Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 1 October 1925 — Page 3
■■BBKK3KWSMIIRE3Hb3BXffffIK3W.WIR^IS^^ We Compile Complete Modern Form Abstracts of Title to Lands located in City, Town, or Country, in St. Joseph, Marshall, Starke or LaPorte Counties I The Indiana Title Abstract Go I S^Walkei^^^ I Send the • I Home Town Paper • to that son or daughter away from | ' home at college or teaching school. | $1 for 9 months | INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO.. | br JIKw t N? 1 Soft- XJBN X / N? 2—Medium rl |i I N° 3-Med. Hard I X’X I jS^isdefl )/ k ' PENCIL COMPANY /I /J » PHILADELPHIA AJ £3 U USA. -O Jenci/s ; See Us i About l Your Sale Bills Free Ad | in Our Three Papers • Special Form I Free! Helps to Fill Out | ' Your Copy. Ask for it. Independent-News Co. I bad _B. ■ JA-BREATH^i| i T\o YOU WANT your friends to avoid you? They E i AX certainly do so when your breath is bad. I There is no excuse for anyone having a bach I ■ breath. It is caused by disorders of the stomacm I K which can be corrected by taking Chamberlain’s 1 Tablets. Many have been permanently cured of B stomach troubles by the use of these tablets after K I years of suffering. Price 25 cents per bottle. g
bounty
STRINGTOWN Eldon, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Merton Duckett of Jonesboro, Ind., was ouried last Eriday afternoon at the North Liberty cemetery. Funeral was held at the First Brethren church. Mr. and Mrs. Duckett were former residents of North Liberty. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Tinkey and son, George Marks and family of South Bend and Vera and Winifred Heim were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. an,d Mr^ Alonzo Sheneman. Jessie Mangus spent Sunday with Mary Strope. Mrs. Jane Buchtel and Mr. and Mrs. Merton Duckett and son of Jonesboro spent Sunday night and I Monday with Mrs. Elizabeth Sous- | ley. Wm. Smith and family took din- '' ner with Mrs. .Elizabeth Sousley | Sunday. । Albert Faw ley and family mo' tored- to Michigan Sunday in search I. of grafpes and peaches. 11 Mrs. Frank Newcomer and Mr. I and Mrs. Vernon Kaser and child--11 ren motored to South Bend Sun11 day evening. Please use your phone to send in 1 the news. • * CRUMSTOWN Ernest Zahrns and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ruesell j Burch of near Hamlet. Bert Kipllnger and family of South Bend were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank , Sensenbaugh of Long Island. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Miller of New Carlisle were Sunday guests at the John Pontius home. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Powell and son and Miss Lilian Wedel of South Bend spent the week end at the Ben Wedel home. Clarence Wedel motored to St. Joseph, Mich.. Sunday. About fifty friends and relatives j from South Bend surprised Mrs. ! Benard Wedel last Friday night, it j being her fifty-fourth birthday. They spent a pleasant evening and | enjoyed a wiener supper. Mrs. John McCoy of South Bend visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Riner. Ray Hollinger has moved his family to Lydick. Clyde Hay and family visited relatives in South Bend Sunday. JORDAN Miss Olive Bellinger spent Sun- , day at the Fred Bellinger home. i Otto Schmeltz and family spent Sunday at the M. Walter home. ; Miss Flossie Jester of South Bend spent Saturday with Mrs. C. E. I Bellinger. We are all going to have a good time at our Jordan box social Tburs.day night, Oct. 15. Better help us enjoy it. Frank Tischer and son and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vincent spent Sunday in River Park with the latter's, daughter, Mrs. Lester Verduin and husband. Miss Cora Bolden of Mishawaka spest the week end with Miss Thelma Snyder. Dolph Cripe and family of North Liberty, Clymour Geiger of Garrett and Harrv Bellinger were callers at the Fred Schmetz home. Dwight Rhodes and familv of Walkerton. Miss Berneice Rovrch and Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hardy and daughter were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bellinger. Mrs. Dallas Miller and Mrs. Mae Roberts of South Bend spent Thursday with Mrs. Fred Bellinger. Mr. and Mrs. Oral Jennings of Omaha. Nebr., and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Snyder took supper last Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Etsel Snyder. Chriney Schenck visited Sunday with Marvin lambert and family
What the World Is Doing As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine
