Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 26B, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 August 1922 — Page 2
Gravel Road e ~ Municipal Bonds ~ andYother Tax-exempt] s i 4Securities | Citizens Bank " Yigonter, Tndiana
e Kelly- " Springfield igmm ) | mmes 1 \%M’ 4 20 per cent MW 7 off List Price kf?;‘ P ' . : paa =" -, on fabrics. - 10 per cent off on Cords - 30x3} Fabric $11.95 and other sizes accordingly. ‘Blazed Trail Garage
I!ivll' chfld is 7 years of age it should take up the study of piano? DO YOU KNOW? No home is complete without a musical instrument. - DO YOU ENOW? If you haven’t' a musical instrument where to find your children when night comes? DO YOU NOW you will find you children at the neighbors where ’ ' they have music? : ! DO YOU ENOW your children go from home to find the pleasures you should provide for them at home? o i DO YOU KNOW your negleci. may cause a life long regret. 7 DO YOU KNOW you should do this now before its too late. > DO YOU ENOWwe are selling good Honest piano from $275 to $350. ‘ Vietrolas $256 to $250. Player Piano' $450 to $550. ' 8000 Victor Records from which to make a selection. All instruments : sold for ecash or emsy payments. Drop us a card and we will come Yours for over fifty years Musical Service, - Bouth Main St. Established 1871 Goshen, Indiana
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%The FIREPROOF WALLBOARD | | » Sheetrock walls and 1 1 : ‘1 ceilings are easily and ) | : | ~ quickly erected. For / | Sheetrock can be sawed ¢ @ ' and nailed like lumber, -' 5 g’.f h "Made from rock, Sheet- : TN - rock walls are fireproof, | t/ - non-warping and non- | TEE: /4 ‘buckling,and are resistant 1 ’ l/\ _| alike to heat, cold and 'v !@f § ‘ . Let us show ,yot'c .Shutrock G AW R 2 o Phaeme gl Sl e e e
The Ligomer Banner . lESTABLISHED 1866.] : : | . §Published by ! : “he Banner Publishing Company . W.C.B. HARRISON Editor, - L Aen Sttty | Published every Monday and Thursday esnd entered in the Postoffice at Ligoaier, Ind., as second class matter.
! "DEMOCRATIC TICKET | ~ Following is the democratic ticket to be voted on at the November election in Noble county: : United State Senator—Samuel M. Ralston 4 : Representative in Congress— Charles W. Branstrator. ' Prosecuting Attorney—R. A. Strong State - Representative—Dr. J. E. Luckey. > County Auditor—E .C. Henney County Treasurer—Glenn RimMell County " Sheriff—William Hoffman Coroner—Dr C. D. Lane ; County Assessor—Jacob:Lindsey County Surveyor—C. A. Davis ; County Commissioners—Second district—W. A. Barhan—Third district Jacob Brumbaugh G County Councilman at Large—M W. Young County Councilmen—First District M. W. Swager—Second district—John E. Pancake—Third district— W. F. Moree—Fourth district—G. W. Shaffer.
- NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS © - State of Indiana Noble County, ss: In the Noble Circuit Court October term, 1922, : Cause No. 8296 : To quiet title. ; T Brooks A. Archer et al. - S LR ‘ : . Orpheus Prentice, et al, ! Coéme now the plaintiffs by Bothwell & Vanderford, their attorneys and file their complaint herein together with the affidavit of a competent person that the residence upon diligent inquiry is unknown of the defendant Elias Secrist; that the names of the defendants are unknown
and :that they are believed to be nonresidents of the IState of Indiana, sued in this action by the following names and designations to-witi “the unknown wife of Elias Secrist, whose name is unknown to plaintiffs; the unknown widow the unknown children, descendants and heirs, surviving spouse, creditors and administrators of the estate, devisees, legatees, trustees and executors of the last will and testament, successors in interest and assigns, respectively, of -Elias Secrist, deceased, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; all of the women once known by any of the namés and designations Rbove stated, whose names may have been changed, and who are now ‘known by other names, the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs; the spouses of all of the persons above named, described and designated ‘as defendants to this action who are married, the names of all of whom are unknown to fplaintiffs; all persons and corporations who assert or might assert any 'title, claim or interest in v lien upon the real estate described in the complaint in this action by, under, or through any of the defendants to this action named, described and designated in said complaint, ‘the names of all of whom are unknown to plaintiffs:” that the following named deféndants are non-residents of the State of Indiana, to-wit REdwin N. Prentice, Aurelia Prentice, Mattie Craig, William Craig, Gertrude Weaver, Fred Weaver; that said action is for the purpose of quieting title to real estate in the State of Indiana; that a cause of action exists against all of said defendants; that all of said defendants are necessary partiés to said action and that they are believed to be non-residents of the State of Indiana. ST : |
‘The following real estate in Noble County, State of Indiana is described in said complaint, to-wit: the west half of the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section twenty nine also the north half of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of said section twenty nine excepting five acres off of the east end of said last described tract, all in .township thirty four north range eight east. This action is instituted and prosecuted by said plaintiffs for the ‘purpose of quieting: their title to the rcal estate above descrihe] as’ against all-demands, claims and claimants whatsoever. g s
Notice is therefore . hLereby given raid defendants that un'ess they bhe and appear on the 7th day of Octvuber Term, 1922, of the Noble Circuit Court of Indiana, being the 9th day of October 1922 to be begun and holden on the 2nd -day of October 1923 at the Court House in the town of Albion in said County and State, ang answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in<their absence. e oo
In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said Court at the office of the Clerk thereof in the town of Albion, Indiana this 14th day of August 1922. Isaac Deter Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court. : Bothwell &Vanderford, Ligonier, Indiana Attorneys for Plaintigfs. 26b3w : @'»_""T"—"—‘ 4 Do You Want Health. . Fuller and Fuller P. 8. C. (Palmer School )Chiropractors will get you well. Nine years Successful practice Over Citigens Bank Ligonier, Ind. Hours 9 to 11 A. M, 2 to 5 and 7 to 8:30 P. M: s vion SEBLE GLASSES © A ccuratey and Scientifically - Fitted. Broken lenses Mrs. L. P: Wineburg
LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDL "
TALD- W.LD « JLilwoff TALE Oklahoma Scriibierf Properly Rebuked by Man Wiioc Knows Those of . Calaveras:County. i o ¥or 40 years after Mark ngin wrote his story of the celebrated jumping frog of Calaveras county, California, no writer had the temerity t 0 suggest that there could be in any other part of the country bullfrogs comparable with those in the famous mother lode country. s
