Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 24B, Ligonier, Noble County, 20 August 1920 — Page 3
GOO(][-.'----_.QQ-= ]P’ « g "W ' » rinting | Tsswssweae : : rlm’ St of pelatiod s m dividends is the ‘ Pile you ih;lfl bave. M' -n'u.«hwom(hsooe. The quality of your g business hd“y: judged by : f.mm . = lmpression of cheapness that s b e ] )- e | - . E hh.m thou;‘:yon waot - : & en jsexpensive handbill or & : W . JMtterhead in colors, if you 3 » ‘ordeg it from us you will be s :, sure of getting good work. e # We:imve dn'«‘;uipmt and . w the know how 'm.um —a B+ =+ ge e ' P e . h?-d";"pdnm that ’ ‘ -.i..-.tnnp_'a ysz
Pianos, Player Pianos ~ and -Victrolas . - " If you are cofitemhlcting purchasing anythifig’ in the musical goods, you should have one of our several representatives call og you and explain the easy terms by which you may purchase reliable instrument. 4 : ~ Ligonier music lovers should not. over look the opportunity of having our Record man Mr. Brown call with his large assortment of Victor Records. South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana
S lativ i Super e Tire The whole question of a super-tire is a matter of principles. For thgre is nothing exclusive in the industry. No patents, - no secret formulas prevent a conscientious maker from building the best. : . _But cost and competition modify ideals. The Brunswick idea is to pay perfection’s price and get it. That has been the Brunswick policy since 1845. And it accounts for the growing preference for Brunswick Tires. Motorists expect the utmost from a tire bearing the name of Brunswick—and get it. : i You, too, will be convinced by your first Brunswick, that here is an extraordinary tire, and that more money cannot buy a better.. : ~ Better tires of their type are impossible —or better tubes. That we guarantee. : - s Try ONE Brunswick—learn how it excels. THE BRUNSWICK.-BALKE-COLLENDER CO. Indianapolis Headquarters: 111 South Pennsvivania Ave. L " ’ft“'“sfl‘%‘f;;i PO - ! 4 “x\“ifl‘ 1 i"',’":r E‘ =) - fl' SN : ' I\ - Wil e »«_\:?_ EANENN W . i QS 25D W DA I SN ARNSE BN W : NS oy B =WA RN ENS D\ =0 7 NS . SN A\ ' =SS =0 )=\ T 2 &5 3 S tee sv\ @ . — f- g ;_‘). ‘3 < Ry 2 '~f o b?\ A RCWITATEY ) = sfi S - . - z."' = S 5 ISR NN e = sl St 7\ i i NN NSRS e N W bNN ‘j,.;\\‘x\\‘s‘vvfi:mié"mMlg?flfxfi;i‘??r"mfirfiifii;flfi#y DR LT g‘ R g ST T Dty = ¥ 3 ORS¢ e st gt KR ST : e Xy A S ,:3.}‘:",l"‘ I RiRS : NS %, B e e ooy TPy AN N 3T vy T \ \ ,\\\\\\\\‘\\\‘\\‘\::‘\\‘:\\. \ ///.‘,j//“.‘,‘u;i;l, T ~\s\~\~.v\\‘-u»‘\l‘-‘\.\,‘—: )m‘""l‘"‘\‘\‘\‘“\\:\\‘\}‘\ ! | T g T T 1111 L R ‘ : e i MLy : : L : ] ‘ S .‘ : e “l’ w P 5 i Ll e G e )X A N
“Tom Green returned Tuesday from an extendéd business trip through MJinois. . : E e Irvin Kauffman is in Coldwater, Michigan, on-a two weeks' business C. 0. Winters, of St. Louis, called on his old friend M. A. Cotherman of the Banner Thursday. : e . James A.- Taylor this week attended his regimental reunion, the 68th Onio, at Wauseorr. ; o Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Rhoades and daughter Hazel of South Bend, were guests this week of Mr and Mrs. Maurice Hess. - g Cecil Hutchison was held up’ by footpads near his home in Goshen Tuesday night and robbed of §3O at \@e ppim gt 4 gun. .e % - Mr. and Mrs: Burley Miller, o!’%umj Bend, came Tuesday for a_ visit wnh{ her parents Mr. and - Mrs. A_lber?.l Bordner. Mr. Miller returned hom= but Mrs. Miller wiil- remain scveiazi days. ‘ . - G WG. Engle of the United Press Association located at Loraine, Ohio, arrived Monday on a visit with -his parents Mr. and Mrs. Werten Engle. Mrs. Engle had been here several days before joined by her husband.
