Walkerton Independent, Volume 58, Number 20, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 12 October 1933 — Page 5

A & P Carnival VALUES! f CAMPBELL’S \A£^ PORK AND Beans 5 "•“ 25 c Quaker Maid 7^ Beans 12SS« 55c / CARNATION BORDEN'S I / A| I I Milk 4»25 c Lh7 ) White House Evaporated \^Milk 6 Site 32c wt oo out mat RAJAH VANILLA EXTRACT 25c TRYSUM MUSTARD 10c KARO SYRUP, BLUE LABEL &S 25c ROBERTS&OAKE SWEETMEAT REG. HAM lb. 14c QUAKER MAID KETCHUP 7^?? Me QUAKER MAID CHILI SAUCE 2 25c RAJAH SALAD DRESSING ...... .^ 25c p !jj 15c SHREDDED WHEAT 2 phgs. 25c UNEEDA BAKERS COOKIES .... lb. 22c UNEEDA BAKERS CHEESE BITES . . . . 2 23c FLEISCHMANN’S YEAST cake 3c GRANDMOTHER’S BIG TWIST WHITE BREAD 10c SPARKLE GELATIN DESSERT. . ... 3 p«cs. 19c FREE: ONE PACKAGE OF SPARKLE CHOCOLATE PUDDING. WHILE THEY LAST. WITH EACH 3 PACKAGES OF SPARKLE GELATIN DESSERT PURCHASED TWENTY MULE TEAM BORAX *&° z 15c FOM SOAP FLAKES 25c AJAX SOAP 3 10c NORTHERN TISSUE 4 rolls 25c VELVET TOBACCO TIN 10c PRINCE ALBERT TOBACCO tin 10c BULL DURHAM TOBACCO 6 bags 25c Buy Now—Save Now! 1 Friday and Saturday! —————————————————— SUNNYFIELD SLICED * BACON *- LB - 10c Fish Fillets,. 2 lbs. 25c " PKG XUC RED CIRCLE hickory smoked Red River Valley, 98-lb. COFFEE I ' LB 19c bag Ohio Potatoes $1.69 ROBERTS PURE Celery, . 3 stalks 5c LARD . . 3 lbs 20c Carrots . 3 bunches 11c sunnyfield cartonortub Sweet Potatoes 3 lb. lOc FLOUR 'ba<3 89C "bal $1.75 I ———————--——J OLD CLOTHING Made Like New! ^ OTOATS CLEANED DRESSES __■■■ Eh and HATS PRESSED Small additional charge for Fur Trimmed and pleated garments. All work fully insured and guaranteed; money back if not well pleased. Phone 4-1 for Free Pick Up and Delivery Economy Cleaners —At Milady Shoppe HUNTING DAYS Call for good guns and Dependable ammunition. There’s none better anywhere at anv price than PETER’S. FRAT ER HARDWARE

S. A. Nusbaum UNDERTAKING j Special Attention to all Calls Lady Assistant Phone 83 Walkerton Dr. C. D. Linton Physician and Surgeon Office over Brown’s Jewelry Store Office Honrs $ to a. m. 2 to 5 p. m. 7 to 8 p. m. Tel. 66 I & Co. I ■ Phone 84 I Coal That Is Coal

Arthur E. Shirley INSURANCE Life, Casaulty, Fire, Auto Phone 86 Notary Public Dr. W. M. Denaut DENTIST OFFICE HOURS 8:30—11:00; 12:30—5:00 Closed Friday Afternoon 7:00—8:00 Wed. and Sat. Evenings Other Evenings by Appointment Milo B. Slick Attorney at Law Abstracts and Insurance Phone No. 21 Walkerton, Indiana D. D. Gardner Insurance Agency Agent and Adjuster Phone 104F21 Walkerton

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Chamber of Commerce tonight at Smth’s Case. * * * * » j George Curtis has been spending the week at the Goodwillie cottage at Koontz Kake. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sheaks were in Chicago Wednesday to see the i Century of Progress exposition. ♦ * * * » . Mrs. Mary Beaudway of Chicago was a guest at the F. S. Leßoy and Will Leßoy homes this week. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Ake and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Shirley were World s Fair visitors in Chicago, Tuesday. ***** Mr. and Mrs. W. F. LaFeber spent several days this week in Chicago attending the World's Fair. • • • • » Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Hay have presented the Walkerton library with a large grandfather clock, a gift very much appreciated. ***** All kinds of sewing lone. Reasonable rates. See Mrs. Lola McDaniel Skarin at the Endley home, 3rd door from Gafill station. wo!2p ***** Mr. and Mrs. Faunt Leßoy and Mr. and Mrs. WiH Leßoy were in Chicago Tuesday attending the Century of Progress exposition. ***** Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Swarzentraub returned to their home in Hammond, Tuesday ater visiting at the Orris Farrar home several days. ***** Dr. and Mrs. C. D. Linton and son will move into the Presbyterian Manse, recently left vacant by Rev. and Mrs. R. L. Hay, when they moved into their new home. ***** Highest prices paid for