Walkerton Independent, Volume 77, Number 42, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 August 1956 — Page 2
Page Two
I Your Sports Comer By Robert Urbin MAKE PLANS NOW to gel to LaPorte sometime this week-end find see at least a part of the National Water Ski meet which RIALTO THEATRE WALKERTON IND. (Tear me out and save) Thurs., Fri., Sat. Aug. 23. 24, 25 JHIKJTJT23E Haley -Aiso3 Stooges Comedy-Cartoon, et<. Sunday 4 Monday Aug. 26.27 Mitohcock. Stewart Owy In Suapanaoram« L^L Ar tgaa£3lri?» Tues., Wed. Aug. 28, 29 MERLE OBERON LEX BARKER “PRICE OF FEAR*’
Public Sale Having purchased the bowling alleys in Three Oaks, Mich, and have already moved and taken possession, I will sell at my farm ’/j ml. north of Walkerton on State Rd. 23. across the road and south of (he Walkerton Sale Barn (look for "Public Sale" signs on highway), on Saturday. August 25, 1956 Commencing at 10:80 A. M. DST 33 HEAD HEREFORD FEEDING CATTLE Good quality, weighing from 550 to 600 pounds each. FEED FEED FEED 1000 bales alfalfa and 500 bales alfalfa and clover mixer hay; 270 bales nice bright wheat straw. TRACTOR EQUIPMENT 1947 Int "M” with M and W gear completely overhauled this summer and on new Super sure grip 12x88 tires; 1948 Jut. “H” in top condition with Int. 2-row power-lift cultivators; 1953 Int. "50-T” baler in perfect running order and wagon hitch; 1951 6-ft. Dane combine with soy bran acrein like new; 90 bu. New Idea tractor manure spreader UMd 2 days; 1955 New Idea 42 ft. fertilizer spreader on rubber; 1954 Int. ‘‘24” 2-row mtd. corn picker, picked les# than 100 acres; David Bradley side delivery rake on rubber; traitor manure loader; new 60-ft. drive belt; SB-ft. Cardinal elevator with wide channel, hopper and 5-h.p. Briggs Stratton motor — motor sold generate; 1951 Case 7-ft. power muwvr, fully mounted on rubber, tor use on any tractor; 20-In. off act dfac; "M. M.” 10-ft. JB-in. diac; 3 16-In. Int. plow on rubber; 2-18 plow on rubber; portable 15-ft. Cardinal elevator on ruhlwr with electric motor; 1947 Dodge 1-ton heavy duty pickup with new 7-20 rwir tires and beat of motor; 4-#ev. spring and 4-«»<m, spike tooth harrows. Int. wagon on rubtwo- with good rack; David Bradley wagon on rubber with rack; new David Bradley buzz «aw; 1951 Case 7-16 disc grain drill with seeder and fertilizer att. on rubber; heavy duty Im. all-crop hay loader; 4 keif feeding hog feeders; hog troughs; 2 steer feeders; garden trail or; Int. “M” wheels mtd. with 12x38 tires; extra set 12x38 tires, lumber, fencing, roofing, water tanks, hog houses, lard kettle, 500 and 850 chick electric brooders, poultry feeders, small tools, etc. NOTE:-Al| machinery has bad the best of care and been stared in good galvanized machine shed. FURNITURE Modernized Kimball piano, upholstered in gray leather stuffed cliairs, dining room suite, lads, springs, dressers, in excellent condition; Whirlpool electric dryer; 2 over, loot stool, dishe-a anil oilier miscellaneous articles. TERMS:-6 Months time extended to those seeing the Fanners State Bank in Walkert<Hi or Wyatt before day of sale and making satisfactory arrangiinents for security; to all others Cash. NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS LI N( II AND REFRESHMENTS ON GROUNDS MILTON ANDERSON W AVNE BFR( 11, Clerk
will b held at Stone Lake. This I j is a very popular and faat-grow-; ! ing sport and the lop performersi in the country’ will be there after qualifying thr ugh the different) I district meets. I A LOCAL ATTRACTION that' should be well worth your time 1 this Thursday will be the finals of the Walkerton Invitational Softball tourney held by the Walkerton Lumber Co. Softball team in the park. This date is set for the finals, barring post-; ponement by weather or what have you. ! WITH THE MONTH of August' ) rapidly going by, the High School I sports picture again becomes a I reality as the teams have started । practice for the fall sports. W alkerton. under the direction of Jim Howard, will begin baseball) ' shortly after the fall term begins and they are beginning workouts now. IT HAI) BEEN THE belief f'r a year or so that this would b< the year that football might get its chance in the local school. However, somewhere along the line, that dream remained only a j dream. When and if football does get its start in Walkerton, the sp< rt will really' take hold as it did in all the other communities. Two county schools, New Carlisle and Washington-Clay, already are playing schedules and Bremen, Knox, North, Judson, Jimtown and many other neighboring schools are playing the game. WHILE ON THE SUBJECT of f<X)tball, the pros have begun their pre-season schedule in preparation for the tough schedule J ——
