Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 25, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 19 November 1925 — Page 3

Division Manager

Mutual Life of Illinois | Never - Without PE-RU-NA In His Home

. Mr. F. H. Fricke, wh;;ddress is 625 Pontiac Bldg., St. Louis, Mo., writes under the date of June 25, 1924 . — “My family and myself have had splendid results from your Pe-ru-na. We are never without it in our home. I wouldn’t take a thousand dollars for what it has done fer my family and myselfii When ¥ contract a cold I immediately take a dose of Pe-ru-na and get relief. I recommend Pe-ru-na everywhere.” For coughs, colds, catarrh and catarrhal conditions generally Pe-ru-na has been recognized as ree liable for over fifty years. Sold Everywhere Tablets or Liquid Send 4 cents postage to THE PE-RU-NA COMPANY, Columbus, Ohio, for book on _flhrrll. e S T l Best fo~ 30 Year's far Distemper, Pink-Eye, Influenza, Laryngitis, Cataarhal Fever, Epizootic, G Coughs or Colds. 7o Horses, Mules & Dogs, O INLE TN DISTEMPER GOSME N, IND. comn Bright Boy Teacher—Dic you make that face a‘ me?t Jimmie—No, ma’am. You just hap pened to walk in front of it.—Answars A——— Never Grows Older He feelslike a boy at forty. Whenever constipation troubled him Beecham’s Pills brought certain relief. “For over a year I suffered from headaches and constipation, other remedies having failed. 1 told someone at my club, who suggested that I try Beecham’s Pills. I tried them, and they relieved me. I’'monly forty and I feel like a boy again after taking Beecham’s Pills. m with common sense .shpuld take et mlfo&xlmflm, biliousness > Mr. ). G, Yonkers, N. Y. man gives good advice. Follow it, and see g oy e »i, ¢ biliowusness mdm by Beecmt’: Pills. iy FREE SAMPLE-—Write today so to B. F. Allen Co., 417 Canal St New Fons Bay from your druggist in 2§ and so¢ boxes for Better Health, Take Beecham'’s Piiis RS RO IR s v RsES.NIIOG’g ‘, < L NERVINE '« 2 2 T\ FOR NERVOUS AILMENTS PRICE $1.50 Write for FREE BOOKLET U your druggist cannot supply you, order forwarding charges prepaid, from KOENIG MEDICINE CO. 1045 N. WELLS ST, CHICAGO, ILL. . Quick Safe * Relief ln'one minute—or less—the pain ends. Dr Scholl's Zino-pad is the safe, sure, healing treatment for corns Atdrugand sl'loe stores DrScholl’s # Zino-pads Put one on-the pain is gone y 2 Boschee’s Syrup A\E HAS BEEN Killing Coughs '!lmi\ for 59 Years Seb MLI B usls Carry & bottle in your AERSRLROGENSN car and always keep itin the house. 80c and %0c at ALL DRUGGISTS. haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. GOLY o HAARLEM OIL . currectinternal troubles, stimulate vital organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine GoLp MEDAL. P - €T~ Tal 0411 et % ! A Ll S U § The reason 1t ) = /32"«;’?"" ¥ (4 ..l' - Os 22 i/ Gl (Gl =sook ) foero eWS B.S A Y --__9‘-‘1 ¥/ 959 4' %/ Box Your Druggist m Sla ight '.:‘ el Rl me A U=g o AFING -~¢RASHES promptly relieved and healed by a few applications of o JINESINO

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iy " | ABy {OHN DICKINSON SHERMAN

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jnmty and of home and state. And in its historical associations it's a century and a half older than even Independence Day. Thanksgiving Day takes us back, willy, nilly, to Plymouth Rock and the Pilgrims of 1620. And it should be Will I, rather than Nill L The President’s gaze is fixed, you will note, on the bas-relief depicting the signing in the cabin

