Walkerton Independent, Volume 46, Number 5, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 July 1920 — Page 3

T - - - - T^T ”’’ ' y '-"*""" *~' * ~ OF -b-.-^p—i -r^ >nw W~ x — When in South Bend make Wyman’s your Headquarters. GEORGE WYMAN & CO. —COME AND SEE US—- . EMILY CLO< N’u This store will close Saturday evening at 6 o’clock x during July and August. Other days, open from 8:30 to 5:30 p. m. 7 \ H 1 ! K Baggage-Sir! K 3 k® <^UUUUU There is genuine satis- > faction and pride in claimz X> *> * n g looking and distinctive luggage when a un- ‘ r®< iform bell hop calls “Bag- , '*A gage, sir!” ' '** V 77 ’ 1 I A \ \ Th e hand luggage that w > I Y ou carry with you should I '■yl / ' '^. ^B3 J he as proper and well bred V Fi </ / I as the clothes you wear—•^l A not only of the very best —, leather but the correct cut and shapes as well. Most Convenient are Indestructo Trunks The pleasure of traveling is greatly increased in knowing that your trunk safely brings your clothes in perfect condition, ready for the appearance in the fashionable restaurant or ballroom. “Indestructo” trunks bespeak genuineness, perfectness of construction, good taste, and a natural preference for the better things. Inside and outside, it*is the ; trunk that truly represents well bred people en tour. A complete display of trunks and bag s will be found the year ’round in our Daylight Basement Luggage Shop. When in South Bend take a Toy Home to the Children

■B : Grain is Valuable- ■ | Why not see us before buying that new | BINDER. We can save you money as we bought | before the prick advanced. All kinds of machin- | ery in stock. | BINDER TWINE now in stock at Federation " I prices. | See us for REPAIRS OF ALL KINDS, and | ■ we will serve you well. ■ | Farmers Supply Co. ; I TEEGARDEX and TYNER ■ = 3t-wnl24. ® ■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ill ■ 3 IA D ■ KB s a KB ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ K^l |TURN WASTE| j .TO PROFIT y I ■ vW; Ow *O xwe ^ing. Cutting, I | Carbon Burning, ft ft ■ ■ KRk Radiator Repairing jRB i B I & Brazing. Soldering, ancU Jjo 1 General Repairing & ■ ■ PLUMBING : W We are thoroughly experienced in every d**ail in the above ■ specialities; every job we turn out must be right. B Fanners if you don’t want to stop your work during rhe day we = ■ will be prepared to take care of you in the evening. | OPEN EVERY NIGHT • ■ Our sj *e will xatisly you. The quality of our work will please > ou - I ; ^h e hop I M Telephone 92 B ■ WALKERTON. INDI VN \. B B First door north of Independent. " w "* KsswßSSßnaß^isyaasoßiEasiiaa"

|E ye s Examined SH im-OR . *" .>mmw Glosses Fitte.] at Moderate Price*— Satisfaction Guaranteed DR. J. BURKE 2*o S. 'Hch. SOUTH HUM. IVD

DR. W. C. WISENEAUCH -DENTIST Plate work and til- - A.51 to 12:0S A. 51 tugr- asp^cialt? i: p m. to s:oop. tn Price* reasonable. Snudayshy Appoiutmen North Liberty. Ind.

;CORRESPONDENCE " MAPLE GROVE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Reason Le- ■ , toy Frick and Laura. Weiss took Sun- । day dinner with Mt s. I .ydia I I » and family. | Desmond and George Strickler | spent Sunday with Reuben Howell. Mary Eastburn and Edward War- ■ ren called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles ■ Hardy Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Rakestraw, of I Turner. Mich., visited relatives tn I this vicinity last week. _ Misses Pearl Hummer and Grace ’ Seward spent Sunday with Bertha I । and Marie Fisher. j, Bert Seymour spent Saturday =[night and Sunday with his sister, | Mrs. Adam Martin. | j Mr. and Mrs. Lee Keltner and g | sons, Charles and Chester, spent the 11 week-end at the home of Mr. and । Mrs. Frank Wharton. Glenn Martin took Sunday dinner | with Elmer Hummer. I Mrs. Gonser called on her sister, 11 Mrs. Frank Howell, Sunday afterI noon. I I Miss Hazel Lawson spent Sunday s j with Emogene Hartman. •| Miss Deane Wharton is spending a • । few days in Chicago. Mrs. Laura Weiss of South Bend called on Mrs. Charles Hardy, Sunj day evening. I Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reasor and I daughter spent Sunday with Ray g. Wiseman and family. g| Mr. and Mrs. Hawn spent Sunday I with Mr. and Mrs. Martin and fam- , ily. Daniel Hartman took dinner with | Cleon Kettring. Sunday. । I'he Sunshine class will hold their । monthly meeting Saturday with RolI’lin and Royce Dunnuck. j-i Mr. and Mrs. Holdeman and son, | Charles, spent Sunday at Elkhart. |l Mrs. John Hummer is spending a I few days with her daughter, Mrs. j Fred Schrader, of South Bend. । Sunday school next Sunday at 10 I a. m. Preaching services at 11 a x — I KIEST MILLING CO. fl Phone 22. Knox, Indiana B Eventually GOLD MEDAL FLOUR Why Not Now? I Gold Medal Flour, bbl. $15.50 g’Arlington Flour, cwt. $4.65 = High Grade Corn Meal, per lb. 6c. 8 Graham Flour, per lb 6c I White Rye Flour, % bbl. $1.90 Wheat Middlings, cwt. $3.45 I Rye Middlings, cwt. $3.45 * Wheat Bran, cwt. $3.20 Will Pay Hog Feed with Milk, Blood and Bone Meal, cwt $4.65 l Hog Tankage 60% cwt. $6.75 it Oil Meal, 34 per cent, fine or । coarse per cwt. $4.75 ■ Blatchford’s Calf Meal 25 lbs. $1.60 ■ Poultry Feed, cwt. $4.50 3 Developing Feed, cwt. $5.00 | Chick Feed, cwt. $5.00 ! Chick Mash, 25 lbs. $1.75 t Steel Cut Oats,- cwt. $5.50 । Hulled Oats, cwt. $5.50 Oyster Shell, per cwt. 51.60 1 Grit, per cw( $1.50 iMeat Scraps for poultry cwt. _57.25. I Very Highest Quality Clovers, Blue Grass, Timothy, Field Seeds, Garden Seeds and Alfalfa seeds. , Soy Beans, Soudan Grass. | Buckwheat. . Harri 1 Salt 1 opt ii> dry, bbl. $2.75 iSO lb. Salt Blocks 60c. j Genuine Standard Cricket Proof Bii ter twine, lb. .14 Prices subject to change without notice. United States Food Administration License No. G-52284 WFI SHIP ANY PLACE

