Ligonier Banner., Volume 56, Number 52A, Ligonier, Noble County, 19 February 1923 — Page 4
Stranger but once--|at this ba‘nk\.j,; Aftef your 'fitst visit, we believe ', - you will feel entirely at home with us—for this ©is that sort of abank. It is a friendly “homey” © institution-—-we make it so and we believe you. ‘;w‘ill enloy doing your business here, - . . The Bank of Secrecy] - = o ‘Open Your Account Today : " MIER STATE BANK l The Lergest and Oldest Bank m L‘igdnief oy - - ‘ Assets over $1,000,000.0e ) A
CrystalTheatre . 5 - V‘.“ 5 s | .s ; . ; MONDAY FEB. 19. | - e Sl | o - “LOVE NEVER DIES” with Madge Bellemy and Lloyd Hughes also .a. fine comedy. s i , e R R Remember Monday is Pay Night, >0 i TUESDAY WEDNESDAY, THURSPAY, Feb. 20, 21, 22, : % Big Double Attraction. Harold Lloyd In “NEVER WEAKEN” it is the funniest most novel "and most spectacular of any of his wonderiul come- - dies. It start with a laagh and ends with a thrill. also “THE KENTUCKY ~ DERBY” e , W . M . SEE the most thrilling horse-race finish .ever shown on-.stage .or screen as the crashing clirnax to a mighty drama of strange ang absorbing adventure on land and sea, the winning of which meant fortune, honor and position to one of the proudest fanfilies in Kentucky. I You’ll never forgive yourself if vyou miss - this melodraatie tfnimph m § smashing reels a program worth twice the price. Adm. 15, 20, 30c. | FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 23:24 . &.« &% ¢ s #le e % «“THE MYSTERIOUS RIDER” a thrilling Zane Grey story also a Mack Senentt comedy. , . Moy e : SUNDAY AND MONDAY FE8.;25-26 0 ‘_ o : ' “FOOLS FIRST” with Ricl‘m“rd‘]iik and Claire ‘“’fndor a splendid erook szory with a- big Sufprise also Buster Keaten in a fine comedy. COMING NEXT WEEK o ; : Priscilla Dean in “Under Two Flags” ap ictare that will live in yoar memory forever, . : e : . : :
? ~ Pnblic Sale - | . ~Of Big Type Poland: China Bred Sowsto be held at Jim Bowen’s Sale Pavillion Topeka Ind., Saturday Feb. 24, 1923. Commencing at 12:00 o’clock On the above named daté we will sell a superior offering 0f45 Tried Sows, Spring Gilts and Fall Boars. © These Hogs are doable Immuned from Cholera. . e S .. The offering is of: the best of. blood lines and as individuals cannot be equaled in Northern Indiana. A great
Fence and Fence Posts
| v 2 White Cedar Posts | e 3to 4 inch tops. 7 feet long STRICTLY No. 1 CUT FROM LIVE TIMBER o ~ No Culls Whatever ' -_ ' , . ‘ b 4 t . lf Taken Off Car Each = 15¢ .7-‘ A' “ | v“: =z z . { “* ": [ - . A "»" " - -4 toSinch tops 7 feet long o i et J /“v'": _ - Strictly No. 1 Cut From Live Timber ~ If Taken From Car Each =~ 25¢ Ic each extra if inot taken from car. We will also make a reduccion on fence if taken from car. = | We have THREE styles of locks so certainly we can please you. Leave your orders for either fence e e . st sik PP g oo oL T et g P e ke or fence posts at once so that we can notify you when Gigonier . - . ' Ipdiana . . Topeka
| bunch for any farmer or bréeder to select their future sows 'or boars from. o R Sreß ! s . W. D Eljdn ‘ Singleton and Kurtz, Aucts. - X Dale Seagley clerk. : o e . Miss Helen Kelley is ill of laryngitis s - : EOR s L . Only four marriagé licenses have ‘been issued in Noble county thus far this year. S
e NOTICE -+ 11 g B g i { The public sale of Joe 5 /£ : : L _ {Kimmell has been post-| poned to Wed. Feb. 21 Bth Ligonier Community Publie -Sale ! At Lepird’s Barn Thursday Feb. 22 11923. Sale to commence at 11:00 o'clock a. m. Stock at 1:00 p. m. 10 Head of Horses—One matched team of geldings 5 and 6 years old welght 2600, soupd; registered team’ of gray mares, 6 'years old weight} 3100; 1 black mare 7 years old weight 1700, cound 5 head of good work | horses. : 10 Head of Cattle—lo head of cattle consisting of “fresh cows and close |up springers and butcher cattle; 1 extra good bull talf 6 months qld, eligible to tegister raised by John Crothers of Kimmell, Ind., sired by Dallas Farewell 410275 by Avondale ] 245144 by Whitehall Sulton 163575. out of Imp, Avalanch 2 nd V 60658 Dan Rosewood 86th V 59-773 by, Pride of Daye 203941 out of Rosewood 81st V 499362. e 100 Head of Hogs—consisting of brood sows and feeding shoats from 40 to 