Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 35A, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 October 1921 — Page 3

- eatro; aIS riere. | |i F 158 . ' . | e - ] o ':, . j Py g :, % | | Y | g ‘ 0| _ PN e ‘f 1 ';:""{:’i"' i 2 A ,L( &1 [ Mana g 7 . RE | 1A T . J LT == lEEE fE Vit e| | > | ] Lol ] ] B RN Ll liagess TR L 1o R ECe PRV Nyl sol sl by = =5 “’J’s/" 0 B 417//1"11 s R I I“,{ 4 AR m‘fil oh ,/ il L 7 (,@ s e feld 1& T , g-;zf;’_:’{{?{'}fi-‘;.%%%aZ1/y_?; L@@ Q\\t fl = A {;::%,“:',’“:".l_‘ 'I 2 '_,,’.v. \’—;:—”’( sl e c vf:'.'“ 1-‘ 3 e o 1 l 7 Comein and see the sensational new 9 ® €¢ : . / heater which “looks like a phono- . ) s o : ” : graph -- works like a- furnace. Here it is at last!. The final solution of the heating problem for small homes—with or without basements. Not a stove, but a pipeless furnace no bigger than a sove. Install’in one o fthe living rooms it will heat three to six connecting rooms and heat them Dbetter than the odinary stove heats one. : : : "HEATROLA o & e X -- The Parlor Pipeless Furnace Words can't }i’ictufe it. Pictures can’t describe it. Come see it. You'll be surprised end delighted. No iron parts to “black.” No nickel ‘parts to polish. The beautiful grained mahogany finissh is a vitreousg enamel—hard and smooth as glass. You can rub it and dust it with a cloth just as you do your furniture. . ; . Come in soon. We shall be able to get only a limited number of Heatrolag this year, so it will pay you to place your order early. . , ESTABLISHED 1864 - PHONE 67 '

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For the name selected as best, we will pay $250. For the second, third, fourth, and fifth ~ choice, we will pay $lOO, $75, $5O, and $25 respectively. ° ~ Anyone may enter the contest, : but only one name from each person will be considered. All names must be-received by - - December 15th, 1921. In case of - ties, the'full amount of the prize will be given to each tying contestant. Do not send your cake. -~ Simply send the name you sug- ~ gest, with your own name and ¢ cgddress,tothel. . 149 William Street, New York ' y&é;fir e e e e

' The undersigned will sell at pubblic auction at the J. T. Iden farm three miles south-west of Kimmell and four miles southeast of Crom= well Thursday, October 27 beginning at one o’clock in the afternoon the following property: » ! 11 Head of Hogs. - Brood sow. 0. I. C. farrow in November. 10 head of shoats from 90 to 100 Ibs. : = - 23 Heaa of Cattle ; 9 head young cattle yearlings, 5 head young calves, 4 head milk cows 3 fresh, 2 Durham cows fresh, 1 Jersey cow fresh 1 Jersey fresh in December last. : - ‘ * Bay horse 7 years old weight 1500. ’ _Grains e 50 bushels of seed oats, 100 bushel of new oats. Corn in crib. - Miscellaneous : - 3 stoves, Gasoline range, 'oil- stove four burners, hard coal burner, clothes rack, barn scales, Galvanized hog trcugh, National separator with 15 yearsi‘guarantee riding cultivator good as new, hand clover seed sower, vinegar barrel, cross cut saw,- grind stone, 18 mint cans 150 or more onion crates, 4 dozen Pl§mouth Rock hens buggy and set of single harness. Terms of Sale—All sums under $5 cash. All sums over that amount a credit of 9 months will be given with 6 per cent interest from date of sale. 2 per cent off for cash. Ne .property removed until settled for. R. D. LAWSON J. T. IDEN I, & Issac Klingerman, Auctioneer Charles Werker, Clerk ' “

Having rented my farm I will sell at public sale Thursday October 27. Beginning at 11 o’clock at my farm 214 miles south east of Kimmell, and 2% miles northwest of Wolf Lake the following property to-wit. 8 Head of Mules Ranging in age from 4 to 9 years, consisting of one - pair of brown horse mules age 5 years weight 2400 Ibs. Onepair of horgse and mare mules black 4 years old, weight 2400, one

