Walkerton Independent, Volume 50, Number 33, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 January 1925 — Page 7

CAI VC SLSANOft«\ I LL. ©CT THAT'S (HAT \ /XYwHV TkArk ' , . — . rUL Kd i Do vou / ahc curin - Elsah orcs motmeA \ prettv Piece I<• J hot / _\ I " BOYSTo A { COMB tN A PLAVIN& TH’ PIANO • I „ ( V&UR MOTHER /» Tj MOTHER. ( O \ f PRA^ A P.CToRE i M V A IKI AMD A-^ OV ' E -» / i HEQES A CHAHCE J J J I <»S PLAYING? / J \SHE'S OUT. V * / "°^O POP ih | Ib^^Xl , UN UUK \ tp-n.&ht ?/J oStaSs To IMPRESS / \ \ ^HiS C ©^'C aho ! 1/\ I - -rrituwi - -A^. —Ai\ MV SwA sleanore that / \ \. i win a pr^ . I \ v TOWN i'm interested / ^AnWraLv j vn ^—J/vZV » * make "old pop" 1 lunn _ /Br-raf . N MUSK . jy 51 W d jW - FlUkm ™ PaS/1 Zr f — AA Yc -n s Vy %. v /x\sA »" 7x 4I : Y4a\_?Y7<. I I he's worth = I | f I I r 1 u r — /T>\ VA T«?to Li K \ JJ /aW /] ( 1’ zyCM ’i X [ ■ Picture to be j »\T | LuaJ Curly Has a ; j I XcjL Fj ’ flKj|Mk \V7s\\ . I - i /vrir V .As. > ■V IK -J DCAwn in ink Musical T /^, / |2 ' z \ ® AwX\\ a^z • —J—— ILZ I WlvH 'X/? 1 \ ‘ ABOUT 3,4 To Ear L raTTnA i -z [tat vff<s H,GH • -rHe lL 1 r-r. VA L X _ Q Vr 1 ^ <P W \ LZ/ttl winning- drawings w — w H l \v\k "\ T-X-H el-L rr-4 \ { ^ ILL ® E published jo&x By n X\vx>\ "■ \ scryciA \ -< 1 1 a\. n x £ft ^°° papers rWs/\ ^9f $ ■^r’SV^Art \ l XXA opens / /A Jr Edward ^AxV\a Mb s U* Myycu ^vaA U : vV McCullough zXPAz 7 fflKSTvr^^ 55Qjy Ly 'iry Mz Ui ~, 41 L. —J X i\) _j / —JBHb /1 A I VL \a c ^s^- - -jHt- — X 11 — 1 1 l■l■T -I- / , LL-L-kJ L-U \ I 1% T MiS paper. 44 M

Neglected Cough Dangerous—How to Stop It Quickly When the delicate tissues of your throat are raw and sore from coughing, and your strength is exhausted with the constant hacking, you may fall an easy preytqmoresenoustrouble. So stop the cough t ne quickest you can, before it creeps too deep. - Te ry Birnple treatment you can stop the a ” Pr^i^lly.at once, and relieve the heavtea epngh often in 24hours. The treatment is nasM on a remarkable prescription known as Pr. King s New Discovery for Coughs. You simply takea teaspoonfu! and bold itin your thr^tfor 15 or 20 seconds before swallowing, without following with water. It hns a double *cuon- . It not only soothes and heals soreness and ur Station, but it quickly loosens and re”J OV «?.w phlegm and congestion which are “** of coughing. With the cauaetreated inthis way.thewhole cougbcon* chuon goea in a very short time. J contains miopiates orharm. ful drugs. It simply helps Nature. It is for coughs, chest colds, hoarseness, bronchitis and spasmodic croup. Very economical, as jgZ^plSCO VE Ry^4 "A/SflfoneT nt utmumutur /^Beliefitkemi\ rt °' LC i nYAHTOM for \ iStomAckLiYet.ud * \3onvl trouble, iOdl \nen disease ud / \Kkamitiau/' boitieXf .WAMTOMA fOQdy ^<l vMdi thi tvsuits rORSALT 3/ALL riLUGG^TS Ftrr'ur a VAM 6YSTER.VELD MED.’cO. IMG GRAND RAPIDS, ML^M. UAZQJIKmiNSte Dis-tnbutoi's \ GRAND RAPIDS —M AN ISTLL

GROVERTOWN Gosh! Guess I musta’ ’bln asleep. Haven’t writ nothin’ fer ’bout two weeks, an’ I hain’t wished all you peepul a happy an’ prosper’us du yer, but I gess it hain’t tu late yit, so I'll jees do it now. Everythin’ good tu ye all. An' then ther’ haint bin so awful much goin' on so ye’ haint mist much. O' course ther' wus Miss Lillie Nelson o’ Chicago an’ her sister, • Mrs. Telkamp frum up nere Grand Rapids, Mich., spent a week with their mother, Mrs. Jno. Nelson, a’ visitin’ so on, an’ they went home last Thursday. An’ Mrs. Tousley, she cum home after a month’s visit with her folks in Chicargo. She got home last Saturday looking 'n feelin’ mitey fine. Clave Gumbert went down t’ Nawth Judson Friday nite t’ visit Mr. ’n Mrs. Russel Richey, ’n then , tha’ brot him home Saturday nite ’n stayed “till Sunday eve. An’ Sunday Gordon Shaffer ’s his wife went down t’ Nawth Judson t’ visit wid Richeys. Yas, 'n Seward Reinhardt, he tuk a little spell o’ wanderlust ’n picked up ’n went t’ Plymouth 'n Walkerton last Thursday on a little bizness ’n Friday him 'n his wife. Dory, Ti her pa r Andy I’ncapher, went way down t’ Hamlet on sum more bizness ’n cum back the same day. 