Ligonier Banner., Volume 62, Number 33A, Ligonier, Noble County, 10 September 1928 — Page 3
L& \\\ . N Stanley Surfus - FUNERAL DIRECTOR Ambulance Service 110 West Third St. Phone 495
(A TR O I R e
Foßretz tor Glasses
; ST ,)) 2y ’ ; Stylish, h . e, ¢ C"‘“ S fomd-. / 4 o_,af«‘ . . . ,3 ~«#% Distinctive RS 27 o 7 SR R s vcr v 3 b = o Remenmber that glasses are an important - factor i{n your personal appearance, : Carclessiy fitted. they detract frow 'your looks. . Adjusted with the precision that characterizes our service, our glisses will add distinction to your appearance and bring real comfort te Four eyes,
We Welcome the Opportunity of Serving You. = . . Nevin E. Bretz . Optometrist agd Gpticiam 130 5. Main St . QOB NN
Dr. Maurice Blue VETERINARIAN Office: Justamere Farm Phone: Ligonier 857
O. A. BILLMAN Wind Mills, Tanks, Pumps, Water Systems, Etc. Well Drilling Phone 333 LIGONIER
VERN B.FISHER Sanitary Plumbing’ and Heating . Phone 210 Ligonier, Ind
Bothwell & Vanderford Lawyers “hone 156 Ligonier. Indiana
Howard White WAWAKA, INDIANA AUCTIONEER Thone 2 on 1 Wawaka
Harry W. Simmons ~ Crustee Perry Townshsp ngceflat Farmers and Merchants Bank aturday Afternoon and Saturday Evening :
W. H. WIGTON Attorney-at-law Office in Zimmerman Block LIGONIER, ND
Harry L. Benner . Auctibneer Upen for all engagemends Wolf Lake, Indiana Both Noble and Whitley ==County Phones
PR - AR A e e S 2! There are all kinds ] of cheap printing—--2| butnoneofitisreal- | Iy cheap-—at least P| mot on a basis of g| value, Cheap stuff | is usually worth al--2| most what it costs. 2| Our printisgd fsn’t | 2| the cheapest you 2| can gdet, but it’s as 2| dood as the best. 1 - ‘ . f&.ml :LS.I Alx .’;‘;'m?f ',
!Firestone Tire Dealers, Announce Trade-in Sale, , A local event of no little importiance is the unique Tire Trade-in Sale inaugurated this week by Elijah & Roe, the well known local Firestone tdealers. S
Under this new plan, your old tires are worth money for every mile of unused service remaining in them. In other words, this progressive firm is making a jgenerous allowance this week on the unused mileage in your tires. Our advice is_to trade-in your old tires for new ones. It is conceded that this event is being held at just the right time because the forward-looking motorist is already thinking whether the tires he has run all this hot, blistering summer, and months bhefore, are the best fitted for safety and comfort during the fall and winter driving near at hand.
He figures he is money ahead, if, in exchange for the unused mileage in his present tires and the difference in cash, he can'get a complete new set and have all his needs taken care of just when the prices of Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires, Oldfield and Couriers are at their lowest. ‘ The great opportunities offered in this Trade-in Sale are additional reasons for the growing popularity of the “Buy at Home” movement, as naturally the tradé-in plan., is only feasible where tire service is available. More and more, the public is coming to see that inasmuch as this city’'s wefare is identical with that of its merchants, buying ones requirements at home is the logical thing to do.
It is. announced that the wellknown Firestone unlimited guarantee is in effect during this sale. All Fire stone, Oldfield and Courier tires are guaranteed for. life against any and all defects in material or workmanship. . i ' " AUGUST. o
0, it’s pleasant in the springtime When the chicks begin to run And baby pussy willows go climbing in the sfm . : Or later when apple and cherry blossoms blow And vou hear thé bees a humming Existence isn't slow. But you jest give me August. With my fish lines all intact | When the corn is in the tassef And the wheat is in the stack. The little lakes seem bluer And the woods a lively green With here and there a field of golden stubble : ' , 1 love to drive to the old farm home The home of Tim and Jack When the corn is in the tassel And the wheat is in the stack There is no use for talking . For better or for worse we'll back old Noble county i Against the universe : ! With the fields asmiling to heaven And Heaven smiling back - When the corn is in the tassel and And the wheat is in the stack.
