Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 50B, Ligonier, Noble County, 8 February 1923 — Page 4

January ,’and.- b ebruar'y Investments . Noble County GRAVEL ROAD BONDS - fon Price on Ap[ilieation . * Write ‘or Call on MIER STATE BANK e . LIGONIER INDIANA. . @ =

Jet White Groceteria ~ We wish to thank the "peo_ple of Ligonier and vicinity vfovr their liberal patronage and the many compliments as to our Groceteria being the cleaest, most sanitary in the country, and prices lowest for quality goods. - Y el : \ SR ; s ..‘, L For this week: eLR AL g s S eTy ' » ALUMINUM AT BARGAIN PRICES : Tea Kettle 3sc‘Conl*blnation";l)ooker it N POrOOIRIOL .......ccniicines messiciinsnrininess, DBC Double Bofler ...l 98¢ Water Pail ... 98¢ Kettle 8 quart S s BBE DISR PRI L i snass - 98¢ Donvex Sauce Pan and Covers ... 98¢ SOAP e ~ BREAKFAST FOOD o P. &G. Naptha 10 for ............ 48¢ Kt;floggs Corn fFlakes 3 " ; P ar Phe for .. iz 2h¢ Kirks Flake 10 for ... 48¢ ‘Smllg‘l‘l) § §k§ for 00l e Fels Nuptha 10 for ' ... 50 888 poiqeanies = 1 e , Palm Olive 3 £or ..........ceerveivnees 256 garg]e g pll‘:g' f :gq_ 5 : Small 8 p 0P sBB Jap Rose 8 fori itk e OEe Cream of Whesit ... 99 Hard Water 3 f0r....5............. 25¢ Post Bran 2 for sssseinessessrissesinasiniss 20C gl RUGAR - ~ .SHOPPING BASKETS Sugar Pure Cane 5 lbs, irsioiniies 38€ 8 sizes 40c, 45¢, 50¢ Sugar Pure Cane 10 Ibs. ... %e Auto Baskets .....ijgusieiivesisesiie., 48€ Sugar Pure Cane 25 Ibs. .......... $l.BB Columbia City Flour e 886 Yotatoes Pk 20c bushel ... 75¢ PllSbury FIOUE .i..oowswiomn UBB Pay Cash énd save money: Why s__hot;ld you help to pay for what others don’t pay? L L > We want your butter and eggs and pay highest cash prices Jet ‘White Groceteria o ; . S 2 : o - '4. "\__'f.> :. 5 Phone 20 - b -/ H. P.-SISTERHEN, Mgr. G We Sell For Less - = -~ uz

Spraying - Just paid 10 cents for ‘a;“fin'.e‘ 'la;'geround.red’ che'ek'efl apple, the longer 1 looked ‘at-it the .mbr'e 1 wanted it, say wouldn’t 'a tree full of those large red apples look grand. . But they do grow on apple frees and you tl.an’te‘,has;e to @‘ out of Noble County to find the trees that do bear nice apples. L R e . There is big money in; fruit and not many acres are required to give a good outcome,. o e r \But-spray you must. .Save that old‘ orchard by tljimmf ing and spraying. We sell lime ‘and sulpher éoliitioxg, also Scalescide and the poisons for the leaf -eating insects. 1 think We‘,have by far the'best hand po.wer's'pry'ing pump on the market THE DEMING you can buy with or ‘without a bél:'rel.;_ Come in and see the. outfit.” - - . Weaver’s Hardware

. Beauty and Durability o are the athactived features of the new . Bat service and saving are qualities no to be ignored . . Otis Baker,Agent -~ i o e

Public Sale

. The undersigned will sell at public auction on the George Stacker farm 4 miles west and tlree fourth mile south of Ligonier, sale commenging at ten o’clock on Tuesday Feb. 20. The following property torwit: = 4 Head of Horses—Black mare 12 yeals old weight 1400, black horse 5 years old weight 1400, 2 bay work horses. : Ea s 2 Head of Cattle—Jersey cow’ § years old giving milk roan cow giving milk. Py a 0 i Good Brood Sow 4 - Implements—Osborne binder, tung truck good as new,McCormick mower good as new, Bander corn cutter, corn sheller, Oliver riding plow, Syracu&e walking plow, riding _cultivator, 24-tooth spring tooth harrow, spike tooth harrow, ‘1 horse spring tooth cultivator, 1 horse low land cultivator, fence stretcher, 3 wagons farm wagon, Studebaker wagon tripple wagon, grain box tight, 2 hay racks 16 and 14 ft. ith side boards, barn scales 800 pounds, Keasey cart sa@lf binder, :féed grinder, good as new, iron kettle, seed corn grader, 2 sets of work harness, good as new, collars, fly nets leather, single ‘harness, pair horse blankets, vipegar barrel, ‘cider barrel, galvanied water trough for hogs, cream separator and cream can, log chain, pitch forks cow chains, grain scoops; tile .scoop, pump jak, 4-horse eveners, other articles ‘too numerous to mention. ~ About 75 bushels of oats. . 471 John Ferm : - E. R. Kurtz, Auctioneer ' | B e

