Ligonier Banner., Volume 54, Number 51A, Ligonier, Noble County, 22 February 1921 — Page 2
‘Large and Small =~ They are the Same : No account is too larg? for §ur capncit&. No account is lbo small for our most careful | attention. : ‘ | Each and‘ every depositor receives the most e qn_g'ive in helpful, efficient service. "l‘}le next time you have money IMGML@ ~ bring it to this bank. | & Citizens Bank : ' Ligonier, Indiana
@ ' ; Tailor Made Clothes - Do You Wear If youdo I am p_repa'red to make you that suit or overcoat at prices based on reduced _ cost in woolens St KADLEC s Store for Men The Tailor Indiana _ | Merchant Tailoring for Forty Years
A Reminder --_= - A . Don’t forget that promise you made the good wife and daughter to buy a piano or Victrola. Come and look at _ stock of Museal goods. We have what you want st the right Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas You ean take the easy payinent phn if» you do net eu'e {o pay, eash. ' el A Yours for 50 years of Musical Service. | South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana
PUBLIC SALE
The undersigned will sell at public sale on the McMann farm, 2 miles north-west of Cromwell, 4 miles south-west of Ligonier, and 8 miles east of Syracuse on , ' : THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, _;921 ‘ Commencing at 11 o’clock a. m., the following property : 6 HEAD OF HORSES o ~ One bay driving horse, 6 years old wt. about 1400 lbs; 1 draft horse, 6_years old, wt. about 1700 Ibs.; 1 brown draft horse, 6 years old wt. about 1700 lbs.; gray draft horse, 5 years old wt. about 1450 lbs.; sorrel draft horse, 5 years old wt. about 1550 Ibs. ; bay gelding colt, 3 years old wt.; about 1.100 lbs, 42 HEAD OF CATTLE One roan Short-Horn cow, registered; red and white spotted Short-Horn cow, registered; white Short-Horn bull, registered; roan Short-Horn heifer, eligible to register; 2 roan Short-Horn bull calves, eligible to register; 4 cows giving milk; 2 cows dry; 3 cows with calves at side; 10 heifers; 8 heifer calves; 14 feeding steers, 2 years old. ; L iy ' © 44 HEAD OF HOGS ‘ 2 sows with pigs, 4 sows to farrow, 1 Big Type Poland China registered boar, fatted sow, 36 ghoats weighing 100 to 125 lbs HAY, CORN, OATS, SHREDDED FODDER 2 15 tons of clover and timothy hay, more or less: 2000 bushels corn, more or less; 900 bushels oats, more or less; 25 tons shredded fodder, more or less. ] ; :
FARMING IMPLEMENTS
2 riding plows, 2 good Oliver walking plows, 2 corn planters, 2 corn plows, spring-tooth harrow, one 90 spike-tooth harrow, - manure spreader good Deering binder, hay tedder, 2 clover seed bunchers, 2 sets harness, good hog rack, two grind stones, scythe, 1 low wheeled wagon, high wheeled wagon, two ladders, double bed wagon box, tripple bed wagon box. - : TERMS OF SALE ; All sums of $5 and under cash ; on all sums over $5 a credit of 8 months will be given, purchaser giving note bearing 7 per cent interest from date, with attorney’s fees and with approved security; or 2 % discount for cash. i 5 ER, , : . : WM. H. BEND guardian o . et . JACOB SHEETS g ko S - - CYRUS HOL%;II;. e + Dinner served by Young Peoples Society Sparta Church - | b?ukiw 5'.; :Se iy R 3 : =-M *'M:‘ 3oAk . 3 ’ & : :SN: 5 ‘ .f‘v %A o
EITABLEBNED 1800, . - 1 Published by “he Banner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor . . Published every Tuesday ar: Priday snd entered inthePostofice at Ligo 1, Ind., « vecord S — Preachers of radical and revolutionary doctrines have beeén most successful i getting a foothold in the Presbyterian, Episcopal and Methodist churches and have made some progress among Catholics, according to the report of a committee headed by Everett P. Wheeler made las: week to the annual meeting of the National Civie Federation. The committee also found “evidence of the activities of the same elements in such non-sectarian bodies as the Y. M. O, A, the Y. W. CA,, en as in snflé philanthropic organizations as the Red Cross- supported lavge® by the churches.” : It is a common trick of scamp journalists, discredited politicians and general, all-around rascals to band themselves together under the name - of some formidable sounding “Association”, “League” or “Federation”, and under cover of annonymity to launch scurrilous attacks upon established instiutions. Such attacks by thése self-anointed custodians of “Amercanism” are obviously futile since they deceive no one but the man who is already a victim of delusion and whom there can be no possible object in deluding further.—Editor.