109 /lbs; 1 register. Duroc sow {farrow in/March. ! : - 256 Head of Sheep—2s head of goo:d brecding ewes. e * | Poultry—7s Hoad Island Reds and Bluff Orpington pullets; 3 full blood- { ed cockerals. : e ‘ - Implemnts—l set freeching harness good as new set work harness wagon in good condition, flat bottom hay rack, new Ideal manure spreader wagon and box complete spring tooth harrow, cultivator and weed ecutter. Furniture—l large size rang ‘cook stove, chairs, bed and springs, 1 Fray Premier vacuum sweeper .with fuil | set of attachments. : | Miscellaneous—2ooo white cedar “]fence (posts, 50 gal. lubricating oil, | Edison Auburn Ajgx and Kokomo auto mrobile tires, 600 rods of all No. 9 '. sale day at t"a.inetaoii}ntaoinnnnnnn | Americn fence 1047 gasoline on sale day at 21c barring no change in ‘price. ‘Hay and grain—loo bu. oats, and 10 tons of hay. e ~Usual selling and buying terms. : ; Geo. Foster, Manager , E. R. Kurtz, Auctioneer, H. E. Hoak and C. C. Smith. Clerks
Sales Men Wanted
- The Atlas oOil Co., Cleveland, 0., marketers since 1896 quality Lubricants and Paints desires permanent representation for this and surrounding counties. Farming experience and broad acquaintance with farmers desirable. Must have own .auto- for solicitation.’ Liberal commipsioin witn weekly drawing account, balanced monthly. Several. convenient shipping points,. Writ’ fully for ' interview. i : : = B2t '~ “The Kentucky Derby” and Harold Lloyd two great features at Crystai Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday. Offi?e Positions in South Bend miay be secured by a short intensive course in the South Bend Business College. Either resident or Home Study Courses Typewriters furnished homé study Students. , Write for Budget No. 3. [~ " BOb6t*
oT e A R N R DIFFER IN VIEWS OF LIFE Orientals Look ‘at Existence in a Man- _ ner Radically Different From : oy the Westerners. ‘ We feel that the things others desire from life must be the same that we desire. Yet, in fact, the races of Asia and Africa—beyond the primitive belly-need — make quite different claims on life from ours. Most of us desire, among other things and above them, comfort and security ;' but Asia and Africa take little account of comfort and still less of security. They want the joy of living and a chance to do thelr own living for themselves; a life not so much protected, but with color and excitement in if, with the zest of creation and accomplishment in it—a life in which a heavy-handed man would have a chance, and anybody could come tg the top. The life of the Arabian Nights—the real Nights—is still the ideal of the Moslem East. For Orientals, those stories are not tales from faery, but such reckonings with the wonders of the world and of science as Mr. Wells used to give us before he became didactic. Or, to put the same point a little differently, the Orientals today . are like our ancestors in the age of Chaucer, with an unknown world around them, in which anything may any time happen—a world full of adventure and romance —Exchange. i
DERIVEQ FROM ROMAN NAME
Term “Scandinavian” Frequently Is in- . correctly Used, According to: This ~ Newspaper Writer. . :
The name “Scandinavia” is derived from one the Romans gave to the region now forming the southern part of Sweden. Gradually it was applied also' to Norway on the western part of the same peninsula, and then the Danes, who occup? an entirely separate peninsula, ¢ame to be‘includ/ed' in the term “Scandinavian” because of their racial relationship to the two countries to which the term. was applicable geographically. As the people of Iceland are descended from Norwegian colonists they, too, may be counted as Scandinavians,: and the same holds true of some Finns of Swedish descent, though the general population of Finland is ethnologically no more Scandinavian than are Magyars. | . : : . , The point is made by those interested in clarifying the terms ‘“‘Scandinavian” and “Scandinavia” that one should refrain from unqualified use of the former unless the first four atleast, of the nationalities mentioned, are ‘being referred to collectively, and the latter term should be uged only to indicate the entire region occupied by these nations.—Detroit News.
