Ligonier Banner., Volume 55, Number 51A, Ligonier, Noble County, 13 February 1922 — Page 3

GOES BACK TO OLD EGYPT|

Legend of Cindaegella, Almost Universal, Believed to Have Cormne - From Ancient Memphis,

- Cinderella and the legend surrounding her glass slipper is believed to have originally come from. ancient Memphis. In the ryins of this buried city lies the pyramig‘o.f‘ Rhodopis, who lived at Naucratis, and was incomparably beautiful and chaste.| Ont day when Rhbodopis was bathing an eagle fiew through the open ceiling of her ‘bathroem and plucked from her mald's hands the sandal which she was just about to lace about her mistress’ foot. g e ~ The eagle :then flew to Memphis, where the king was administering justice in one of the courts of tlie palace, and, hovering above the king, dropped the sandal, which fell into the folds.of the king's garment. He examined the sandal and found it so small and love1y that he bade his servants search all Egvpt till they should find the woman whom it would fit. - ' Rhodopis was found In Naucratis and carried to the king, who married her. She diled ‘after a few months' happiness, and- the disconsolate King had one of the costliest pyramids of antiguity built in her memory, In the first century B. C. the priests of Memphis were wont to exhibit a sandal in & crystal shrine which, they declared,. once belonged to Rhodopis, miraculousiy preserved through many centuries. The sarcophagus and the mummy of Rhodopis have entirely vanished and her pyramid is little more than a ruin, but her legend lives in every land.

FAMOUS “LION OF LUCERNE”

Thorvaldsen’s Masterpiece Commem- ~ ©orates the Heroism of the Swiss Guards In Paris in 1792,

The well-known monument called the “Lion of Lucerne,” “erected near Lucerne, in 1821, commemorates tilie tragic fate of the Swiss guards in the French Revolution when in their devotion to duly they were saerificed o the bullets of the Marselllais and the pikes of the mob, August 10, 1792. This infantry regiment, the “Gardas Suisses,” had been originally a Swiss mercenary regiment in the Wars of Religion; but for their own good conduct at the combat of Arques they were incorporated in the permanent establishment of the Maison du Roi, by Henry IV, (Henry of Navarre), in 1589, and in the guards in 1615. The ¥French guards sided openly with the constitutional ‘movement at the Revolation, and. were disbanded, but the Swiss guards: remained faithful to their trust. e ' This monument was the work of Bertel Thorvaldsen (1770-1844), a Danish sculptor, noted for his statues of Christ and the apostles, and for his efforts at classical sculpture. He was the son of an leelander who had settled In Denmark, and was born at Copenhagen. There he lies buried under a bed of roses in the courtyard of the muséum he endowed.

But Is It Worth 1t?

This is a remedy of an English woman for taking off superfluous ounces from the face that has become too fat through overeating and lack of exercise. ' To. begin with, of course, she recommends mild dieting and plenty of walking and lots of water to drlnk every day. This to cut down superfluous fat all over the bedy. : One good exercise is this: Open the mouth and work the jaw vigorously, first to the right, then to the left, then backward, then forward. Do this persistently. . Then draw the cheeks in between the teeth and puff them out hard and full Then, with the teeth shut fight, stroke the cheeks with the palms of the hands gently. upward from the chin tip to forehead. Don’t do any of the stroking exercises too rapidly or vigorously, but do them for a long time, persistently, slowly. You will get the best results In this way, .

American Time Signals Best, ‘The English freely admit that the system -of telegraphic time signals adopted by the naval observatory at Washington is much to be preferred to that in use at Greenwich for supplying Great Britain with standard time. - At Greenwich a signal is sent out at noon, whereas at Washington a series of signals is used, beginning five minutes before noon. During thése five minutes every tick of the observatory clock Is electrically transmitted, except the twenty-ninth second of each minute, the last five seconds of the first four minutes, and at last ten seconds of-the fifth minute. After this final ten Sseconds break, the noon signal is given. In this manner the middle of each minute is clearly in~dicated, and yet more clearly the instant of noon. The length of “the serles facilitates the regulation of -clocks and chronometers. i

~_ Fifty Men and One Elephant. [ Interesting tests were once made to determine the respective pulling pow- £ er of horses, men and elephants. Two | horses, weighing 1,600 pounds each,i . together pulled 8,760 pounds, or ')')o2 pounds more than’ their combined | weight. One elephant, weighing 12.000 | peunds, pulled 8,750 pounds, or 3,250 | pounds less than his weight. Fifty | . men, aggregating about 7,500 pounds | . in welght, pulled 8,750" pounds, or just | s much as the single elephant. But, like the horses, they pulled more than their- own weight. One hundred men