ahead. The Chicago Bears, considered the outstanding team in the Wesbin division, romped to a win over the cross-town rivals, the Cardinals Saturday night in Florida. The Bears again have the same type of team that Halas , made famous in the pre-war days, as they have once again gained the tag ns the "Monsters of the Midway." OF COURSE ALL the teams have the size to rate a name like this but it seems that the Bears have that something extra that ) makes them extra tough. The’ Bears this year will be under the guidance of Paddy Driscoll, who received the job as head coach when George Halas retired. Driscedi certainly has ihe material to make good and if any one beats them out thh year, it certainly will late as an upset. | THE LOS ANGELES RAMS, the winners ot the W'estcrn division last year, will certainly have their troubles staying up on lop as several of the veterans ol the last few years have called it quits. Much will depend on the performances of the iwkies they have drafted and only time wUI tell just what their team will be capable of doing . (’LEVELAND WILL AGAIN be the team to beat in the Eastern half despite the loss of Otto Graham. They still have two great quarterbacks in George Ratter-1 man and Babe Paralli, both experienced in the tough pro league. They will prcbably have tneir chiet threat from the Washington Redskins. । I OF COURSE A LOT can happen to a team between now and the last Sunday in September when the championship grind gets under way. Injuries are the chief threat that a team worries about ind one k.*y injury can change the picture of the whole league. This promises to be another great season f< r the play-for-pay boys as they soon Etart the grind for the title of champions and the lucrative reward that awaits the winners. Ammunition Worker One of Safest Jobs The ammunition worker has one of the safest jobs' in American; industry, according to official 1955 statistics of the National Safely, Council and the Army Ordnance Corps. A worker in one of the Army's 26 ammunition plants is only one-. • sixth as likely to be injured on the job as the worker in an average American industry. He is about 23 times saiev than a person engaged in coal-mining, lumbering or marine transportation . He is probably five times safer at work than at home. He lis four times more likely to be I killed in a motor-vehicle accident Ilian ho is on his job. In fact.; only one major U. S. industry - communications - has a better safety record than the Army ammunition industry. Sharing credit with Anny Ordnance for thie safety achievement are 19 prominent American 1 industrial firms, who under contract with the Ordnance Corps operate 22 of die 26 Army ammunition plants. | One of thea 26 installations is the Kingsbury Ordnance Plant, near LaPorte, Indiana. Commanded by Captain John E Bess, Jr., it is operated for the Ordnance Early birds get best deals BIG IM demonstration! WSP AUGUST 20-31 '“yT 1 - . -'mA. See your MERCURY DEALER Williams Supply Co. Walkerton, Ind,
Corps by the American Safety Razor Corporation, Kingsbury Division, and presently employs about a thousand workers. 'Open Season Hearing i On Deer, Pheasant A public hearing was held at Ihe office of Harley G. Hook, director of the Indiana Department of Conservation, Wednesday, to discuss tho open season on the hunting of deer in Indiana. | It was proposed that hunting with bow and arrow be allowed in parts of Tippecanoe and Browr. County state parks, throughout the entire month of November, and that the archer be allowed to kill a deer of either sex or any age. , For the firearm hunter, it was proposed that he be allowed to hunt from December 5 to December 8, inclusive.. One male deer with at least one forked antler, may be taken by a licensee. It was proposed that the license issued for the year 1956 be valid in the following counties: Bartholomew, Bro^’n. Crawford. Harrison, Lawrence, Martin, Monroe, Morgan. Orange, Owen,Perry and that part of Greene County lying east of the West Fork of White River. The outcome of the hearing will be published later. Pheasant Season The time limit for pheasant hunting in Indiana will be decided at a public hearing, to be held in the office of Harley G. Hook, director of the Indiana De- । partment of Conservation, on Wednesday, Reptember Sth at 10.00 am. CDST. At the hearing it will be proposed that the open season for the taking and killing of cock pheasants be from November 10 to November 20, inclusive. Os course, the two Sundays within these dates are excluded. It will be proposed also that the hunter be limited to one cock pheasant per day. ! Benefit Dinner at St. Patricks School Walkerton, Sunday, Sept 2, 11 a. in. tu 2 p. m. Chicken Fre casse or ham. Adults 51.25; children 75c. Public invited. a3own
