Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 49A, Ligonier, Noble County, 30 January 1922 — Page 3

n AR TR Wi o ' ‘ s {;« L) / W & K A ,”f Z /Z//// éGy f"'_/”/é';»’ e al\ =8 e ', Y - 3\~ : : g \*\" 1 Z/// //” N\ /\AL - WILL START YOU >y B/ i ? < NN !;’-,‘4‘ , : N R s 240 “z p ‘:ani 2T 0 » - KING /70 LUB next Xmas k" fi“e B \4 will have 250 V 25 fa WAY W g N v Lo D i oVI R e O e e S DEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR EACH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS AND YOU HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN EASILY SAVE A DOLLAR A WEEK AND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. o 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 I,CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT EACH WEEK. . v IN FIFTY WEEKS. , | _ | - ~10-Cent Club Pays $127.50 _ 5-Cent Club Pays 63.75 2-Cent Club Pays 25.50 , 1-Cent Club Pays 1275 YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE LARGEST AND !DECREASE ERCH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. YOU GET BACK EVERY .CENT YOU NrIN.. . - COME IN AND ASK ABOUT IT. \ - ‘ Make Cur Bank Your Bank o We pay 4 per cent. interest on saving deposits ‘ and Saving Accounts. o e : . : . ) .: F : - Farmers & Merchants Trast Co

Dry Cleaning, Pressing L ; Dyeing and Repairing - Altering, Repairing . - Women's Garments . | (Mrs. Harley Bowen) = - All Work Called For and Delivered ' ’ ' SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 'REM_E‘.MBER: Cleaning and Px;essing iS ,an. economy not a - = fuxury | o L Call or Phone 63 | o l -Successor t_o Roy Ferguson” . - | LOCATION: Old Telephone Office -~ Rear of Banner Office. = = i

We Have Receivedf Large Shipments e 4 ~ o . Hard and Soft Coal Chestnuf, No. 4 and Furnace sizes -in hard coal. Best grades of | . soft coal . Full line {of Building Material now s anband . COMPTON & HOLDEMAN HOLDEMAN & SON Straus Wool House. " Phone N 0.279

Baby Chicks Beginning with Tuesday Feb. 21 we will have a hatch of Baby Chicks every Tuesday. We hatch 9 different breeds of pure bred utility stock, selected from free-range healthy flocks. Write for price list now. Archbold - Hatchery

This Means You, Mr. Merchant! B — DID you know that you and this paper have. an interest in common? Your success helps the communityasa who?e “ which in tum is of benefit tous. | ' When a merchant adver- - ~ tises with us, he is investing his money, which is returned with interest, Shew Your Geods fn the Windews ”mm h : MP?Q

(LAGSIFIED A 3 Auctioneering. " Anyone desiring the services of an experiericed auctioneer available for all kinds of auction sales, apply to Harry L. Benner, Wolf Lake, Ind. Noble and Whitley county phones, : 45btf I have contracted 5,000 muskrat hides to be delivered before New eYars. Do not sell but see me and get more money. I pay more for all other furs than anyone else. - : Joe Miller 40atf

L 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. E . Alvin S. Harr, Kendallville, Ind. . _ 45b4t ~ Notice of Services : Christian Science Services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’clock at the hall over Weir & Cowley. Welcome 1199

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 change. For information call at Banner office. 47atf e okt S R ! For rent, good farm of 290 acres with éverything \furnished. Enquire of W. A. Cochran or George Goshorn. . : : 46Dbtf The wise automobile owner will store his battery for the winter with Kiester’s Battery Shop where it will receive the proper care. . 42att For Sale house of 7 rooms with lot 101x158 good barn and garage. Good location and fine shade and fruit trees A baragin if taken at once. Inquire at Banner office Lo 4ehte If you have a good fresh cow or springer I want it, if you want a good fresh cow or spninger I have it. George Fester,Lepird barn. Ligonier. : . - 44bta . S it . 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 i 30btf

