Ligonier Banner., Volume 57, Number 36B, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 November 1923 — Page 2
Loans to farmers and stockmen are negot- . - itated by this institution with the ‘ least formality and greatest . | . - helpfulness. . ~ Applications for Fa‘rm Loans fe_ceive pro- : mpt and courteous attention- . our rates are moderate; Terms favorable and facilities unexcelled. ~ Conference with our officers is cordially ~ invited, and kept in strictest confidence. - " You will receive here every accomodation . ~ consistent with sound banking principles. | - We pay 4, on savings . #Tlc Bank on the Cone?””
We have plenty of money available at lowest current rates for sto 20 year loans secured by first farm mortgages. Our terms - are_very attractive and serv’ice ‘prompt. | »Call at our office or write for complete information. ' . "",Th_e . ) B Straus Brothers . Company & 132 E. Wayne St. Fort Wayne, Ind.
Branch Office-~Ligonier, Indiana
Stansbury’s Yellow Front { I‘.:AL s 3 3r~{'-“‘";g‘;{“( A cSi e AR R N e eo e S e i t SCEREY *E«ffi:‘i‘*é‘“}wfiz R - - 5 1= : R g%@‘x A L e - s e | eSS R LT O R | - J/e | |IR e S gfi e i i || BRI TR R L A flm""‘ 2 | GRS ReE e .ST RO\ | | h?«»%‘i%fia\ R LPR B E L TE R _ HE | %**,%’?}gi‘g%:A . %/ i 11} “z':‘fr;'-,i\xt'...fi%‘—;—g:%{' Sa o : INGE=Z : : 1) S e ‘?,&,f,fi*-i ] | NEH | ; ,\g\ T e Ry /l e - g e = - S A N S 5 = - T kY e <% ;/ T I Bt \TaasEEEn D SR N o S N - EEECEN) | RS SRR NS T :r; : L= g~ < ‘.%:r @Z:*‘\ =O~ A ‘ R TST S A Y Sgt > NRC S % neeEßes SO TR e . RIS e %j‘\:{““.x o | sel W TE oTR S e | Ree 2l S i R i oTR 3 R : . el iTG *"’:%:i_i:"-" BEN B = TS S B\ AR e RO S R sTR (L o R S . (L S e e T|O R~ R R Delightfully Graceful — i Where ordinary underwear must be stretched into shape, Athena is.cut to the curves of the figure. The neckline slopes gracefully to the front. The armhole, . rounded and shaped, as in a custom-made R : : v s Note this Difference], coat, sets easily yet snugly. Extra width 18 given through the bust. The back is . tapered naturally. Trim and modish in : ! outline, the garment yields freely to thée . movements of the body. - : - UNDERWEAR ’ 2 Underwear ds ear 3 SS& z v i : You will gain a new idea of shapeliness in under- : wear, if you will let our saleswoman show you the _ sevendistinctive Athena features that make for grace =~ - and comfort. Yet Athena costs no more! In all ‘ l. , styles, wcights and fabrics. . - , : i Underwear Department .
Witk thé mutiplied styles to select from all selected with the greatest eare for fit, durability, and comfori you will find in our selction of all styes to meet any requirement. Our Athent garments are made t¢ fit, if not we want You to return them to us. - ' - Long Sleeve short sleeve high nech low neck, ankle and knee length, Wool Cotton stlk and wool. All grades. Athenia in Cétton from $1.75 to s2.o¢ Wool from $3.00 to $4.25 Bilk and wool from $2.560 to $4.00 Childrens in wool for the bhoy and pirl. o s : m&&mhfimmil
suit in all stylesa special weigh: a good fitting garment only ....... sl.2§ Boys heavy union suits, cettem from 90c to $1.20 o : ‘Boys ribbed umiom suits frem 95¢ to 76c ' ~ Men’s fleece lined union suits $l.BB Men’s pants and drawers - 2 Mens ribbed union suits ... $1.88% A heavy weight fleeced l’lllon‘qu,jl,4 ol o oo s A full assortment of imfants weel bands and vests; men’s wool umien sults boys and girls wool union sults.. We Welcome You To Look Over This . Line of Goods and Compare Prices . and Quality :
The Ligomer Banner ESTABLISHED 1866, . r Published by "he Banner. Publishing Company ' W. C. B, HARRISON Editor Published every Monday and Thuraday and emtersd in the. Postofilcs at Ligoaiwr, Ind., as second class matter.
