Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 50A, Ligonier, Noble County, 15 February 1921 — Page 4
Invest Your Money in A 6 per cent Tax Exempt Bonds Denominations $389t0 $5OO maturing in one to ten years. Interest payable semi-annually. North & Holman . Cosbaclors @ Churuhusco, Indiana
all the news happenings that come to your attention to this office. It will be appreciated for every piece of news will make the paper more interesting for you as well as others. We want and with your help will print all .
What Happened to Jones - SENIOR CLASS in the High School Auditorium February 17th and 18th ~ Adults 45c, Children 35¢ Tickets on sale at Hatchison’s and Griffith’s
. ' share your wash day burden with us. Housework moves so much faster where there is two to do.it. That’s why we are inviting you to share your burdens with us, Why not join the ranks of these pleased folks today, by phoning for our driver. He will call for your bundle. . PHONE 86 - AND DRY CLEANING :
To stanp up under tße tests of today, l;lu!t have | quality material and quality workmanship. ‘Men are demanding of us and we nre satisfying _ all their demands by furnishing such staridard . brands as ' \ | e Hart Schaffner & Marx und Campus Togs Clothes - Pronounced the best bycnhcs. M Carney Clothing Store ~ 'The Store where Most all the People Trade @~ '
Frank Sack bas returned to Jamestown NY. . : ' - = . — S en————— i . Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Hess returned from Chicago Friday. - e gy s et Mrs, J. A. Wiley was taken il at the union service Sunday evening. - Thirteen of the 2450 farms in Noble county are of less than five acres. “The Stealers,” the m powertul play of the year at Crystal Thursday and Friday. o , Allen county farmers own more automobiles and gass engines than the farmers of any other counly in the state, Ty v ; | A e R Blanch Freeland who has been ili for several months at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Ed Jackson s improving. . : _ Every man woman and child who lives and loves should see “The Stealers” at Crystal Thursday and Friidayfi i - - Nothing has been seen in the last few days of Harry Williams, alias Esch and he is believed to have left t-lma vicinity. ; ' | } The acreage of principle crops in Noble County {8 corn, 40,000; whest, 26,400; oats, 22,200; rye, 5400; tame hay, 26,300. . : ; When R. D. Sinclair examined into ’llm.-mhlmry of his cottage at Wawasee ‘he found the silverware mising but inmhmg else disturbed. ] E_ “The Stealers” is a page from life, ‘2O wonderfully wrought by the hands tof.a master, moulding the charcter of ‘man_ that the: picture lives and ' breathes a picture you will never for!g(-(. See it at Crystal next Thursday and Friday. i 3
Bob Shobe went to Buffalo Saturday on business. é f | Nelson Grimes of Goshen spent )m and Sunday with friends : é . ot it ! ! Mrs. G. W. Lindsey of Elkhart visited her mother Mrs. L. Eschbach over {mt 1 , Miss Wava Morrow spent Suurwj and Sunday in Goshen with Mrs. Ira ‘Manahan. _ | S | e i m———— X - G. M. Zimmerman and wife spent Sunday in South Bend with Dr. and ‘Mrs. Baker. ] ’ - Mrs, Lawrence Knepper and Miss Ruby Knepper of Wawaka shopped ‘here Saturday. v " Mrs. Jesse Gage and daughter Mrs. Earl Etuff visited in Sturgis, Mich., Friday and Saturday. Miss Mary Banks of Fort Wayne spent the week end iwth her gjster Mrs. William Green. . : Miss Freda Lynn of Fort Wayne spent Saturday and Sunday here with relatives and friends. Mrs. T. G. Holycross of Kendallville has been spending several days with Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Ryan - : ~ Mrs. Claibel Guggenheim of Youngstown, Ohio visited Miss Catherine Baum over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Crothers of Kendallville were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Crothers. ~ Mrs. Emma Blake spent Saturday and Sunday in Mishawaka with her brother John Myers and wife. : Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Longcor and two children, of Elkhart, spent the week end with Mrs. Jesse Sockrider. Miss Flokrence M. Jackson of Lhicago representing the Volunteers of Am-1‘ erican was a business visitor Saturday. L ‘ Y DRS i ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mann of Kankakee, 111, arrived Saturday for a few 'd.y_s visit with Mr. and Mrs. Chris Mann. ’ - .
