Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 49B, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 February 1922 — Page 2

The Ligomer Banner : ESTABLISHED 1868, . t & Published by ‘ “hegßanner Publishing Company W. C. B. HARRISON Editor F Adver Rt 1 [ AR TR Sst ion 1| Published evéry Monda:f and Thursday and entered In the Postoffice at Ligonier, Ind., a 8 second class matter. W

e S Pablie Bales. " Thomas A. Stiffler will have: a public sale having decided to quit farming and will offer on what is known as the old Mel Carmien farm one mile north and two-miles west of Ligonier three miles east and three miles eouth of Millersburg, Tuesday February Tth beginning at 11 o’clock in the morn_in-g the fellowing property: - Four Head of Horses—Gray gelding 6 years old, 1,500 pounds; iron gray. mare 7 years old, 1,500 pounds, gray gelding 9 years old, 1,400 pounds, and one gray gelding 9 years old 1,350 pounds. L Four head cattle—Guernsey cow T years th, fresh Feb. 6, Holstein cow € vears old, giving milk, dark Jersey cow 3 years old, fresh Feb. 28, light Jersey cow 10 years old giving milk. Four good Sows-—Spotted sow due to farrow March 12, Durcc sow due to farrow April 27 youn Duroec sow due to farrow latter part of March, young spotted sow due to farrow latter part of March. ; Twelve head sheep—Eleven good breeding ewes one Shropshire buck. . Twenty-five tons of hay, 560 bushels corn in.erib and some in the shock. "Forty laying hens. : A Farming Iplements— Studebaker and Buckeye wagons 81%, Keystone gearless hay loader, Keystone side-de-livery hay rake, Deering binder 8 foot cut with tongue: and truck, Johnson mower giant frame 5-foot cut, eorn King manure spreader, 16 disc grain driil, John Deere corn planter, Oliver No. 11 sulkey breaking plow, disc harrow, two Oliver riding cultivators, 20-tooth spring harrow, three--section spike tooth harrow, 2 flat bottom hay racks, stock rack, extra heavy dump boards, scoop board; Keasey road cart 9 barrel galvanized steel -tank, galvanized- steel water fountain for hogs, 1%4 H. P. Sta-Rite gasolen engine pump jack, tank heater, 4-horse tandem hitch rolling coulter and jointer combined, ball-bearing grind stone, rope enough for barn and fork, set heavy double work harness, set light double wagon harness, ‘set driving harness, work collars, forks and shovels and many other articles. : i ‘Hot lunch served on the grounds with warming place provided. e Terms: All sums of $lO and under cash, all sums over that amount a credit of ten months will be given with out interest giv‘.i‘ug note with approved security. Two per cént off for cash and if motes are not paid when due 8 per cent will be added from date of sale. : . o : No property to be removed until settled for. L , - . THOMAS A. STIFFLER Cal Stuckman, Nappanee Auctioneer Slerk_s-——W. H. Loy and Levi Chiddiser. o

- - Hay and Grain Sale. o The Slabaugh Brothers will sell at the Bowsher farm three miles north and one half mile west of Ligonier boginning at noon Friday February 10, ‘the following property: About three thousand bushels of corn, four ‘hun_dred bushels of oats sixty tons of mix- - ed timothy and clover hay and a set of work harness. A credit of seven months wil be given with 7 per cent interest.. "Harley Longcor is the auctioneer. ' e 48h4t TURN YOUR SPARE MOMENTS INLk > TO DOLLARS - - ; | Bupply coal consumers with “Koal {is,ave,’". guaranteed to save the user 130% of his coal. Men or women will | find this a very profitable business. Exclusive rights. Write for full parti- . culars enclosing stamp for reply. . HOUSEHOLD CHEMICAL co. e 150 E 3rd St. St, Pawl, Minn. , : 4834 t Farm For Rent. ; 160 acres in Noble coffaty. Green Brothers and Oldfather, | ligonier, Indiana. e . 48btf

