Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 48B, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 January 1922 — Page 4

Jlean Sweep dale i | | © Saturday w e will place on sale five dozen A number one Mouse Brooms at the low price of 63c. Every broom has mahogany baked in handle, five sewed all fine Oklahoma selected broom corn. springy and long life. Don’t miss getting one of these brooms as they are high grade in every sense just like vou would buy| and pay‘s.l.oo:for. This is our Saturdav sale for your henefit not how cheap a broom st 1 «- | 4 : 5 ol Ghie ; L but how goodrwe can offer. | - i ' Prices declining at ihis store. Remember Broom Sale Saturday enly Jan 28, 63c. v : . T4' 9 v - 2A::ey; : @ : - :

| RHEUMATISM ! | ~ €an Be Cured By . Or. Richards Famons Preseripton.—(Neutralizes The Acid.) Ur. Richards [imiment.—(Stops the Pain) . | Ur. Richards Stomach and Liver Pills. (Rids the sytem of Foisons, ) : S . b i:;:‘ AL COST OF COMPLETE TREATMENT ONLY $1.50 - Use allthree together, - “Will Not Upset The Stomch” 'r.‘f)‘v‘e- N : ’ Positively Guaranteed Cut out this-ad—Take it to the drug store—Tell the druggist this is what you want—He’li- thank yeu—And you’ll Thank him AND. YO U WILL BOTH BE HAPPY ~ Sold and Recommended By . ,}‘ * » | .fi. , ; v - Cecil 5. Griffith . Manufactured by The Dr. Richards Medical Co. - Columbia City, Ind. o

E,nnt‘ié to be secured by first: morigage for not to exceed 40 per cent value of land alone, excluding im‘provements, S : 2y - Loans for more than 40% of land value at 1%. Call at our office for complete information about our corditions and terms which are atiractive. o L N ; ,':F.r ‘ ,x‘_ ; | 4 i ‘%Saii&’\USBRORiERS 1 . s e i ‘e’fiflw ‘ i ‘ COMPANY LGONER, - | - v 47323 V & INDIANA

= ) o 5 - Have Cut Prices Now on Dyed Garments , 4 ! fi Clothing Dry cleaned :md’_.-l)y ed is not a luxury but an art o prac-‘ tical econoiny. : : / - ‘ Aud with our new equipment are ahle 1) give the best or ser?ieé Jeaving your' garmentg “h‘e’e‘f.fmm odor, ' il ‘ e Will be woth your while to look us up or PHQNE 86 when ia wa!_lt of such service. : \ . : Lk L - BANNER STEAM LAUNDRY - Dry Cleaning And Pying. = '

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m + JLAQOII | 5‘P : 1 Auctioneering. Anyone desiring the services of an experienced auctioneer available for all kinds of auction sales, apply to Harry L. Benner, Wolf: Lake, Ind. Noble and Whitley county phones. : . 45btf Young men, women over i 7 desiring‘ government positions, $l3O monthly write for free list of positions now open R. Terry (former Civil Service examiner) 1401 Continental Bldg. Washington, D. C. i ‘ 46a3t*

.1 have contracted 5,000 muskrat hides tb be - delivered before New eYars. Do not sell but see me and get more money. I pay meore for all other furs than anyone else.. S Joe Miller 40att : For Sheriff. ' I wish to announce that-I will be a Republican Candidate for Sheriff of Noble county Indiana subject to the decision of the primary election held on the 2nd day of May 1922, Alvin S. Harr, Kendallville, Ind. e ' 45b4t : Notice of Appointment, o State of Indiana Noble County SS: Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed administrator of the estate of Nellie Pickett, deceased, late of Noble county Indiana. ¢ - Said estate is supposed to be solvent. » ; Edward Piggott, Administrator W. H. Wigton; Att'y : 46a3t £ Notice of Services Christian Science Services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at the hall over Weir & Cowley. Welcome 1-1-22

