Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 46A, Ligonier, Noble County, 9 January 1922 — Page 4
e - Monday, January 9 i “THE LOVE SPECIAL” with Wallace Reid and Agnes Ayers and a 2 reel comedy. ' o : ' L ~ Tuesday and Wednesday, Jan. 10-11. Big Double Bill SFLYING PAT” a 5 reel comedy drama with 1)61‘01]13' Gish and “SILK HOSIERY” a 5 reel drama with Enid Bennett. Adm. 10 15 and 20c. Thursday and Friday, Jan. 12-13. Special Attraction “WHIAT WOMEN LOVE” with Annei te Kcllerman the most famous womani swimmer in the world. ./The most remarkable comedy and fight ever photegraphed. Also Clyde Cook in a great 2 reel comedy. Adm. 15 20 and 25¢ » _ Saturday, Januaryl4 = = - ' “THE JAILBIRD” with Douaglas McLean also a 2 reel comedy. o) » Sunday and Monday, January 15-16 , “CONRAD IN QUEST OF HIS YOUTH” with Thomas Meighn also snapshots of famous sercen siars and a eartoon. ’ - Coming January 19-20 Norma Talmadge in “THE PASSION FLOWER” ' L . City Treasurer’s Annual Report Treasurer’s Annu.fl Report for year 1921 as of December ,3llst 1921 , = " Totals General Water Bond , SAunds - Fund Fund » Fund Balance® Dec. 31st 1920 ....... $13013.95 $10942.37 $1456.62 $614.96 11. ©C Erwin taxes .. ... 1784418 1631889 < -« : 16256.19 Interest .o nliGn 192.83 192.83 : Water rents ... Lo 0 SRR AT 8292.47 NY'C RR U 0 HEnts ... 124 .41 +124.41 ; i Cnester Vanderford Doc. fees 7000 70.00 ! Sewer assessments -0 291,27 291.27 e Paving assessments ... 51.26 . b 1.36 Sidewalk assessments ... 84.48 84.48 : : Lhatham Street Sewer ....... .. 1308.62 1308.62 - : Sand, License etc., .......... 464.17 464.17 - Transfer to Bond Fund ........ 875.54 87.64 Transter of Fands ............. 945579 9495.79 POl .fn 813Z107. (383448 - 97499 . gvag 0 Disbursements for year ...... 41177.45 32156.64 7627.16 1393.75 Balance as of Dec.,3lst 1921 10143.62 7187.75 . 2121.93 833.94 . ‘ " A.'O. Shearer, City Treasurer
sl R Tty Sy W) TG |(o2 // R R Gl Wl A 7 (7RG ) . : = NG Bt "/ 718 ///f X A ol [l X / s v - s %%@*r [\~ 785 o W 2 ;%:PM\ sPil } e £K, Q%\J;gj: ‘:'\' ':7:/ /'f/// -;,_’;//." ; :L'Z, = ~ " Rißp g fl/é’é b % /-" > m‘/fl“ ‘f wirz ster vou S b S 8 - -iN OURv , U7\ //;;,4;3‘ B TY o 5 4NNy VRS VO, ST e el 880 Qe ) A .""":‘;\} i G ; 5> Gl e | aide BT - ”,,u;/,, y Y -"‘ _—_——-— e . - TRANKING /J(LUB ‘nextXmas (° Lvaszmy B\ \ & o Héfi ha Sp we=itgal BAN WVAVS DEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR ERCH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS ARND YOU "HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN ERSILY SAVE R DOLLAR R WEEK AND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. a S : THERE ARE CLUBS WHERE YOU DEPOSIT 50 CENTS A WEEK, OR $5..00 OR ANY SUM-~A CLUB TO FIT YOURPURSE. . ¢ OR YOU CAN BEGIN WITH 1 CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT EACH WEEK. | IN FIFTY WEEKS. ° L - 10-Cent Club Pays . $12750 e - 5-Cent Club Pays ‘6375 2 - ~ 2-Cent Club Pays 25,50 | - 1-Cent Club Pays 12.75 ‘ 4 YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE (LARGEST AND DECRERSE EACH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. YOU GET BARCK EVERY. CENT YOU PUT IN. S ' S COME IN RND ASK ABOUT IT. i - - Make Cur Bank Your Bank o We pay 4 per cent interest en saving deposits ‘ . - and Saving Accounts. ohg Farmers & Merchants Trust Co
‘ g Menday, January 9 - -+ “LAVENDER AND OLD LACE” you have read the book see the pictui'e. Starring Marguerite Snow -alse a good comedy. o e ; - Tuesday and Wednesday, January 10, 11 ‘ “DANGEROUS MOMENT” starring Carmel Myors an extra speclal attrac. tion also a 2 reel comedy, - - Pricés 10 and lic | Thursday and Friday January 12,13 “FOR TfiOSE WE LOV».,E”'ml{)t]mp- of (ioid.xvyn Bost I’radticiions don’{ miss this one. Also a good comedy Prices 15 and-tic, - _ : - Saturday, January, 14 =~ “WINNERS OF THE WEST? Eposide No. 6 also big feature pietire “Go STRAIGHT” featuring Frink Mayo. S el ‘ > . f'(‘;‘: :. fa iA R = g : > ; 'i3 ~_Sunday and Monday, January 15, 16 . | SIS RiN ; g e 8 Pik Aey S “HER WINNINY WAY” starring Mary Miles iMuter, : L
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SCALP ;TREAMNT ' Shampooing and Manicuring . ; g;d&m{@fi- Taglor,.. .. Dr. Gants Residence, Onio Door South
ILIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA,
Teachers’ Examinations.
