Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 39A, Ligonier, Noble County, 30 November 1920 — Page 4

Battery Service : Cold weather is just ahead. Is your storage batl-'y in proper condition to 'meet the heavy demands that will be madeon it? . : ‘ : : A weak, half run-down battery will not turn over a cold, stiff engine: it will not keep your lights burning brightly during the long nights that are coming. o : ~ In winter, mi_)re than at any other time, you need a fully charged, powerful battery in your car. Our service will insure this for you. It will keep your battery up to the mark all winter and insure the quick starts you want. - _ If you plan to store your ear, remember special battery attention is necessary. An idle battery deteriorates quickly unless charged and inspected regularly. We will take care of all this for veu: store vour battery give it the attention it needs and return it to you in the Spring fresh and vigorous. ; ' - - You need our service this Winter. ..Drive around, let us look at your battery now and make arrangement for the future. o g » i | Robi Electric Service At The Lincoln Highway Garage |

Overland Sales Co. ‘Will Quit Business Dec, 1 and will sell for cither ca_sh.orv p_aym«entsf ' 1 1916 Ford Touring Car 1 1917 Chervolet Touring Car. Ifvnit Tawing Car. @ 112 H. P. Titan Portable En»gine-. | Al Tires, Tubes and Spark Plugs - at 25 per cent discount. ~ = Overland Sales Co:

1 a Id Wit Kill That Cold With v- . _ .v | ‘L . . . ol ASCARA &7 QUININE - yOR GQ '{‘&QQ . . AND Colds, Coughs "YQOMH La Grippe - Neglectod Colds are Dangerous ' veke no chances. Keep s standard remed s handy for the first sneexe. ‘ Hroaks vy a cold in 24 hours — Relisves Grippain 3 cays-—Lxcellent for Headache Cuinine in this form doee not affect the head-—Cascara is best Tonic Lazsi o-~No Of‘;&tf: in h'.:';i‘.‘f. s : : . i ALL DRUGQGISTS SELL IT

~ Get out of the treadmill of‘i)____::fl/-ndl fiw/% N a 6, Put gour--834 ( ,&M D,% in “ey _ - \‘v 2 fo. - SHENE R Keep e VAN )it thers e ZamefT€ - 00\ 02 (2 alw . o B e 2= N e~ v % s 3 L . e T ARSI eb it . andgrow ek SOME MEN FIND THEIR DAILY WORK A “GRIND.” THAT BRI, SR A st HACE 1 eSO . THE MAN wm% PUTS PAR‘I’ OF HIS EARAINGS INTO THE BRI AN lAL D Does BETER WOk HE Euq_,f%mqun»érm YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TODAY. = w,,,,,- 49" cent. ix;tei‘és,t, on savingjdepoeits .+ and Saving Accounts. = Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

Ed Klick and wife have gone to Florida for the winter. '_ Cromwell has a jeweler first in severa] yearss : e Miss Eleanor Juday is home from an Albjon visit. 5 Mrs. A. W, Beazie and son Howard of Fort Wayne were visitors here Milo Kauffman returned to Michigan City Saturday. He was visiting his sister Mrs. C. L. Schigbach. ‘Mrs. Jack Michaels has recovered from a three weeks iliness Charles Bates and family have returned to Bouborn. o ~Mrs. Adam Michaels has gone to Chlifcago for a visit. . : ; . Syracuse City Basket Ball team played here Friday evening with Wolt ‘Lake and lost 2 to 6. Syracuse High School team won from Cromwe]l 20 to 5 . S 1 Schools opened Monday after a vacation from Wednesday. All teachers visited home folks. . | J. Jamerson and daughter Ruta were Garrett visitors Friday. . Ed Kline gays he is going to have a sale. L S . M. E- church bazaar Friday and Saturday of this week. Supper will also be served. : e \ ————

