Ligonier Banner., Volume 59, Number 50B, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 February 1926 — Page 4
“TWO INCOMES ARE BETTER THAN - ONE”
Earmng Year S , : ~ Should Be Investing Y Should Be Investing Y ears Plan for two incomes—One from salary, one from ~ood bonds. Set aside a definite portion of: the salary check tregularly for bond investment and re-invest the income Then, when emergencies arise or salary earnings cease the bond income will be there to fall back upon. _ THE MIER STATE BANK With its connections with J. P. l\'lor;.;an', Kuhn, Loeb & Co,, and other bond houses of first rank occupies an unapproachable position in this community for the recommendation and furnishing of bonds suited to your needs. [he Mier S Bank Ligonier, Indiana We handle only Listed Securities, Municipal and Gravel Road Bonds.
Remember the Eagles Indoor Fair all next week. Richard Barthelmess at Crystal tonight and Friday. The city cound{l meet one week froin tonight Febrjary 11. Mrs. Sol Henoch will entertain the Benevolent Society of the Jewish church tomorrow afternoon. , Lost—A Dufold fountain pen, either on the streets of Ligonier or at Lane's hill. Finder return to Banner office and receive reward. .
' More Money Raising Chickens You can raise hundreds of sturdy chicks at a time, with one of our new, imrpoved incubators. There is profit for you in using the Weimer incubator because it has cut out the guess work and time and trouble of trying to raise chickens with hens, the old indepenedable and expensive way of chicken raising. We have broeders, too—and chick foods—drinking fountains in fact, everything that will help you to raise chickens profitably. Come to us with your chicken problems—We will be glad to help you— WEIR’S
T | , (N | *lSaturday @ R Q 1 [~loe Speclals ( ' 'rt .xi February 6th EE | Beef Boil, pound 12lc Beet Roasts, pound 18¢ Pure Pork Sausage 20c Fine Bacon, pound 30c Hossinger Bros.
Remember the Eagles Indopr Fair all next week. @ ¥ - . s Mrs. George R. Hussey is in Albion visiting her parents. : See Soul Fire with Richard Barthelmess tonight and Friday. : Do not forget the Kagles Indoor Fair to be held in their lodge room all next week. : Mr. and Mrs., Arthur Longenecker will soon move with their children to Chicago. - Mrs. Robert -D. Shobe substituted as teacher in school Tuesday for Harold Lantz who was absent. - ‘Mrs. Ross Sittler of Warsaw will spend the week end with her sister Mrs. (harles Wagner.’ : This ig charter day for the Lions club of Kendallville and Ligonier Lions are‘there in force. ~ The Perry township Farm Bureau meets in regular session tonight in the Centralized school house.
. Wanted, housekeeper. One who can drive a car preferered. P. F. Kern 218 Union street. 50b2t Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Latta were recent dinner guests of Postmaster and Mrs. W. S. Milner., J. C. Beck, of Goshen was in thd city Wednesday calling on old timg friends among them W. W. Wood. An automobile crank was found by Adrian Adair and left at the Banner office to be reclaimed by the owner, Miss Helen Caldwell went to Fort Wayne to be with her grandmother Mrs. . A. Kincade whp has been ill of flu. - . “The Anclent Highway” a rousing outdoor romance of the kind that made Curwood famous a’E'Crystal Saturday. Dr. Black reports the birth of g daughter Monday to Mr. and Mrs. Louis Knepper of Wawaka. Mrs, Knepper was formerly Edna Cook. Richard Barthelmess in Soul Fire his outstanding triumph A picture to live for years for it is true and great as your own soul. See it Thursday and Friday. : .
