Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 48B, Ligonier, Noble County, 26 January 1922 — Page 5

=etiy § -~ VA ) M e e Vo :::’:’,’s 8 ot PPy f) - ,/ ~%_ {\ i‘¥ s T Rt (2 (2R Ty W 2 Q) R / Ry AR - =X G 2 pERE N A ~.’-4/ // ;//,/" r?? : i b sy, /// %/ 87 7 < 24 el 7 / 5 | ihs it | 45 Wi AN )/ WY/ M 2 A 7 Y\ /9P - ~ T o : i T \\ =\ W 7 i WILL START YOU . B/ i DRt TN\ 77\ ] : TN TN Sl IN OUR' - /9 L\ B ] ) ~ " I NV R 5 : AR EXETE R B ©OR FO-%3 ; . AIIE ‘A‘.;_;;:}x‘. ?{‘ @‘ : \9\‘\‘3* - KING /[ #¢LUB W ?(/\[ .}_;. Og T A ‘ '97 @ !{;':’ L 7 ~-j‘fl~“"m' It‘ < : ‘l : e w o A ey o vy f B ' HEthmaS &S T B e e ; ® ! Xy AT/ 5g . EAR : i ; {‘%'?' : .'3:'7l{' i £ i youwill have glzd s N 1 T4l DA SRS eI . W T - R i VDEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR EACH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS AND YOU HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN EARSILY SAVE R DOLLAR A WEEK AND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. ‘ THERE ARE CLUBS WHERE YOU DEPOSIT 50 CENTS R WEEK, OR $5..00 OR ANY SUM---A CLUB TO FIT YOUR PURSE. OR YOU CAN BEGIN WITH 1 CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT EACH WEEK. .~ IN FIFTY WEEKS. i : . 10-Cent Club Pays $127.50 -~ 5-Cent Club Pays - 63.75 ' ~ 2-Cent Club Pays - 25.50 ‘ 1-Cent Club Pays 12.75 YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE LARGEST AND 'DECREASE ERCH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. YOU GET BACK EVERY CENT YOU PUT IN. . ' : ! ~ COME IN AND ASK ABOUT IT. . = Make Our Bank Your Bank ' | We pay 4 per cent. interest on saving deposits v and Saving Accounts. | Farmers & Merchants Trust Co __A_fi‘____.__f—_‘_w.,._‘,.fl_,__,_m_“,,.. . eRSSi O e e e ‘

pay After Inventory Sale o January 28teFeh 4

COTTON BATTS Our 89c 214 lb. pure cotton ‘batts ........ 69c 20c value Lottots Batts ... ... 12 ibe value Colton Batts 3 for .. ... 2b¢ . APRONS - , Ladies’ Cover All Aprons $1.19 value .... 98¢ Ladies’ Cover All Aprons $2.43 yalue .. $1.98 GOWNS Ladies’ Outing Gowns good quality large sizes and well made $1.98 value for ........ $1.19 - CARD GAMES _ Sieam boat PlayinpgCarde ..............i... 29¢ ok, Fitor loubne ..o BB . LUNCH KITS Handy Andy Lunch Kits Japaned tin satchel shape contains vacuum bottle each... $1.98 ' _ - BLANKETS | ‘ Nashua Plaid Woaol nap ... ... $83.49 Grey cotton with pink or blue borders 64x76 e pair e 8140 Grey Cotton with pink or blue borders 64x80 B PRI e Ry HOSE | Ladies’ part wool hose 59¢ value the pair 43¢ Children’s Arrowhead hose 50 ¢ value .... 29¢ . BLOOMERS = Girl’s pink bloomers 48c value go at ........ 29¢ Girl’s Outing Blomers29¢ value go at .... 19¢

Beenlator tops eael (... B 8 boxes Tooth pieks ..................c0... 10¢ 12 boxes Blue Matches ..................1..i. 24c 32 boxes Safety Matches .................. 10¢ ® eards 100 safty DINE ..o, 2DC & doz enap dress fastners .................... 10c 75¢ bottle liquid floor wax .................... 49¢ 1 pint bottle liquid floor wax ................ 29¢ Cyclone Egg beater 25¢ value ............ 19¢ White table oil cloth the yd. ................ 29¢ Lanters $1.50 value each.................... $1.25

