Walkerton Independent, Volume 45, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 22 April 1920 — Page 4

I i ' % >WS I f I W1 V W' U I I - H\ h ul L^w>f3 I - IL ■ ; Lj a — ~ Z Price Is Secondary J {when patrons see tiie rich colorings and pleasing | combinations in our art-designed WALL PAPER The agreeable surprise then is, after selections, 1 J when it is learned that our prices are from 10 to 30 i | per cent savings. | Let us show you while our shelves are still full. i C. M. CARTER, Ph. C. I PEOPLE’S DRUG STORE TA<? > Jr re j 8 llllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllH | Garden Making Time! | “ We have the celebrated Leonard = E Garden Seeds which insure a good E E yield. = E If you want cabbage seeds or carrot = = better get your order in early. E | FRATER & KARR I = Walkerton, Ind. Phone No. 72 = fiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimmniiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii 2>>>iiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiin | For Bread Baking Use | | White Eagle Flour | | For Pastry Use | U Rose Leaf Flour -1 | BEST BY TEST j 1 Guaranteed Trouble Proof | Ask Your Grocer f TiiiiiiitiififiittiiiuiiifimniiiHuiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim JOHN MOUNTAIN % I , ’ [ F ; ' ■ 4? ’ : - j ' -7-, Candidate for Conn t y Tre asu rer cp // b/ / c\T // Ti<:k c t CAPABLE EFFICIENT HONEST Thanking the voters of thiscommunity for their support and consideration, I pledge myself, if nominated arid elected to this responsible office, to give it rm careful and conscientious attention, and assure the people that their trust and confidence in me will not be misdirected. Your support will besincerely appreciated.

WOO 3 MANAGERS lUR SUFFRAGE IN PRIMARY GO ON RECORD FAVORING VOTE FOR WOMEN AT POLLS IN MAY BALLOTING. URGE LEGISLATIVE ACTION Pass Resolution Supporting Equal Rights in Selection of Presidential Nominee. Indianapolis—(Special) — Leonard Wood s Indiana campaign managers have gone on record in favor of equal suffrage at the primary voting in May. The Wood leaders take the position that the women already have the right to vote for presidential electors and should consequently be allowed to vote in the primary to express a >reference for the presidential candidate. At a recent meeting in Indianapolis the district managers of the Wood organization passed resolutions supporting equal rights at the polls and urging the ratification of the nineteenth amendment. The resolution, which was presented by E. O. King, of Huntington, associate manager in the Eleventh district, advanced the belief that the women, having by previous legislation the right, to vote for presidential electors, have by inference. the rght to vote in the preferential primary. It also advocated that if further legislation to make this legal is necessary that the special session of the legislature, if one be called prior to the primary on May 4, pass the necessary law to grant to the Hoosier women the right to express their choice for presidential nominees. Text of Resolution. The text of the resolution is given herewith: ‘Whereas the state of Indiana has by statute given the right to women to vote at the general election for presidential electors. “Whereas the importance of electing a nominee for the Republican party is hardly less important than electing the man so nominated. “Whereas women are voting in many states of the Union and thirtyfiva states have already ratified the national suffrage amendment, only one yet lacking to make the necessary three-fourths, practically all the northern states being favorable to women suffrage, now, “Therefore, we. the Wood state committie. urge and indorse the ratification of the suffrage amendment to the Constitution. Meanwhile, in keeping with our attitude formerly expressed, we look with favor on the opinion expressed by the attorney, general that the women of Indiana, having the right granted by statute to vote for presidential electors, also have by necessary inference, a right to vote a presidential preference at the May primary election. .May 4, without specific legislation thereon. Recommend Legislation. “If any legislation be needed, then we recommend that if the legislature of this state is convened in special rwam —lt— _oxwu—a- .lawgranting to women the right to express a presidential preference May 4, 1920. And if a special session be convened we further recommend that Will H. Thompson and Charles Martindale. attorneys, and members of the Wood legal committee, be requested to draft the necessary bill to provide for the aforesaid proposed legislation: that said bill when prepared be delivered to the duly accredited representatives of the women to be presented to the state legislature by them for passage, if they deem it advisable and that the legislature be requested that said bill, if so presented be passed by said legislature: and further we pledge our support to aid in every honorable way to obtain the enactment of said legislation.” Discuss Wood Tour. It was pointed