Walkerton Independent, Volume 45, Number 46, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 April 1920 — Page 3

I — ------7] When in South Bend make Wyman's your Headquarter! || l GEORGE WYMAN &CO J p •* —Come and See Us— J Rr- Z *^b' j I I 1 i liOs 1 L * h il Hti s 4BB' I fkrrHHl I—fw' m h 1 h r”"- f» InCßTE^^mii I "W HM N. V. P. Wardrobe 1 runk Closed Top $41.50 Open Top $45.00 j /^\UR SPECIAL—A full sized, riveted, fibre-cov- I ered Veneer panel wardrobe trunk. Strength j I combined with beauty and convenience at a price I which attracts the favorable attention of people who I know trunk values. Closed top —$41.50—Open top —545.00. Other N. V. P. wardrobe trunks —$30.00 to $85.00. N. V. P. steamer and dress trunks—slß.oo to । $35.00. Indestructo wardrobe trunks —$75.00 to $130.00. Ilndestructo steamer and dress trunks —$40.00 to $55.00. LUGGAGE No matter where your traveling leads you to, a voyage is made much more pleasant by suitable luggage. Opinions vary as to weight and size of a bag or suit case, but in this basement luggage shop, you will find the j right weight and size that you desire. Matting suitcases sl.lO to $12.50. Fibre suitcases—sl.7s to SIO.OO. Leather suitcases—sl2.so to $40.00. Leather bags—s7.so to $55.00. Bags of imitation leather—s4.oo to SIO.OO. Boston Bags—s6.so to $18.50. Over night bags and cases, $8.50 to $17.00. , Hat boxes, automobile cases, and week-end trunks. $9.75 to $45.00. Safeguarded Investments PAYING OUR PARTIAL PAYMENT INVESTMENT PLAN | FROM makes it easy to save money systematically . 6TO 12 and to accumulate high class securities pay- > Per Cent ing good dividend returns and, capable of j I large increases in value. Let us explain this^plan to you. Tell us how much you can pay down and how much you can pay monthly. Tell us what securities you have, if you have any, so we may advise ?you as to their present value, stability and future. We will make up a special investment suggestion for you according to what you can afford to invest on this partial payment plan either on 10-payment or 20-payment basis. Write to our Department A-2 for our paper “Guaranteed Investments” giving advice on the market conditions—it will interest you. Securities Trust Company 10 South LaSalle Street CHICAGO, ILL.

( W K__ EYES EXAMINED and Headaches relieved without the use Drags by H. LEMONTREE South Bend’s Leading Optometrist and Manufacturing Optician Open till 6 P. M. 222% S. Michigan Street Phone Lincoln 6504 Dr. Arthur A. Pons D-C-O. D-C and D-E-T. Chronic Diseases, Nervousness and Rhcmnatlm Rome Phone 8593 114 W. Washington St. ©ver Baker’s Shoe Store—2nd Floor SOUTH BEND. IND. DR. W. C. WISENBAUGH DENTIST | OFFICE HOURS: Plate work aud fli- BA.M toL-»A M 4ag« a»pecialty l^X)p.ni.tos Cp m Prices reasonable. Sundaysby — Appotuttneo North Liberty. Ind.

! Plain Questions to Walker ton People. ! Every Walkerton Header Will \dinit the Soundness of the Logic. Would Walkerton people recommend'Doan’s Kidney Pills as they do if the medicine were not reliable? Would they confirm their statements after years have elapsed if their experiences did not show the remedy to be deserving of it? Statements like the following must carry conviction to the mind of every reader: Mrs. George Beiter, Walkerion. says: “I had severe pains all over my body and my back ached constantly. I was very nervous, my hands were swollen and I had rheumatic pains. Doan’s Kidney Pills helped me from the start and gave me wonderful benefit.” LASTING RES! LTS Over five years later, Mrs. Beiter said: “I haven’t needed Doan’s Kidney Pills in a long time. Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills-~the same that Mrs. Beiter had. Foster-Milburn Co , Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. The Kilmer Co., North Liberty W. H. Smith and S. A. Nusbaum, Walkerton AGENTS FOR South’Bend Floral Co. FLOWERS FOR WEDDINGS, PARTIES AND FUNERALS.