hides, poultry, eggs and junk, by Lippman & Co.. Walkerton. Open every day and Wednesday and Saturday evenings. Phone 207, any time. 2twosp Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Steele accompanied Mrs. Cletus Hornung and two daughters to her home in Burlington, lowa, last Saturday, after several weeks visit among relatives here. ***** Mrs. M E. Moyer and children of LaPorte, spent several days last week in Walkerton, the guests of Mrs. Moyer’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Anderson. Mr. Moyer was an over Sunday guest here Mrs. Anastasia Smith will hold a public sale at tier farm home north west of Walkerton on Wednesday afternoon, October 25. beginning at one o'clock. Detailed list of articles will be published next week. ***** Bus to the World’s Fair when the Graph Zephlin visits Chicago, exact date to be announced later. Round trip $1.75. Call Phone 225 for reservation, or see Earl Fouts or Peter DeWaele, Walkerton. 2twnol 9o • • • • a Startling experiences with Spirit Mediums. More unusual and weird facts concerning Spirits and i “Spooks” are discussed in the ‘ American Weekly, the Magazine I i Distributed with NEXT SI NDAY S' | CHICAGO HERALD AND EXAMIN-! I ER. wn • • • • • E. J. Henderson, of Toledo, was I stricken with a heart attack and other complications while attending ! to some business in Walkerton Tuesday and was taken to Fairview hospital. LaPorte. He was able to return to his home in Toledo Wednesday. ***** Extensive improvements are he- । ing made at the Goodwillie cottage 1 :at Koontz Lake. A basement, 1 nine by tw’elve feet, is being put under the main part, a sun room and entrance hall have been added and a new foundation has been put under the whole structure. ***** Louis Schmeltz of south east of | Walkerton, reports that he has a i ; Grimes Golden apple tree in bloom ; for the second time this season , About two weeks ago Mr. Schmeltz I picked about two bushels of apples l from the tree and now it is in : bloom again. We are not quite । sure, but it looks like a gross violation of the NRA on the part of I Mr. Grimes Golden. ***** J. A. Sharkin has purchased the : Gates Filling Station, located to I , the rear of the Dupler store, and j took possession Tuesday. Mr. [ | Sharkin w’as in business in Walk- ' erton seven years ago, when he conducted a poultry business in the Groshans building on the corner I now occupied by the Shell Filling Station. Mr. Gates’ plans for the । future are not known. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Dulany. of McKeesport, Pa., have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Finch several days this week. Sunday and | Monday they were in Chicago at- j i tending the Fair. On Tuesday | evening the Finches entertained in I honor of Mr. and Mrs. Dulany, the guests being Mrs. S. R. DeCoudr^s. I of South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Clem I DeCoudres of North Liberty Miss Ethel Bierly and Mrs. Ir-! rael Hatton, of North Liberty, attended the district meeting of the Womans Foreign Missionary Soci- । ety of the Methodist church at ' Crown Point last Thursday and ' Friday. Miss Margaret Haber-I | mann, a returned missionary from i I India, who was one of the speakers i ।at the conference, returned home | । with them for a short visit with I । Mrs. Hatton. Both Mrs. Hatton j and Miss Bierly had known Miss I I Haberman previously. She expects । to return to her work in India n- xt i I July. Glen Shupert has been selected | as the new Boy Scout Master for I the year commencing in September. I and Arthur DeMyer will be the assistant Scout Master. Two new counci! members were added to th. list as representatives from the I American Legion, which organiza- । tion will assist in looking after the I Scout interests here. The new ! council members are Faunt Leßoy । and <’harles Finch. Council mem- । retained are Etsel Snyder and Louis Kiser. The Scout troup enjoyed a wiener roast Tuesday evI ening and the football game at Notre Dame last Saturday.