ALL OUT OF THE ORDINARY Curicus Events and' inventions That Have Recently Been Made a Matter of Record. ' An English raciag automobile at Brooklands burst a tire while running 119 miles an hour, skidded nldcwh.i eighty yards, looped three loops backward and brought up in. ploughed, ground just off the track with all hands safe. 5 Twenty men dined at a table sel in the fire-box of one of the Reading’s new glant locomotives. The npsoq' was 13-2xB-Bx6-1. : : A horse at a California factory wears close-fitting goggles to protect its eyes from chemical fumes. ' Instead of driving & pig to market, Chinese coolies tie it to a pole, covex it with wrappings of straw and marshs graas and carry it—two bearers to & pole. : o Atrbagn omrried ta the Austrian army serve as pontoons and can be paddisd ifke boats. ‘ . A Nerth Carolina farmer focused & biddenn ommera on his prize cantabupe, iz the field, and got a fine picture of a neighbor in the act of liftiug the melon. . In sn eighty-foot tank in Cincinnat{ is s merrygo-round to whichi swimming popils are attached at the end of hanging ropes. The boys learn the strokes at the teacher's word as they circie :
A maspufacturer of skates has on his, estate a stalrway made of old grindstones that have been worn out at! his faciory.—Popular Mechanics. ' PUTTING YOURSELF TO SLEEP Prof. Marcus Hartog’s Method of Selfy . Suggestion Has the Merit of Novelty. 3 The mathod I myself adopt for selfsuggestion is, when comfortably settled in bed, to count each full breath, inepiraiton plus expiration, and after every ‘“Bve” or ‘“ten” to make the vurba! suggestions—each word formuleted fr thought, as if in silently repaating a lesson—that I wish to be accomplixhed. The formulation should be by rote without thought of the scnse _ . Thus my first suggestion was that 1 sbould sleep by the completion of 160. 1 found that this worked very wall, but that I was apt to wake up suddenly after a short time, too sleepy to suggest and too wakeful to sleep. The next thing was to put in at the “tens” “My sleep shall be continuous,” alternating with the other suggestion at the odd “fives,” and this succeeded. Another difficulty was that in counting I got Into a state in which again I could neither count nor rest. This difficulty was over come by altering the “tens” suggestion, “My sleep shall be sudden and. ccatinuous.”—Prof. Marcus Hartog,, ia the Manchester Guardian.
: This Better Worid. . Burglars entering a San Franciseq firm’'s establishment the other night found a note pinned to the safe, con« taining the combination and an urgent appeal to them to use it instead of explosives. The burglars accommodatingly acceded to the request. On the same night burglars blew open a safe In an eastern city and among other plunder found a burglar insurance pol 4 fcy. The next day they thoughtfully: returned the policy by mail so that the firm could collect on it. These little exchanges of polite amenities would seam to indicate that the Hon. Champ Clark is right when he says that the| world is growing better every day. They also seem to indicate that as] sogn as soclety ceases placing ob-’ stucles in the way of the burglar’s pary suits the burglar generously m society half way. Perhaps, atmem society has all these years m stood the burglar. : Big Doses of Radlum. i " Dr. A. Schuyler Clark of New York read a paper on the radium treatment of skin cancers before the United Medical Bociety of New York a few woeks ago in which he demonstrated by citing many cases of his own that radium is an efficlent and satisfactory’ means with which to treat these lesions if used in sufficient guantity.
The special point made by Dr. Ch.rk{ was that all the cases treated by the single or massive dose method, that 1 to say, with ome treatment of Vfl'; high power, healed kindly, and none of them has recurred. He showed that many of the cases, when treated with repeated small doses, either refuse to heal or recur after a short time. The scars left by the healing after one heavy dose are smooth, nearly level and show a minimum amount of deformity. : Magnetized Mouse. A curious magic wand has been developed in France. It is worked by the action of a concealed magnet, so that a mouse or other small animal ap, pears to run up and down the wand in & mysterious way. The wand is a square tube of light wood covered witg silk, and the antmal is of celluloid an has a small plece of fron on the bottom. Inside the rod 8 a small lead weight on an endless cord, and when the wand is turned up the weight falls gradually and draws along a small magnet, also fixed on the cord and just below the surface. When the »od is inclined the rat olMmbs. up.
