Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 31B, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 September 1922 — Page 3

O.A.Billman

Aermotor Auto Qiled Wind Mill

Oiled only once a yr.

Gas Engines, Tanks, Pumps and Pipes

Water supply systems, Well supplies and - well drilling

Phone 333 Lo ' 'Ligonier, Ind.

Plumbing and Heating - Do By H. E. ROBINSON ~ Phone 218 Ligonier - Ind.

LIGONIER AUTO TOP & TRIMMING i Ford Toéa Whiie You Wfiit $7.50 : F urnituro—l;phohtoring - All Work Guaranteed Nm;v is the time tb get tops and side curtains fitup for winter.

. SCALP TREATMENT Shampooing and Manicuring. » - . Emma C. Taylor Dr. Gants Residence, One Door South ‘of Presbyterian (Church. e Ligonier., Indians :

Specials For Fri. Sat. and Mon. " QUTELIUS 5 & 10 cent Store

1 pint Aluminum Drinking Cup polished 15¢ value on Sale Saturday and Monday each 10c Table Oil Cloth Covers 1 1-3 yards square about $l.OO value our ‘special price........ 69¢ Paint 14 pint cans full line of colors 15c value specially priced for Saturday only 10c Varnish Stain all colors 15¢ vvalue; on sale the eah .. e e e

‘ ‘ - CORSET DEPARTMENT - = C-B corsets $1.25 value on sale for 8 days BacH! Ge e 89 C-B Corsets $1.50 and $1.25 value on sale for 3 days at ....c...ccivinviniiiieniennenovens. $1.29 ANH-$2.00 C-B corsetsofi Bale for 3 days 8l ......oo.iifin e L hividanidninles Saaosl.39

‘C. M. C.,, R. M. C. Star and O. N..T. Crochet qottons 3 day sale price 8c spool or doz 89c Boy’s Chambray Shirts on sale ‘fv‘or 3 days Coats Sewing Thread Black or White 2 BODIB lOr ...l B Dye Flake in all wanted colors for dying fabrics of all kinds 10c value sale price .... 5¢

' ‘ ‘ ~ OVERALLS AND COATS - ' - Men’s Blue Striped Overalls with Bibs and Jumper Coats you can not buy them in Ligonier for less than $1.25 to $1.50. (Why Pay so much when you can buy them here . for $l.OO. EACH—Why?) o : o e SOAP BARGANS FOR SATURDAY ' : 10 cakes Kirks Flake White Laundry soap for 45¢ 0 Lo R e 10 cakes P& G White Laundry Soap go at 49¢ in OSB ET B 10" cakes Walthke’s White Naptha Laundry Soap go at 48¢c € el L i - 4 cakes Palmolive Toilet-Soap go at 29¢ -~ - T et %% 4 cakes Ivory Soap Saturday Bargain price 25¢ : } e R Rub-No-More Washing Powder ¢ boxes for 23¢c L e , e BARRELS . “ e 100 Barrels for sale at 6ach ... oo s doriigsills dorsiscatisssihonkest siirmsniiioss binst 1000 : ! . AT OUR CANDY COUNTER : : - Two barrels Fresh Salted Peanuts on sale Saturday the pound ..........ccooouiieiicn. 10 - Ten pails Assorted Flavor Chocolates 40c value on sale Saturday at the pound .......... 20¢ ~ Candy Kisses see what a large sack you can buy at our store for .........u........10¢ -We are naming Some prices 'on-WALL PAPER that should surely interest you. = = ~_Won’t you come in and let us give you an estimate on the cost of decorating your room iflW’A “w °f3s ffl“‘fifi Mfiént. a 0 - St e . &s&«afiw“; PSR (Tl e

s ‘ S ~ E.R. Kurtz ° Auctioneer ~ Cnone No. 65, Ligonier. T Bothwell & Vanderford " Lawyers = Phone 156. Ligonier, Indiana R 0 S . 0 CHARLES V'INKS AND SON Dealer inj ' Momimenu, Vaults, 'T. ombstones, "~ Builing Stone

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

Harry L. Benner .- Awuctioneer _ Open for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana ‘Both Noble and Whitley ... County { Phones ~_W. H. WIGTON ‘ Attorney-at-law - Office in’ Zimmerman Block " LIGUNIER, I[ND

GLASSES = A ccuratey and Scientifically Fitted. Broken lenses replaced. | Mrs. L. P. Wineburg

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Secalp Massage : Manicuring, Shampooeing Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing Marinello Toflet Preparations Halr Goods

