Ligonier Banner., Volume 60, Number 33A, Ligonier, Noble County, 4 October 1926 — Page 3

M. G, WilliamsO.M. OSTEOPATHIC MASSAGE ELECTRICAL TREATMENTS Office Hours 9:30 to 11:30; 1 % & and 7 to 8. Other Hours by appointment Phone 103 Zimmerman Bldg. Harry L. Benner m Oneet Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley County Phones

How about your letterheads, billheads, statem : m&fd&‘&mmfi then ok us £ ush thern ut ity (hoady ot W time and our motto is that any- ’ ’ thing that’s - e % g ingisworth W\ €,,_‘\,J, f/? g f,’;’/”f 7, (\_, V}’l') y - S u Aave that order N-O-W thile we have the time to do Printing as & ehould be m

- 0. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, . Water Systems, Etc. | Well Drilling Phone 333 LIGONIER Next door to Ford Garage W. A. JACKSON Crustee Perry Townshsp Office Mier State Bank. Ligonier Dr. Maurice Blue "VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm. Phone: Ligonier 857

B Printing. Prompt and Careful Attention

b s " e : to your @& Wc_nrereatgy at all umes to e M‘W%

VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing] and Heating Phone 210 Ligonier,§lnd Howard White . WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Phone 2 on 1 Wawaka E. R. Kurtz Auctioneer * Znone No. 65, Ligonier.”™ '

We cen wrn out anydfiwdn,pdfins fine that you' need, at a price as low as any one, Quality, material e

The Flaming Frontier. ) Thousands 'of people in the great cast. Historic figures headed by sixteen stars. A monumental achievement. Hordes of Indians in thrilling realistic battle. Three full regiments of U. S. cavalry ~ Preparatory work for the picture begun over two and one half years ago. The greatest feats of horsemanship ever seen in Western pictures! The Exact reproduction of West Point with its glorious military promp of the late 70’s. - The recklessness of the old West during that same period Fort Hayes the Custer outpost, built again in the hills above Universal City Crane City refuge of ~ gamblers and smugglers of the old West constructed at Switzler’s Island Oregon in the true reproduction of the original surrounding. Special roads built for the giant trucks used te transport supplies into the wilderness. Over a thousand Indians specially engaged f or the‘ giant battle scenes with 212 officers and men in Custer’'s command. (The actual number in battle according to history.) Fifteen Hundred Horses used to carry the ammunition and small supplies alone. Sixteen Cameras used to photograph Custer’s last stand. Battle action organized with historiqg military precision under the supervision of Colonel Byran U. S. A. retired a West Point Officer of the clasg of 1885 and hundreds of other details too mumerous to mention—the spectacle no child—student or parent should miss. See it at Crystal next Tuesday Wednesday Thursday. Boosting Dr. Hostettler The desire of Cylde A. Walb of LaGrange Republican statec hairman, that his neighbor and family physician, Dr. A. J. Hostettler of LaGrange receive the appointment as a member of the state board of health to fill the vacancy caused by the recent resignation of Dr. Homer C. Haas of Peru is expected to have considerable Weight with the state appointing committee; it was learneg Saturday following a preliminary meeting of the committee Friday. Mr. Walb it was learned is pressing the case of the LaGrange physician with some vigor. The committee having the power of appointment consistg of Governor Ed Jackson; L. S. Bow, man auditor of state and F. E. Schortemeier secretary of state. _

: A Five-Day Week. Arthur Brisbane says: _ “Henry Ford announces five day week for working people in all hisg plants and that means about fifty industries—coal mines, iron mines, lum, ber camps, factories machine shops etc. Some years ago when the averageg man was ‘“well paid” with $2.50 a day for 10 hours Ford announced $5 as the minimum for an eight-hour day. Next he made the minimum $6. Now he reduces the working week to five days and intends that every good man shall earn in five days as much as hd has earned hitherto in six days. No Watson Endorsement. An enterprising reporter for the Indianapolis News after a talk with W. H. Settle president of the Indiana Farm Federation printed a story that the organization had inq;brsed the candidacy of James E. Watson for the United States senate. The _report traveled over the state when Mr. Settle nailed it as untrue in an authorized interview. " Watson cannot secure the support of the farmers after inactivity of 3¢ years in public life in their interest. The indorsement story was a fake. About 70 Miles Long. Elkhart river a South Bend Tribune writer on history says is about 70 miles long. It’s source is in many small lakes in Noble and LaGrange counties and it flows in a northwesterly direction through Noble and La@Grange counties emptying into the St. Joseph river at Island park Elkhart.