Mrs. Elizabeth LLamb Electrieal Facial and Scalp Massage -~ Manicuring, Shampooing . Hair 'l'infln%f and Hair D:figs;sing ' " Marinello Tollet Preparations -

BETTER THAN ALL MEDICINE

Oysters Put Artemus Ward on His Fect Wien Every Other Remedy ' - Had Proved a Failure. = =

When Artemus Ward and Dr. Hingston, who acted as his manager on hig western lecture .tour, arrived in Salt Lake : City, after -that amusing and successful visit to’ California, the beloved; humorist, fell sick. . So badly was He, after his arduous rounds of the Pacific coast and his strenuous days in Virginia City, Nev., with Mark Twain and Bill Nye, that his life was despaired of. = The lecture Artemus had arranged with Brigham Young to give in the theater, had to be: postponed. -In fact, so. hopeless seemed the case that Dr. Hingston even tried to arrange to have the body of his friend and partner transported to the East on the sfage coach., But the optimism of Artemus brought him back to safety again, a very thin and weak man. e But before he was allowed to leave his room, Arvtemus had difficulty gaining suflicient. strength even to walk. From Brigham Young to the least humble of the Mormon “saints,” attentions in the form of fresh eggs, jellles and other belpful delkcacies were showered upon the convalescent. Artemus enjoyed everything, but nothing seerjed to give him strength. " At last a food was discovered In a local grocery, so we are told. that “lifted him from his couch.” - This was nothing more or less than a dozen cans of Baltimore oystérs, put up in squares ‘of block tin. 'lfhe first oyster stew *hit the spot,” and Artemus chirped up: : > : “Get out the bills for the lecture! See Mr. Clawson and arrange for the date. The show is sdfe_enough, now we've got on an oyster basis,”—Mark Stuyvesant in the Cleveland Plain Dealer. : :

TOO MAKE HEADWAY IN LIFE

Consecrate and Concentrate, Is the ' Advice Given by Writer in ; Forbes Magazine. :

You wiant to mhke headway in the world, of course. See if thig thought can help ypu: lirst, consecrate yourself' to youyr calling;*then concentrate. The .lives of most men of - notable achievemernt have been characterized by congecpation and concentration. Befor~ «one can consecrate oneself, one must be pessessed by some bigger and broader and better idea than mere money making. There must be something in the work that appeals to one. The work must appegr to be worth while, worth effort and industry and gacrificé. | You could not, for example, conceive of anyone consecrating himself to “bootlegging.” There isn’t one honest calling, however, to which a worker could not consecrate himself or herself if animated by the right spirit. #aving consecrated oneself to a line of endeavor, then concentration must follow if proficiency and success are to be attained. T ' The worker, be he employee or employer, who hasn’t consecrated himself to his calling fails to derive from it that deep satisfaction known to those who have consecrated themselves to their jobs. Concentration follows congecration naturally and with Joy rather than hard effort.—Forbes Magazine. e e,

Swiss Santa Rings Bell

In the quaint little town of St. Gallen, Switzerland, which has retained many of its curious medieval customs, Santa Claus makes his visits ringing a gigantie cowbell, says Yopular Sclence Magazine. e In Bi. Gallen, every. Christmas eve fwelve men array themselves in white trousers and shirts, embroidered wool suspenders, and bright red ties. Each one fastens an enormous cowbell on to a wide leather belt, and covers his head with an enormous mask of cardboard, the upper part of which is decorated by stenciled designs, One of the twelve is called “Samichlaus” It is his duty to give the good children présents. The other eleven remain at a little distance on the out: skirts of the jolly crowd that follows the)}i on their rounds, giving ‘candy to the grownups and entertaining everybody with their- clowning. -

Cave-Dwelling Snakes.