Sale == Pills =2

-~ Notice to Non-Resident. State of Indiana, Noble County, ss: Before Harry W. Thompson a Justice of the ‘Peace in and for ! Perry Township. Noble County, Indiana. ‘ § Action for danages and in attach‘ment.’ = William L. Bowen :

N st - : et E. W. Rush whos christian name is unknown to plaintiff. - Notice is hereby given the above named defendant E. W. Rush whose christian name is unknown to plaintiff, that said above named plaintiff William L. Bowen has filed with the undersigned Justice of the Peuce in and for Perry Township, Nobhle County, Indiama, his complaint for damages against said defendant'wherein he claims the sum of two hundred dollars, and that said plaintiff has also filed with the undersigned his affidavit and bond in attachment; and also an affidavit that said defendant is a non-resident of the State of Indiana and -whereas property of the defendant has been attached. therefore, said above named defendant is heceby notified of the filing and pendency of said action and that unless he appears and answers thereto on or before the 30th day of Octcher, 1322 at my office in the City Hall in the city of Ligonier Noble County, Indiata said ‘complaint and the matters and things therein contained will be heard and determined in his absence

Witness my hand-and scal this 26th day of September 1922. © - - _ Harry W. Thompson, Justice of the Peace. = Bothwell & Vanderford, Ligonier Attorneys for Plaintiff. " 31b3w QWL Lt i For rent modern flat centrally located. Address Banner office. 3latf Wanted—l 2 or 14 gauge shot gun. Inquire at Banner office. - 31a3t W. W. Wood of the Refrigerator plant had business which took him to Chicago today. Monday and Tuesday nights pretty heavy frosts visited this county, but no damage resulted. § Miss Faye Hull will visit her sister in Goshen while the Dr. Black family is absent at Muncie. The next state c¢onvention of the American Legion will be held in Michigan City in accordance with ac tion taken at the Terre Haute meeting Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Black left on Wedensday morning for Muncie, Ind. where the doctor is a delegate to the Indiana State Medical Society. They will be accompahied by Dr. 1. J. Beck nell -and wife of Goshen and will return on Friday evening. :

Hair Nets with elastic 10c value sale price 4 lor il SO Lady Lois Hair Nets double mesh on sale B ) e e 1 pint Vaccum Bottles pricer for this sale at edch .. B 3 Alum mixing bowls on sale at the set 65¢

Safety Pins brass with guard 10c value on Sale at B.dez. for ;o a il 19 Bra‘s,s:_Pins needle point 160 count 3 papers for il ebt s aialin 08 Stqne"Sldp Jars $1.38 value sale price 89¢ Met’s Blue Chambry Work Shirts on sale for SLOANVE GE BRBN |0 i 198 Men’s Over-alls in plain blue fair quality priced BOOOIRL oks i s TTAE

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANL.

- Registration Made Easy. There is no excuse for any voter tol fail to register for the November elec-; tion. The next registration day is Monday October 9th. Those who do; not register .cannot vote. There are three methods of registering. One is to procure a blank fill it out and have two residents of the precinct sign it as witnesses and file it with the city or township chairman of your i political party. This may be done with~ out leaving your home city or township. The chairman will see to it that the blank is properly filed “with the county guditor or the registration bhoard. :

Another method is to have your registration blank properly attested by a notary public. But the last way is ‘the better one: this is to go to your precinet voting place one week from next Monday, October 9th, and register with the board. : : Every person qualified to vote should register this year. He has an imprortant duty to perform at the polls. - It is an opportunity to undo some of the mistakes made: by the present state administration as well as the county and township . A change in the political complexion of congress. will mean a modification of the inquitous traiff law ‘which will wring millions of dollars from the people least prepared to pay. It will mean if the state administration is changed, the repeal of the urnjust and burdensome tax law and a-reduc-tion of taxes. The same may be said of the county and township administrations. With these important matters to consider and act upen the duty of the voters to register and vote right is apparent.” No matter what your former political affiliations have been, your duty is plain this vear. Without a change in administrations the same conditions that how eéxist will continue. : :

68 Want More Money - By decreasing the state tax for highway purposes in order to raise amounts in other funds the state officers expect to have the legislature next winter increase automobhile Ilicenses sufficient to.- make up the amount of about $350.000. This would mean about a dollar more for each vehicle license issmned. This is regarded as a smooth way to recoup the road fund in the state tax rate. How wil Ithis proposition strike the average voter who regards motor vehicle licenses now too high? A vote for Dr. Luckey for state reprecntative is a vote against an iccrease of license costs and a vote for the return to the’'county in which it is assessed of all vehicle license money where it may be expended on the highways of the county under local control. ' With such a law Noble county would soon have al laer highways improved. o

