draper went to South Bend Saturday to attend the circus. He will spend a couple of weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Graham, his uncle and aunt. : Mr. and Mrs. Ed Belts, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Decker and Mrs. W. C. B Harrison and son George Robert were among the Barnum show visitors to South Bend Saturday Roy Sargent of near Syracuse has gone to the southern part of the state to visit his army comrades. Mr. Sargent resides near Syracuse and saw active service in France. :

The Ligonier school board did not reorganize at the last meeting of the old board Thursday night on account of the absence of Jay Wiley, the new member; who was away on his vacation. : Elmer Sapp, of Princeton, -111., and his daughter Mrs. Van Aiken, of Coldwater Mich., drove over from Klinger Lake Saturday for a visit with Miss Estelle Gerber. Miss Gerber accompanied them on their return to tha lake from which place she returned to Chicago on Monday. - S -——“ ' A total of 126,700 yellow perch, large mouth black bass and blue gills were planted in 65 streams and lakes in 22 counties, chiefly in the northern part of the state, during July from the Lake Wawasee. Plantings of baby fish in Hoosier’ waters so far this year are double that of any previous year, and every indication points to the department being able to make its sloga of

~ Mrs. Jacob Hull was a Goshen visifriends a vizit Monday. - Ray Woodruff, after a week at home ;m gone to Erfe, P&. on business. t Miss Gladys Baker is spending a ‘week’s vacation at Nigara Falls. | i’ Mrs. Leo Kruger, of Chicago is a ;nouo!nl‘heohu_dmr relatives. ltad Mrs. Sam s&u. spent Sunday with their son Leonard at Culver. " The 1920 census shows Indiana has 30 cities of more than 10,000 populaMrs. W. J. Fisher was here Friday from Kendallville to attend the Jeanneret funeral. r

‘Now that sweet corn has reached the market at 25 cents the dozen ears no one will go hungry. ; Chautauqua season tickets will remain at $2. This plan was decided upon at a meeting Monday uight. : - Miss Halle Goshorn leaves Wednesday for New York state where she will spend her vacation visiting relatives. ~ Headlines in ne;rly all the papers announce potato prices dropping. Let’em drop to §1 the bushel. o ~ John Sparrdw has gome to Mexico, New York to spend three month with his daughter Mrs. R. C. Dick. S

Mr. and Mrs. Graham Lyon, and Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Schutt motored to Toledo Saturday afternoon and returned Monday. : - : Every democrat in Perry township should atend the organization meeting in city hall tomorrow (Wednesday) night. i ' _Mr. and Mrs J. H. Golder anl granddaughter Alice Vance leave Wednesday for an extendeed visit in Norther Montana. \ ‘ C. C. Hull, of Dayton, Ohio, is here to spend a week with his aged father Henry Hull and to visit otter relatives, : R Louis Wolf will build seven miles of roads in Whitley éounty where he has secured highway improvement contracts. o : J. Frank Snyder an old newspaper man, is dead at his home in LaGrange. He founded the LaGrange Democrat and was a prominent citizep. The Kahn Shirt factory in Goshen is exeptced to open in about a week. It is a branch of the Ligonier factory which is doing a great business. Lyon & Greenleaf are paying $2.30 for No. 1 wheat. The price is still sufficiently high to yield the grower a profit, although a small one. ; ‘Mrs. H. Billings who had been spending several months with the MeDaniel families in Ligonier, leaves tonight for her home in Washington D. C. S £ Arthur Kelley and Louis Kerr heard the League of Nations debate between Senator Hitchock and Jackson Morris at Winona Monday night. The auditorium was crowded. b

Mesdames Jacob Heck and George Emmett, of Detroit, Mich., Mrs. Hannah M. Pence, of South Bend and Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hite of Mishawaka, met at the home of their sister Mrs. William Arndt in Goshen' the other day and enjoyed a reunion dimmer of the family circle. Most of the party are former Ligonier residents. Baptist Yearly Assoclation The Noble-LaGrange yearly association will hold its next meeting with the Topeka church Aug.l7, 7:30 to 18, 7:30. ; The church is making every effort to make the meeting a complete success. Will all the other churches make equally as great effort, by being present in large delegations form the first to the last of the sessions. ‘ It is desirable that letters and complete reports be in the hands of the clerk before, or at the beginning of the first session. e Thos. J. Mawhorter, Clark% John H. McCloskey will offer at public auction at his farm 4 miles east of Ligonier,-2 miles west of Wunh] on Blased Trail,'6 miles northeast of Topeka. Sale to begin-at one o'clock sharp on Wednesday Aug. 18. . The following personal property toSpan Black full blooded Normans, coming three years old. 18 Head of Cattle—Two red cows giving milk; cow fresh in April, gne dry cow, 2 2 year old heifers pasture bred; 3 yearling heifers, 5 steers. -