Teachers’ examinations will be held the last Saturday in January, March April May, June, July August and Oetober. - '
" County Superintendent, Hall says. high school teachers in the service will not be re-employed until they have met fully the license requirements.! Applicants for high school license will be graded by the state superintendent. Those applicants for common school license may be graded by state or countysuperintendent as they prefer. Teachers cannot contract without a license and trustees cannot pay teachers with whom they have no confract. Along with teachers examinations in Januarry, April July and August high school deficiency examinations are held for teachers desiring high school credit which they lack and for pupils who completed work in non-standard high schools. : :
Noble county applicants who wish to write in other county seats should obtain : permission from their county may be granted on all: threeshrdl superinten{ient. Exemption license may be granted on all three years. State licenses will be given to techers who have taught six consecutive years in Indiana. Such license expires il teacher drops out one’ year except to attend school. Lifes and four years professional tickets are granted those completing required courses of training. Life license from other states may be validated in Indiana 'provideu the requirements in such states for such licenses are equal to or greater than in Indiana. In most cases they ca" not be validated. : 5
Old Directors Chosen.
At a .meeting in Goshen Saturday the Elkhart County Farmers Mutuai Aid assocciation elected officers. The directors for Noble county are Geo. W. Fahl, E. W. Hire and Theodore Wright. O. V. Borger continues to represent °~ the company as agent for this county. 3 e
Injured in Auto Collision.
James Starkey of Wolf Lake - suffered severe scratches and braises and a man from Ligonier also was badly bruised when the automobiles in which they were riding collided near here. Both of the machines were badly damaged. :
Aged Lady Hurt.
Mrs. Jane Akersy aged 86 received a severe injury on the back of her head, two broken ribs and several bruices as the result of a fall from the back porch ,of her home in- Syrcuse. S / : -
To Exhibit Fowls.
"Harvey Hull is in Albion attending the poultry show. He is exhibiting Barred Rocks and Wyandottes. Mister Austin, J. W. Droper and Conrad White will probably have birds on exhibition. . .
Orders Reiorms.
Mayor Johnson of Gary formerly of Kendallville has appointed a number of policewomen to enforce a new curfew law he proposes to have enacted. He says he will save the youths of his town of both sexes frfom shame and degredation. :
Joint Meeting.
- The American Legion and the Ladies Auxiliary will hold a joint meeting Thursday evening in Legion Post Hall. An effort is being made to increase the membership in both organizations. : L
Death of Aged Man.
Benjamin Paul 79 many years ago a hardware merchant in New Paris died at his home there Friday of heart ailment. He had been in poor health for several years. ;
Pavement Now Open,
Lincoln Highway west was thrown open to traffic last Saturday and the new street pavement is now all in use. The opening of the pavement on First street is of great convenience
Bring Big Premium.
© A $75,000 issue of school bonds at Elkhart was sold to Thos Shillan of 'lndianapolis for a premium of $4,511 ‘The bonds pay 5% per cent interest. b —e - L New Postmaster for Waterloo.
Rep. Fairfield of the Twelfth district has selected Clyde Fee to be postmaster at Waterloo. There were ten candidates' for the office which pays $l,BOO a year. .. s
Robbers Get 15 Cents,
After turning off the electric lights at the meter in the home of Samuel D, Stutsman at Goshen Wednesday night thieves entered in the absence of the family and turned things-topsy-turvey Only 15 cents is missi,hg.,; .l ,
Newlyweds.