LITTLE MAID IN THE “MOON DOOR” SYMBOL OF THE HOPE OF NEW CHINA ; ■ Z’W Wm.I K S 1 & rMt-WI- t • , z -iy fJu i-.iß \ ' ' fll < W WL ■ I -JfJHBBI ■ m v iWWW . J' Ji f“ ■ Jb' ' 7 (L . Ginling College, at Nanking, Only Girls’ School in Five Provinces With Population of 110,000,000—Interchurch World Movement to AJd l Institution.

The way to all tilings at Ginling lies through the moon door. And through the moon door on the way to wisdom pass and repass every day the 70 Chinese maidens of the “gung-gwan.” The moon door at Ginling is round as the full moon whence it has its name. And the Chinese maiden, as she steps over its high sill, may spread wide her arms and still not touch its rim with the tips of her fingers. Sometimes across the courtyard is another moon door, and beyond it, like a smaller concentric circle, still another, leading on through that Chinese puzzle of a iiouse, the “gung-gwan,” or official residence at Nanking China, which is now the home of Ginling College for Chinese girls—one of the three women’s colleges in all China. The moon door is but a single feature of the old place. Once inside the high stone walls that inclose it. one is lost in a maze of courts ami galleries ami covered passages and isolated rooms. The whole is China, old China and new. The moon doors and the architecture as a whole lend the dignity and the greatness of old China. But the laboratories and dormitories, libraries and studies made from the old rooms of state and ceremony are modern, just as the spirit of the Chinese girls who use them Is modern; just as the force of America is behind it all. represented by the five American missionary organizations and the American Smith College which maintain Ginling, la modern. One pushes ajar the halves of a

rne nangar. Many people think that the airplane word “hangar” is an affectation and is the late adaption of a French word. A look Into the Standard dictionary will reveal the fact that Thackeray uses the word and that it means a shed, not primarily a place to hang a dirigible.—Hartford Courant.

*■= ■ T— I Wil How to Lower Your Meat Bills । Hints From the Department of Justice — — r - - ■■tomii *

SPECIALIZE in buying meat AND SAVE MONEY. The housewife of the present generation and particularly of the past year or so, during which money has been rather plentiful, has been demanding meats from one or two cuts of beef; that is, cuts from the loin for steak and cuts from the ribs for roasts. This has created a tremendous demand for the loins and ribs, leaving an oversupply of the major portion . of the carcass, which the retailer must dispose of at a disadvantage, owing to the lack of demand. If Mrs. Housewife would take more interest and specialize in her buying, end would read carefully the articles that have been and are being published, calling her attention to the cheaper meats, she would realize a substantial saving. She would soon become convinced that there is exceptionally good meat in the round, rump, plates, chuck, etc. In the olden days Mrs. Housewife would call for a chuck steak, round steak, as well as an occasional porterhouse. Mrs. Housewife now knows only one steak, and that is the porterhouse, which is naturally the most expensive, as it is the most called for, and it logically must stand the extra expense. It is the world old law of supply n nd demand. How many housewives know that from the chuck they can get steaks, boiling beef, pot roasts and stew meats? The carcass (excepting the loins and ribs) contains meats that are just as appetizing, delicious and nutritious as the more expensive cuts, which are the ribs and loins. Unfortunately, however, custom recently has dictated that the ribs and loins be considered the more popular, hence the cheaper cuts have really gone out of their own. A few years ago the average house wife usually called for a chuck steak or round steak as a matter of course. In fact, it was the daily diet and one seldom thought of ordering sirloin or porterhouse steak, except on special occasions. A good comparison would be that of ordering chicken or turkey for every day of the week just because It happens to be a “treat” or a special delicacy, and if chicken or turkey were thus ordered the outcome wou.d simply be higher prices, due to the demand being larger than the supply. The round makes wonderful steaks*