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONTER, INDIANA
i Have your hemstitiching and picot edging done at the Sheets stpre. 24btf Have your hemstitiching and picot edging done at the Sheets store. 24btt ~ John Willard, 5. of Smti and Phoebe Vohris, 72 of Goshen are newly weds. - 5 Kendallville - expects to expend abeut®loo,ooo in improvements on her water and light plant. W i *Tom Jeanneret has beem on his vacation this week and has spent most of his time at Wawasee. : i i e e — £ ~ Two youths dressed in soldier uniforms passed forged checks for m!if amounts in Kendallville. Vol 1 Mrs. Petér Regula is home from an? Eikhart hospital where she was operzited_ on for q;_mdmiwn..' 1 Mr. and Mrs. Henry Israel, little son and Mrs. Lena Jacobs motored to Winona to hear Billy Sunday. i . Miss Grace Spurgeon, student at Co-‘ lumbia. uniersity, New York is visiting at her home near Wawaka. 1 Mrs. Morton Long and litite dankh-j ter who had been visiting the Gmelmai family in Kendallville are home.
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Weir and son Johin.drove over to Albion and joined the Corbin Bidwell family at dinner. Mrs. Thomas Cass is in an Elkhart hospital recovering from a surgical operation. She was in care of Dr. Black. — i T Dr. J. R. King has mysteriously disappeared from Corunna and there is much speculation as to the cause. ‘The doctor was prominent. . Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hays of Elkhart, are taking a week's outing at the John Green cottage, Diamond laße. Mrs. Hays was formerly Miss Mary Green. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller spent the week at their Rome City cottage. They had as their guests their son Terry! and a young lady from South Bend. . - " Clarence Kinney, of Buffalo, New York joined Mrs. Kinney here this week at the home of her mother Mrs. Guffey and called on his old time friends. L e _ ~ Rev. Charles L. Deßow, formerly pastor of the Ligonier M. E. church, will preach at the Chautauqua tent Sunday morning at 10:45. All his old friends will be pleaséd to hear him. The Fisher family reunion will be held at the home of Officer and Mrs. Cal Fisher in this city tomorrow. Invitations were. issued to 125 members. A big dinner will be a pleasing feature. Rayménd Howard, of St. Louis Valley, Colorado, was a guest severa' days this week of Mr. and Mrs. James A. Taylor. The young man was on his way ta his old home in Napoleon, Ohio. - - =<‘ - £ : In the reorganization of the school board Jay Wiley, the new membep succeeds Dean Cochram as treasurer. Mrs. Lena Stansbury continues as president and W. J. Bolitho as secretary. '
Miss Magdaline Green is rapidly improving in a South Bend hospital but her mother Mrs. Fred H. Green is not doing so well. Mrs. Green has been in the institution - for treatment several weeks. v : The incomplete censes returns indicate that Kendallville has a population of over 5,00 whilé all the other towns in the county lost. Kendallvilg must have drawn people to her by her seductive ways. : ————g—, - "Miss Wilena Wigton ‘a member of the graduating class. of the Ligonier High school, will attend DePauw university the coming winter. Miss Lois Tucker of Cromwell will be her roommate. Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Finnigan, of Hillsdale, and son Clarence and wife of Detroit, have been guests at "30‘ H.C. Ryan home. The whole y lmade a motor trip to Constantine, Mich., and to Elkhart. Word has been receied by his parents at Kendallville that Carl C. Sher‘wood was married August 11 to Miss Doris Cresswell, an English girl at Bombay, India. Tke young man is a graduate of the Kea-dallville schools; and Purdue university. , 0 e e e 1 ‘Mr..and Mrs.. Ellsworth, of Laning, Mich.,, who had been visiting Mrs. Ellworth’s parents Mr. and Mrs. W. A. King, left Tuesday morning for a trip through the southwest with Los Angles, Colifornia, as their objective point. SR e i S e et e : 3 _Mr. and'Mrs. Albert Bordner were in South Bend to see their new grandson Horace Hartman, Jr., Granpa says the lad is husky -and gives promise of becoming a second Jess Willard. Mrs. Hartman and babe are at the -home of Mr. and Mrs. Burley Miller. Drydén to Arthur J. Mc Gainty at English in the Ligonier schools. Mr. S e w‘fé«“{fi%fi Sl D N e e
