Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 49B, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 February 1921 — Page 2
2 " ] ~ There is work for every dollar during these reconstruction days. ; Do not let money lie around the hodfie. Do not carry much in your pockets. ‘v Put it in the bank where it will help do the world’s work. : f We have a savings book for vou. ' . lenier. Indisma
United Brethren Chareh
Everybody is invited to attend its services who do not attend church elsewhere. ' '
Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Preaching Sunday 10:45 A. M, and 7 P. M. - Mid Week Prayer Service Wednesday 7:80 PM . .
Stop, Think, Think Seriously, Think Deeplp
The churches have a claim on YOU, because they are doing more than banks, manufacturing plants or any other industry to determine financial values and stablize the wealth of the country. Thoy are demanding the passage and rigid enforcement of laws that will :ll“n“ our body politie and guarantee the safty of the rising generaon. = .
_ They stand for the éomplete elimination of every form of evil from civic and social life. They are giving the world its highest and noblest ideals of citizenship, and the best expression of moral and religious life. . . -
The churches are the custodians of the Gospel, and the Gospel offers the only hypothesis on which the great economic guestions of the day can be satisfactorily settled. . ; »
COME THOU WITH US WE WILL DO THEE GOOD.
o : Tailor Made Clothes Do You Wear If you do lam prepared to make you that suit - or overcoat at prices based on reduced - cost ln.woolens e i, KADLEC bower Store for Men The Tailor lndl.ana \ Merghant Tailoring for Forty Years e
A Reminder Don’t fbrget that pr,omise you made tho good wife and daughter to buy a piano or Victrola. Come and look at stbek of Museal goods. We have what you want at the right m » o ioBit 5 i’. - M«.‘Jfim_ Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas Yfififikothe easy payment plan if you do not care to pay eash. S YmMSGyoarsoansicngorvie_g. ; . | South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana
| share your wash day btii'den with us. Hofisework moves so much faster where there is two to do it. L i"l‘hat’s why we are inviting you to share your burdens Why not join the ranks of these pleased folks today, by phoning for our driver. He will call for your bundle. ~— = ; . PHONE 86 v :
L el e l"he&-nP-bBEngConp.y ~ W.C.B HARRISON Editer &3 [ iA e st teon |
Published every Tuesday su« Friday and entered iathePostoflice st Ligo r. Ind., » ecocoed
YISIT THE FAIR
The army boys showed thelr loyalty to the public and it is now up to the public to show its loyality to the boys. The boys "did their bit” when doing that bit meant weeks of hard training icng months of discomfort and risking their lives in defense of the friends and acquanitances who are now invited to atend the Fair which the service men are giving in an effort to build themselves a home. The enterprise merits the hearty support of Ligonfer and the surrounding territory.
Dissolution Notlee.
I. Ed Jackson, Secretary of State of the State of Indiana, hereby certify that the Lincoln _Highway Garage Company has this day caused to be fited in the office of the Secretary of State,- the properly signed and attested consents, statements and papers required by Section One of an Act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, entitled “An Act prescribing the method and procedure for the voluntary dissoluation of private corporations and voluntary associations, and declaring an emergency,” approved March 14, 1913. An I further certify that said written consents, statements and papers 80 filed as aforesaid show that said company and the officers thereof have complied with the provisione of said Section One of saild Act, and that such corporation is now in process of dissolution. . e x :
In Witness Whereof; I have hereunto set ‘my hand and affixed the seal of the State of Indiana at the City of Indianapolis this 31st day of January AD 1. .
Ed Jackson, Secretary of State _P. H. Wolfard, Deputy : L 49b2w
Horse and Mule Sale
Jack Buckles will sell at public auetion at his farm 2% miles southeast of Kimmell on Thursday Feb. 17. Sale commencing at 1 o'clock. - One pair Black Horses weight 2900. These horses are as good as grow, " 20 head of fine mules 4 toé years old. Well matched and well broke. ¢
Spotted Cow 6 years old fresh in October. = : .
~ Big Type Poland China sow, sired by Scaer’s Big Bob by Big Bob 2nd, dam Miss Jumbo. :
100 head of chickens.
Terms: Cash .or -note due in six months with 8 per cent interest from date. . B )
JACK BUCKLES
“The Stealers,” a second “Miracle Man” in thme at Crystal next Thursday and Friday. : e S
GLASSIFIED ADS.
Chicken supper at The American Wednesday evening. 50 cents. 44btf
Juggle wood .for—sale. See D. Selig & Sons, Ligonier. , 44bte
For Sale—Hard wood, fine or course Call 174 or 208. < e
Buy a duplex timer for your Ford from Kiester Electric Shop and stop that misfiring. : -44 but
For sale, desirable building lot. Sidewalk and sewer. Rube Deeter. 23btt
For Ren'—Modera house oa Broadway. Good l!ocation. Inquire of W. A. King or Heary Hire, 49t
Secure a business education, either in the resident school or by home study. Catalog and Home Study booklet free. Write the South Bend Business College, South Bend Indiana.