15 Head of Shegep—B good breeding ewes, 7 gpod lambs. : 9 Head of Hogs—l brood sow due to farrow in September, 8 spring pigs. Farming Tools—McCormick binder 6-ft. cut, good as new, .McCormick Mower 5-ft. cut,Keystone Hay loader, good as new, Keystone side: delivery rrake new, new Hoosier Fertilizer Disc. Drill 12disc), Bully Boy riding corn Plow, Rock Island corn planter, John plow, spring tooth harrow, Disc harrow, Keasey cart, set douegle ‘breeching work harness, practically new, J. H. McCloskey - E. R. Kurtz, Auctjoneer =

| PASSABLE IDEAS #9F ‘The politician may be & wirepuller, but he should be careful not to get bold of a live wire, : If you are going to cast your bread upon the waters it's just as well to wish It many bhappy returns. the ball team that Is at the foot may induige in a double-header. In bullding casties in the alr we may not be able to rise to them, but wmnmwm/m Strangely enough, some people get hotter as a result of cool treatment thntbeydon:umflmg A woman !s Inclined to feel that she has Jost her grip when she can no longer twist a man around her littie finger. _

“If my husband should ledve me, I'd die,” exclaimed the blond. “If mine should leave me, I'd bleach™ replied “Seeing Is belleving.” quoted the Wise Guy. “So, after all, it is pérhaps just as well that we can't see ourselves as others see us” added the Simple Mug. : Tommy—*Pop, what is the difference between theory and practice?” Tommy's pop—*“The difference between theory and practice, my son, s exemplified by the advice we give and the advice we accept.” {} BELIEFS ABOUT BIRDS There is an endless mofint_of lore woven around birds. . Feed strange pigeons unfi they will bring you true friefids. . The coming of a strange dove In your window is the sign of coming sad intelligence. ~ ‘The pigeon is supposed to look ivell to its own stomach; hence pigeontoed people are said to be stingy.

In India a young woman whose husband is away reads a sign he will soon return if she sees a pair of doves. : 3 In India pigeons are thought to bring good luck. They are carefully reared in houses, which they are belteved to keep from decay. - : If you hear the first note of a dove in spring while you are lying down, you will have ill health for a year; if you are walking, good health; if sitting, just fair. : , ~ The appearance of a white dove at the window means In some countries a recovery, while in others it is interpreted to mean an angel has come to take away a soul. G

UNITED STATES PRODUCES 00 per cent of the world's ol 75 per cent of the world's corn. © : qucent_ottl:wwld':lad. | szet«ntotth-;wdfld'tefil. : 'a)percdto!t;wofld'lzom, 50 per cent of the world's zine. ‘25 per cent of ; world's wheat. 40 per cent of the world's silver. 'wpermtct‘t;wld’ledpp&. . _oo per cent ot/tb-: world’s aluminum. 85 per cent of ;‘iofld‘l_ automobiles. w‘pcmta;m«gmnud “Itmmw-;ntdmvuw: copper and operates 40 per cent of the railroads. = :

MUSINGS | _ ~ What & great life it would be if we could appreciate today the way we do our yesterdays. Our idea of an effeminate man is one who can remember how the ladies at the party were One of the unfortunate things about life is there are so/ few ways to be wise and so many ways to be foolish. . Viewing the result of amateur whisky makers we can't help reJoicing over the fact that so far there are no amateur dynamite makers. -

A PHILOSOPHER SAYS— A good many afflictions can be d.b regarded, though not a toodnehe. The woman who does washing by the day is willing to hang out almost anywhere. : . : Noah did a good thing for the world when he refused to take aboard -any animals larger than the elepbant. L ——— \ Kodak finishing Wirher Qimot. | b 7 % “ e : : S'ale == loy =i

~ Judge Meyer spent Sunday in Go--52 iy S ! & o —— at Winona Sunday. : | in the big circus at South Bend SaturMr. and Mrs. Robert Ritter and children are home from a visit in Deca- -. e | Thurlow White returned to Elkhart after visiting a week with relatives Miss Madeline Cohn has gone to Chicago to spend a few days with relatives. ~ | AN ' 5 g 2R 2 ~ Miss Pauline Friend, of Chicago was 4 guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Kimmell »for a week. - Mr. and Mrs. Willard Shell motored to Plymouth and spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Perry Shell. Miss Blanch Freeland, of Cleveland, s spending her vacatiog with her ‘mother liere Mrs. Ed Jackson. ' ; Mrs. Vernon Hursey and children, ‘who had spent a month visiting friends 'her@. have returned to Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Henryand daughter Mrs. C. E. Bishop and Hal Green motored to Niles, Mich., Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Mehony and children of Eikhart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritter. | Miss Pearl Bordner will spend her vacation of two weeks visiting her sister Mrs. Allen in_ Battle Creck. Mich. , . P Mr. and Mrs. Frank McDaniel . accompanied by Burl and Miss Louice Inks motored to Fort Wayne and spent Sunday. B Siimiep———_ . ~ Mrs. Glen Stayton and babe of Mishawaka who lLiad = been visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. James Holm for week have retu-red home. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pierson, of Michigan City and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Purcell, of Chicago motored here and ‘visited Mr. and Mrs. Louis Piercon. ‘Mrs. Peter Regula, who was operated on for appendicitis in an Elkhart hospital last weck, continues to -improve and will be home in a few days, Mrs. Emma Bailey of Ligonier and nieces, Misses Golda and Neida Baker of Chicago were visitors here this morning enroute to Rome City to spend the day.--Kendallville News Sun Thursday. ; .

