Walkerton Independent, Volume 54, Number 15, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 6 September 1928 — Page 4

666 Cures Malaria and quickly relieves Biliousness, Headaches, and Dizziness due to tenqjorary Constipation. Aids in eliminating Toxins and is highly esteemed for producing copious watery evacuations.

Ellsworth’s Will Celebrate Their 96th Birthday and 57th Anniversary September 13 to 22 A Sale of New Fall and Winter Merchandise (Founded by Grandfather Chess 96 \ Years Ago—and Perpetuated for I 57 Years by the Ellsworth Family J Elbiunrtfps SOUTH BEND, IND. WW 4j i l h 1 1 /;/'// m c cormickdeering news 7*?s^ equipmentmakes a.good fanner better-~=^ Hjfeli NORTH LIBERTY SILO & CONCRETE CO.

Lucky Day at North Liberty Silo & Concrete Co. The entire cash business of Wednesday, August Ist will be given away Free! Look over your Star Receipts, pick out the ones marked August Ist and bring them in. Throw all other August receipts away and begin to save the September Star Receipts.

We have two Chevrolet sales to report for last week: one coach to Fay O’Conner and another coach to Charles Toth of Crumstown. Ray Carbeiner can not say that he was never lucky, for, in checking his July STAR RECEIPTS he found one on July 13 th the LUCKY DAY. Ray immediately came in in time to get $4.00 of > merchandise free. A Tough Job Made Easy -’s a tough job if you have to Hauling out the barnyard manure Cepond on a pitchfork or an old fashioned spreader with the box hi‘*ber 'han your shoulders. Make quick work of it with a Ight runnine man 'ra snreader. We have one on display now. aTiFT

t HOW MUCH DO YOU’SAVE? The statement has been made by many observers that the person who cannot save money is destined to failure. This is not entirelytrue, for success in life cannot be measured by material standards. It would not be difficult to give the name of many who have achieved high success in life without having accumulated any material possessions of consequence. But such instances are exceptions. With the rank and file of men and women, the ability to save money is an indication of will power and ambition. People who fail to save

Will Pay For Itself The corn crop promises good and corn huskng is a slow hard jab. Time is worth money. It pays to get the corn husking done in time to save it all. In view of that we have placed an order for one-half car of McCormick-Deer-ing corn pickers. Come in and look them over. Roy Vermillion purchased a used Ford two-door last .week.. We still have some good useu^ Fords. Come in and see them. { Thomas Jarvis and Marviu King left Monday morning for the vicinity of Middlebury where they expect to dismantle and re-erect three silos, one for Dan Whitmer and two for Noah Miller.

money do not neglect this practice because they CANNOT save. They do it because they WILL NOT. It is not that the saving of money in itself is of supreme importance. The point is that the function of saving is an indication of one’s attitude toward life. Failing to save indicates indifference to one’s well being —a failure to grasp the deep problems involved in individual progress. Broadly speaking, it might be said that the person who cannot save money is destined to failure in life because he does not care enough about success to fight for it.

It’s a bit Early Now But Corn Machine Time Will Be Here Before You Know It i - As you watch your corn grow, tassle out and ripen, keep your corn machine needs in mind, it is a decided convenience to have your own corn binder and your own ensilage cutter. With Mc-Cormiek-Deering equipment, you can harvest your own corn quickly, economically, and at the best time, then you can help pay for your machines by doing work for a few of your neighbors. A lot of fly swatters went out over Saturday and Sunday to our gas customers. We will have another surprise before long. Watch the adds. Our visible gasoline pumps are meeting with the highest approval of our customers. /XTp^^cnßMieK-D&RiNG A M John Ebersole of Granger pur chased a new McCormick-Deering grain drill. Yon cannot afford to sow your wheat in a slipshod i method, tjs a McCormick-Deei-ing disk dr with a. fertilizer attachment.