P Pub!i‘c Sale ‘ I ■ My acreage' haring been reduced to lew than 40 acres A 4 of ground, I am compelled to <*<‘ll at my farm, located 4’j X miles east of North Liberty on Road 4 to Pine Road, then J ■ 3 miles south; 7 miles south of South Bend, or 1 mile north A A of Lakeville on Road 31 to Road 4 (Pierce Road), 4 miles X X nest ut Pln<‘ Road, 3 miles south; 3 miles west of Intersection 1 W Roads 6 anil 31 south of LaPaz, on Road 6 to Pine Road, ■ ■ then 3 miles north, on A | SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER Ist | Commencing at 11:00 O’Clock A | 12 - HEAD GOOD HOLSTEINS -12 i V AU were raised on my farm from high producing dami X and Curtis Candy Sires by artificial insemination,. They an* S X Urge, typy, weU uddrred and colored, weighing from 1,400 X V lbs. down. AU have good udders and quarters and my annual 1 ■ B. F. average to 4%. Individual certificate* for Bang's will ■ X be given with each animah 1 have well above the average ■ producing herd, but my pasture has been so redooed that 1 :■ they are not at their very peak of production, Ylerd consists W ' A of four 3-year olds with first calves, fresh In late July; two A ♦-year old second calf heifers, fresh tost of July to early X w August; three 5-ymr olds, on* freak and other two fresh I A October 1 and November 17; heavy producing 10-year old ■ X to freshen December 27; two 3-year old open heifers. A Pl RE BRED LAN DR ACE BOAR • MONTHS OLD AND | ELIGIBLE FOR REGISTRATION. MILK EQUIPMENT Delaval milker complete with 2 late model stainless steel ■ units used about 18 months; good 6-can Harder Frette side A door, aide spray milk cooler; 17-gallon electric water heater; j 'U 10 stanchions; 5 drinking cups; 10 10-gallon milk sans; wash V ■ tanke; buckets; can rack, etc. ■ j TRACTORS & EQUIPMENT I 2 1948 lIIC “H” tractor and hydraulic lift cultivators, both X good; 1944 A. C. "WC” tractor with starter and set of power ¥ ■ lift cultivators; IHC 2.14 Inch plow on rubber with Radex ■ ■ bottoms; John Deere 2-14 inch plow on rubber; 1950 90-bu«hel R X New Idea tractor manure spreader; 1948 New Idea sing.’s ■ j row com picker; 7-ft. IHC Hk tach disc; David Bradley X I rubber tire wagon and good rack with 16-inch sides; 4-srctlon I spring tooth harrow; 3-bar side delivery rake on steel; imir B Lzmtz coulters; IHC 6-ft. horse drawn mower; Me- ■ CoDough 18-inch chain saw; 12-hole galvanized hog feeder; 1 10-m-st galvanized liens nvst; 500-chlck electric brooder and w other mtoceilaneous articles. ■ TERMS — 6 months time extended to those seeing our clerk X at the Bank in LakeviUc before day of sale and making j satisfactory arrangements for security. To all others CASH. B LI NCH * REFRESHMENTS BY PINE CREEK LADIES ■ NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS X WARREN BAUGHMAN | HAROLD STEINER, Auctioneer NELSON LEMAN. | Bremen, Clerk X a iima <1 .rim wnmar_ t- —n an a 1 r- —r .t.. — —ft
August 23, 1956
COMPLETES THAINING i SAN DIEGO. Cabs. Josep । T. Laskowski, son of Mr. and Mi Edward Laskowski, Route 1, N Liberty, is scheduled t< complei ’ । recruit training August 24 a the Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego. Calif. i The ten-week course includes . instruction In all basic military . and Infantry weapons. 1 Upon completion of training, ' the New' Marines are assigned to Camp Pendelton, Calif., for fur ther training, cr to one of th ! many Marine Corps schools. Drive Carefully Always! I REES Plymouth, Indiana AIR - CONDITIONED Thursday, Friday A Saturday “Good-bye My Lady” WALTER BRENNAN, PHIL HARRIS, BRAMMIN do WILDE A lonely boy — A lonely dog A truly wonderful story! Cartoon, Screen liner & NewsSunday, Monday 4 Tuemday “Gaby” In Cinemascope LESLIE CARON, SIR CEDRIC HARDWICKE, JOHN KERR They lived a lifetime in one day, one night of laughter, and tears and love! ; Color Cartoon and News ' Sunday Continuous from 2 P.M. Monday Thru Saturday, 7 4 9
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