Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 20, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 15 October 1925 — Page 8
!B|%^SBa^^ I ' ' Tigertwist IT greets hard usage as Jack Dempsey would repel the taps of a flyweight. It has the sinew of the oak and the soft, grace of the sapling. It’s built for a life of hardship—with the air of the aristocrat. You’ll see Tigertwists* only at this store —they’re exclusive in Kuppenheimer GOOD CLOTHES i Come in and look over these Tigertwists in the newest American styles. Designed for the American figure—tailored to the American taste. $45 and up Others $20.00 and up The GLOBE CLOTHIERS —the house of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes Walkerton, Ind. FARM FOR SALE I Beechgood-Rees farm offered at $65.00 per acre. I Will be advertised at auction after November Ist. I Party wishing to deal privately with owner before I that date write Mrs. Fallis Rees, 1269 Vine Street, I Denver, Colorado. Itw | — __ _ .. •It Pays to Keep ? | the Hen that Lays i | MR. FARMER—Let us help you clean up your j g flock of the loafers and lice. We have the dope for i | both and will help you with your poultry problems, j | Walkerton Produce Co. | | Buyers of Poultry, Eggs and Cream | £ . Phone 133 | Coal Lime s ® Cement Sewer Pipe Brick Asphalt Roofing Cement Blocks WALKERTON CEMENT PRODUCTS CO. Phone 33 . W. S. Rhodes, Mgr. KR. FARMER ~ Advertise t your Sale in I this News- I pap^* It will brintf \ JOU buys. I c
Correspondence LONESOME TRAIL The latest radio reports have it that the frost killed the pumpkin,: th-at is why we started the Lonesome i Trail. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Goit spent! Sunday in Bourbon with the latter’s brother, Stewart Goit and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Christ Tinkey and! son, and lady friend and Miss June and Sam Tinkey of*Dowaglac, Mich., 1 were Sunday dinner guests of Henry Wanamaker and family. Mrs. Bertha Brough of Indiana-' polis is spending the week with, 1 Mrs. Julia Rinehart and Mrs. Hen ry Wanamaker. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bowers and! niece, Florence Tinkey, Mrs. Bertha! Brough, Christ Tinkey and family were Sunday dinner guests at the Henry Wanamaker home. Mrs. Julia Rinehart is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sakos, and son Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Harness Mrs. Harold Selvy spent Thursday evening at the Orville Harness home. PUMPKIN CENTER Mr. and Mrs Ray Bowers of! Walkerton. Mr. and Mrs. Christ j Tinkey and son, Harold of Michi-1 gan and Mrs. Bertha Reed of In- i dianapolis spent Sunday with Henry I Wanamaker and family. Roscoe Goit and family. Mr. and ; Mrs. Mark Trobridge of South Bend | spent Sun,day with Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Goit of near Bourbon. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Schultz and ; son, George, spent Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ramsby at Koontz lake. Mrs. Julia Rinehart is on the sick list this week. Barney Goppert and Mrs. Mamie i Schultz were in South Bend Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Schultz and । son, George and Barney Goppert visited Sunday at Five Points with the latter’s nephew, Lewis Stutsman and family. Barney Goppert and Gus Schultz and family attended the pot hick supi*er at the Ramsby cottage at Koontz lak». This was given as a farewell to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ramsby, as they are leaving soon ; for their winter home in Florida. Stuart Goit is having a sale this week and is going to build on his farm north of town, known as the George Clem farm. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Sakos of LaPorte called on Mrs. Sakos’ brother, Orville Harness. Thursday evening of last week. JORDAN Fred Schmeltz is on the sick list. Miss Edith Sheddrick spent Sunday with Velva Neville. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Hardy and daughter and Mrs. C. E. Bellinger ! wore shopping in South Bend Saturday afternoon. Misses Cyrena and Gertrude Wiley spent the week end with their brother. F. 11. Wiley. Otto Schmeltz and family spent Sunday with M. Walter and family. Mr. an I Mis. Jay Cotton are the j proud parents of a new baby boy. Mr. and Mr<. Frank Casad and j son, Mr. and Mrs- Ed I^imbert and family. Mr. and Mrs. John Richardi son and daughter of South Bend, visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. ' Chancey Wright. Mr. Casad and family started Monday noon for [ Florida. Mr. and Mrs. OHver Hardy and daughter, Mary, spent Sunday with Mrs. Maggie Jackson and daugh j ters near North Liberty. Mr. and Mrs. Will Anderson, H. IG. Hawblitz-4 and son, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bellinger and Claymoor Geiger called Sunday evening at Fred Schmeltz home. L. P. Hardy and family of South i Bend called at the C. E. McCarty | home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Millard of Chicago, Misses Cyrena and Gertrude Wiley of South Bend. F. R. Wiley and wife, I. J. and Adelaide Millard took Sunday dinner with Mrs. O. M. Wenger in Walkerton. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Barden of Elkhart, and A. G. Barden were Sunday visitors at the Qlarence Walter home Sunday. A. E. Vincen* and wife, Frank ' Tischer and son and Walter Mar- ' quis and family spent Sunday with Earl Vincent and family in South Bend. SHILOH Mrs. George Hughes and children who have been visiting at the Ballinger home, returned to their, home in Warsaw, Sunday morning I Mrs. Hughes was unfortunate enough to tear the ligaments in her ankle, caused by stepping in a hole in the lawn. Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Rensberger and daughter, Wilma, and son, Arthur. of Lydick, spent Sunday at Stiles. Miss Fern Lotz also called. Mr. and Mrs. John Freed and sons spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Susan Freed of Teegarden. Mrs. Legrand Lotz, Mrs. George I Hughes and children and Mrs. Joseph Ballenger called at the Skinner home Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Manford Webb and family of Wyatt called at the Spaid home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ritzman called on relatives on Silver Street and Yellow Bank Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Martin of Mishawaka, spent Sunday afternoon at the Wenner home. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Gardner spent Sunday at J. A. Gardner’s. Mrs. Cora Norton and daughters, Vera and Mary, of Walkerton, spent Sunday at the Skinner home. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ross and sons spent Sunday with Mrs. Maggie
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Monroe of South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gardner and son sp-nt Sunday at the Melvin Walter home in Walkerton. Claude Leslie of Lapaz spent Sun 1 day at the A. F. ITurke home. Mr. and Mrs. Milo Matz motored to Niles, Mich., Sunday. , Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Walter and I children of Walkerton spent Sunday evening at the J A. Gardner home. Mrs. Ray Skinner who has been i seriously ill is improving. ; Rev. Chas. Derdorff spent Monday at A. F. Burke's. i Wayne, Rolland and Charles i 1 Matz spent Sunday in Teegarden. j | Mrs. Jane Cover, who has been ! ' staying with her daughter, Mrs. J I iA. Gardner, went to Walkerton. | i Saturday, where she will stay at j I the Waiter Cover home for a time. — BARBER Mrs. Curtis Ramsby of Mishawaka anil Mrs. Wilbur Flowers and ■ children of Plymouth were calling , on friends in this vicinity Saturday. Mr. and m r> x. E. Cole were vis- ' iting her sister of Lapaz Sunday. The Hag pole was erected at the Barber school this week and the I children yelled Hurrah! for Old i G lory! Miss Doris Cochran of Indiana ! Central University spent the week I end at her home. Donald Gardner, an employee of , Studebakers, spent Saturday and I ( Sunday with his parents. । | Arnold and Irene Austin of Mish- , i awaka spent Sunday at the L. A. | , Schmeltz home. Dean and Martha, son and daugh- I ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray stull had ; their ton dis removed Saturday at , Rochester. Miss Berniece Schmeltz of the ' Industrial Acceptance Corporation ; of South Bend spent Sunday at f home. Alva Barber and family motored j to Clinton, lowa, Monday to spend . the week with Mr. and Mrs. D. L. I ' Rihart and others of that vicinity, i Mr. Bihart is Mrs. Barber’s brother. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Jones, formerly Miss Ada Barber, are caring for the Barber property during their absence. We noticed in last week s punchettes that our dealer. Louie Schmeltzer, has traded his notorious horse to August Schultz for the cow he purchased from Harry Holland. who so highly reccommended her, and he advises that the cow is as good natured as its former owner. The construction on the Gordon ipike has been completed. Otis advises not to drive too fast. A Fable. Two men were disputing over their respective churches. One was a Baj-tist and the other a Presbyterian. Finally one of them appealed to a passing neighbor and both ; submitted to him the argument* as i ,to which was the better church, j ।