out at the meeting of the managers that the Wood campaign committee early in the campaign had gone on record in favor of the women voting ;n the primary. Plans are now being made for General Wood s campaign tour In In di ana The district managers have nut in a request for one or more speaking dates in every congressional district and it is likeh that the eneral will spend at least five days in Indiana. He is expected to make his trip in this state about the last week in April Among the cities that have put in a request for him are Bloomington. Evansville. Terre Haute. South Bend. Ft. Wayne. Indi anapolis. Richmond and Muncie. It was announced here early In the week that Col. Theodore Roosevelt has issued a statement setting forth the reasons why Wood should be nominated and elected. Record His Recommendation. "We need a man who will combine two principal characteristics in one.’ said the Roosevelt statement made public here. “First, the fearless de termination to preserve law and order and the ideals of this country, and. second, the ability to conceive and put into operation the fundamentals of constructive sane, liberalism. Generat Wood is this man. He is not a man that we have to take on trust. He is a man with a record ” hich is his recommendation. Hr handled the most diT'cult admin!:'ive wo’k with consulate sueess, as his r< ord in Cuba and the Philippines indicates. Codfish Had Swallowed Watch. 4he fishing smack Hoodeneganset, Captain Skidmore of Essex, Conn., had, among several interesting marine relies, a lady’s gold watch taken from the stomach of a codfish near the reef off Nantucket. Ma<s. 'i'he timepiece is marked on the interior of the case, “Bergee. No. 5722, London, England,” v itli n<> dao . It is in a perfect state of pre rent firn, with the bands marking 12:15 o’clock.—The New England Fisheries. Our For Sale ads bring results.

A GARDEN WINNEu y ■ A : 4 ■ ISIR *• ■ ■ They're^ at it again. Let Uncle Sam’s sw*^Vtoys and girls once get an i&r they don't desert it in a The call for the 1920 U. -S. School Garden Army was' nOyTuore than issued until winners- in the 1919 season were busy. School children in 1919 produced $48,000,000 worth of foodstuff, 2,500,000 kiddies competing. The photo shows a Louis- j ville (Ky.) schoolboy who won a prize with his 62-pound pumpkin. The Department of tu • -n* rior sponsors the move Excess «r Food Blamed. Dr. Prltchaad. an English practitioner, believes that most of the digestive troubles of Infants and young cb Idren are due to excess of f >d. And, betides the direct derangements of the stomach and intestines, these have an effect upon the whole system ami may In the long run make it more susceptWe to cutehiag other diseases. Electric Fire Logs. Electric fire logs, which have heen used on the stage for several years, are now available for other ti'.^ These fire logs are made of in Ration wood, consisting of three or more logs naturally grouped for interior tire place® and outdoor campfires. The log-i are of translucent material and asbestos, re-enforced with metal, and are made hollow for the Insertion of electric bulbs. The bark and cut ends of the logs are artistically designed and hand-painted to give the natural appearance of partially bun ed logs. By shading the translucent and opaque parts properly and providing for reflection from below, the logs, when illuminated, glow with the natural bright and darker shading of burning wood logs. The fire logs can also be obtained In the form of a laiye_w9 »■ w tlb l ,n L* —E’L » s h heap, for I rg> >^T-fashloned fireplaces. ’ . i c I Bits of S ecref Far Eastern History. The afte '-dinner confidential chat of a British i laval officer with a French bluejacket nt a Sydney hall In 1553 cost the British empire New Caledonia. Our French (friend had for many days cast longinJ eyes on Captain Cook's discovery ol 1794. So had we. But the hint givln of our intention to annex enabler* our rivals to land and take possession three hours before we came to thej scene. Thus we los‘ not only New Caledonia and the adjacent isles, hut the Loyalty group and the New Hebrides; for it is an open secret that the throat of the impossible New Hebrides condominium will soon be cut and France will gather in this g t m of the Pacific. It may bring balm to remember that as the French beat us on the post for New Caledonia so we beat them by a nose for Maorlland in almost exactly the same way.— S.vdnev Bulletin. NEW "DIAMOND POINTS” ISSUED. Folder Gives Results of World Survey Conference and Plans for Financial Campaign. A new edition of “Diamond Points tn the Interchurch World Movement” has been issued by the Literature Department. In addition to pointed, . terse information about the origin, nature, scope and plans of the Movement, contained in the leaflet originally issued, the new folder gives, in a dozen short paragraphs, the result of the World Survey Conference, together with plans for the financial campaign, the training and pastors’ conferences and the evangelistic and life enlistmeut programs.