They say a few rich fellows - Have gobbled everything ; But they cannot steal the sunshine INor the happiness by jing We hav'nt any millions But we don't feel the lack ‘ When the corn is in the tassel And the wheat is in the stack. George D. Gaby. Arrested on Charges of Banditry James. Chamberlain alias Chambers 40 and W. L. Sims ex-prohibition enforecement officer in Pennsylvania are under arrest at Fort Wayne charg od with banditry. They were arrested at Hicksville 0., when the inaneuvering of their automobile which is cquipped with a smoke screen prevented the town marshal of Hicksville from nabbing a cargo of booze. Clarence Guett and Arthur Battershell have identified th’e‘p\qir that held held them up recently.
84th U. B. Conference at Winona Rev. H. C. Beaychamp South Bend has 'been elected superintendent of the St. Joseph district of the United Brethren churchs. , : Ninety-seven ministers and sixtylaymen attended the Brethren's eighty-fourth conference which concluded Sunday. Friday’s program inluded addresses by L. L. Huffman Hammond and Jesse E. Eschbach Fort Wayne.
Recapture Bandit.
Howard Manning 22 Hammond who c¢scaped . from the Porter county jail last April by attacking a sheriff has heen apprehended at Cutshaw Mont., according to advices received. Manning was awaiting trial for robhery of a Hammond loan bank at the time ‘of his escape. '
N. Y. €. Employe Crushed.
C. M. Fisher of Elkhart was crushed to death late Thursday afternoon when he fell under the wheels of a tank car at the local W, Y. C. shops. His body was cut in two. Fisher was working under the car when a locomotive bumped into it.
Selig Buys Calf.
Sam Selig of Ligonier purchased a calf at the Goshen fair sale. Charles Smoker owner initial weight 400; final weight 870—total weight 470. Price $18.50 per cwt. - New Commissioner : ~ Oakie Warner Howe has been select ed as county commissioner of LaGrange to fill the unexpired term of S. B. Nichols who died recently.
Now s the time to y your siube. subscription—DO I’l‘){(%
| How to Reduce Live Stock Shipping Losses |
FINAL FEFDING BEFORE LOADING SHOULD BE LIGHT - | A-AY e ;“ S -y N b 2 ' IRRIVAL AT LOADING PENS SHOULD BE TIMED, TO PERMIT RESTING AND COOLING OFF BEFORE LOADING : ‘ e s [T 1o A - e ] ] T T l-'-'—-!——-=T _Lpnyg !f.','"_{f_ia_,—_fl Wl T NG
The loss suffered by producers, shippers and packers through - deaths, cripples and bruised flesh tn shipping live stock to market ‘probably reaches $15,000,000 a year, states the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation. This sum is equal to about half the value of all the hogs on farms in Ohio, South Dakota, or Kansas, on January 1, 1928, and is nearly as large as the value of all the hogs In Texas on that date. Much of this loss is avoidable. Some progress has been made In reducing it in recent years, but it remains large. In each of the last several years, railroads paid live stock loss claims aggregating over two million dollars. In many cases, these claims are settled on a 50-50 basis, so that the actual loss would be still larger. 'ln addition, there is a huge aggregate of small losses of one or two head of hogs or lambs, or a crippled steer or cow in a car on which no claim is paid. Records show that the death loss of hogs averages about one head ouf of every 500 marketed. With nearly 48,000,000 head sold in the last year, the “deadage” would be nearly 100,000 head. Dead live stock brings about 1 to 2 cents a pound and cripples sell at a discount of 2 to 3 cents below animals in sound condition.
