Walkerton Independent, Volume 63, Number 19, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 7 October 1937 — Page 8

MtORMICMDEERING NEWS | \‘ A ?* 6 ^****** ma tes • good Earner beber _- --■ • fSii The Silo Co. i&J North Liberty Walkerton South Bend Cf«»~ ”•»• •' Thursday, October 7, 1987 Volume XII; Xo. 34 F' '' ' " <iii s - W ' ■ , • *Sk!Sht A 7 >|BK2h -^MHuI / ii^>l ^TtA r / wllra w*WI BEI / X. jafer , / GbHp "’ ' .'^ vT. &:X£^iHSd£*£3®iHb..; I TURN CLEAN, EVEN FURROWS With McCORMICK-DEERING Plows Turn your stubble or cover crops with a McCormickDeering Plow and you’ll be rewarded with a deep, mellow seedbed, with trash and green manure well covered. You’ll put the soil in good condition to get full benefit of fall and winter weathering. You’ll get the plowing finished in short order, too, with more time for other fall work if you select your \ i equipment from this line which I includes tractor and horse-drawn plows in many models and sizes for varying soil conditions. * Phone us and arrange s° r a demonstration. We 11 XJLF — f ^r h e lp you select the plow you need for your farm.

Glasses Properly Fitted . at Moderate Prices 19011 DR. J. BURKE Dr. W. G. Bogardus Dr. E. C. Beery Optometrists & Mfg. Opticians 228 S. Michigan St. SOUTH BEND, INDIANA ) y The Morning After Taking Carters Little Liver Pills — i We can help you solve your printing problems

BIG BARGAIN OFFER! FOR NEW OR OLD SUBSCRIBERS THAT REALLY WANT TO SAVE MONEY PICK THREE) a % l ° y ur FINE MAGAZINES ' with i —2 OUR NEWSPAPER, 1 Year / (THAT'S SOME SAVING, FOLKS!) Select 2 Magazines in Group A—l in Group B GROUP A- PICK TWO GROUP B - PICK ONE □ American Boy 1 Yr. □ American Fruit Grower 1 Yr. — M .. - o □ The Country Home 1 Yr. □ Chnstn. Herald 6 Mo. □ Cloverleaf Review 1 Yr. □ Flower Grower 6 Mo. □American Poultry Journal...l Yr. □ McCall’s Magazine 1 Yr. □ Farm Journal 1 Yr. □ Motion Picture Magazine ...lYr. □Gentlewoman Magazine 1 Yr. □ Opportir.it, Magazine 1 Yr. □ Good Stories J Yr. □ Open Road (Boy.) 2Yr P vv? ; „ _ .. „ , „ □ Household Magazine lYr. □ Parents' Magaz.ne 6 Ma. □ Illustrated Mechanics 1 Yr. □ Pathdr-ter (Weekly) 1 Yr. □ Home Arts Neediecraft 1 Yr. □ Pictorial Re.lew ..........1 Yr. □ Mothers’ Home Life........1 Yr. □ Silver Screen lYr. □ Poultry Tribune 1 Yr. □ Sports Afield 1 Yr. □ Successful Farming 1 Yr. nuu„_„> c av. □ Womans World 1 Yr. □Wo mans Wrid. 2 Yr. n Leghorn World 1 Yr. □ Household Magazine 2 Yr. □ Capper s Farmer 1 Yr. I DTrue Confessions 1 Yr. □ Breeder’s Gazette lYr. Check 2 Magazine/ thus (X) Check 1 Magazine ifntr (X) 2^ER IS [mail THIS COUPON NOW! GUARANTEED . , . , . | Check the three magazine* denred and return ■■■■■■■ list witb your order. Fil! out coupon carefully. ACT NOW! ! Gentlem n: I enclose $ , I want the I | three magazines checked with a year's iubtcrip- 1 While This , Great Offer i'"" . • St. or RFD ............................ Lasts i T . f , T erm ana S 1ate.......................... 1 Classified Ads Cheapest and Most Effective—Use Them Frequently.

^lllllllllllllllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllillHL I Rialto Theatre I WALKERTON 1 Fri. - Sat., Oct. 8-9 | I “THE LIFE OF THE E PARTY” = With Gene Raymond, Joe Pen- = = ner, Victor Moore, Parwyakar- = S kus and Helen Broderick = E Added Comedy = I Sun. - Mon., Oct. 10 -11 I 1 “PARADISE ISLE” | E With Movita and Warren Hull = = Added Comedy and Late News = 1 Tues. - Wed.. Oct. 12-13 f i “YOU CAN’T HAVE i EVERYTHING” i E With Alice Faye, Ritz Bros., = ! E Don Ameche and Tony Martin = = Added Comedy - = = E First Show Sat., Sun., Wed. = S Nights 7:00 and 9:00 CST. = E All Other Nights 7:15, One a E Show Only = ^lllllllllllillllllllllillllllllllllllllllilllllll^