moon door, latticed over paper in plum blossom and honeycomb design, and enters a chemical laboratory set up in a room with 20 windows, each framed in dragon tracery. And from the flagstones of the laboratory floor, often is scraped fungi and mold for use under the microscope. These are typical contrasts of Ginling College, revealed through the survey of the Chinese field now being made by the Interchurch World movement, which seeks to promote the closer co-operation of Protestant Churches of America in attaining their world aims. Ginling College, the survey shows, is at the heart of five Chinese provinces with a total population of 110.000.000 — and is the only woman’s college in that great area. Yet its capacity to receive young Chinese girls Is limited b.v the capacity of the old “gung-gwan.” rented since the beginning of the institution, four years ago. Fund of SSOO 000. Ginling owns 37 at s of land on the hills beside the Yangtze river. In the Interchurch World Movement sur- । vey of China, there is a budget Item . of $500,000. It is there to show the Churches of America how they can place upon that land on the hill the library, administration building, recitation buildings, chapel—all that are needed for a modern college. Unless the fund Is available by 1021, many young women of China seeking college educations must be denied admission to Ginling. because the old “gunggwan” is too SEfaall. T

Hawks Not All Enemies. » The department off agriculture says 1 that of the 50 prir clpal varieties of > hawks 47 are of bet efit to the farmer - since they catch grt at numbers of rot dents that injure crops. It is even t said that a hawk c n the farm is as » valuable as a cow. There are three - varieties of hawks 1 hat are deadly to chickens and shouldj be shot on sight.

I pot roast or corned beef. It represents approximately 23 per cent of the ’ entire beef carcass, and the chuck rep- j resents approximately 34 per cent. The : loins represent 17 per cent and the i ribs 9 per cent, and of the entire carcass there is actually less than 5 per cent porterhouse steak, 3 per cent of club steak and about 9 per cent of sirloin steak. Among the many appetizing uses of the chuck are roasts, steaks, pot roasts, stews, boiling beef, pot pie meat and hamburger, with the fore shank for soup meat and soup bones. There has lately arisen such a remarkable demand for one or two expensive kinds of meats that people who formerly were entirely satisfied with what represents the less expensive portions never even think of ; calling for them. At the same time they continually complain of their meat bills without ►topping to analyze the reason. ' “Is that the best you have?” seems to be the by-word., The more it costs the more people want it. The less ex- < pensive (although often very good ar- ' tides), go begging. If a dealer has to buy a certain portion of the cheaper articles along with his good articles and he cannot sell the cheaper ones, i YOU pay the price for what he is obliged to lose. The same applies to meats. The butcher pays a certain price for the cattle and he must get that price out of them. If the demand, j as stated above, all runs to one or two , different cuts, those cuts that are in , demand must make up the loss on socalled cheaper meats, while if there was an equal selling distribution on the entire carcass, there would not be so much complrfnt of the high cost of meat Every housewife personally should make inquiries of her butcher as to the different cuts of meat. Chopped Beef Au Casserole. 1% lbs. clod of beef, ground. % c. tomato relish. Tabasco sauce, 1 can beets. Mix chopped beef with tomato relish. Add % teaspoonful tabasco sauce (more if desired). Season well with j salt. Put in glass casserole and bake two hours, basting frequently with a high quality of table sauce. A few I strips of bacon across the top of any ( meat loaf adds to its richness and Im- | proves tlavor. Serve garnished with ।‘beets, quartered. Serves 5 people. —-— - ,