We should learn to look upon saving, therefore, as a test of ambition. Those who are willing to fritter away their earnings from day to day without provision for the future show a fatal indifference to their own fate. It is well to remember at all times the solidifyng effect of thrift. It gives substantiability to’ ones plans and distinction and purpose to all individual progress. For Preservation of Fine Colonial Homes More than any other city in the country, the atmosphere of the Seventeenth century is Retained by the city of Annapolis. It has many landmarks and institutions of the pre-Revolution- । ary days, including ancient trees, | structures and customs around which the romance of history has been woven. There are several particularly fine specimens of homes of that period, but the touch of modernism has threatened some of these and the movement to preserve them for all time has been inaugurated by the administrators of St. John’s college, itself one of the oldest institutions of ^higher learning in this country. Three signers of the Declaration of Independence aided In the formation of the college and their homes, still preserved, are but a short distance from the college campus. The houses which the college proposes to preserve are the Pinckney house, the Brice house, the Hammond-Harwood house and the Peggy Steuart house. The latter was built by the owner of the vessel which caused the Peggy Steuart Tea party, which was a counterpart of the Boston Tea party. Query as to “What’s in a Name?” Answered Mitchell Kennedy, the art expert, said at the Lotus club in New York: “What’s in a name? Lots.’’ He laughed and then went cm: “There’s too much in a name. All the French art world Is agitated Just now over an old [minting found in a cellar. Is it a Goya or not? If it’s a Goya it’s worth a fortune. Merit has nothing to do with the matter. The name alone will determine this faded and moldy picture's worth. Another laugh. “Once in a famous gallery a famous critic said to me: “ ’Look at that daub in the corner. Did you ever see such muddy colors, such ridiculous drawing, such—’ “‘But that's a Rembrandt,’ said I. “ ’Oh, what a magnificent work,' said the critic, ‘now that I've shifted my position so as to get it In the proper light.’”—Springfield Union. ~ Indians 9 Use of Metals The bureau of American ethnology says that Indians and Eskimos were not skilled in the working of metal previous to the coming of the whites, although copper kind come into use in the Great Lakes region. However, the copper Implements were made by hammering the soft metal. Ivory and bone were used by the Eskimos, and there have been a few occurrences of meteoric iron being worked to a limited degree. The Indians used stone, bone and shell Implements extensively. Metal working in copi>er and bronze was quite highly developed among the Indians of Central America and northern South America before the arrival of the whites. Quite So A writer remarks that an unshaven man always feels uncomfortable in a railway carriage. Especially if a fellow passenger absent-mindedly strikes a match on his face.—The Humorist • Says the Cynic Although tiie man who marries a widow seldom says anything about his wife’s first husband, there are times when lie wishes he was still alive.—Exchange. EYES EXAMINED And HEADACHES RELIEVED Without tlie une of anij Drugs H. LEMONTREE EYE SIGHT SPECIALISTS 222 S. MICHIGAN ST., South Bead. Indiana BUS SCHEDULE KIEST MILLING CO. Phone 22. Knox, Indiana Gold Medal Flour, bbl. $9.20 Kiest’s Best Floub, bbl. 7.70 Rye Flour, % bbl. 1.00 Graham Flour, lb. .05 Gold Medal Cake Flour, pkg. 2 3 Corn Meal, lb. .03 Choice Whole Rtoe, lb. .07 Wheat Middlings ewt. $1.85 Wheat Bran cwt. $1.70 Red Dog Middlings, cwt. 2.65 Hag Tankage 60% cwt. $4.15 Oil Meal 34% »wt. $3.25 Corn and Oats Chop, cwt. 2.50 Gluten Feed, ewt. 2.50 Blatchford’s Calf Meal, 25 lbs. 1.35 Poultry Beef Seracs cwt. $4.60 Poultry Feed, ewt. 3.00 Developing Feed, ewt. 3.30 Chick Feed, cwt. 3.40 Egg Mash with buttermilk, cwt.-3.50 Growing Mash, ewt. 3.60 Chick Starter, ewt. 4.10 bracked Corn, sifted, cwt. 2.50 Oyster Shells, ewt. .90 Grit, cwt. 1.00 Alfalfa Meal, ewt. 2.50 Pig feed with buttermilk, blood bone, oil meal and tankage for growing pigs, cwt. 3.00 Bone Meal, Dried and Semi-Solid Buttermilk, Cod Liver Oil. Highest quality Farm and Garden Seeds, 50 lb. salt blocks for stock 45 100 lb. sacks salt 1.00 Baled StrawStandard Cricket Proof Binder Twine lb. ,_lo^c