Until recent times no reptiles were known to have adapted themselves to existence in the darkness of caverns. Now, however, it is known that in the Malay pehinsula a snake, a species of coluber, inhabits certaln caverns, feeding upon the bats.~ - These cave-dwelling snakes' attain a length of between eight and nine feet. Thelr coloring simulates that of the walls' of the caverns. The rock is a yellowish limestone, traversed with blackish veins, and these markings and colors are curiously reproduced in the ®nakes, many of which lurk on the ledge in the Eeml-darkness near the entrances, watching for the bats. 2 AR % 1

The Game of Whist,

All great discoveries are works of time, and the game of whist is no exception to the rule, Its merits were not recognized in early times, and under the "vulgar appellation of “whisk and swobbers” it long lingered in the servants’ hall ere it could ascend to the drawing room, o At length some gentlemen in Fngland who met at the Crown coffeehouse In Bedford Rod, studied the game, gave it rules, established its prineiples, and then Edward Hoyle, in 1748, blazoned it forth to all the world.

CHARLES V'iNKS AND SON e ol Dastebth | Mensneris, Vaults, Tombstons,

LIGONTER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.

TESTING AIR I OLD MINE

Of All Methods, the Lowering of a Miner's Safety Lamp Is Acknowledged to Be Safest.

~Raising and lowering a bucket seveFal times, to bring into a long-disused mine fresh alr from the surface, is common practice. . Methane may be expected in abandoned shafts or pits driven in coal measures or carbonaceous slates, or where a heavily timbered shaft is partly filled with water. 'lf methane is suspected, it is best to lower nothing but a miner’s safety iamp. If the light is not extinguished, the descent can be considered reasonably safe. When no safety lamp fis available, and it is necessary to test with .an ~open light, care should be taken to immediately withdraw all persons in close proximity to the shaft or pit as there may be an explosion. Generally, there is no physiological warning of oxygen deficlency in the ggr. The first decidea feelmg is one of extreme weakness accompanied by dizziness, better described as partial paralysis, and the victim collapses practically without warning. To guard against this danger, a man should not enter old workings without having a rope tied around his body and at least two men on the top. The rope should be kept taut. Then if a distress signal is given, the explorer will not only be prevented from falling, but can be quickly pulled to fresh air and his life saved. : -

RELICS OF AGES LONG PAST

England Has Three of the Most Remarkable That the Whole World : Has to Offer.

A loaf of bread more than 600 yeags olg, it is sald, is to be found at Ambaston, in Derbyshire .England. It was included in a grant of land from the crown in the reign of King John, and has remained in the Soar family ever since. i Almost as great a curlosity as this is & house 1,100 years of age, and yet fit for habitatlon. This old dwelling, the oldest inhabited house in England, was bullt in the time of King Offa ef Mercia. It is octagonal in shape, the walls of its lower-story being of great thickness. The upper part is of oak. At one time the house was fortified and known by the name of St. German’s Gate. It stands close to the River Ver, and only a few yards from St. Albans abbey. : g ' A marriage proposal 8,400 years of age 1s In existence in the British museum. It is the oldest marriage proposal of which there is any definite record. It consists of about ninetyeight lines of very fine cuneiform writing, and is on a small clay tablet made of Nile mud. It is a marriage proposal of a Pharaoh for the hand jof the daughter of the king of Babylon. It was written about the year 1330 B. C. - : :

Making the Hammer Safer.

The hammer is a useful tool, but its use is not quite free from danger to the user or from injury to materials. The .flat, highly polished surface :is likely to glance off the nail unless the blow is squarely, delivered; and when the nail is of cast metal, its head often flies off and inflicts quite severe injuries. One firm had innumerable accidents from this cause, and some of the memn were permanently injured. Thereupon, the managers tried hammer heads with scored faces as an experiment, and owing to the success of the experiment, the polished faced hammer has been abolished in that firm’s factory, except for speclal classes of work. “When the hammer's face is scored or roughened it is very much less likely to glance off the nail head. The fact that this. type of hammer has proved so conspicuously successful and safe, has encouraged many manufacturers to place it on the market.

The Beaver. ’

A family that figures prominently in the annals of New York owes the origin of its great wealth to a humble but industrious rodent, the beaver. The same rodent has conferred its name upon & downtown street in that city. There survives the tra@ition of a Beaver brook that once meandered its picturesque way -through what is now the downtown section. : But the beaver himself is a vanished species in this country. The beavers that inhabit ‘the little ponds in the zoological .gardens are immigrants from Canada. ' j : In these restricted areas, surrounded by high wire fences, these citizens by adoption are as busy as were their ancestors who once ranged along the streams that watered the woods. —Chicago Journal, - :