of the Pilgrim ship of the “Mayflower Compact.” That deservedly famous document should be read by all on every Thanksgiving Day—and here it is: In the name of God, Amen. We whose names are underwritten, the loyall subjects of our dread soveraigne Lord King James, by the grace of God of Great Britain, France and Ireland King, Defender of the Faith, &c. Having "undertaken for the glory of God and advancement of the Christian Faith, and honour of our King and Country, a Voyage to plant the first Colony in the Northern part of Virginia, doe by these presents solemnly & mutually in the presence of God and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a civill body politike, for our better ordering and preservation, and furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by vertue hereof to enact, constitute and frame such just and equall Lawes, Ordinances, acts constitutions, offices from time to time, as shall be thought most meet and convenient for the general good of the Colony; unto which we promise all due submission and obedience. In witness whereof we have herevnder subscribed our names. Cape Cod 11th, of November, in the yeare of the raigne of our Soveraigne Lord King lames of England, France and Ireland 18 and Scotland 54. Anno Domino 1620. It would be interesting—and important—to know the thoughts of President Coolidge at the monument, for he has long been a close student of his country’s history. Moreover, his American ancestry goes back to the beginning of things in New England and his first American arcestors lie close by, in the old burial ground of Watertown. These ancestors were Puritans, not Pilgrims. John Coolidge (1604-1691), the first of the American line, arrived among the first of the Puritans in 1630, with his wife Mary and one child. His son Simon (1632-1693),was the first American-born Coolidge. Every good American should know the difference between the Pilgrims (1620) and the Puritans (1630). The Pilgrims—*“Separatists”—withdrew from the established church of England in order to have the right to choose their own ministers, then appointed by bishops. They held church and state to be separate; several influentinl members of the Plymouth colony were not church members, They were not concerned about the religion of others; they asked only religious freedom for themselves. They were largely simple country folk. They were without capital. They practieally sold themselves to hard labor for seven yeu.. to | get to the New World, | The Puritans did not separate from the established church. They undertook to make formal changes to suit themselves. They held churech and state to be one; only church members had the rights of freemen and the power to vote, All other creeds were anathema. Tue Puritans of 1630 under Gov. John Winthrop included many of the English gentry and came in a fleet of ten ships to Massachusetts bay, with goods and live stock valued at one million dollars. We may know in general the thought of President Coolidge regarding the Pilgrims. As governor of Massachusetts he delivered an address at the Tercentenary Celebration at Plymouth, saying in part:’ There was among them small trace of the vanities of life. They came undecked with orders of nobility. They were not the children of fortune but of tribulation. Persecution, not preference, brouwght them hither. But it was a persecution in which they found a stern satisfaction. They cared little for titles, still less for the goods of this earth, but for an Idea they would die. Measured by the standards of men of their time I they were the humble of the earth. Measured by l later accomplishments they were . . . a mighty | host, of whom the world was not worthy, destined | to free mankind No captain ever led his forces to * such a conquest. Oblivious to rank, yet men trace to them their lineage as to a royal house . . ] What an increase, material and spiritual, three | hundred years have brought that little company { ts known to all the earth. No like body ever cast | mo great an influence on human history. Civiliza- | tion has made their landing place o shrine. ‘5 The first American Thanksgiving Day was cele- ' brated December 13. I€7l, within a few days of

'No Wages Could Pay Mother for Her Work |

' “The average mother with four or five children.” has heen under serutiny by an investigator in home economics, says the Syracuse Post-Standard. He finds that, in the course of a vear, she makes the equivalent of 1095 loaves of bread, 50 cakes and 750 pies, prepares meat which if assembled, would maxze one or two cows and about six hogs, peels 5,110 potatoes, makes 1,200 beds, dusts 7,500 chairs and sews

'ALVIN COOLIDGE, thirtieth Presldent of the United States of America, and “The First Lady of the Land” at Plymouth of the Pilgrims—a , pleasing and significant picture to all good Americans at Thanksgiving time! For Thanksgiving Day is a national holiday peculiarly our own, It’s the happiest sort of combination of sober and sincere gratitude to Divine Providence, of feasting and