PASTORS’ CONFERENCES Will Be Held in Every State in Union Under Auspices of Interchurch World Movement. Arrangements have been completed for the great series of pastors’ con--1 ferences to be held in the central West this month and in March, under the auspices of the Interchurch W.irld Movement. It is expected that these meetings will to a large extent explain to clergymen everything about the 1 movement and also show them the tre- ' mendous impetus already gained by this world evangelical campaign. Pas- । tors’ conferences will be held in every i state in the Union, having been ari ranged on simultaneous dates from ■ Feb. 16 to March 12. The first of the pastors’ state conferences in this part of the country ■will be held at Milwaukee, Feb. 18 to 20, and Dr. R. Calvin Dobson, field manager for the Interchurch World Movement for Wisconsin, has sent out invitations to all the protestant clergymen of the commonwealth. Acceptances thus far indicate that the Milwaukee conference will be the most notable meeting of the kind ever held in Wisconsin. Other conference dates are as follows : lowa —at Des Moines, Feb. 23 to 25; Michigan—at Lansing, Feb. 25 to 27; Indiana—at Indianapolis, March 1 ' to 3, and Illinois—at Chicago, March 10 to 12. A uniform program of procedure will prevail at all the conferences. They will open at 2 p. m., continue that day and evening, all the next day and well into the afternoon of the third day. Every phase of the Interchurch World Movement will be covered and explained by men actively identified with ! the great work. Each conference will begin with a fifteen-minute devotional exercise at 2 p. m. This will be followed by an opening address to explain the aims and scope of the movement. The remainder of the afternoon will be de- , voted to the foreign survey, on which so much work has been done already as to permit of many rather detailedstatements of facts that, it is expected, will amaze everybody not familiar with conditions beyond the North American continent. The evening session, after a devotional exercise, will be devoted to “The i Outlook’’ and “Everyland,” the magaI zines published by the Interchurch World Movement, and to a complete The Se^^nd Load. It takes two tru. xs to move the av- | erage household—one to carry the furniture. and the other to convey the old clothes the housewife gives away as soon as she moves into the new place. —Kansas City Star. SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to eure in all its stages and that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in the curative powers of Hall’s Catarrh Medicine that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails lo cure. Send for j list of testimonials. ' F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Eyes Examined SHUR-ON ; Glasses Fitted at Moderate Prices— Satisfaction Guaranteed DR. J. BURKE 2AO S. Mich. SOUTH BEND, IND. KIEST MILLING CO. Phone 22. Knox, Indiana Eventually GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Why Not Now? 1 Gold Medal Flour per bbl. $13.50 High Grade Corn Meal, per lb 5c Graham Flour, per lb 6c White Rye Flour H bbl. $1.35 | Navy Beans 7%c lb. Wheat Middlings cwt. $3.00 Wheat Bran cwt. $2.70 i Hog Tankage 60 Si cwt. $6.75 Oil Meal, 34 per cent, fine or coarse per cwt. $4.75 'Corn and Oats Chop, cwt. $3.25 ]Cracked Corn. cwt. $3.25 j Will Pay Hog Feed, with milk, , Blood and Bone meal $3.90 cwt : Blatchford’s Calf Meal 25 lbs. $1.50. i Poultry Feed cwt. $3.80 Developing Feed cwt $4.25 Chick Feed cwt. $4.25 I Chick Mash with milk 25 lbs. _51.25 Oyster Shell, per cwt. $1.50 Grit, per cwt. $1.50 Meat Scraps for poultry cwt. _57.25. Condon Bros. Select Southport Globe Onion Seed. Yellow $1.65, a lb. Bed per lb. $1.85 Very Highest Quality Clovers, Blue Grass, Timothy, Field Seeds, Garden Seeds and Alfalfa seeds. Soy Beans. Soudan Grass. Steel Cut Oats, cwt. $5.5fl Hulled Oats, cwt. $5.50 Barrel Salt, kept In dry bbl. $2.50 50 lb. Salt Blocks 60c. .Genuine Standard Cricket Proof Binder Twine, lb. 14 * 2 c. 116% acid phosphate, ton, $28.50 iKanite 14 to 16% potash ton $50.00 Prices subject to change without t notice. United States Food Administration License No. G-5228 4 WR SHIP ANY PLACE t

FOR PRESIDENT 1 .y H SENATOR HARDING Ohio, the Mother of Presidents, presents another distinguished son for tha consideration of Republican voters in the person of Senator Warren G. Harding. His life has been one of strenuous toil and endeavor since the dav he was apprenticed a printer. Early manhood found him a valiant editor and, like the beloved McKinley, a vigorous defender of the political principles of Abraham Lincoln. Editor Harding s virile Republicansim gained h m fame beyond the confines of the Buckeye state as far back as 1896, since which time he has belonged not more to the Republican party of Ohio than to the Republican party of America. Senator Harding is now serving his first term in the United Slates Senate, having been elected in 1914 by the re-united Republican and Progressive parties, his majority being more than one hundred thousand. Harding As a Business Man