BL%E mfi'muflgm AR e 5 Secretary of Better Business Byresl Calis Goodrich Measure “Monstrosity™ and Says it is idea! . for Stock Salesmen, W AFFORDS PUBLIC NO PROTECTION Indianapolis, Ind —The blue shy. law passed by the recent special ses sion of the legislature is termed a “monstrosity” and one that will suit “the salesman of guestionable securi ties” by G. F. Olwin, secretary-mana-ger of the Indlanapolis Better Business Bareau in a report made to his organization. The passage of such a law was“urged by Governor Goodrich in his message to the assembly and the administration forces threw their weight behind the measure. . . When persons really interested in obtaining & law that would protect the public from “questionable securities” learned that it, like the curative tax measure, was full of jokers, they recalled that the governor himseif has been interested from time to time in the promotion of stock enterprises through his Winchester bank. ideal for Stock Salesmen.
“In the opinion of the bureau manager,” Mr. Olwin's report says, “this is not such a blue sky law as the people of Indiana have been demanding, nor such a law as they had a right to expect their represéntatives in the senate and house to give them. To our mind it is an ideal stock salesmen’'s blue sky law. . »
"“The first amendment struck out the words ‘principal or agent,’ in Sec tion 1 and inserted the word ‘issuer’ making this and succeeding sections apply only to the ‘issuer’ who may ‘undertake by advertisement, circular, prospectus) through . agents or other public, or general offering’ attempt to\dispose of securities, amenable to th\Tc law. :
"“Here is how this may work. Let us call the ‘issuer’ the Come-on-Motor Corporation with home office in IHinois. If they, for themselves or through agents, attempt to séll stock in this state they will come under the jurisdiction of the blue sky commission. However, to get around this law they make a secret contract with ‘Jones & Co.’ Indianapolis, stock
salesmen, to ‘underwrite’ their entire issue of $1,000,000 at $6.25 per share of $lO par vaiue. Jomes & Co., thus purchase this stock for their own account and proceed to sell it in this state at $12.50 per share. It is their stock and they have a right to dis pese of it and advertise it for sale under their own name. The ‘issuer does not enter the state at all and therefore does not come under the jurisdiction of the commission. Jones & Co., dispose of the stock to the citi zens at 100 per cent. gross profit and there is no information filed with the Secretary of State in regard to the Come-on Motor Corporation. s Eliminate Meat of Bill.
‘“The next amendment which worked havoc with this bill was that which struck out all of paragraph ‘G’ of Section 1 and other parts of the bill requiring the filing of copies of ‘all contracts of agreements between the issuer and underwriters of such securities,’ etc., and all contracts relative to the sale or disposition of stock, together with copies of the minutes of directors or stockholders relating to or affecting the issue of such securities. : 3
“This provision was the very meat of the bill as it passed the house and would have done more than all the rest of the bill put together to protect the public from the sale of questionable securities. But the stock salesman does not want publicity in such matters and this was stricken from the bill. : o
“Without the provision requiring the filing of copies of all contracts and minutes relative to the disposi, tion of stock, most any sort of a deal may be put over without the knowl edge of the investing public. » 2 Sales Are Not Voidable,
“Another amendment struck out all of Section 20, which made sales consummated in violation of the provisions of this act ‘voidajle’ providing that request for the return of the money was made in writing within one year. Is there any good reason why a sale made in violation of the law should not be voidable?