'N 'en Fridy nite the Farm Rur’o’ had their meetin’ ’n it wus a rest good one tu. ’Bout twenty men brot ther good sens with ’em ’n jined it. Tha all voted 'n resoluted again the county unit law ’u th’ child labor law. Our peepull down here don’t like th' ring o‘ them two proposishuns a bit. Say, I red sumphin’ purty good ’tother day whar it sed as how 'a ery o' prospairity is one in w’lch th’ •pe^Pull go in det fer things tha’ don’t nede, ’n the country is a hull lot more prospairous ’n ever before ’coz it’s got 'bout twisted ’Smtuch ; munny 'n it b’ys ’bout has ’smutch.” j ’N its wuss ’n ’at. Ust t’ get six pr. o’ shu strings fer a nickel, now ye» j

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| git pair o” th’ same ones fer five cents. I ’N ye ust t’ git a good man sized shurt fer fawty sents, ’n now yu kin git th' same thing fer a |1.25. 'N still tha by carpet by the yard ’n ware ’em out by th' foot. Gosh! Ain’t that a good one? Our skools Is huminin’ alon^ mitey fine agin. Teechers 'n skolars all dun vakashunen ’n back t’' bizness. Thet little run o' mumps tha hed is kinds' dide out 'n every buddy feeelin’ purty good. Now’, I’m goin’ t* tell ye ’bout the Otterbein Klub meetin’ this Thurs. nite ’n quit. Now be shure 'n b’ thar. Yu’ll heai sura good muslck ’n Ringin’ ’n speekin’ ’n git a cup o’ coffee ’n a bite t’ ete. PINE George Mcßride and family and Walter Barnhart and family called on John Whiteman and family or Lapaz Thursday evening. Miss Ruth Benedict of Culver called on Arthur Herbster and family Thursday. Floyd Gardner and family and Bert Gardner and family of Walkerton were Sunday visitors at the home of George Mcßride and family. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Herbster and Earl Herbster helped butcher at Mon Robertson’s last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hawblitzel, Arthur Herbster and family and Earl Herbster were Tuesday butchers ax, the George Mcßride home. Irvin McEndarfer’s young folks visited with Fred Shupert and family Sunday. Fred Shupert and family visited with Frank Bennett and family Thursday night. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shupert and Ed Hawblitzel were South Beud , callers Monday. Frank Bennett and family, Fred j Shupert and faintly called on Bert I Shupert and family of Lakeville 1 Saturday* evening. i Mrs. IjOU Lonzo called on Mrs. ■

Cliff Ixmzo Monday afternoon. Quite a number from Pine are attending revival services at the I^akeville Methodist church. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Patrick of South Bend visited the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kershner, over the week-end. John Knepp and family were South Bend shoppers Saturday. Oscar Helm and family of North Liberty and Lou Lonzo and family of Des Moines, la., were Sunday afternoon visitors at the home of Cliff Lonzo and family. Our neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Lou l^oiifzo, ^iave ^-etuyned home after an extended visit with their son, Clyde and family, of Dps Moines, la. Quite a number of people read the story in the paper several weeks ago about the state and the industry of Nebraska especially in and around the city of Grand Island, where Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Lonzo were visiting relatives and friends. Later they visited their son. C. D. Lonto and family and other friends In Des Moines, la., who say NebrasKa has nothing on lowa as Des Moines alone has a population of 150.000, and an area of 56 square miles, ; largest newspaper and perodlcals. . It has 9 railways, 104 passenger trains daily and 95,000 dally passengers. The state ranks first tn cattle, corn, oats, and several other products. .Altho we do not care to write too much about lowa, as that is not our home, but hs we always like to use ever} body alike and not show partiality between friends of • those two states, we feel like telling : the readers of this paper a little of the good of each state Mr. and Mrs. Ix>nzo left their home by auto Oct. 27th, and landed in Peoria. 111., at 5 p m-, same day. 1 visited relatives and left there the 30th and arrived in Des Moines at 7 p m., rode a distance of 3Ja j miles that day. up and down hills, especially from Davenport west. They remained in Des Moines until । Nov. 11th. then went with Illinois relatives to Anita, Fountainnell, Atlantic and Marne. lowa. by auto. J After a ten day visit at those places. . their son came and took them to Omaha where they visited friends and next morning left Omaha, arrived at Grand Island, the next evening at the home of Mrs. Ix»n(zo’s brother and family. Visited