o NEWS NOTES j ~ Mrs. Smith Cunningham died at Topeka Saturday evening. The' little children of Mr. and Mrs. Jay Wiley are ill of the measles. : A uew babe was born to Mr. and Mrs. Henry Musser Sunday. ‘ Mrs. Tillman Stiver 53 is dead/ at her home near New Paris. After zero weather for four or five days the temperature moderated today somewhat. o o Leslie Harper Friday had his Dodge car quite badly damaged when it skiaded against a telephone pole. ri_er. and Mrs. ‘Glefl- Peterson -Were called to Bryan, Ohio, Saturday to at‘tend the funeral of a relative, Mrs. Sol Loeser arrived Sunday from Kalkaska, Mich., called here by ;the serious illness of her husband. Clifford .and Junior Jackson came from Elkhart to spend a. week with their grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Mel Jackson. - - e ! : Richard Klein 87 was found dead Sa;turday ‘on the stairs of his home in Fort Wayne. He was a prominent fur deader. . e R X
. -Miss Alice-Vallance and Miss Bess Grigson teachers. in: the Ligonier schools have been ill for the past few days. . e i : Howard Hire has returned to Waterloo to resume his old position as car reparier for the N; Y. C. railway company. Goniala John Truman aged 50 lost his lifs on, the roof of a building in' Fort Wayne aSturday when he came into‘ contact with live wires. Sl Rev. H. W. Thompson called here to officiate at the funeral of Dr. Gants paid the Banner a short call before returning ‘to his home in Decatur. To Bretz for Glasses 54% \ Attractive Béas. GLASSES | | Y s\,fi o B E, é‘“{% Py e ot
A happy expression and contented mind are the inevitable results of correctly focused and fitted glasses. § .. We take special eare in examin- " Ing the eyes of those advanced in age and assure accurate results in . every ‘ease, Gl ‘ ~ . Our Admirable Service Will Surely et "’_P.leasé ¥ou. . . : Nevin E. Bret _ Optometrist and Optielan o MOSTHMG B o
‘Don’t miss Harold Lloyd at Crystal Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday. - Dean Crockett and Squire Robinson spent Sunday in' New Paris visiting friends. s ! o Wanted—To buy a carpet and rug weaving loom. Inquire of C. H. dflf: Iries of the Banner Office. ~ 43btf ' Fof rent farm of 292 acres (near Ligonier. Everything furnished. . quire of W.:A. Cochran. = - ‘_{{llb‘t_t_ o < & : ‘ 3 ;:‘: ' i' For sale, iron flues 7 ft. 7 inches by 3 inches, great for fence posts. Inquire of Joe Millér. - .- 26btf For Sale—Some good chunk horses at the right price. Otis/ Baker Ligonier, Ind. e 49bt: 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 jn fair condition. See 8. C. Wilhelm. , . 49att For Séle——»S&nit?ry Lunch Cloths. Will glady 'call and show samples Mrs. Audley Green. Phone 3561. 51b3t
Mrs. Amos Jeffries who has been dangerously ill for the last week is semewhat improved but is still confinedioher Bed . ! ¢
Since removing to their farm in Benton township Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Eckhart receive their mail in Syracuse. : : e i
“A. M. Repine a former resident of Noble ' county died - Saturday of of pneumonia at Ninles, Mich. He is survived by his widow and three sons and a daughter.. - :
FOR SALE—Modern house seven rooms and good:basemént on Lincoln ‘Way South in paved district. Anyone interested may secure a bargajn, Fine shade and fruit trees. Call phone 133 Elnrer Klotz, Ligonier., .. .hZ2adt
. g Y G EEERMRE 0 e RS oo gt aa L e K : A : K | It can’t leak because it’s made In one ~ piece — that’s - why we guar. | antee satisfaction or your | - money baclz ~ Complete finefiof - Kantleek Rubber ~ ' goods. Prices- ‘ _from 40cto $4.75 ; , ¥ e ° C. S. Griffith The REXALL Store
STOCK OFFERING
A limited amount of common and preferred stock of the LIGONIER ARTIFICIAL ICE COMPANY is offered for for sale. The preferred stock v‘,ca'r‘ries.{_a 'gueran.te.e of ‘sév;en per cent payable semi-qhnually. This stock. is an ffinusUaflllyf good in‘veStment Jas-‘ a'ny‘ Ligdniervbusinesgiman wnlltestlfy : _ ‘ - For further particulars mqulre of L LKOOD, R. GTQdd orH. S. Pollatd ofthtsc:ty ‘» ,l
d%’ | THE WINCHESTER STORE | (FofrE\ W ’)/' s Phone 67 ;. o ; bfi[ , &> ~ Ligonier's Leading Hardware = i 5::: : : : iR D e N\ The Most Convenient - Flashlight " A Winchester Fl;ishlig‘ht is handy and easy to operate. It never fails to give a quick flash or a steady beam of light ~as youcommand. o : : _ : Such features as the patented safety switch, extra . thick seamless zil}c battery | ca‘n,; and spun-in lens make them the most popular flashlights we have ever sold. = This is flashlight week at our store. Come in and - see our complete assortment of styles and sizes.
r!.mx'“f\ T p— Wc) eo o | HA 1,1"."; 3y’ ’ ";.';:;;’) ] Winchester Miners Type Flashlight. Tested lens with silver plate reflector attractive in apperance efficient in operation. Price $l.OO. up complete with battery. i | : S Fois
For best results use Winchester Batteries
Weir & Cowley
Beauty and Durability . ere the ‘att ectived features of the new - Automobile But service and saving are qualities no to be igndrcd ‘Let me demonstrate this wonderful cat :for you . Otis Baker,Agent - Ligonier,lnd:: - . :
Advertise in the Banner
i\!\x\\\v‘?‘\ Q“ 3 ~ r:=:// | s : . 2y - ‘Winchesfer ‘Searchlight Type Designed for outdoor use. Throws a wide beam of © light. Fibre or nickel cases, -