“The salesman of questionable securities prefers to work under a blue sky law if such a law is to his liking, as he uses the fact that the state has a blue sky law to boost his sales. We believe that the Indiana law will suit him. He will in effect say, ‘You know Indiana has one of the most stringent blue sky laws of any State in the union. The commission even passes upon the moral and business qualiflcations of applicants. If this stock were not all right, you .may bet we wouldn't be allowed to sell the moak'" " : P Photographs at Hieber's Studio. Sale: o DS e
EX-SHERRIFF 15 " DUT WITH FAGTS Says Biggest Surprise of His Life Was " the Way Tanlac Restored Wile's : Health - “1 just wish you could hear my wife praise Tanlac and | am no less gratefal than she is for her wonderful recovery” recently declared Peter Miller. a prominent farmer living at Litties, Ind. R. F. D. 14 Ex-sherriff of Pike eounty M ”
. “For fifteen years she hardly knew a well day was, and was on the flat of her back two thirds of the time. She couldn't eat solid food of any kind without suffering severe paiu afterwards. Bhe suffered with dreadful headaches and her nerves were 8o shattered that she couldn't rest at pight and for years she hadn't been able to do any work around the house and thought she could not live much longer. ‘ . "1 never had anything equal to the surprise 1 got when. Tanlac ‘overcame all my wife’s tr@bles and changed her into a strong and healthy woman. Tanlac seemed to soothe her stomach and give her an appetite, apd within 4 short time she was up and around the house. She has gained so much in weight that her friends hardly know her. She eats three meals a day and is so much stronger that she insists on doing a big share of the housework while only a short time ago she could
o . Vacation Time ~ Vacation time is here. The P.]. Carney store is well prepared to take care of ~your wants. Just step in and look over - our line of cool goods for summer. Large line of Traveling Bags just received. Carney Clothing Store - The Store where’Most all the People Trade’
~ Girls and women to learn to sew on - power sewing machines on shirts. - $9.50 per week tomstart, with, rapid advancement. Apply, ¢ i Kahn Brothers Shirt Co. = M'S‘SP“" \ S ,b
not even cross the room lym 1 have spent thousands of rs for other medicines and treatment, but my wife’s health has been restored by Tanla: at a cost almost too small to mention.” ' : ¢ 5 Tanlac s sold In Ligonier by 8. J. Williams and by the leading druggist in every town. . : adv Mrs. R B. Oglesby and Miss Afna Hoten, of Oak Park, are guests of their sister Mrs. John H. Green. Mrs. Roy Snyder and little daughter of Ligonier are guests of Rev. and Mrs. Thomas J. Mawhorter near ‘\‘:-l waka. : : o
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brook and son Charles of Plymouth were gueésts the | first of the week of Mr. and Mrs. | J. H. Green. Mr. Brook is president of | the First National Bank of Plymouth. | ‘ * ! : ‘. 1 « E. D. Mclntire, the well known and | prosperous farmer, will follow the| example of his brother-in-law, Henry| ‘Herald, and retire from the farm. Mr. ‘Mclntire is not in the best of heaith.. * One hundred bushels of Michigan! apples sbld on the streets of Goshen this week at $1 the bushel . The apple crop in Noble county is a large one,? but the price of the frult remaind| above $1 the bushel. ' | Many people of - Noble county at- : tended the Cox rally at South Hend| Thursday. A good many drove to Go-| hen leaving their cars there, using the | trolley to South Bend and return and} driving home later in the evening.
X% Al W Hal'k ChNe 'NE Clothes
- FOR SALE { ~ . FIRST CLASS BATTERY SERVICE STATION DOING GOOP BUSINESS WILL SELL AT A BARGAIN. GOOD REASON FOR SELLING, IF W TERESTED CALL M. 5. HANILTOY, SECOND FLOOR BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE, LIGONIER, IND,
Our Advertising Service Means More Sales for 1 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 me‘dium for reaching the buyers - of this community. ; ‘We can also provide Artistic Printing | of every description.