. For sale or trade a ranch in Blaine county, Montana consisfing of 320 acres along the Great Northern railway 24 miles from the Saskatchwan. Good house, garage and well, right in the centre of the wheat blet. A good grain market within an hour’s drive. Here is a rare bagains for some on= who desies to make a charnge. For information call at Banner office. 47atf For rent, good farm of 290 acres with everything \furnished. Enquire of W. A. Cochran or George Goshorn. / © 46btf The wise automobile owner will store his battery for the winter with Kiester’'s Battery Shop where it will receive the proper care, 42att J _ For Sale house of 7 rooms with lot 101x158 good barn and garage. Good locatien and fine shade and fruit trees A baragin if taken at once. Inquire at Banner pffice ... Aohtt -If you have a good fresh cow or springer I want it, if you want a good fresh cow or springer I have it. George Foster,Lepird barn. Ligonier. : : "~ 44bty - To The Public—l am prepared to make and fit stove pipe and set up stoves for the winter. Also stove repairing. D. M. Rench L 80btt Wanted—Young women to take a short course in nursing. Pay while learning, * Address Dr. Bonnell M. Souder Hospitall, Auburn, Ind. 47a6t

Get a hot dog sandwich 5 cents at American Cafe. , 47a2t Wanted, work by & young woman. Call at No. 505 Grand street. 47atf Wanted—Man to work on farm married. C. L. Chamberlin - 45btf s ; 1 . st : For 'sale, .80 acres 4 miles south west of Ligonier. C. M. Campbell, Bement, Illinois. W 45a8t ‘Washings | wanted" to help suppont the children. 407 Union street. Mrs Rollin Bailey. Kt , Anyone desiring accommodations may secure board and room at 128 Jay street, Phofie No. 382. ‘44btt For sale, modern nroperty in good location. Call at Banner office. 47btf For Sale—Corn, hay, oats. Inquirré of C. A. Wolf. Phone 271. 47btf Give your skin a chance—you can’t injure it cleaning with Blue Devil. Do you like to get the, dirt out of cracks and corners—use Blue' Devil. -—-—————_— Ny ~,v. Get a hot dog sandwich § cents at American Cafe. ‘47a2t

W. H. WIGTON “ Attorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block } ~ LIGUNIER, IND. CHARLES V‘INKS AND SON " e Disker in g ; Monuments, Vaults, Tombstones, " Building Stone

EARL WOLF ‘Auctioneer Will Answer (lu!is Anywhere - Phone 16600 Q Ligonier ah lndhm]

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

MOST HAZARDOUS OF SPORTS Participants .in Irish Wild Goose Chase Always in for Danger - Real and Thrilling. The etymology of steeplechase is too obvious to mneed set - explanation. Founders of the sport merely fixed upon a . distant steéple and rode straight to It, crossing gallantly, hedge, ditch, paling, turf or timber, pastures, crops, moorland er ridge and furrow—whose riding ' straightest, came in first and was winner. - But there are few, indeed, to whom a wild goose chase bears any implication of sport, yet the phrase derives from a sport hazardous, indeed. It is said to have begun in Ireland, where a chosen leader took mounted men cross country, but chose always the roughest, wildest going to be found. If mischance befell the leader some other took up the office—occasionally there was a change of leaders if the first proved timorous. For danger real and thrilling was the spice of the wild goose chase. : The winner was not he who came home first, but he -who had flunked nothing in the route, even possibly having gone further arouna to negotiate an extra hazard. : Knowing this I have wondered a little if the Wild Geese—the Irish legions who, fighting for alien Kings, have shown themselves prodigles of valor—did not take their name from the sport nearest the heart of their homeland.—New York Heralgd.

DISPLAY THAT IS PERIODIC “Aurra Borealis” Has Its Manifestations at Intervals of From Ten to Sixty Years. e The name “aurora borealis” was first used by Cassendi, who: in 1621 observed one in France and wrote a description of it., The “aurora” is periodic .in its manifestations, the finest displays being at Intervals of 60 years and less marked ones at intervals of 10 or 11 years. - It is asserted that the greater and lesser displays correspond with the increase and decrease of spots on the sun. : e This phenomenon is generally manifested in the following way: A dim light appears on the horizon shortly after twilight and gradually assumes the shape of an arch having a pale yellow color with its concave side turned earthward. From this arch streams of light shoot forth, passing from yellow to green and then to brilliant violet. o

The name, “aurora borealls,” while generally referring to the northern lights, is' applied to a similar phenomenon visible in the vicinity of the South pole. e : Machine Clears Land for Farm. Among the new agricultural machinery is a ponderous mechanical construction which moves under its own power over some rough country and leaves it in -condition for planting. The, operation of = clearing land for agricultural purposes is & very hard and tedious operation,' but with the aid' of this new machine the labor ‘and time expenditure is reduced more than half. The front end of the machine, which moves on a caterpillar tread, is equipped with heavy bars with sharpened points which enter the ground alternately and tear roots and throw them on a conveyer belt, dropping them inside to be disposed of later. The rear of the machine is supplied with a somewhat different device which pulverizes the ground and leaves it in condition for planting. Under ordinary conditions this machine has a capacity of three acres a day. _

Enlightening the Ignorant.