Notice to Notes Lost by Robbery. Notice is hereby given that three pro missory notes of $1166.66 each dated March 8, 1920 due respectively November 1, 1920, November i, 1921, and November 1 1922 with interest payable annually at the rate of six por centum per annum from July 15, 1920 negotiable and payable at’ the Farmers State Bank Wawaka, Indiana, with attorney’s fees and waiving relief given by Elmer P. Magnuson, Edward G. DePew, Alton Lower, Fred ‘Zimmerman, John F. MeCloskey, Edward Piggott, Mark Kinnison, Glenn E. Raoe Harry J. Stuff Frank W. Franks, Fred Spurgeon George Randall and Thomas D. Stingner and pay: able to. me : were by the deposited in the Farmers State Bank Wawakd Indiana to be held for the convenience of myself and the ma-~ kers thereof and the same were stolen at the time of the robbery of said bank, in October 1921 and I have never seen or heard of them or! either. of them since and do not know where the same, or any of them are, - All persons, firms and corporations ~are hereby informed of such loss and ~warned to make no purchase of same or any of them, as no person othes than myself has any right, title claim * -Dated this Jandary 43 1923, ~~ David S. Sontchl, - 47a3w %%mmw

'SLASHED TO THE M e These tires have been tested By ~myself in the taxi business and - will be personally guaranteed by ~ myself that the Edison Tire Co. will give you a reasonable adjustment against workmanship and ) material for 7000 miles. | i Prices quoted are for cash only. . Cord Tires in Propoirtion 30x3 Non-Skid, $8.75 < 30wy Al | a 2 12.00 | iRy Y Y ag R ; x 4 - e | 33X4 6 ’ T 717.00 adxa. - 1 MG kp GEO. D. FOSTER ~ LEPIRD'S-BARN = .

A Reminder Don’t forget t\hat‘/ promise you fiMo the good wflc and daughter te buy a piane or Victrola. Come and look at s_tock of Muscal goods. We have what yeu want at the right price. Lk ik eest S ELE Pianos, Player-Pianos and Victrolas You can take the easy payment»pl.an if .ynl do net care to pay eash. » Yours for 50 years of Musical Service. . ‘ South Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana

| 4 Have Cut Prices Now on Dyed Garments & Clothing Dry cleaned and Dyed is not a luxury hut an art o prac.f. tical economy. '3 : \ i § , ‘ » » : ! ;l‘.?" And with our new equipment are able to give the best or service | § leaving your garments free from odor. ' : " : / o i: Will be woth y;)ur while to look us up or PHONE 86 when in wanf E of such service. . : | b :#:. S ; S ’ ', - Dry Cleaning And Dying |

S | Money To Lend On Farms L lofiins to be secured by first mortg‘age for’not to exceed 29 per cent vilue of land alone, excluding impro've-/ men{s. | _ » L : | : ' ~ Loans for more thah 40% of ~lénd value at 7%. o Call at our office for complete inforni_ation.about our : Q\Kditions and terms which are attractive. oL i | THE STRAUS BROTHERS ¥&3¥ LIGONIER, FEsteblished [, INDIANA® %

_ymeEß BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

Sy o g g e _.‘..',.-W--:—-— GHOSTS THAT REALLY LIVE in the Modern World Some of Them Actually Make Their Living, Though Unknown. There are ghosts in the material as well as in. the spirit world. In fact some people earn their living by .actIng as “ghosts.” Some “ghosts” often become prominent in their “professfon” | despite the fact that their work Is little known. e : Busy painters sometimes hand their canvasses over to lesser known artists to “touch up” or finish off. The struggler is glad of the work, the artist is’ able to do more and the result seems to please the public. ' Minor authors often practice the same thing. A man may be writing a book on. the history of Mexico—let us say. He needs certain information which he knows can be obtained from reference books. Gathering that Information does not require the brains of a genfus, his secretary can do that quite well, while he works up the “local color” from the bare facts obtained. It is an open secret that many writers work in this way and that ghosts are often employed to “write up” books of reminiscences of . celebrities. Sometimes, the work these . | “authors” behind the scenes do is lm- | portant. - They revise navels, draw “ends” together, work up “climaxes” and give dramatic effect to. “situa- | ‘ tions.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.

INDIANS WELCOME AT MIAMI Seminoles Add Picturesqueness to Well-Known Florida Resort by '~ Their Gaudy Costumea,

Visitors to Miami are always interested in the Seminole Indians, whether seen in their camps in the Everglades paddling down the Miami river or the canals in their quaint canoes, or mingling with the crowds upon the streets in their characterIstic and plcturesque dress, made of .gaudy colored horizontal stripes of cloth, : : e During the summer the Indians go far out into the Everglades, but in winter months they come nearer the city, and a camp of them is usually situated on the Miami river just outside the city limits. Here in a tropical jungle, on the banks of the river, they erect their huts with thatched roofs and sides, arranged in a circle with the communal campfire in the center, The number in this ecamp varies from 80 to 50. They. go back and forth into the glades to their 'truck farms for provisions and for fish and game. Sy The Seminoles are a peaceful | tribe, and cause no trouble,