*‘s‘-‘ ‘.,v ' \ *‘ .' . J @A 4d How tomakeit P Use level measurements for all materials T e : }écup shortening A 1% cups sugar i “‘Gratedp ‘rimf of !4 orange iy Nl 1 egg and 1 yolk | : o i‘/z cups floufi - P b 3 ) teaspoons i owder < 1 cup milk an ? i ; : ; _ 1% squares (1% oozs.) of : unsweetened chocolate (melted) ; : 1 teaspoon salt ; Cream shorfening. Add sugar and grated orange rind. Add beaten egg volks. Sift together flour, salt and Royal Baking Powder and add alternately with the milk; lastly fold in one beaten egg white. Divide batter into two parts, To one part add the chocolate. ' Put by, tablespoonfuls, alternating da.k and light batter, into three greased layer cake pans. Bake in moderate « oven 20 minutes. pul AL . G ¢ TFILLING AND ICING = . 3 tablespoons meltg’d butter 2 tab!elgioons orange juice 3 cups confectioner’s stigar 1 egg white A {Powdered sugar may be used but '3“;quares (3 0z5.) _ does not make as smooth icing) sweetened chocolate : * Grated rind of /% orenge and pulp of 1 orange ' : R ) Put butter, sugar, orange juice and rind into bowl. Cutpulp from orange, removing skin and seeds, snd add. Beat together until smooth. Fold in beaten egg white. Spread this icing on ayer used for top of cake. While fcing is soft, sprinkle with uxiiw;‘ctfined“;hp;ohw shaved in fmed gi;écea wij d::'tpkniefz . (use % square). To temaining icingadd 2}6 squares uneweetenec. - e otk has becn e Shread il hickly berveen . layersand on sides of cake, -~ Ay Re B A B fiv,»;M .

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

pair of bay mare mules ages 5 and 91 years weight 2400. One pair of black and grey mules age 4 and .9 years weight 2500 piunds. All-sound and well broken - L - 4 Head of “Cattle 5L 2 registered Holgtein fresh in May 8 years old, good cows, fresh in Feb. the other in May. One Holstein & ‘years old fresh Julyy 16 Roan cow 5 years old fresh June 9. one Shorthorn bull Calf 8 weeks old. i 5 Head of Hogs - s - Big Type Poland China sows with 31 pigs ready to wean 4 registered sows 2 of them grand-daughters of ‘Giant Buster one good Poland China %sow with pigs the others have 9 7 and 6. " 1 - -Farm Implements. Studebaker wagon with tripple box, wagon with rack with seat on, 2 sets of heavy double harness, set "of light driving harnesg, set of single 'ha‘rness, Johnson corn binder, Deering ‘binder seven foot, Deering mower, clover seed huller side delivery, Hay rack, Hay grader, tedder, Superior clover seed drill, 2 Oliver riding polws, 2 Olive 405, walking plows, two 20 tooth spring harrow, spike tooth harrow, one double disc, Double cultipacker, 2 Oliver riding corn plows 2 one horse cultivators, fanning mill, farm scales will weigh 800 lbs., tank heater, calf gear and lumber to lmake stock rack. Other articles not mentioned. : -

Terms of Sale—All sums under $5.00 cash. All sums over that amount a credit of 9. months will be given with 7 per cent interest from date of sale - i

oo S Jack Buckles Col. Al Goss, Auctioneer H. G. Earnhart Clerk : Dinner will be gerved on the Grounds

On account of sickness the undersigned will sell at public sale at his residence in Ligonier, Indiana on Saturday November 5 th 1921. - - - The following property: - ) | Matched team 5 years old, 2 cows one fresh in Feb. one fresh in May vearling Durham bull, 6 head of fat hogs 200 Ibs. one sow, oneé boar, two horse wagon, set of double harness, 405 walking plow new, about 250 shocks o ffodder, about 200 shocks of corn and fodder, about 10 tons of Timothy hay, about 75 bales of rye straw about 250 bushels of corn in crib.,, hard coal burner, round Oak heating stove, 9x12 rug, 2 bed room rugs, center table and various other articles not here mentioned. Terms made known on day of sale. o : - Harlan Gibson - i " A(R 02 B AT L SR, 1 \ They Knew the Horse. . - William Fetters of near Avilla and formerly of Ligonier is searching for a horse and buggy which he purchased at Garrett Wednesday for $lO from two men who reside near But: ler. He accepted the offer of the But® ler men and started to drive home his new steed. While turning a corner the {animal became frightened and ran ‘away. Fetters was thrown out Oof ‘the buggy and stunned. When he regained consciousness the rig ould not be found. ' B

' Decision Awaited. <Taking of evidence was completed in the Pancake case in the Noble circuit court last Thursday and the atorneys will meet one day this week and submit their pleadings. hTe suit Mrs. Mary Thompson vs. Joha, E. Pancake to annual a ocontract, an accounting and to partition real estate, was tried before Judge Bowser, of Warsaw, ; Machinery Has ‘Arrived. The machinery for the artificial ice plant has arrived and will soon be placed upon the concrete foundations provided. The placing of the machinery will require some. time but it is hoped to have the plant:in full operation the latter part of November. Harry Pollard is the manager and Rolland Todd is one of the stockholders. = They Seem Satisfied. R There will be no town election at Churubusco ithis yeéar, neither party ‘having shown sufficient interest to work up a ticket.” The holdover offlicers, who have served three such terms are all republicans. =S