Public Sale

iThe undersigned wil Isell at ‘public }auction on their farm; known as the ‘Schlichtenmyer farm % mile south of Brimfield and 4 miles northeast of Albion the following persohal property on Friday February 23. : ~ Commencing at 12 o’clock sharp. - 5 Head of work Horses | = 2 Good milk Cows—Holstein cow 6 years old will be fresh in March, Durham coy 6 years old, will be fresh in March. . Hay and Grain—lo tons-of clover and timothy mixed hay, 1000 bushels of corn in crib a,lso some corn in the shock, 300 bushels of oats, 70 bushels of 1y : : o +Farm Implements—McCormick binder, Ohio hay loader, rude widespread manure spreader, Superior grain drill disc and tandem, Deering mower, Ideal corn planter; Oliver riding plow |2 John. Deere cultivators, Turnbull farm wagon, double wagon. box, bpb [sleds, spring tooth. harrow,' oats seeder, Oliver walking plow, land roliler, hay tedder,/2 hay racks, dump ‘boards, platform scales, 2 stock racks farm wagon No. 2, .3 sets work harness, set buggy harnes, 2 hand cultivators, shovel plow, extension ladder, 6 white ash .wagon tongues, sleigh, Hoosier corn sheller; self hog feeder, 2 hog troughs, fanning mill, stone boat, pitch forks, work bench, hand tools, post digger, grind stone, wheel barrow,'{crow bar, seeder; apple tree trimmer; horse collar, log chain and many other articles not mentioned. Terms ‘of Sale—Sums of $5.00 and under cash in hand® A credit of sev: en months will be given on all sum,sj over §55.00 drawing 6 per cent interset from date of sale purchaser givi'ng,i not with good freehold security. iNo_I property to be removed until terms of sale are complied with. St . Green Brothers and Oldfather Col. John Singleton Auct. Ll G. L. Foote Clerk s L

Democratic editors of the state are holding their winter meeting in Indianapolis today. Sedin ;

- The W. W. Andrews home at Kendallville was damaged to thé extent of $5OO by fire Tuesday. - - di st

Mrs. Paul Parker formerly Miss Nell Cass of Liigonier has been iil at her homie in Albion. :

Mrs. Sarah S. Carey. 75 a widow of Albion and Mrs. Rachael Baker 85 of Whitley county are dead. R

The backbone of he cold ‘wave was broken by snow ‘flurries - and intervals of sunshine Tuesday. 5

Office Positions in South Bend may be secured by a'sMort intensive course in the South Bend Business College. Either Yesident or‘Home Study Courses Typewriters furnished home study Students. = Write.- for * Budget No. B ; B ponae

M. Business = Man

?f : ( ; £ ’ \x' JHY netfmake_ your 'V appeal for patron. gfie through the columns ¥ this newspaper? With ever.y I‘SSUGV it carr les its message into the homes of all the best p%ogfe of this community. Don't blame the people for flocking to. the store of your competitor. Tell them what you e wwm if vwr‘

NEW YORKERS BURNING WOOD

Builders, It Is Said, Are Being Besieged by Householders Asking - for Old Lumber. ; ‘ Householders in all parts of New York, according to the observations of policemen, are collecting a great deal of firewood this fall. This is taken to indicate that many of them are anticipating a coal shortage during the coming winter. : - In backyard sections everywhere it is a common sight to see the male membegs of the family busily engaged in splitting boards and lumber into kindling wood. This firewood, as a householder expressed it, is not intended to supplant coal, but to help save it il “At this time last year,” a bullder said, “I used to give wood away occasionally when I was. tearing down or repgiring old bulldings. 1 used P hang out a sign reading, ‘Wood given away free for the asking’ My only stipulation was that persons applying for. it should cart it away for themselves. It may surprise you wnen I tell you that my wood often went begging. It is quite different this year. I do not have to hang out a sign: every day I am besieged by men, women and children soliciting old lumber for firewood: There are So many of these applicants that I have to turn most of them away. . : “I am sure that this demand for firewood means that ‘much more weod is going to be burned in fires this winter than in the past.” ;