Récently, comments the San Francisco Ghronicle. some foolhafdy scribe from Oklahoma broadcast a story to the effect that Oklahoma bullfrogs were capturing and devouring unwary chickens. The story was & palpable attempt to discredit the Calaveras bullfrogs and has brought forth & merited rebuke, ; 7 :
A modest and essentially: veraclous Tuolumne county miner, commenting on the Oklahoma story, bigunds it as a rank jmitation of -what really happened near Shawmut, Tuolulnne county, just across the line from Calaveras county. He sg¥s a lot of Calaveras bullfrogs were washed down into a creek in Tuolumne county and that shortly thereafter young ducks began to disappear. g :
One duck,” larger and wiser than the rest, permitted himself to be swallowed all but his tail and legs, whereupon he started paddling and brought the bullfrog ashore. Thereafter he made a regular business ‘of catching bullfrogs in this manner. The miner says he sold 159 frogs caught in this way at $1.50 a dozen. He is tralning other ducks to hunt bullfrogs and contemplates giving up mining. It's a great country. - : &
BRAIN’S SIZE DOESN'T COUNT Men With Small Ones May Have Larger Mind Capacity Than : ; Many Others. As the action of the brain has not, as 'yet, been seen by man, no one at present knows just what it is, beyond its merely physiological or mechanical substance. It is said that the brain of the normal man contains over 800,000,000 cells, and that about 3,000 are destroyed every minute. If this is the case then a new brain appears about-once in sixty days. The normal brain has a volume of'sB to 105 cubic inches. The brain of the Anglo-Saxon and the German, and of other civilized nations, averages the larger number, while the negro brain occupies & space of about 96 cubic inches, and some Australian natives have brains of only about 58 cubic inches. The male brain is about 10 per cent heavier or larger than that of the female. The. most intelligent animals have only about sixteen ounces of brains. The size of .the brain, if it is not below normal, does not appear to influence the intelleectuality of its possessor. Men with small brains may have larger mind capacity than some of those possessing brains weighing several ounces more. It would aprear then that the size of the brain, u: ess it be unusually small, has little té do -with fits quality.—Seattle Daily Times, :
Cannibalistic Sea Gulls. : It is not generally realized how great an enemy the sea gull is to smaller birds. An observer ventures the opinion that the reason why small migrants invariably cross the sea by night is that otherwise they would be simply exterminated by gulls. Sometimes it happens that a change in the wind delays the arrival of flights of spring migrants, so that they fail to make a landing before daylight, Lighthoyse keepers have then witnessed scenes of savage slaughter; hundreds of poor, tired, little songsters being hunted down by gulls, seized and devoured. ¢
- ‘Year by year in England gulls work further and firther inland, and in bad wenther may be seen almost anywhere, even in the Midlands. Indeed, on- one occasion' a number were noticed in a flooded meadow near Leamington, a town which claims to be almost the geographical center of England. \ * Putting Shad in the Hudson. ‘Bvery river flowing into the: Atlantic from the St. Lawrence down to the St. Johns is a shad river; that is, the shad come into the fresh waters to spawn. The Hudson used to be one of the famous shad rivers, but of recent years, perhaps because of the sewage and 01l near New York, the fish have fallen off. This spring the conservation commission of New York state has planted a million fry in the Hudson. A million is not much when it comes to young shad, for a single roe, if it hatched 100 per cent, would produce a tenth of a million fishes; but a million fry, if they all grew up, would mean a good deal to the epicures who look to the Hudson for the toothless and toothsome shad.