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; the first anniversary of the landing on Plymouth l Rock. During the first terrible winter of 1620-21 nearly half of the Muytlower company had died. , But the fall of 1621 had assured them of an : abundant harvest. Moreover, the Fortune had ! arrived in November with thirty-five more colonists. So there was every reason why Gov. l William DBradford should set apart a day for ; thanksgiving. , The Puritans. who arrived in force beginning : with 1630, apparently adopted the Thanksgiving : Day of the Pilgrims. Or possibly they evolved a i Thanksgiving Day of their own. Anyway, the . Puritans at Watertown had a Thanksgiving Day | celebration in 1634. The famous Cotton Mather, in ; his “Magnalia Christi Americana; Or, The Ecclesl- ' astical History of New-England” has a chapter on ' the life of the Rev. John Sherman (1613-8)), : A. B, A. M. (Trinity, Cambridge), who arrived in Z Watertown in the summer of 1634, in which he l says: So much was religion the first sought of the » first come into this country, that they solemnly . offered up their praises unto Him that “inhabits the praises of Israel” before they had provided habitations wherein to offer those praises. A Day of Thanksgiving was now kept by the Christians of a new, here called Water-town, under a tree; ‘ on which Thanksgiving Mr. Sherman preached his first sermon, as an assistant unto Mr. Philips: there being present many other divines, who wondered exceedingly to hear a subject so accurately and excellently handled by one that had never before performed any such public exercise. Cotton Mather, it will be noted, makes no mention of a Thanksgiving feast following the *“public exercises” “under a tree.” It is to be hoped that the famous divine was a bit forgetful—otherwise the Puritans of Watertown must have been obliged to be satisfied with “a feast of reason and a flow of soul.” Incidentally it is interestiag to note that in all human probability President Coolidge’s great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather was one of the congregation that listened to that Thanksgiving sermon. The first national observance of Thanksgiving Day took place 160 years after the first celebration at Plymouth. It is generally stated that the first national observance was November 26, 1789, in accordance with a proclamation by I'resident Washington. That, however, is an historical error. In the proceedings of the Second Continental Congress it is recorded that September 13, 1781, “on motion of Mr. Sherman, seconded by John Witherspoon of New Jersey, it was resolved that Thursday, December 31, 1781, be ‘appointed as a , Day of Public Thanksgiving throughout the : United States and that a committee be appointed to prepare and report a proclamation suitable to , the occasion.”” The committee appointed consisted of Mr. Sherman, Mr Witherspoon, Joseph ‘ Montgomery and James Mitchell Varnum. The : proclamation, reported October 26, 1781, recites, : among other things, that the year is one in which “the confederation of the United States has been completed” and “in which, after the success of our allies by sea, a Generzl of First Rank, with his } whele army, has been captured by the allied J forces under the direction of our Commander in ' Chief.” | In the first session of the first congress, organized ,' April 3, 1780, we find Mr. Sherman one of a com- | mittee of three to request President Washington ; “to recommend to the people a day of public : thanksgiving and prayer ‘to be observed by : acknowledging with grateful hearts the many : signal favors of Almighty God, especiailly by affording an opportunity peéaceably to establish ) a Constitution of Government for their safety and | happiness.” It was in accordance with this request | that President Washington by proclanmsdtion set apart November 26, 178), as a day of public thanksgiving. . : The “Mr. Sherman” In both cases was Roger

50 to 100 garments, exclusive of mend- l ing and darning and the sewing on of | buttons. The gross amount of dish- | washing and a number of other ac-| tivities is not computed. In her spare | time she may do the family wash, This hardly seems to cover the zround. Mothers can be recalled who do all that and then some. They do it without any claim to knowledge of modern efliciency systems. Their ob- |

jective is work performed and they zo far in its attainment J The investigator is endeavoring to contribute an answer to the question: | Shall mother be paid a salary? That || question, however, once answered in| the affirmative, i 8 productive of an- | other just as difficult of answer: Can | we pay her what she is worth? f { Norwegian Whalers | Norwegian whaling, in respect of | providing the material outfit for the |

