Walkerton Independent, Volume 46, Number 5, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 July 1920 — Page 4
■ iiiiiiiiiisDsiDiiiiias | iiißaiati^iß93QiiißiaiKiiaiiiiiiiisiiiiaig l i a i 11111119g | S g aEllll||||a|| AMAZING | Clothing Bargains | ■ Celebrated “Collegian” Suits for Less than Manufacturers’ Costs : ■ B I We were fortunate to secure a large number of Collegian Suits away below manufacturers’ costs, because they were finished too late to be applied on regular | orders. We are placing this wonderful purchase and a portion of our own stock on Sale today. Sale continues until this purchase is exhausted. | $30.00 $35,00 $4500 i ■ Values up to $40.00 Values up to $50.00 Values up to $60.00 I | | ■ BOYS’ KNICKERBOCKER SUITS MEN’S OVERCOATS , SWEATERS, SWEATERS. SWEATERS K ’ Wonderful bargains, all wool cloth, 119^0 Overcoats next winter will be very high. Buy now Now is vour time to buy a sweater for OAtr' L ~ “ tailored in latest style, SIO.OO and 3IL. JU and save money. the cool evenings and for next fall. Discount £v/° W i - W " ■' : — H : । Extra Specials Kahki Pants for Men f.rA C•' Wi * - I ** f / wWBr- Toyo Panama Hats, fine quality, CQ OQ Good heavy weight, well made, not CO PQ ■ « bargain, only thrown together v^»uv ? i 3 * Heavv Canvas Gloves for Alen, knit OCrk Children's Kinki Knickerbockers. Cl OA | wrist, 2 pairs for JjC all sizes 3 LO J WW I " ® ’ Silk four-in-hand ties, £A p I f extra special dot (APS, CAP>, CAPS. ( ■ * BOYS’STOCKINGS THE well Q^p A large lot of spring and summer caps, ■ i i . known Iron Clad OJv in all wool cloth, j our choice for 50c and I JL WMS ■ ; Shoes Below Present , । Wholesale Prices Come to the Store==Watch Our Bargain Counters Specials in ■ Outing Shoes for Men CO A A hi Snecial Sale Price 3J.UU You will4ind dailv hundreds of small lots displayed there at prices which actually j T»-t xl»• ■ 4PV.VV on|v replesenls a smal| par( of theil . cost Thvrc may he just what you want. U 0061 WCaF g a Outing Shoes for Boys, . CO CO For Men And Bovs ■ g size 10 to 1314 34. JU * g ■ w . Nainsook, cut and sewed union suits for ■ i Pile DEICQ 5 PA T’“ ‘" w ' * ,sc i Shß 7^ BC dr 1 ■ Ribbed union suits for Alen, fine yarn, Cl 1 " Oxfords for Boys in Black and Tan, CO 5 Q S 8 falM wF wr Wr I closed crotch, value up to $1.50 only 31• I J I also fiom former seasons 51.98 to 3^* * J Bovs’ ribbed union suits all sizes, A* ■ Tko ‘ f CLOTHIERS, SHOERS, HATTERS value up to $1.25 Hjf । j Ihe Direct Endicotts direct from Hide, to you, 1 wv ■ dark cordo English Shoes for Alen, fullv CC OA n r umnrM u * umi ecdtav ivn Chalmers fine as silk union suits for (T lOP " I guaranteed. Not SIO.OO, but only ________3<).OJ B. F. HARDEN. Manager WALKERTON, IND. Men. extra special (seconds) 31.0 J 1
= ■ ■■■■■■■■■■■■ welcomes The ’ OPPORTUNITY TO TELL ALL FACTS MRS. BYERS. DEEPLY GRATEFIX FOR AID. WANTS OTHERS TO KNOW TRUTONA S MERIT. Terre Haute, Ind., June 30, 1920, “I am glad to have the opportunity to tell of the wonderful benefits Trutona has given me.” Mrs. Rebecca Byers, who lives in Terre Haute, at 85 7 North Third Street, said recently. Mrs. Byer’s gladness is explained as follows: “For the past three years my sys-
g * E ■ ” iFOURTH OF JULY WEEK; | Special In Every Department ;I । i t • ir : Shoes and Hosiery ; . T I ? 9 Ladies' Undermuslins and Bathing Suits ■ | Childrens' Wash Suits and Rompers a * Ladies' Waists and Middies, in fact every “ department is offering Some Exceptional ■ ■ ' Values for this Week’s Selling. । “ You can always Save Money by trading I —AT — J - ■ 9 J ■ The g " 2^sWh i&slw® “ y IS * '. 9 1 9 1 a * R 5 9 1 8 1 3 B 9 E ' T it 9 B• 8 8 p.