Attacks School Athleties.
Investigation by the state board of education of athletics in Indiana high schools with a view to curtailing the number of basketball games played was demanded -by Senator Swain (Madison county) in a resolution introduced Saturday in the senate Action on the resolution consisted of the prompt adoption of a motion by Senator Nejdi (Lake county) to lay it on the table thus precenting further consideration. o : Senator Swain declared that high school pupils were directing a large part of their time toward athletics, “greatly to the deriment of academic Instruction” and that the state’s low educational rating warranted action on the part o fthe state board. Senator Nejdl, before moving to table Sawin’'s resolution pointed out that members of basket-ball teams were compelled t> pass certain scholarship requirementa and that the measure was an attempt to ‘“regulate harmless amusement.”
Bulld Masonic Temple.
Despite the heavy cost of building South Bend Masons have decided to proceed with the plan of erecting a New Masonic temple which wiil take care of the ten bodies in the e¢ity. The cost of the project will be between $700,000 and $1,000,000, but it has beén decided to keep all commercial features out of the building and maxze it strictly a cathedral for the Scottish ‘Rite degree and a temple for the blue lodges and York Rite bodies. The Mystic Shrine also will be taken care of. . Edwin G. Gloyd Dead. Edwin G. Gloyd died at Kendallville Saturday on the 72nd anniversary of his birth after an illness of several months. Born in Allen county just north of Fort Wayne he spent his boy hood days there and learned tlie miller's trade, The Gloyd family was prominent in the early days of the county and Gloyd mills is one of the beautiful spots in the Cedar Cw district, near the county line, ere it is hoped some day to establish a statc park,
Traffic Unusually Light.
Traffic on railroads with the exception of limited trains is unusually light according to a local ticket agent. The high cost of fares and general business conditions are blamed as the cause. - Flood of Bills Ended. ‘ Saturday was the day for the intro-. duction of bills in the house under the rule that bars a new bill after 451 days without the consent of a twothirds majority. A a result a score of measures were poured into the hophopper. ; PUBLIC SALE. ; The undersigned will sell at public auction at the Daniel Rose farm 215 miles northwest of Wawaka, one mile north and five miles east of Ligonier, four miles south and two miles east of Topeka. Sale commencing at 12 o'clock on Tuesday, March 1 the following described property: : Four Head of Horses—Bay belding coming 5 years old weight about 1350, gray ‘mare coming 4 years oud, weight about 1300, bay geMing coming 3 years old, black gelding coming 3 years old. =Sy , Two Shorthern Bulls, pure bred— Roan bull one year old March 3 sired by Fame's Lad 474167, red bull one ‘year old May 10 sired by Fame's Lad 4741167, 2 12 Head of Hogs—6 head of Chester White sows due to farrow in March and April, sow with six pigs, 80w bred to White Wonder 62189 pedigrees furnished, 5 shoats weighing from 70 fo 90 pounds each. Hay and guh:-aso bushels of oats, about 500 bushels cf corn, 10 tons of _ Portable Wood Sawing Outfit coni x&; |
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
SELECTED QUIPS ? Shut the door in the face of nature and she will come in at the window. - Nor Is there in the bright lexicon of ‘youth such a word as “ignorance™ it where the giraffe got the You may have observed that a good practical joke is on the other feliow. ‘A little old town may grow shabbler and shabbler, but the tfees don't. A good word can always be said for beans until the baby pokes one up his Dose, : : ; e ~ Peace comes to the average man at forty—when he quits making resoloMost people seem to enjoy coming out of church more than they do going In. : Many a man's good name isn’t good for a pound of sugar at the corner An application of money will sometimes remove stalns from a man’s character, - Put yourself in your neighbor's place 'and you would stop abusing him, quite probably. : L Vanity of women Jooks lke a plugged rickel when compared to the conceit of men, Partial payments puzzle the schoolboy and the older he gets the more they worry him, The easlest-way to interest a woman in a §1 article is to mark it down from $1.50 to $1.29, Why should a novelist care whether one likes his book or not if 50,000 coples of it are sold? It is hard to choose between slamming a door and ‘using profanity. They're both wicked. Any man who knows how to make both ends meet ought to be a pretty good secretary of the treasury.
