Walkerton Independent, Volume 48, Number 7, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 13 July 1922 — Page 2
Had Your Iron Today? CV-rW3»W^.i| di I < ®nJH ^’j IfeC ^SShII^ Toast It — Delicious Raisin Bread DO this some morning and surprise the family: Serve hot raisin toast at breakfast, made from full-fruited, luscious raisin bread. Let your husband try it with his coffee. Hear what he saj-s. Your grocer or bake shop can supply the proper bread. No need to bake at home. Made with big, plump, tender, seeded SunMaid Raisins, and if you get the right kind there’s a generous supply of these delicious fruit-meats in it. Insist on this full-fruited bread and you’ll have luscious toast. Rich in energizing nutriment and iron—. great food for business men. Make most attractive bread pudding with left-over slices. There’s real economy in bread like this. Try tomorrow morning. A real surprise. Telephone your dealer to send a loaf today. 16^^ Sun-Maid Seeded ßaisins Make delicious bread, pies, puddings, cakes, etc. Ask your grocer fur them. Send ^ or ^ ree book of tested recipes. [j if Sun-Maid Raisin Growers, Urmbmkip 13.000 Dept. N-15-12, Fresno, Calif. & Blue Package
V parker’s ^AIR balsam I JO Hamo — ?-S topsHalrFallliig J 3 ’'olor ant’ e:^4 -figs” R„ < xIC^3H_ “urtruta IMxih' ^/.Ubocue.K.Yj HINDEROCriNS Removes Corna, Callouses. etc., stops an pain, ensures comfort to too feet, makes walking easy. Ho. by mail or at Drus* <i»U. E iwx Chemical Works. Patchogue, £l. X. s Kill All Flies! T DISEASE Placed anywhere. DAISY FLY KILLER attracts and Ulis all flies Neat, clean, ornamental, convenient and Z Alt a-.X’X eiieap. Lasts allseaATehayyySS’Zyy son. Made of metal, can’t spill or tip over; will not soil or injure HKA^S^Stw^^CkCwCIF anything. Guaranteed. DAISY feahfegg^^^SajSl FLY KILLER — 11 -rr.TSsr at y r . nr dealer or 6 by EXPRESS, prepaid. *IXS. HAROLD SOMERS. 1»> De Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn. N. Y. OLD NAMES BACK IN FAVOR "Mary" and “Eliza” Again in Style, After Having Suffered a Temporary Eclipse. Old-fashioned names are again in style, and the greatest of them all — Mary—heads the list of present day' Detroit brides, says Bert Maloney, marriage license clerk. “I have a passion for the name of Mary.” sang Byron, and many a poetical Detroiter will experience a cuddly feeling at the news that the old names are back again. The popular Sarahs Anns, Agneses and Janes of Byron’s time gave way to the Ermentrudes, Clarisses and Ysobels of recent yesterdays, but now they’re coming into their own again. Os course, "Mary" never went entirely out. There’s something elemental in it that defies banishment. It’s an ancient name of many tongues, symbolically connected with .motherhood, with Isis and the moon and with the regeneration of man. —Detroit News. Ton can’t sell the lessons of experience; you can't even give them away. Yon never can tell what a woman Jury Is going to do. Nor a man jury.
vA^^eS^^a,/ W <J^l Ton will find in Posttim & delightful and satisfying mealtime beverage, with no element which can harm nerves and digestion—orcause wakeful nights and dull days. Your grocer has Postum in two forms: Instant Postum (in tins) made instantly in the cup by tha \w\nn of Ixjiling water. Postum Cereal (in pack-ag<-a of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make tho dunk while the meal is being prepared) made by boding for fully 20 minutes. Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc,, Battle Creek, Mich.