GEORGE WYMAN & CO. . SOUTH BEND. Now on ! Special Purchase Sale of Seamless Axminster Rugs Room size $/| p* 9x12 foot T" O The immense stock of fine rugs on display here, and the low prices at which we sell them makes Wyman's rug department the best place in this part of the state, in which to buy rugs. This special purchase of handsome, seamless Axminster rugs offers a very unusual value now. Their soft, harmonious colorings will make any room more attractive and pleasant. And because they are of such splendid quality woven without a seam, they will stay beautiful for years. We believe that you cannot duplicate this value anyplace. So come bow and see them. ' Other Rug Values 9 x 12 foot seamless .If Z/AAv Axminster rugs, special at $29.75. #7/ /'■ Extra values now in Oriental rugs. from T W's ? $1.45 to $147.50. ■ Ask about the Morris Plan for financing T y° ur ru £ purchases. 37~U. Drive right up to Wyman’s door — our attendant will park your car ■ . ■ .... , ■ X ■■ - I ■ Ml " ■”

Improved Miner's Pan To take the place of the familial pan in separati,n_ gold fryu sand and p-HM' 1 1 1 a bowl devised by a Nebraska man Is operated on the fame t>YlncTple as a cement mixer or n cream separator, says Popular Meehnnlcs Magazine. A revolving screen removes the eoarse gravel before the material is run into the-bowl itsell This js fitted with grooves that retain the heavy gold particles as the con tainer turns. The outfit is operated by a small engine and there Is a pump to furnish water. A small unit will handle from twenty to thirty ions of material a day. Dangerous Curiosity Curiosity Is a kernel of the forbidden fruit which still stlcketh In the throat of a natural man. sometimes to the danger of his choking.— Fuller Forgiving Friends Friendship, says the American Magazine, Is half made up of overlooking or forgiving the human failings of ' those one likes I ^X7he YELLOW I with the I •—- c °^i EAGLE MIKADO

“The Fair Worth While” THE WILLIAMS COUNTY FAIR SEPT. 11, 12, 13, 14 AND 15.1928 2 Nights—THURSDAY AND FRIDAY—2 Nights r— — - FREE ACTS— I ASAW’S . "WB ELEPHANTS . -4^ fflSB HORSE PULLING TAKETA |L CONTEST JAPS ° — COUNTY STEINER COMMUNITY TRIO || ''O W THEATRE ARGYLE * T W SISTERS Z ♦ : Fireworks Live Stock Parade Big Racing Program Thursday, Everybody’s Day. Friday, Children’s Day. Saturday, Soldiers’ Day J. M. HODSON. President A. S. HAUSE, Secretary V- - / ’

1^ i ■ - ? w I X X THETHER it is operating a giant motor in 5 y y a great industrial plant, or the tiny motor S of your electric fan, electricity is equally ■. efficient and economical. Snap a switch and put • ' this tireless servant to work for you at every oppor- 5 tunity. Let it wash and iron, bake and clean. Make fullest use of electrical appliances to enjoy the complete convenience of a modem home. J» Special Rate for Electric Cooking J« Northern Indiana public Service Company | WANTED; DEAD STOCK Phone us at our expense PLYMOUTH FERTILIZER CO. Phone 728 Plymouth, Ind.