- Remonstrances with sufficient names to defeat improvements were filed against the Kssing and . Strombeck roads in Kosciusko county. Syracuse has & new teacher for the 7th grade and domestic science, Miss Rachel Smith from Menomonie, Wisconsin, taking Miss Butler's place. .y The Syracuse American Legion basketball team has scheduled a game with the All-Stars team of Garrett for tonight in the Syracuse high school gymnasium. : e NGRS Glen Stater of Mishawaka spet;t the week end here, returning home Sunday accompanied by his wife who has been visiting her parents for several weeks. o - ' . R Sy b : Edward Case alias Wanderwyst. who defrauded several South Bend men and tricked Ruth Philips, a South Bend girl into an illegal marriage has been arrested at Cleveland. ~ The legality of the proceedings through which Mary Pickford obtained a divorce from Owen Moore last year has beex vigorously attacked in a briet tiled by Attorney General Fowler of Nevada. : | ° S DL PR Paper clothing has made its entry into Fort Wayne, and while it is not -actually being worn, it has been placed on display as an example of the new paper textile industry which was established in Germany during the war, and which it is said is to be introduced into this country.
TEN LIOONIEL bt N
Big Syrup Yield.
Reports from over Indiana indicate a big maple syrup yleld. Adispatch from Columbus says camps in that locality are In operation and that the yield will likely be the largest recorded in 20 years. The sap is ruaning more freely and in larger quantity than for many years. - Mapie syrup Js being sold at $2.59 a gallon, but there is little on the market because the demand for it is #0 great that it is sold to individual purchasers as fast as it is produced. ~ Floyd Deahl Speaks. “Who Cares?” was the subject of an address delivered at the men's mass méeting held at the Strand theater in Kendaliville Sunday afternoon. Floyid A. Deabl, a South Bend attorney well known here was the speaker. Mr. Deahl has delivered addresses in KendaMville and Ligonier at previous occastons, S :
Meetings Well Attended.
- The series of township Furmers’ Federation meetings being held ‘throughout' Noble County the past week closed Saturday night with « good meeting for Wayne township held at the city hall. R. L. Thompson of Topeka and Counay Agent B. V. Widney were the speakers. 3 S ———— | _Auxilliary At Alblon. A Ladies’ Auxilliary to the American Legion has been organized at Albion under the supervision of Mis. Hood of Fort Wayne. The first session was devoted to outMning the years work and it was decided to hold a meeting evéry two weeks on Wednesday evening. ' . . Nearing Century Mark. Mrs. Ellen Carrick who was. for many years a resident of Elkhart coun-. ty, living in York township, just north of Middlebury, will. be -one hundred years of age on April 24. She is now living at Rochelle. 111., with hre daughter, Mrs. Charles. King. Both are 'widows. , { ;
Called Home By [liness.
_Mrs. Jeanette Young has returned from a two months visit with her daughter and family in Ligonier. She was called home by the illness of her daughter, Mrs. Nellie Stewarh.—Albion Democrat. A Henry Hire's ;conditlon shows a 'slighth improvement. . A Mrs. Bert Kelley of Indianapolis fs visiting Mrs. Maurice Brubaker. Sbi——— gl Mrs. O. O. Schrock and children are visiting her mother Mrs. Tallerday in Elkhart. : Miss Jennie Todd of Goshen was an over Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sisterhen Jr. _ : This evening the Home Department Bible class of the Presbyterian meet: with Mrs. Leila Smith. ! Helen Hite of Goshen was the guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Jess Hite over the week end. - : " Mr. and Mrs. Jay Kime of Mishawaka spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jess Hite. o A tariff fight is brewing In' the Canadian Parliment westery farmers demanding drastic reduction. 4 BU ] }' Mrs. Sam Selig and son Leonard spent Saturday and Sunday in Fort ‘Wayne with relatives and friends. The Sewing Society of the Presbyterian church had an all day sesion of work in the Red Cross rooms yesterday. . ’ -——m | Mrs. Frank McGuin who has been spending the past week with Mishawaka friends returned home Sunday evening. g ; S e ST s v s ‘ | Auto tops, curtains, cushions, TJ seat covers made and repalred ‘yi Derr Koontz on Second St. between Main and Martin streets, Ligonier 1 S ¥ : DSOIZI,
GOOD AND LOGIGAL REASON
Mre. Jones Knew Exactly What She Was Doing When She Selected
Mr. and Mrs. Jones had come to that all-important part of naming their new baby. Mr, Jones, who, by the way, detested work, and llked nothing better than to sit in front of the fire and watch other people do it, wanted the baby named plain “BllL" Mrs. Jones had different views. 5 “I shall name the baby Willlam Olver Robert Kenneth,” she asserted. “But why all those names?’ asked her husband. @
“Because,” replied Mrs. Jones, tartly, “if you look at the initials you will find that they spell ‘Work,’ so perhaps, when baby grows up, he will take to it better than his father.”
— Deserved.