Dr. Black Report. 1 Dr. Black reports the birth of a son‘ at Wilmot to Mr. and Mrs. Roy Staufs fer South Bend. The doctor reported the following tonsil operations: Willo+ dene and Margaret Franks, Albion, Jacob Owen Heffner Topeka. A daughter was born to Mr. nad Mrs. Byron Grubbs north of town. Peppermint oil Market. Peppermint oil is still weak on the markets at New York and it is expected that the stituation will not be changed until prices are well below present levels. Natural oil is quoted at $6.75- $7 a pound while distilled is at $7.25-7.50 per pound. v Rivoms 'y mablans sy Now in Albion. Harold Sorgenfrei former principal of the WNorth school in Elkhart township and Noble county club leader is now in charge of the A. & P. store at Albion. He and his family moved from the Yant home to Albion recently. % Child Swallows Todine. The three year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hostettler living six miles east of Goshen on the Fish Lake road geverely burned his stomach and throat when he swallowed about an ounce of tincture of iodine. s

Called to Ilinois. Dr. M. G. Williams was called to Danville, Ilinois Saturday by a telegram announcing the death of his wife's mother Mrs. John Stuede. Mrs. Williams was at the bedside of her mother when the end came. : Bank Liquidates. The State Bank of Mongo northeast, of LaGrange has closed its doors dug to lack of business The bank was entirely solvent. . . i > A ) e L

THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA

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. GEO. W. DAVIES Secretary of the American PolandChina Record Assocliation, Explaining How Farmers May Add One Hundred Miilion Dollars to Their Annual Income by Following the Ton-Litter ldea.

' THE American farmer will apply I in' his pig raising certain practical ‘principles made available to him by science and experience he can boost his income $100,000,000 a year from this one source alone. Next month will witness the return of the ton-litter reports. Farmers who want to learn how to make more money out of their “mortgage-lifters,” will study these master lessons of economic pork production with greatest care, according to the Sears-Roe-buck Agricultural Foundation, which exhibited the champion two-ton litter last year. : In effect the ‘“Ton-Litter” means a material reduction in the overhead carried by the farmer on his pigs by getting more pigs to market from each of his sows. More pigs from less Sows and few simple rules of sanitation in their raising, mark all the difference to the farmer making this $100,000,000 or doing without {t. Just what the “Ton Litter” can do for the farmer was demonstrated in dramatic fashion at the American Royal Livestock Show at Kansas City and the International Idvestock Exposition at Chicago last fall. The thousands of men and women who thronged both of these shows were amazed to learn that the 18 pigs comprising the world’s ' champion litter of pigs ‘exhibited by the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation weighed 4,789 pounds at six months of age. Over two tons of pork from\one sow in 180 days!Largely as a result of the Foundation’s pig exhibit, and brought closer home by a depressed corn market, the “Ton Litter” is rapidly winning many converts among farmers who had previously scoffed at it. They are coming around to see that through proper feeding, breeding, care, and management. they can turn out at six months a litter of pigs weighing 2,000 pounds that had previously taken them twelve to eighteen months to produce. - Business Methods Used. “In exhibiting the world’s champion Ittter of pigs at the two largest Hve-

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The biggest two-ton litter ever produced—l 6 pigs out of a single sow—weighing 4,789 pounds in 180 days. The champion litter was shown at the live stock expositions In Kansas City and Chicago last fall by its owner, the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation. Tl e £ :

State Meeting at Laporte. Delegates to the statg W. C. T. U. convention to be held in Laporte in October are now being chosen in the different communities. Strayed—O. I C. Gilt weight about one hundred pounds. Phone 863. L. s 82b2t*

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Prof 3. R.Wiley, of Purdue oy o of

F. H. Norman, of Roenn, Indiane, who produced the first_ton-litter on rec_ord.

stock shows in America, the SearsRoebuck Agricultural Foundation hoped to demonstrate just what businesslike methods in growing hogs for the market would do for the farmer,” says Samuel R. Guard, director of the Foundation. “When these ‘Ton Litter’ contests were first started the idea was to produce 2,000 pounds of pork in six months from a litter of ten. That meant an average of 200 pounds a pig in six months. Some farmers believed this was too much, but many of them, by breeding prolific, rapidly maturing stock of good size, succeeded in producing litters weighing over a ton. The world’s champion litter went well over. the two-ton mark in six months, instead of a single ton. This should convince the- average farmer. that a production of ‘Ton Litters’ is not such a difficult matter after all. We fully expect to see the 4,-789-pound record eclipsed this year. The “Ton Litter” idea, which is well on the way to revolutionizing the pork production industry, first came into the mind of Professor James R. Wiley, swine extension speclalist of Purdue University and assistant secretary of the Indiana Livestock Breeders’ Association. In a statement to the Foundation, he tells some of the circumstances that provided the setting of the first “Ton Litter” project. Prof. Wiley’s Work. Gl