_ AT OUR C ANDY COUNTER < * Peanut Butter or Molasses Kisses the pound s O Spanish Salted Peanuts the pound v i hess et by AN Ri e e e Chocolate Coated peanuts the pound ....o.ccovovioioooiones o, Assisesr e i R AGI B Our High grade chocolates the pound Fssannrniiorssssisnshosscatorhressachs iihins WondehsaenVisiaol Ronoi e S Lbocolate DYope tHe DOUNA ..o i i Wb e b e L 00 Almond, English Walnut ‘or Brazil nuts the pound Aisbbessiaiiinantevearssnliviisitinhe ittt 20 L mmrm-~-mw ' ~ NEW DRESS GINGHAM ' : ; Be sure to see our New dress Ginghams priced at the yard ................ 22 and 27¢ :

CORN POPPERS : Blach sheet steelwire mesh corn poppers and COVEES iiiiiniimminnisirsnensensieshenitesssasssnssassasnns 39%¢ W LAUNDRY SOAP ‘ 10 cakes iKrks Flake White soap ............ 55¢ 10 cakes Pearly Wave for ...........ccu......... 48¢ 5 cakes Waltkes Naptha for-...............;.... 30€ | - GLOVES - Canvas gloves the pair ....ciiniine, 106 Jersey gloves the pale o i 198 Men’s Black Knit gloves the pair ............ 50c¢ 0 L OILMORE . L : Triangle Model for cleaning and polishing hardwood floors can be washed each .. 98¢ ol TOILER SOaP 0 Palm Olive 3 bars fay ...l .. a 0 200 Jap Rose 3 bars foP ... 00, 208 All 5¢ toielt soaps 3 bars for .................... 10¢ ' - 'YARD'GOOPS = . . Outings extra heavy light or dark yd. 14c Challie for comforts 1 yd wide the yd. ....18¢c Percales light or darvk ..ol ... 18e CHAIR SEATS : Fiber chair seats reinforced in center with woven wire which prevents breaking SAER s e B ' LAMPS , : Rayo Nickel Plated brass table lamps white shade complete $4.50 value for ............ $3.50

OTHER SP ECIALS

Snap mouse traps S.for ... i 100 Ladies 10c¢ handker chiefs 3 for ............ 25¢ Crepe Toilet Paper 4 for ..-.................... 25¢ Tissue Tollet paper ........cimoiinnniv. 90 Tumblers Plain ... ... ... 0 R Tumblers floral design ........cccoveuvvennnniins 10c Pressed Crystal Sherbets ........cccoeennvonn.. 10c Mop Sticks 26c value ... ............. 19¢ Brooms 45c¢ value ety GOC 1 pint Vacuum Bottles $1.69 value for 89¢ Brown or Tan oil cloth the yd. ................ 25¢

Rheumatiz in One Reel. “Well, Eph,” said his ex-employer, meeting the old darky on the street, “how ‘is the rheumatism these days?* “Porely, sah, porely,” was the dejected reply. “Believe me, Marse Bixby, I'se jest a movin’ picture ob pain.” —Boston Transcript. ' L i Better Off Without it Old Grones—l wish to heavens 1 could acquire an appetite. His Wife—For goodness’ sake what do you want with an appetite? It wonld only give you more dyspepsia.

The Days That Are Gone. “You used to say,” she complained, ‘“that you counted that day lost when v»a did not hear the sound of my soldd.” : “Yes, I know,” he repiied, “and 1 2221% never ceaze to long for those dear ‘lost days.”-—l_soaton_, Transeript. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN _____-——_-;—_—__._—-—‘:—"—‘""‘— \WA“Y QQME ...—..-'_::_ | I.E‘fYERHEAO% LNE — e THIS, BUY TAKE —= ——————— wouß TIME BoMg , — s NO HURRNY — | T L : T F - wens LV ; bt é : LA 47 : @1 b G é////fi/’ A 0 S T S RIS : Hooray! Hooray! Here comes the Printer’s Pal! When we’re Busier than & One-Armed Snare Drummer, he never Adds to our Woes and he Always, Always brings his Ad in Early. And he ever hollers that his Home Town Paper is the best in the Land and Pays Up without being Asked. : -