Correspondence JORDAN Miss Annabel Rupel, North Manchester College spent the week end! with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Rupel. Mrs. M. Oliverious and son, Harry, of Bass Lake, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wilder Cox. Mrs. Josephine Casey, who has been visiting several weeks with Mrs. Oliverious, returned to the Cox home. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Whitman, of Santa Rose, Calif., and Mr. and Mrs. Larmon Foote, of South Bend, spent Monday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Caddie Steele. Mrs. Emma Knepp, of Blairstown, New Jersey, visited Sunday and Monday with Miss Effie Rupel. Mrs. Rose Wiley, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Walter and daughter, Betty, and Miss Adelaide Millard and I. J. Millard were Saturday evening dinner guests of Mrs. Mary A. Reamer. Mr. and Mrs. James Foster, of LaPorte, and Miss Betty De Waele were Sunday visitors at the Fred Bellinger home. I Mr. and Mrs. C. H. McCarty and Mrs. Charles Seitz, of Gary, were Friday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCarty. । Mt. and Mrs. Fred Doylle and daughters, Frances and Margaret, I and Mrs. Florence Patterson and ; son, Millard, of South Bend, called , at the Mrs. Rose Wiley home Satur-| day afternoon. । Miss Catherine Douty spent the week end with Miss Mary Hardy. I Miss Myrtle and Miss Doris Huhnke visited Sunday with Misses Annabel and Glea Rupel. Miss Mary Ellen Nash, of Culver, spent Sunday with Miss Adelaide Millard. Miss Rosemary Wiley spent the week end with Miss Dorothy Seitz. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hostetler and family were Sunday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Hostetler, of LaPorte. । Mrs. Ford Wesolek attended a birthday dinner of her mother, Mrs. Lee Wringle, in Bremen, Sunday. • Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Wiley spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Zollus White, of Burbon. Mrs Viola Faulkner, of North Liberty, spent last week wuth her daughter, Mrs. Goldie Hostetler. The Jordan Birthday Club met with Mrs. Fred Schmeltz Wednesday of last week. Fourteen were present to enjoy Bunco and the refreshments. YELLOW BANK The ladies aid met last Thursday ■ afternoon with six present and will ;' meet again this Thursday in an all- • > day quilting. • A number of the young folks : • from this vicinity attended the foot : I ball game at Notre Dame Saturday. :i Mrs. Rachael Baughman, who has I been caring for Grandma Grenert. : while Mr. and Mrs. Sam Grenert j motored to California and back, ■ spent the week end with her son. • Lawrence Baughman and family. ; Mr. and Mrs. Will Woodbury, of ■ Nappanee were Sunday guests of Mr. ; and Mrs. W. I. Berry. ■ 1 Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harbaugh spent : Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Mag- • gie Harbaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. : Lynch and children were Sunday : guests. Let Us Help You Keep The Egg Dish Full! !i Our Customers For HOOSIER BRAND LAYING MASH say that it makes a lot of difference in the egg production of their flock. Try it and note the increase in eggs. We Make Our Own Chick Feeds, Therefore, We Sell for Less . . Ask for HOOSIER BRAND Holser-Palmer Co. Grains - Seeds - Feeds

" : - 6^5 ...—_. _ ll SUGGESTED BY THE Pedestrian Pointers CtiICACO MOTOR CLUB | । I A '' 1 I V. X /SKs B ^vadSm TM ROW IMO RUBSISM OUT OF THE CAR SHOWS A LACK OF COURTESY ANP COMS I DERATION FOR OTHER MOTORISTS, SAVS THE CMICAGO MOTOR CLUR. SAVE YOUR TRASH FOR THE RUBBISH CAN’ <k _ -VAORO %2ocJp i . ______—J