Two sharpers are operatixig‘ in the nearby county of DeKalb on a swindling game as eye specialists says the Goshen News Times. One enters the home and asks to see the aged lady of the house to examine her glasses an deyes. She consents. The specialist examines her. weak eye drops a special prepared dope that blinds the eye, calls the operating specialist who is waiting outside. He ‘pronounces the case serious and that a slight operation will remove the cause. He operates by pulling. off a cx%vering made -by his partner to the game of a thin film caused by the original dope. A settlement of $275 is forced upon the aged farmer by a note payable at Citizens bank Waterloo. Notice has been served on all banks to be on guard. : :

A loss of about $4,000 unprotected by insurance was caused when 2 large bank barn on the farm of Isaac Miller six and one-half miles southwest of Goshen was completely destroyed by fire Monday afternoon. The fire was caused by a four-year-old son, who had built a blaze on the barn floor. He secured some matches from the house, and gone to the barn, unnoticed. The fire was first discovered by Mrs. Miller but the flames had already gained such headway ‘that they were beyond control. Two pigs, much grain and all the farm implements went up in sgnoke_. ;

Given Pleasant Surprise.

Twenty neighbors pleasantly surprised Mrs. Addie Grow at her home on East Fifth street Tuesday evening when they assembled to give her a farewell party. There were refreshments and social entertainment of a most pleasing order. Mrs. Grow has sold her dwelling house here and will soon go to Grand Rapids, Michigan where she will spend the winter. ‘Sheileaves many close friends in LigSnjer, . e o _

Girl is Killed. . ' Rosemary Campbell 10 daughter of ‘Mr. and’ Mrs. Basher Campbell of Porter was killed when the automobile in which she was riding was in collision with another machine north of Valparaiso. The girl was thrown out of the machine. She suffered a fractured skull,. = e

- Fire Destroys Barn and Contents. . Fire of unknown origin about midnight last night destroyed the 40 by 70 foot barm, on the farm of J. H. Wisely of near QOsceola and all its _contents including two registered cows valued at $1,500 and al Ithe grain recently harvested Arom 160 acres, Y & i SZ ,) . : .Now Lives in Kansas. Mrs. Mary C. Miller widow of the \late John C. Miller and for some years a respected resident of Ligonier orders ‘her copy of the B,fin!,igt sent {o 'Scandia, Kansas where she is mak'ing her home. | : Sy | The B. & O. railway shops at Gar | rett will soon be employing 600 me chanics. Five hundred of the nam- | ber now reside in Garrett, =

Fake Eye Specialists.

Small Boy and Matches.

“HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN” Toast Propoud by Loyal Scot Worthy of a Place Even in Scrapbook of Good Republican, : :

The following was on the back of a postal card recently received by a Kansas Cityan from a friend in Brussels. It evidently was composed during the life of the late Queen Victoria: . :

~“Noo, Gentlemen, fill 8’ your glesses, for I'm about to bring forrit ‘The Queen’. (Applause.) Our Queen, gentlemen, is really a wondérfu’ woman, if I may say it. She's ane’ o’ the gud auld sort, nae whigmaleeries or falderals aboot her, but a douce, daicent bodie. Respectable beyond a’ doot. She’s brocht up a grand family o’weelfaur’d #ads and lasses—her auldest son wad be a credit to ony mither, and they’re a’ weel married—a’e dauchter is nae less than married to the duke o’ Argyle’s son and heir (Cheers.) Gentlemen, ye’ll maybe no believe it, but I ance saw the Queen. (Sensation.) I did. It was when I took my. auld broon coo to the Perth Show. I mind o' her weel-—sic colour! sic hair! sic (Interruptions, and cries of ‘ls it the coo or the Queen that ye’re proposin’.) The Queen, gentlemen. I beg your pardon, but I was talkin’ of the coo. However, as to the Queen; somebody pointed her oot to me at the Perth Station. And there she was, smart and tidy-like; and says I to myself, 'Gin my auld woman at hame slips awa’, ye needna remain a widow anither hoor langer’. (Cheers.) Noo, gentlemen, the whisky’s -gude, the nicht’s lang, the weather's weet, and the roads are saft and will harm naebody that comes to grief. So aff wi’ ye; every gless to the bottom—‘The Queen !’ ”—Kansas Oity Star.

