Walkerton Independent, Volume 58, Number 20, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 October 1933 — Page 4

nasssasD I E. "-.AHAmerican musical ■ (tC As smash of the year! I >1 I /vi I ?&Af ■ ' > Ar I —\v v x #^l I M S«“n\ W Al I I I Gmpu* cutie# and ' L ttf&l I •jJnd gUdiators fvß £ Vs ■ grandstand* •■ -1 VTUW I STS^-Jt J| iJWW’ । I ni9hbl I / I 1 Hot off *® Campus , vCP^^f ®s 11 K _■ 1 <,O "TH. Old O«.«»od I X r _ x ■ P»CU<r« •"* I *"* j I I BING CROW f I I BURNS * AM- EN y 'Mb&dj I I ^ARY R CA^USLE^^^ ome ^y ‘The Big Fibber’ I I jack^oakib 1 Sun. and Mon. I lOx Ro®* l Co-eds^ Oct. 15‘a nd 16

picture rf} I J after your own z/eart I * * '' nr . S See it with the one you I love best! I GARY COOPER “ONE SUNDAY AFTERNOON” I Comedy “Dream Stuff” I Tues., Wed., Oct. 17-18

| Here’s a Bargainl: । Typewriter Second Sheets JR | for use as Carbon copies l^llA | of your Letters, 1000 Sheets —Bl | S’/zxll Size, Special Price I ' INDEPENDENT-NEWS CO. I taanMmma ■ 'a^.a^aea ■ ■ ■ ■ ■■■■■■■■■■ ■ 9

Roy Sheneman LAWYER Office Over Houser Hardware Phone 38 Walkerton

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Comedy: “The Pharmacist” Friday and Saturday OCT. 13 and 14 RIALTO THEATRE WALKERTON

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RIALTO THEATRE Claudette Colbert will be the “wickedest woman in town" as the star of Paramount’s "Torch Singer" which conies to the Rialto Theatre on Friday and Saturday. The cast features Ricardo Cortez. David ; Manners, Lyda Roberti and baby I Leßoy. Cast in the role of Sally Trent. ’ Miss Colbert portrays a New York , show girl in love with a scion of । one of the town’s wealthiest famii lies. Deserted just as she learns she is to bear his child, she becomes htwd, bitter, vindictive. Forced to give up her child for adoption, she takes on the name of “Mimi Benton," becomes a brazen torch singer, hostess to the night life of the town. Many surprises i await the audience in this picture. See it. “College Humor” “College Humor.” Paramount’s elaborate musical comedy version of college life as it ought to be, will be shown Sunday and Monday at the Rialto Theatre. Bing Crosby, Richard Arlen. Mary Carlisle. Jack Oakie. George Burns and Gracie Allen, Lona Andre and Mary Korn man head its all-tar cast. The Ox-Road Co-eeds, a comely collection of chorines, prance in and ’about the various scenes. Coach Howard Jones, of the University of Southern California, appears in the football sequences. i “College Humor" is a new-style musical comedy—a picture in which the music, the comedy, the dances and the other characteristics of the medium are part of the plot, instead of extra scenes thrown in at random. ‘One Sunday Wternoon” “One Sunday Afternoon.” which co nes to the Rialto Tuesday and Wednesday, is a refreshing romance of the early 1900’s. With Gary Cooper as the star, it concerns a dashing young blade who is blinded for life by love at first sight. Through love-blind eyes he worships a woman who really does not exist. This false memory becomes the bitter rival of the girl who gives him all her love and devotion. The secret emotions that rule his heart are laid bare in this story from the successful Broadway stage play of the same name written by James Hagan. Mr. Onion Grower —Your onions for shipping must be tagged. We can furnish the tags, and print them for you on short notice at a reasonable price. See us. Independent-News Co. 'e the School - 4 book Histories 4 Leave Off.. . That is where the work of Elmo Scott Watson begins, < and in his illustrated feature articles which appear in this 4 newspaper he relates for our 4 readers those little-known J chapters in American his4 tory which afford fascinatJ ing sidelights on the building * of the nation. 4 History is his specialty but J not all of his articles deal * with historical subjects. He also writes on popular < science, on literature and the fine arts and on many other < subjects of current interest. 4 Teachers find his articles J valuable for supplementary 4 use in their classes and you J will find them so interesting * and informative that you will want to tell your « friends about them.