Butterfly Farm Hatches Its Cocooas by Electricity b<tUad!i«e under artificial eoadMoM to the occupation of a CbHforade farmer. Bis incubator is an Us serfs ova®, with the humidity regulated to suit the typo of cocoon boing hatched Ota the farm he grows 'pleats sad flowers suited to the palate of the flying beauties. For hardier butterfUss, demanding cooler air and ample mototere, a care is provided. * Discarded Automobile Radiator Makes Good Ground An exooQent ground can bo made fee the hmUo set by using ajUerarded copper automobile radiator, which can be purchased from a junk dealer or at an automobile-wrecking plant. The ground wire is firat soldered on, and the radiator is then placed in the ground at a depth of from 4 to 6 ft. A layer of earth, about 1 ft. deep, is tamped down firmly on the radiator, and a layer of salt is sprinkled over this. Alternate layers of dirt and salt are tamped in until the hole is £4 2.
north of South B'end. L. I’. Hardy and daughter, Genevieve, and Wayne Hardy and daughter, Martha, were Sunday visitors at the C. E. McCarty home. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Forsythe of Cleveland, Ohio, spent the week end with his sister, Mrs. Wm. Diapert of the lake, and Mrs. Joe Berger. Mr. Forsythe is with the Cleveland, Southern Railway and Light Co. The Lincoln township country fair iheld at our school last Wednesday afternoon and evening was a decided success. A splendid exhibit of vegetables from the pupils of all four schools, besides fancy work and grasses from other patrons of ■ the districts. Nearly a hundred ribbons were given in prizes . A Pony race afforded much fun for the chilriien and the day meant much from a social standpoint. Where are all the other correspondents of our papers. We notice there are only a very few faithful ! this fall. Where are Mt. Vernon I Pumlpkin Center, and the rest. Mrs. Merrill Reece had for her l birthday guests Sunday: Mr. and j Mrs. Delbert Divine and daughter, ; Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt Masterman, i Miss Mabel McDaniel. SILVERSTREET Word has been received from | Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Steele, who have i been spending a few weeks at Mayo I Brothers Hospital, that they left there last Thursday. Sept. 24. on । their homeward journey. They will । stop off a few days to visit their I btofher, Ruben Steele, and wife, of i North Dakota. Mrs. Katie .St imp and Mrs. Geroby Stump visited with Mrs. M 8. ! Morris and Grandma Burkholder Friday afternoon. Mrs. Katie Stump spent last week with Mrs. Geroby Stump. Fern Irene Stump visited Grand}’ I pa and Grandma Stump Thursday, j Mr. and Mrs. Ben Baughman : called on Mr and Mrs. Henry | Baughman of New Carlisle Thurs- । day evening. Mrs. Harvey Stump and little * daughter. Fern Irene, spent Tuesday with her sister. Mrs. M L. Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Hepler and son of Plymouth called at the M. S. Morris home Saturday moruing. । Paul Longecker and Anthony Colp :w ho are working in South Bend, I had a close call while driving thru j town Friday morning. They dodged ( out to miss a car aivd struck an | iron post throwing both men clear of the car and bruising them gome, ' and smashing the car all to spliuter ~ rb«» series of meetings will begin | next Sunday, Oct. 4, at the Piue Creek church. Rev. C. H Deardorff of White Cottage. 0.. will be the , evangelist. Meetings will continue each evening for two weeks. Everybody welcome. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stump called at the M S. Morris home Saturday afternoon. | Mrs. Amelia Gensinger visited, with her daughter, Mrs. M L. Clark of North Liberty last week. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Loring of Walkerton called on Mr. anxi Mrs. 1 ! Harvey Stumip Friday afternoon. Mrs. Rosa Kramer and son, ■ । Floyd Henry, of Flint, Mich., are ! . visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Wolf, fer a few days. Quite a few of our people are at- I tending the meeting at North Lib- 1 | erty They have a good speaker and fine singing. I Ben Baughman filled his silo last I W’edne^day. i How does a weak tire know you • are all dressed up and ready for a ' party? t So England will pay with rubber. ' At last we know wbat an "elastic