Lost Matohes. QGeorge Ade, praising bachelorhood at the Chicago Athletic club, said with a cynical smfile: **Tis better to have lowed and lost than never to have lost at all.” For Rent—Two nice housekeeping rooms at the Maryella. 50atf Farm for Rent. Call Henry Hire & Son Ligonier, Ind. 48b5t* ‘y youreßanner Subscription NOW‘
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
EXAMPLE SET BY TEACHER Responsibility of Those in Charge of. the Youth eof the Country is a Great One. | e : 1 ‘Few teachers realize the extemt to! which their students, whether in the. primary grades or the university, are tollowing their examples. It i related of Willlam R. Harper, wallre: membered president of Chicago university, that he was brought to a realization of his responsibility in the following' manner: When he was afflicted with cancer and knew that there was nothing before him but a hopeless, lingering illness, he decided that the best thing to do was to take things mnto his own hands and end it all. He confided ixic decision to a friend of hts, a men who had a broader vision on this polnt than the great president himself. He referred President Harper to the many students who had been under his influence and said, “Among all these thousends many will face a crisis similar to the one which yew face now. Many will reack the decision which you have reached, for they will think, ‘lt is all right; Prexy did it ” Doctor Harper saw his responsibility at omce and said, ‘lT'll stick it out.” What a great thing it would be if all teachers were willing to bear ags much as this, in order that their lives might be better examples for those who may come under thelr influence.
INVISIBLE " INKS ARE MANY The Two Simplest Are Milk and Water — Chemical Substances That May Be Employed. 4 It ie strange thaf two separate cases —one a military case and the other a domestic one—should bring the out-of-the-way subject of ipvisible ink before the British public, says the Manchester Guardian. [n more ro‘mantic days (not so very long ago) invisible ink was a favorite precaution of sentimental youth-—usually, .of course, a quite unnecessary precaution. The two simplest and handiest invisible inks are milk and water. If you write your letter with a clean pen in milk it will dry off quite invisibly. But the writing will show up ‘in a faint brown when it is toasted at the fire. If you write in water, the .way tc make the writing visible is fiq sprinkle the sheet with fine ~oal dust or powdered charcoal. - : . There are, besides, various chemical invisible inks. A weak solution of cobalt used as ink remains invisible until the paper is heated, when ft shows up red. The red can be changed to green by steaming it or breathing on it. A solution of salts of lead or bismuth makes an invisible ink which shows up black when treated with sul.phuretted hydrogen. Another resipe 48 to write in a weak solution of tan. nic acid. When dipped in a bdath of ‘persalt of iron the writing cosnes out ‘black. :
. Reason and Caprice. ‘ ° Edmund Burke says: "Tthinsthd; whole view of life, it 1s more sale ta live under the jurisdiction of severe ‘but steady reason than under the rempire of indulgent but capricious ‘passion.” Such wisdom should be 'proclaimed these days for the practice 1s decidedly against it. Men are not dinclined to conduct their lives in aoicordance Wwith ‘severe but steady 'reason,” but under the influénce of the very oppusite passion. And the itimes and customs seem to -prepare 'men for “induigent but capricious ives.” In faot, inventive genius is ;largely employed in preparing mo‘tives and attractions toward these ‘capriclous iives. llf there is a lecture or & prayer meeting appointed for & certain night and a bamquet or & Idance for the same time, the stream ‘of attendance is toward the Ilatter. 'Between the church service and the automobile side the latter is chosen ‘too often among people of religlous tendencies. Ili s the rule of this ‘choice that m#%®Bs necessary so many isocial reforms. It is the difference ‘between the steady reason and the ‘capricious pazflon, as Burke points jout.—Ohio St te Journad. J ; - = w - Remember the Eagles Indoor Fain all next week. :