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

Asks Only to Be Left Alone— Jerseyites Know Her as . “Miss Alice.” To the scattered residents of the wooded Watchung mountaing she is merely “Miss Alice”—to the townfolk of Plainfield, N. J., “another queer one”—to the county officials, a perplexing problem. ' . : Plainfield’s womar of mystery lives in a tent; torn, wind-battered, reinforced with dry branches. Always the front flap is open, so that sharp winds seep snow upon her bed of rags. Her food is dried herbs, cooked in an improvised stove of stone. Her clothes are threadbare, carelessly wrapped about her slender body. :

Not more than thirty, blonde, cleareyed, active-bodled, well-mannered, cultured, apparently without funds and. yet indignant at proffered aid—such is “the problem.” :

It was only after lengthy persuasion that she stopped for a moment to reply to a question asked her by a reporter. -

“Who I am is of no concern to anyone,” she said in a clear, firm voice, her blue eyes flashing; her head held high. “I want no help; I want to be let alone.” - ’ )

It was from her neighbors that the visitors learned as much of her story as she has ever divulged. She was, the neighbors said, the wife of a physician in New York. e

Last summer she had come gs part of Plainfield’s “back to nature” colony. She had erected her tent and “squatted” there. Rarely she had spoken to others, and never of her past. : ; Another odd feature of her case is her assurance that she can live without aid. Apparently the woods provide food for her. She is a vegetarian —this her neighbors know. - . Whatever may be her explanation for her conduct, it is not the working out of a radical theory of the simple life. She does not mingle with such radicals who live near by. : :

FEARED TO SPEAK HIS LOVE

Faint-Hearted Swain Jailed for,“Dog‘f ging” Girl's Footsteps. :

That “faint heart never won fair lady” was demonstrated in a New York city court when a tall typist, pleading guilty of disorderly conduct, said it was all because he did not have the courage to tell the idol of his heart that he loved her. Bessie Gitnick, twenty years old, a stenographer, told Magistrate Renaud that for two years Harry C. Anderson, twenty-eight, had been “dogging” her every step. : “When I'd open my door in the morning to go to work,” she said, “he would be standing outside the house. He would follow me to the subway and then rush into the same car with me. He’d trail me from the subway station to my office, and when I came out for lunch he would be waiting for me. Just like a shadow, I couldn’t shake him. “He would sit at another table and watch me eat. He would follow me back to the office after lunch and then home again at night. He would even keep a nightly and Sunday vigil in front of my home in Brooklyn. I just can’t stand it any longer.” A DEER RACES TRAIN

Doe So Tame That It Follows Children ‘to School, ;

Tales of a tame doe which races with trains on the Lewisburg and Tyvone branch of the Pennsylvania railroad and follows chjldren living in the mountains near Ingleby, Center county, Pa., to school every morning, have been brought teo Harrisburg by trainmen, who say the deer, which has been named “Mimi,” is a great pet of the mogntain folk. E Three years ago “Mimi,” then a fawn, came to the Ingleby summer home of Mrs. H. W. Rowe. Children fed and petted the fawn, which stayed, making an old log shed its refuge. ‘ Strangest of all, its inseparable com‘panion is a huge dog, which acts as a protector. Every morning Dorry Cherry, engineer of the Lewisburg and Tyrone flyer, toots his whistle when he nears ‘lngleby. The toot is a sign for the train crew to notify the passengers that the strange race between the deer and the train is on. Sometimes “Mimi” takes the track, and runs ahead of the engine, but generally races alongside.

- DOG IS DOPE PEDDLER Carried Drug From Man to Woman-—— . Both Arrested. A poodle dog, Felix by name, and a drug carrier by profession, has pranced down Broadway, New York, with his last cargo ofsnarcotics, the police said. Felix, who answered a call of a welldressed young woman just as an alleged addict approached her, was closely watched as he placed his paws ‘against her skirt and 'stretched his neck upward. : The woman, who said she was “Miss Phillips,” is in jail charged with having removed from the poodle’s collar a package containing a drug. The alleged addict is in another cell charged with accepting the package. Felix is ‘ nosing about in a third cell, bl Ton of Garlic and Onions Goes by Mall. " A ton of garlic and onions was recently shipped by parcel post from Douglas, Ariz, to a merchant in Globe, Ariz. A record was made in the time required in taking the shipment frgm the postoffice to the railroad car. Shoots Bandit Who Had Empty Gun. A bluff with an empty pistol cost an unidentified holdup man his life in New York city when he attempted to rob a restaurant. He used the gun 45 ¢ col The Soprigho of an adJoining bakery . the stranger

