Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 5A, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 March 1926 — Page 4

o "Iwiy , INCOMES ARE - | BETTER THAN | - ONE - Earning Years - A|: | . Should Be Investing Years Plan for two inco‘mes——One from salary, one from good bonds. Set aside a definite portion of the salary check Yregularly 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. Morgan, 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 Mi ' ‘ e Mier State Bank . Ligonier, Indiana We handle only Listed Securities, Municipal and Gravel Road Bonds.

“T'he American The Old Reliable Cafe and Flotel Prompt Service and o | Courteous Treatment Private Dining Room at disposal of Guests _ H. Leavy, Prop.

Home Realty and Investment Co. ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. : - J. L. HENRY Manager Dealers in Real Estate, Stocks and Bonds and . | Property Rentals We have some REAL BARGAINS in REAL ESTATE, never before offered to the public. Call and let us explain the terms and then take you to SEE them ‘lf you are in the n__'narket for : - INSURANCE Just call 165 and we will call and quote you rates and terms on any of the following . AUTOMOBILE, ;FIRE and CYCLONE. LIFE, WORKMAN'S COMPENSATION and EMPLOYERS LIABILITY ‘ Satisfactory Service, OUR aim | YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED

LA o . . : : -‘,?\yii o % A Beautiful Display of ‘fl,‘,‘ ~AL‘§§€Z’(’( - | . \‘/@AM%@% Faster Blossoms. and \// ifi-fifi«*.fl ffi’"’”‘“\" ..4/‘ » I Eii g : , w 3 ..% . Flowering Plants & a | At Easter time thoughts of one and all tun naturally to - Flowers. To aid you in choosing to please your fancy we offer this wonderfully attractive collection. |

SHRINKING EARS A ‘ SIGN OF EVOLUTION

Scientist Also Notes Decrease : of Little Toe Bones. {

Baltimore, Md.—Tendency of the hu-/ man ear to become smaller, except the’ lobe, which remains a kind of provision of nature “to give women something to hang ornaments on,” was cited among other things by Dr. Adolph Schultz as demonstrating in his opinion the pres-| ent-day working of evolution. De-| creasing number of small bones in the little toe and the passing of the wisdom tooth are others. ; Doctor Schultz is associate in anthropology in Johns Hopkins Medical school and is widely known for his re-,‘ search concerning the bodily structurei of man as compared with the primates. For the edification of man—and| woman, too—who 18 prone to believe that he is perhaps a perfect speci-| men, Doector Schultz enumerated the? following as not certainly but quite Ukely to be wrong with him: - | ~ His eyes are not in the sgme horizontal plane. ; His ears are not of the same size. | His mouth is bigger on one side, and the sides are not on the same level. | His right arm is longer than his left. : One foot is larger than the other. His collar bone is not symmetrical. ‘“‘Man, however, 18 not, the only one of the higher animals to show a difference from the primitive ancestor,” Doetor Schultz sald. ‘“The ears of the ourang-outang, for instance, are small, -and Its big toe is only a stump of what it once was. Of course its mental powers do not compare with those of man | but the ourang-outang probably has made as much progress away from the original ancestor as man has.” |

N T ! KEMAL IN SILK HA ‘ : : 7 e \ E ROt { I PRI ; o QT e + e o 5 | 5 Rl R | - e i i}:“—:-::.'.'»':fé : : Pt S L 3 2 e 5 RS 3 S : : : Fees g e % R Rt S 2 e SRR e 3 i % .&k" f&:% PR % bV g W_j R Py 3 e B IO S g & '1 '?2. B 0 < RS LR 2 Gl e g SRR O N N R S : Becstnes e*fi a 3 & bR TR g 8 Caeaee R .%5:-;3-:{:3:1:1"." R 0 B R ~‘s-,;;t;;;:;:;:;m:-zg 4 R R 2 & : g "’:/ R 5 G oo 3 5T R g ; I 2 8 g 8 \ s R SR 5 N w<’,>> G R Wi S e sit Q 0 S B eSR : v R G KRR i : S i R BR s R SN PRy : S B : e 833 R B 8 o @-}\. L R e Pt @RS o e e b R RS e e v i O

Mustapha Kemal Pasha, President of Turkey, Is Insistent on the modernization of his country. Having prohibited the wearing of the fez, he seis an example by wearing the most o« cidental of headgear. Here he is seen in a tall silk hat.

Make Strong Linen of Human Hair Mixture Amiens, France.—The manufacture of strong linen for the filtering of extra heavy oils and other fats is the latest use found for milady's beautiful hair.. : The supply of women’s hair being totally inadequate to meet the demand of the manufacturers, it is now being mixed with hair obtained in China from the fast disappearing queues of modern celestials. The carding, spinning and weaving of human hair for the manufacture of cloth is an industry just established here, but which has made great strides. The cloth or linen obtained from very close weaving of hair is virtually untearable and is in demand by refining plants and distillers of heavy oils, which require .that the cloth used as filters be subjected to a very high tension. : Several washing operations are required before the hair can be sent to the carding room. Thereafter it is handled just like wool and woven on special looms.-

Holds Office 46 Years

. Unlonville Centre, Ohio.—John Peter ‘Kritline, ninety-one, has been reelected treasurer of this village, rounding out 46 continuous years in that job, and establishing what he belleves to be a new Ohio record for longevity in elective office.