them and other friends ten days, - when the> again went to Des Moines, - and visited until last Friday evening. They got tickets for North Liberty f and were taken by Mr. and Mrs. P. _ O. Heim to their home on the farm Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lonzo do not regret 8 their trip as they made many new acquaintances and friends and were certainly entertained and used fine 1 by their relatives and friends, sevf eral of whom had big dinners for k them. If it were not for their little r patch here in good old Indiana, they could, and probably would, have 1 spent at least another month in the r West. The weather was fine all the , time they were gone in the West. - There were quite a number of e.s citements such as fires and robberies, j churches burned to the ground and g banks robbed and one young man _ leaped from the ISth story to the j pavement below and killed himself on account of a sweet little girl who was a manicurist. Mr. and Mrs. Lonzo and perhaps , others would like to hear of others g who are spending these cold winter x days in some other states. They met B several families on the train headed for Florida. MAPLE GROVE (Intended For Last Week) 1 Ed Vanderhoof of South Bend called on Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Reasor 5 last Saturday. t Mrs. Chas. Gonser of South Bena # visited last week at the Russell t Baughman and Wm. Strickler f homes. , Ralph Weiss ajid family and Mrs. f Laura Weiss of South Bend called on Mr. aud Mrs. Chas. Reasor Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Keltner and sons spent New Year’s Day at the ' ।T. M Reward home and assisted in the butchering. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Snyder were Monday visitors at the home of Mrs. • Wm Hummer. [ Mr. and Mrs. O. J. Turrell and sons spent New Year’s at the R G. Turrell home. Mrs Lucy Simpson is on the sick list. ■ Rev. C. Polen of Lakeville called on Chas. Reasor Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Geyer were New Year guests of Harold Geyer and family. • For This Week) Howard Ort and family and Mr. . and Mrs. Knight Lawson were Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Lydia । Hummer and family. Ray Wiseman and family spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Reasor. Ernest Reasor and family took , Sunday dinner with the iatter’s 1 brother. Earl Bailey and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Reasor were j Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and 1 Mrs. W. 1.. Keltner. A. B. Martin Is on the sick list. ! C. B Hardy called on Henry Vinson and wife last week. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Seward and I family were Sunday dinner guests l of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Scheidegger. Wade Hummer called on Chas. Reasir one day last week. Mrs. Lydia Hummer spent last Friday with Mrs. Edward Reasor of South Bend. Sunday school next Sunday at the usual hour followed by preaching services. Mrs. C. W. Anderson, Supt. Rev. E. Riggin, Pastor DIXIE Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Walter and sons and Mrs. Amanda Baughman visited with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Baughman Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kale ana Mr. and Mrs. Claude Houser of South Bend were Sunday geusts of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Sanders. Mrs. Max McCoy and son, Richard, ol Mishawaka, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Walter, Mr. and Mrs. Ottu Schmeltz, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bunch, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Summers, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gushwa and son, Glen, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Walter, and son, George. Lowell Pickrel called on Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Richard sanaay. Mrs. Wm. Herbster has been caring for her daughter, Mrs. Edgar Hoover, who has been suffering with rheumatism.. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Summers visited the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Summers, Sunday afternoon. George Walter called on RalphKilian Sunday evening. Effie Kirkley entertained two of her little friends, Helen Richard and Dorothy Keiser, oven the w’eek-end, Friday, Jan. 9th, was Effie’s ninth birthday. Mrs. John Walter, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Herr, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keiser, Mrs. Orby Baughman, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Gillis and George Walter attended the farmers" institute in Lakeville Tuesday. Chas. Gillis had a radio installed in their home last week. Mr. and Mrs. Orby Baughman and sons were guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Baker Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Herr, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Keiser, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Mangus, Delbert and Roscoe Mangus, Mrs. Orby Baughman, Mrs. David Baker and Mrs. Albert Kirkley attended the poultry school in South Bend last week. Hiram Baughman is visiting his niece, Mrs. Melvin Mangus. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sanders, Joe I Sanders and son, Harold and Cecil

, and Walter Keiser were entertained , by radio at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Sanders Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Quigley returned home from Mount Vernon, Ind., where they had been visiting : ( the latter’s parents for a few weeks. Miss Edna Houser was a guest of > her cousin. Miss Evelyn Roush, In s Mishawaka, Sunday afternoon. • Mrs. Marshall Kirkley and Mrs. • Angeline Gillis were in South Bend » last Wednesday on business. Mrs. r Gillis is slowly improving. 5 Elnor Weldeman of I^aPorte was » a vuest of Cecil Houser Monday ! night. Mrs. Oliver Clabaugh has been 111 wltn the flu. . Lewis Dowell from South Bend I called on his mother, Mrs. Alice 1 Dowell. Sunday evening. > 1 f STRTNGTfIWN > Dr. Claude Geyer and family of South Bend spent Sunday with Mr. ! ’ and Mrs. Robert Geyer. ’ Mrs. Ralph Horn who has been sick at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Selkirk, left Tuesday evening for Ashland, 0., where she will resume her teaching. Frank Newcomer and family spent Sunday with Clete Heim and family. Mrs. Elizabeth Sousley spent Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Sousley. Miss Anna Shene man is spending n few weeks with Mr. and Mrs.’ ‘ Henry Stull. Howard Naragon of South Benaspent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Naragon. ■ Helen, Dora and Marie Naragon took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Summers Sunday. Mrs. John Roush and daughter, ■ Olive, called on Mrs. Henry Stull ‘ Thursday afternoon. Vernon Kaser took a sled load of young people over to the Star church Sunday evening to attend the services. Mr. Faylie of Rich Valley has rented Mrs. Buchtel’s house and is 1 moving his family here this week 1 There will be preaching at Tabor i church Sunday morning and even-/ ‘ ing. Rev. F. Willmert, pastor. ‘ | Mrs. John Hummell and daughter, ; Esther, and Agnes Neiswander took j i Sunday dinner with Henry Stull and j | family. Harley Mangus snent Monday ’ night with Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred ! ‘ McEndarfer at Sumption Prairie. | Paul Mangus of South Bend visited his father Sunday night. Mrs. Elizabeth Sousley and Jessie Mangus took Sunday dinner with Will Smith and family of near ; Lakeville. Mrs. Wilfred McEndarfer spent • several days last week with her ■ parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Mangus. 