Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 49B, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 February 1922 — Page 3

~ Gravel Road 2 and ' ~ Municipal Bonds and other Tax-exempt ; - Securities . . Citizens Banlk e ik |

We Have Recei\/edf Large Shipments - 0 v . o 1. N Hard and Soft Coal - Chestnut, No. 4 and Furnace sizes ~in hard coal. Best grades of C o o softcon. Full line jof Building Material now . onbhwd - COMPTON & HOLDEMAN ~ HOLDEMAN & SON Straus Wool House. Phone N 0.279

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' DEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR EACH WEEK FOR 50 WEEKS AND YOU HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN EASILY SAVE A DOLLAR R WEEK AND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. r o THERE ARE CLUBS WHERE YOU DEPOSIT 50 CENTS R WEEK, OR $5..00 OR ANY SUM---R CLUB TO FIT YOUR PURSE. i OR YOU CAN BEGIN WITH 1 CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT EACH WEEK. ' _, ~ IN FIFTY WEEKS. . ‘ : . ' 10-Cent Club Pays - $127.50 ‘ : , 5-Cent Club Pays - 63.75 , 2-Cent Club Pays 2550 : 4 1-Cent Club Pays Ll2OB o . YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE |LARGEST AND DECREASE EACH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. .YOU GET BACK EVERY CENT YOU PUT IN. ; : » . ; ~~ COME IN AND ASK ABOUT IT. e ‘ 'Make Our Bank Your Bank We pay 4 per cent. interésf on saving déposipa i and Saving Accounts. ' ‘ Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

Clothiers and Furnishers,

The clothiers and furnishes of In; diana will hold their annual eonven: tion in the state capital February 13, 14 and 15. Over 300 delegates are ex-l pected to attend. Sol Schloss formerly of Ligonier, vice president of the na-| tional association is down for an address. ; ! it John Gonderman today with his family moved to Benton where he will engage in the mercantile business. ‘Thie Banner will be a regular visitor

It May Be Recovered.

Consternation reigned at the home of Mr.cand Mrs. Gordon Parker at Goshen when it ‘was learned that their small daughter had swallowed a quarter. No ill effects were reported to date, » :

A convention*of city and town school superintendents of the state is being held in Indicnapolis this week. Feb. 2, 3, and 4. L i - Wanted—Second hand 2 burner oil mvds'fielephone a 0 o .

Public Sale.

The undersigned will sell at public auction on the S. C. Sackett farm 4 miles east of Ligonier and. 2% miles west of Wawaka on the Blaze Trail on Wednesday February 15. Commencing at 1 o’clock sharp the following property to-wit. o 13 Head of Cattle—Spotted Durham cow 7 years old calf by side, Brindle Durham cow 9 years old to be fresh Feb. 12, Brindle cow 11 years to be fresh Feb. 13, Red cow 7 years old, to be fresh Feb. 17, black cow 9 years to ‘be fresh Feb. 23, Durham cow 3 years old to be fresh Feb. 28, Durham cow 9 years old giving milk, Durham heifer 2 years old to be fresh in April, Durham heifer 2 years old to be fresh in Sept., Durham heifér 2 years old, open, Registered Durham bull 2 years old. 8§ Head of . Hogs—Sow .open, T shoats. ‘ Hay and Grain—4oo bushels of corn more or less, corn in the field and corn fodder, oats and rye, milt and oats in bin, hay in mow. o) Farm Implemets—Boo fence posts more or less, Sando 8 H. P. gas engine International 8 in. feed grinder and belt ensilage cutter one horse corn cutter, corn plow. : Terms of Sale—All sums under $5.00 cash. All sums over that amount a credit of 7 months will bé given with 7 iper cent interest from date of sale. 2 per cent off for cash. . SACKETT & SQUIRES E. R. Kurtz, Auctioneer. Charles Schwab, Clerk.