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

GIRARD HAS ROYAL " REVENUE FROM COAL

Easily Richest Educational Institution on Earth.

Glrard college royalties on coal last year uamounted to $8860,000, says “Girard” in the Philadelphia Inquirer. But last year the consumers pald about $1,000,000,000 for their anthracite delivered into ‘their coal bins. Wiping out that royalty would be like dipping a drop from a bucket of water. : g Years ago the Girard estate stopped spending its coal royalties. The estate I managers, which i{s the Board of City ] Trusts, wisely decided that coal in the ground is capital. - , When that capital is removed from the earth its equivalent in dollars must be invested to take its place. Otherwise the estate would some day have spent its great resource of revenue, ; : ' Coal royalties for years past have been invested and only the lnterest on that investment is spent. ~ Last year:the value of the Glrard | estate increased almost $11,500,000, which inspires Walter C. Gold, a graduate of Girard college, to glve other interesting figures. v .- Girard: college is now, as it has been from the beginning, the richest educational institution on earth. At the start of the present year the four biggest college endowments {n the world stood in this order: Girard—SB72,ooo,ooo. : : Harvard-—564,000,000. . : Colunibia—3ss6,ooo,ooo. Yale —540,000,000. - Stephen Girard died ninety-four veuars -ago, and his fortune /of about $8.000,000 was the largest then In Amierica. More than $7,000,000 of that wuas set aside for the creation and maintenance of Girard college, which tiie old banker directed to be built on lines carefully set down by himself. No otlier college in the world was then worth anything near $7,000,000, The figures show that it still leads, although | enormous gains made by Harvard and Columbia may soon remove (zirard from first place. This college. for fatherless boys, of whom there are now more than fifteen hundred students, has had a unique record. i A Girard student is not only educated free of all cost, but his food and clothing are provided free from the day he enters until he graduates. Thus Girard college hus sent into the world many thousand well trained vouths and at the same time multlplied its capital from about $7,000,000 to more than ten times that sum.

Uncanny Experiment The appointment of Joseph Bar croft as professor of physiology at Cambridge university; Kngland, recalls the fact that Professor Barcroft once performed an experiment which attracted world-wide attention. He was studving lung diseases. For one whole week he remained in a glass chamber

£ JACOBS & COMPANY

»-g'xfi“‘,\\“\ ¢ 20N v : 41N % ol } : 7o /' 1 e ‘ ;- " " Fo NAP W ' 1l iSN &) s A by | . . A(N ! ‘.'il i §\ BN A Y A [ R > B A Ny \ g-« S DY & ‘}:.';_\", \‘-—‘ 1+ < g . N e vl s 2R , \ AN \"le"‘\-‘”\, : "\“ ‘,' !‘l,\ '\; [ \‘f .‘. S PN " BV A ( v I. */)

We are also showing large selections of ~all the new Silks and Dress Goods A full and complete line of ' Munsing Underwear -

E. JACOBS & COMPANY

trom which all the afr was pumped exeept the smallest amount required to sustain life, Students watched in relays day and night to see that the small motor drawing out the vitiated air did not stop, for if it had stopped even for a few minutes it would have meant certain death to Professor Bar croft. When the sclentist emerged from the glass chamber his body had turned completely blue.—Pathfinder Magazine. : ‘

Iron-Willed Man

“The saving grace of life is that we aren’t compelled to do a number of things we ought to do,” a man with an expanding walstline philosophizes. “Now I ought to take exercises, but 1 don’t. Instead, I turn on the radio fn the morning and jump back in bed while the announcer Is directing the morning calisthenics. T lie there and think of how early the poor announcer gets to work, and of how uncomfortable the poor fellows are who are exercising, and of how pleasant it 18 to be strong-willed enough to resist the temptation to exercise, and I enjoy it. That little bit of calisthenics in the morning sweetens my whole day for me.”—Detroit News Subscriber for the Banner.

T ¢ St 'fi b : ¥ lhe Judge . e e B ifi‘( ; i 3 : PR ) | ays---giy . ® 5 ‘"”‘,, : : L, i gl \ - B _dar & v 5. “You can usually tell a lot v - ; ; f about a person’s ability and J - x ] é% stability by looking at the b/ 5 il Z ;& 4 ‘ a'. balance of his Thrift S % M e ) ' ' \N § i fl Account.” WS / - 4 $ : : \ : & S A :[f you want to be known in this community \ =GR s, ' s as a person of dependability and worth drop ~‘ 4 Yoies o ; % : : ! in and start a Thrift Account, saving a cer- ¢ \ . : : : tain part of your earnings each pay day. . ‘. 4 3 , L 5 Do your banking ‘here The Bank by the Clock ' Ligonier, Indiana

Easter will soon be here and we have received very attractive assortments of the very latest styles of COATS : DRESSES - \ This seasons styles are beautiful and we have bought very large assort- " ments to select from

Dry Goods, Rugs, Ladies’ Ready-To-Wear

| A \db < 5 e W. L. Douglas Shoes Red Wing Worik Shac Goodyear Welt Shoe Repairing Dr. Scholl’s Foot Comfort Appliance | Satisfaction Guaranteed ’ Phone 192 ’ . Ligonier

- HOSIERY ATy X, %" % ’ All the new late shades

N (F ! B | | | i l‘\l ‘ : | | } | | . | L\ &r“ l

Curtains by the yard ~ or by the pair Rugs in all of the new - designs-—inall sizes . Lenoleum ih all widths .