Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 30, Number 10, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 5 May 1909 — Page 5
yaffil IPTOMMI ]j jHV MARVIN COPPES, PROPRIETOR L L BRYSON, MANAGER. {■■■■) TheTtc*<xi& Start jWFWH General Item a Carried In Stock ARR,XAI/fj NffiK drugs, Confectionery, Ice Cream, Soda Water, Cigars, jf/lfvy Cameras. Photo Supplies. Toilet articles, cut Flowers. Wall Paper a Paints Tm\\xai Ml NOW GET BUSY! |W Lyffl Great Clearing Sale On JWyi Wall-Paper. j/Kli To each and every customer who IJH |ra| buys enough WALL-PAPER to |jr?| JjjMg, paper two rooms we will give the J§|DO BORDER FREE. Kl?| This is good only from April 27 to |STSS Ijk I j May 11. r St k| COPPES PHARMACY.** || oJLSL ft curved ie£ | j jfx w f, Guarantted (• Give Sotisfaclioiv Hi jg)
When you get a hat here it •Is the result of a lot of thinking, a lot of work, a lot of “management”—the management including all that we do to protect you on style and price. MRS. C.i PINCH. Faihionkbla Millinery-. South Main Street.
Farmers & Traders BANK. (COPPES A SON, Bankers) Established 1884 Nappanee, Indiana. Paid in Capital. $40,000.00 Surplus and other property outside of the banking business as additional security to depositors.. 75,000.00 Individual Responsibility This Bank is under the direct supervision and control of the State of Indiana We solicit your banking business believing that the advantages we offer will be a convenience and benefit to you. Samuel D. Coupes, President Harvey E. Coppes, Cashier Harry B. Greene, Asst. Cashier Fred E. Coppes, M Asst. Cashjer JACOB o. Kantz, LOINS# REAL ESTATE JWEspecial attention to-collection and insurance. Office over] Hartman Brothers store. JL.T. Playne, M. D. (X VETERINARIAN Nappanee, Indiana. Strycfeer & Son, Livery—Phone 72.
I NOTRE DIME UDY'S To all knowing sufferers of rheumapusia, -rfc< sv,. er muscular or of the joints, sciatica. luniViirr s, backache, pains In the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured all of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all sufferers FREE. You cure yourself at home as thousands will testify—no chamre of climate being necessary. Tnis simple discovery banishes urio acid from the blood, loosens the stiffened Joints, purifies the blood, and brightens the eyes, giving fiasticity and tone to the whole system. At the ibove Interests you, for proof address lire. M. Summers, Box B, Notre Dame, Ind. THE NAPPANEE NEWS Nappanee, Elkhart County, Ind. NAPPANEE, IND., MAY 5, 1909. NAPPANEE LOCAL MARKET REPORT. Eggs, per dozen $ 18 Butter, per pound 16 Lard, per pound 12 Hams, per pound 14 Tallow, per pound 04 Shoulders, per pound 10 Bacon, per pound 12 Hogs dressed 084 Dressed Beef, forefquarter ... 07 Dressed Beef, hind quarter ..... 09 Beeswax, per pound 20 Calf Skins, 8 to 15 1b5.... 10 Beef hides, per pound 07 Chickens, alive, per pound 10 Chickens dressed 15 Wheatr—per bushel 1 35 Corn, per bushel 60 Oats, white, per bu5he1.......... 50
TOWN AND VICINITY NEWS, OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO NEWS READERS. V ■: Items Gathered by Reporters in and Out of Town and From Exchanges. —Theatorium, song to-night “Rainbow.” -For sale, a good house. Inquire of N. A. Lehman. lOtl |—John Glass, aged £0 years, died suddenly in Goshen, April 23. —A full blood, 1 year old collie dog for sale. Inquire at News office. —Red Seal fancy dress ginghams 12 cents. H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. —Lowell carpets, 65 cents. H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. —Buy your pine apples now while they are cheap, at Hartman Bros. lOwl —New summer goods this week. H. Ct Fidler’s Cash Store. —Red Fern dress skirtsat our store. • H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. —Buy your pine apples now while they are cheap, at Hartman Bros. lOwl —Linoleum, 50 cents a yard. H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. —A football with every boy’s suit. H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. T —Only 10 cents for large pine apples at Hartman Bros. 10.wl —Big oranges at Hartman Bros, next Saturday. lOwl —Big oranges at Hartman Bros, next Saturday. ' . lOwl —For sale or trade, a good secondhanded motorcycle. Inquire at this office. ’ lOtl —Mrs. Pauline Bender, sr., died In, Goshen, April 27th, at the age of 65 years.