Chamber of Commerce tonight at Smth’s Case. ***** Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Blaine were Chicago Fait visitors today. Mr. and Mrs. Owen Dowty and Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Dowell were at the Fair in Chicago Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. B. I. Holser haw' moved into town after spending the summer at their Koontz Lake cotLa ge. Mrs. Mabel Leßoy of Appleton. Wis., came Wedn shay evening for several days visit with Mr. and Mrs Wm. Leßoy. Rev. Walter Wilson, Ruth and Mary Barney. Emery and Louis Gerecz were Chicago World s Fair visitors. Wednesday. Mrs. Dora Griffin returned Wednesday from Chicago where she visited her daughter. Margaret and other relatives for several days. ***** Margaret Ann Leßoy celebrated her fifth birthday with a party last Saturday afternoon. Twenty-eight little guests were present to enjoy the games and the birthday cake. ***** Honoring Mrs. Cletus Hornung, of Burlington, lova. Mrs. Gerald Steele of North Liberty entertained four tables at bridge last Thursday evening at her home, in a hard times party. Prizes went to Miss Geneva Mann. Mrs. A. J. Kennedy, of Walkerton, and to Mrs. Lenn Fettel, of South Bend. Refreshments were served at the close of the games. Legion Auxiliary Elects Officers On Thursday afternoon Mrs. Weltha Burnside was hostess to the Orville Easterday Po-t I’nit. a short business session was held to elect officers for the coming year, followed by a ’social hour. Th > following officers were elected? President. Mr% Kathryn Awald, vice president, Mrs. Dorothy Flaugher. secretary, Mrs. Estherlyn McDaniel, treasurer, Mrs. Bertha Vanderberghe, historian, Mrs. Alta Walter. chaplain. Mrs. Evelyn Wolfram, Sergeant-at-Arms. Mrs. Margaret I^eßoy. The next meeting of the Auxiliary will be held at the home of Mrs. Kathryn Awald. the evening of October 2«. Any eligible ladies interested in the Auxiliary ar« welcome. Boys Raise Bees to Pay for Co’lege Education Alma, Mich. —A sweet way to • in education is by the production of honey, according to Howard Potter an«l Barker Brown. Jh-th have p ;l ; j their way through Ah: a college by raising bo<s. Last summer the two handled 150 swarms of hues, which yielded L’.ooo pound* of homo. In a generous mood, the bees furnished two crops of t oney. Citified A^erti^in^ FOR SALE—Monitor Radiator Hardcoal stov p large size. Inquire of Fred R. Sher'and. 2twol2p FOR SALE Cabbage. Phone. 183F12. 2twol9p Worth M y WANTED: Representatives to look after our magazine subscription interests in Walkerton and vicinity. Our plan enables you to secure a good part of the hundreds of dollars spent in this vicinity each fall for magazines. Oldest agency in the I’. S. Guaranteed lowest rates on all periodicals, domestic and foreign. Instructions and equipment free. Start a growing and permanent business in whole or spare time. Address Moore-Cottrell. Inc., Wayland Road, North Cohocton, N. Y. FOR SALE —Apples, all varieties. Lakeside Park Fruit Farm. 3^ mi. j southwest of Plymouth. 2twn I FOR SALE-—Cabbage, Spanish bald head by the hundred weight or ton. Also turnips. L. F. Kelver, phone 149F12. 2tw019 FOR SALE —Cabbage and pumpkins. Phone 195 . 21wm 19 p Wm. Freese FOR SALE —Reed davenport and two chairs. Mrs. F. T. Purdy. FOR SALE —Big iron “depot” style heating stove, in good condition, priced right for quick sale. See it at our store at once. Carter’s Drug Store FOR SALE —Herford Calves direct from range. Credit to right parties. Carl Newcomb, Rochester, Ind. wstn2p No Drops Used BETTER VISION and MORE COMFORT thru BETTER GLASSES BY L(MDNT@S Optometrist — Opticians 22214 So, Michigan St. A quarter of a century in the same location. SOVTH BEND, IND We save your eyes and save your monev.

