Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 36A, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 November 1920 — Page 4

amas G.ft Christmaé may be a long way off but we _are already making - pictures to be used as Christmas remembrances. Make an - appointment today. ; . Hieber Studios - Phone 264 Photography and Xray

: : .{j & A‘ o AN l / ",..\ E /E 2%/ | / ;"_l/"’1-\0} / e LAY - i e NG ] TRE R ek 4 ‘ - \ ‘\ué‘ : } "\ 1 | ' N ’ - !‘ 2 - -*’ o .-— » i ille l LaCamille Front Laced Corset Just the corset to make yo u 'k yor best. Elizabeth Lamb - Corsetiere e e e —— Harry -Schlotterback Trustee_Perry Township ' Office Day, Saturday at Mier State Bank | b’“_ | - s (_\‘ JEEESSRGE Al &y P Q;.J} y ‘*’3"-:%‘; yiias s T =S e Q 1) o WP i *‘l‘&\-.*7.43&, B i, PNENRE TAR n‘\ . T ‘;,_« e "Lki;";‘i“fim' it et priacs § 8 ~/ v “'Q....‘_’,r THE BREAD WITH THE GOOGD TASTE 5 Comes from Rodger's Bakery. Its good taste is not its only good quality. for there are others. Qualities of health and nutrition, cleanliness and purity, such as can only be obtained from the best of flour, skillfull mixing and experience in baking. : M. G. Rodgers o Telephone 244 :

We are in a position L. give all — Job — Printing, Prompt and Careful -~ Attention .

heads and :\ther pringed _ fatter Wultoyow b\ninen‘.' e are ready at all times to give you the

"~ Fine Concert Given. The concert given at the Presbyterian church Sunday evening under direction of Miss Martha Hutchison was well atenged. The program rendered was highly enjoyed. The Syracuse American Legion basketball team deéfeated a Ligonier Legion team in that town the other evening. The game was a fast and furious .- e ‘ Newton Pancake, aged Elkhart township resident injured in a fall from an apple tree, was taken to the home.of 4 son in South Bend in an ambulance. Ly e } ‘Dad Spry of the Wright aviation field at Dayton, Ohio, spent a couple of days with his sister Mrs. Lloyd Willinmson. He has been transferred to Californja. : o = The Millersburg bank, a Straus institution will have a stockholders meeting Nov. 18 when new directors will be chosen.’ The stockholders and their families will enjoy a big dinner on the occasion. Ly " Judge L. Wrigley will be succeeded November 18 by the republican chosen at the late election for the office of judge ‘of Noble-Whitley circulit. Judge Wrigley served twelve. vears and retires with the reéspect of the people. e L

e ® e . § - b : "; 2 " ~/‘ “‘:‘?4:‘@‘ 3 &£3 W S ; ¥ o Lt i 2 : - if A . Y e bk A & PRGN ¥ it s , S 3 : | a ySN . £ . i 3 .éf':eg f $ S P -\‘ » - r '\?v 1 y 2 o s L BB o O S | TR Long-steeved, ‘high-necked blouses are about to gain distinction by thelir scareity, and here is one that has other claims to that honor. It is long sieeved and high neécked In a new and original way: 'The vogue for knife niniting inspired its turn-over collar aud the Inserts in the cuffs.

N _AND ABOUT THE CITY Fut your best foot forward and m‘ won't have so many kicks coming. "To err 18- human, but it counts ageinst your flelding average just the e, ‘ e When pilt to thé test lots of us are congenlal merely because we hate the When money talks it requires a great deal of faith to belleve that silence i’ golden. When boopl‘e are too fresh it is just as well to take everything they say with a grain of salt. : il It's all right to save a few minutes provided you don’t waste an bour figuring how you can do it. It the longest way round is the shortest way home why should a man ‘come straight to the point? Extremes meet, In spite of the fact that so many of us have great difficulty in making both ends do the same trick. . Muggins—*“A woman can't keep a secret.” - Buggins—*“But when she eats an onlon she shouldn't breathe it to a soul.” A : “Beauty is only skin deep,” quotes the Wise Guy. “And some girls are skinnier. than others,” snickered the Simple Mug. ‘ : : “A waman s as sonnz as she feels,” simpered the sweet young thing of forty-five. “Too bad she doesn’t always look the part,” replied the male ‘brute. : g : )