A large, guttural-voiced woman sat in an aisle seat for one of the Pavlowa performances at the Manhattan opera house, She was the type who read all the captions aloud at the movies. Here her weakness took her in the form of interpreting the pantomime for the benefit of the man with her, and those around who could not escape. “Aw!” she would exclaim deeply and caressingly. “Her toesl” Her best remark, however, was on the occasion of Pavlowa's final scene in “Amarilla,” where she is dancing near ‘the stone seat in the count’s gardenl “Now,” she sald, “she is Vorshiping. vhere he sat.”—New York Hvening Post. ; i ,

Truly Mathematical Prodigy.

The mathematical prodigy, whose case is reported in_the Lancet, was able to give the square root of any number running: into four figures, in an average of four seconds, and the cube root of any number running into six figures in six seconds. He gave the cube root of 465,474,375 (which is 775) in 18 seconds. These feats, and others even more remarkable, he performed without resort to writing, as he was blind from birth. = - ¢

" Old-Fashioned Notion.

“The coffee is good here, the waiters attentive and the music and vaudeville superior. Besides, I don’t think you will find a more tastefully decorated place in the city.” : “I agree with all you say,” replied the visitor, who was being shown about town, “but occasionally I go into a restaufant for the purpose of getting something to eat.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. - :

Mospital Without Wards. A hospital without wards, where people of small or no means can recelve private treatment, is being built in New York. Liidy P

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- PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN . WS MM FRM BELEF, | : © BASED OM MEARS OF L - PERSONAL EXPERIENEE g Y THAY TWo ( {l, ' gg 4 ARE . CAN | for | S e o ; K e ;i ' S = @)y v TRE P lark) | .»\;‘,\‘-‘l Y AN 3 K e" LNy j >" pe &o\'\\ "‘ p o ; N s = ?/ e y j : ;‘{ j” % ‘vl.’; 4 . :"“ .-'*’.'-\“*l’.“ » P ‘\"{.V/’ > 8 \ .:’ & /‘ ! a’kf‘"‘" /— ? i ?}/_ ~;zf:,;" 2 = — K goo The Big-Feeling Gink is laying down the Law again. Every Remark is a Statement ; every Step a Strut; every Pose a Picture.. He takes Himself Seriously - and pretends to be the Braln Trust, but personally We think ' he's Full of Prunes. .

The Insecurity of Office. “A public career has its compensae tions.” o : “What are they?” asked Senator Snortsworthy suspiciously. . “Well, you enjoy a certain honorable distinction, you are much in the public eye and your fellow citizens pay you the respect due a.statesman.” - ~ “Maybe so, but I'm never the center of an admiring crowd of my constituents that I don’t wonder which one of them cherishes a secret ambition to stand in my shoes and is figuring out a little combination: that may in a few years have me back in the home town practicing law.”—Birmingham Age-Herald. L : _ Poisofted by Matches. Qases of poisoning from safety matches seem. to be common in Denmark. Dr. C. Rasch reports ta the Ugeskrift for Laeger (Copenhagen) on thirteen recent' cases in hiz own practice. The trouble took the form of a severe inflammation of the skin on fingers, neck and facé, with badly swollen eyelids. In men it appears below the pocket in which the ratches are carried; in women on the fingers -with which they light their cigarettes. Dr. Rasch ascribes it to the use of phosphorus sesquisulphide wher amorphous phosphorus was not to_be had. | " Take Views From Airplane. _ For the first time an American archaeologist has used aerial photoge raphy to obtain bird’s-eye views of the oldest man-made topographical features of America, the Indian mounds. David I Bushnell, Jr, is using such photographs of the mounds near East St. Louis to illustrate a report of the byreau of ethnology of “the Sinithsonian institution at Washington. : Tk 7 v i E eet e ee e et i : ~ Giraffe Disappearing. The giraffe seews to be disappearing from its natural haunts in Africa. A few years ago it was gquite common “to encounter them in herds of 80 or 100, but now herds of 20 seem to be the aversge. : -~ | PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN

= e b= s v - : N , : | o siy e 2 : T | =z ' - N =z ~ o & c : // ;‘ = ."‘ < //./’4 i ;,1; ’ O v< e T The. JAutomobilist'was taking a Ride in fan Airplane when the Motor stopped and he jumped out from Force of Habit to see Wotinell was the Matter now. This teaches us that no Automobilist should take a Joy Ride among the Clouds without first being Strapped to his Seat. '

~ DANCE All Latest Steps Taught et e e S e o et Tuesday and Thursday Evenings Regular Meet- | ing Nights ' Arnold Elson Phone 18, Ligonier

- SCALP TREATMENT Shampooing and Manicuring : . ~ Emma_C. Taylor Dr. Gants Residence, One Door South " of Presbyterian Church, - Ligonler, Indlana

"- | SN - : V : ‘ e é%‘?}:f::‘ Gde “Faster, Jimmy, faster! ey Ly e LN T N T e /5\ breakfast till we bring AT C R W Fiseis ot .\,;{,:\_» % 4}:\ 800 ;43?,” : < \ -+ x g i \ ;// ) Compare Havor and crispness! ' : 9 , 2 . KELLOGGS againstany ~ Corn Flakes you ever ate! Takes the rough edges off hopping out of the covers these snappy mornings just thinking about that lusty ' bowl of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes waiting down-stairs! Big and brown and crispy-crunchy flakes—a revelation - in appetizing flavor, wonderful in wholesome goodness— ; ~ the most delicious cereal you ever tasted! Instantly you like Kellogg’s, not only because of apo pealing flavor, but because Kellogg’s are not ‘‘leathery’’! Kellogg’s are a delight to eat, as the little folks as well as the big ones will tell you! And Kellogg’s ought to be h best—they’re the original Corn Flakes! You have only ' —— - to make comparison to quickly realize how perfect they are! - o) 7W KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes for to- & : - morrow morning’s spread! They get b 1 TOASTED the: day started right! Insist upon e ] ORN - KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes in the % (o ~ RED and GREEN package—the kind ’% FL AISE; that are not leathery! ’ . ; ¥ ¢ FLAKES Also makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN. cooked and krumbled

A Reminder ‘ Don’t fnrget that promiise you made the good wifs and daughter to buy a piane er Victrela. Ceme and loek at stock of Muscal goods. We have wlmt you want at the right Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas ‘You ean take the easy payment plan if you do net care to pay eash. e | Yours for 5¢ years of Musical Service. South Main St.. 'Estabiishéd 11871 Goshen, Indiana

We Have Receivedf Large Shipments Hard and Soft Coal Chestnut, No. 4 and Furnace sizes in hard coal. Best grades of e softcoal. | Full line jof Building Material now o o OnTieea COMPTON & HOLDEMAN ~ HOLDEMAN & SON Straus Wool House. e Phone N 0.279

I LT 7277 2RI A 7 Lt (z“fg\"b e S —— : r a _&?‘S": e 4 (ffi-fi ‘x‘;;.a,;,;.‘- ; S ‘ | Aristos Bread =1 Quart warm potato water 1 level tablespoon salt - '_ 2 heaping tablespoons sugar % cake compressed yeast 1 heaping tablespoon lard 3 guarts Aristos Flour - ’ : ial PROCESS ! e T Dissolve yeast, sugar and saltin water. Add lard to Aristos Flour. Make into a dough, and after greasing dough on top, put aside ~and let stand for five hours (which is termed proofing). Then + press dough down andlet standagain from one-half to one hour, according to temperature. Now fold dough into loaves without " kneading, and let them stand three-fourths to one hour before bakirig. It will usually take one hour for this size loaves to bakf - —four loaves being what this amount of dough will make, | Write for recipe book, sent free on request. ' ~ The Southwestern =7 &¥ Kansas City, ‘Milling Co., Inc. VS ‘ R WRaeE : 4 4 L BRSY 9 B \V) i ; . e . 1 .5"" ko ¥ i lv, & s A i .j’;{ g ¥ ,',_: 1 4 i| K% 3 ;:}('l R e e BN WY ONeSE Al s ke ke o B R g sA ey i sy et B 0 G QS SS/ b GAR s 577 40