; Apple’s Subtle Emanations Influence Other Vegetables The apple is a most mysterious fruit, the British Association of Refrigeration agreed when their president, during their recent convention in London, made the following assertion : “A stream of air which has passed ‘ over an apple contains some subtle emanations which profoundly influence other vegetable forms. Potatoes placed in the stream either do not sprout or, if they do. the sprouts are misshapen dwarfs, more like warts than anything else. Bananas are excited to a much more rapid ripening than ordinarily. “It is only elderly apples which pour out these emanations, and the effect . on young unripe apples is again curious, for they are stirred to more rapid progress. They ripen more quickly. It is as though the elderly apple were jealous of youth, and would destroy it-” The nature of those emanations is unknown. They are chemical individuals, “their physiological activity must be prodigious, equaling or even ex- . ceeding that of snake venom. ... Os what use is this power? Why can it so intluence its fellow vegetables’? In that lie* the puzzle.’’ Perhaps the emanations explain what warehousers of apples have known for a long time, that “there is a kind of communal life, a herd quality, in apples when stored together. They tend to and. indeed, they do rip en at much the same rate." —’lime Magazine. Seven Presidents Died in Capital line fifth of our former Presidents passed away in Washington, namely, John Quincy Adams. William Henrv Harrison. Zachary Taylor. Abraham Lincoln, William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson. 'Die fust occupant —or former occupant, as the case may be—of the highest office in the land to I die in the Capital City, says the Washington Star, was President William Henry Harrison, who died on April 4, 1841. just one month to the day following his inauguration. John (Juincy 1 Adams, a former President, died In Washington on February 23. 1848. followed two years later —July 9, 1850 — by President Zachary Taylor. President Abraham Lincoln died there April 15, l*tis, and Woodrow Wilson passed away in Washington February 3, 1924. and William Howard Taft, on March 8, 1!»3o. the last two named being former Presidents. Ride Safe and | Save Money —put on new g GOODYEARS ! Now! I • Slippery roads, colder pi weather, more driving on n dark roads —" Fall and S Winter make smooth, S thin tires more danger- 9 ous. Get safe-gripping M new Goodyears while | H prices are low, enjoy I H their protection all ( J Winter — they'll still be almost new next Spring | R | ... More people prefer i Q Goodyear Tires than the Its next three largest-selling j S makes combined more । H people buy Goodyear i P Tires than any other ! 9 nr a kind — you. *3 t 00, willti nd M l Goodvears best in val- | 1: Klei GOODYEAR | imiQIPAI’HnNDER? As-FMB Vuperriun. Core Tire I MileaijesteppeJ up .>0 . t — tread JO thicker * with Full Center True--K I tion I PRICE " - wi wi SEPt T2!Mt I ■*■■■■■■* OVERSIZE , 93 2 Other sizes in a j ’ proportion. 4.40 .1 $5.59 !^5«55 | Expertly 4.75-19 6.97 i f?. ”0 j mountedfree _ „„ •nd lifetime 5.00-19 7.38 1 7.Z9 i guaranteed. 5.50-19 9.40 i 9,40 s The Silo Co. Local Dealers 1 --- -— : (you need! • THIS ; *®K.X handy til LIGHT H S U .