PUTTING IT UP TO TINSMITH

Mr. Fijjit Wants to Know Why Stove--1 pipe Is Always Adjusted to 4 Sud!'v‘lSmall Dimensions. _ One:,of the unsolved mysteries of everyday life is why a stovepipe man will always make a _.stove{)me too small. Give him the old pipe as a pattern and he will send a new piece that can’t be put on even with a shoe horn, remarks a New York Sun writer. Fijjit had a bandage around his finger when he got to the office the other morning and explained that ue had vainly tried to adjust a piece of stovepipe that was too small. “If it.-bhad been an inch too large it would have been all right,” he said, “for it rested on the stove and could not come off, But that tinsmith believed in a snug fit, a-mi he made the pipe so small that I had to send it back after working with 1t for half an hour and cutting my finger.” - Two other men in the office said they bhad similar experiences the last week and no one could offer an explanation _of the thusness of the stoveplpe, | -0 iEll i

Remarkable Family.

| Marcus Aurelius has just celebrated | his eighity-second birthday and -the | seventy-third year of his notable ca- { reer as fisherman on Lake Huron. 'All | of the brothers and sisters of Marcus: have not survived to. join in the cele- '| bration, but if they had all been there | the list of those present would include Jullus Caesar Hitchcock, Benja- | min Franklin Hitchecock, Cyrenus Den mark Hitchcock, Theodore Wellington | Hitcheock, Euphemia Ophelia Hitchcock, Diodema Rosetta Hitcheock, Melissa Hitchcock, James Alexander | Hitcheock, Apollus Napoleon Hitch- | cock and Samuel Lake Hitcheock. "old Mare,” as he is familiarly ‘termed by those who choose to ignore ‘his share in the family roll of fame, | has never missed a season on the _lake 1 since he Jvas nine years old; has saved 14 people grom drowning; was a champion figure skater, and states that he wil be on the ice again this { winter, - i p et . | , Pamage by Floods in Bengal. ~ i The floods in north. Bengal have affected 1,500 square miles and 1,500, +OOO- people. The loss of life appears |to be relatively small but many cattle * ~have perished, crops have been destroyed as well as many villages. “Thousands of half-starved | persons “hgve taken refuge on railway embank--'-}m%nts'_'dnd othér high ground and are ibeing maintained by relief funds and ‘government grants. The floods have ‘begun to subside, but an immense area is still inundated. An outbreak of disease,” especially of cholera, is ‘feared as the waters abate, owing to putrefaction of carcasses of cattle. R %o < ‘Devetion,. : £The Woman took her. small visiting . niece 'to church. with her. The ecity lService was " much ..me?re ritualistic than that of the village church which ’t‘:\he little girl had been in ‘the habit: _of attending, but the Woman was _Dleased to notice that she seemed very interested and very devout. - JAfter chureh; on the widy home, the Wonisn asked: B #“And - did you . like . the service, ('igaf?"‘ -" : o Ui o ~ 70, yes, auntie, it was very inter- , é&mg,” the little girl -answered politely. ““’Course I was sort of con-| .-ft%léd ‘at first, but I just watched you, | -and every time you lame-ducked 1 did, | iv.g@g"fiemqagg‘;nnm%. o o

27 AN Enduring Heel. Aluminum heels £6r boots and shoes ‘arg_ the invention of a designer of Northampton, the etnter of England’s ‘bopt and shoemaking Imdustry. It is colored to miatch the shoe. To the base of the Heel is serewed a plece - ofileather, which, when WO otit, can be'replaced at a cost not exceeding 12 cehts a pair. The heel itself will not - wehr dowH, even when the leather has @ieppeared. 0 0 G ‘ B 52 ST : i am oo ‘ _ Mrs. Walter Robinson and little 80ng were recent visitors with the Caléh Huber family ‘in Qoshen. _‘Beo the ad of the Philadelphia. Canfy Kitchen in this isaye. Valon: tineshearts made of candy With your name upon them: See them,

. Farm For. Rent.