Could Drink a Big Fog. It takes a big block of fog to make one good swallow of water; says Dr. W. J. Humphreys of the United States weather bureau at Washington. The densest fog off Newfoundland banks contains some twenty thousand droplets in a cubic inch, Dr, Wells and Dr. Thuras of the bureau of standards found. To get one gulp of water, enough fog to fill a space 3 feet by 6 feet by .100 feet long would have to be condensed. In a fog of that size there are 60 trillion particles of water, or three times as many particles as ‘the number of dollars spent by the United States durlng the world war. “It would. take about a half hour to count an inch of fog particles,” says Dr. Humphreys. “Placed side by side 2,500 to 8,000 droplets would be needed fo All that'length? . . o

- W.H. WIGTON G o MR ~ Office in lefilfi”érmén Eocktiff.f}? LIGUNIER, IND,

RS W ATN gy &iot et GREAT MAN’S SON FORGOTTEN | pEr e Lafayette’s Boy, Named for George | Washington, Was Once a Refugee i in This Country.,

. The Century company says that comments provoked by “Sword of Liberty,” recently publifshed by them, impressed them with the fact that the ‘average American seems never to have heard of George Washington Lafayette. It seems strange that his story was not exploited du®ing the wartime resurgence of enthusiasm about Lafayette and his noble friemdship for this country; yet how many Americans know that Lafayette had a son named after his fast friend, General Washington, or that the boy was at one time a refygee in this country? ‘The story is part of the packgroudd of the aceount of two revolutiens— American and French-—contained In the book: Follawing the earlier phase of the French Revolution, during which Lafayette was so immensely popular, and after the hostility to his moderation had developed which drove him into exile, he sent his son to America, to the cdre of the American George Washington for whom he was named. It was his boy, according to the authors, Frank W. and Cortelle” J. Hutchins, who, on returning from America, dug up from the garden of the Paris residence where they had been buried, the two swords given to Lafayette by the American congress and the .French republic in recognition of his services in the two republics. This Georges Washington Motler de LaFayette was born In 1779; he was therefore but thirteen when he. fled to America in 1792 and his distinguished father to the neutrgl territory of Liege. —The Argonaut.

PARIS MUSICIAN LIKES JAZZ

M. Milhaud, Leader of Polytonio School, Says He. May Some Time - Compose Jazz Sonata.

* Charles’ Henry Meltzer, well known music critic who has recently returned from a study of the modern Europeap musical world, in an article in the December Forum called “The Polytonie Six of Paris,” describes an interview with the much talked of Paris musician, M. Milhaud, as follows: “Some day,” M. Milhaud said, “I may compose a jazz sonata. The jazz form has been quite gn inspiration. One may at times hear excellent music Ain the halls and much bad music is performed in concert rooms. I have told you of my lové of melody. By this I mean that in my compositions I try to give equal importance to all the instruments I employ. , _“My orchestra, of course, varies according .to the nature of the works I write, and I have tried my hand at a good many styles. One form which I am fond of is the chamber symphony. I have turned out four examples of the sort so far, each scored for only a few solo instruments. I have published ‘various piano compositions, among them a set of six which I grouped under the name of ‘Le Printemps.” I have made scores for ballets with large orchestras and just now I am - halfway through a tragic, lyrie drama, named ‘Les Eumenides."” -

To Attempt World Flight.

London regards with admiration Sir Keith Smith and his brother, Sir Ross Smith, who, two years ago, flew from London to Australia, covering the 11,294 miles in just under 28 days, and whq-now announce that they have begun preparations for a flight around the world. ; T , The distinguished brother aviators dare not after the long non-stop flight record. Theéy feel“that aviation will develop itself on routes upon which stops are possible. What they wish to prove is that there are practicable means by which every section of the clvilized earth can be reached by flight, just as they now are reached by ship and train, and that this can be done at an immense saving of time and perhaps af actual cost .of transportation. Fortunately for themselves and the cause they advocate so energetlcaily the distinguished Smith brothers have plenty of money with which to demonstrate their theories. = -