Public Sale. = The undersigned will sell at pulgfié sale on the J. E: Yoder farm 3 miles south and % mile west of Topeka and 3% miles northeast of Ligonier on Wednesday, February 8 commerecing at 10:00 o’clock A. M. sharp the following property to-wit: 12 Head of Horses—Pair black geldings 4 and 5 years old weight 3,200 pounds, pair gray geldings 4 ‘and 5 years «old weight 2,800 pounds., a good broke pair, dark gray gelding 4 years old weight 1,700 pounds, dark gray gelding 4 years old weight 1,600 roan mare 5 years old in foal weight 1,500 roam mare 3 years old, weight 1,500 roan gelding 4 years old weight 1,400, bay gelding 4 years old weight 1,2000, bay gelding 6 years old, weight 1,3000 Ibs. Ve 21 Head of Cattle (Including 16 Cows) Holstein cow 4 years old fresh in March, Holstein cow 8 years old be fresh in Oct. Holstein cow 7 years old fresh in April, red cow 4 years old fresh April, part Guernsey cow 4 yrs old fresh time of sale, Guernsey cow 4 years old been fresh 5 weeks, black cow 4 years .old fresh in Oct. Jersey cow 10 years old fresh in Oct. Black Jersey cow 4 years old, fresh in Sept. Hereford cow. 7 years old fresh in April, big roan cow 6 years old fresh by time of sale, Bown Swith cow 4 years old fres by time of sale, Jersey cow 8 years old fresh by time of sale, Jersey cow 7 years old fresh by time of sale,spotted cow 3 years old fresh in June, roan cow 5 years old fresh in May, full blooded Shorthorn bull 2 vears old, bull 11 months old a good one,two yearling Holstein heifers, black calf 4 months old. ‘ : 85 Head of Sheep—6o head of these sheep are good Shropshire ewes, 21 white faced ewes and 4 bucks. 37 ead of Hogs—lB brood sows, some of these are full-blooded Big Type Poland Chians, 2 red sows, about all to have pigs March 1 to April 1, 19 shoats to weigh 125 Ibs. ~ Half interest in 48 acres of Wheat in the ground. : Farm Implements, Etc.— Deeringbinder Bft. tongue truck nearly new, Deering binder 7 foot in good shape, | International hay loader nearly new, side delivery rake in fair shape, Amerson manure spreader good as new, New Idea spreader in good shape, new Stu.debake\r;wagon with tripple bed, Studebaker wagon in good shape winth box, Buckeye wagon handy farm truck, top buggy, Emmerson 14disc in good shape, Oliver Cultipacker Oliver sulkey plow good as new, Oliver sulky plow in god shape, 2 Oliver walking -plows in good shape, Gale corn planter in good shape, John Deere riding cultivator, 3 walking cultivators, 2 spring-tooth harrows 24 tooth each, spike tooth harrow 105 tooth, float 2 grain drills,’ Hoosier fertilizer drill good as new, one-horse dill in good shape, 2 pair bob-sleds in good shape, slegh, 2 flat bottom hay racks, good stock rack, wood rack two jclover seed bunchers fit any 5 foot mower, 2 fanning mills one as good as new. 3 : . - Harness and Small Implements—set heavy brass .trimmed harness in good shape, set harness in fair shape, 3 sets gooz work harness, set for 3rd horse, Bgood leather collars, set light driving hmarness, set light driving harness with collars, 2 sets single harness, log chains, forks, shovels, and other articles too numerous to mention. o ', Terms of ale—All sums of $5 and under cash on all' sums over $5 a coredit of 9 months will be given, purchaser’ giving note "bearing 6 1:091:j cent interest from date with attorney’s fees and with approved security, 2 per cent off fo cash on sums over $6.00. e e Harley Logeorn & E. R. Kurtz, Aucts. Alva Lantz, Clerk. . . i

Will Cause General Regret, ‘The appointment by President Harding of Senator Kenyon of lowa to a federal judgeship will be deeply regretted not because the gentleman will not make a good judge but for the reason it removes from the U. 8. senate ‘its foremost member. Senator Kenyon is presidentia] timber, but the appointment removes him from the field. While a progressive republican Senator Kenyon in his official career showed great breadth of mind and honesty of purpose. He was the brains of the republican side of the upper house of congress, and the gervices of such a man are greatly needed at this time, e

LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

WAS NOT HIS LUCKY DAY

Trolley Car Patron Got into Trouble When He Attempted to Get | Away With Umbrelia.