- Selects Strange Home. No bird selects stranger places for a home than the house wren, the flighty, fidgety, fussy little midget of a hird that carols all day and would fight a turkey buzzard or any other thing that flies. The biological survey of the Department of Agriculture says: “Probably no bird displays gredter eccentricity in the selection of a nesting place than the house wren,” A hollow branch or a knothole in a post or stuip are his more prosaie choices. When more esthetically inclined he affects old boots and hats hung up to scare robbins from the cherries, or takes an old copper pot or tomato can lying on the roof of a back shed; or if the gardner hangs his coat on the fence when warm weather begins, and forgets it for a few days, he may find when he returns that an enterprising wren has preempted one of his pockets and has his domestic affairs under full headway. .

Demon Was Cuttlefish. For many centuries Norway has had its legends telling frightful deeds of the kraken, a great and mysterious marine creature that was a danger to sailors on the high seas. Now scientists have found that the localitles in which these folk-tales flourish are the habitat of giant squids or “cuttlefish,” of the genus. Architeuthus, that have frequently been cast up upon sea beaches. According to Dr. James Ritchie of the Royal Scottish museum, the largest of these on record had tentacles with a span close to 80" feet. It was nine.feet nine inches long from the tip of its tail to to tip of its short arms, but its tentacular arms were each 14 feet long.— New York Evening Post,

| ‘For Living Game. : Hunting and its attendant outdoor life appeals to all sportsmen and is the motive for a great use of the forest lands for that type of recreation. But there is another feature perhaps little thought of, but none the less present and important in the simple presence of living game In the landscape, and there is little question but that the value of a live animal viewed by forest visitors several times during its life, has a greater aggregate worth in the recreation scheme than the same animal dead.— American Forestry Magazine, S W

The Suffragist. She was registered for citizenship class for the first time and she was full of enthusiasm for her party. Unfortunately, she was very deaf and the usual questions were somewhat hard to understand. “Age? Born in , this country? Color? What state?” Fumblingly she got them all, but “occupation?” she could not grasp. ‘“Are you a housewife?” roared the impatient girl behind the desk, “No,” replied the deaf but earnest suffragist. “Second wife,” ; a 2 : S'ale ==

- Letyour children have all the breaa . . ' s ' tb?'wantflspread withwholesome - ke e~ | ' delicious Brednut. cAccording to ' : ' iW = ’ severalbulletinsof the U.S. Dep-+ el B T . ment of Agriculture, foods (af‘:‘:e eae e g i T\ . . "‘Brédnut cf:,racter are more (. » : : » : e 5 F » 95% digestible. cAnother bullst:: . o g ARy EE - gives their energy value as 3500 5 . . it calories to the pound. » : 'z Soen el\ : . v ‘: y —.4) koY T ‘ g | ‘ £ (g}%% e // g W e e ‘b\\ > 4 4@\ ‘ifim'#/‘fi | g | ‘ o SRR ’ TB> \‘ ';II; | ‘ linesgl < AN U 7 . OREY ) LS ‘ | ‘ .fi , 1 [ e A N \ e 1 i‘M; .\’ c%‘ I: ‘ o (PRI - Here’s Help! e . cA new food with a ‘Spendthrift’ flavor - i and a “Penny-wise’ co¥ =~ =~ i . flS we go-around the country talking with wo- - ' ' men on household subjects we find this ques- e tion in the very front of their minds: ' : - | «“With purses shrinking the way they are this o ' - ~ year, what can help us to give our families whole- ‘ | - some delicious foods?” s e - - Brednut gives real aid in one important direction. 1 - : It provides a delicious economical spread for L bread.| Its flavor is so fresh and delicate that L ~ even mere men become enthusiastic about it. < il b - It’s made from pasteurized milk o e : o and rich tropical nuts. ' » . , ; Can you resist Brednut when you know its delight- - : ful ingredients. The richness of tropical nuts — : : brought from far off islands! Pasteurized milk from : o ‘ healthy cows! Blended under careful supervision 'in spotless rooms. These ingredients make Brednut— e : the most delicate bread spread you ever tasted. : i _ ‘ We certainly wish that every woman could see Bred- \ e | . nut made. Every household then would have a new Delicious! it idea of. brcad—sprea_ld_ purity. All would und.erstan_d, T iki s even without reading the Gevernment bulletins, why - il itk Brichint } sgch a f9od is so high in energy value.:;- why it is so- g v highly digestible. Why children love it. ’ cinnamon to lof sugar. ol : : ‘ Toast the bread and Remember this about Brednut. It comes to you in spread liberally with » : : ! Brednut while still hot. : a pound: pat of purest white. You can not only taste Sprinkle the sugar and , : but actually see its perfgct purity. Yqu can quickly i catßman h(‘;":efwilf; ' _ color Brednut to a golden yellow with wholesome . sesving this teiasb ask your- . vegetable ‘m'ateri.als which your grocer gives you. ° _ :elf n‘i your s‘3;’; - r;"e‘:g _ * . . ~ spread. | o Vw"‘;a )| SR | | o a’t“’:’". P e The delicious new spread for bread - e 2 v (Made from pasteurized milk and rich tropical nuts) Al » 3 | . : ; 5 A ; Copyright 1922, bynohoqmr&gambleCo.. Cincinnati