The Social Hour will serve a cafeteria supper -in the Presbyterian church parlors Tuesday, December 14, beginning at 5 o'clock. Former af: fairs of this nature advertise it sufficiently, but special attention is called to the sale of numerous artciles to be heed in connection with the supper. Come afternoon and evening and see the exquisitely hand decorated all linen handkerchiefs, the kind you have to pay enormous prices for in cily stores and which you would not be ashamed to present to anyone .for a Xmas gift, the full comfortable aprons and children’s bibs and the complete line of Christmas food and dainties already prepared to save you worxk, brown, fruit cake, candies, stuffed dates etc. It will be worth your while to atend the sale as well as patronice the supper which will consist of a delicious menu. : 39%a2w

Y - Miss Evelyn Smith was a week end visitor in South Bend.‘ - .Miss- Rstelle Gerber was visiting home folks over Sunday. : - i m Rev. Harry Thompson was a Kendallville visitor Monday. » Arthur Himes spent the_‘week end with Wawaka relatives. Miss Bedford high school teacher spent Thankagiving‘ifin Elkh_art-. Arthur Longenecker spent Thanksgiving with his mother in Chicago. -Willis E. Oyler had business which took him to Fort Wayne Monday. Miss Myrtle Fry was a guest of her mother. at Kendallville over Sunday. "Mr. and Mrs. Karl. Ramsby, of Mishawaka, were guests of home folks. ‘ A ‘Miss Helen Kann, after a'visit_wiih the Sig Kann family, returned to Fort Wayne Sunday. : : 3

Miss Alice Van Wagner of Mishawaka was a guest of Ligonier friends over the week end. . “—MfSamuel Galloway was* in Detroit the first of this week on business for the Bryan garage. Phil Schioss has gone east on a business trip for Wertheimer Rros., wool and seed merchants. Mr. and Mrs. Ed C‘ulver and little son were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Culver over Sunday. : R e o Mr. and Mrs. Elton Lepird of Goshen, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fayette Lepird.

Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Parshall of Elkhart were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Crockett. : Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Sin Clair, of Chicago were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Dunning. e - Miss Mae Harvey, of Columbus, Ohio was a week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sanger Smith. Ui e ———————————————— Miss Zella Luckey came from Elkhart and ate Thanksgiving turkey with Mr. and Mrs. George King. \ ‘ 3 ————— -~ Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Farnsworth, of Toledo, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Deeter over Thanksgiving. The Misses Mae and Anita Joseph, of Terre Haute, were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Jospeh. e ——— Miss Helen Webber, granddaughter of Mrs. Belle Parsons, deceased, accompanied the body to Cleveland, 0., where it was buried. - e

Miss Beatrice Flick, who is a teacher in the Jacksonville, Florida, schools arrived .home Saturlay, night to visit her mother Mrs. J. D Kreager. S R R ENinneed of Printing see what we can | go els*ewhere;{

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

{ ALL ABOUT WOMEN SR i ~.' | —— ; = | .As a‘rule women are darker thas men. . Two women have beep elected as judges in Switzeriand. ; _There are more than 300 women's clubs In the Philippine islands. - : It in claimed that women are happlest at the age of thirty-five years Once a woman becomes married In Corea she loses her pame absolutely. An mm has discovered a milkmald who wears 3 monoim. < -‘ At present many women manage _their own farms on Vancouver l» aad e | Rk — ~ Mrs. Charies Eykyn organized the first forestry corps for women in Great Britatn. : « | ‘ A ‘ A Dbill giving women the right to vote has been passed by the Phillp pine senate. , - A feature of Japanese wefldl.nta s ‘the buflding of a bonfire made of the © Miss Martha Neumark of Cincionati is. studying at the Hebrew Tnlon college for the puipit. '

Ono of the three rent commissioners of the District of Columbia is & woman, Mrs. Clara Sears Taylor. bl The women In Spain are making a strenuous effort to have that country grant them the right of suffrage. Less than 50 years ago women prisoners in Tennessee were employed ln breaking rocks for Street pavements ODD AND INTERESTING Kd;‘u‘ now has a well-organized motor postal service X . e < WHh the ai¢ of a microphone you can hear a fly walk. ' Gold pens have been manufactured In America for 80 years. The mother monkey never survives the death of her little one. * The average rise and fall of the tide at Panama is only two feet. One gaslight gives as much carbonle acid gas as two sleeping persons.