•—RADIO SETS — i j Build Your Own Radio Receiving Set I concerts, market reports.«'tc. ' * Complete directions with drawing and dla- * grams sent postpaid for 3&c. Send coin or • ■ money order todaj. Special otters on complete I Kadiu Receiving Sets and parts. Write for list. Bassett Radio Supply Co. j MAKE MONEY SHAKE TIME EVENINGS at home mailing circulars. Send 2So fur I . booklet which tells you how. Young Agency ; ; 2316 N California Ave. Chicago. Illinois YOU CAN W® ■ ■ Hair Color Re •torer. Sate to use as water. Makes you look young again. At all good druggists, 75 cents, or direct j from BESSIG ■ ELLIS. Chemists. Memphis, Teup Excellent Advice. “Never refuse to see what you do not want to see or which might gc against your own cherished hypothesis or against the views of authorities. These are just the clews to follow up, as is also and emphatically so tlie thing you have never seen or heard of • before. The thing you cannot get a pigeonhole for is the finger point showing the way to discovery.” This advice to scientists and others was given in a lecture by Sir Patrick Manson, the celebrated British physician who discovered that malaria is caused by mosquitoes. Sir Patrick died a few weeks ago.—Exchange. Back to the Simple Life. Back to his native hut, there recently sailed from England a South j Sea islander, a direct descendant of a line of famous Fiji chieftains. He graduated from Oxford university, England, in 1909, served as a cook with the It. M. A. corps in France In 1910 and later as a clerk with the Royal Scotch Borderers, earning a bravery i clasp and being medaled by King George. He has returned to the South ■ Pacific, deserting civilization to live . among his fellow Fiji Islanders. i If vanity fails to catch a man In i one disguise it assumes another.
IMPROVED UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL Sunday School ' Lesson ’ (By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.. Teacher of Englfah Bible In the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union. LESSON FOR JULY 16 THE HANDWRITING ON THE WALL. LESSON TEXT—tSan. 5:1-31. GOLDEN TEXT—God will bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether It be evil.—Eccl. 12:14. REFERENCE MATERIAL—Gen. 19:12S; Exod. 14:21-31; Ezek. 31:1-14; Acts 12: 20-23. PRIMARY TOPlC—Daniel Tells the King of His Wrong-Doing. JUNIOR TOPlC—Belshazzar's Feast and Fate. INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC —Judgment Against King Alcohol. YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC — How to Enforce the Judgment Against Strong Drink. I. Belshazzar’s Impious Feast (vv. 1-4). 1. Who attended (vv. 1,2). Belshazzar, his wife and concubines and a thousand of his lords. 2. Behavior thereat (vv. 3,4). (1) They drank wine; they engaged In revelry. (2) They committed sacrilege. In their drunken revelr.v they drank wine out of the sacred vessels which had been taken out of the temple, of the house of God, which was at Jerusalem. When men are under the Influence of intoxicating liquors they lose all regard for sacred things. (3) They worshiped Idols. They prayed to gods of gold and of silver, of brass, of iron, wood and stone. IL The Handwriting on the Wall (vv. 5-1 G). 1. The time of (v. 5). It occurred in the same hour In which they were engaged in their drunken revelry. 2. The effect upon the king (v. G). He was greatly disturbed; he was seized with consternation. “The Joints of his loins were loosed, and, his kne°s smote one against another.” 3. The king's behavior (vv. 7-1 G). (1) He called forth astrologers and • soothsayers, offering rewards of gold and position (v. 7-9). Their utter In- \ ability to interpret the writing left the king even worse perplexed. (2) Daniel brought at the suggestion of the quren (vv. 10-1 G). The queen here was perhaps the wife of Nebuchadnezzar who remembered Daniel's service in Interpreting Ids dream. For that reason he was sent for and prora- । ised great reward. 111. Daniel Interprets the Writing J (vv. 17-2SL 1. Daniel's address to the king (vv. I ; 17-24). He brushes aside his promised gdfts (v. 17). He would not have his sp»s«<'h limited by the king’s gifts. 