" Notice—Before you decide upon a business training or higher accowmnting, resident or correspondént course write for particulars to the South Bend Business Colleg, South Bnrnd, Ind. We have just what you want. ; S 49:1m
Wanted—Telephone man for line and central work, 225 phones, Office in residence. No house rent, small garden plot, garage, Write giving reference and experience stat salary wanted. L. J. Piggott, Secy. F. M. T. Co. Wawaka, Ind 49b8t
To The Public.
- Cold storage for automobile at $2 a month. I want to buy junk cars as well as 41l kinds of junk. I bhave for sale parts of the following make of cars: Overlands, all models up to 83s. Maxwell parts and Buick model 37. Also windshield glass. Rear fenders fcr Fords. Used tires and tubes. All these parts sold at a great saving to the buyer.
. ‘Ben Glaser, Cement Block Building Cor. Cavin & Pigeon streets, Ligonier
: Wanted. 4 I want to buy corn. C. L. Chamberin. Phone 16 A Ligonier - 41btt
Farmers Attention.
Horseshoeing and geueral blacksmithing promptly done at reasonable prices. New shop in rear of Weir& Cowley's. Give me a call. Wil H Hieber, the blacksmith, 3la2m
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
. We the undersigned will offer at public sale on the E. D. Mclntire fsrm 1% miles west 3% mile north Topeka and 6 miles north of Ligonler. Commencing at 12 o'clock on 'WEDNESDAY FEB. 23 * ~ The following personal property: 16 HEAD THOROUGHBRED HORSES Black Belgium mare 10 years -old weight in flesh 1500, bay Belgiom mare 15 years old in foal has weighed 1920, sorrel Belgium mare 2 years old a good one, black Percheron mare 10 years old in foal, black team of Percheron geldings full brothers coming 4 and 5 wetght between 1500 and 1600, brown Belgium gelding sound weight 1900 ibs., roam Belgium stud 3 years weight 1600 Ibs., black Percheron stud coming 2 years old a real good colt, black Percheron stud coming one year old, 2 bay Belgium gelding coming 3 broke, black Percheron gelding coming 2 yvears old, brown Belgium coming 2 years, sorrel Belgium gelding coming 2 yvears old, black Belguim gelding coming 2 next fall : 19 HEAD OF CATTLE 19 ~ Mostly Thoroughbred Shorthorn ‘Red thoroughbred cow .7 years oid coming fresh soon, red recorded cow € years old in calf. road recorded cow 4 vears old with calf by side, roan recorded cow 4 years old in calf, red recorded heifer 3 years old in calf, roan bull 3 years old recorded a good one, red bull 16 months old, roan bull S months old, red heifer 9 months old, 2 heifers 8 mionths old, Jersey cow 7 years old, Guernsy heifer coming yearling, Hereford heifer 2 years old coming fresh, 3 heifers coming one year old, white cow coming 3 years old. . R 3
24 Head Good Shropshire Ewes will ; lamb in April : 10 Thoroughbred 0. 1. C. Brood Sowx Will farrow the last of March and April recorded O. 1. C. boar 9 months old. : /
McCormick binder with truck in good repair, Ohio hay loader side delivery rake, hay tedder, McCormick mower, 7 foot cut, Gale corn planter, riding corn plow, 2 walking corn plows, Hoke drag, spike tooth drag. 2 wagons, disc good as new, wood_and stock rack, 2 pair good flat boftom hay ladders, 2 shovel plows, spring tooth one horse drag, riding Oliver breaking plow, 2 Oliver walking plows grain cradle, galvanized 12 barrel supply tank, Keasey cart, Hoosier 12 hoe grain drill good as new with fertilizer attachemnt, manure spreadcr good as new, corn slicer two hole corn sheller with sacker and. pulley attachments, Fairbanks and Morris 2 horse engine, 2 horse feed grinder new 1% inch line shaft with hanger and pulleys 16 ft. long, pair bob sleds, 2 sets breeching harness, 2 sets wagon harness set of trace chain harness, set third- horse harness, collars 2 sets fly nets, 10 bushels extra seed corn, few bushels potatoes, 5 bushels little clover seed, bushel mammoth seed extra good seed, wheel borrow, forks, shovels good buggy pole, 2 scoops boards, set dump boards and many other articles not mentioned. TERMS OF SALE—AIII sums under $56.00 cash. All sums over that amount a credit.of 8 months will be given with 6 per cent interest from date of sale. 3 per cent off for cash. No property removed until settled for. " BE. D. MCINTIRE
E. O. Grady; Auctioneer M. A. Yoder, Clerk
The .undersigned will sell at public auction on- the Christian Slabaugh farm 3 miles north of Ligonier, 4% miles southwest of Topeka and & mile west of the Salem church. Commencing at 10:30 a. m. on =~ “. . TUESDAY FEB. 22 &
The following personal property: 7 Head of Horses and Mules 7 Match team of blacks coming 4 and 5 years old weight about 3200, bay horse 9 years old, brown mare coming 7 years old, sorrel mare coming 1 years old, span of mules coming 5 years old. ; S
Holstein cow with calf by side, Durham cow with calf by side, Durham cow will freshen March 1, bick cow will freshen June 7, spotted cow freshen March 18, good Jersey cow giving milk fresh last of May.