s a ■ ■ vc.B a ■ ill ■ I tem has been in a run-down condi tion. My kidneys had been giving me a lot of trouble and my stomach was in such shape that I had to be careful about my eating. I suffered constantly from pains in my back land I knew that my liver wasn’t in good condition.” । ■ “My appetite had almost failed | me completely when I began using Trutona. But thanks to this treat|ment of the perfect tonic I can eat (anything I want to and thoroughly < enjoy it. For the first time in three !years my back doesn't bother me. , and I sleep sound as any human be- [ ing .can.” “Trutona did all of this for me after other medicines had failed to relieve my troubles, and I’m sure if one bottle will help me so much, a ifew more will put me in splendid health. Furthermore. I'm confident that Trutona will do the same for I [others if they'll take it according to direction.” 1 t
■l■■■■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i Trutona’s healthful action reaches every portion of the body, performs its work faithfully and efficiently. Trutona rebuilds diseased nerves and tissues, creates a healthful appetite and aids in the assimilation and digestion of the food. Trutona is sold in Walkerton, at j People’s Drug Store. Trutona is sold in North Liberty ■ at the North Liberty Pharmacy. "I Wouldn't Go Camping Without ( Rat-Snap,” Says Raj White. “Wife and I spent our vacation camping last summer, smell of cooking brought rats. We went, to town, got some RAT-SNAP. broke up - cakes, put it outside our tent. We got the rats alright—big fellows.” Farmers, storekeepers, housewives, < should use RAT-SNAP. Three sizes: < 25e. 59c, SI.OO Sold and guarante- , ed by st-jy29n. Price X Houser, Huffman Bros.
■R-aßi ‘ ■ 99 w jbb.. ■ — THE INDEPENDENT Published every Thursday by THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO. <tNIORPOKATKt> Publishers of the WALKER ION INDEI’ENDENT NORTH LIBERTY NEWS LAKEY ILLE ST A\ D YRD CLEM DeCOl DREs, Business Mgr. W. A. ENDLEY Editor. Published by the IndependentNews Co. at Walkerton. Indiana. Subst. ript ion Rates One Year $1.50 Six Months - 90 Three Months 50 Terms in \dxame Entered at the postoffice at Walkerton as second class matter. July 1.192 U. INDEPENDEXt E DAY. July 4th, Independence day. means a little more to us now than it did a few years ago. Still in the shadow of the great catastrophe of war which threatened the freedom and democracy of this country, the । priceless value of our liberties as a ' nation are brought more vividly to mind. When our liberties are menaced, as they really were, more, perhaps, :han we can fully realize, we know iiow to appreciate them with the rue spirit that is born and nurtured n a free republic such as ours. Therefore, independence day is a I allowed one tha: should be full of I meaning to us and serve to renew , and re-strengthen our loyalty and de- j motion to American ideals and insti- ! t ut ions. * Senator Johnson said he was mak- j ing tiie race on a “shoestring.” Investigation discloses upwards of | $200,000 expended for him in Cali- ; fornia, which is pretty expensive for I shoestrings, e\en in these h. c. 1. days.— Bremen Enquirer. Every presidential candidate, or his following, is obliged to spend ; large sums of money to meet the i many legitimate expens s of his cam- [ pai-n. This is ( Specially true under il'.e p; 'sent primary system. One enndidate may spend more i imey kan anotli 'r and yet do so henor- . y. Th ? char esthat have been de so freeh and shameh sly ?-ninst certain j>romin- it and highaded (tmdida’es for Ihe pr> den■he p . idem v must i. kept im-