ON THE ROOF OF THE WORLD

Englishman’s Description: of Life in the Andes Mountains Makes Inter- : - esting Reading. ,

In a recent expedition te Peru Mr. Joseph Barcroft of the University of Cambridge did some exploring in the higher Andes and made some interesting discoveries, which are told in the British Medical Journal. © At 12,000 feet cows gaye milk; at 13,000 feet they gave littlg or none. At 15,000 feet there were no cows. At

11,000 feet fleas disappegred, though lice remained so long a&s jligre were “humean beings. i g At these heights men have lived for many generations, having fiecome acclimatized to the rarefied mir. Many of them lived in chimneyless and windowless houses; they had' a purely communal system of government, and some of their customs would hardly appeal to more civilized races. When a native was very ill, for instance, the date of his funeral was fixed without reference to his convenience, and an official saw to it that he was ready to keep the appointment. 1 It was remarkable what loads the people were able to carry at these altitudes. A boy of about thirteen would carry from the interior of a mine a burden of forty pounds, ascendIng & staircase’ with it from a point 250 feet below, while a full-grown man ‘would carry one hundred pounds of metal, yet the European was out of breath if he carried his coat up a slight incline. :

Stump Cutter Does Work Rapidly. Tree stumps can be cut off at ground level, or as much as 30 inches below, very rapidly by a machine, described and illustrated in the Popular Mechanics Magazine, that does the cutting with a sort of combined band and circular saw, for though it is flat, like a band saw, it 1s % inch thick, and maintains its circular shape. The saw is rotated rapidly by a small gasoline engine, and when cutting below ground, it is started some distance from the stump, and is sloped and fed downward so that it descends into the ground and strikes the stump at the desired depth. After cutting through the stump the slope of the saw is reversed, and it proceeds to cut upward, ending by having cut out a saucershaped section of the ground containing the tree stump, : £ :

Sarcastic.

A farm hand who had worked every day in the week from dawn till late at night, finishing his duties by lantern light, went to the farmer at the end of the month and said: U

“I'am going to leave. You promised me a steady job”? = ’ ' “Well, haven’t you one?’ was the astonished reply. “No,” said the worker. ‘There are three or four hours every night when I don’t have anything to do except fool away my time sleeping.” i

Want Library for Every Ship.

During the recent war the American Library association placed for the use of the men of the merchant marine ships a total of 250,000 books. These books were made up into libraries ang shifted from one vessel to another, Recently the American Merchant Marine Library association has becn organized for the purpose of carrying on this work under the slogan “A Library for Every Ship.’—The Classmate. S : g

Americans Consume Much Milk. The average American today is a great milk drinker and consumes twice as much as former generations, according to the Department of Agriculture. The consumption of milk last year was estimated at 44 gallons for each person, net including that used in fce cream, cheese and butter~Exchange. . i Mrs. Harry Grove Dead, '_3 Mrs. Harry Grove aged b 2 who died at Goshen Tuesday was a sister of Frank Reith of this city and Rufus Reith of Kendallville. : _ For Sale—Soft Coal heater | used one winter. Call Friday or Saturday at 326 East Fitth St. Mrs. Grow.

~ to Car Owners REDUCED PRICES ON United States Chain . Tread Tires While they last in the - following sizes 30x3 S RER j ‘ 30x31-2 - 9.80 ' 2o saa L - 12.00 - 32 , 16.00 33x4 17.00 - > 32x4 1-2 , 322.50 ‘We also have Usco treads Nobby tread ~ and Royal thds to fit your car BEN GLASER United State Tires Sales and Service Depot Tires are tires, but U. S. tires are good tires