WEAR AND TEAR PROOF | L | - < ‘~"‘.‘--{-‘1 s W ‘ S R R AN “} s X\* Bl S R Lo R | Tk e~ S P TR C o S S ORI T SR S | QU % H NS \ it RO : 3 \ RN RN 3 ol ¥ ‘ 7 3 QAR SR i 2 3 N N o BN o C ol » g : ,‘“ k & k -_ '\\ 1 3 ‘ e h‘& b ¢ RS SN '\‘.z‘?! b - | sw\\tv PR iawtee - Able to withstand all sorts of weather is this neat dress of dark blue serge with white braid on collar and sleeves. and mordover it is trim and smart looking. It boasts a plaited skirt, patent leather belt and a hand-

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

~ FAMOUS LAST WORDS *Which ope of these is the third il spwnyy” “I' wonder whether this rope win hold my welght?™ Y _ B Sl _ “That frecracker must have gone out. I'll light it again" - “I wonder If it's loaded. T look down the barrel and see.” - : 'Wntcbmchgooqtmfimm ger’ sign. I bet 1 can touch 1" “What a funny nolse that snake muu. 1 thlnkyl'll‘nep on him.” “Pve never driven a car in traffic before. But they say it's perfectly sim;e - : “It's no 'fixn swimming sround in here. I'm golug out beyond the life Nim” @ e = “I thipk I'll mix a little nitric acid with this chloride of potassitm and see what. happens.” . : “There's only one way to manage a ‘mule. Walk right up in back of him and surprise him.” = " They n;y these things can't posslhiy explode, no matter how much you throw them around.” . “Oh, listen!- That's the train whistle. Step on the accelerator, and we'll try to get across before {t comes.” “These traffic policemen think they own the city. They can’t stop me. I'm going to cross the street how. Let the chauffeurs look out for me.”—Dorothy Parker in Life, v :

FROM THE PENCIL'S POINT The less work a man does the more he tires other people. : . It is usually‘ very uhlucky for the mouse that meets a black cat. : ( Many a man who talks of his lost opportunities never made one to lose. Politeness is a curb that holds our worse selves In check.—Mme. de Bassanville, ‘ : . ; : — / Why is the candy shofi’ always on the ground floor and the dentist’s office four flights up? When a woman's bliss lles In h‘ér ignorance It is folly for her to read the letters she finds in her husband's pockets. ‘ & When & man of oppoaltev‘!efin readily agrees with you, you have either succeeded In convincing him or tiring

SPARKS OF LIFE Electrical progress seems to assure tha; future generations wm tbe— Married by- telephone. » : Divorced by wireless. . " Raised In electric incubators. ‘Cooled by electrically driven fans. Graduated from college by electric--Ity. . Alred in electrically driven baby carriages. ' Educated by electric teaching machines. : v Warmed by electrieally heated clothes. - R L. w— 2 Shocked to death at sixty by a licensed executioner, -

t\““\\\\‘\“\“\\\“\‘\’ ¢ ' . . FLASHLIGHTS : 5 T ‘ 4 There's mighty little glory In : : the things that are easy to do. : . —_ 5 s+ No man is fit to play any § : game unless he is willing to ¢ s lose, ’ ’ - ’ # v : ‘ ‘Beauty may be only skin §. - deep, but some girls believe in ¢ % plastering it on thick. ; : ’ - ’ : -We don't believe in vain : ¢ Dride, but there are a lot of # :thhmeverymmonkhttobe: ’ too proud to do. :

DO YOU KNOW THAT—'Spaln has fewer dall& papers than any other European country. Castor ofl has been found to be a very satisfactory lubricant for aeroplanes. Locusts are today eaten in Arabla, much as they were in the time of John the Baptist. | Seulptors now make use of the camera as a means of verifying the work of thelr’chlsels. To'savethemlnen'fimeaagiteen has been placed 500 feet below grovond in a coal mine in Europe. g _ A nmew farm lighting plant may pe operated by portable instead of the customarv stationarv eneina : ~ The W. C. T. U. wil hold their next meeting at Mrs. Ed Belts Tuesday evening Nov. nl: at 7:30 p. m. A full attendance is desired. - =