Remember the Eagles Indoor Fair all next week. ' : ‘ "W Remember the Eagles Indoor Fair all next week. - ' “The Ancient Highway'’ by James Oliver Curwood Saturday. & S SRR BRI ? For sale—4 light electri¢ fixture. Mrs. Milton Selig. 49btf - For rent, modern 7 room house. Inquire of Graves Millinerey Store.6oa4 For sale at half price boy’s rubber ‘hip boots good as new. Inguire at ‘Banner office, e : 50a2t } Miss Carolyn Denning of Topeka Kansas is here a guest at the L. K. "I‘hom)pson home. | " T ~ Carlos Lane has quit Notre Dame ;university for the season and will try for a position somewhere, Ferd Growcock has his fractured ‘arm out of a sling and will soon bhe able to go to work. Farm For Rent—2oo _acres good Bstock and grain farm one mile from town. Inquire Mrs. Jennie Sheets ‘Bartholomew. Ligonier, Ind. 48atf . The next meeting of the Chamber of Commerce wil be held at Hotel Ligonier Friday noon February 12, Now is the time to pay your sub. scription to the Banmer. @
~ Yesper Service. The Christian Endeavor Soclety of the Presbhyterian church was in charge of the Vesper Service Sunday P. M. Jan. 31. ' : Sacks Orchestra assisted the young people and furnished four brilliant gelections. - Solos by Janis Sedgwick, Margaret Kelley duets by Wm. Reed ‘and Irene Johnson, Winnifred Sutton and Louise Reed, Margaret Reese,and Laurabelle Reed were worthy of much praise, Virginia Oldfather rendered a pleasing pipe organ number. The opening exercises were conducted in an impressive mannper by Helen ‘Wills and Rosablle Brode. : ~ Three minute papers were read by ~ C. E. History—lrene Pollock. } Beginning of Ligonier Soclety— Rosabelle Brode Present of Ligonier Society—Bernice Rager. The reading of the evening was given by Louise Wemple. Ushers—Jas. Sack, Winfield Sutton Wm. Reed and Herbert Galloway. The chorus rendered several delightful numbers. : : Two unique features of the service were the Processional and Recesslox& al. : e The Chorus director Mrs. H. Button . Pianist Mrs. A. Reed Leader Mrs. G. H. Bacheler were responsible for this program. A large audience listened to this beauiful service.
" Truck Drivers Warned. Warning to tourists and truckers using the state highway has been issued by state road officials. The cdict deals with hauling of heavy loads on the soft roads. - Rules set forth covering the load limits on' state roads during the thaw ing period or by reason of wet weather follow: : : A three ton gross load. : One-half rated capacity of vehicle. A load that will causs wheels of a vehicle to cut into road surfaces more than two inches. - . - (Load of 350 pounds per inch of width of tire on any wheel. i Christian Endeavor Meeting, The Christian Endeavor met at the Presbyterian church Monday evening in a social session enjoyed a suppere and interesting nmusical program. ‘There were about thirty-five members present. After the exercises the following officers were electd. President—lrene Johnson » Vice President—Winifred Sutton Recording Secretary—Virginia Oldfather. : ; Correspondng Secretary — Helen Will. : - ‘Treasurer—Bernice Rager. The society is in a flourishing condition.
Services at M. E. Church Feb. 7th "Sunday School 9:30 Communion service and short sermon 10:45. o Epworth League 6:00 Evening Service 7:00 ) e J. W. Reynolds, Pastor. Sends Late Telegram. The Banner is indebted to W. Glen Engle of Lorain, Ohio for a late telegram printed elsewhere concerning the confession of Merritt Longbrake. 5 eeeee— Remember the Eagles Indoor Fair all next week. The Ancient Highway with Jack Holt at Crystal Saturday only. ’ Now is the time to pay your sub. scription tn the Banner. : Ford Tomn Trucks. v The year 1926 witnessed the biggest sale of Ford Ton Trucks in the history of the Ford Motor Company according to a sales statement just issued by the company. The total for the year was 217,112 units, an increase of 16,826 over the sales of 1924. This mounting demand for Ford trucks was accounted as due largely to an increase in truck buying by the agricul, tural districts of this country, is now coming into the market stronger than ever before and indications are that 1926 will see a marked rise in the number of trucks. of less than two tons capacity on American farms. : Other figures indicate that more than 60 per cent of all trucks in use during the past year were Fords. In the less-than-two-ton class. 71 per cent of all makes sold were Fords.