I Lucinda Long, making apple butter^ The Golden Rule class of the Center Sunday school met Sunday I in the home of Mr. and Mrs. O. D. Harbaugh. Quite a few of the young folks attended the annual B. Y. P. D. conference of the Church of the Brethren at the Bethany church near New Paris Sunday afternoon. . School News Girl Reserve Party The Girl Reserves of the Walker-; ton-Lincoln township school held their initiation last Friday, October Ist. A pot luck supper was served from 6:30 to 9:30. There were sixteen new members initiated: Pauline Hahn, Rita Leffert, Pauline Tinkey, Katie Stickley, Loisanne Cox, Esther Peterson, Phyl’is Gorsline, Josephine Fisher, Betty Bellinger, Lavaun Gensinger, Rosemary Wiley, Lillian Swonger, Pauline Kelver, Elnora Hancock,; Irma Walters and Dorothy Seitz. The Girl Reserves also attended the Notre Dame-Drake football ' game last Saturday afternoon. Sophomores Have Party The members of the Sophomore : class enjoyed a scavenger hunt Tuesday evening. The group met at I Iris Mellin's home where they re- ' ■ ceived their instructions and start- : !ed on the hunt. The group that . won the prize consisted of Miss Senior, the class sponsor. Walter I Marquis, Jean Gaw and Iris Mellin. The class later enjoyed a weiner 1 roast held at the home of Betty De- i Waele. First Call for Basketball Coach Pugh has Issued a call for I candidates for the 1937-38 edition j of the Walkerton high school bask- : etball team to report this Thursday evening. A brand new first five will represent the school this year due to the graduation and “quituation” of members of last year's ] > team. That puts the coach on the ■ spot but gives him a legitimate alibi at the start of the season. It looks like any five boys in high school have equal chances of making the team except that the coach probably will look to the boys who constituted his squad last year to do the bulk of the early season playing. However, there are several Freshmen with plenty of size and some of them may step tn to fill some of the vacant shoes. King basketball, commonly called the good old Hoosier pastime, wil’ be the game of games this year in • the majority of the high schools 1 throughout the state. Even in . some of the larger schools In which football is played, the basketbar । coaches have squads of hardwood artists working out daily. । I. U. Meets Gophers As Underdoes Saturday Indiana University's football team will make its Big Ten debut Saturday when the Hoosiers meet the ' strong and highly favored Gophers of Minnesota, at Minneapolis. Indiana will enter the game decidedly the underdog, but Hoosier teams in the past few years have given the powerful Minnesota combinations some difficult afternoons on the gridiron, and are bent on resuming this practice. Indiana's open week end date last ! Saturday enabled the Hoosiers to | revamp their offensive and defensive i tactics for the Minnesota game. ' Practice last week was almost solely I defensive while the squad was to I concentrate on offensive this week. Fire Prevention Week — A procltmation designating October 3 to 9 as Fire Prevention I Week was issued by Governor M. ; Clifford Townsend. j Fire departments , fire chiefs, I schools and civic clubs were urged to “promote measures of public and private fire protection, extend instruction in fire prevention and arouse the people generally to the | need for habits of greater care.” The proclamation called attention j to the fact that “almost all fires are caused bj’ human carlessness or improper construction or maintenance, and are preventable. ‘ The individual citizen can greatly aid the fire departments by becoming conscious of fire hazards and eliminating them in his own property,” Mr. Smith said. “The whole modern trend in safety work is toward prevention—prevention of traffic accidents, fires and all types of accidents. “We feel that Fire Prevention Week serves a good public purpose by calling attention to the need for greater caution. Thousands of dollars and scores of lives could be saved annually if just a little more attention were paid by the individ- ' ual citizen to fire prevention.”

ROUND OAK RANGE SALE Starts Oct. 11—Ends Oct. 16 Unusual ~ Value ■ of Quality Beauty BE fl Performance ■tn LZ— ■ x Md - " iliu*“ ROW BUFFET ™ FREE!6 eces of beautiful enamel . ware valued at $7.50. Included with the 'wSSMBWftMW purchase of each Round Oak Range during this sales period only, this fine sei of high quality enamel ware and if s FREE' Picture this beautiful full porcelain Round Oak Range in your kitchen ,' - • Convenient credit terms can be arranged J4A QQ Allowance for your old heater on any Glow-Boy or Ray-Boy Circulator purchased during this Sale. Walkerton Lbr. & Coal Co. Phone 95 I BnßflflßflßßßflflflflßHflMßßflflflflflflßßflßMflMHßflHßaHflflßßflßMßflHHßßßßßßMHflflßßflMflflflHflßßflßHßflflflHMHßHMMflfl

I Bare & Heim Start Work on New Station (North Liberty News) i Messrs Bare and Heim and a corps of workmen last week started work cleaning up the debris left | when their large garage building r । was destroyed by Are recently. The work of replacing the old garage with a new super service station I was held up for several weeks pend- { • ing the settlement of the insurance on the building. Although the mat-1 i ter is not yet settled. Bare & Heim , [ have decided to proceed with the ' construction of the new building. The new service station will be! 1 built along lines of the latest type ’ of construction and will include all ' the modern devices for servicing ■ automobiles and trucks. The build- J ' ing will tie set back on the lot. hav- i , 1 ing a frontage on both Main and Centre streets. It will include ser1 vice room, mechanics room, display and office rooms. The work will be pushed forward as fast as possible 1 an effort being made to have the station ready for operation within “ two months. You'll like our printing service. ; - - ------ ' Dr.C. D. Linton Physician and Surgeon s Office over Farmers State Bank of Wyatt Office Hours > 9 to 11 a. m. 2 to 6 p. m. 7 to 8 p. m., except Thursdays Tel. 66

Farm loans Real Estate Insurance Collections ABSTRACTORS THE CREAGMOR AG’CY. Florence Creager Morris Claude A. Morris Attorney Insurance Do you want I a week end guest? I Not the kind who comes with a load of luggage, eats you out of house and home and has to be entertained. That kind is seldom a welcome guest. But you can be host and hostess to a most welcome guest every week end of the year . . . one who brings you all the news, yet nothing malicious nor slanderous; who doesn’t need to be fed but brings you full meals of enjoyment; who doesn't need to be entertained yet brings you a large - measure of entertainment; who costs you less than 3 cents per week. ? Who Is It? I We give you one guess . . and you’ve guess- * ed correctly. It’s — THIS NEWSPAPER | $1.50 per year.__ Subscribe Today Send in Your News Items