Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 50A, Ligonier, Noble County, 5 February 1923 — Page 3

~ Haiving sold my farm I will offer -at gmfblii; auction at my residence two and ong-half miles S. E, of Kimmell and tv£ and one-half miles northwest _of Wolt/ Lake on Tuesday Feb. 6th. " .On #ccount of the shortness of the . a¥ys dnd so much to sell we .ieelvthp.t we will have to start the sale at 11 o'cleek prompt. e # ; HMead of Horses—Pair of blick " mares, the Hickman team 6 and 7 years old weight 3200; black gelding s years old weight 1600; black-maye "¢ years old weight 1500; brown gelding 7 years old; weight 1100. ° = s Head ~of Cattle—Red Shorthorn cow 4 years -old giving milk,- White - Shorthorn cow. 5 years ' old giving - milk, registered Hglstein cow 10 yrs old weight 1100. n R 5 Full Blooded /Sorthorn Heifers, .bred as follows: Roan Mary 1054182 Calved Feb. 11th 1921 sire Donside Prince 984289, dami Roan Lady 45th 927850. Lovely "Roan 2nd 1057148, Calved Jan. 4, 1921 sire Rosewood Bar on 601889, “dam Lovely Roan ,90331. -~ Ballechin Lady 1023970 calved Dec. 13 ‘1920. sire Sylvan Power 487373, - dam Ballechin Daisy 7Tth 985334. Matchless Queen 1024114, calved March 30, 1921 sire Royal Sultan 862975, dam Matchless Clara 927840. Snowflake calved May. 25 1920, sire Royal Sultan 862975, dam Smowball 804667. . 68 Head of Hogs%i()_big Type SOWS, bred to-farrow fr_oi_n;@lojof March to 25; one Big ;Type_'BOari g-rgn’dspn ot Grand Buster; 57 shoats’ weight ;75 .to 100 lbs. s : o Six Dozen Chickens mostly Rhode Istand Reds. - e Farm Iniplements—3. sets double harness, set single harness, 2 wagons 3% -in. Studebaker wagon with t;*ipie‘ box, 4 in. Handy wagon, spring wagon Moyer -buggy, 7 -ft.; Deering binder,{ Johnson corn. binder, hay loader, sidqfl delivery hay rake, tedder, 6-ft. Deering mower, No. 11 Oliver riding plow 405 'Oliver walking plow, -2 spring tooth "harrows, spike tooth harroyw, tandem disc, cultipacker; 2 Oliver riding corn plows, 1 horse* cultivator, ‘Superior drill, one horse - Superior‘jj drill, .John Deere corn planter with attachment for -dropipng soy beans Thomas clover seed drill, single sho vel plow, double shovel plow, Inter national feed grinder 8-in. burr, corn sheller, pair bob sleds, good as new. ‘dump beards, 6 hay slings, 2 doubls _harpoon forks;” 3_hay knives, sack - bauler, feed cooker, 2 hog racks, onc just new, log bunks, 4 log chains,. 2. - barn bronoms. i i . f Miscellaneous: Set butchering too:s consisting of 2 kettles, sausage grinder, lard press 2 hook, 3 hangers, cop per kettle, some cider barrels, 3 ci -4 open barrels, shovels, forks spades. crow bar, cant hook, grubbing hoe. stone boat, slip crapper, piece 2 in. pipe 18-ft. long, DeLaval sep‘arator No 12, jars, tank heater, 700 -of 1% inch, -plank 500 feet 2x4 ‘and Ix 6 10 to 14} feet 3 wagon tongues, set hay rack “sills, grind stone 5 galvanized ehicken coops, 6 wooden coops, 1% h p Internatiohal gas engine and pump jack. : Terms—All summs ofi $5 and under / cash /All sums over $5.00 a credit of 9 months will be given with 6 per cent interest from date; 2 per cent off for cash.. -.- e : : : . , - <Jack Buckles. Col.-Al Goss, Auct.- e ‘H. S. Earnhart & Melvin Blain clerks. . Lunch served by the M. E. Aid So: ciety of Kimmell, - - : :