1 I It rtspiires great strength of charac- ; 1 ter and courage to thus speak in the * • pn'seneo of a great Ifing. He knew ' that this was no time for bribery. He ' knew that his would be the last words i ever to fall on this poor sinner's ears. (2) He reviewed before him the his- । tory of Nebuchadnezzar and applied the lesson to the behavior of Belshaz- | zar (vv. 18-24). He showed clearly that Belshazzar should base profited by the experience of his father. 2. Tlie interpretation of the writing (vv. 25-28). (1) “Menu" means "numbered” (v. 2G). "God hath numbered thy kingdom and finished It.” (2) "Tekel" means "weighed” (v. 27). "Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting.” (3) "Peres" means “divided" (v. 28). “Thy kingdom is divided, and given to the Medes and Persians.” IV. The Judgment Executed (vv. 29-31). In that night was Belshazzar slain and Darius the Medean took the kingdom. The Chaldean dynasty ended with Belshazzar. So we may interpret this whole scene as pointing to the conditions at the close of the times of the Gentiles and as adumbrating the , prevailing conditions. Let us note: 1. The stupidity of men. They, like people today, would not learn by ex- j ample. Nebuchadnezzar's fate should I have deterred Belshazzar from such frivolity. The driftwood of wrecked humanity cast upon the shores of ‘ time seems to do but little good to I posterity. The awful issue of the • drunkard's life and all kinds of sin should deter men and women from practicing sin. 2. The magnificent splendor. This great feast was characterized by pomp, display, parade. How characteristic of tlds age! 3. Luxury. The famous hanging gardens of Babylon were a noteworthy example. Signs of luxury today are on Avery hand. 4. Licentiousness. The king witli his wives and concubines. This is notoriously prevalent today. 5. Blasphemous sacrilege. And may not tlie sacrilege of today be in excess of theirs, expessing itself in (1) a profession of religion for pecuniary gain, social and political preferment; (2) use of the pulpit and of the ministry for display and notoriety, even tor tlie propagation of false doctrine; (3) uniting witli the church, attending the communion, so as to cover up secret sins; (4) the use of the Word of God to give point to a joke; (5) denying that tl>e Bible is God’s Word, making it a book of errors, myths and legends; (G) sneering at the Virgin birth, repudiating Christ’s deity and setting aside His vicarious atonement. G. Drunken carousals. Tlie handwriting is on the wall. God will not endure this forever; His judgment shall fall. Conditions in the world indicate that tlie time is drawing near. Are you ready? Fruit of Christ’s Death. Tlie fruit of Christ’s death is a multitude of new lives. As the seed produces Its like, so Christ produces men like Christ lie, ceasing to walk In the world as a living man, a multitude of men are raised up in His likeness. Who shall measure the fruitfulness of the cross? It Is tlie source of all true thought, of all holy feeling, of all noble action, and of all graces of the suiriL
QLe Kitchen Cabinet Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union. The lark’s on the wing. The snail’s on the thorn, God’s in his heavenAll’s right with the world. —Browning. HOUSEHOLD HINTS Tea, and most fruit stains, may be removed by spreading the cloth over a
bowl and pouring boiling water through tlie stain. The higher it is held when pouring the mote , force will strike the stain. If the stain will not re-
spond, try sprinkling witli borax and soaking in cold water; if this falls rub a little glycerin on the spot and soak It for a time in glycerin. Iron rust will usually respond to lemon Juice mid salt, if placed In the strong sunlight, or try salts of lemon, moisten and place in the sun; then be sure to wash out the spot to remove the acid. Ink, if fresh, may be removed by soaking the linen in sour milk. If the fabric cannot be so treated. apply dilute oxalic acid to the stain and rinse in water with ammonia in tlie water. . Tar—Kerosene is a good agent to remove tar, if fresh; then wasii in soap and water. If tlie spot is dry, soften it first with a little lard well rubbed In, then wet with turpentine; scrape off the fat and rub again with turpentine. Steel wool has been sold at ten cent stores for years and yet there are housewives who have never heard of It. No. () steel wool is the best scouring agent for all kinds of kitchen utensils. It may be used, protecting the hand with a piece of paper, or held by plyers when a good deal of force is i