‘NOBODY WORKS BUT FATHER’
And According to This, the Oid Gentieman s Growing Just a -Little Bit Despondent.” ! “'m discouraged and tired of life*” declared the head of the family. “Why so despondent?’ asked his friend. ; o “Statistics.” : ~ “Statistics? What's that got to do with 1t?” ; “Yes; they say five hours of work @ day Is enough to supply each member of the community with a Hving, provided the work be equally sharea by all.” . ' “Well?” : ; “Well, I'm the only one in five In my family that labors. So, If the statistics are true, to support the crowd I've got to work 25 hours a day."—Milinneapolis Tribune. Fuel Problem Solved? . Forced by the high price of imported coal to make use of a low-grade native lignite, the rallroads of Italy have solved thelr problem by ordering American locomotives, equipped to burn pulverized fuel, says Popular Mechanics Magazine. This material is drawn from the bottom of its tank In the tender by four four-inch steel feed screws, operated in pairs by a two-cylinder engine that will run on twenty to twenty-five pounds of steam. From the screws, the fuel is blown, In suspension, by a fan through two five-inch lines of hose to the firebox. The fireman controls the rate of feed from the cab.
Cortland Bleecker, the well-known clubman and connolsseur, sald at a dinner in New York: : “We live In an age of substitutes, and we pay three times more for these substitutes than we ought to pay for the real thing. : “A pretty debutante said to me at a dance: : , “‘I see that you're admiring my stockings. Don't they glisten beautifully? And yet they're T)t real siik, you know. They're an artificial silk made of wood." : “‘Wood, eh? sald 1. “Thea that ac--counts for the ladder just below your knee.'” Yo e ——————— Identified. ; “Was that your wife I saw with you the other evening, headed for the train?” : Bt "'l!yw!romwltl-oqnen-_ ning, and the next I happened to meet up with a young lady who lives out at our station. Don't know which—by the way, who was carrying the par cels?” L ; “You were, of course.” Sy “Oh, that was Miss Cutely, you saw.® —Philadelphia Ledger. : ol
“What did you do with that man you caugh’ ‘dealing off the bottom of the deck?* { "Oommlt!edhlmtotheuylum."wi plied Cactus Joe. “Anybody who | would try a trick like that In Crime son Gulch don’t leave enough doubt about his sanity to be worth arguin’ over.” ] Territory Has Two Capitals. d ‘When South Africa became feden ated, ten years ago, a controversy as to the cdpital city was settled by one of the most curious compromises in history. Pretoria became the administrative and Cape Town the legisias tive center. So United South Afriea ‘has two capitals, which are about “You children would rather go to 8! moving picture than to Sunday school 7 i ;’ “Yes,” answered the small girl. “It's darker In the picture theater and we ‘don’t Aave to have our faces washed,”
Bills
Accounted For.