623% acres Noble CQunty,‘g‘lndianm lying two miles north of Ligonier. Good buildings. Level land all in cultivation. Write or call The Straus Brothers Company, Ligonier, Indiana. e : - 49b3t R ekt ‘_.m' » i A Word to Advertisers, ~ Persons desiring display advertisentents in the aßnner must have their copy in by Saturday for the Monday issue. or = Wednesday - noon -oy Thursday’s paper. It is a physical impossibility to set display ads on press days. ' ; 49btf & A. v —t o To Give Away, : ~ Somebody desiring a well bred ani house broken pup, kind to children, may learn of one by inquiring at ‘the Banner office. It will be given away to the right party. e 60azt ‘- Publie Sale. i J. J. Stewart will hold a public sale on the Teal farm ‘one mile west of Ligonier Friday Februaty 23 beginning at one o’clock’ p. m. | 50a3t

Lecture gn Lincoln.

v fFriday evening Februia;;lrgth; at Rabbi Mark will deliver a lecture ¥ Abraham Lincoln at' the Jewish temple. E’verybody’invited.zi 50a2t Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Lundy visited friends in Elkhart Tuesday. = - Mrs. G. H. Bacheler of Kalamazoo Mich., ar’rived Tuesday evening, ° ~ Donnabel little daughter of Mr.fl‘an%u. Mrs. J. A. Wiley is ill of the measles. Mrs. H. H Decker visited the first of the week with the O. A. Chiddister family. . . o Thé Loi'aJxlay Shop: has bene removed from the Kerr building on S. Cavin street.. ; ' e ; ‘Bor‘n,‘ Wednesday morning to Mr, and Mrs. Reginald Dukes a son weight nine pounds. ; ' The price of gasolene has been advanced one cent a gallonswithout any known cause. =~ Lot Prépare your meats with Wright's Liquid Smoke. Get it at Griffith’s Drug Store. : ~ 49p3t For Sale—Some good chunk horses at the right price. Otis Baker Liganier, Ind. . i : 49bi? Pure Milk and Maple Row cream delivered to all parts of the city. Earl James. Phone 831. - . bbtt FOR SALE at a bargain a cutter in fair condition. See §. C. Wilhelm. & i - e Agatl

‘Walter Robinson had business. which called him to Chicago several day¢ this week. = ° ; ' Tena-derma-iax WOn(ferful English complexion clay, new skin in forty minutes. See it at Qriffith’s Drug Store. e ~ 49b3t My Shop will be open :at all times: for painting-of any description. See me before having yeur painting work done. Wallace Jackson. '~ 46btf ~ FOR SALE—Genuine Washburn ‘mandolin with leather case: Good as new. This fine instrument goes to the first comer.* Inquire at Banner office. . S - 47atf Mrs. Evanna Smith who had been in Findlay, Ohio with her sister Mrs. Charles McLean and on'a visit with a niece in Angola arrived home Monday after an absence of a couple of| months, bieni

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WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY FEB:s = | - “LYING LIPS” with House Peters and Florence Vider a great spectacle of life and love, see the marvelous Scemes, the thrilling ship wreck, ‘the realistic storm, the society wedding. One of the fine pictures evet shown here also the Ist round of tiwe Leather ' Pushers. Great - Show. Special Musle Adm 16 and 25e. g| . - | FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FEB 9.00. =~ - “THE CAVE GIRL” with Teddié Gearad s drama of a spirited girl forced to don man’s garb and live on her own resources in the wilds of the Yosemite Valley. Also a Sen-net comedy. o BIG BAND BENEFIT ‘AT CRYSTAL. 'TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY FEB. 18-14 ERER e gl " _An extra fine feature program and speelal musical program with band numbers and solos. One show each night. . .Everybody should . show their appreciation for thegr fine band by attending. o ¢: S 'm’ .‘,5.3” ; . o ,— ._." :-4-.' ‘l - 5 - (t’%‘ | ¥n® WINCHESTER store | Giffs wli;;;’ . ©_ Phone 67 - : h]fl - ncu i. e o . A o : w v/ | Ligonier’s Leading Hardware |' N

E————— [ B HHEENNNN R === A The Most Convenient ~ Flashlisht - A Winchester Flashlight is handy and easy to operate. ' -It never fails to give a quick flaSh,or a steady beam of light as you command. L e T : Such features as the patented safety switch, extra ' thick sealpless' zine battery can, and' spun-in lens make them the most popular fleéh-lig*hts we have ever sold. ’ ' This is flashlight week?‘at ‘our store. Come in and ~ see our complete assortment of styles and Sizes.: . = -

i »y{;}nr\"”“’ : PeTH . = W T e ey e T i~ __:_ig::{@;;- = ‘ @fiuzmsrmu% i Winchester Miners Type Flashlight, Tested lens with silver plate reflector attractive in apperance efficient in -operation. Price $l.OO up complete -with battery, b e

For best results use Winchester Batteries

Weir & Cowley

' Xi\\\\”fig-\o SRt " WWinchester Searchlight Type Designed ~ for outdoor use. Throws a wide beam. of light. Fibre or nickel cases.