needed. A fine table pad may bo made of newspapers basted together; then cut to fit tlie table, having it one fourth ! inch In thickness, cover with an old sheet and a pad that costs nothing j will be ma<le. Use a white shellac over the tips of shoes or other places that have been skinned, then put on the shoe polish ns usual. Appllqm^l designs may be stuck on curtains with n little paste or glue. The result Is effective and the work merely nothing compared to the time taken to fasten on by the needle i method. When serving cocoa give It a few turns of an egg beater before serving. This breaks up the cooked albumen of ’ tlie milk and makes a more uttrao i tlve drink. Cover a cut onion or a slice of ! onion with an Inverted tumbler. This j keeps the onion fresh and palatable until used. Each home has an Individuality that Is strut.illy its own. and expresses to the world the Ideals and standards of life of those within. COOL AND REFRESHING ICES AND DRINKS There Is nothing that “touches the spot" like a cold drink or a good
flavored fr oz e n dish. Be sure to make a few bottles of the delM ous r a s p b e r r y shrub. Raspberry Shrub. — Take twice as much
per measure of fresli raspberries as vinegar. Put over the heat in an agate kettle and cook until the fruit is mushy. Strain through muslin, and to each quart of the juice allow one pound of sugar. Bring to the boiling point again and seal in sterilize 1 botI ties. Allow two tablespoonfuls to a j glass of iced water. Cider vinegar ' should be used and, if very acid, slighti ly reduce with water. Fruited Mint.—Make a sirup of two ' cupfuls of sugar and one-half cupful of water; do not stir. When it spins a thread add the strained juice of one i orange and six lemons, pour one cupful of boiling water over the pulp and skins of the fruit. Set over the heat and let come to the boiling point. Strain and add to the first mixture. Cool. Add one cupful of red raspberries and one and one-half quarts of ice water.’ Serve with a sprig of mint. Ice-Cream Coffee. —Add four tablespoonfulls of finely ground coffee to one pint of boiling water, one-fourth of a cupful of rich milk and one-fourth of a cupful of cream. Let the coffee drip in a percolator, scald the milk and cream and add to the hot coffee. Put in a covered vessel and surround with ice. When ready to serve pour into slender glasses and put a spoonful of vanilla ice cream on top of each glass and a cube of sugar on each plate. Fig Ice Cream.—Soak two pounds of figs over night in orange juice, put through the meat grinder and return to the juice; steam and cook in it until soft. To one pint of cream add one quart of milk, one and one-half cupfuls of sugar; boil, add a tablespoonful of lemon juice, cool, add the figs and some of the lemon rind, and freeze as usual. Ginger Special.—Put two tablespoonfuls of grape juice in a glass, add shaved ice and fill the glass with ginger ale. Serve at once. Unusual. A baby weighing only two pounds and one ounce was born in a New York hospital. It is described as the smallest perfectly formed normal baby on record. This baby’s diminutive size is due to some peculiarity of its pituitary gland, a peasized lump of tissue at the base of the brain. That is knowledge that has been discovered within the last few years. Gradually we are learning about that most intricate of all machines, the human body.
The Young Mother. THE ILLS OF INFANTS AND CHILDREN should be so well known to the youngest of mothers that a reminder or a repetition of the symptoms of illness seems unnecessary, yet there are some mothers who overlook a feverish condition, a little colic, or a disposition to be irritable. If not corrected they may lead to serious sickness. And to correct them, to bring Baby back to its happy self, is so easy by the use of Castoria—a medicine prepared just for infants and children. It will regulate the bowels (not force them), aid digestion and so bring quiet and rest. Fletcher’s Castoria has been doing this for over 30 years; regulating the stomach and bowels of infants and children. It has replaced the nauseating Castor Oil, so-called Soothing Syrups, poisonous Paregoric and other vicious concoctions in the homes of true and honest mothers—mothers who love their children. Those mothers will give their babies foods and medicines especially prepared for infants and children.
