Walkerton Independent, Volume 54, Number 11, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 9 August 1928 — Page 4
TEEGARDEN Lou Weaver and family of Michigan, visited with the latter’s mother, Mrs. Ida Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Horsby were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Aldrich. Mr. and Mrs. Cal Bates and son Wayne, called in the evening. Many people from this place attended the Old Settler’s picnic at Koontz Lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Kessler andlit-
T t is only natural that A Ellsworth’s whose hobby is,“Forever Introducing the New,’* should be the fir& to present the early Autumn modes with exacting authority. We know you will enjoy these first new modes of Autumn 1928. \ \ —Frocks of printed velvet —Frocks of transparent velHIUKK i vet —Frocks of black satin ■May / —Satin Frocks in brown tones ^=^l ' —New Travel Coats pKjjl —New Handbags (L^Bel —New Hats rtjw x \ V —New Sh°es Ellswurlifs SOUTH BEND, IND. I wnv 1' r|j 1 1 /ii y/ MTORMICKDEERING NEWS \ ^"Good equipment makes, a good farmer better >- / i|Sßj NORTH LIBERTY SILO & OjR CONCRETE CO. Volume 5 August 9, 1928. No. 32 *'• •• ••• •* • *• We Are Satisfied When You Are
We want all our friends and customers to know that we value and apreciate the patronage that has been given You have certainly been generous in giving your loyal support and we are mighty grateful. If you stay with us, we assure you we'll stay with you Our policy from the start has been “A Square Deal and One Price to Every Farmer” and our motto is “We Are Satisfied Only When You Are.” We would
Type 10-20 and 15-30 Lf^yfKZ^ ibss^f LJ4MU A 71" 1Famous for their smooth, steady, viabrationless, 4-clyinder, valve-in-head engines. Triple power —belt, drawbar, or power take-off. Ball and roller bearing at 29 important points reduce friction and wear. Economical, durable, and powerful. You can't get a better tractor at any price. Albert Burke of Teegarden expects to drill about seventy acres in the corn with a one-horse fertilizer disk drill purchased from our store Monday. The school children of the Goatbart School will be more than pleased to ride with William Sheneman in the new Chevrolet school (buss purchased from us last week.
) tie grandson and Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Morris motored to Ohio Saturday where they attended a reunion. Sam Wolf of near North Liberty called on Mrs. Ida Thomas Sunday !evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cotton and daughters who have been visiting । her (parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. La- ' Flore for a few weeks, left Monday for Ohio where they will visit some of Mr. Cotton’s relatives. Wm. Hornsby, who has been ill for the past eleven months passed
rather lose a sale than a customer. Our work in this community is to help you make and save money Evidently this policy has been mighty popular, because business gets better and better. New faces appear at our place of business every day, and not one day goes by but that we make another sale and a new friend. THE NORTH LIBERTY SILO & CONCRETE CO.
Bankers Buy Silos Guy Thayer, cashier of the Farmer’s State Bank of LaPaz purchased a 10 x 30 silo to be erected, on his farm near LaPaz this week. Frank J. Pitner, cashier of the First National Bank of LaPorte purchased a 12 x 35 silo, complete with roof and chute to be erected on his farm near English Lake. This makes the fourth silo purchased by Mr. Pitner within the last three years. j I w William Campbell of Walkerton tells us that Mrs. Campbell will shoot the first person who will come to their home and take away her new Meadows Washer. We do not blame Mrs. Campbell because a better washer aannot be found than the Meadows. We have them on display at the machinery hall. Mr. Bressler will be glad to show one to you.
away Monday morning. Funeral services will be held Wednesday forenoon at the First Brethren Church. Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Lehman and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Lehman and son of South Bend, Floyd Lehman and family of Wakarusa were Sunday guests of their mother Mrs. Mary Lehman and Forest. The Metcalf reunion was held Sunday at the Mac Metcalf home of this place. Arthur Rupe and family of North
A Farmall on Every Farm 10885%^^ The all-purpose tractor — is built especially for cow-crop work. High, 30in. clearance. Semiautomatic steering Triple power. Short turn. Also a full line of Farmall tractor machines and attachments. Charles Bellinger replaced his old Osborne mower with a brandnew 6 ft . McCormick-Deering mower. McCormick - Deering machines win every time. There is a reason. Another mint raiser, Leonard Malstaff purchased a new McCormick - Deering combination side rake and tedder. It pays to get all of the mint.