PUBLIC SALE

The undersigned .will offer at public auction on the Abe Gibson farm 1 mile south and 3 miles east of Topeka sale commencing at 11 o’clock on Eriday Feb. 2nd: . e ot | The ‘Following Property to-wit: .\ b Head of Horses—Bay ‘gelding” 8 vears old weight 1600; black gelindg 4 years old; weight 1000; gray geld: “ing 10 years old weight 1400; bay : geldig&z 3 years old 'weight 1300; bay , mare 10 years old weight 1100. 12 Head of Hogs—2 registered Du-#-roc dows due to farrow March 18; 10 tread of shoats weight 125 lbs. Farming Implement:?—,—z- wagons, 2 hay raeks, Ohio hay loader, Deering ' mower 6-ft cut, Johu Deere corn planter, Avery'disc, 2 ' corn . cultivators, shovel plow, Gale riding ‘plow, Bryan walking plow, Oliver walking plow, spring tooth harrow, 3 section: stéell; harrow, corn sled, road cart, new buzz saw,‘and\‘afee,d grinder, and a four eylinder motor mounted, 2 sets work ‘harness, single harnes§, 110 ft. 114 rope, harpoon, ‘6 pullies, 3 pitch forks, ¢ 9 ecorn forks, scoep shovel, 3 log - chains, slop wheeler. . - 7 . Corn in the crib. oy Houseliold =~ Goods—Davenport, 2 - beds, Kkitchen .cabinet, Oak ' table, -dishes. A bt s - Terms of sale—All sums junder $5 .cash; all sums over that amount a - credit of 9 months will be given with~ ~~out interest; if not paid when due in- - tetest . at 8 per cent will be«charged ' trom date of sale; 5 per cent off for T g WA Bloadel 0 pari Seagly Clerk. 4 . Theel Mrfiwggmhwork ~ ing rules for which. the Brotherhood | ot Rallroad Signalinen fought hardest “Wflmfifl . the United State s railroad ybor ‘board S e ey Wodumtir eol B sud ek T Bk A bt whiTs i Tioke NaR A Hehibo

LATE BOWLING SCORES

City Leakue Teams Test Their Powers at Oyler Alleysf Last Wednes- - day Evening - fg

. The Elks -‘ bowlin g team‘f—"maintains its ‘lead in thec ity league contests with the City huskies a close second. The Legion also holds securely, its place at ‘the tail end of the list althe team comsists of some fine rolarss oo e The Mighty - “Casey”’ MeDaniel of {he stamp lickers postoffice aggrega tion tolled the-high score of the evening with 221 pins whije “Bunt”yHarsh a close second with’ 220 and Mifflin Hunter trailing with 212, - 7. o ““The City boys beat th® Elks three games winning one of the three by ofie pin and moved up with two games on the calendar, = e The Legion rolled’ in their ,usual hard Juck, losing two games by clos? margins. vt gy : _ _The results of the contest Wednes lay might:follow: % G ¢ JRefrig vs Legion e, me nasdee sgk GRS Al G Varcd ioqo o 136 dRE 108 W Vance .. oo aBt ola 168