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Sherman of Connecticut (1721-93), who is unique in American history in that he helped prepare and signed the four great documents: Articles of Association (1774), Declaration of Independence (1776), Articies of Confederation (1781) and Constitution of the United States (1787). He was a great-grandson of Cuapt. John Sherman of Watertown, who heard his cousin, Reverend John, preach the Thuanksgiving sermon “under a tree.” And it was Roger Sherman’s grandson, United States Senator George Frishie Hoar of .\lussuchusetts.l who procured the return from England in 1896 of the manuscript diary of Gov. Wiliiam Bradford containing the “Maytlower Compact.” Thanksgiving Day, as a recurrent national holiday by Presidential proclamation, had its beginning in 1863. In October of that year President Lincoln by proclamation so recommended the day to the people and set aside the last Thursday in November for its observance. Such has been the slow growth through three centuries of the observance of Thanksgiving Day, which has marched across the continent with the American people. Plymouth attracts more than 230,000 visitors a vear. These visitors make much of the “Old Howland House,” which dates back to 1666 and was owned by Jabez Howland, son of the John Howland of the Mayflower. It now belongs to the Howland Descendants of America. John Howland | was that “lustie younge man” of whont Gov. Wil- | liam Bradford writes, in his “History of the | Plimoth Plantation”: ’ In sundrie of these stormes the winds were so feirce and the seas so high as they could not beare a knote of saile, but were forced to hull—strike sails and toss with the waves—for diverce days‘ togither. And in one of them, as they thus lay at hull, in a mighty storme, a lustie younge man (called John Howland) coming upon some occasion above the grattings, was, with a seele—roil—of | the shipe thrown into the sea; but it pleased Oodi that he caught hould of the top saile haiiliards, which hunge overboard, and rane out at length; yet he held his hould (though he was sundrie fadomes under water) till he was hald up by the ¢ame rope to the brime of the water, and then with a boathooke and other means got into the shipe againe, and his life saved; and though he was something ill with it, yet he lived raany years after, and became a profitable member both in church and commonwealthe. This *“lustie younge man,” thus miraculousiy saved, married Elizabeth Tillie, who was on the Mayflower, and their descendants are many in the land. Moreover, tradition has it that John Howland was the last of the Mayflower passengers to die. Many places in the south of England have associations with the Pilgriins and have honored their | memory with memorials of various kinds. The latest memorial to be set up is a stone at Immington creek, at Hull. Tt was.unveiled in the presence of representatives of the American, British and Dutch navies. The photograph reproduced shows Capt. A. P. Fairchild, U. 8. N., delivering an | address on the Pilgrims. : ' On Thanksgiving Day the good American should ! give thanks to the Divine Providence which has ! so often aided the progress of this one nation »of earth dedicated to liberty. to equality of rights’ and opportunity and to the pursuit of happiness. ' Never in all history has the individual eitizen had so great an opportunity to achleve a competence, ! establish a home and found a family. Never before has a people enjoyed such material comfort. And { the nation is the wealthiest and most powerful of earth. With power comes responsibility; such is the unwritten law. Also prosperity tries the soul of man quite as much as does adversity; such is | human nature. And so it is with nations. The | good American should therefore add dignity and | importance to Thanksgiving Day by taking stock . of the past and the prese® and by making re-‘ solves for the future. i 1

industry, reached its zenith in the{ years 1912-23. In 1923 60 cmnp:mies‘ were working with a total of ]6l‘ steamers, 34 land stations und‘ 29 floating factories., The produc- | tion in 1913 was 600,000 casks off oil. valued at about 36,000,000 kroner. | The period of the war caused the whaling industry to slacken off, but now whaling is progressing again in South Georgia, South Orkneys and Shetlands, the West Afrivan waters and in the far distant Antarctic waters of the Ross sea.

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Or a Diving Suit He—What kind of shoes do you think I ought to wear with these golf hose? She—Hip boots.—Colorado Dodo. Cuticura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring in the hot suds of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub in (‘u-‘ ticura Ointment. Remove surplus | Ointment with tissue paper. This isi only one of the things Cuticura will do | if Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used | for all toilet purposes.—Advertisement. l Hams Senior—What is cold boiled ham? Frosh—Oh, that’s ham boiled in cold water, isn't it?—Bison. DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN Take Tablets Without Fear If You See the Safety “Bayer Cross.” Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tabl>ts you are not getting the gZenuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millioas and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. [lmitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. The British museum was visited by more than 1,000,000 persons last year, the largest number on record since 1851, e A ALS TOrCE ETRT WER LY (LA £ \Na‘e *ab\e & CarriSetol A AR AY /g SRR Y. \4\63 Yo "':, 'n(‘:u;\ Df‘ YOUI , R/ ] USKID ¢/ has them [ 08 g L 0 et e S N RN {lO United States Rubber Company ’ CON'T BROOD OVER .STOMACH DISTRESS RS - | . | Don’t lay awake nights and feel miserable all day—there’'s one right way to fix up your gassy, rebelious disordered stomach in such a short time that your heart will be gladdened. Today Dare’'s Mentha Pepsin is the one remedy supremely efficient where acute or chronic indigestion or gastritis f{is making your days and nights miserable. Reports of its mighty power to overcome unbearable, near suffocating stomach agony have swept the land until today its sales are marvelous Get one bottle of this pleasant speedy acting medicine today with the distinect understanding that if it doesn’'t help you —your money will be returned. Shoes Sent Far - Shoes sent to chilly Alaska from this country in seven months of this year numbered 20558 pairs for men and boys and 8,072 pairs for women, while those shipped to sunny Hawaii included 98,613 for males and 48,602 for females. Lots of men would suffer from dyspepsia if. they were compelled to eat their own words.—Bridzeport Post,