Miss Esfelle Gerber came from Chicago and spent the week end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Ger- : 1

© WORDS OF WISE MEN | Blow not agalnst the hurricape. ' ImymNanutPflMu Blessed is be that considereth the poor.—Rßible, : : ‘ !fi are like the cuckoo; you have He must be pure who would biame snother—Danish proverb, _ And fearipss minds climb soonest into crowns.—Shakespeare, There is no means to escape from the celis of a gulity cousclence.

Do not despise theory, but test ft; for theory is always the foundation of A men's enemies never kick bim when he is down; they staund astde and let his friends do it. . If we would establish any real and enduring power over others we must cultivate their trust in us. It Is a common fault that we are never satisfled with our fortune, nor dissatisfied with our understanding. It 1s the part of a wise man to keep himself today for tomorrow, and not to venture all his eggs In the same basket. : - - Worry, rightly taken, should traln to quietness, humility, patience, gentleuess, sympathy. It ought not to eventuate (though it naturally does) in making others suffer hecause we are uncomfortable, in making us ‘a source of painful worry to others because we are worried ourselves.

- SAYS THE OWL ‘ Office seeking grows on a man like any other habit. .‘ : "~ Where ignorance isn't bliss It is folly to serve hash. - Poverty keeps off more cases of gout'? than the physicians cure. o ~ A chromo s sometimes known by the tea that Is given away with it. The golden rule is frequently used in drawing a line of conduct for others, - : : It’h_lmpomlble to derive any bene fit from a new umbrella until it is used up. Y ' . A marriage license may be a kind of court plaster used in patching up brokLots of people spend the last half of their lives trying to forget what they learned the first half. -

A soft answer turneth away wrath, but a wrathful answer doesn’t always turn away the soft person. - When a man steals he does it for himself, but when a woman steals she does it for some worthless man. Ne ’ : A man’s ears are placed so that he may catch all things said to his face. It was never intended that he should hear the things that were sald behind his back. - : ~ CARD SUPERSTITIONS Carrying a bit of coln In the pocket will help win the game.: o In any gfimeyoua‘mmtowmu you will keep silent while playing. If you win-in any kind of a prize, an excellent offer will be made you

| Turning the front of the hat to the back is done to change the luck at cards. If you are having bad luck with cards, buy a new pack, and pay for it yourself. : In cards, if the luck is against you, take the first queen you draw and wish three times, the last time naming the person you love best. Lucky at cards, unlucky at love, is a superstition commonly known. The French interpret it good luck in gambling, bad luck in the household. There is a negro superstition to change your luck at any game you're playing: Get up and turn around three times and sit down again. Another negro trick to change your luck V::othmwnmovertholeftm

- STATISTICAL NOTES . Parasols were used by the anclent In 1786 the nm—em directory was issued in Baltimore. Tides in the bay of Fundy rise rapidly from 60 to 70 feet. : A single pound of the finest spiderwebs would reach around the world.

The modern gold coinage of Europe was commenced by the Florentines in s . The record of deeds show -transfer of half lot 30 in Smith’s addition: to Ligonier by Charles Cornelius to Izora Iden. - . S The U. B. Minister desires the ladies of the W. C. T. U. to atend in a body the services of- their church Sunday morning N0v.14. -~ =

- SEEMS SACRILIGIOUS League of Nations Efigy Burled at Marion Ohle, With Harding Of~ln his first public utterance after his: .wuz.m Hardiog bhas forever put the league of putions behind him. ; 5 : o The American people by the unparalleled majority they gave Harding ordered the league of nations scrapped according to the interpretation Senator Harding places on the solemn referendum. He made it clear that this

mandate wiil be carried cut to the Jetter. - o

~The Marionites in thelr parade curried up to the front porch a stretcher bearing the effigy of a corpse labeled “League of Nations.” : . “You didn’t want a surrend-r of the United States,” saidySenator Hardivg. “You wanted Anu-r[:& to be fiee and unmortgaged. That's why you didat care for the league which is nuw desonsed.” - : i