- Young, Bob Mclntosh had‘ always prided himself on his honesty-and uprightness, but it was a rainy night when he saw an umirella apparently deserted on a seat in the trolley car. He picked it up. and examined it. It could not be very valuable, it was ‘hardly worth while terning it in to the motorman of the one-man car and —the walk from the trolley to tha home of young Bob Mclntosh was a good, four blocks in the pouring rain, As the car neared the street, says the New York Sun, the honest young man looked around and seeing that none of his fellow passengers was noticing him he picked up the umbrella and walked up to the motorman’s platform. There with the glibness of one with a guflty conscience he conversed with the pilot until the car drew up at his street. “Well, good night!” said young Bob Mclntosh as he lightly stepped from the car and raised his umbrella. “Good night” quoth the motorman, but as Bob made his way across puddles .to the curb he noticed that the car had not continued on its way; indeed, even the door had not yet been closed. He had started down the street to his home when a mighty “Hey!” made him turn. ~ i “How far are you goin’ to go with that umbrella, young man?”’ shouted the motorman. = “This time it happened to be mine,” said that worthy as he slammed the door shut and shot the car forward. . § ; ;

ADAM AND EVE GO SHOPPING

Writer Has Drawn Liberally on His Imagination in Describing Remarkable Excursion.

Let us imagine our scapegoat ancestors attempting an eleven-o’clock stroll through Drang’s ten-story department store. Can we not hear the tense ejaculations of our first mother before -the mountains of unknown things, wools, satins, silks, challies, organdies and muslins, piled celling high before her? Even Adam, who has a reputation as a namer of things, might well drop all his Miltonic airs of superiority, and say for once in some dainty form of Edenic language, “Eve, dear, I certdinly am out of soundings. I can find names -easily enough for birds, beasts and fishes, but all this” (with a gesture of meek hopelessness) “is out of my zone. Yet I am sure it is all intended for your sex; for I'm thinking no man would gear himself up in any of this—duffle”~—if one may help him to a word. o : Then Eve, if true to her old Edenic form, would retort: : ‘“But Adam, dear, you can’t deny that it is all most tempting; and I am going to pick out right away some of that soft, cloudy stuff, the color of a sunrise; I'm sure it would be much prettier than fig leaves for a dress.”— North American Review. N

Few people of the United States can play games. Many can contest a game for the satisfaction of beating an adversary, or to get exercise, but actually to play a game is a different matter. Sporting editors, judging by their writings, must be the most serious of men, and their earnestness is often amusing. The defeat of a college football team recently called forth a lugubrious atterance from a correspondent who evidently felt that the educational institution had received a blow from which its scholastic reputation of a century and a half would hardly be. able to save it. The writer asserted that the football trainers of this institution were pald insufficiently, and, after taking the authorities to task, reached his climax in these significant words: “A young, inexperienced coach has been asked to assume the respon-. sibility of the team, who could be hired at a salary no greater than the average professor in the college receives.” In the present state of, American school,athletic affairs this might be considered an extremely high compliment.—Christian Science Monitor. : ; : :

A member of the Royal Geographie society in England estimates that the fertile lands of the globe amount to 28,000,000 square miles, the steppes to 14,000,000, and the deserts to 1,000,000. Fixing 207 persons to the square mile for fertile lands, ten for steppes and one for deserts as the greatest populatlon that the earth could properly nourish, he arrives at the conclusion that when the number of inhabitants reaches about 6,000,000,000 our planet will be peopled to/its full capacity. If the rate of increase shown by recent census statistics should be uniformly maintained, it is shown that the globe would '‘be fully peopled about the year-2072., But such ealculations do not allow for unknown sources of error,and therefore cannot be taken too literally.

"“My brother,” said the solemn person, “are you so living in this world that you will wear a golden croewn in the hereafter? : “I'm trying to,” said Mr. Peckton, “but 1 never could wear a fancy cloth hat without feeling dreadfully conspicuous and uncomfortable, If I should win a golden crown I'm afraid I never would get used to it."—Birmingham Age-Herald, ; ~ For sale—Portland sleigh new. Enquire D, F. Keefer on the Jacob Sheets farm. ; ek : o [ s ~ The one thing we don’t recommend Blue Devil for is cleaning teeth, yet some say they like it, A

There’s a Difference.