; Cash in Treasury. According to ‘the annual report of the treasurer J. C. Roscoe, the Farmers’ Federation of Noble county had $70.82 on hand October 15. The total receipts for the year were $9,212.58 and the disbursements $8,422.82. To Meet Next at Albion. " The next meeting of the county Horticultural Society will be held in Albion in December. One hundred attended ithe meeting in Kendallville last Thursday, - " .| . v Fatal Bonfire. Lorane, aged 5 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin {Hoffman of Fort Wayne burned to death ‘'when her clothing dgnited playing with a bonfire. i S ‘ ————e R : . Home From Hospital. ; - Miss Evangeline Franks, popular teacher of the Klkhart township schools is recuperating ,uicél’y from her recent operation at the Elmrg General hospital; = ~~ v ... 8

]'F you want ‘what you want when you want it—in the printing line—

l 3 DAYS—STARTING SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30th h e b Cecil B. DeMille’s 12 Star Masterpiece : , The Affairs of Anatol—the worlds latest, gfeatest word in the motion picture art—comes to the Jeff- | erson Thertre for a three day showing, starting Sunday, October 30th. This supper photoplay attrac‘tiOn is undoubtedly the most eagerly awaited and probably .th’e most costly picture ever issued. So costly that only the certainty that several thousand people will pay to see it makes it possible to show this here at thisearly date and at the small admission price Qf 40c, tax Included. About a month ago it opened simultaneously at the two famous New York Theatres, the Rialto and the Rivoli, and the Ncew York Tribune reported that as a result Broadway was so jammed with people that traffic was blocked. : " Here is a picture of real splendor, a photoplay in which your eyes will be feasted and 4yo'ur brain bewitched by beauty, a feature play of striking originalities, where *sparkling wit will follow profound depths of human feeling, where the work of nature and of man blend into a perfect, haunting symphomy of magnificent charm. _ » :

ROMAN RECORDS IN AFRICA Discovery It is Believed Will Throw Much Light on Early History : of the Empire. A &covery which, it is clalmed, will form one of the fundamental sources for a history of the Roman empire under Augustus has been made recently by Doctor Oliverio, an Itallan savant In Cyrene, the ancient Greek colony in Africa, founded in the eventh century. A Morning Post correspondent, writing from Cyrene, says that excavations at Bengasi—the ancient Berenice, which stood in the midst of the gardens of the Hesperides, near the mouth of the River Lethe—have resulted in the unearthing of a block of marble eight feet long, one face of which bears a flawless Greek inscription of over one hundred lines; the transiation of a letter from Augustus on the government and administration of justice in Cydenaica, giving a ‘wonderful insight into the financial and judicial conditions of the country at that time. ' Other interesting finds are -a sanctuary dedicated to Eastern divinities, probably of the time of Julian the Apostate, with a remarkably well-pre-served black marble statue of an Egyptlan goddess. An extensive Ptolemaic cemetery also has been located. At Apollonia, a Christian basilica of the Fifth century is being excavated, and at Merdj, the anclent Barce, some Cufic inscriptions have been found which are held to be of great importance when the history of the Arab conquest comes to be written.

Fight Plant Diseases.

While continual effort is being made to introduce promising new plants into the United States, the various branches of the Department of Agriculture are striving to avoid making additions to the imported insects and plant diseases that are already costing millions of dollars yearly. Foreign countries have listed several thousand insects of troublesome kind, with many plant diseases that are not yet included among these immigrants. Bes{des special quarantines and plant inspections the further precaution is being taken of restricting the numbers of the plants introduced and growing for a considerable time in greenhouses or under conditions of isolation, to make sure that all pests have been removed. After it is made certain that the plants are thoroughly freed from insects and diseases, they are propagated more extensively, and are distributed In the usual way to growers for experiment.

Aild for Struggling Authors. Here is an item from the New York Globe of interest to impecunious writers: “It is not generally known that the Authors’ -league has a fund for authors who are in distress. Recently the league learned that a young woman who had won considerable distinction and prominence as a. writer had through a series of misfortunes and through illness been reduced to dire ‘distress. A representative called to see her and found her on the verge of a physical an&» nervous collapse, due ‘to actual starvation. Immediate means were supplied her, and in order to give ‘her an opportunity to regain her health and to get' her back to her work a substantial amount was rdised among the members to carty her through this perlod of-enforced inactivity. { e e i

-+ Noise Eliminated.