Baptismal services following the sermon. Everyone cordially invited to ; all these services. t. The Tried and True class will f hold an ice dream social at the homo i of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Martin. Satur- ■ day evening, July 3. Everybody come. TRACY I Mrs. Louise Grover of LaPorte is F spending a few days with her sister, Mrs. Mike Moyer. * Mr. and Mrs. Buss Ellis and t children spent Sunday with Mr. and : Mrs. Frank Ellis. ' Mrs. Bert Burlingham is spending a few days at Walkerton with her brother, Mr. Rollo Barnes, and family. , Emily Goodsell visited a couple of days with Mrs. Charles Ellis. Mr. Airs of LaPorte spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Elizabeth West. Mr. and Mrs. Win. Schoof are spending the week with their daughter and family, Mrs. Wm. Schmidt, of Mishawaka. Carl Robinson and family and Mr. ana Mrs. Gary Collings and little daughter^Phyllis, spent Sunday at the Aldrich home. Miss Loraine Litchfield of McCool spent Thursday with her grandmother, Mrs. Elmer Aldrich. ALFA-MINT CORNER Mrs. Bert Morris and son, Bobbie, were visitors at Wakarusa last week a few days. . Mr. and Mrs. U. Kronk and son, Calvin, and Cleo Biouser and family motored to Nappanee Sunday to visit U. Kronk’s son. i Samuel Lockwood and wife of ► Wakarusa gave Mr. and Mrs. I'. Kronk a visit last Wednesday. Clyde Keck and family from the county seat made Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Bettcher a visit Sunday afternoon. Win. Snyder visited at Lakeville Sunday. William Snyder has his 110 acres of peppermint all weeded and clean. He says it looks excellent, and the prospects are fine. Mrs. W. T. Shively and son Elvin left Friday for Evansville, Ind., to be I at the bedside of her sister who underwent an operation and is serious- : ly ill.

———— AS Th t •'e we re some prettq long waits -for the Doctor in v" ■ ■. horse-and-buggq daqs ni - ... '—“i s 1 r \/ J KE it easier to get around and * JL you make healthier and hapr pier communities. No one any longer W iM questions the worth of the automobile ir L — or begrudges any legitimate ex- । S M pense connected with it. U But millions of car owners are rebelline: at Y the ^ ea that runnin £ an automobile has got to gL' \ 'mi u T mean wasre. J Every now and then you hear a neighbor • WVW BllrV complain that "he doesn’t seem to have much 1 ’* luck with tires.” I I I ) Send him to us. 1 | R H F I' ’ g g « i- l The minute a man begins to question the / fc g service his tires are giving him, he’s ready to E J J J listen to reason. — » LI ©laze Our business is built on the principle that the only way to get better tire service is to get better tires to start with. Select your tires acthey hi^tlva^^ That’s why we have taken the representaIn sandy or hilly coun- t j on f Qr g. TitCS. try, wherever the going is apt to be heavy —The 111 U.S.Nobby. < ’ . ' For ordinary country roads—The u. s. chain U. S. Tires have a reputation for quality. u2s. r piain. whcels—The Built up through years of creating better everywhere— u^s? tires. Such as the straight side automobile tire, Rovai cords. pneumatic truck tire It is not by chance that U. S. Tires are made th 6 anc * largest rubber concern in the w ° rid - We are proud to represent U. S. Tires in this community. S I United States Tires I F « si. B, w. B. APPLE —» j|

■BBBbBaa■B ... a a . a ■ ■ . ■ ■ ■ : Announcement ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ fl fl fl ■ ■ J Beginning July 7th ■ ■ “the GniGHrESTSPor in town” ■ ■ ■ Will close at 12:30 Wednesday during 2 the months of July and August. ■ ■ ■ Brightest Sf»or tn Town” S i uenct, Indiana ■ ■ ■ ■ • ■ ■ ■ ■ Cl" QfIBfIB3aBBBHHRr BBBiBIB BlHnwa,awa,

A barn dance was given Saturday night at the home of George Lee. Some of the older as well as tne young shook their light fantastic toe. E. C. Swartz and family called on

Mr. David Bowers, who lives west of Walkerton. Fridaj’ evening. XX illis Buell, near Walkerton, and Mrs. Willis Gore of Chicago visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John

■ ■■aßflflßflflflJll Worthington. The farmers are very busy. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Collmer South Bend visited Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Sunday.