Health Facts i For Hoosier Folk | THE BETTER CH\X< E By M. Alice Asserson, M. D. Every proud parent, on beholding his new-born child. exclaims to ’ himself with notable benevolence, “Well. I’ll certainly give this baby ' a better chance than I ever had.” 1 Visions of happier childhood, more • fun. more toys, more holidays, perhaps a high school and college career. come crowding into his head • Does he ever think of his child’s : health while he builds these castles !' in the air? He is too much inclined - to take good health as a matter of - course. Parents make a genuine effort to do their best for their children. The mistakes they make are due to ignorance or thoughtlessness, j Good health is the greatest gift - parents can give their children. If ’ your child is to get wealth and education, he will have to get them lor himself, generally speaking The one clear gift you have to of- . fer him is good health. , A baby's health begins long betore he is born. The beginnings of those teeth which he will start to cut when he is six or seven months old are laid down six , months before his birth. Every good mother, then, will seek medi- ;, ca ^ advice early in pregnancy so that by proper attention to her own health she may have a healthv 1 j baby. In childhood, regular sleep reg- ‘ • ular meals of milk fruit n vegetables, fresh air and sunshin, are necessary for health and ■ growth. Parents who really want to give their children that’ better chance will not keep them out late at night, or take them to crowded movies and places where they are almost sure to catch infectious germs. Perhaps, from time to time, this scheme of the better chance will involve a good deal of self sacrifice on the parents’ part. It is no joke getting a healthy boy to bed at eight o’clock, or up again at seven. But you will be repaid by bright eyes and rosy cheeks. Give him this particular better chance. He will create the other chances for himself. /r - -I a i T <T> WC. ‘ Friends are to be enjoyed like flowers or music, or the stars; they are not to be used like napkins, umbrellas, or crutches. ’ W ' understand that Arthur Bris bane, the writer of the “Today" column, is many, many times a millionaire and draws „n annual ’ salary’ of about $2 50,000. Ohio is using her cigarette tax money for education. For Marlene Dietrich and other । women wearers of men’s clothing, we quote the fifth verse of the sec- 1 ond chapter of Deuteromony : “A । woman shall not wear that which pertaineth unto a man. neither shall ’ a man put on a woman’s garment; I for all that do so are abomination ( unto the Lord the God.” । The four grandchildren of Henry , Ford must content th nrelves most- 1 ly on the estates of their father or | grandfather. Since the kidnapping , epidemic the Ford children are not allowed to attend a base ball game I even under guard. । The Stevens hotel, advertised as I “biggest hotel in the world.” was । opened in 1927. and has been operated at a loss of about SI,OOO,- * 000 each year. The hotel is now in । the hands of a receiver and the original owners are broke. Now when the charge of a long distance telephone call amounts to 1 one dollar, fifteen cents more must i be added for the federal tax. We are having too many strikes । in this country now. Many men have been out of employment so I long that they’ aj;e no longer inter- i ested in an ordinary job. Warren Davis, Macomb. Illinois, | is charged in his father’s divorce bill as being too intimate with nis I step-mother. At the Century of Progress eley- I en weighing machines are being op- I j erated. Fifteen cents is paid for j being weighed. If the operator does * not guess within three pounds of I the weight the “sucker” gets a j cheap cane. This “racket” has 1 proved to be the most profitable of | all concessions on the ffair grounds. । The potato cron is estimated as I less than 50 per cent normal but i duo to so much unemployment and scarcity of money it is predicted I that potatoes shipped in this month i may sell as low as one dollar per bushel. | On an averagt . it is figured that i our per capita number of cars in " the I nitod States is thirteen times I greater than in the rest of the j world. Butler University has arranged I its schedule of classes so that students living within a 35-mile radius ’ may live at home and drive to i school each day for classes. Seeing he amount of leisure time at hand by reason of the NRA, Butler is of lering courses dealing with tlm ' roper use of spare time. The courses are said to be both enter- ' aining and have commercial valum NRA code hearings disclosed that 50- percent of America’s 586 radio broadcasting stations do a total business of $3,000 a month or less ।

■ The Airman Looks at the World’s Fair 1 . . ’MI < - < & । * SO B X'''-'M" ; ' tail B

The beauty of man-made Northerly Island and North Lagoon of A Century of Progress—the Chicago World's Fair—stands out in this airplane

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H< re's a pair of sophomore "finds at Indiana. Wendel Walker fullback, of Vincefin s. and Ettore Antonini, end. of Clinton. They look like sure starters against Notre Dame Saturday (Act. 11l at Bloomington. If anyone has doubts as to how Walker rates after his first varsity mime at Indiana, ask th> fans who Mo»t Primitive Race Ihe Austnilian bushnum are proK tbly the most primitive people now living.

* 0 3 ... but why hunt? A V

I • | pardon our slang .. . . I • | t- —but why wear out you “dogs” in looking | | —for a job—a room—a home—a summer v | cottage —an automobile—a radio—a piano | —etc., etc. ... i I 8 I ? either to buy or sell? ; I 1 | You can find just what you want quickly and cheaply if you will read or use the classified ads in This Paoer. _ - Independent-News Company, Inc. I NORTH LIBERTY WALKERTON.

view which was snapped far above the 628-foot Sky Ride xow’ers which are shown in the background.

saw him take i "shoestring pass” from Veller and dash 35 yards for the winning touchdown against I Miami. In that game not a single pass ; was directed to Ettore Antonini. ! yet Antonini is the boy who is the ' l»est receiver on the team. He | stands 6 feet three. scales 205 | pounds and will bear watching in j the Notre Dame-Indiana game. Not 'Slow to Anger” a suppose I overdo ft. tint when I’m ' mad at a man 1 want to climb right ! up his chest.—Theodore Roosevelt.

•■•••a*®- ** '>«»■«» 5 For the | ! I • e i i o $

NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME BY INDIVIDUAL Cause No. 42152 State of Indiana. St. Joseph county. ss: In the St. Joseph Superior Court j No. 1. September terra, 1933. In the matter of the Petition of , Emilie Suzanne Pomranke. Notice is hereby given that I have I filed in the office of the Clerk of j the Superior Court No. 1. my pe'ition tor the change of my name to Emilie Suzanne Luther, and that j said petition will be heard by the j court on the 20th dav of November. 1933. EMILIE SUZANNE POMRANKE John W. Schindler, Attorney for Petitioner 3twos — NOTICE OF PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME BY INDIVIDUAL Cause No. 4 2151 State of Indiana. St. Joseph coun- • ty, ss: ' In the St. Joseph Superior Court No. 1, September term. 1933. In the matter of the Petition of ; Otto Pomranke. Notice is hereby given that I have filed in the office of the Clerk of the Superior Court No. 1. m v petition for the change of my name to I Otto George Luther, and that said ' petition will be heard by the court on the 20th day of Novem- | ber, 1933. OTTO GEORGE POMRANKE John W. Schindler. Attorney for j Petitioner 3twos