“You charge more for board than you did last summer.” - o ~ “The place offers more rest and comfort,”. answered Farmer Corntos. . sel. “There ain’t any election for guests to sit up all night and argue about.” o P e * Wheat is Stolen. j Leonard McConoughy, reported to authorities that 35 bushels of wheat were stolen from hig barn on the Lincoln highway sotitheast of Goshen 'by a person or persons- who. traveled. in an automobile. . I Bt e B io o eT3 oy R " Syracuse Man Dles. = - John Mickey 60 of Syracuse died at &wm&wmfswmm i Uity oit e

= R S = e S NSy = Ly e T =Ty SN = YR /T ST~ S So /Gy YREEY ) ATR AN c& 'oo‘ s \'\i‘gfj\{.;‘"’\\ . o‘- - NS YA - N _,-;.:;; i 6’ 6" : :’_ R et == —— P = . e M ut Your Money in a FAKE SCHEME ma | , o Keep it SAFE in Your HOME TOWN BANK~— : }Some slick stranger might come along some day.and tell-yon how you can make a fortune by investing your money in his alluring proposition, | o But listen! if his scheme was such a good one, he wouldn’t have to ge around peddling it. Some of the big financiers would have had it long ago. ; : ; - : ; . { Don’t send your money out of yourn own town to never come back. B Make Ourgßank Ycur Bank i We pay 4 per cent. interest on saving deposits - | and Saving Accounts. Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

Use for Exhaust Gas. At its point of issue from the cylinder the exhaust has a temgperature of from 800 degrees to 1,000 degrees F'., and consists almost entirely of carbon dioxide—a colorless and odorless gas.| These properties make it sultable for carbonizing wood, that is to say, making charcoal, and it is now being utilized for that purpose in France. The hot gases. are caused to traverse a specially constructed oven, In which | the wood is suitably arranged, by which means the temperature of the wood is raised to about 500 degrees, which carbonizes without burning or igniting it. Many ovens of this type were installed during the war, in Algeria and Tunis, with the object of furnishing a substitute for anthracite coal, which was very scarce and dear, for use In enriching low-grade gas for motor purposes.—Popular Mechanics Magazine. —_—-—“ < “Good Neighbors.” ‘Mrg. Merriweather and her four small children lived in a Hitle house ifn ——— street, where the neighbors were exceedingly friendly over the back fence, and made many back-door calls. Mrs. M. began to worry about the children and their surroundings as they grew older, and moved to another part of the town. Shortly aftef moving away Geraldine met one of the old neighbors who inquired as to how she liked her new home and the neighbors. Geraldine, being only seven ~and honest, replied: : : “We like our new home all right, but we haven't any good neighbors now—they all stay home and mind their own ~ business.”—lndlanapelis News. g e

Daniel Boone's Mark. _That Daniel Boone, famed n‘enucky‘ hunter, made an expedition into Wayne and Lincoln county during his career is the belief of a party of lamberjacks who recently discovered the name “D. Boone” chiseled in a large tock at the mouth of a cave on Pengd Fork of Four Mile creek, Lincoln county, mear the Wayne® line. The forms of the letters are said to eorrespond with the name of Boone which is found carved in the rocks of Kentucky. The rock beariug the name io Lintle ey &o«m ‘hug fll St

o CROMWELL NEWS . The high school 72 .in number gave a. supper at the M. E. church Friday evening for the Natefger party and the teachers. ‘Neal Hontz has a new auto. . Miss Blanche Burwell of Churubusco is visiting relatives here. - Miss Masters 'one of the school teachers is off duty jon account of sickness. " ' P Morris Miller will' move his Electro station in the Newell Hursey room recently vacated by the " cream sationed. - it st

Ray Maggart of Mishawaka is here for 4 visit. ' F. Rutter and family have moved in the Mrs. Conner residence. - The Hanhshy family in the Benjamin property. : ‘ ~ The Community church revival will close Sunday evening at the M. E. church. The attendance has been the largest ever known here before. Rev. Knatfzer and party will return to Winona. : ! S S

Mrs. Velma Miller is home from the Goshen hospital. . Etna lost a ball game here Sunday 10 and 3.° : < : The Indoor Band Fair will be held The High School Basket Ball team has been organized and practice has here Nov. 2, % and. 4. begun. A benefit movie show will be given Friday evening the 28th. . Mrs. T. Ruby is visiting at South Bend. / : / e Mrs. Glenn Nicoli is home from a Goshen visit. o : * Hallowe'en Sapper. The Ladies Aid Society of the Presbyterian church will .serve a Hallowe’en supper in the parlor “of the church October 27. Menu: roast beef mashed potatoes, gravy and noodles, ‘cabbage salad, pickles, sweet pota- - Price 50 cents. Bverybody .invited. %g%%pmm”:%j e 2 s%fivfi% ‘ffig\‘? 4 ‘%‘%flk*% “‘ffi‘s’g’fi’*’g"“ s %w%%«@z?%w *éfififi“%fif&g* b