One of the leading business men of' the nation says this of Senator Harding: “Warren G. Harding is essentially a business man. He has the business instinct. Beginning with nothing, and building up a big business of his own. and then taking extensive interests in all of the other big enterprises of the city in which he lives, has put

Is a Man of McKinley Type

In many respects Mr. Harding resembles that other favorite son of Ohio—William McKinley. Both were of Scottish descent. In presence, in ! manner of speech, tn ability to judge of men, in careful, painstaking mastery of detail and tact in bringing together opposing factions on some,

Opposes Compulsory Military Service In a speech at Columbus. Ohio, February 23rd, Senator Harding said: "We might well pledge ourselves never again to be so unmindful of our national defense. We ought to have an ample navy, as our first line of defense. We ought to more than keep apace—we ought to lead the world in the development of aviation and be stronger in the air than we are on the sea. We ought to have a stronger army than we have ever known in peace heretoiore. and we ought to have all the young manhood of the republic know the benefits of discipline and physical betterment that come of military training, but it ought to be VOLUNTARY, not compulsory; supported by the government in camp, in the national guard, in schools and colleges. It ought to I be made so popular and so helpful that young America would seek it = as a j privilege rather than accept it as a duty of compulsory requirement.” “Get Back to Normal” —Advertisement Try This Pleasant and Effective Home Remedy For Coughs and Colds IT WORKS LIKE MAGIC AND COSTS BUT LITTLE TO PREPARE If you want a cough medicine that is surely fine for coughs, colds hoarseness, bronchial affections, croup and throat irritations, get 3 oz. of Glando Pine (50 cts. worth) with full directions for preparing and you can make a full pint of excellent cough medicine. Glando Pine gets right at the cause of the cough. The first dose relieves, it opens the air cells and makes you breathe easy. Children love to take it. When prepared according to directions it will not separate as some of the inferior cough medicines do. George Pollick, a painter and decorator, of Logansport, Ind., says, “I took a severe cold which settled all through my system. I had severe pains in my chest and lungs. My throat was swollen and sore. Glando Pine gave me relief almost instantly. I consider it very fine for coughs and colds.” Mrs. John Polter of 359 S. Williams St., Paulding, Ohio. <a d. “I neglected to doctor a cold which settled on my lungs. My cold grew worse until I coughed almost constantly. I began to spit blood. I lu-t in weight and looked so bad that people thought 1 had tuberculosis. I finally tried Glando Pine. The first bottle helped me. I continued its use until I was cure I w.~ly believe that Glando Pine saved my life.” To avoid disappointment be sure you get Glando Pine. Once you have । used it you will never want to be without it in your home. Manufactured only by the Gland-Aid Co., Fort Wayne, Ind. HOFFMAN BROS. C. M. CARTER, PH. C. North Liberty Walkerton

? LaCamille Corsets with the Ventilo Back guarantee comfort. We specialize in the correct fitting of stout women. THE GRACE CORSET SHOP. 130 So. Main St. South Bend. Ind. 4

' him in close touch with the problems oi production, transportation and disI tribution of both manufactured artiI cles and foodstuffs; and it has brought him in close touch with the l problems of capital and- labor. Now. as never before, this country needs a president who has had practical business experience and who can bring us back to safe and sane thinking and safe and sane living.”

common ground, there is a remarkable similarity. -Mr. Harding is first of all a patriot. He believes in America; in its form of government; is proud of her past and hopeful for her future; and be believes that our highest obligation is to our own, and that the problems which vitally concern us are domestic and not foreign.

S 112 MihionS^lk^ I used last yeai-^^k.. to KILL COLDS Mk Hii-L’S CASCARaKHuNINE Standard cold remedy for 20 yean —m tablet form —sate, sure, no Opiates—breaks up a cold in 24 ^^khours —relieves gr p m 3 days Money back if fails. The 7 genuine n has a Red At All Drx.g St.r.. ; We want your News Items,