Proof Positive.
if you meed some come ia and see - US
PUBLIC SALE Thoroughbred Stock
- We the undersigned will offer at public sale on the E. D. Mclntire fsrm 1% miles west % mile north Topeka and € miles north of Ligonier. Commencing at 12 o'clock on . 16 HEAD THOROUGHBRED HORSES ~ Black Belgium mare 10 years old weight in flesh 1800, bay Belgium mare 15 years old in foa! has weighed 1920, sorrel Belgium mare 2 years old a 4 good ofe, 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 Beigium gelding sound’ weight 1900 Ibs., roam Belgium stud 3 years welght 1600 Ibs., black Percheron stud coming 2 years old a real good coit, black Percheron stud coming one year old, 2 bay Belgium gelddug coming 3 broke, black Percheron gelding coming 2 years old, brown Delgium coming 2 years, sorrel Belgium gelding eoming 2 years old, black Belguim gelding coming 2 next fall. 19 HEAD ornhrn._n 19 Mosmtly Thoroughbred Shorthorn -~ Red thoroughbred cow 7 yéars old coming fresh soon, red recorded cow 6 years old in calf, road recorded cow 4 years 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 8 months old, 2 heifers § months 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. : , ' | 24 Head Good Shropshire Ewes will : lamb in April : | 10 Thoroughbred 0. L. €. Brood Sows Will farrow the last of March and April recorded O. 1. C. boar 9 months old. : E © McCormick bindeéer 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 bottom 1 hay ladders, 2 shovel plows, spring tooth ome horse drag, oriding Oliver breaking plow, 2 Oliver walking plows grain cradle, galvanized 12 - barrg] supply tank, Keasey cart, ‘Hoosier 12 hee grain drill good as new with fer 1 tilizer attachemnt, manure spreader 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 chaln harness, set third horse harness, collars 2 sets fly nets, 10 bushels extra seed ‘corn, few bushels potatoes, b bushels little clover seed, bushel mammoth seed extra good seed, wheel borrow, forks, shovels good buggy pole, 2 scoops boards, set dunip boards and many other articles not mentioned. TERMS OF SALE—AII sums under $5.00 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. o . E. D. McINTIRE E. O. Grady, Auctioneer M. A. Yoder, Clerk ‘
Kick Causes Insanity.
John T. Lickey of near Syracuse was taken to Warsaw Saturday whea he became violently insane. Some time ago Mr. Lickey was kicked in th: head by a cow. . ;
Amen!
There seems to be a general belief that everything- will start up in the spring. Let us hope this doss not include prices-—Kendalville NewsSun. el g o
| To stanp up under the tests of today, must have quality material and quality workmanship. | Men are demanding of us and we are satisfying | ‘all their demands by furnishing such standard - brands as F i | “ Hart Schaffner & Marx and Campus Togs Clothes o Pfononnced the best by critics. _ ' Carney Clothing Store
‘ e A\ v ,I_.’;." /: T \ : ——— | kL - U LTS ) T N T e . %i“‘tn i . o ;- ’O‘¢¢ ‘_ »,/:;x'" = ~l’ nOUR BARNK is re foundati 18 a sure foundation ‘ : » ;\ : iy %." £ B RF\ % or u RSy~ & 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 or vour Vacation and we will arrange a card to suit vou. , If you have a certain amount to raise at any given time. You can select a card and average your weekly payments accordingly. . : : 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 Co
WHY NOT - e shdre your wrac.h day burden with us. Housework moves so much faster where there is two to do it. That’s why we are inviting you to share vour. burdens with us, i : Why not join the ranks of these pleased folks today, by phoning for our driver. He will call for your bundle. : PHONE 86 ' : | AND DRY CLEANING
" -'.‘\:“}‘r' . /Y ’/43 — W G i)g?roof S
G@@fll-....;‘j Printing
r I \HE kind of printing thet rn dividends is the iod you should bave, Pale, muddy, poorly arranged printed matter is worso shan sone. The quality or your business is often igdfi by the quality of your sta — imferior printing gives an impression of cheapness that is bard to overcome, while good printing carries with 8 o desirablesuggestionof quulity, We produce only Quality Printing. Whether want an inexpensive ham ors letterhead in colors, f you order it from us you will be ot ¢ bhave the ““know how’’ that ensbles U 3 to getout good print-lll—pd-dl‘"& impresses roonh with the good taste of ts users, That is the only kind of printing that
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