Longengker; ~...... 424 170 . 161 DAMHEY i 181 131 3 Joamneyet ... ... 174 156 . 189 Gandicap .o 062 %2 63 Tofals &il 830 2000 RIR darfs .t g 0 sl ke Lgonaahend 13T 308 186 Bing ... aoaags bt 1Y Franks %b 0 185 364 Y 156 Myers oo oia o 169 188 014 Handiedp .....5... 38 38 © v 38 Potals .. ..ooL 09. 913 0 786 ._ Postoffice vs Hipco : RRex i 128 80 e 10 Bonie oo 108 48T 104 MeDaniel .00 0 118 w 1152 821 WOOHrUeE e 108 7138 0 IR Ninér, o o 188 152 - 352 Handieap 22 0. §6 66 -6B Totals 2L7. ... 0688 ' 8517 Bi 2 Byersole o o 4 135 7 116 Shiremah .00 95 106 7 134 HFSt odiinnn 405 154 145 Bisch i o 136 149 liB Humber>-. 000 180 191 - 282 Handicdp oao 6% B 8 RS Yotale ..- ... 833 842. TSE . L@ty vs Hlks - pA Ll iR D gl ad e B Barl o 00d32 oGOB 0B O Spaih .0 . 183 IDy 0108 Weßex L. 4.l 8h 0 1890 443 BlRex 0l s 1380198 10 3 Miler . c 1790 L 1906 197 Headicap io .o 88 53 58 Tothls ... 8305 JBOB. 395 Rlson 00l i 1 -1R AP FerpeHeon .iw...nio 165 “ 0166 102 B Beean 1860 Map e gdd WoDnler L g s Al T Green ..ow bt 164 T 8 Handicap 0. .4l 18 I 8 - 18 Botals v i B 3 (801 782 R, L L(;eague;Sta,nding = o s el W T Pe FAks: o eB5 8 ol Gty a 8 e Hipes 2e 3 AR ARG Raprigh: 5l A lumrm 10 = aie PO e R Legion !l it gaing 300 28, 2808 -Handicaps for this weck are: . .. - Elks 19; City 48; Hipeo 68; Refrig 62 P 0. 65: Liegton- 8% 00l it

1 Good Time-No Magic, < The S. (. picnic club met ‘at the} home. of Mr. and Mrs. {luf(.-ob Simalley Thursday evening. “Eats’ galore and} a-splenl,did ‘all Tound time marked the | oegasion. e s " This elub s net - conspicuous for the frill§ and furbilowg of formality, | it rather smacks of the days of “Auld Lang Syne”’ when the! latchstringf hung oat; yet its mantiers are notj atrocious. For instance, the fork is used as‘the purveyor of food while the knife is yet to be observed describing, ‘a parabolic curve with the sacred ap: ple butter as its destinatioh. Owverreaching is looked upon askance, es: pecially if the effort necessitates the ‘formation of cemsiderable air-space above the chair. In suc¢h case, the ikindly_assiétan(ze of a fellow guest should b:efimf‘plored‘@o help out in the transportation act. ‘The limit of above air space has not been ‘unani-| mously agreed on.) Again the spoon is' placed gently. beside the cup, lest in some utiguarded moment the steaming amber lose its equalibrium, thus deluging most lavishly the area conventionally devoted to the various food receptacles, aside front a generous rivoulet that might meander. into the lap of the disconcerted guest. Rxpérience has had something'to do with | the latter’s observance. How&ver, ia case of mishap, the host or hostess is rather expected, (though it is optional as ‘yet) 'to excell in the | drenching process, but the act must ‘be dextrous and mot. too soon theres after lest the motive be - discerned. {the interval in question serving nicely | for the victim to mop off his or her lap, and get the self-kicking ma|chinery in thorough working order. Yo sensatiohal colopse ot chuls nor mysterious disjlnting of table |legs marked the evening's proceedfings. < The “black arts” didwt seert {to work as on a previous occasion | while within the Smalley household, | “on yes; werre having a great tims. B e ik eoee e o G JUR R e B

The Plot Thickness,

_Considerable difficulty has beer encountered in identifying the Lexington ‘seven-passenger touring _car, driven: by Raymond Slack of Ligonier wio was arrested January 21 following an automobile collision on the Lineoln: highway northwest of Goshen. = Skick who is now seryving a four-mouths’ sentence at . the penal farm on a charge of driving a car while intoxicated and illegal possesSib}ll of liquor did not have a certificate of title for the car no license issued hini. hv the state. "The plates on thé car Nos. 141502, were found to have jbéen inade from dealers plates, Nos. M-582:- All numbers, including a secret number .on the machine’s parts, have ‘been obliterated and in somé cases~others substituted. The dealer’'s license plates which appayr’ ently were stolen were originally .is sued to a Syracuse dealer.—Goshen Daily Democrat. - b

To Do Stueco Work.