to Perils in Drinking Cup Evoke Warning from U. S. I With a million sufferers in the * United States every day from respirai tory diwaaes which may be spread by ■ the common drinking cu^ or glass, the i public-health service recently issued i a special warning to beware putting 1 the lips to a container which someone ' else has used, unless it has first been I well sterilized. - All but two of the states have passed la we banishing community use of drinking vessels, and they have been ■ forbidden for several years on trams and steamers in interstate commerce, but in spite of this fact, many people, • the government says,'defeat the law by failing to insist on its enforcement. Some cities, the bulletin states, have passed ordinances forbidding the use of glasses at soda fountains, but m others, the receptacles are rinsed again and again in the same water until the wash itself becomes more dangerous than the used glass Citing the Ohio laws as an excellent example of good sanitation, the public health service points out that they provide a sodafountain glass or other publicly used container must, after each use. be first washed in cold water, then in hot jWater with soap or suitable cleansing powder, or exposed to live steam, boiling water or hot air for not less than five minutes, then rinsed in clear cold water and drained. If hot air is used to kill the germs, the law provides the temperature must not be iess than 260 degrees. Heat is about the best, sterilizer known, and boiling water will kill most, germs within five minutes. Motor tourists should provide separate drinking cups f®r each member of the party, the health service adds, and care should be taken to keep them clean. • ♦ ♦ {[Fragrant carnations have been used with success as a substitute for cheese ■is ba..t for catching rats in 1.x. -.cLs.
Sacred Steps The Santa Scala is a flight of 28 steps of white-veined marble In the piazza of the church of St. John Lateran at Rome, which, according to tradition, belonged to the house of Pilate at Jerusalem, and were made sacred by the feet of Christ as he passed to judgment, the Kansas City Times relates. Penitents are permitted to ascend these stairs only on their knees, and so great has been the number that annually made the ascent that ft was found necessary to cover the steps with planks of wood to insure their protection. It was while ascending these steps that Martin Luther, then a monk, thought he heard the words, "The just shall live by faith.’’ Mortified by the degradation to which he considered his guperstltlon had led him, he descended and hastened from the spot. She has to be an uncommonly pretty bathing girl to be a treat to a life guard. Paid your subscription up yet? Honxe PROPER FOOD FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN The age during which children are attending school may aptly be called "The Dangerous Age." It is the period of rapid growth and every care should be taken to insure the child of a normal and healthy body. The idea of eating only tit and wholesome foods should be early impressed on the younger members of every family in order to protect them against later 111 health and Its accompanying unhappiness. if the utmost care Is not taken In the diet that is used by children, cases of food poisoning, indigestion and kindred ailments may result. And milk, being the chief Item In the diets of most children, should be carefully guarded. It Is. because of Its nature, prone to infection If exposed to germs and may soon become unfit for use. Wherever there is the slightest reason for doubt as to its purity and food value, steps should be taken to Insure the sterility and the fitness of milk Intended for consumje tion by children. Many mothers have Adopted the excellent practice of using inllk that Is absolutely pure and sterile and free from any genns or bacteria. The most satisfactory, as well as the safest milk used In preparing food for the growing child Is evaporated milk. It Is sterile, and therefore safe. It Is more digestible than market milk. Its uniformity, convenience and cost are qualities that recommend It. The following dishes are well suited to the needs of the growing child: they are easily digested and very nourishing: Caramel Custard. 1 eup evaporated cup susar milk diluted (caramelized) with > tbsp sugar 1 cup water H tsp salt 3 eggs H tsp. vanilla Scald the diluted milk Caramelize the sugar and add to milk to dissolve. Beat eggs slightly, add sugar, salt, and flavoring and combine w’th scalded milk. Pour Into custard cups and set in a pan of hot water and cook tn a moderate oven. When done, a knife blade run tn the center will come out clean. ‘ Fish Chowder. 1 pint raw fish cut 3 cups boiling tn i-lnch dice water i small potatoes, 1 eup evaporated • Heed milk diluted t onions chopped with fine 1 cop water 14 pound fat salt ® emckers pork, sliced Fry out the salt pork. When brown, remove pieces of pork and put fish, potatoes. and onions tn kattle. Cover with boiling water. Simmer until potatoes are tender. Add the milk and cook S minutes finger. Season with salt and pepper. Just before serving add the crackers.