When the World 1s Filled.

His Different Nature.

‘ . Three Days---February 3, 4 and 6 o : . SPRING LINE OF CURTAIN SCRIMS | Shipment of 100 pieces of Curtain Scrims for this Big Sale. Think of it, 1 yard wide double border Curtain Scrims on sale for 9¢ tthe yard. Not cheap junk usually offered but a reguldr 15¢ cloth at the yard B eAU L oot o e e S gy Limit 25 yards to a customer. ‘ ; o : :

- Pearly Wave White Laundry soap 10 bars 45¢ - Waltkes White Naptha Soap 10 calzes ... BOC . Kirks Flake White laundry soap 10 cakes 48¢ Cut glass values to $2.25 each your choice 89¢ Cooking glass values to $2.00 each ........ 89(5 6 foot window blinds oil finish (not' water colors) at o 0 ek se b s ninsin iIO 7 foot window blinds oil finish dark ereen special at 69c Gillette Safety Razors with 6 blades $1.98 .value at e, $125 Hair Nets cap single and double mesh elastic j, nets, all colors except grey 10c values all go at 4 for 25¢ Infants’ Bath Robes (soiled from handling) $l.OO to $1.50 values got at . [ Wizard Carpet Cleaner or Dust Down 19¢ BRINE AL 2 HUT i i O Stocking Caps for boys, girls or ladies, 59¢ - value go at 39¢ American Maid Crochet cotton ............. Be White Table Oil Cloth the yard ............ 2dc Fancy Table Oil cloth the‘iyard b Ol 29¢ Linen Toweling the yard ................... 20¢ 29¢ Turkish Toweling the yard .............. 20c Cotton Toweling-the yard ek ‘Outing light or dark the yard ... 14¢ Cotton Batts 20c value go at ... 15¢ All 15¢ Batts go at 3 for Seasasiseinseinansnsaarases SOC Boy’s and Men’s Jersey gloves go at ... 15¢ Boy’s and Men’s canvas gloves.go at ... 10e

The Gutelius 5 & 10 A good place to trade and buy for less '

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Carney’s Clothing Store

A Tremendousßeduction

Suits and Overcoats

Every suitand overcoat in our stock will be oftered at greatly reduced prices for the next few weeks. This includes every suit and overcoat in our store consisting of Hart Schatfner & Marx and other well known makes of clothing all are latest stylesand fabric.

SPECIAL PRICES ON BOYS’ & CLOTHING

CARNEY CLOTHING i Th?s“"e: Wheresl*};gi‘l;:'fhe P,e"P‘f' Trade i

s¢& Toliet soaps 8 cakes for ..................... 25¢ Men’s Overalls size 42 $l.OO value for ... 59¢ ~ Men’s 79¢ blue shirts go at ..................... 65¢ Sponges 15¢ value for o s iessiaini 306 25¢ Colgates tooth paste Bl sAR Thermometers 35¢ value for 20¢ . Aluminum,Tea;Spoons eachk ... % Aluminum Table Spoons each ................. 3¢ * Alufiiinum Table Fork ad s 1 Pint Aluminum Cups each oAb White Metal'Knives_‘and'Forks set ........ T9¢ White Plates the dozen ... $1.20 White Cups and Saucers the dozen .... $1.75 Piano Rolls with words o at ... 39 Piano Rolls regular go at ................. 29¢ 98c Copy Rright Books go at ................ 69¢ Boxed ‘suspenders Ts¢ value go at eivsch D ‘Boxed ‘suspenders 59¢ value for ....\... 45¢ $1.39 Stone Slop Jars go‘ gt . o Ladies’ Aprons ssesasesnsnanesseninnnes 20% diScount Children’s Union Suits Skt 2D% discoimt Ladies’ Union Suits .........cccn...25% discount White Sauce Dishes 6 for .................... 45¢ - White Oatmeal Dishes 6 for ................... 60c - Willing Workers Tablet 6 for ................. 24¢ $2.25 Corsets fOr ..u...ivioervorrnioon..... $1.25 $1.98 Corsets for ..........0mnn....... $1.09 Sl Cormetafor ... ... .. . .. gg Ladies’ part wool hose heather only 59¢ WAUHE e h et v s 4%

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