Liberty spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. 0. Domer. Russel Maxson was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Murble Maxson and son Dale. Mrs. Oren Litchfield spent the week end with her son Clarence and family of McCool. Guelson says he’s sorry for what he said when the Independents played here but when a ball player gets hurt they look for a little sym- ! pathy from the crowd instead of insulting remarks, and as far as the poor sportsmanship is concerned he wants to know what kind of a sport the Walkerton fan called his first baseman when he was carrying the ball bat around making the remarks that he did. SHILOH Orval Harness and family spent Sunday evening with his father, M. D. Harness, at Hamlet. Callers at the home of Orval Harness were George Cecil and family, E. W. Harness. Mrs. Brent Rhinehart and son Norman and daughter Betty Jane, all of LaPorte, and Sylvester Harness and family of Hamlet. Mrs. E. W. Harness of LaPorte has been spending the last three weeks with her sister-in-law, Mrs. Orval Harness and family. Mrs. Orval Harness and family spent Monday with her grandma, Mrs. Julia Rhiriehart. Sunday guests at the Bodine home were Mr. and Mrs Frank Inmann, Mrs. Edith Knisley. Mr. Jone» Mrs. Gauk and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Alf. Wolfe of South Bend. Melvin Walter and family of Walkerton called at J. A. Gardner’s Sunday evening. Howard Ross is sheading a few days at Joseph Cotton’s of Milwaukee, Wis Ow<>n Bowman and family were Sunday guests at A. E. Burke *. Miss Winifred Schulta le rLutlng relatives in LaPorte. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Rowe sipent Sunday at the Amos Prtte home in Middlebury. KIEST MILLING CO. Phone 22. Knox, Indiana Gold Medal Flour, bbl. $9.20 Kiest's Best Flour, bbL 7.70 Rye Flour. bbl. 1.00 Graham Flour, lb. .05 Gold Medal Cake Floor. 28 Corn Meal. lb. .03 Choice Whole Rice, IK .07 Wheat Middlings, cwt 2.25 Wheat Bran. cwt. 1.95 Red Dog Middlings, cwt 2.65 Hog Tankage 60 r i cwt >4.00 Oil Meal, 3457, fine or ooarao__3.4s Corn and Oats Chop, wt 2.50 Gluten Feed. cwt. 2.50 Blatchford's Calf Meal, 25 1b5.__1.35 Poultry Beef Scraps cwt. >4.60 Poultry Feed. cwt. 3.00 Developing Feed. cwt. 3.30 Chick Feed. cwt. 3.40 Egg Mash with buttermilk. cwt.-3.50 Growing Mash, cwt. 3.60 Chick Starter, cwt. 4 10 .’racked Corn, sifted, cwt. 2.50 Oyster Shells, cwt. .90 Grit cwt. 1.00 Alfalfa Meal. cwt. 2.50 Pis teed with buttermilk. blood bone, oil meal and tankage for growing pigs, cwt. 3.00 Bone Meal, Dried and Semi-Solid Buttermilk, Cod IJver OH. Highest quality Farm and (taraen Seeds. 50 lb. salt blocks for stock 45 100 lb. sacks salt 1.00 Baled Straw Standard Cricket Proof Binder Twine lb. lO^c 1^ Ml ' \ TW 7 B 4 "lb 7flll The Ideal BIRTHDAY GIFT hl'OR mother, tether, arm or daughter, there is n© more appropriate brrthchry g,ift than an accurate, dependable, smart-Loo-hcaft BULOVA WATCH Even if your budget be limited, you will be able to make a suitable chaise bum our splendid assorTsaenag, priced from $25 up. •1111111111 l II s® RAMONA - 14 Kl whm, dust-proof caaa, ele&mthy est- SKgjßf) graved, 15 jawal JOAN —14 Kt. white proof case, beaatif u 44 y engraved, 15 jewel .... E. V. DERF The Jeweler Walkerton and Plymouth