; Taking It Easier. " wphe. Japan of Lafcadio Hearn and/ Loti is.no more,” said Hamilton Hartley, the author-traveler, at a Washington dinner party. “Labor troubles, you know. e «“You' have heard of the Japanese rivkshaw runners? These men ftrot betweea the shafts of a rickshaw at the rate of five and six miles an hour. I mean to say they uesd to trot at that rate. Since they’ve been unionized lts's hurd to get them out of a walk. “Once, having forgotten my valise, I offere¢ a Tokyo rickshaw man a double fare if he’d hurry back to my hotel for it. Well, as he galloped down ? the road his fellow workers stared af- . tew him in -amazement, and one of them yelled: e 1 “‘Hey, what are you running for? Aren’t 'you working today? " - o Trade Schools for Women. - Argentina’s recently organized Social Irederation of Women (Confederacion Social Feminina) has for one of its chief objects the establishment of trade schools for women and girls in order 1 to teach the elements of the manual trades, thus making more women economically " independent and enlarging the sphere of their actlvities. Thus far it has organized two such schools, one of which has an attendance of 40 girls, who are learning to make men's and women’s clothing, baskets and the Se il Tl OSR SRR R R i(L R T

" SCALP TREATMENT = - Shmnpo,o_lng and Manlcnring b ' Emma C. Taylor oo Dr. Gants« B"es}dexgee,?b;ie Doot :qut’ll of Presbyterian Church, . | o ,i»'" ¥mm, s : i

SIDELIGHT ON SYRIAN LIFE

Writer Gives an Insight Into His Life . &8 & Small Boy in That Little ‘ Known Country. :

The roads were open. Travelers came into our village. .Scarcely a night was the guest house in our courtyard unoccupied. I liked fo sit with my father and his guests in this room, bullt after European style with four large windows over which in winter olled paper was passed to keep the cold out. The walls of the guest room were white and on them were hung the choicest rugs brought back from Kurdistan by my Grandfather Mirza, There were chairs in this room. I was very proud that we should own chairs, but I found them most uncomfortable to sit on. After a few meoments my legs began to ache and 1 slipped down on the cushions. Im the alcove of the guest chamber were some old manuscripts bound in course leather. They were holy books with {lluminated marging, Among them was a Bible In Syriac. I carefully refrained from touching it. It was too holy. I might perhaps be struck dead for my temerity. : ; - Among the travelers that came along the road was Hady, the singer. He was the ugllest man that I had ever seen, sore-eyed, pock-marked and dirty. But he was very wise. His Ivory handled dagger In its silver sheath was so long that it reached from his chest to his hips. My playmates and I would have laughed and jeered at him, perhaps, it he had not carried this dagger.—Youel B, Mirza in Asia MagaSag e ; :

BARGAIN AT $3O A MONTH

Chinese Boy With “Exceptional Knowledge 3( English” Should Have Been Snapped Up Quickly.

The following application for employment was received by a Shanghal hong from a student in the Shanghal college: ° : ; ~ “Nothing 18 of less Importance than the age of a person; nevertheless, it is proper to begin that I am in my twenty-first year. Having a firing ambition to do some service in the business world, I grasp this opportunity to insert myself into the sphere. It is true that many are now wandering idly In the market awaiting employment. But it is-true to the same extent that many of these, if not all, ara good for nothing. To take notice upon them, or to put some duty upon them is to give gun powder to children.as a plaything. The danger can be imagined. : by “I am now going to give some account- of my personal abilities. It is not too much to say that my knowl edge of English can hardly be represented to the full color by such a little adjective as ‘thorough. It is exceptionally excellent, to be outspoken, As to the'art of typewriting, my hands go on as smoothly as to skate on an fey river. With!' such intellectual weapons any hard dutles can be as easlly conquered as an egg shell by a wave. The salary I look for would be $3O a month. “Awaiting your answer earnestly, 1 am, ' Sir, ———""—North China Ga, zette, : ;

Robin 1s Inventor.

The robin li‘ves in trees and part. ly on the ground, so that it sometimes hops, like birds that live in trees, and Sometimes walks or runs, like birds that live on the ground. The robin is a plucky little fellow, He will stand up for himself, and refuses to let othér birds put upon him. Generally he lives alone—some. times with a mate, but never do you find robins in flocks. This little bird can claim to be the Inventor -of pottery. - = : Look at a robin’s nest and you will gsee that it is a clay pot, set into a pile of straw. When a robin has fin. ished . with a nest, take it and put i{ on the fire, having first thoroughly dried it. Leave it on the fire until all the straws. have been burnt, and if i has not broken, you will find that you have a perfectly good earthen pot, —Pearson’s Weeklp. e

Peculiar Manx Cats.