—Ox blood walking shoes for men and women. H. C. Fidler’b Cash Stoke. —Dry wood, and soft coal. Telephone 43 or 4. lOtl Nap. Lmt. & Mfcl Cos. —9xl2 rugs on the Installment plan if you wish it. H. C. Fidler’s Cash Store. —A voice from the dead or the strike at the Big Iron Works Friday night at the Theatorium. —Mrs. Joseph Shrock, aged 70 years, died at her home near Middlebury, April 20, of paralysis. —Ladies’ summer underwear in union and 2 piece suits. H. C. Fidlkr’s Cash Stoke. —Mrs. Israel Frey, aged 61 years, died Monday evening at her home in Middlebury from cancer. —Samuel Bowden, aged 92 years, an old settler of Elkhart county died April 26 of Bright’s disease. —Philadelphia, The cradle of Liberty and A Student’s prank, at the Theatorium Thursday night. —To loan: 1 have $2,000 and $3,000 to loan on first mortgage farm security. 33tf J. S. McEntaffer. —Frank Brown is making preparations to build anew barn in the rear of his residence on North Main street. —“Polly of the Circus” will be the present season’s farewell attraction at the Jefferson in Goshen, Saturday night, May 15th. —The ticket office of tha Lake Shore at Gary was broken into and S4OO iif money was taken from the safe but no tickets were taken. —Accidents will happen, but the best-regulated families keep Dr. Thomas’ Electric Oil for such emergencies. It subdues the pain and heals the hurts. —Leo Solomon, the well-known Ligonier resident, aged about 58 years and who had been critically ill for several weeks, died Thursday shortly before noon at his Ligonier home, —Harsh physics react, weaken the bowels, cause chronic constipation. Doan’s Regulets operate easily, tone the stomach, cure constipation. 25c. Ask your druggist for them. —About everybody in Nappanee has read “Polly of the Circus” and about everybody who has read it wants to see Polly on the stage at the Jefferson in Goshen, Saturday night, May 15th. —lt is said that approximately one ton of fish are received at Goshen by the express company every night and disposed of to the venders and to farmersjresiding in the vicinity of the city. —Mrs. John Rummell, 20 years of age, and a resident of Wakarusa until last December, died last Monday in New Mexico. The remains were brought back to Wakarusa for interment. —James Egner, 19 years old, is under SI,OOO bond at Columbia City to answer on the charge of rape, filed against him on the affidavit of Henry Salesman, a farmer, and father of Elsie Salesman, aged 14 years. —Mrs. Rebecca Anna Stiller, of Crumstown, St. Joseph county, took strychnine last Saturday night with supposed suicidal intent and died as a result. She has been in ill health and is believed to have been despondent.
—“Not guilty,” was the verdict of the jury at Columbia City in the case of the state ys. John Petersohn, oi Churubusco, formerly of Goshen and Syracuse, for failure to take out a transient merchant’s licence. —Bicknell Young, C. S. B. will lecture at the Jefferson theater, Goshen, Tuesday night, May 11th. All Nappanee people who hre interested in Christian Science are invited to attend. No admission fee and no collection. —J. S. McEntaffer has taken the agency for 40,000 acres of land in Mason, Manistee and Lake counties in Michigan from the owner; at prices of $6 to sls per acre, and on easier, terms than you can rent, if you want to make a rich strike see him. 46tf —Fort Wayne will have the annual meeting of the Indiana Bankers’ Association in June, instead of during the fall as has heretofore been the time for the convention, in accordance with a change in arrangements made last Friday at a meeting of the executive committee, helu in Indianapolis. ‘ —Chas H. Gravit, a farmer, shot and "killed himself last Friday night at his home in Lagrange county. The weapon used was a double barreled shotgun loaded with No. 7 shot, he had held the gun in his mouth so the shot entered his brain and death was instantaneous. He was 53 years old and a prosperous farmer. —Goshen Democrat: At a meeting Held in the council chamber, a number of citizens who are interested in the proposed hot water heating plant for Goshen, discussed the project with I. R. McCreery, sales engineer for the Shott Engineering Cos., of Chicago, which concern has 63 central station hot .water heating plants in operation in 'different cities throughout the country. From what can be heard of them they are all working successfully and have shown good profit since being established.