M. M. Speicher was in the city Saturday calling on friends. He is engaged in the contracting and build ing business and dealing in Rocbound Stucco: and puts it on is his line ot work.- Mr. Speicher has contracts te begin on as Soon as the season Ligonier on as soon as the season opens and he looks for much work iu his line during the coming summer He will look_ after contracts in Ligo: nier and. vicinity. :

Suit on Judgment.

. Clara M. Hans f_orfnerly ‘Clara M MecNutt this afternoon filed suit in the gireuit court against Dr. George A. Whippy for $810.95 judgment on a judgment for $802.75 now due’'and unpaid, granted her on March 4 1913, i a suit against the defendant J. S. Yo der prepared the complaint.-—Gosheu Demoerat, Friday. The parites are former residents of Ligonier and Mrs. Hans' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Mc Nutt reside ltere. e

Heavy Loss to Road.

Big Four officials estimate that the freight - wreck between Silver Laké and Claypool earlier in the week caused a loss of $lOO,OOO. Eighteen cars were derailed and smashed. The wreckage has not, all been cleared away. Seven of thec ars were so. bai ly wrecked that they will be burnexifi.’ One car contained sugar, two automobile radiators and two coal.

; 400 Pounds of Coin. The Cromwell Advance says

#The Sparta State Bank made a shipment ‘of silver and subsidiary coin/to tlie Federal Reserve Bank of Chicage. There were 20,000 pennies, 4,000 nickles, 5.000 dimes and 3,200 quartérs making a total of 32200 coins or $l7OO. The shipment weighed 400 pound and was sent by express.’ b A Word to Advertisers. ' Persons desiring display advertise‘_m‘efit..szil_; the- aßnner must have thelr copy in by Saturday for the Monday issue (or Wednesday® noon’ fi;r Thursday’s paper. It is a physical im‘pb:ssibility to set display ads 'ou press days. s end 49btt L Finger Prints May Tell. = _ Identification of bandits who swoop ed down on Fort Wayne early Wed nesday morning 4in' a repetition of the coupilast August will probably be#es: tablished soon by finger prints left behind by the yeggs who robbed four offices of approximately $1,500.

He Didn’t See It

+ Mr. (G Hog: had every reason to keep his hibernating quarters Friday Feb. 2 and he could hardly sec his shadow from under the umbrella he might hive ecarried had he ven-| tured forth. D i Didn't Know of Fractures. = Otis E. Ballou a LaGrange citizen walked about three days before discovering he had three fractured ribs suffered in a fall on the ice. An exray disclosed the injuries. . W ~Farm For Rent. | - 62% acres Noble County, Indiana lying two miles north of Ligonier, ‘Good buildings. Level land all in cultivation. Write or call The Straus Brothers Company, Ligonier, Indiana. : A s 0 e L ARRE . Prepare your meats with Wright's Liguid Smoke. Get it at Griffith’s Dhgig Btoes, . 0 p Aghle ~ Mr. and Mrs. Bryon . Grubbs and Dolpheus Stabler visited Syracuse redatives lant wekl - -l Lo

For Sale—Some good chink horses 32%s o & - I at ‘the right price. Otis Bakér' Ligonier, Ind. S - 49br White & Wickwise of Angola will establish a branch furniture factory and store in Blkhart. e (Pure Milk and Maple Row ¢Gream delivered to all parts ot the city. Earl James. Phone B’3l. e ol R ~ !Lying Lips” is one of the best pictures of the seasen at Crystal WedL e Mgt | FOR SALR at a bargain a cuiter in air condition. ' See’ ‘B. C. Wilhelm, oo e *{f{ 49& B § Twisgemmsdex wosfestl Buslich complexion clay, new skin, in. forty lminntes, See it at Grittith's Drug ufi 93t b e B T b | WANTED...Manager for chain 'storc Yisi. *@?:%{%f et ey $4 nlfi’f“éfif*fifi%é"@%‘“

. ..+ 4N AUTOMOBILE TAMNKS

vicvana Chauffeurs Said to Be Using : it Because It Is Cheaper : Than Gasoline. o