The loss through bruised flesh includes about 5,000,000 pounds of pork and 4,000,000 pounds of beef tanked every year, about 5,000,000 pounds of pork and 2,500,00 pounds of beef sold as trimmings at a lower price, and the loss due to reduction of grade on hams and other cuts because of thelr bruised condition. Prices pald for live stock take into aecount the average loss the packer can expect through bruising, so!that most of it comes out of the farmer’s pocket. ; : :
Measures to prevent these losses begin at the farm, the Foundation continues. The last feed before loading should be light. Excitement or overexertion in moving to the loading pens should be avoided. Prod poles, pitehforks, clubs and whips should be tabooed, and slap sticks, consisting of a piece of heavy canvas on a short handle, used instead. Arrival at loading pens should be timed to permit resting and cooling off before loading. Cars should be inspected for projecting nails, loose boards, holes, or defective door fastenings. The car should be bedded with sand, sawdust or cinders, with straw or shavings added in winter to prevent hogs from piling up and causing losses through smothering. : i :
In hot weather, hog cars should be thoroughly wet down when loaded and the rallroad should drench the hogs at every avallable point, being careful to avoid throwing water directly upon them after they have become overheated. Four to six hurlap bags of ice which will drip over the,hogé should be hung in the car. Overloading should be avoided, especially in hot weather. Small, weak, extremely fat, or inactive or crippled animals are the classes most likely to be lost in shipping and_should be penned separately. Vicious or unruly animals should be tied. : ' ; :
Part of the responsibility in the reduction of shipping losses must be borne by th 2 railroads. Having chutes and other equipment at loading points in good condition, pens free from mud and with shelter from sun or storms, facilities for feeding, watering and sprinkling, careful handling of brakes to avold bumping and piling up of live stock in the cars, prompt movement on the roads and avoidance of delays in delivering cars from the terminal yards to the unloading docks are measures which help to minimize live stock losses. : L
l How to Produce and Market Quality Eggs l
= SR Y HAVE CLEAN NESTS, — —r-)S00& ONE FOR EVERY 4 OR 5 HENS = CLEAN? eA7 LITTER ON FLOORS / » L ’ % 4 ‘. 220 l & ! "’l‘ ‘IL(: - F e J‘g% @« > ‘fi 7.:‘1 go) — $ Py S o iam = e%\QR O O "" ; —_—= e COLLECT EGGS TWICE A : ' DAY IN HOT WEATHER g AND KEEP IN €OOL, ft‘ FAIRLY DRY PLACE' 78S . === &Y e 3 ; T\ A b)) — 2 .‘N LD LM e .e___
Production of quality eggs which will bring a premium over the lower grade offerings is largely up to the producer and when he refuses to take the extra precautions necessary to produce eggs which will grade as fancy, he bears the entire loss, says the Sears-Roebuck Agricultural Foundation. In a survey made by the United States Department of Agriculture of the eggs sold at New York City in one year it was found that less than 50 per cent of the eggs received would grade above firsts and command a premium for quality. ¢ &
Four salient rules of method for the producer who wants to produce and market high quality eggs can be outlined as follows: o 1. Have clean nests, one for every four or five hens.
Clean eggs are absolutely essential to rate a high grading, and clean surroundings are necessary to insure their production.. The poultry house should be kept scripulously clean and liberally supplied with clean straw or litter. Nests also should be kept clean. Dirty eggs sell at a big discount and spoil the sale of good eggs when packed in with. them. Washing destroys the “bloom” of the egg and hastens spoiling, -so that dirty eggs should never be washed. g
2. Sell, kill or confine male birds as soon as the hatching season is aver. ~ Fertlle eggs during the summer, alone, cost poultrymen over fifty million dollars. Infertile eggs keep much better, particularly in hot weather, and are superior for shipping, preserving and storing. ; : v 3. Collect eggs twice a day in hot weather and keep in a cool, clean, fairly dry place. Eggs are a perishable food and in warm weather should be treated much as sweet milk and cream., Collections in the morning and again at night prevent eggs from remalning in nests very long and becoming heated. The cellar or basement, provided it is not too damp, is usually the best place to keep eggs until they are marketed.