. : LLS IN THE ARGONNE I *X ■•• m^— ■ - >v ■ a <- > ; ™ r >s J|k t ;^ f" liHWW War nursing was to Miss Edna Coughlin, a Good ich nurse of Akron, 0., just what she expected. But the reward w; mure than she expected. She was the only woman nurse who saw field service in ’he advanced aera of the Argonne sector, bravely administering to the gr veiy wounded under the tire of shell and a< rial t G< neral Leonard Wood visited Akron recently, he pa ised to pin on the Distinguished Service Medal—for heroic pertori cue—the r^xard ^he had not expected. She ia uow Mrs. W. J. t^uiusler.

\<n i< i: STATE OF INDIANA COI'NTY OF ST. JO. EPH IN THE Sri'El'lOi; ( Dri;T . T. JOSEPH CO I NTY The Chicago, L. kt Shou A- South Bend Railway Company ! . VS ' | Joseph E. Kaley and Marx E. Kalex . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to Joseph E. Kalex and Marx E. Kak y to appear on the 2Sth day ot April, 1920, at nine o’clock a. m . before the Honorable Chester Montuomeiy. Judge of the Superior Court of Si. Joseph County, to show cause xx h? the property described and sought to ।be condemned in the complaint and as therein prayed for. should not be condemned as prayed for. fix the Chicago, Lake Shore A South Bend Railway < Jompany, plain11ff, a : Joseph E. Kaley and Mary E. Kalex, as defendants, the property l,e:n. sought to be condemned being a stiij> of kind situate in St Joseph t'ouni State of Indiana, to-wit . Beginning at the Souhwest <■< rn- ; of a certain tract of land containin (Ten and Twenly-nin< hundredihs (10.29) acres, and described in a Iwarranix deed conxtyinu said T n ami Twenty-nine-hundredths t10.29i acres to the Chicago. Lake Shore and South Bend Railway Company by Joseph E. Kaley ami Mary E. Kal ? by deed dated the Fourth day of April. 1907. and recorded in deed record 136 on page. 422, with a strip of land Forty (40) feet in width of which the center line is Twenty ( 2'D feet West from said corner, extending South to the Michi. , n Road to property owned by one Ridenour, for right of way purposes. 2. Also a pari of Section Three (3), Township Thirtv-seven(”7) | North. Range Two (2 I East; b'gin nina for the same at a point in th< | west line of said Section Three ( a I distance of Six Hundred (KuO) f> . t south the Northwest corner thereof; thence East on the south line of tet ritor.v conx eyed by said Kaley to th» i Chicago. Lake Shore A South B nd I Railway Company, a dis'atiC' of Three Hundred Twenty (:;2t>» f> <;; । thence in a Southw» sterly direction a distance of Three Hundred Ninety j i 39*>) feet, more or less, to the intersection of the North line of the Lin*coln Highway West with the east line of a forty (40 I foot strip leased by said Kaley to said Chicago, Lake : Shore A- South Bend Railway Com pany as right of way; thence west xvard along tin* north line of said Litwoln Highway West, a distance of i Sixty (GO) feet, more or less, to the | west line of said Section Tin ■ ■ (31; thence North on the West line of I said Section a di - ance of Two Hund- : red ei lux (2so) feet, more or less. to th< Southwest corner of lai <b hetetofoti conxeyed by Kaley to the said Chicago. Lake Shore A- South Bend Railway Company as a gravel pit; excepting tin refrom Twenty ,(201 feet as tile east half of a hi-h way Upon the West line of said See tion, and a snip Forty tio i feet wide adjacent, upon the tasierly ud< thereof, and used a* ri h of way l»y said Chica-o. Lake Shen A South Bend Railway Company in rcachim sail! graxd pii The quantity of lami included in the triangular pi’^e, exclusive of the aboxc named exception. is Eighty six hundredths i.B6> acres, more or less, to be condemned and appropriated in fee simple. 3. Also lessors do hereby lease to said lessee for right of way purposes, a parcel of land Forty (40) feet in width from east to west and beginauny ow g> w'xllL a_b.H- -uiort h lipe and immediately west of the tract above described, extending due south to Lincoln Highway West. 4. Also, a right of way Thirty (30) feet wide from east to west beginning at the anglinc road, which is the first road South of Lincoln Hi h- . way West, which crossed the we-; |line of said Section Thr< e i:; i :• i point about Four Hundred i Imii i 'south of Lincoln Highway W’ .