-- ! L n f Every Night! (jsleman SPORT-LITE LANTERN Lights instantly )ust the thing for any camp- ; L -ng, hunting, fishing trip or out- ! I door task. Small in size but big • !' ’ in brilliance. Stands only 12 nches high, weighs only 3 lbs., । * yet gives up to 150 candlepower of pure white light. Pyrex glass globe protects mantle. It’s a Double-Duty > lantern for use indoors or out. I 1 5 Has Built-in Pump and many I j - eatures of larger lanterns. Makes fj j I , and burns its own gas from -egular motor fuel. *"he Coleman Lamp &• Stove Co. | Wichita, Kans. Philadelphia, Pa. • Chicago, 111. Loa Angel**, Calif i ask Your Dealer

1 New Regular Prices on Staple Merchandise ■— ■ u 25c Colgates Tooth Paste .C. 19c 35c Colgates Shaving Cream 25c ; 25c Pocket Combs * 20c i 25c Kotex 15c, 2 for 25c 35c Palmolive Shaving Cream 25c All Sizes Hess Stock Poultry Foods, Prices Reduced 10c School Tablets 5c 15c Loose Leaf School Paper 10c ; 10c Ruled Loose Leaf Paper 5c ; 20c Loose Leaf Backs 10c SI.OO Puretest Cod Liver Oil (pints) 75c 75c Stanolax Mineral Oil 50c Complete Line All Standard Toilet Preparations I In 10c Sizes Paper Napkins - Shelf Paper - Etc. - Etc. Fresh High Grade Chocolate Boxed Candies 5c —25 c —5O c — SI.OO —75 c C. M. CARTER. PH. C. (arters Drug Store 3?eoxtU, Store — — .. WttKERTON. INDIANA FI XE 5c TOILET SOAPS MART’S MARKET Phone 8 “A Good Little Place to Trade” SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK END 3| b BOILING BEEF | LARGE FRANKS f J Ol BA( ON SQUARES *o^ Folks, the season is here! Why not let Mart’s j Market supply you with the quality of Oysters you will like, throughout the season—Special prices for i churches and lodges. I*”**^* * ■ * "1 ! Mr. Merchant- j I । I Do You Use $ I Salesbooks? | w I" " I We sell ’em at prices that । are right! Any kind of g style you want. Call us just before your supply runs out. Buy at home! • Independent-News Co. • | North Liberty Walkerton | J - • ■ I I The Time-Tested News Weekly I 1 r Right from Washington, D. C. is now offered to you along with YOUR CHOSEN HOME PAPER By a favorable arrangement we are able to send you that g H old reliable family weekly, The Pathfinder, in combination /a f- ® with this paper, at a price never before equaled. There is /•'■M 3 5 nothing like The Pathfinder anywhere— f S » The Capitol is nothing equal to it at any price. Over a » ®, 751 feet long, 2 million people take it and swear by it. It ; _ 3 — rises 307 feet. 4 takes the place of periodicals costing several rnvers 3Vo times as much. News from all over the S J ~4 world, the inside of Washington affairs— ® □ t'lTnon nno ^ le about politics and business, x" 3 science, discovery, personalities, pic- □' ® Dome is irontures, stories—and no end of fun. and weighs Gall at our office, see samples of jT 3 r* -Pathfinder and order I : < 2 I nine --Ann-Belk i « 3 million XHIHIiBUMI this club< or s end , the i 1 ® Z pounds amount by mail. News. ; Z 1 VA.e'rr "7,3 fl gs information, entertain11 Hll! I ™ cnt for a who,e > ear - ! f I your favorite local weekI। I I ■ ! ri lv an< J tbc m ost popular i — LL 1 LrJ.Je- national weekly - 104 1 ■ ' splendid issues— I j o I Pathfinder and This Paper I Have Company? Tell Us!