4. Keep small, dirty and cracked eggs at home and market graded eggs at least twice a week to a buyer who pays for quality and buys on a graded basis. o :
Eggs, even of the best quality, if dirty, grade as dirties and bring low prices. In addition, the inclusion of a few dirty eggs spoils the sale of the others with which they are packed. These eggs should be consumed on the farm, where they bring “full market value.” Many farmers are guilty of holding eggs for higher prices. This is particularly true in the autumn when prices start on a seasonal advance. Deterloration sets in and i{nstead of bringing higher prices, the eggs grade lower and sell at a substantial discount. The widespread use of the automobile makes it easy for farmers to market eggs frequently, so that there is no excuse for eggs being held longer than three or four days, especlally in hot weather.
More local dealers are buying on a graded basig, so that the producer who sells fine big eggs is paid® premium, the Foundation continues. If the dealer still insists in buying all eggs.at one price, regardless of quality, the farmer should ‘seek another outlet, such as a few customers with whom he deals direct, or a city commission firm which caters-to a high-class trade,
Wakarusa Man Robbed.
Police are, looking for a man who robbed Milo Stump Wakarusa barber of $2O at the Miller hotel in Warsaw Saturday night. Stump stepped out of his reom for a few minutes and when he. returned his pocketbook was gone. s
THE LIGONIER BANNER, LIGONIER, INDIANA.
| USE CANVAS SLAPSTICK [y, INSTEAD .OF FORK OR Tt CLUB, TO PREVENT ) | BRUISING 4 ‘s Q . < T, B : OVERLOADING SHOULD BE AVOIDED, AND SMALL OR EXTREMELY FAT ANIMALS SHOULD BE PENNED SEPARA TELY e — e ——={fh = ==7 l-z.—zz'r..gga‘; - :-:.b-! ol \—\aum~,,, v,/ SEARS-ROEBUCK AGRICULTURAL FOUNDATION
SELL,KILL,OR CON- (7 , FINE MALE BIRDS % WHEN HATCHING! d ‘ SEASON 15 OVER , \\ W, /S oot = { B 2N N L 7 PR s e o) g \‘ ; i el 2 § = __—————_"’N:\ -Ei 4 .. — LB & S B ) NN = KEEP SMALL, DIRTY, AND g 2 CRACKED £GGS AT HOME {2708 AND MARKET GRADFD & = &8 EGGS AT LEAST TWICE & A WEEK TO BUYER WHO ; PAYS FOR QUALITY AND / BUYS ON GRADED BASIS J\| & ' 3 A (g - .r.'.’-.&.—.;‘s - ‘};“\\ (1 T : esaesald SEARS-ROEBUCK AGRICULTURAL FOUNDATION
Dies at Benton.
Warren Routson 50 died Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o’clock at his home one and a half miles west of Benton, following a three months’ illness of heart trouble. -He was born in Elkhart county and had lived in and near Benton all of his life,
1 Lads Held as Robbers., Three youths, all under 21 vears of age, were held at Indianapolis as a result of their confessions to approximately forty holdups: and burglaries. W »
~ The three, Harry Moly, 19, John McCarthy, 19, and Milburn Jones 19, confessed to eighteen ‘holdups, one store burglary, the theft of twenty automobiles, and the passing of worth less checks amounting to $500: - Detectives said they believed the crimes admitted amounted to only a small part of the total activities of the youths. S
Bold Chicken Trief.