- bUhgairlED ADS

- Auctioneering. ‘ Anyone desiring the |services of an experienced auctioneer available for all kinds of auction sales, apply to Harry L. Benner, Wolf Lake, Ind. Noble and Whitley county phones. 45btf . I have contracted 5,000 muskrat ‘hides to be delivered before New ieYars. Do not sell but see me and get ‘more money. I pay more for all other furs than anyone else. = : Joe Miller 40att For Sheriif. I wish tto announce that I will be a Republican Candidate for Sheriff of Noble county Indiana subject to the decision of the primary election held: on the 2nd day of May 1922. Alvin S. Harp, Kendallville, Ind. i e S " 4bb4t

Notice of Services Christian Science Services are held every Sunday morning at 11 o’'clock ‘at the hall over Weir & Cowley. ~ Welcome hoi 1 71-1-23 For sale or trade a ranch in Blaine county, Montana consisfing of 320 acres along the Great Northern railway 24 miles from the Saskatchwan. Good house, garage and well, right in the centre of the wheat blet. A good grain market within an hour’s drive. Here is a rare bagains for some on= who desies to make a change. For information call at Banner office. 47atf For rent, good farm of 290 acres with everything \furnished. Enquire oft W. A. Cochran or George Goshorn. Lo e s T e TR It you have a good fresh cow or springer I want it, if you want a good fresh cow or springer I have it George Foster,Lepird barn. Ligonfer.

- The wise automobile owner will store his battery for the winter with Kiester's Battery Shop where it will| receive the proper care. . 42atf _ For Sale house of 7 rooms with lot 101x158 good barn and garage. Good location and fine shade ‘and fruit trees A baragin if taken at once. Inquire at Banner office ... itk 40Dt " To The Public—l am prepared to make and fit stove pipe and set -up stoves for the winter. Also stove repairing. D. M. Rench _ 30btt |

Wanted—Young women to take a short course in nursing.wPay lwhile learning. Address Dr. Bonnell M. Souder Hospitall, Auburn, Ind. 47a6t . ‘Wanted—Man to work on farm married. C. L. Chamberlin 45btt For sale, 80 acres 4 miles south west p‘f Ligonier. C. .M. Campbell, Bement, Illinois. - } 45a8t Washings wanted to help support the children. 407 Union street. Mrs. Rollin Bailey. . Anyone desiring accommodations may secure board and room at 128 Jay street. Phone No. 382, _ 44Dbtf For sale; modern property in good location. Call at Banner office. 47btf

EARL WOLF Auctioneer Will Answer Calls Anywhere _ Phone 16000 Q Ligonier : lndhnl‘

CHARLES V'INKS AND SON . Dealer in} ~ Monuments, Vauits, Tombstopes, e eTG s W e e e

W. H. WIGTON i - Atforney-at-law Dffice in Zimmerman .Block - LIGONIER, IIND.

Mrs. Elizabeth Lamb Electrical Facial and Scalp Massage ~ Manicuring, Shampooing Hair Tinting and Hair Dressing Marinello Toilet Preparations ;i Hair Goods v

LEARN TO DANCE All Latest Steps Taught 'Tuesday and Thufsday | Evenings Regular Meet- - ing Nights v Arnold Elson Phone 18, Ligonier -

Putting it ofF today won't get it done tomorrow. An alsv«fisemené in this paper today tomorrow.