A report in the Scientific American has it thit the -taxicabs of Havana are runnipg on what our forefathers knew as rum—though 'of -the denhtured vatiety. | They are using it because it Is 30 per cént cheaper than gasoline, and it is the product of ‘blackstrap molasses, which Is Jjust now 4 drug on the market. This byproduct of cane s%igar is overflowing the storage tanks; by turning it into automobile fuel, taxi rates have been ‘cut; the minjmum now being 20 cents. This cut is said to have been author--ized by the mayor ‘at the request of the cabmen themselves, who hope by this means to’ popularize this mode of travel. =0 ; e The superabundance of blackstrap ‘molasses has given them their opportunity, and everybody and His wife are riding in state. Jamaica, too, is planning an installation near Kingston for the conversion of rum into industrial alcohol. The:first consignnient to be treated would be one of 800,000 gallons, the spirits being shipped to’ Canada and elsewhere,

LOCATED ON BOUNDARY LINE

Town That Is Half in‘ the State of . Yermont and Half in Provv ince of Quebec.

There is a town called Beebe Pilain, which stands half in the state of Vermont and half in the provinee of Que“bec. The post office was built about (1830 exactly on the boundary land line between the United States and Canada G : ~ Stunding in two countries, the post. office belongs to:the postal servige of the two nations.. The cellar connects the two countries. "In the days not very long age when th/é post office was .a geuneral store, whisky was known to be seld in one country and ~delivered in the other without ever having gone from qn_(’ier the roof of the .old structure, : o Standing in front of this strange post officegis a large post which marks the boundary line, It is saia that one fime a man who wanted to get a roadway to lis premises moved this post, ~and many thousands of dollars and no little tinie had to be spent to establish the exact line again. i 4

o S Causes af Climatic Change.

‘Tyndall was one of the first to suggest that the ‘cause «of the great changes that the climate of the earth has undergone in ‘the past might concélvably be the formation of thin c:uopies of gas in the atmusphere, capable of transmitting the luminous heat of the sun, put impetyious to the dark heat rays|radiated back from the earth. Wheeler, seeking a new explanation of'|the glacial = periods, suggests that sych canopies could ‘be formed by the fall of rings of matter external to the atmosphere. Being afterward resolved into belts, they might give rise to strong climatie zones, until their final disappearince by descent to the earth in the form of dust. He jieturesquely suggests that primitive | man saw the latest cloud belts, which gave rise to the myths of sérpil.ltéf,iwined' ‘about . the earth 0 b e e e

' Starlight Drives Motor. ’ A motor dr‘h*en"@iyJs!:u‘light‘ has heen invented by an American scientist, Dr. W. W. Colilentz of Washington, 1) .G, sayf the Mentor Magazine, So sensitive is the instrument, which measures ! liea‘p radiation from the sturs, ‘that it |will deteet an electric current of one;bllliunth’ of an ampere. Or, to put it more graphically, it iis possible to measure the heat given off by the most distant star by means of electricity generated by it§ heat. If the heat from .a certain nebula Gomposed of 105 stars, hundreds of millions of miles from the earth, were concentrated on sixty drops of water for a hundred yeurs, the temperatare of ‘the water would he raised one degree only, Doctor Coblentz says.

Burglars Laugh at Police.

The wildest fiction writer would not have dared to put It in a story, but Scotland Yard itself was visited by burglars the other day. The ‘sacrosanct home of criminal justice, which no stranger cam enter without being asked his business at every turn, was thought to be the one place thieves would let alome, but early morning visitors entered ' the * lost property room within a few feet of a seore or move of reserves, apparently passing right by a man patrolling outside and got away with several hundred dollars worth of valuables, =

Scandinavia’s. Forest Dowry.

About 53,000,000 acies, or about 59 per cent of the soil of Sweden; is covered with forests, 'For each 100 of the inhabitants Sweden has 966 acres of fopest, which is the greatest proportion in Eurepe, vext to Finland. Great Britain and Ireland have only 7.4 acres per 100 inhabitants. Of the cereals, wheat is chiefly grown in the central and southern parts of the country ; rye farther north, but in the most northerly parts barley is the staple | Keeping Ships Afleat. |, _ Keeping ships. frons sinking fg the _ambition of C. 8. Hensiee of Chiitte_nooga, Tenn., who hus invented a of these eups would ‘be dravn tnto the hole in the huil and fonn a 4 water MR e e s S Sißy S e SR AR m&mmwm%g d eee s e LR R eég;ffl&ffiéf tops. The, St~ Grocery, - Ligouer, oo s e P e B TR T e S s L A

ABDVEBOARD WITH THE BOYS

William H. Morgan's Remarks to' a - Woman Who Questioned = | £ Habit of Smoking. .