l"l can’t play marblu | ' :-‘%: » ‘ i any longer, Petey, ~_'4l, : s o beense Tk 't (SN g K. for e ot o WU St » A house!” R . "i? : 4’ F ‘ S e el Slv-4 : ' : '/~ 4 A 4 t M,h4A /” : : & - 58 I‘ e:11 . FE ;;’ § '._—:'-9___/;.\ it : 2 .v : Of all the good things to eat, not one will afford you ~+ more delight than Kellogg’s Corn Flakes! In flavor and . crispness, Kellogg’s are the most fascinating cereal food you ever put in your mouth! And, you’ll prove that to “be a fact just as quickly as you try some! - . Children insist upon Kellogg’s, for Kellogg’s are never tough or leathery; they’re just like théy come out of the ~ Kellogg ovens! And, Kellogg flavor appeals to the little folks just as it does to every member of your family! i Don’t put off this wonder-treat! Order Kellogg’s Corn : - Flakes for tomorrow’s breakfast! NT—7 o)l Be certain you get KELLOGG'S—- -\ |(7(ello9g8 || s acticious Corn Fiakes in the RED ) : =MI and GREEN package. It bears the ‘77’ TOASTED signature of W. K. Kellogg, originator *‘{9’ CORN -of Toasted Corn Flakes, NONE ARE 3, I.AKES GENUINE WITHOUT IT! S||| FLARED | : @ Mgy 1] oDy b ’ Nie== 1§ * Alio makers of KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES snd KELLOGG’S BRAN, cooked and krumble®

¥ N Ye & : PR Ty o 4 : ! a VS WeTW it B o raer IRO A LaoRE Yo dl Bl S Rl By ¥ 't_'\" Y? 4 LAI . L R e R } WRLCAREL A% )- s ) AR A b » NS i i Va 3 T : ooy w 2 \\.' o . n‘n flo- SN : : ! : - : X . R 1 »ot \.l 4 K, § |!B i i ' ; L S T L / : WG!B HERS Ne T 'er,t'f‘, R e e ¢ ~deda T e : L@, - ' Al j ik Py = g » s > \ > | : ; 5 N # 1 \ RSN Sodady Sol 3 - o 1e gt St - T N Y e Y 3 e eTBT T T | ] T 48 ® '/‘ % , - ’ig i ; gi,‘”!li "! e H., 3 . HETM U ;!u;u;t . - L (TR O (LR R, 2 ; i il y S AR . R eS e Jo s ¥ V’ ' N a 2 2 . i t 418 & 2 T : . X | T o 3 g | - “ ] 8 B 'vtx; |R Y < R T i t ” 2 i 3 2 3 3 A 343411 ‘ ik - ' eAI e Y A o - L - (48 S T T Y b : ¢ i SRR * USHE & B ‘K& Ny (,” i N SPR Y #H | 7 4 i = & " o =SR &“5, »X \ g : !; . - : : ” R GRSy T T Y - % 4 S 4 s SRS T R ¥\ ] I = j AR | Rl VR VRO\ BRI S T : ) g‘ i e 3 4 df - # g - =5§llH : . i L H ) W~\Q L i i H g gsi}sgr : F | ek ; g T S | T f*}*} s : | o SAA RO Sy 1 '“ii}' P : ie? - N e i I } HHI=E Rl Caiers NKA AR <% E NN % ¢ L eiuE ¥ 3 i . eRE e R Pl v R RN e . T £ LD % g Y £ RNN s - ‘- \' R bl T Ty N ol iy COANN . ] g : N g o P ' F fSCONA } - oy . \e 3 R f‘:'gafi, § \:___.‘A’ Bt w 1 i Y X R NI ‘! hiy T 3 R, 1: 34%‘. 1 .‘y’q’f <N GO TR N . /O ARy v NG TS AR 3 A .Lx.’y} ng‘fli-hn i oy PRaE caniy 1 -AN L 3 Y 5 .y B v N PRI g 2 b U e e SN Fen 1 Sk THR TG R R ’?“ \tifl Frome st R L & oy e S P 4 I W < X Sl ER e 1 3 L s S Sesed e ol AT A U h e f'.;‘-‘*’» g eRy o R e 3»& L SR e SALEE T L e e B o A e o sl SR N aaesave. i . SSR B S GRERR ZF R & PR o s e B B 4 o R R T T T " R ee e g ,g‘:""‘* ey ”,% iLT ‘;:*-: S nrgte v E. .(3 SRS TTy T o %W e LMY 4 R L e RiAy A c@*z"‘f‘ %} 81 S oe e —fiiflfi‘ff Y "*’?;3%%{"? AUARUi TR fo il s e 7KSR N W RT3} SR oST S AR Rs L S T R i TORNGAN o F ‘fi e R IR N eeey S eTR TI S SRR Rl ee o A s M b A TYTININGGY CYATY e oo B R lINVBEY.ES ATI BR) oA | LY %g*flg}*nw;% ”s;‘:ffia;}\”“*'z»‘*s O SR S RSR e S IO sRt M T e e e S RLRRoIe Rl e i ssl o-ol o R eSR e eSRA e B ee I TS RS e s s T