Wanted—Young women to take 'a short course in nursing. Pay while learning. Address Dr. Bonnell M. Souder Hospitall, Auburn, Ind. 47a6t Wanted—Man to work on farm married. C. L. Chamberlin 45btf For sale, 80 acres 4 miles south west -of Ligonier. C. M. Campbell, Bement, Illinois. : 45a8t Washings wanted to help support the children. 407 Union street. Mrs Rollin Bailey. o Anyone desiring accommodations may secure bcard and room at 128 Jay. street. Phone No. 382. 44btf For sale, modern property in ‘good location. Call at Banner office. - 47btf

W. H. WIGTON Attorney-at-l.aw ~ Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONI(ER, IN D, e CHARLES V'INKS AND SON ’ Dealopid’ Monuments, Vaults, Tombstones, Building Stone

EARL WOLF Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere Phone 16000 Q Ligonier ; Indiana

LEARK TO DANCE All Latest Steps Taught Tuesday and 'Thursdaw Evenings Regular Meeting Nights = Arnold Elson : lPhone 18,', Ligonier

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LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

RETAIN YOUR HEAD COVERING Writer Asserts That “Flu” Is Spread : by Practice of Doffing the Hat ; in Salutation. ; ~ Influenza has always been widely mysberlous in its operations. Long ago one of our warships was off the west African coast, says London Answers, when a dense black mist advanced from the shore 'and swept over the vessel. All the men on deck at the time were stricken down with the “filu”; and a little later the remainder of the men and officers were attacked. The ship was at once ordered home, and, though many of the cases were complicated with pneumonia and bronchitis, none, luckily, proved fatal. The patients were treated with cinchona bark and ammonia, which was then a recognized formula for malarial fevers. L

> During the devastating epidemic of “flu,” the Turks in Europe escaped because, it is said, they never removed their’ turbans. The medical faculty of Vienna officially declared that influenza was largely due to the practice of doffing hats in the streets. In support of this contention, it was pointed out that the great majority of the victims were of the male sex. A traveler found influenza to be unusually severe in Mexico, where, as he remarked, there is so much hatdoffing. : o It may. be the case, however, that such a large proportion of males are attacked because of the constant drain on. their vitality by the nature of their daily occupation. The writer was recently informed by a high medical authority. in London that influenza epldemics of late years showed the principal sufferers to be male persons who had reached the most active years of thelr lives. e

LEARN FROM THE ELEPHANT

Be Careful Where You Step and Take Credit When Due, Is by No 'Means Bad Advice. :

A circus man says'that an elelphant is always careful where he steps. He goes forward one step at a'time, and doesn’t lose his hold upon one place of security until another is gained. If many of eur business men had acquired this elephant philosophy and had followed it they wouldn’t be hanging over financial precipices now. .

If one goes about: thipking that the world is filled with crooks and schemers, the world it filled with erooks and schemers. On the other hand, -if one believes that the world is filled with fine neighborly, helpfal, (lnnaly folks, one finds people of that class In the great majority. : It isn’t well to have too much humility,. The man who gets into the habit of refusing to take credit for the good work he does is quite apt to be surprised when he discovers that people accept his denials as the truth. It is much better to be.like the little girl in the old story who, when she was asked, “Who made you?” replied, “God made me that length,” indicating with her hands the ordinary size of a new-born babe, “and I growed the rest myself.”—Forbes Magazine.

Shopping in Ecuador. The common trade balance of Ecuador is a short stick carrying a suspended pan at each end and held up by a cord around the center. The welght is 8 rock about the size of a man’s fist, and, while no-‘two of them are ever the same size, the merchant is always prepared to pledge his honor that the stone weighs a full and exact ‘pound. The price for a commodity is almost never fixed, and as the Ecuadorean is always prepared and expects to come down somewhat from his first price, it speaks worlds for his/optimjsm that he invariably tries to get more. The bargaining does not actually begin until you have disregarded the first figure and asked: “What is the last price?’ (*el ultimo precilo?”). In fact, I have been told voluntarily, when pricing ponchos, that the price was 25 sucres, but “I can come down a little.” ]