. Senator Harding thus took the first opportunity after his election to clear the air on the league matter according to press reports from the “front porch.” Lo

- Cavin Heads New Company. A dispatch from Lansing. Mich., to the Sturgis Journal says: : “Wlill A. Cavin of Sturgis is. the largest stockholder in the new Edwardsburg Lumber company which hasfiled incorporation papers for $25.€4OO here. The erntire amount is paid in cash. e ~ “The stockholders are Will A. Cevin 130 shares; Melvin S. Rudistl, Niles, 20 shares; Charles Barnaby, Greencastle, Ind., 80 shares; and Ray Brown Edwardsburg. 20 °®shares. “Edwardsburg is a town of abou! 500, located 9 miles southwest of Cassopolis in Cass county.” | - Mr. Cavin now has the controlling +iock in four lumber yards and two of them handle coal in comnection. | : THE BRYAN PLAN - William Jennings Bryan has it all figurcd out. He would have President Wilson resign, permitting ° Mr. Marshall to become president. Ar. Alarshell would then appaint Senator Harding - secretary of State so that Mr. Marshall might then resign, permitting “the republican president-<elect to succeed to the presidency at once. Mr. Bryan has a great way about him. He skulked all through the campaign because President Wilson did not see fit to call him into the peace conference at Paris. It will be recalled that Mr. Bryan quit the Wilson cabinet at ‘a very critical period in our. history and a dignified silence on his part now would be becoming. :

It the election of Mr. Harding proves beneficial all the people, democrats and republicans alike, will share in the advantages. They must like-g wise share any misfortunes which| might develop Senator Harding will be. -the president of all the people from March 4, 1921 for four years.| ; "‘New Acts Out. ~ Representative . Hoffman has the| thanks of the Banner for a bound copy of thé acts passed by the Indiana legislature at its last special-session. | bl o Mr. and Mrs. Chester Patton care from Dayton, Ohio and agent‘the -m-.k‘ end with Ligonier relatives. |

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e k- ; . Get out of the treadmill ebf~and of cbt-and griravagance : FIE 48 Put your e.: : ¥ L'd ; ‘q.*\ S m RN g "féi- ! S e Zi A NN\ Keep ~.:}_~,,V1; -SN . : e\ 18 = > lt' them il g W4B “‘ ¥ ‘:',, 4 ~;jw~l,, L/ ‘s P OJ.WQVS . Ay e . NS 5w to it “= _ andgrowßick SOME MEN FIND THEIR DAILY WORK A “GAIND.”” THAT | 18 BECAUSE THEY SPEND ALL THEY MAKE AND ARE CONSTANTLY WORRIED FOR FEAR THEY WILL BE 'FIRED"” , THE MAN WHO PUTS PART OF HIS EARAINGS INTO THE BANK REGULRRLE 1S HAPPY AND DOES BETTER WORK BECAUSE HE I 3 FREE FROM WORRY. : . COME IN AND OPEN YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TODAY. We pay 4 per cent interest on saving’depbsito and Saving Accounts. Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

~ Is Not Far Away Den’t forget that promise ien made the goed wife and daughter to buy a piano or Victrola. Come and look at stock of Muscal goods. We ha_ve what you want at the right e o o ; Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas Yeu can take the efisy p;yinent plan if you do not eare to pay eash. o ' Yours for 32 years of Musical Service. - SOuih Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, indilna

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CIYLE H EADQUARTE ‘{S_, N\ where Seoririy #Brand (1 n_thes_ are sold

Cold Weather - Makes y'ou think of winter - clothing. | ~Naturally you will buy that ~warm overcoat at the ~ store which gives you a . good]big dollar’s worth of merchandise for every dol~lar you spend. - Wwwmw* SR BRSNS ‘ w »g"?f.“fnii‘fl%‘i;lfinl.\‘U‘%’Jlg}t‘:‘x gl f S STORE FOR MEN - S