~ Rev. Smith to Goshen. . El Rev. Charles H. Smith new supsr | intendent of the Goshen district of the M. E. church succeeding Rev. Arthur @. Neal of Warsaw deceased hag leased of Sanford C. Yoder of Kalona lowa the residence at 1139 South Eighth street which Mr. Yoder recently purchased of J. S. Hartzler of Elkhart formerly of Goshen, and will occupy it the latter part of this week moving here form Bluffton. . Under the terms of the lease Rev. Smith is to have possession until August 1 1924 when Mr. Yoder several weeks ago elected president of ‘Goshen college to succeed Rev. Daniel Kautfman of fScottdale Pa, will move ‘here form Kalona preparatory to re‘opening of the college ag & Mennonite ichurch instjution in September 1924 ——Q@oshen: Democrat. - .
High Class Jersey Cattle to be Soli ' at Auction. ' Bassett Jersey Farm of Ligonier Ind _ . Ainsworth Bassett owner , Will hold its complete dispersal Sale of High Class Jerseys Thursday November 15, 1923. The entire hei. is rich in the blood of The Gold Medal Sire the Imported Jap” Thifityvfive head to be sold at your price.’ Thes¢ choice females are in calf by the ser vice of “The Cid’s Gauntlet” a noted Island Prize winning son of "Thc Important Cid” . ~ For choice cows, open or bred helters or a good yound herd sire attend this sale Federal Accredited herd. Fo catalog address Tam Dempsey Salc ‘manager Westerville, Ohio. = 36b2i
Te Held Big Public Sale.
C. M. Knapp of this %’c;ity will Wed nesday November 14 hold a big public sale at the Joseph Knapp farm near Ormas and Wolf Lake.: :The offering includes ten head of horses fourteen cattle, nine head of hogs; sixteen héad of sheep, 400 bushel of corn in crib eight tons of hay 176 bushels of oat a large lot of farm implements and household goods. -The sale com/ mences at 10. o'clock im the morning and dinner will: be served on the grounds by the Ladies Ald of Ormas E. R. Kurtz | i{s the--auctioneer and Joseph C. Kimmell clerk. =
Firey Cross Salesman Arested.
Memberg of the Ku Kilux Klan of Allen county came to the rescue of three “Fiery Cross” salesmen arrest ed by police on charges of disturbin ga religious meeting and placed un der bonds for $3,000 for their appear ance in city court at Fort Wayne.
The thre salesmen for the klan publication are alleged to have been calling their paper and atempting to make sales on the property of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. : ] :
Unearth Remalns of Indians
Employees of a road construction company excavating in a gravel pit north of Dutchtown and on the Vanburen far in Kosciusko county uncovered four skeletons in a fair state of preservation. 1 :
One of the skeletons was taken to the office of Dr. J. S. Smith coroner of Kosciusko county at Warsaw and the physician expressed the opinion taht it was that of an Indian. .
Enjoy Fine Party.
The young people of the Presby: terian churech proved themseleyves successful entertainers Tuesday evening when they planned and carried out their program at a Hallowe’en Party in the church parlors. Games and stunts were enjoyed and deli cious refreshments = served. Mes. dames Smith and Bacheler were chaperons, e o
Attend Big Party.
The Misses May and Faye Speckeen and Agnes Neseley were among thc number who attended the Hollowe’en party which was held in thé barn on the Reckenbaugh farm near Fish Lake. oOld time games and refreshments were the main features of the evening. - . | !
Presbyterian Chureh. G. H. Bacheler Pastor
Residence The Manse 318 W 3rd St Telephone 346. . Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Morning Service 10:45 A. M. Vesper Service 6 P. M. Mid-week Service Wed. 7:16 P. M Y. P.-8. C. E. Thursday 7:16 P. M : - 36btf
Fire at Yellow Banks.
~ Fire which started at midnight Sunday swept through the 16 room annex of the Yellow Banks hotel two large cottages and the billiard ball at Webster lake causing a loss estimated a! $20,000. The origin of the fire is undetermined. Webster Lake {8 a summer resort southwest of this city.
Booze From Michigan.
Most of the liguor now being sold in Indiana comes from Michigan it is contended by prohibition officers. Detroit and surrounding territory is headquarters for bootleggers. Some of it percolates in Ligonier it is alleged. ; : 1
~ Mrs. Leßoy Sthair and little son Philip of Goshen are visiting with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Larson near Ligonier.
LAGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
SUPERSTITION IN RUSSIA Peasants Employ- Formulae of Dark ~ Ages in Their Treatment *of Siok Persons. ' In the Volga government of soviet Russia the peasants lay people sick with the fever in the snow naked, so that “the cold wind cen blow away the heat.” Prayers and pious formulae are constantly resorted to. -
An exorcism {s written upon a card and hung around the patient’s neck and be is not permitted to eat or driuk anything for three days, in order that he may experience the full healing effect of this eharm. If he does not re cover, then his family and relatives beat him with clubs, brooms and anything they can lay their hands on, in order to ‘“chase out the devil.” | In many cases the sick man Is hitched to a plow, and after he has plowed 2 while he is put in a Russian vapor bath gnd later massaged with petroleum and tar—usually until he dies. Little children are rolled in dough and put in hot vapor baths, under the impression that this precautiou makes it easier for them to stand the heat. A popular. preventive of cholera ‘ts to bury alive in the yard dogs, hogs or poultry, . ° . ' Lynch law: is constantly practiced, especially in the famine aistricts, In some cases a victlm of village justice {s tled behind a wagon and dragged -through the gtreets for hours. ~ While the soviet government {s energetlcally combating such brutality and spperstitions, it simultaneously encourages them by its hostility -to religion. -and studied contempt for the church.— Georg Topoff, in the Frankfurter Zeltung. _ T
LESSON TAUGHT BY ARTISTS
They Have Made Every Phase and Object of the Material World - 0 Interesting.
Raphael has made infantile grace obvicous te unmaternsl eyes; Turner opened to many a preoccupied vision the weonders of atmosphere; Constable guided our perception of the casual phenomena of wind; Landseer, that of the natural language of the brute creation; Lely, of the coiffure; Michelangelo, of physical grandeur; Rolyfe, of. fish; Gerard Dow, of cattle; Cuyp, of meadows; Cooper, of cattle; Stanfield, of the sea; and so on through every department of pictorial art. Insensibly these quiet but persuasive teachers have made every phase ‘and object of the material world Interesting, en: vironed them with more or less of romance, by such revelations of their latent beauty and meaning: so that, thus instructed, the sunset and the pastoral landscape, the moss-grown arch and the craggy seaside, the twilight grove and the swaying cornfield, an old mill, a peasant, light and shade, form and feature, perspective and anatomy, a smile, a gesture, a cloud, a waterfall, weatherstains, leaves, deer—every objeet In nature, and every impress of the elements, speaks more effectlvely to the lmagination.—Henry T. Tucker-
Yankee Tourists In Switzerland.
About 10 per cent of the visitors to the various resorts in Switzerland dwring the summer. of 1922 were from the United States, according to Swiss estimates forwarded to the department of commerce by A. R. McGruder, secretary to the legation at Berne. The estimate places the number of Swiss visitors at about half of the total; Eogland’s contribution at 1§ per cent; France, 7 per cent. Holland, 5.8 per cent and Germany, 4 per cent. More tham 50 per cent of those who visit the first-class hotels are American, Mr. McG@ruder states, the next in order being the British, with less than 20 per
“Kill Yeur Cig.”
~ Bweden 1y campaigning against carelems cigarette habits, the cause of so many fires. A lighted cigarette, thrown dowa by a youth in a sawmill, started ‘a fire which was not extinguished unt pearly $2,000,000 worth of property bad been destroyed. Other l&e fires Bave been started In the same way. The Fire Prevention society suggested te the Swedish Tobacco monopoly, which controls the output of cigarettes in Sweden; to print the warning, “Kill your cigarette when you have doné with it,” on every package, and the executives of the company immediately agreed to adopt the suggestion.
An_Accomplished Wife. :al wife is an excellent cook.” ey man.” “Bhe makes the children’s clothes, key own dresses and hats; designs and mekes her lamp shades and window drapes; keeps a garden, does her own b = ; " “What a lot of accomplishments; and to thimk my wife s just good lecking.”