. “There were several things that led up to the organization and subsequent development of ‘“Ton Litter” work,” Mr. Wiley declares. ‘ln the first place, two or three years of extension work among hog producers in Indiana showed the need for a project that would teach good management. 1 found that many Indiana farmers kpew what good rations were and they were :feeding them. The vast number of Indiana hogs I also found were well-bred and if fed and managed right would top the market. We therefore first organized what we call Hog Production Demonstrations, in which the farmer co-operating with us kept a record of the feed and reported on various items of management. The task of keeping records did not appeal to the farmer, and so while this work . never became general, we did get some good data on the importance of raising big litters of pigs. On a group of 52 farms we found that it took 278 pounds of feed to produce a weanling pig when an average. of four pigs were raised per litter. When an average of six pligs were raised per litter it took 182 pounds of feed, and when litters averaging seven and onehalf pigs were brought up to weight, only 138.-pounds of feed was required. We also found that when all were marketed the pork produced where seven or more hogs were marketed per Mtter cost approximately a dollar a hundred less than on farms ‘where five hogs or under per litter went to market.” - ] .

L Five Pigs to the Litter. ~ Mr. Wiley's survey also showed that } the average litter contained but five and “seven-tenths pigs and that the average weight of those litters at six months of age was low—l,oBo pounds for those made up of from five to seven pigs. This convinced Mr. Wiley that the key to increased hog profit lay In the prolificacy in sows and the ability to grow rapidly in pigs.

Must Have the Banner. Nelson ‘Hoover one of the proprietors of the Hoover CGoal Mining Co., - of Hooversville Pa., and a former re,sident of Noble county in renewing his subscription says he must have the “Old Reliable Ligonier Banner.” . Now is the time to pav vour sube

That was in 1922. Many of the leadIng hog growers looked upon the development of one-ton litters ‘in six months” time under average farm conditions as nothing more than an idle dream ‘and politely refused to take part in the contest. Mr. Wiley and his associates, however, scoured around the state until they had found a sufficient number. of farmers who were willing to follow the few simple yet rigid rules laid down for the contest. The work began. Long before the pigs were six months old the excellent results of the work became evident. Thirty-six ton litters were marketed in Indiana that year as a result of that contest. And the “Doubting Thomases” had to admit that the ralising of litters weighing a ton in 180 days under average everyday farm conditions. was not only possible, but could be accomplished without much difficulty. After the first season’s work, the swine extension men in other states were so completely sold on the tonlitter idea that the organization of ton litters was immediately made a major project in practically every section of the country. From these thirtysix litters in the one ton class in 1922, interest in -the work has continued to grow until last year 741 ton litters were reported in 23 states. Following are the states where ton litter contests flourished last year, and the number of ton litters credited to each: Illinois ........122 Texas ........ 16 Pennsylvania ~121 Idaho ..,..... 8 [ndiana ........ 85 Georgia ...... 8 Minnesota ...... 79 Oregon ....... 5 Tennessee ...... 67 Vll‘{l.nla Vi 4' Kentucky ...... 44 Loulsiana .... 3 Ohfo ........... 44 North Dakota. 3 Missourl ....... 85 Kansas ....... 2 Wisconsin ...... 84 N:bnrauku Nlanteie i fowa ............27 Utah ......... 2 Oklahoma ...... 21 North Carolina 1 Michigan ....... 18 : — ' Total .........741§ Two Tons of Pork on Hoof. 1

The astounding thing about the 1925 “Ton Litter” contest in the various states is the phenomenal weight to which some of these litters have been brought up. Over seventeen toms of hogs from eight sows on seven farms in six states were produced in one year. These eight sows, with one in Texas in 1924, are the dams of the only known litters in the world to reach a weight of two tons or more at 180 days of age. They demonstrate absolutely that not only can one ton of pork on the hoof be made in six months, but that double that amount is possible if the best methods. of breeding, -feeding amd management are followed. ;

The champion litter of the year and of all time was produced by the Rawleigh Farms at Freeport, 111. This remarkable group of 16 purebred Po-land-China pigs reached the world’s record weight of 4,789 pounds in six months after passing the one-ton mark when 102 days old. These pigs were rescued gy'the Sears-Roebuck Agriculturat Foundation from 25,000 others on the Chicago -market when they were within five minutes of the ‘sticker’s” knife in the- packing plant. They were then used to make: up one of the feature educational exhibits at last year’s American Royal and- the International Livestock Shows. Another litter on the same farm, consisting of 15 pigs, weighed 4,511 pounds in 180 days, the second highest weight on record. :