After the boom of a shot gun had summarily interrupted a chicken thief in broad daylight, the sharp demand to “halt” brolught him face to face with a loaded shot gun in the hands of Miss Frances Reece, Haflghter of Charles Reece of Whitley county. He was ordered to release the chickens he had stolen and placed in his car and after doing this he speeded away. |
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION.
~ Notice is hereby given that the undersigned Citizens Bank, Ligonier, Indiana, has been duly appointed and has qualified as administrator of the estate of Anna C. Silburn, deceased, and the heirs and creditors of said decedent and all other persons interested in her estate will be governed accordingly. Said estate is presumably solvent. I : Citizens Bankk, Ligonier, Indiana r Administrator. Bothwell & Vanderford Ligonier Indiana, attorneys for estate. 33a3w
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THERE ls nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as an antidote for pain. Safe, or physicians wouldn't use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several million users would have turned to something else. But get real Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed in red: - .
.B ‘ : [/ L e .F’ :‘\4 J;._‘ /et -. > B it 1 BA¢E T 54 rl > / ‘7‘ 7 £ £Sh ISR N (3 j NP 1 a . ‘;\:'?‘-‘& e e/ Aspirin is e the trade mark of L Bayer Manufacture 2 of {douoacet!cacldester of Salieylicacid
dere’stheway Y \\x LA we look at it: to \\y\gg be the best tire NONS dealers in town \%’Q we must have the best tires! That’s our aim—tobethebest intown! So, there justisn’t any other way about it—we sell Goodyear Tires exclusively. We Know OGur Rubber Believe us, we’ve put in a long, long timein the tire business. ‘We know just why some tires won’t do at all. You-may sell a man one of them, but he’ll never come back for more. We want every customer to remember us when he needs a tire — and Goodyear Tires satisfy. '
Complete Price Range Goodyear provides us with a
. Make This Your Tire Headquarte;r.sg— o | Honest Prices—Honest Tires—Honest Service Kiester Electric Shop Lincoln Way West - Phone4Bl - . Ligonier, Ind
Hoine Realty and Investment Co. f ROOMS 3 AND 4 SECOND FLOOR ; LEVY BLOCK, LIGONIER,T IND. : o ARENRTMage ' ' City Properties and Farms for sa!e fhat will appeal to you, especially when you consider the possibility of future prices. = . | - FARMLOANS 57 FFDERAL LAND BANK FARM 1.0AN557 O with’ EXCEPTIONAL Pri;velege Clause o . - SECURITIES | ~ The Securities that we have to offér, are of the highest type. GRAVEL ROAD. SCHOOL, PUBLIC UTILITY and REAL ESTATE PREFERRED STOCK, all TAXFREE. = - . - Official Indiana I;icen§e' Branch Automobile, Truck, Chauffeurs License, Cerlificates ~ of Titles and Transfers. All given special : : attention. - o
i%] Holding the e o ercury below the SRR Ny : : ra DANGER LINE Scientific tests by the United Shie hineai off/ sgriculture as well s State and City boards of health show that the best temperature for keeping fresh foods from spoiling is below fifty degrees Fahronheit. ELECtric refrigeration holds the temperature at the point where bactena are dormant. | Place a thermometer in your refrigerator and | see if you are risking the health of your family with tainted food. | Electricity to Serve You , TNDIANA & Mictica NoIRNA, b 4 Y 32 A g| & e = 24 &
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% complete line of tires—Good- - year All-Weather . Tread Balloons, : known as ‘‘The Werld’s Greatest Tire,” for the man who wants the best tire at any price. And, then, for the man who must have a lowpriced tire we have Goodyear Pathfinders —a remarkable tire at aremarkably low figure. Goodyear. Service, teo With every tire we sell goes real tire service—we putiton properly, see that the tube is . correctly installed and inflated; we give you free inflation to help you keep your tires operating at their best; we check your wheels; see that everything is going right to make your tires fist along, longtime. - |