~/ That's Easy. - First Lady—Bo glad I've met you here. I hope you'll forgive the short Batice and lunch with me tomorrow. Second Lady (equal to the occasion) —Thanks; I'm lunching with Lady Es-
First Lady—Really! Well, if you o 8 go early she might bring you on when she comes to me.—Punch,
‘ . Call of Duty. “Don‘t you think sitting up till three I the morning at a_poker table interferes with your regular duties?” “Frierid,” responded Cactus Joe, “when you've lost 17 stacks in . the early evening there ain’t any duty that seemig more urgent than sittin’ cloge up an’ trying to rescue your perishim’ m‘." . oo
‘Wae stil have several good used Ford cars for sale at bargain prices. Come in and look them over. Ligonier Uni-: versal Sales Co. : 36b2t
~ For Rent Small stucco cottage west of Methodist church. Call on E. Jacobs or Mrs. Clara Jacobs. 36btf
Jackson will paint your automobile and make it look like new. plat! B L ‘ . Cows For Sale, ‘ ‘f We have three good .AMiilch cows for| sale. Ligonier Universal. Sales CU.]‘ : . - 28atf | For Sale large hard coal burned in! fine condition. A bargain, Sack-sg Bakery. - : o *29btf ' ’\‘v’a‘nted;Roomers»‘by'the week 3t 217 East Third, Shobe residence. Mrs Rosa Williams. - - 34abt WANTED—To buy poultry. I will pay highest market prices. Call Star Grocery .or See O. W. Bobeck: *33ast
" Christian Science services are held svery Sunday morning at 11 o’cloc_laf and everv Wednesday -evening at 7:30 at the hall over Weir & Cowley. | Welcome. : : i Paint your automobile with Autor lac, three, six and ten day system. The system that will not check. This is a new system and the best on the market. - Fords $l5, automobiles accordingly. Jackson Paint Shep.’ 29at;; © . Cass Track Line, i _The Cass Auto Truck Line operates n and out of Ligonier hetween Forg Wayne and South Bend. Local and ‘ong distance hauling done &t reason ible rates. : o 48btf ~ Christlan Church Services, Sunday ‘school at 10:00 . ' Morning worship at 11:00 = | Evening worship at 7:00 o : - The public is cordially invited to these services . . - 46atf . WWanted : ' - By experienced, practial nursg patients to nurse in-‘my home. * Wil also care for aged people Phong 1246 R or 701 So. ‘Sth St. Goshen: . : 33bto Nov.r
- Found on €avin street a sman’s open face gold watch. Owner may call on Earl Taylor and recover his proper,t& ... 35b2t ~ Notice of Appointment. | State of Indiana, Noble County, ssi: Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned has duly qualified as exe cutor -of the. will of Rosa McCloskey deceased, late of Noble County, Indiana. ' ‘ i Said. estate is supposed to be solvent. o . - . John McCloskey, executor of :the will ‘'of Rosa McCloskey deceased W. H. Wigton Atty 34b3w £ : . P s i e = . i = New Oil Delivery Regulation, | I will beginning Thursday Octobé;r 25, discontinue my visits for the delivery of oil on each Thursday there aftef until May 1, 1924. Ed Crockett ’:c e g
The HUDSON Co. - :’GoShefi, Alfqldiana" Merchandies Worth While
" Blankets Nashua 72x84 large plaid Blan- $ ) kets priced per pair 3-50 Nashua Storm K“ihg Blaih?kefs $3 8 5 Fancy plaid 66x80 priced pair .. ‘ ¢ Nashua Supreme Plaid. Bankets $ 4 4 50 66x80 Heavy ! Priced per pair o Do Nashua Wool Finish plaid élan—kets 66x84 priced per pair $4.85 Nashua Large Size Wool Finish $ 4.9 5 plaid Blanketes 72x84 Priced .... DXe Chelsia large size plaid Blankets 4 ]9 72x84 special price»pfle;r pair el Fancy Plaid Wool Blankets, bed Q. 50 size, 66%80 per pair ...l ot All Wool Blankets, black and white $lO or red and black priced ......L...copee - . Domestics Heavy Twilled White Outing Flan- 25¢ nel, worth 30c, priced ........f.ciconic. i g Unbleached Bed Sheeting, 94, Very ) low priced at yard A SOC Fancy Outing Flannel m ligh'é colors. Priced at yard ........... ISC Sateen 36 inches wide; all ’ colors. ' Priced ab FAPA it 500 Colored Table Damask, red, buff and $1 blue, priced per yard ......jiieeen 82 inch Dress Gingham, gqjod for 19 house dresses, priced per yard ... C
. With:,us "roh (;)'.x‘f‘)befofé . | ROV o - Draws Interest From o novgies O e 'kPut yo.ur‘—méney‘»in ou'rbank: - Earmers & Merehante Triust €6
Foot Ball " Elkhart Athletic - Goshen Eiks - Sunday, Nov. 4, City Park, Goshen Time 2:30 . BIG BATTLE NEXT STNDAY
Read the Ligonier Banner
o Coals, Coats df the h’ighér ;c}aéS'at e’icceptionally reasonable prices. Only the best materials and furs used in these garments - - = s : 'v o . 5 : K o n \ %85, $8950 Cloth ‘Coats tha‘f 'h‘éve'* style ‘, anfl qualit'y‘k at popular -prices. Coats for dress or. utility ‘wear. . o : - L ASEERE - Plush Coats for Sto'uflrpeobfe.- Coats are made of Salts Peco .‘Van,d"Eisquimeatte Plush © 825 $35 $39.50 Coats for Children. Made of warm woolen materials: Pretty styles and colors. Sizes 2to 14 priced at. - o L .. 5551950.
~ Real Silk Hosiery “Qg T Q G | | Sub-Standards” Every Saturday we have a sale of Real Silk Hosiery Sub-Standards for men and women. Small imperfections cause these stockings to be classed as sub-standards. The imperfections are so slight they are hardto find. If you have never worn any, try a pair and see what you can save on silk hodiery. . Lot . Ladies, per pair 80c = Men’s, per pair 50c