- DonGe BROTHERS 1 Its cost of service varies but | ' little in a wide variety of uses. _ ‘ , In other words, its inherent ' ‘ - sturdiness enables it to stand ’ - up equally well in almost any ‘ | kind of hauling. _‘ _ | ~ Ligonier Auto Sales ‘ o Lincoln Highway Garage 5 . . ' : . ” : o U“,‘}."\\{‘.’ ¥ / n ":’. / = .._- B ——— -[—"\ :“g‘h 1 : : : ot :.-n S o YB~ ” ) M‘;,g’ - A—N" 1 |’¢;\ ////Q o e — PR G R O\ Y ;' G\‘ ‘,') % {":.;) » - ;"f'i - ;"?j\ *_ : - : ' % iAR R Nl e "(":-“'. o ‘ \ :”-,,.’MM vrvflfi.;t?; j“; ‘.;—‘l‘ s T "x«' eo ‘, ;,‘.v;.__, ee al YS e D e g%‘*‘ggfiég"mmhmfifamfiMmimr%f‘figfig%%?fiimifi

MORE GOOD THAN ~ TRIP TO SPRINGS Had m: Bad He CouM ~ Not Stand. On His Feet For Sev. ‘; “ “eral Months .

- "Yes, sir 1 can testify to Tanlac rheumatism,” said Willlam C. Hafy, 312 Garden street. Toledo, Ohio, a well knownemployee of the Willys-Over-land Automobila Company, “for the medicine set me right more than two years ago and [am still feeling fine. “My trouble started about ten years' ago with loss of appetite. Soon after this I commenced to suffer from indigestion and sour stomach and wasn't long until inflamatory rheumatism got my feet and legs. For months 1 was unable to stand on my feet and was in intense pain most of the time. My feet and legs would swell up to twice their normal size and if a red hot iroa had been run into my flesh 1 don't think it could have huft worse. Now and then I felt a little better, but the trouble would soon come back ‘worse than ever, and something more than two years ago I got in such a bad fix that | was advised to try Hot Springs. [ “After . taking the treatment - there six months | seemed to be considerab-. ly improved, but a few months luteri the old trouble started up again and it was at this time that a friend of minc suggested Tanlac. The first two bottles brought about such good results. giving me a fine appetite and making me feel so' much better, that | bought more and just kept taking it and improving. Well, after finishing my ninth bottie 1 felt perfectly sound and ‘well and had the surprise of my life when 1 got on the scales and found 1 had actually picked up forty pounds in weight, and the best of it is | have held my wonderful increase in weight and strength and have felt fine to this day. I have the best reasons in the world for praising Tanlsc and | don’t hestitate to recommend it, for it set me right when everything else falled. ' 1 am enjoying better health than 1 have in fifteen years and can hold my own with the best of them. Tanlac built me up until I neither Took i nor feel like thes ame man” =

- Tanlac is sold in Ligonier by-S. J. Williams and by the leading druggist in every town, . ady. . Miss Leah Summers has gone on & week's visit with frineds in Churubusco and Fort Wayne. ' i . Mr. and rMs. Reuben Huff of Elkhart were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Huff. = Mrs. George Longenecker who has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank McDaniel after visiting in Topeka will returne to Chicago the latter part of the week. ; i

= y through the columns : of this newspaper? With = every issue it carries its ES message into the homes of = all the best people of this &= community. Don't blame = z Peod:f for flocking to &= tor. [ell them what you & havew sefln:hm if your = . prices are you can E ngf “‘~,§{‘ TR ’:'a; E‘l‘;l | =

E. R. Kurtz ~ Auctioneer Dates can be made at Weaver's Hardware Store Ligonier, Phone 134, or call my residence, phone No. 65. ; Aécutrtly and Scientifically Fitted. Broken lenses . replaced. Mrs. L. P. Wineburg

Our Advertising Service - Means More Sales for 1 You, Mr. Business Man in this paper you start on the road to more business. There is no better or cheaper medium for reaching the buyers of this community. ~ Wecanalsoprovide Artistic Printing of every description.