: e ey S o st ~ PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN WHo ye €, }J ] f o ef-sc“l A PARKIN' yep Roo ' eAR HKE o [ TTHAY, \ / HENE | ¢ =y \ /{/ — N ~ &. 3 \\.\\\—% e ‘\ (B 0 . > \ e { - 7 ] — ARLES ] ; .%&wmfi The Boésy Cop makes the Automobilist feel Pretty Cheap for Parking his car Wrong. And if the Automobilist Perks Up and Talks Back, the Cop will send him to the Pen for Life, How Thankful we should be that This Town has no Bossy Cop!

MOCK WEDDING IS REAL

Giri Finds That Minister Made the - Ceremony Legal.

Miss Elizabeth Parrill, eighteen years old, of Chicago, took part in a moek wedding at a party and did not discover until after the ceremony had been performed that she had been married by a minister and that the contract was legal. She then hurried home and told her parents of the affair. Her father went to court and attempted to secure an annulment of the marriage. The judge granted it after the girl promised to be more careful in the future. J

She tgld the judge that she had been invited to the party by a student in a nearby college. The man nroposed a mock wedding, with himself as the bridegroom and her as the bride. She accepted “in fun,” but her escort had a minister marry them,; and the ceremony was binding.

Mother and Children Perish in Fire. Mrs. Reuben Johnson and her six children were burned to death when fire completely destroyed their home at Windsor, Nova Scotia. The children were from one to Jifteen years old. : ' :

Asks to Keep Husband From Home. - An injunction preventing her husband from entering their house is asked for by Mrs. Jerome Britt of Brooklyn, N. Y. She declares her husband beats her every time he enters the home and is not a safe companion,

Carney’s Clothing Store ————— ANNOUNCES ———— ATremendousßeduction cnod s iR L | | | Suits and Overcoats o | Every suitand overcoat in our stock 0 will be oftered at greatly reduced , = ~ prices for the next few weeks. This | ‘includes every suitand overcoat in our store consisting of Hart Schatfner & = - Marx and other well known makes of » | clothing all are latest ‘styles and fabi;ic. ; SPECIAL PRICES ON BOYS’ T CLOTHING CARNEY CLOTHING : e Store Where MostAll:PhePeoglq m‘

& V\.i' ’£ i AR ~,,u:i . 4 ¢ | '..’/1. ; - e ‘ Q,.) ; F o THE URIVERSAL CAR Ra 3 g w el e Lyl - Lla wo BAL Bt q\‘ ‘Q & Lh"" o- ‘," N > e b ; //-’L) \}:L{)o‘ ‘ o R/ fi% -chj‘Tfim_.. b e é',«}', —4/ , L%jé;i,\ T W/ bapsot/ L LT eI e N 4 ooy e i R E e S £t 3 N e= | 1« s D i B 1 : ‘ ,L; S '* R ] 18 ‘ i 00. - B ff el R : 18 i b 1N B HR Ji M O n AR A S | AT SR eSR R e Tl Net ¢ b p o= e : a 7 T\ 1/ 8 3 ") S>Wyo PP P e R R eel & \\\L/ [ (ANSpeall) e T () | e S . = T NSO A B\ «__’/\‘mV g oo EEeelh . N | — Genuine Many Ford owners can afford to own and operate any car they may choose, but they prefer a Ford “because it is a Ford.” v . For “because it is a Ford” means dependability, ease of operation, efficiency—and it means sure, quick transportation. : ~ And “because it is a Ford” means good taste, - pride of ownership and genuine Common Sense, § The Ford Sedan.’a}closed car of distinction, beauty » and convenierce, is the ideal all year 'round car, ~ for pleasure or business—for the farm, town or. city. It gives you all that any car can give at a _ much lower cost for operation and maintenance, Ford Cars of all types are in great demand, so \ place your order at once if you wish to avoid ' delay in delivery, _ . ; . ; ; i k * - Farley & Kansier Inc. | ‘Ligonier, Indiana = §

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