What Cabbages Dislike. ' | Some time ‘ago, a number of scientists, by means of a device invented by an Indian savant, were able to watch a plant growing, -and study the beating of what in vegetable life corresponds to the heart of,an animalj An average plant grows at the slow rate of one-millionth part of an inch per second, yet this device so magnifies this that, thrown upon the screen, the increase is easily seen. Plant life does not differ grgatly from animal life. Place the roo?: in bolling water, it struggles and dies the same as the animal. A cabbage dislikes being boiled as greatly as would your pet dog. The only difference is ‘that the .cabbage can not protest, but squirms, wriggles and writhes. ; } An Order for One Wife. An English traveler and author In northern Waigeria became interested in a Home for Freed Slaves. Women and children were kept in the institution until they could- be otherwise disposed of, which was generally by matrimony, in the case of the women when the author acted as a marriage ‘broker. He ‘says: ‘A Maussa soldier ‘would come to me with a note from his commander certifying him to be a man of good character and able to support a wife or another wife, as the case might be. ol “I.then turned over a corner of the note and scribbled: ‘To Lady Superintendent, Freed Slaves Home: Please let bearer have one wife'” | |

Mrs. Elizaketh Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage Manicuring, Shampooing Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing . Marinello Toilet Preparations - Hair Goods

[lonGe BROTHERS ' announce ' ~ asubstantial reduction ~ inthe prices of their cars - _ effective January 1¢,1922 Ligonier Auto Sales

.~ Notice to Notes Lost by Robbery. . Notice is hereby given that three pra missory notes of $1166.66 each dated March 8, 1920 due respectively November 1, 1920, November 1, 1921, and November 1 1922 with interest payable annually at the rate of six per centum per ‘annum from July 15, 1920 negotiable and payable at the Farmers State Bank Wawaka, Indiana, with attorney’s fees and = waiving relief given by Elmer P. Magnuson, Edward G. DePew, Alton Lower, Fred Zimmerman, John F. McCloskey, Edward Piggott, Mark Kinnison, Glenn E. Roe Harry J. Stuff Frank W. Franks, Fred Spurgeon George Randall and Thomas D. 6-Stingner and payable to. me were, by the deposited in the Farmers State Bank Wawaka ‘lndiana to be held for the convenience of myself and the makers thereof and the same were stolen at the time of the robbery of said bank, in October 1921 and I have never seen or heard of them or either of them since and do not know where the.same, ortany of them are. “All persons, firms and corporations are hereby informed of such loss and warned to make no purchase of same or any of them, a2s no person other than myself has any right, title claim or interest therein, Dated this January 13 1922. David S. Sontchi. 47a3w For Sale—Corn, hay, oats. Inquire of C. A. Wolf. Phone 271. 47btf

Carney’s Clothing Store ———— ANNOUNEES ——— A Tremendousßeduction . —— ON——— : Suits and Overcoats e "E\very suitand overcoat\in our vstock | will be oftered at greatly reduced ~ prices for the next few weeks. This - includesevery suitand overcoat in our ~ store consisting of Hart Schatfner & ~ Marx and other well known makes of . clothing all are late_st styles and fabiic. o SPECIAL PRICES ON BOYS' Aot 0107"'“ i CARNEY CLOTHING

Musical Program by # ® . The Ligonier Band Wed. Feb. 1 at the M. E. Church P PROGRAM ¢ - Part I i March—*Hail to Unecle S .....cccccuriornisermseranisenss Weber Selection—Potpouri form ‘“Martha” ........................ Flotow Coronet Solo—‘‘Spanish Serenade” ........................ Eilenberg - - Curtis Hire | i Vocal Solo—Selected ; : : _ : Mrs. W. W. Wood ' Selection—*“The Blue Paradise” ................ Edmond Eysler Reading—Selected ‘ o ; , : Helen Shaw Krutz i - Intermission : s ; PROGRAM : ' : ; ' Part 11. : Selection “Maehelß® 00l o Verdi Xylophone Solo—“My Regards” ............ccoeiueun..... Llewlynn o ; Edgar Sack , Coronet, Bartone Duet—Cavatine from “Maritana’” Wallace : Curtis Hire and Wm. Sack Reading—=Selected e | ‘ Helen Shaw Krutz B : Baritone Solo—“ Fantasia Originale™ ...................... Carnaud = Wm. Sack . Violin Solo—Selected : : ‘ : j it Miss Helen Carney s March—“ King of the Hi-Way ..........c.coccveennennn.... Wm. Sack