Strict adherence to modern sanitation practices was followed in the development of these two litters. Blue grass before weaning and rape afterwards, with plenty of fresh, clean water were furnished. Corn, tankage, minerals, skim milk and kitchen waste 'with a pig meal consisting of bran, corn meal, linseed meal, rolled oats, middlings, beef scrap, gluten feed, dried buttermilk, molasses, salt and charcoal made up the concentrate allowance. The eost of feed, labor, freight and commission left a profit of approximately 7 cents a pound for the heaviest litter. !

' Thieves Steal Peaches. | ' Sneak thieves stole several,bushel®¥] . of peaches from the orchard of Mr.| - and Mrs. John Rogers near Albion last| ' week leaving no clue. ' e ' ‘Wanted Work at plain sewing, sweeping ‘dusting or cooking. 217| . Smith street, Ligonier. . 2obte

_ | Lo e 20 Years of Steady - Growih ‘ This bank by protecting its de- ~ positors interests, smoothing out “their business problems and making them feel at home, has earned their confidence and recommendation --- Thats How - We Have Grown. S " Your Checking Account will be Appreciated. . We pay 44, on time deposits and saving account The Farmers & Merchants | ~ Trust Company “THE BANK OF SAFETY AND FRIENDLY SBRVICE.”

Home Realty and Investment Co. ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER, IND. _ J. L. HENRY Manager - Real Estate, Stocks and Bonds | . and ; ' Property Rentals We have some REAL BARGAINS in REAL ESTATE, never before offered to the public. Call and let us explain the terms and then take you to SEE them ’ ~ Ifyou are in the market for = | INSURANCE 3. Just call 168 and we will call and quote you rates and terms , ‘ on any of the following \ AUTOMOBILE, FIRE and CYCLONE. LIFE, WORKMAN'S COMPENSATION ’ and » - EMPLOYERS LIABILITY ) - Satisfactery Sgrvice, 'OUR aim ~ YOUR BUSINESS SOLICITED

You need not’run the Bold wo'm out tires any longer when you can buy good tires at such low prices A 2 Cord .. . 316 30x3 1-2 Oversize C0rd...................$ 8.50 | 29x4.40 8a1100m.........................$ 9.50 30x4.75 8a1100n.........................81325 30x525 Balloen ... ... .. $1460 31x525 8a1100n........... ... ...516.25 30x5.771 8a1100n.......:.........0.........318.65 Tt will pay yew to call and get ‘oin' prices before you ‘buy tires. All sizes at low cost. * . Kiester Electric Shop Phone 481 - Lincoln Way West

’ ,” -.: N P 3 %, i 5 - : v ATSR P S B L . e°s ° ) e A Refreshing Night’s Ride on Lake Erie { ; Take a palatial C& B Line Steamer from Cleveland to Buffalo andenjoya | ; cool, clean stateroom arriving in the morning, rested by the break in vour ! journey. See Buffalo’s beautiful sarks and boulevards en route to Niagara ol i’ana, the gateway to Canadian and Eastern pleasure resorts. Your rail ticket is good on our steamers. Each way—every night—between ; ! Cleveland and Buffalo leaving at 9:00 p. m.; arriving at 7:”0 a. m. {Eastern Standard Time). g Fare ss.so—Round Trip Fare, $9.50 New Tourist-Automobile Rate, $5.00 and up with Special Two Day Round Trip Auto Rate, $5.00 u;d up. : . ! I The Cleveland and Busfalo C&B e = ‘Transit Company . ®oy (S , East Ninth Street Pier INE S ' /“Q\ . Cleveland, Ohio : R Y - s N » % S ANy Fomcentmme | \ 35k w i Nl e :;"..‘> e i ) e .‘l“fl"l k\\“‘ b T :f-"::!“‘\‘\\. s ’IQ “\ | 5 [ S B 0 eRT i N "\“hx s : 24 r.‘.._““ = LTy ‘:-»A[;NT._;- T R A B Sy 1 P G LT Set SR fipcn DR oy S 8 el %.M#;:\‘:{‘\‘\ 4 SRR+ D - i S T, L e DY & v e | /11 s - . .' o~ e o I o ,>~(- o g % v , W )

_ fsd ,’, 8 }‘\' . | B . $2.00 The Year