The head of a department in one of the downtown stores has her own ideas of sane dressing, and is very critical of the girls under her charge. Recently one of them has been talking a great deal about the bad cold she has ang the fear she feels of taking pneumonia. She was in the midst of her discussion when'the head walked in, She listened a minute and then sald: *“I wouldn’'t blame the Lord 1f he did send you pneumonia” ~ “Just for the way you dress,” the older woman retorted. “You don't dress as If you cared a bij for your low down at the top and entirely too high up at the bottom.”—lndianapolis News, e
Pholographs af Hiebar's Stutle.
«.Chet Luckey was in South Bend = e < s Mrs. . Robert Shobe is visiting her ~ Mrs. Harriet Yeager of ElkhaTt way - W. H. Baker of oGshen drove over yesterday on business. : F o e — Ed Hil of Goshen spent Saturday here visiting with old friends. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Varon Trowl of South Bend spent Sunday here with relatives. |' Carl Lynn of Elkhart visited with friends and relatives here over- Suu- [“" : : o P Mrs. H. C. Henry of Toledo spent Friday and Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. A. Yorkey. oy . i ' Misses Evylen Urich and Eva Lar: son spent Sunday in Auburn with Mrs, Arthur Larson. - ox ot Mrs. Marion Glant of Kendallville attened the funeral of her brother-in-law, David Glant. G NG - Sam Wertsbaugh of Fort Wayne spent the week end with his mdther, Mrs. B. F. Groves. Jacob Beckner returned home Sur.day after several days visit with relatives in Bouth Bend. i The Wolf. Like Friars defeated the Churubusco basket ball team at Albion, by a score’of 29 to 16, .
‘Harry Inks will soon begin repairs on theold Banner block, preparatory to moving the telephone office. Henry Knight manager of the Elkhart office of the Scuth Bend Asphalt Roofing Co’s office was here Monday. Mike Renner who has been in qua:antine since the middle of Januacy will return to Route 4 on Thursday. In line with the general reduction of its forces the N. Y. C. laid off night baggageman Ed McDaniel last Tuesday. : . . . Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Pontius have moved to town from Washington township. Mr. Pontius entered the emplcy of the H. I' P. - Co. Monday Mr. and Mrs. Charles McClish are the proud parents of a girl born Sunday night. The little lady weighed 7 pounds and has been christened Charlotte Louise. : . The secret of happiness that of doing some act ecach day that will fhow appreciation for all that has been given by nature, that's the message in “The Stealers” the big superproduction at Crystal Thursday aud il-‘ridfiy. . : . | e e iEpwotth_» League held a business and gocial meeting at the parsonage on 'Monday night with excellen turn out Elections as folow, Clair Weir, president, Esther Taft Vice-President and Ruth Lutey treasurer. Several new members were admitted.: The social hour followed with games etc. ‘Mrs. Lutey served ice cream and cako>, o Bg i 2 - Now {8 the time to have that car fixed up for spring. New tops, new Side curtains, topes. recovered, side curtain lights sewed in. Furniture upholstering, repaired wor dome while you wait. Prices Reasonable. ; | - Ligonier Auto Top Co. Rear of Electric office. - 49b4t
WwWeareNot Ad-Writers - We just try to tell you in plain English why you should trade with us. We ~ want your trade and we feel if you give ~us atrial you will want to buy ofus. . We sell the best merchandise. , - We sell cheaper. | T ‘We want you to come back. We guarantee satisfaction. ~ You can't lose when you {rade here~ you are sure to profit. .- . T GRERTe . W storerorMEy N
v Laer ' B 3, — Why not éry that Battery with the Dreadnaunght Plates . :IF your car needs 1 new hattery, why : : ' . not try a Gould? You've heard 2ot : aboul it, and read the ads.in jhe weekly : > magazines. There's a reason for the e : rugged power and extra-long life of the : Gould. It’s Dreadmaught Plates— and < ~ let us tell you : = . Plates Make the Battery for lhfy are the reservoirs w[‘ power, - .= . Everythiogelse in a bottery is incidental » to the operation of the plitcs and sub- ' P ject to their lif=. An el ive Gould : : process, niéver successfuily fmitated in - 11 years, puts the extra hife and (-n‘wcr, . : in Dreadnaught Plates. And that saves » - : dollars for the Gould user. We cam _ ; supply a Gould built for your car. : v Testing - ’ ‘Rm‘hrprgingfl . , SQUARE DEAL REPAIR SERVICE L F | f, , i . - : o RS SRR St WE SELL THI T BATTERY . WITH ,“l‘,l)i". ' b“:m Robinson Electric Servi At Lincoln Highway Garage ' ,
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We Have Receivedf Large Shipments , T Hard and Soft Coal Chestnut, No. 4 and Furnace sizes , in hard coal. Best grades of - — soft coal. Full line of Building Material will | soon arrive - HOLDEMAN & SON - C, E. COMPTON, Mana_ger» StrausWool House. . * Phone N 0.279 §