1 Gall Stones Before risking operations send for , , my free booklet, explaining simple 1 home treatment for Irritations of | Liver, Gall Bladder and Gall Ducts as associated with Gall Stones. __Dr. E. E. Paddock, Desk AP, Kan- , sas <lty. Mo. StwnlflS Getting Up Nights Can be stopped ° ftPn ln ^ 4 rr hours. To prove that you can be rid of this strength sapping ailment, have more pep, be free from burning sensation, pain in groins, backache, and weakness I’ll send yop Walker’s Prostrate Specific free and postpaid under plain wrapper. No obligation. ; No cost. If it cures your prostrate gland trouble, you can repay the favor by telling your friends —if not the loss is mine. Simply send me your name and prove that you can feel 10 years younger and be rid of pros- , trate trouble. I. B. WALKER, 2496 Gateway Station, Kansas Citv, Mo. 2tjls andJ29 wnl i A Good Thing - DON’T MISS IT j Send your name and addrees plainly written together with 5 cents (and t! is I dip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co, Des Moines, lowa, and receive in return 3 ! trial package containing Chamber lain’s Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, t >up, bronchial, ‘flu” and whooping coughs, f and tickHng throat; Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets for stomach troubles, indigestion, gassy pairs that crowd the heart, biliousness and constipation; Chamberlain’s Salve, needed in .every family foi burns, ecaids, wounds, piles, and skin affections; these valued family medicines for only 5 cents. Don’t wits iu HalFs Catarrh Medicine Those who are in a "run down" condition will notice that Catarrh bothers them much more than when they are In good health. This fact proves that while Catarrh is a local disease, it is greatly influenced by constitutional conditions. HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE consists cf an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in improving the General Health. Sold by druggists for over 40 Yearr. K J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio. PRINTING K not the cheap kind but the good kind done here. MAAAAAAAAAAMMMWWWMMWWWto

KIEST MILLING CO. Phone 22. Knox, Indiana Gold Medal Flour, bbL >10.69 Kfest’s Best Flour, bbl. 9.59 Jr ah am Flour, lb. .06 Pure Buckwheat Flour, lb. 07 Oora Meal, lb. .04 Choice Whole Rice, lb. .00 Year old Pop Corn, lb. .05 Wheat Bran, cwt L9O Wheat Middlings, cwt. 2.00 Red Dog Middlings, cwt. 3.59 Hog Tankage, 60%, cwt >4.09 Oil Meal 34%, fine or coarse 3.15 Corn and Oats Chop, cwt. >.» Gluten Feed, cwt >2.40 Soy Bean Meal, 38%. cwt 3.09 Blatchford's Calf Meal, 25 Iba 1.3 S Poultry Feed, cwt. 0 59 Developing Feed, cwt. 3.39 • Chick feed, cwt. 4.99 ‘ Egg Mash with Buttermilk, cwt 4.09 ! Growing Mash, cwt. 4.10 .Chick Starter, cwt. 4.70 Cracked Corn, sifted, cwt. 2.60 Oyster Shells, cwt 1.00 Grit, cwt. 1.0» Beef Scrape, cwt >4.50 Alfalfa Meal. cwt. 2.25 Pig feed with buttermilk, blood bone, oil meal and tankage for growing pigs, cwt. 3,30 Very highest Quality Clovers, Blue Grass, Timothy, Field Seeds, Garden Seeds and Alfalfa Seeds. 50 lb. sacks fine Salt .75 . 50 lb. salt blocks for stock .50 70 lb. Sacks Farmer Salt 1.00 Baled Timothy hay and straw Prices subject to change without notice. WB SHIP ANT PLACB Come in—and pay that overdue subscription account Don*t wait until th» paper stops. GAAL W. SEYBOLD Attorney-at-Law Suite 415 J. M. S. Bldg., South Bend, Ind. Phones: Office, Res. Main 887 Main 3561 Dr. John A. Stoeckley 511 J. M. 8. Bldg. South Bend. Ind. Extracting with Gas-Oxygen Anaesthesia, Local and Nerve Blocking Anaesthetics. “Buike Eye Service Is Easily Remembered. You Always Remember Satisfaction-” 7.50 ana M-t< SHELLTEX AA SHURON GLASSES 4>O*VV DR. J. BURKE! SOVTH BEND, IND. Over 20 years in same location. 230 S. Michigan Street r 1 Our Hobby Is Good r- - rv • .. Ask to see iTlßtin^ samples of our busp i — — —— nesscard^ —■ lll visiting r ’ ■ cards, wedding and other invitations, pam^ phlets, folders, letter heads, statements, shipping tags, envelopes, etc., constantly carried in stock for your accommodation. Get our figures on that printing you have been thinking of. New Type, Latest Style Faces