Talent Gone Elsewhere, *“Do you find it hard to secure competent campaign managers?” “More difficuit than it used to be,” replied Senator Sorghum. “Politics is much more difficult than salesmanship and is not nearly as reliable in compensation.” — Washington Evening Star. :
4 Real Home Atmosphere. : Henpeckke—My wife and I spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Gnaggs. ! : Flubdub—Did they mdke you feel at " home? ; . - Henpeckke—They -~ certainly did. They scrapped like the deuce all the time we were there.—-l'gew York Sun. For County Treasurer. | Glen 8. Rimmell demberatic candidate for treasurer of Ndble county to be voted on at the election November 7 will highly appreciaté the support of the people and if elobted promises: to conduct the office with fairness to
Notice to Taxpayers of Tax Levies. In the matter of determining the tax rates for certain purposes by Perry Township, Noble County, Indiana. s g ‘ Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Perry township Noble County Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular meeting place on the sth day of September 1922 will consider the following budget: e - Budget classification for township: - Township fund: Rt Salary of Trustee .......... $ 720.00 Trustee’s expense ; ‘ : 1 A Draveling . . ciaiaiieea 10000 B, Qe it i DOO Sup. for Justice of the Peace .... 40.00 Records and advertising ........... 200.00 Public’ ditches -assessments | against township ................. 300.00 Pay of Advisory Board .................. 15.00 Examination of records ................ 40.00 Miscellaneous : : 1. care' of cemeteries, etc. ...... .. 300.00. Total township Fund ................ 1765.00 Estimate of township funds to be raised: : Peiien Estimated expenditures as . - | Bhove' . . . coianan s 18500 Working balance at end of |
year to meet necessary ex- o penditures until receipts of revenue from taxation .......... 600.00 TOLRL sl ik 438000 Less estimated revenue & bal, 2365.00 Balance at end of this year .. 600.00 Total deductions ................... 600.00 Amount necessary to be raised by taxation ..........uw.e.. 1766.00 Road Fund: . X DABOY il v minissomie . SAOO 00 Road tools and machines .......... 400.00 Bridges and Culverts ............. 400.00 Gravel, stone& road material 1000.00 Miscellaneous ...........c.cccceeveeneeeee . 1600.00 Total road fund ................... 5800.00 Estimate of road funds to be raised: Estimate of expenditures A 8 ADOVe Ll e 580000 Working balance at end of year to meet necessary ex- . penditures until receipts of . revenue from taxation .......... 1000.00 POLRL . o hiciniciin i 680000 Less estimated revenue and balance Balance at end ‘of this year 1000.00 Total deductions ~..................... 1000.00 Amount necessary to be raised by taxation .............coueene... 5800.00 ~ Special School Fund:
Repair on buildings ................ 400.00 School furniture and supplies 300.00 Fuel for school houses ............ 1000.00 ‘Special school fund debt .......... 2500.00 Payment of interest .................... 150.00 School transfers ......................3000.00 Pay of teachers ............c.e........ 4500.00 Transportation ......... .. 6000.00 Teachers’ institutes .................. 100.00 JRNIOY. BeTVIES .. T 50.00 Miscellaneous 7 1. Janitors supplies water,. ] light ete,, 50q;'.00 Total special school fund .. 19200.60 Estimate -of Special School Funds to be raised: ° S 4 Estimate of expenditures Bl above L e 19900.00 Amount necessary to be raised- by taxation ... ... ... 19200.00
Bond Fund : o ' ! Payment of bonds ..................... 3000.00' Payment of interest .................... 1000.00 Total bond fund ................ 4000.00 Estimate of Bond Fund to be raised. Estimate of expenditure as L BDOVE | t.liiitiidindisnsisssimasins sosiseniaes. $OOO.OO Amount necessary to be raised by taxation .........c............. 4000.00 . Library Fund. el - Books, binding and periodicals, salaries librarians and assistonts, maintenance of buildings, .iucluding janitor, repairs, supplies, postage, express, freight, rural extension work, Miscellaneous -.........ucunis $1350.00 Total Library Fund » prn i Amount necessary ta be rais-