‘Well, neighbors,” he said, “my son! and I ' ave been hauling wheat for I nearly forty years. There are two J -mads that lead to the mill. One Is over the valley road and the other I leads through the hills, and never yet has t'e mil'er asked ‘which' road did you con’?' bht he alwaysi asks ‘is the wheat good?' ” T •' way to kill competition is to create something too good for cotu-pt-iition to imitate. • It is fortunate that the average ! man is self made. Proxidence must feel a tremendous relief from responsibi'.ity. IMate of Jemima S' hwartz \<H h L <>l FIX U \< <X>l \ 1 By direction of Ina Koontz. Executrix of the Estate of Jemima Schwartz, late of St. Joseph County ; in t -> State of Indian;-, deceased. Notice is Hereby Gixen to the heirs, legatees and devisees of the said decedent, and all other per- ! sons intereste<l in the said estate, , that said Executrix has filed in ths court her account and vouchers for i the final settlement of said estate, | and they are hereby required to be ' and appearin said Court on the 13th day of November. 1925, when the same will be heard and make proof of their heirship or claim to any’ part of said estate, «.n,d show cause if there be, why said account and vouchers should not be approved. ! Witness the Clerk and the Seal 'of the St. Joseph Circuit Court at South Bend. Indiana. 13th day of October. 192 5. Wilbur M. Warner, Clerk. C. P. Creviston. Deputy. J. Willis Cotton. Attorney’ for Estate. 2tw022 NOTICE OF SALE | Notice is hereby given that or । the 4th day of November, 1925, at ■ j 10:00 o'clock a. m., at the door of! the Court House of the County of ! St. Joseph, State of Indiana, the undersigned will offer for public j sale the following described real estate, situated in the County of St. | Joseph, State of Indiana, to-wit: | “The North West quarter (%) of the South East quarter ( L ) of Section 14, Township No. 35, North. Range 1 West, excepting therefrom two acres off of the North end thereof.” ! I will first offer 10 acres in a square form out of the Northwesterly corner of said tract: And if not I sold, then the entire tract. Terms of the sale are cash. j Said sale is made to satisfy mortgage given by Ira W. Place and Lelia M. Place, his wife, to the ' State of Indiana, to secure a loan j from the School Fund of the State of Indiana. — Dated at the City of South Bend, । Indiana, this 2nd day of October, 1925. I Clarence Sedgwick, Auditor of the County of St. Joseph, State of Indiana. 3tw022
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H i A Deluxe Christmas Card at No Extra Expense ! Since the happy custom of I sending Christmas Cards has become a social obligation, in- ' dividuality in one's own peri sonal greeting has been sought ou would like to have your card different from your ! neighbor's— one that would attract attention to itself among the many on its recipient's table. Relief-Ensrax ing, a new process perfected by us. gives these advantages without ex- | tra charge: You can write your ’own wording if you like or ust any shown on samples You can use any of the newest styles of letterings. This Mail-to-Order line of nearly' eighty samples, all distinctive in design, is now ready for your inspection, ai\d the } price, are reasonable. Duane G. Berry The Jeweler * Walkerton, Indiana Hall’s 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. HALLS CATARRH MEDICINE consists of an Ointment which Quickly Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which assists in improving the General Health. Fold by druggists tor over 40 Years, I*. J. Cheney & Co , Toledo, Ohio. DR. W. F. MIRANDA Office Hours 8:00 a. m. to 8:00 p. m. Telephone 24 | SMITH & GO. i Funeral Directors, | LADY ASSISTANT | OFFICE PHONE No. 4 | RESIDENCE, No- 4. | | WALKERTON. INDIANA |
Roy Sheneman LAWYER Office Over Hous e r Hardware. PHONE 3«. M. S. DENAUT, M. D. Glasses Fitted. Lenses Duplicated Office and residence in the Denaut : Building, Seventh Street. Telephone ' No. 5-1. — SLICK & CURTIS Attorneys and Councellors At Law Notary Public and U. S. Pension Attorneys Settlements of Estates, Abstracts of Title, Real Estate. Loans, Insurance and Collections. Dr. W. C. Wisenbaugh DENTIST Office In Denaut Building WAL KE RI ON, INDI AN A Tuesdays and Thursdays 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. Evenings by Appointment
"" ■■■■ SBLBUidEJB^B a B^Biiß'Zß a : .BKBXB.T'BZ..BrB^B^B^B^B^SJa^* A e Compile Complete Modern Form | Abstracts of Title! ; to Lands j ’ I located in City, Town, or Country, in St. Joseph, Marshall, Starke or LaPorte Counties I I I The Indiana Title Abstract Go. . | ^llWalke^ I ■BW«E3rXB3^B^BrB:^;Tr7B:'BZB^BTBrBL'BrB~B^^^ i ■ I In?i—Soft JC/ I ? a N? 2—-Medium I N? 3 -Med. Hard / y&ir 1 I l no l= 4^^ I I /Jw l \ ( I I Jteisde# y A t I I PENCIL COMRANT ! < I PHILADELPHIA A\\ X -'J ZJ I I Xr ’/j ' ! tt c I s | - fences
INUSBAUM & GO. UNDERTAKERS We give our special attention to all calls Lady Assistant Phone 83. Walkerton Masonic WALKERTON LODGE, F. & A. M. I No. 619. Regular meetings the first Thursday of each month. Visitor* welcome. W. HARVEY SMITH. W. M. GROVER OPLINGER. Secy. Dr. H. S. Dowell DENTIST Office in Residence Phone No. 56. WALKERTON. IND. Want Something ? Advertise Fer it in these columns