->. ac jacent to the east line of Ser-Hon Four ( 41 anti extendin sou < !rx a.r<! .about Two Thousand 20b- i fe, : to the Souihv est corm r of R <5 no- i's land; tie nee on an eight IS' d.-_r> curye to right Fixe Hundred S x ami Twentx-tix. hund: .His : 2‘> • feet; thence in tangent to said cur in a Southwesterly direction Fi > Hundred Thirty iixe (5351 r« <f: thence on aTen < U'> de. ree curve to tight Seven Hundred i7m i feei to a junction with present right of way of the Chicago. Lake Si.ore A- Somh Bend Railway- Company, and be ng the same lands now occupy n by He Railway Company tor riehi of v. ay purposes. The -aid Railway Cot pany a kto eomlcmn said -mp for it ma a- - street and interurban railway to b« । peiati d bye! *clri< ity. WITNESS the hund of the Ch i); of said Court and Hm Hii. < h dax ot \pt il, 192 m V Hill R M W \R\ER Cm Jostqfli Superior Court. I’. J. Lewis Meyrr. All’y hm tiff. |:!t-a2”w. Flaws in Diamonds. F laws in the diam id consist largely of black <>>■ earlion spots. These ; are formed of um-ry-'al l a<l carben. I Nature in the ca--e of th-- o • 1 : ■ i mond stayed her haml I . h she had Completed tin' process ol pel eet '.rys- । tallization.

^^"xvaScBSaSS^aSSSBCBSaasS ssssaattsssgissisa ' I ^'-bwe’s | ■ -sjiA 8 - b A Floor Paint g that stands wear and tear Dragging furniture, ] use—paint the floor today BQ scuff of grown-ups and and walk on it tomorrow, the rough and tumble of Easier to keep clean—just children will not injure it. mop it off. m. It dries hard and stays We recommend this foor - hard that a why it is call- paint and want you to Sa ed Lowe s Hard Drying know mere about it. Come Floor Paint. ।j n an j i oo ^ display . This paint is made espe- I panels; ask, also, for de- ? g|| cially for floors. Easy to ' scriptive literature, | Walkerton Lumber Co. I gg Walkerton. Ind. ** | fftiints I THE UNIVERSAL CAR | The Ford One Ton Truck is serving business 1 just as faithfully and economically as does the Ford Touring Car serve all the people faithfully and economically. The Ford Truck is a necessity to the grocer both in delivering goods and in bringing goods from the stations, docks and from the country. It is an ideal motor car because there isn’t a want of the farmer or business man that it doesn’t supply in the way lllj of quick transportation at a minimum expense. rjN Come in, examine the Iruck, and let us talk cH|| over the subject. iHig Rudd Motor Co. |r I Walkerton Ind. | S' x' ' < I I i - - - yJi. ' --.- I 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 ’rritations, get 3 oz. ol 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 tause of t’.e cough. Ihe first dose relieves, it opens the air cells and makes breatne cl y. Children love to take it. When prepared according to directions it wd! not separate as some of the inferior cough medicines do. George Pollkk, a painter and decorator, of Logansport, Ind., says, “I took a sex ere cold wna n settled ail through my system. I had severe pains .1 n.x <ne>t ano lung>. My throat was sxx'ollen and sore. Glando Pine gax’t me relief almost instantly. I consider it verx- fine for coughs and colds.’ Mrs. John Tolter of 359 S. Williams St.. Paulding, Ohio, said, “1 negU clod to doctor a cold xvluch settled on my lungs. My cold grew worse until 1 coughed almost constantly. I began to spit blood. 1 lost in weight and looked so bad that people thought I had tuberculosis. 1 finally tried Glando Pine, Ihe first bottle helped me. I continued its use until 1 was cured. 1 firmly believe that Glando Pine saved my life.” To ave I disappointment be sure you get Glando Pine. Once you have uso'l it you will never v.ant 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 The Indiana Title Abstract Company J. WILLK COTTON, M^r. Prepares modern abstracts to lauds in Laporte, bL Joseph, Stark and Marshall counties. Hfks Ststa Ban?' Walkericß. In Children's W v 3 DISORDERS of the stomach and constipation are I JL*> the most common diseases of children. To I correct them you will find nothing better than I ® Chamberlains Tablets. One tablet at bed time will I g do the work and will make your child bright and I 3 cheerful the following morning. Do not punish I € your children by giving them castor oil. Chamber- I || lain s 1 ablets are better and more pleasant to take. I