23 Head of Hogs 23
Full blooded big type Poland China boar 2 years old, 22 pigs ranging from 60 to 90 pounds each. ~ FARM IMPLEMENTS
) Milwaukee corn binder, grass seed idrm good as new, 16 shoe grain drill, ‘manure spreader, Oliver sulky plow, Syracuse walking plow, 3 horse ‘wooden frame spring drag, 2-horse }wooden frame spring drag, peg tooth drag, low wheel wagon block wheels rwagon box, flat bottom hay rack, rubber tire buggy, 1 horse gasoline 'stover engine only out one year, donble set of work harness, 2 set of single driving harness, horse collars, 2-horse 'waxon. hay rack with side boards, ‘John Deere cultivator, Hoke spring tooth drag, poultry fence, grind stoue, ‘dinner bell, barrell churn, heating stove good as new, Florence heating stove, 3% ton of fertilier, hen house Bxl2 and one 6xB, 20 cords chuk wood, corn in crib, 4 bushels early six week Seed potatoes. : TB&S OF SALE—AIII sums under $5.00 cash... All sums over that amount a credit of 8 months will be given with 7.per cent interest from date of sale. ‘No property ‘removed until settled for. s | : WILLARD H. TYLER Harley Longcor, Auctioneer 'W. HcToy, Clerk . e Dinner will be served by the Burr '~ Mrs. Perry W. Kiser and -children, Cemira Ann and John Hixon are visiting Mrs. Kiser’s mother Mrs. Pauline Hixon and other relatives and friend
MISCELLANEOUS
PUBLIC SALE
6 Head of Cattle 6
LOCUST LONG POPULAR TREE
Has Been a Pronocunced Favorite in This Country Since the Earflest : Colonial Days. _
There Is a tree, which because of the affectionate regard which old-fash-atd folk have for it, Is calied “the home tree” It is the black locust, Before King Widiam's war, before Queen Anne's war, before the French and Indian war and therefore long, long before the American Revolution 1t would seem that a man could not set up his home In the eolonles without sarrounding it with these locust trees, The practice continued at least as late as the Civil war, but since then other trees have become the fashion, Ani around the old homes In the middle At- | lantic states, and perhaps in many oth- t er parts of the country, grow the-aei venersble trees, generally rough, i goarled and storm broken, and they | also mark the site of many a house i that long ago passed from earth. i A few years sge in bullding a rallroad “filll* across a Virginla creek near | Washington the hull of a ship that | must have been sunk there in the very | early days of the American colonles was exposed. - Her timbers were not sound, yet they had not wholly rotted | nor had they fallen apart. Her sides | and deck were of locust planking und.% the plauks were fastened to her ribs, | not by nails and bolts, but by pins of | locust wood, or “dowel pins.” as they are called. That was one of the many uses to which the Americans of other times put this locust tree, v ' ~ The locust is variously called the black locust, the yellow locust and the false acaucla, with its thorny branches, Its delicate pinnate leaves and its | dense clusters of fragrant flowers, l which distill perfume along old roads and in the gardens of thousands of§ homes. The wood I 8 very hard and | strong and has long been used as fence i posts, well lining, in many forms orl turnery and in making “tree nails” for | pinning together ship timbers, : l .One of the beliefs of the early set- T? tlers was that the locust tree had the | power of protecting a house against ‘ Hghtning. People Lielleved in the locust J tree as lightuing li-urance long before | Franklin's original lightning rod made | its appearance in 1752. It may be that | some trees are hetter conductors of | electricity than others and that the | numerous prongs and -sharp-peinted | branches of the locust tree offer some | measure of defense agalnst fire from the clouds. The bellef in the protecting power of the locust tree survived notwithstanding that locust trees were often splintered by lightning, |
Mothers’ Pension Movement Spreads Forty out of the forty-eight states have now adopted some form of mothers’ pension., They have recognized the principle that chlidren should not be taken from thelr mothers because of poverty alone. The rapld extension of the mothers’ pension movement Indicates the general belief of the country in the paramount value of home life and a mother’s care.