Milk-Bucket Support Molds Pail Conveniently ► Holding a milking pail can be made • much earner by using a support of the kind shown in —-- i the drawing. — I Take a piece of— — I heavy wire JjZ, wT? 11 1 1 ' 1 3t\l 111 — 'V Illi IjAL— 4ill I ' 1 about 5 ft. long, bring the ends together and splice them. It is better to solder the joint so that the wire ends will not catch and tear the clothes. Set the milk pail inside of this loop, and twist the wire on each side near the top of the bucket to form two small handles of equal size. Give these handles a slight curve so that they will fit over the knees securely and at the same time comfortably. ♦ ♦ • Lobsters Colored to Taste by Dyeing Their Food lobsters may be colored to any hue desired to suit the particular schervs of dinner decoration simply by putting coloring matter in their food, according to a well-known German scientist. He discovered that they turn red after they are boiled because of the action of the heat upon a chemical in their sheila. * * * {[Discarded phonograph 3®edles ' make excellent glazier’s points; they | m dri-^n into ’ - > sh in m - 1 way. Lefor-
303 Miles an Hour fWJ 1 1 Lieut.. Alfred Williams, U. S. Navy flier, who in an unofficial test at New York last week flew a 20foot Curtiss racer at a speed of 303.5 miles per hour, the fastest sneed ever attained by man." Friar Bacon's Brazen Head Is Old Legend According to a legend prevalent in the Middle ages. Roger Bacon (12141292) spent seven years constructing a brazen head, which he fancied would tell him how to surround the island of Great Britain with a wall of brass. This head was to speak within a month after its completion, but no special hour was set for its so doing. Bacon, accordingly, set his servant to watch, specially enjoining him to notify his master in case the head should speak. At the end of the first half hour the servant heard the head exclaim: "Time is”; at the end of the second half hour, “Time was,” and at the end of the third half hour. "Time's past"; whereupon It fell with a loud crash and was shattered to pieces. The servant neglected to call Bacon, thinking he would not care to be disturt>ed for such a trifle, and thus the knowledge necessary to build the brazen wall was never acquired. This belief in the existence of a talking brazen bead was widely spread in the Middle ages. Gerbert. a French churchman, is said to have made such s head; and Albertus Magnus is al'eged to have constructed an entire man of brass. —Kansas City Star. Can Learn Much by Study of Child Mind "The child mnid," said Professor Davidson, “is almost beyond eomprehansion. and yet. If studied carefully, it is, the key to all psychology, for children are true mirrors of human nature. We often wonder why Robert insists on a five-cent bat like Ralph's, Instead of the better, more costly one his father bought him, and why Mary threw her wax doll Into the corner and demanded a rag doll tike Martha's. “One CSirlztmas I sent my niece and nephew each a ring. Raid's had a ruby and Alfred’s a plain seal. My sister, with many exclamations, presented the rings and waited for the happy burst of joy. but u> her amazement Alfred began to cry. “ ‘Why, Alfred, wbafa the matter?' demanded bls mother. Ml Oh.’ sobbe^ Alfred. ‘I waat a wttM a ato^ Why He Did Net Fi^hi White, who wag amaM and ptmy.had offended Brown, who wu a powerfnJ fellow atx feet th height, and who had, in consequence, declared that be would tbruh White whenever he met him. Some time later an unkind fate threw them together and, true to his promise, the big man gave poor White such a blow on the face ns almost knocked him down. Recovering himself, the victim exclaimed : “Confound tt, sir! What’s that for? Do you mean that in jest or earnest “In earnest.” replied the other, placing hlmeelf in a fighting attitude. “Oh, very well.” said White. “If It's in earnest, there’s nothing more to he said, but If It had been in jest 1 should not have liked It at all.” And he walked off. —Minneapolis Tribune. Where do you think you’ll go this year to get over the effects of your x r acation. Year in and year out the Prince of Wale s must run up quite a sizeable expense account. | [ I'VE HEftfcD THAT AUTOS RUN at night but" YOU'D NEVER, CuESE |T-To SEE 'EK STALLED ALONG THE ROADS/ J / x.