A marriage license wags fssued at Albion Thursday to Clarence McFarand 23, Cromwell to Ruth Ellen 84ked 19 Sparta township. e
Fine Lake Skating,
Many - Ligonier peope go to Engle and Wawasee lakes to skate on’the {ce. Sunday Irvin Jacobs and Chester C. Smith took a said-on Wawasee.
Badly Hurt 'in Fall. -~ . Miss Hortense Christner who was confined to her bed for a week as the result of a fall ig able to:get about on trutches. She was badly injured. . Fah : e eeatvpmep oLy Mol ‘- Wow Postmaster at Plercetons The .'. 8. senate has confirmed the ;mpoin‘t;;m;txt, of- ‘Elmer. B, McCarter for postmiz for at Pierceton. He held a demporaly appeintmenti | ¢ ¢ o Carlos P. Frickert of near ‘Argus was killed while jionting when aceidentally shot by a cousih, s | ‘Williani H. Hm‘fing aivf?war:{vet#: eran is dead-at Howe at '*’%W 804
. NEWS NOTES : Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bartholomew spent Sunday with old friends in South Bend. oy i 'Ch;arles Gale has opéned a shine parlor in one of the Kerr rooms on S. Cavin street. : S 1 el e ~ Mr. and Mrs. Julius Kann of Ken‘dallville over Sunday visitors with the Sig Kann family. Mrs. Henry Sn'ider who. had - been taking treatment in a Fort Wayne hospital arrived home Saturday. George Qoéhorn had his tonsils removed in an Elkhart hospital Saturday. - e :
Mr. and -Mrs. Russel Walters Kendallville —were Supday guests of Roy Stroman. % : . Mrs. Mae Trowl and daughter attended the funeral of a Goshen relative Sunday. : o Mrs. Maurice Brubaker and little son John are hom;e from an Indianapolis visit, == | e B e ~ ~ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Levy and little daughter are on a visit with Chicago friends. e ) : Mr. and Mrs. Nigholais Gapesius of Elkhart were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alton Bailey. I Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Feldman of Fort Wayne have been guests of the C. A. Wolf family. . @ i ' D R i A 3 R ST Mr. and Mrs. James Kinnison werc dinner guests last jevening of M. and Mrs. A. E. Wysong.
Miss Avis Green residing in Los Angeles, California will receive the Banner a present from her father, Audley -Green. E e ) Mr. and Mrs. C. W- Welch are herd from Findlay, Ohio- guests of Mrs. Hoagland. ' ———C————— / Toney Luse is the new shine artist at the Lundy & King barber shop. . Mrs. Frank Cain is gradually regaining her health. She some time ago under went a sericus surgical operation. - s - Mrs. B. W. Cowey went to Elkhart to day to visit her son and wife Mr. and Mrs. Reed and also to see her new grandson. Will iHre and attorney Bothwell attended church services at Benton Sunday evening and greatly enjoyed the exercises. : . Mr. and Mrs. Dan‘Myers formerly of Ligonier but now 'of Spencerville havecadopted the Carey children. The little! tots were formerly of Syracuse.
Rev. H. Lewis Meyer who now resideg in Chicago was in the city Friday ‘'on ‘business and visiting old frends. 5 : Mr. and. Mrs. A. L. Baughman of Wolf Lake were here guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Fryer and shopping today. i : . Mrs. George W. Brown entertained her picnic club last evening. : ~ Ed Sisterhen the shoe merchant is recovering from a bad cold. Wanted, furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Address Box 114 Ligonier. - 46a2t /"" A RDA AAN SR £ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sprague are the parents of a new son born this morning and Dr. Black reports all well This is the ninth child born to Mr. and Mrs. Sprague with eight living.
. Victor Brumbaugh and son Samuel of Nappanee were Ligonier visitors !today. Mr. Brumbaugh is- driving a new Oakland Sport car. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cooper of Al"bion were Sungay guests at the John T. Baker home. ; l' The new city council will hold its first regular meeting Thursday night ‘the “12th. , = S —— - i The Ligonier Ice company today began . plowing ice on Engle lake and will commence housing it in a day or two. The ice is six inches thick. | ‘Bandits operating in a car held up a fillig' station in Fort Wayne Sunday night and secrued $2O in cash of Mr. Rockfeller’s money. gl :
Stuart Carney who has been confined to his home by illness is expected to visit the Carney clothing store tomorrow. : ; Goshen has purchased the Kessler residence for $11,500 cash and will conyvert the brick structure into a city nall, * i ] :Mrs. John T. Baker is home from ‘her visit in Detroft.” = - ' ‘ For sale hous and lot 101x158 barn and garage in favorable location. Fine neighborhotd, Inquire at Banuer, oitice, " oiuF . o 7 Oy SR _4,6;l_&:{
¢Maké' Jour' hair sweet ahd flutty—with: Blue Deyil (})gléan‘séif,:" . 46a2t 40 Notice of Appointmént. " ' (4Btate’ 0f Indiana Noble County SS: » Natice is hereby given that the iindersignéd has ‘been. Hppoifited” atiministrator of the estate of Nellie Pickett, deceased, late of Noble county Ihdiana. L ROl l ‘ ¢ Said estate is supposéd to be 861- % & Bdward Piggott, Administrator Wt Wigton, Aty dsadt
Mrs. Daniel Klick wife of a Syracuse business man will pnfi)ahly die the result of an operation in an Elkhart hospital. o HEN FAITHFULLY DID DUTY Clever Woman’s Confidence lin Her Pet “Biddy” Proved to Be Abun--5 dantly Justified.