However, although large grants have heen made in many of our states, the amounts in general have been so small that th¢ Increased cost’of living has not been met and the full purpose of the laws is not attained. Some of the states are now making careful studlies of increased costs so that allowances may respond to the higher prices.
He Drew Conclusions.
Jack went to school for the first time last September. The little neighbor boy, who was In the second grade, took him. And mother anxiously walted for his return. “Did you like it, ‘dear?” she asked the minute he came into the living room. :
“No,” he returned shortly. ~ “Why, didn’t you have a nice teacher? came question No. 2. B “She dldn’t know nothin’,” came the disgusted response, “She asked more questions than Baby Ruth does.”.
A Dry Subterfuge.
“Have you any of those hollow book forms that look llke the real thing?” asked Colonel Biffkins. “We don't carry anything of that sort,” replied the salesman. “May I ask what you want with them?” “I'm restocking my lbrary. I have Just discovered that some of my choleest volumes leak.”—Birmingham AgeHerald, : 2
Those Modish Skirts,
Verna May, seeming much puzzled, sald to her mother one day: “Mamma, I didn’'t know that people got gray headed while they were little girls.” “They don't, dear,” mother re-
“Well, I saw a little, bitty, grayheaded woman, then, with her dress as short as mine."—Chicago Tribune,
Wouldn’t Stay After That.
Billy went over to play at Arthur’s house but returned so soon that his mother was surprised. “Why did you come home so soon?” she inquired.
“Oh, Arthur’s father said somefin’ 1 dido’t like an’ I comed right home.” ~ “What was it he said?” questioned mother. .
“He sald: “Tell that noisy kid to “homevu“ #
Maine Sardine Pack Reduced.
The 1920 Maine sardine pack.is estimated at 70 per cent of normal. Since the average pack Is about 2,200, 000 cases, this season’s output is not much more than 1,500,000 cases. i e et e e ' Dad the Washerwoman, A recent survey of farm life conditions in Arkansas by the state college ~of agriculture revealed two homes in which the father did the family washng. ' fole Willis Oyler who broke one of the bones of his forearm last week when he slipped on the ice on his kitchen door step, is. out of pain and the fracture is mending sapisfactorily.
Are You Rubbing Out Your Health ~and Happiness
Why let washday be a drudgery-—and ordeal that reduces your strength and energy? . _ : " :
EANF MINULE EANL WSHER
will do the rubbing for you—will clean vour clothes snowy white—Will not injure the mosf delicate fabrics—Will give you the enjoyment of - . i ~ A Snow White Line When the Clock Strikes Nine One Minute Washers are the last word in mechanical washers for Hand, Electri¢ or Gasoline Engine. Thev are made in a variety of models—all are economical, trastworthy, beautifully finished and sturdy enough to endure a lifetime of use. They are equipped with the latest improvements for safety, speed and economy—Adjustable Dolly — Roversible Swinging Wringers—lnstant Safety Release Device on Wringer—Handy Folding rack—Washer Control Lever Conveniently located—Strong Bench Frumes, ete. . You'll never know a pleasant wash day until vou decide on the ONE MINUTE. - s s
i ) < Lo 3 i : e ' ' NN 3 S ? i eg o (‘. . 2TB ™ e £ ,?‘ f u»“ psdl 3 , = | 7:‘ ; : £ ; "‘: 5 < | id 4ot B . el e o ‘:‘» v ot o¥— 1] r‘:___,m.,«x »* - e ‘- ) -.*.::.':*Tgi o) . ' el Jf 4) N st - R A g P —tl =t AREme) e : ’;': 5‘331 "y, sed \“‘3 7 / : -‘~> g : P e W NN : s . —Q {.’v,.f - 5 B /| =< - ; -2 au v ‘ : .
Sold and guaranteed. A*‘sk for demo
WEIR & COWLEY : ESTABLISHED 1864 SRR o SN 8 THE WINCHESTER store
Star Grocery | ' S_ole‘agents for Snow Cap Flour i M e Turkey Red | " ‘.'Wheat ; Seecial price, this week 1.50
| "g:»; / A\ NG ' e | \ g/lfff* "" sl honey ¢ nOUR_BANK § 2 fat - ‘ o is a sure foundation forYOUR HOME
Our Christmas Banking Club is now open and offers many new suggestions for 1921. ..You can open the account with any amount. We invite you to call and tell us the amount you want to raise for Christmas er your Vacation and we will arrange a card to suit you. . ‘ If you have a certain amount fo raise at any given ~time, You can select a card and average your weekly payments accordingly. A ; We wish you all a Happy and Prosperous New Year. - We pay 4 per cent. interest on saving deposits | : and Saving Accounts. Farmers & Merchants Trust €o
nstration by