Wyman’s 68th Anniversary Sale Now in full swing —is I Setting New Buying Records One hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars worth of new seasonable fall merchandise has been purchased especially for this Anniversary Sale — the largest volume the store has ever purchased for a single event. The values are the best we have ever offered — in practically every kind of merchandise the store carries. The sale is now on — thousands of people have already taken advantage of the bargains. It is already setting new buying records for South Bend and the surrounding communities. So — come early — to-day! Tomorrow! And every one of the eventful sale days through Saturday, Aug. 18th. New Bargains every day through Sat., Aug. 18 Watch the South Bend papers for details Thurs., Aug. 9—Greater South Tues., Aug. 14—Founder's Day. t Bend Day. Wed., Aug. 15—Accessories Day. Fri., Aug. 10 — Home-m?ker’s a x , p Thurs., Aug. 16 —City-wide Dol- . , „ - lar Day at Wyman’s. Sat., Aug. 11 —Apparel and Children’s Day. Fri., Aug. 17—Last Two Days. Mon., Aug. 13—Fabrics Day. ' Sat., Aug. 18—Last Day. You will find thousands more Bargains > - '^^^4 as g°°d as these New Crepe Satin in twelve fall colors, 40 in $1.95 yd. New Flat Crepe in fall colors, 40 in $1.68 yd. New Costume Jewelry, hundreds of pieces $1 Warm part wool bed blankets, 70 x 80 in. $4.65 Percale finished sheets, 81 x 99 in. $129 each 500 pairs of marquisette ruffled Curtains $1.68 nr. 9x12 foot Hartford Saxony Rugs, very special at S6B 1200 Turkish Bath Towels with colored borders -29 c I 500 pieces of silk and rayon I’ngerie $1.95 $1.50 Lion brand all silk chiff Hosiery $1 29 or. New Fall Dresses in four sma t fabrics sl^ 68 New fur-trimmed fall and wi iter ccat? S6B Mail and phone orders filled subject to prior sale — write to Joan Navarre, j !| । । i Use our free parking service when you corm io the sale.
Masonic WALKERTON LODGE. F & A. M No. 619. Regular meetings the first Thursday of each month. Visitor* welcome. ROY GINDELBERGER. W. M DR. W. M. DENAUT. Secy.
CHRYSLER. I here must be Sound Reason for such mounting Success/ F \ 3 ~ J *■ _ ■ 1 ,■■■■■ ^ . -**.l—» —— — ■ __..vz=e=3S -
WHEN the products of a single motor car manufacturer have in five successive years overwhelmingly gained in public esteem both at home and abroad— When each of these annual gains has constituted a sales record for the whole industry— " When the total gain over five years is the only record of its kind and the greatest in 25 years of automobile manufacture— When the announcement of its latest । products sweeps the nation with enthusiasm and produces an increase of orders actually ten times greater than its best previous year—
TAYLOR’S GARAGE WALKERTON DEALER ,
M. S. DENAUT, M. D. Glasses Fitted. Lenses Duplicated Office and residence in the Denaui 1 Building. Seventh Street. Telephone No. 5-1.
Then it must be apparent that the reasons are to be found in superior performance, greater style, higher artistry and assured long life. You are cordially invited to put any Chrysler to a test and comparison of your own. You will then instantly recognize in its surpassing quality and value, sound and logical reasons for Chrysler’s mounting success, r r r New Chrysler "75” Prices— Rorai Sedan. $1939; 2~ patsenger Coupe (with rumble Me/}, $1933; Remitter {with rumble teat}, $1999; Town Sedan, $1699. New Chrysler ”65” Prices — Barmen Coupe. $1040; Road tree (with rumble teat), $1069; 2-door Sedan, $1063; Tearing Car, $1073; a-door Sedan, $1143; Coupe {with rambla teat}, $1149. All pricet J. e.b. Detroit, uw
Roy Sheneman LAWYER Office Over Hous**r Hardware. PHONE 3».