The origin of Manx cats is now attributed to the arrival of these cats on the Isle of Man from ships belongirig to the Spanish armada that wers wrecked there. They were probably brought from Japan or eastern Asia, They are a distinct species with short forelegs, and elevated bindquarters, and differ from other cats somewhat in call, ways, and character. They vary in color. People who have owned them for long periods say they are not good mousers or hunters. In character they are rather similar to a dog, being highly companionable and having some of the qualities of a guardian, but they are not considered hunters in any sense of the word. e :

Sense of Obligation.

_ “What a wonderful thing it would be if Shakespfare were alive today?” 4] wish he were,” said Mr. Storm. ington Barnes, earnestly, “I should like to meet him. T'm sure he would be very grateful to me for the manner in which I have interpreted his pos etry.” . : . '

Her Present Occupation.

. “You say that your wife went to cok lege before you married her?®— ‘ “Yes, she did.” ' it “And she thought of taking up law, you said?” : i teel “Yes; but now she’s satisfied to lay “t,downo" ~n‘.'i‘ I, o k B Dregsmaking—All kinds will do men's- silk shirts also. Work guaranteed, Mrs. C J Gale 206 Grand St. 50a4s el Feed Grinding, Floyd Leming grinds feed Tuesdays and Fridays. For Other dates call 3A.

Gravel Road ‘ ~ and e Municipal -OndS _ and other Tax-exempt ~ Securities Citizens Bank s i

i We Have Receivedf Large Shipments { Hard and Soft Coal ‘ -Chestnut, No. 4 and Furnace sizes in hard coal. Best grades of soft coal. - * ! Full line jof Building Material now E 'onhand , | i COMPTON & HOLDEMAN ! HOLDEMAN & SON & Straus Wool House. g Phone 0.279

N e|- "‘ Y /‘ij/ % % fi S (= B~ T Y Y Y 3 ]B % e, % Y Y/ NIl L \’@ =lO ) o L *Z;N‘ gf/ Z W ~ T /,, AN \\\inlé %; : &/\ Fl s T\ 177\ r ’ RO ‘ S @ /, W : - // . next Xmas CRf ity B O ( ° . ’Jz / - //",: i :,;"_‘/o‘\ 1‘ ] youwill haveSidcam & [ B DEPOSIT ONE DOLLAR EACH WEEK FOR_'so WEEKS AND YOU HAVE $50.00. YOU CAN EASILY SAVE R DOLLAR A WEEKAND WON’T YOU BE GLAD TO HAVE THAT $50.00. THERE ARE CLUBS WHERE YOU DEPOSIT 50 CENTS AR WEEK, . OR $5..00 OR ANY SUM---A CLUB TO FIT YOUR PURSE. _ : OR YOU CAN BEGIN WITH 1 CENT, 2 CENTS, 5 CENTS, OR TEN CENTS AND INCREASE YOUR DEPOSIT ERCH WEEK. IN FIFTY WEEKS. : . 5 ~ 10-Cent Club Pays -~ $12750 : e 5-Cent Club Pays 63.75 : | 2-Cent Club Pays 25.50 o 'l.Cent Club Pays eIS - ' YOU CAN BEGIN WITH THE ILARGEST AND IDECREASE EACH WEEK. THERE ARE NO DUES. \YOU GET BACK EVERY CENT YOU PUT IN. : LA - v o 1 COME IN AND ASK RBOUT IT. . Make Our Bank Your Bank : We pay 4 per cent, interest en snvin{ddposits .+ and Saving Accounts.

Farmers & Merchants Trust Co

Public Sale. The undersigned will sell at public sale on his farm b 6 miles south of Kiimmel, 3 miles west of Wolt Lake on Wednesday, Feb. 15 sale commencing at 12 o’clock the following property to-wits - ° L ‘Bay mare 3 years old weight about 1400 Ibs. ; a 0 '4 Head of Cattle—Red cow § years. old giving milk, red cow 9 years old} _giving milk, spotted cow & years 'old giving milk, heifer 2 years old. ~Farm Implements—Studabaker wa'gon, Moyer buggy, Portiand sleigh, HKauuckle hobs, wey of dump boards,

set of heavy harness, set of s’ingfie harness, Deering binder 7ft. cut, Deer-. ing corn planter, spring tooth harrow spike tooth harrow, manurs spreader ' hay ladders, flat bottom rack, Oliver plow 405 National cream separator good as fiew churn. - Terms of Sale—All sums of $5.00 ‘and under cash. Allover that amount ‘a credit of 6 months without interest will be given if paid when due if not paid when due 7 percent interest will be charged from date of sale. = o - atndy ¢ N George W Buckles |+