ed by taxfition ... ..o .- 135000 Poor Fund. L To reimburse county ............... 900.00 Amt. necessary to be raised = by taxation ......s.i..eee. 900.00 Proposed levies:s ; T Net taxable property ...... 4,5650,000.00 Number of taxable polls .......... 150.00 Funds Levy on Levy on Amt. to ' Polls Prop. be raised Township v 40 - 1765.00 Road - 13¢ . 5800.00 Special School ; ; and tuition - 1.00 42%c 19200.09 Bong = - lc 4000.00 Library 2%c 1350.00 Poop-L o 20 900.00
- Taxpayers appearing shall have a right to be heard thereon. After the tax levies have been determined ten or-more taxpayers feeling themselves aggrieved by such levies may appeal to the State Board of Tax Commissioners for further and final action thereon by filing a petition' therefor with the County Auditor not later than the fourth Monday of September, and the State Board will fix a date of hearing in this county : Dated ‘August 15, 1922. & Harry B. Schlotterback Trustee Perry Township, Noble. County, Indiana. S . 25b2w
Notice of Petition to Change Cor- ‘ porate Name ’ Notice is hereby given that the undersigned corporation has filed its petition in the office of the Clerk of the Noble Circuit Court of Noble County, Indiana, praying therein that said Court enter its order and decree changing the corporate name of the petitioner from “Universal Sale: | Company,” its present corporate name to “Ligonier |Universal Sales Company Inc,” and that said petition and the matters and things therein contained will come up for hearing and determination on the first day of the Tegular October 1922, term of said Nobile Circuit Court, being October 2 1922, at the Court House in the town of Albion in said Noble County Indiana' : ey
’ Universal Sales Company, Petitioner. ’Bothweu & Vandenford Attorneys. . e : 24b3w For Sale—9o ' 3-inch steel 'boiler flues, 7% feet in length suitable for fence posts. Inquire of J. A. Wiley. Mtex State Bank, o 20ate
8 HOW MUCH HAVE .. YOU cor nTHE BANK? e VN4 000 RNOE ;fl" Vi ‘%’zt‘.i}i ~ D[A ?1 : : A\ ;' gl = PRy <<l ) kY ZoB __ = . " |l 3 I’: A P i 'J.;’;“»"/u.‘: Rexy SMI o Y ,’i‘./"' g e /iy i | if,, |Wil ll e 1 4'{s/” |!=‘ grfl M,J 4 f oty 1 \_ I,L’.\‘-{-i\ Im,‘i;‘ilw; *\‘ ‘f'?g* vi'é//) / / : : e W CHH NIRRT NE = T : Allthe time when he was well and earning money he was throwing it away on some fool extravagance or investment. Perhaps that’s what made him sick. And now even the doctor is worrying where he is going to his money. . Don’t you do that. = 4 e - Bank your money [regularly, and when the unexpected happens, it will come inhandy. = . @MPut your money inour bank. - We pay 4 per cent. interest en savingldeposits L | and S-vihg.-"'Accopnts; o - Farmers & Merchants Trust Co
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& 3 -~ .¢e | . : A \"-,7", ’ "f. :: : d 2 v i\ = » - % o\ /% \ NS é (o i WY, ’ K 1 5 XX % AN 2.2 72 | Ak = Y ’ el S 0 ‘ % ‘L%»-’ ; (/ LA S , ‘”’/)_/S‘ »l‘ ? ; i 3 : :———'/4;, : (‘f‘f/l /.'é Y,//' ) S --eoN, N ! / TR O -~ NB, < v = 2 : 47 : Cug<2 SN G“Hey, fellers! Game’s off? ‘ Jimmy Smith’s mother says : ’ every bey can have some : 3 £ ' . Kellogg's Corn Flakes! She’s - ; o ~ " treatin’ the whole nine ’cause : : we elected her Jimmy capEasy to digest- =i perfect summer days foodS Heavy meals during ‘warm weather encourage drowsimness, sluggishness and headache! Eat Kellogg’s Corn Flakes liberally because they are the ideal summer food for - youngsters and older folks. Kellogg’s digest easily and ~ let you walk or play or sleep in peace. And, they’re . satisfying to the keenest appetite. De- . = .~ licious with fresh fruits! = a == ==> Insist upon Kellogg’s Corn Flakes in the [l #4gp T {;‘f | ‘RED and .GREEN x;:ckage__.whieh ‘bears the || “SESOgeer NIl ) signature of W, K. Kellogg, originator of Corn {| T€ A E-"’ A Flakes. Nome are genuine without it . TOTED |if kst : _ ke - N o \..‘ ‘ -'A.“* it ot i e P FLAK 125 28 AL oafbdl .2 llzl AN Ni? yi. 41& £y_ Me | g§'4 .AN fif |&y@’-@ H - 4\ N .‘;35,%'&’-;»,,%\;‘_&'gig.;‘,‘,:; W /7 & V'B 4%, 1y == =24 VA BVEAY N Y === A Y oe / *i% ;**‘fi%»;% eit U B o L R e e N & i%{e@%%wf@%fifiy,?“figfi e MSODNEITACES m% - KELLOGG'S KRUMBLES and KELLOGG'S BRAN, cooked and krambled L* il e’g R s SRR R S T RLTN OO W, Tmi vy