KIEST MILLING CO Phone 22. Knox, Indiana Gold Medal Flour, bbl. |10.53 Klest’s Best flour, bbi. 9.50 Graham Flour, lb. .05 Corn Meal, lr». .04 Choice Wihole Rice, lb. .10 I Wheat Bran, cwt. 1.65 Wheat Middlings, cwt. 1.80 Red Dog Middlings, cwt. 2.50 Hog 'Bankage, 60%, cwt. 3.85 Oil Meal, 34%, fine or coarse 2.90 Corn and Oats Chop, cwt. 2.10 Gluten Feed, cwt. 2.50 Soy Pean Meal, 38%, cwt. 3.00 Blatchford’s Calf Meal. 25 lbs. 1.35 Poultry Feed, cwt. 3.30 Developing Feed, cwt. 3.65 Chick Feed, cwt. 4.00 Egg Mash with Buttermilk, cwt_3.6s Growing Mash, swt. 4.00 Chick Starter, cwt. 4.50 . Cracked Corn, sifted,, cwt. 2.50 Oyster Shells, cwt. 1.00 Gri’. cwt. 1.00 । Beef Scraps, cwt. 4.00 Alfalfa Meal, cwt. 2.25 Pig feed with buttermilk, blood bone, oil meal and tankage for growing pigs, cwt. 3.00 ' Fine ground feeding oatmeal. Dried Buttermilk, Bone Meal. I Very highest. Quality Clovers, Blue 1 Grass, Timothy, Field Seeds, Garden । Seeds and Alfalfa Seeds. . 50 lb. salt blocks for stock 35 TO lb. sacks Farmer Salt 90 Baled Straw. Choice Timothy Seed, bu. 4.00 Standard Cricket Proof Binder Twine, lb. .15 Prices subject to change without notice. WE SHIP ANY PLACE THINK OF BURKE’S AND YOU THINK OF REAL EYE SERVTCE t $7.50 and $8.50 B SHELL GLASSES V COMPLETE $5.00 Examination Included DR. J. BURKE Over 20 years in Same Location 230 S. Michigan Street SOUTH BEND, INDIANA Jiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiig WARD F. \LEONARD\ | Chiropractor I = E S Phone 222 WALKERTON, IND. nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllilUS YOUR NAME Is it on our subscription list? We will guarantee you fuil value FOR YOUR MONEY GAAL W. SEYBOLD Attorney-at-Law Suite 415 J. M. S. Bldg. South Bend, Ind. ! TI K a* 1\ Z! aB fa Mh * » “Step On It” ’ —in this day and age —has come to mean. . In other words SPEED — ACTION, —LET’S GO — —GET THERE —ON OUR WAY —etc., etc. in other words— Let’s Get Results. WELL that’s what we mean too —Get results with this newspaper Ads whether yo u have something to sell or want -to buy.