“She praises it ,’3 to everybody: Mrs. Crane had indigestion for ten years; Tanlac brought immediate relief. As a climax to long years of suffer- e~ ing, *Mprs. Hattie Crane got so bad F . she couldn’t sleep and there were "&« (Y days when she couldn’t walk across s o s the floor. At times the gas pressure ’g‘; '.‘ _:\'YY : /,-. s was so great she could scarcely |EZRa R\ ) 'Y# Q breathe. She was faint and dizzy. P N bl, She writes: *“ Tanlac brought im- [IReA3 ) " :A i mediate relief and six bottles were fi‘.‘—;t Gory fl enough to rid me of my troubles and bring back the joy of living. My health is better than ever and I am so pleased with Tanlac I praise it to everybody.” *Authentic statement from our files. You don’t have to take our word for Tanlac. Just try this marvelous tonicyourself and see how quickly it brings results. There is nothing like Tanlac to cleanse and revitalize sluggish blood, restore lost appetites and put the whole body in fighting trim. Results come quick. You start feeling better right from the first dose. Before the bottle 1s gone you will wonder what miracle has happened to you. | Tanlac is absolutely pure and harmless. It is a natural | tonic, a formula of roots, barks and healing herbs gathered | from every part of the globe to bring you health and strengt '! Note: For Constipation, take Tanlac Vege- i table Pills, Nature’s own harmless laxative. ;i ! v | TANLAC | FOR YOUR HEALTH | o e

In Chi breakfast, lunch, dine e PN N P at 'k . Q e—/ D A 4 4 ) 143 QJ_ D 3 1\ % '@.D rl o East of ! I Madison St. %5 | Travelers and Chicago ! residents proclaim the | outstanding quality of The S Brevoort’s ResSy, taurants. HighSO est standards - \l l’ f . d .. IS TN of service an ) -A‘.‘ moderation of 333 33 charge distin--3 Jeß eyt guishalldeparto it Y = = ythexrsd ments of this Yy} famous down-2-mig® ezl town hotel. = XS Convenient to - sl NN R g stores, theaters, AP PRt banks and transPStsgeaaa, portation lines. Bag -& | = o = In the Heart —> 5 of Downtown 4 -'K ’.'-'v 1 Chicago t L B B e We can sell property—any part of Florida, if priced right. List with us for results. - BENJ. E. GAGE Suite 626, 79 W. Monroe, State 7659 Chicago - - - Ilinois 2,000 Acres Rivar Bottom and bench grain alfalfa. Hogs, cattle; you can’'t match it Must be sold as whole. Price Hundred Twenty acre, cash and terms. National Fnundin{ ] Co., 1217 Detwiler Bldg., Los Angeles, Calif. ROSEMINE. Remove unsightly wrinkles with this dainty creme. Softens, bleaches, rejuvenates skins. Comes in SI.OO & $2.00 jars. Butler Co., 316 Woolworth Bldg. Houston,Tex. For Sale, Big Bargain—4 000-egg Wishbone Incubator, neariy new. Value $1,500.00; quick sale $400.00 full equipment. Mrs. F. B. T., 4459 Lineceln Ave., Chiecago, Il DYSPEPSIA AND INDIGESTION Wonderful relief by taking Brown’s Stomach Medicine. Used for 35 years and manufactured by the Oldest Established Drug Store in Illinois. Send 8100 for bottie postpaid. J. D, BROWN & CO. JOLIET, ILI. Established 1844 Men and Women—Sell Christmas gifts to your friends and neighbors. New and beautiful line of house furnishings, sell to everyone. | Easy, profitable work. Write for free particu- ! lars today Bradford Pacos, St. Joseph, Mich. Christmas Greeting Cards. Magnificent box assortment. 21 hand-colored and engraved i Cards with env., $1: value $1.95. Guaranteed. Agts. Wtd. Gardner,7o Arcade,Providence R.L ’ i"o; S;;I:OO-AN:;”Rivh.iié\':l (‘;)rn Farm; 300 improved, balance timber; buildingg. tsas: terms. B. E. MOSES, Cypress, I—li. | THE MICHIGAN STATE DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTU RE offers free helpful informa- | tion on state certified lands, markets, soils, crops, :limate, accredited dealers Write Director of Agrisultural Industry 7 State Building, Lansing, Mich | W.N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 46--1925. l e | He Was ‘ “Why do you think Fanny doesn’g | like you?” : | *I told her there was a fool In every | family.” ! “What did she say?” ! | “She asked if I were an only son.”— | Madrid Buen Humor. 1 R ! | Honesty, like other policies, often runs out the day before the fire.