There was an old woman who lived —not in a shoe but on a farm in New Hampshire. She made a contract to deliver two dozen fresh eggs to an anaemici family from Neéw York who were buillding up on milk and eggs after a wearing season, and these eggs were to be dellvered at a certain hour daily. Although she had to go by buckboard she always fulfilled her contract to the last egg. ‘But one day as the old woman was putting on her “bunnit” preparatory to start an accident broke one of the twenty-four fresh eggs and there was no time to wait for the laying of another. What was she to do? Fail to keep her appointment or deliver the twenty-three eggs with an excuse? This clever old woman did neither of these things. She snatched up a squawking hen which had a record as a good layer, cramped it into a coop and started out. On the trip the needed fresh egg arrived, and it was added to the others and made up the quota,
. When the customer was counting the eggs she noticed the .warm one and asked the reason. The old woman_laughed and told the story of how her favorite dependable hen had almost literally laid an egg in her hand. The story has been told over and over since then in ever-widening areas untll with the return home of the New York family, no longer anaemic, it has reached -the metropolis.—New York Herald. - :
‘ Heard in Every Home. “Why on earth you will persist In coming into the house with all that dirt on your feet beats me, I never saw such a man,” ' “Now you leave me a little money before you go downtown.. How do you expect me to pay the gas bill and vegetable man with nothing to pay with?” e “But I just gave you a dollar last Thursday to shop on. Do you mean to tell me you've gone and spent a whole dollar so soon?” ; “It seems to’me you might hose off the porch once in a while when you are hanging around doing nothing.” “Now, I don’t want to see you winking at. the hired girl again, or T'll pack right up and go straight home to mamma.” “My land! Take.those big feet of yours off that sofa cushion right this minute. You are the limit!”—Ban Francisco Chronicle.
Freaks of Sound. If, when the air is still, you stand near a high wall and speak a word loudly, it will come back to you as if repeated by an invisible person. It is, of course, an echo. Parallel walls separated by a few hundred feet, as a canyon, may so reflect a sound as to cause it to be distinctly heard again and again in a long-undying gseries of repetitions. If the reflecting walls are irregular, the repetitions, instead of being distinct to the ear, will be mere jumbled and Vuninteuig{ble reverberations. This is noticeabla in Ewn caverns, ane
| V . ./.['_l}% \l\ : " > \ Q;g/ i Z »*-:'7')‘?:\ o A : ' o - Ao Lo 78 o el T ' dir S *\*fi/fiu‘%a | s ol e _. PN cg;m\\\__‘ e : ’ , ettt U P A i i Qs , , i gf!; 5 N l i ‘ Z__t" §t‘." A ::b / b % 1 ’ 1 | | ' ~ The Handiest Tool in Has your kitchen a spatula? Housekeepers tell us that the spatula is the handiest piece of kitchen cutlery they own. Tt is useful in a hundred different ‘ways—for turning griddle cakes, loosening cakes in tins, scraping pots andpans. . ... .~ - Winchester spatulas are made of superior steel, tem- - ‘pered to just the right degree of flexibility. Pol‘ished cocobolo handles. Cast-on bolsters fit tightly prt eGI E ok OIR oty SRR T SEN : £Ek ;i . fohanflles/, Lopne T Te ks fapril sty | BT R e e e(e Loy eel Bray e :’-,¢‘.:«!.§-;:‘.,.‘»;.5 tiodman 5 : L
- WINCHESTER KNIVES for All Household Purposes . 5 WEIR & COWLEY st ‘". L ‘ 4%"3";;‘ -}7::"3‘275‘» 4) / ! ; “ : ."'j ,t' ; ;‘"; ’{l(
sl | ': !. . l Battery Prices Cut Again Reduction of 15-33 Lowest price in years on Standard battery. Drive around and let us tell you about it. ; | . 9 ; :o Electric Service Ligonier, Indiana : ; ~ i g, ] SrestOlite Stowage Satterny Feet speak a lz'mguagé all their own— soak yours in Blue Devil and listen. ; 46a2t
CONCEIT A MASCULINE TRAIT
Woman Writer So Asserts, and Says ‘ It Usually Crops Out After His Marriage.