Four standard types of truck bodies on the Ford Ton Truck chassis comprise the line for the new year. A stake body, especially adapted for farm and other use requiring accommodations for heavy bulky loads and three express types are verstatile enough to eover every field of ton truck haulag. :
' One of the express bodies features low sides while another is of the ‘canopy top and curtained sides type, The third is screened with canopy top and protecting curtains. Open and closed cabs also are provided. : One new commercial body style was developed during 1925 the pick-up bedy designed to take the place of the rear deck of the Ford Runabout for light weight haulage in which speed, light weight and easy maneuvering abilfty are dominant factors. The runabout seat affords comfortable riding for the driver and there is ample room for another passenger.ii Full protection against inclemeng ‘weather is provided by the top and side curtains which open with both doors. ; _ A Big Bargain. For sale 1926 Overland Six Sedan, first class condition as good as new, Run only 4,000 -miles. Peter eßgula.
- “‘““““n r_nmumummmmnqfl TR - GLOBE’; .'" ’*’*L‘*Z'i’y"s @ L ‘ =yl © B ' \ = - - | Bty 1T ’i” T e ' v | gigimmmz W f !‘ai'wzn!va.tmllih i - ~!.,.z-;!‘s’.;:i:§;fl;,'~zlu,unh_fl Are You a Good Cook? re Xou a oo OOK. ""I‘HEN YOU deserve a good range. See the -+ beautiful GLOBE Ranges we have on display. Their spotless porcelain panels put beauty and brightness in any kitchen, And GLOBE Ranges use less fucl—Dbecause they embody the famncus and exclusive GLOBE ~ Hot Blast princ’; le of combustion. Better baking ovens—tl:- 7 give your fine recipes the perfect results the, deserve. Come in and see these beautiful re . ges. . A. B. Weaver . - Phone 134 »
J. C. KIMMELL ‘ . ~ J. K. KIMMELL "~ Phone 800 e Office First Floor Citizens Bank Building Ligonier Ind. \ FARM LAND BULLETIN G 7914 acre farm 3 miles west of Ligonier. Would trade for Ligonier property. - 90 acre farm south of Mentone. 14 acres of choice onion and mint land. Would trade for Noble county property. $2300 cash and long time on deferred payments takes a good 95 acre farm in York township on paved road. Good building and fertile soil. Would trade for Ligonier property. 69 acre farm near Indian Village at a bargain. 80 acre farm in Elkhart township just off the Toledo and Chicago Pike. ' : ' 80 acre farm within two miles of Albion on State Highway. Two sets of buildings. ‘ _ 100 acre farm in Swan township. 30 acres of onion and mint ground. $1,500 cash and long time on balance. : 80 acre mint farm all under cultivation within 314 miles of Ligonier. Good buildings. :Priced to sell. : ® 5 acre tract with good buildings, on the Toledo and Chicago Pike with good buildings. Would trade for Ligonier property. : . o ’ eA N RS FEDERAL FARM LOANS INSURANCE OF ALL KINDS A SOUND SECURITIES ;
ONCE MORE EXTRA SPECIAL 'Those Mammoth Grape Fruit . e SACK’S BAKERY
% ‘ 8 Jot White Groceferia Week-End Bargains Gold Medal Flour . : $1.32 Columbia City Flour . . $l.lO No. 2} can Peas, heavy syryp .. 30c 3 packages Jello, any flavor . 25¢ Special Sun Kissed Oranges o 23 70 pounds Farmer Salt . . 89c R # Jot White Groceteria