- William H. Morgan, who conducts one of the best boys’ camps in Maine ‘has. studied human nature in both boys and men, and knows just what _to’ éxpect of people. The mother of a boy at his camp noticed that several: of the instructors smoked and she wondered if this wasn't setting a “bad example to growing boys. . Mr. Morgan replied, remarks Collier's: “Regardless of what we may think yabOut_\,t:he, propriety- of smoking, we are obliged to recognize the fact that the ma’jorit-y of active men do smoke, If you select instructors who do not smoke vou limit your field and may have to do without other = desirable qualities. Or If you ask men. accus tomed to smoking suddenly to change their habits and do without tobacco for two months, the chances are that they will slip away and smoke when nobody is| looking. 'The boys are hound tol learn of this and then they have the example of men doing things on the sly, which Is infinitely more harmful than the example of smoking would be. T don’t care anything about smoking myself, but I do ligh* a cigarette occasionally before the boys <o that they won’t think that maybe 1 smoke only in secret. Nothing 1s so important for a loy as to learn to do : whatever he does <+ in the open” PARTICULAR ABOUT HER VEIL Rummage Saleswoman Learned Sormie- ~ thing From Woman Customer ; She Failed to Please. - The Woman Who Sees had had no facquaintance < with rummage sales vothef' than seeing such posted signs, S 0 when she was asked to bie such a saleswoman she was thrilled. Her table was covered with seraps of &ilks, laces, yeils, discarded collar and cuff sets and things in their category. Late in the afternoon a dear old-lady, ‘wearing an expensive- Persian lamb codat, came up to: her and asked if she had any gray veils. The Woman Who Sees said that she had, and immediately produced one from among the veil pile. . = e . “This is a very pretty one, and it - has. a deep, lacy border; it ought to look well on you, it is such a goodlooking taupe shade.” ; - : - The dear old lady held the vell up to her face, and asked how much it was. s A

“Bight cents, madam.”

“But isn’t 1t too gray for me, dear?” “No, I shouldn't think se. Besides, it is the best véil T have herej no holes in it, ahd scarcely worn.” , - The ¢ld lady fussed a bit, smiled, and walked away.: But in ten minutes she had returned and said. “Dear, I'm afraid the color is too deep for my skin. Thank you.”—ExChanfe: @ 0 v i ;

Learned Methods of Eagle.

. Making the young eagle scream 1§ oné of the most trying duties of the father bird, and it would never learn to fly if it wasn’t starved into it Franecis H.' Herrick of (Cleveland. Ohio, lived in a tree for two months to learn these and other inside facts on the domestie life of eagles, according to a paper he read at the meeting of. the American = Ornithologists’ union at Figld museum. Mr. Herrick said he observed from a tree house ‘the hatching of two eagles and their early life. The youngsters were tantalized into. their first screaming hy their father and mother, which soared above them with fish in their ‘talons; -The young eagles learned to fly by the starvation system also, he said.—Chicago Tribune. ; i l, -+ John Galsworthy. ' " John Galsworthy looks like a family lawyer or a high court judge. He is clean shaven, urbane, genial, but ¢er. “tainly not expansive. ‘His voice is low, and it is difficult:to believe that “he could ever be vlolent or provocative or even excited. He may find ‘many things in life that are cruel and unjust, but he declines to be angry about it.. There is an entire /absence of “side” (I know no polite term as .expressive 'as this vulgarism) about John Galsworthy. He is not effusive, but he is modest and gently kindly. He is precise In his dress, and neat~ness characterizes }ik" appearance as ~well as his writing., I imagine that - few people have ever called Mr. Gals- ~ worthy Jack!—Sidney Dark in John o’ London’s weekly, o

The Teaching Spirit.