All feminine creatures, from the cradle to the grave, proceed on the basis that all men are conceited. This is perhaps particularly true of the man who is no longer lover, but husband.; As lover he had a wide streak of huinility in his composition; a husband “mostly regards humility as a waste product, writes a Woman of Forty in Harper's. - i |
More than once I have seen some dull woman flattering my husband, and have had him tell me afterward what a fine, keen, warm-hearted little person she is. I have yet to meet the man who fails to feel that the woman who admires him has something sound and right about her. More than once I have flattered a man just to see him expand. : 4 Indeed, it is a stupld eor inexperienced woman -who has not done this, and usually because she wanted to get something out of him. ' In his dealing with a woman it is quite easy to sell a man a gold brick. Doubtless, the well-known law of compensation works here; if men get plenty of selfsatisfaction out of their self-confi-dence, it is something for which they have to pay the piper. - S . A woman of my age knows that a certain amount of self-satisfaction has been necessary to keep the race going, and that the self-satisfied type that appreciates itself most highly has been the most successful type. The trait has been very valuable to the race, at any rate in the rough-and-tumble conditions through which men have lived and struggled in evolving from the days of Pithecanthropus. . o Women have done their bit in simulating this quality of conceit and selfsatisfaction because they like suecessful men and have married them when they had the chance—which is the same thing as saying that they ‘have married conceited men and bred conceitéd boys, swhose conceit they fostered by praise. ;
. THE '_WM ( WInCHESTER
.« BANK STATEMENT . : ~ State Bank No -sor ~C. W. Bender, President s - Chas. A. Werker, Vice President ‘Marion Crowcock, Cashier Report of the condition of the State Bank of Kimmell, a State bank at Kimmell, in the State of Indiana, at the close of its business on Dec. 31 1921 : RESOURCES Loans and Discounts... .... $78,318 g 9 ORerdrfil s ..o oo oo 8o 44 B Bonds .. ..........i. 457300 Other Bonds and Securities 4,748 oo Banking House il s 1080 OO Furniture and Fixtures...... 2,850 oo Due from Banks and : : Trust C0mpanie5.......... 10,333 o 6 Cashan Haoeh.,.. . iveiins 2,571 76 08l JOMEN . s s 144 o 0 Current 8xpen5e5........... 98¢ 27 IRNes BNI 169 74 Interest Paid ... ... ... ... ~ 988 54 Interest Receivable Accd to L matr iok T 2,308 19 Total Re50urce5...........5115,079 99 S LIABILITIES Capital Stock—Paid in ...... $25,000 oo DOCBINE L i v 300 60 Undivided Profits ........... 1021 07 ‘Exchange, Discount and Interest 2459 07 Demand Deposits 836,056 61 Demand Certificates 33,457 16 Savings Dep05it5,..15,437 94 84,951 71 Recterve set up for Taxes 361 62 Interest payable Aced to : B~3Ax-2|’.'..,..........' 586 52 Total Liabilities.......... $115,079 99 State of Indiana, County of Noble 83 = - I, Marion Growcock, Cashier of the State Bank of Kimmell do solemnly swear that the above statement is true. - MARIONGROWCOCK. Subscribed and sworn to befere me this sth day of Jan. 1922 ' Leonard Van Voorst, Notary Public - My commission expires June 11, 1924.
LEARN TO DANCE All Latest Steps Tgught Tuesday and Thursday - Evenings Regular Meeting Nights Arnold Elson Phone 18, Ligonier .
|] 1 wifil pag; ' it dedons b Jfore you order SALE BILLS
e ~ Other Winchester Cutlery - to Make Housework Easier | | Winches. Kitchen Slicers—Handy all-purpose knives. Cocobolo handles. Brass telescope rivets—steel that holds its edge. : A Fine Potato Knife —Winchester paring knife with cut-off blade—a.. new desigy in a vegetable knife that does not tire the hands. | Butcher Knives-——Made of superior steel, finely ground, sharp edge, hanales fastened with three brass rivets; are fully guaranteed. B . 6-inch Butcher Knife -40 c 8-inch Butcher Knife -50 c Othersaslowas - - = 25¢c- ~ Sixes from sto 14 inches. See our line of fine knives, fully B 8 e e A& A taig L