block. but we should be more discreet and less flippant in launching our accusations against men whose honorable careers show them to be of the true blue type and above price. Governor Coolidge, of Massachusetts. lives in a double house for ’ which lie pays a rental of $32 a month (raised from $27 since his I nomination), is on a party line ' phone, ami does not own an automobile. holding that such luxury is I beyond his means, says the Fort i Wayne N< ws. He lives within his modest income, owes nx> man anything and sleeps well of nights. There is in his manner or ordering bis personal affairs that which should earnestly commend itself to a good mam of his fellow citizens who in his circumstances would consider themselves in the shadow of disgrace unless possessing automobiles and other trappings of luxury and wealth, living within one’s income is a virtue from which tar too many Americans have become divorced and it is aeartening to find one in high estate who has not lost his sense of real vaiu'-s. If only the defenseless public, [which is being ground between the upper and nether millstones of the striker and the profiteer, had a [ chance to strike a-mnst something, there would be some satisfaction in [ all this fuss. The nearest approach : to satisfaction and reprisal for ■ .>* average worm is to refuse to be! ’stung by the exior’ionate prices ask-I ied by the profiteers. The planks are being gradually ■ sawed, planed and fi’ted in o me: i platform at Frisco and ’ mfi [ the balloting will be_in abom Fii—[day. it looks very McAdooish now, [ [but you can't always tell. There’s ' I some chance for a compromise canu- i lidate. j Mr. Bryan is putting up a charac[teristic fight for a dry plank at the I Frisco convention. They must liand it to Bryan for 1-acklxg •‘; nd p< I sistency of jmrpose. H t is a fore to reckon with. So Russia do sn't suit Enn a [Goldman. W-U. she's hard to sa fy if displeased wi ; h a country r ri exactly as she wanted jhis com : run. a million on h-» n ■ ■ ■m a missed it. must envy Mr. Harding, whoso friends o o en as much.
Champ Clark is being urged by old line democrats for the nondnation. He would be acceptable to the rank and file of the democratic party. it begins to look as if party lines J in this country will undergo as many .changes as country lines in Europe । have since the armistice. ———— One reason tha r the aggregate of banks savings keeps or. mounting is | that “rainy days" do not come i [around like they used to. ’ In this country th preside;.t does his running before election, while in Mexico be does i >st of his i ming afterward^ A non-essential citizen: One who ' is fanatical in politic - aid can't see any good in any par*, bm his own. Then-'i: ■ ; than pointing with pride in national I politics ihis year. . Wilsonia:, influence is un-j mis: ikubiy G n. n: ;• i . Frise * convention. The profile * - . n the effect is just the sau.e. ___ __________________ i I ■ I s Tho-. D. Lee - * H I BUS LINE 1 I ® ■ U WALKERTON B ■ NORTH LIBERTY Si 8 >Ol TH BENdI I ■ S : daily bus : B a ! am WaI TT LV ‘ a £ 9:30 9:1 a 9 a BLS LEAYLX i' N N 6 : 1 , ' a -1 Tl i 5 ■ 3 S S f 6? ? C ft
■■ o ■■■■■■■■ a a H ■ | Greissman’s I | Fashion Shop j | For Women B 1 126 So. Michigan Street 3 | SOUTH BEND. IND. g I Suits and Dresses f a. ~ ■ 1 abi ics of Rai e Beauty and ■ g Exquisite Design. g H The Ladies will find this S = Store an interesting place to I ? 'isit. a ® &acKßaß aaaaaa B WO-nCHT ■ Helped LncieSam W in the W ar More than DekoLight plant- were u-eti by the t . >. (lovecn-nent lot Delco-Liglit was U -elected for this service l>e-«;<u-e of it- sm < e id tooling ami Hep i 1 under severe ojk " » hIt will -e ' at ; - • ot inc □ rPTDiP Pn