One of the most important things. a training school ecan do is to get teachers into the spirit of their jobs. Training schools cannot send ¢ut teachers imbued with the spirit of their jobs, having pride in their profession, aad a belief in teaching as a life” career unless they develop a love and consecration to their work., It is the lack of this spirit which 15 responsible for the unwillingness of young teach-. ers to do the work of the rank and file, and diplomas should be refused: those who lack it—Principal Olive Jones, New York eity.

v Mutes Hold Congress. o ‘The Latin love of gesticulation had full play in Rome at the first national congress-of deaf-and-dumb Italians, the delegates to which represent 40,000 deaf mutes throughout the country. Eloguent and lengthy speeches were Uelivered, but not a ‘sound was heard. The speakers used only their fingers. The congress wants compulsory free .education for all Hmir Klgd o 0 e e 0 ~ Miss Christing Hamer is dead in the house where she was born in Kendall: ville 44 yenrm mgoly s i ) 1 will pay the highest market brice. a%%@;; Mione 7 da, 488 sffis*fia Jate

‘Enrollment in Ton Litter Club

Many Noble County sarmemrefii'r ing that they. can increase their hog Profits by better feeding and better breeding. aro entolling in the Hoosier Ton Litter Club. Twenty applications have already bécn sent in to. the County agent and almost every mail ecar ries additional abpplications and in< quiries regarding the club: In order that nobody shall be disappointed it has been qecided to extend tlge-‘ftimej"(_!'til enroling from January 31st to February 3rd.' However all applications: must be.in the County Agent’s office by the ‘latter, date.” = Applications phoned in will be accepted, . . - The Ton Litter Club is fostered -by the Indiana Livestock Breeders Association and to become a member entails an expense of fifty cents to cover thec ost of the annual repors: The association offers medals as followsy To any person in Indiana ‘who) produces a litter of pigs, farrowed between February 3ra aud April 30thm clusive, when six months ~old 2006 pounds ‘a gold medal; 1800 pounds ‘a silver medal; and 16000 ' pounds 'a bronze medal.. ' e

Not a Blind Piz.

An effort has beou made' down in New Jersey to transplant the eye of a pig.in the socket of a 17 year oid boy who lost the sight of the ‘eve celebrating the 4th of July: ~ The surgeon has hopes of giving the bow the ability to*do his looking through a pig's eye. The pig that gave up one of its eves is to be kept in Juxury an i ease the remainder of his days. =

", To Ohserve Library Wesk, - Gow; | McCray has issued Ja proeiamation, declaring February 11 fo A% Librap)%, Week in Indiana aud thé week will be observéd. in all cities - and towns with public libraries. The wevk last year was made the occasion of art poster ‘ work i the. Ligdnier ~school and W?:; very instructive. Setadll R BT e o /| Would Kegulate Em, - . _ ,’Accothjg to the Albion New Eid Congregsman Fairtield would regulate marriages and divorces by law ‘and he has introducéd a bill. providing: for the reguisites to insure -connubini bliss. Such a measure ought to pass. Ora M. Fitestone ‘and family ana Mrs. Ella Slentz visited at the J. M. Schlabach home near Cromwell. -~ -

~ Another Heavy Reduction in | KELLY-SPRINGFIELD . o OtherSlzesAccordmgly i i , ~ BLAZED TRAIL GARAGE | " ""LIGONIER, INDIANA = se== |

THIS COUPON GOOD FOR ONE ADMISSION . FARMERS EXPOSITION =+ STo Be Held in fhe o | MANOPACTURERS BUILDING e STATE F’AIRGRQU\:DS__INDIAN APOL IS | WEBK OF FEURUARY 13,308 Compliments of THE LIGONIER BANNER Present This Coupon at Ticket Offics 1 -

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o ‘?‘.';’ : 4 BATTERIES | | | Thebest battery . Yyou can buy is the cheapest in . theend. | Blazed - I 2lrall . fi QGarage

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