M ■■(J. a -------, „ = — Contents 15 Fluid Drachm] BW j i " I s CASTDRIA J ALGOHOL-3 PER GENT. , S 1 AVc^ctablcPreparationferAs-* ( similntin^UicFood by Regula-q EsZv j Therelyi^otinijDtt^ I Cheerfulness and Rest Contains fc?* neither Opium. Morphine nor fkj Mineral. XotXabcotw KIM I Ejie- A helpful Remedy for * Constipation and Diarrhje 1 j nnd Fcverishnes^ I Loss of Sleep I -resulting Pt ® I 1 Fur Simile Sijnatcreof 1 Tire CrxTM’n Goneyor. Exact Copy of Wr*pp«T.
m Pan Ie ^ ives ^ heer ^ u * New Co> or Tone to Old Curtains V vlllw PUTNAM FADELESS DYES—dyes or tints as you wish
It Works Tnat Way. SKlictis—"Does the Bible explain Just why Methuselah happened to live so long?” Uynlcus—"l think not, but my own private opinion Is that some woman must have married him for his money.”—New York Sun. Don’t Forget Cuticura Talcum When adding to your toilet requisites. An exquisite face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume, rendering other perfumes superfluous. You may rely on It because one of the Cuticura Trio (Soap, Ointment and Talcum). 25c each everywhere.—Advertisement. Mosquito’s Strong Wing Muscles. In proportion to size, a mosquito’s wing muscles are equal in strength to an eagle's. A mosquito can fly 50 miles without a halt, and with a helping wind three times that distance.
2 or 3 Cans of Baking Powder Are Not Worth the Price of One If they are the “big can and cheap” kind because they may mean baking failures THAT’S WHY CALUMET The Economy BAKING POWDER Is the biggest selling brand in^he world t Don’t let a BIG CAN or a very low price misExperimenting with an uncertain brand is expensive — because it LWJ WASTES t.me and money. best by test The World’s Greatest Baking Powder
Children Cry For A Word About Truth. “Great is Truth, and mighty above all things.” So says the Old Testament, yet it is equally true to-day. Truth shows no favors, fears no enemies. From the inception of Fletcher’s Castoria, Truth has been the watchword, and to the conscientious adherence to this motto in the preparation of Fletcher’s Castoria as weU as in its advertising is due the secret of its popular demand. AU imitations, all substitutes, all just-as-good preparations lack H the element of Truth, lack the righteousness of being, lack all semblance even in the words of those who would deceive. And you! Mothers, mothers with the fate of the World in your hands, can you be deceived? Certainly not. Fletcher’s Castoria is prepared for Infants and Children. It is distinctly a remedy for the little-ones. The BABY’S need for a medicine to take the place of Castor Oil, Paregoric and Soothing Syrups was the sole thought that led to its discovery. Never try to correct BABY’S troubles with a medicine that you would use for yourself. MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'B CASTORIA GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS TH« CKNTAUR COMPANY NSW YORK CITY.
Im ^ ew Shoes-Old Shoes-Tight Shoes j Ft all feel the same if you OS& 1P shake into them some ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE « i; '4 The Antiseptic, Healing Powder for the Feet / h;t A Takes the friction from the shoe, freshens ' the feet and gives new vigor. At night, ; |LA* I when your feet are tired, sore and swol- 4J h ’ ’ I f* : len from walking or dancing, Sprinkle £^3 AMI yJg ; > ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE in the foot-bath EPM yML/A < Lx and enjoy the bliss ol teet without H’Ai su ache. r —tri Over 1.500,(W) pen nds of Powder for the Feet / were used by our Anny and Navy during the war. R„nt>xFHi / ln a s>,nch ’ AX ’ r ^^sJ‘ oo ' r * EASE , ?
Truth that occupies a nutshell finds some minds too narrow to give it room. It never rains but It pours, and when one cloud disappears they all do.
Fan Can Serve Two Purposes. The big, wheel-shaped fan placed at the top of the air shaft of a ccal mine for ventilating the mine is sometimes designed for blowing air into the mine, and sometimes for drawing it out.