More than a millien patients pass through the New York hospitals every . The Moscow fire of 350 years ago s the “world's record™ In it 200,000 people perished. Several hundred new designs in penny toy®s are brought out every week in London. : Statisticlans figure that the populatipns of the world average 110 wowen t_oeverylw men. : : ‘ The eariiest menfloaotnhoe-‘u\in an Egyptian papyrus, written sabout the year 2200 B. C. : The present year marks the 150th anniversary of the incorporatiom eof the New York chamber of commerce.

FARM .lO_URNAL SAYS Many a good man has raised eane in The coat that s pald for s alk ways the more comfortable garmeat. After a fellow reaches forty he me longer relishes being called “old man.” A good way to study domesti¢ economy is to mMAITY an e¢onemical man. rel never increased farm production. _ Pelitics may make strange bedfellows, but they're mainly transients Lot the boys and giris have a day off every now and then; they'll come back all the more willing to stay. B The acid test of love is whether you enjoy kissing your best girl right after she has been eating enilons.

Passing the cellection bax on Sunday doesn’t make a good Chiristian efa man if he leaves the kitchen weod bex empty on week days. . Ayoiuldywmmfl needles is limited to the fact that they can be used only once on a talking maching is not likely to make an economiBELIEFS ABOUT BIRDS _Katydids bring bad luek to an or To catch a sparrow and keep it confined in a cage is an omen of death. When a sparrow builds above your window it is a sign you will have .a To stop a Kaytdid's singing, touch the tree in which it is singing, and the sibration wil! stop it atonce.

Clarence Kinney came Trom St..l Louis to visit his famiily here over i g . ‘* » “ Louis' Kerr was in Clevollmlg; charge of the funeral of his aunt Mrs. oee Rl £S TR B S S N R

STOP! LOOK!READ! ~ Everyone is advertising Special - bargain prices, _-hbut‘v we will stack ~our prices and merchandise up ~ beside them all and we know where you will buy. . | Men’s Black China Dog Fur Coats . | 23,50 Men’s heavy Ulster Overcoats . . . 2950 - Bociety Brand Clothes - FORYOUNG MEN AND MEN.WHO STAY YOUNG ; - Overcoats o e | $3O, $35, $4O and $45 $25, $3O, $35 and $4O Men'swoolUnionSeits -.. . . . 400 Broken lot Men’s Woolen Shirts and Drawers priced at . e i w9O $1.35,. %9245 Men’s best grade Work Shoes . . .2 Men’s brown English Dress Shoes . . 7.50 Men’s black English Dress Shoes : -.. 6580 ~ The above are not sale prices They are regular money saving prices on sound business principles, which guarantee staple goods at staple prices. o h S STGRE FOR MEN S =

E.R. Kurtz | Auctioneer ~ Dates tan be made at Weaver’si Hardware Store Ligonier, Phone | 134, or call my residence, phohe; NO. 65- : : : : i

GNOW is the Time to’Buy - High Yielding Securities = - Commodity prices are on. the déch’ne. - Money ’ rates will follow. , ‘ A No one expects the price of capital to hold at - present levels when underlying conditions change. - i While we are in the midst of a high yielding in- | - Vvestment market is the time to lay away sound L and safe securities which will assure the investor : _ a high rate of income for years to come. 4 al -7% or Better bt g 4 o Exempt from Federal Income Tax Up to 8% - . Seven per cent is the minimum dividend rate ‘ ' - obtained from current issues of Straus Preferred _ ~ - Stocks, at par. When such stocks, measuring up . - _to the “Straus Standard,” can be purchased at or ' “below par, they are indeed an attractive pur- - - chase for the farseeing investor. | A e L | g+ F . No. 125 entitled "Sixty Years of Safely” 7 e e S IGONEER INDIANA e Y

EARL WOLF | » . ’ Auctioneer | Will Answer Calls Any\vhere ' Phone 160020 -; ligonier - lndilnal

~ CHARLES V. INKS AND SON Dealer in ) Monuments, Vaalts, Tombstones, Building Stone ormar Fifth and Cavin. LIGONTER e —— W. H. WIGTON ‘0 ) Attcrney-at-law Omice in Zimmerman Block . LIGONTER. IND.