FATALLY HURT ON LAKE SHORE DIES IN CLARK HOSPITAL ELKHART THURSDAY. Man Fell Beneath Train and Both Legs Crushed—Question of Who Pays Expense. A man who gave his name as Amiel Lembusky, of Cleveland, fell beneath the wheels of a freight train while in company with several tramps who were trying to board the train, and both his legs were crushed. He was taken to Clark hospital, Elkhart, where he died on Thursday, the following day, from th? effects of his in juries. The accident happened near Osceola in St. Joseph county. As the best opportunity was afforded to get the injured man to Elkhart, instead of South Bend, he was taken there. Since the accident occurred in St. Joseph county, Trustee Sigerfoos and other Elkhart authorities insisted that the expenses should be assumed by that county. The St. Joseph county authorities became obstinate, however, and insisted-that as the injured man had been taken from that county he was no longer a publiccliarge there. , —Mrs. Ed Bocker of near North Webster was found murdered at the home of her parents in a small town near Kalamazoo, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Bocker formerly lived in Whitley county near the Kosciusko county line. Bocker farmed and bought junk. Recently he disappeared and the woman went to the home of her parents near Kalamazoo. —The home of Milo Powers, at Goshen, together with the entire contents, consisting of household goods and clothing, was wiped out of existence by fire last Tuesday evening within a very few minutes after the blaze started. So rapidly did the flames spread that people living within a stone’s throw of the burning house could not reach it in time to save any of the contents.
—The management of the Wawasee Inn at Wawasee lake have arranged for the establishment at the Inn this summer of a health resort similar to that of William Muldoon on the Hudson river In New York, where wealthy prominent business men, wore out and run down by business worries or dissipation are taken in hand and after a course of treatment are sent back to work in the best of condition. —Mrs. Mae Reeder, through her lawyer, A. G. Whitney of Chicago, has filed suit for divorce in the Elkhart circuit court against John C. Reeder, who is employed at the Putt & Teegarden garage in Goshen. Mrs. Reeder is the woman of whom an account was given in these columns last week as having ran away with their child from Goshen, and was followed by her husband who did not succeed in recovering the child. —The will of Samutf J. Stoutenour, made Nov. 2, 1904, and witnessed by B. F. Deabl and L. B. Whippy was probated Wednesday. The widow, Anna M. Stoutenour, is made executrix. All of the property, both real and personal, is given to the witfow for her life time, after which it is to go to the niece of the deceased, Mrs. Anna L. Aitken, wife of Charles A. Aitken. Mr. Stoutenour died at Nappanee last Friday, one week ago.
—A short circuited electric wir< caused a great deal of damage anc much excitement in the numerous fires resulting from it, at Elkharl early Friday morning. The greatest damage was done at Goldberg’s cloth ing store, 611 South Main street, but the greatest excitement was created at the Depot iiotel where four rooms were burning and the entire building was tilled with smoke. There were seven calls for the department from 2:25 until 5:20. <r '2,000 Jobs For Indianians. The Census Bureau at Washington figures that under the new law now in conference Indiana will be entitled to about 2,000 places. There will be thirteen supervisors for the census in Indiana, one for each congressional district. They will be appointed by the president and confirmed by the senate. While the president will not be bound to accept any one’s recommendations as to these appointments, it is supposed that in the practical workings of the new law he will look to the Republican senators and representatives for a list of nominations. Each supervisor will receive a lump sum of $1,500 and in additioh $1 for each'thousand of population enumerated in his district. Under this arrangement the compensation of the supervisors will vary from $1,600 to $1,900 for the census period. A Scalded Boy’s Shrieks. Horrified his grandmother, Mrs. Maria Taylor, of Nebo, Ky., who writes that when all thought he would die, Bucklen’s Arnica Salve wholly cured him. Infallible for burns, scalds, cuts, corns, wounds, bruises. Cures fever sores, boils, skin eruptions, chilblains, chapped hands. Soon roots piles. 25c at J. S. Walters. —The News Bookstore will furnish rubber stamps and pads to order. —The World Almanac, up-to-date at the News Bookstore,
Please Wait For Us—it Will Pay You.
Nowhere else will you find a spring fashion display more pretentious, interesting and full of suggestions as our big exhibit of Hart, tShaffner (Si Marx, and Reiss Clothes For Men and Young Men. The store will open about May 10th, and men who pride themselves on their clothes, who wish to dress faultlessly at a moderate cost will note this grand display and profit by it. H. S. & M. Clothes are made from ALL WOOL fabrics only, which is a very important item for the wearer, it adds to the length of service you get; it makes the fine tailoring, the perfect style and correctness of it all more valuable because they last better in all wool fabrics, thanfin the cotton mixtures which are so common. Prices for men suits range from $lB to $25. REISS CLOTHES are hand-tailored in our owe shops, are fashioned out of the very best all-wool materials, are fashionable and correct, and will satisfy the most exacting buyer. Prices for men suits range from sl2 to S2O. Qur Display of Children Clothing Will be a revelation to the Ladies of This Community. We take great pride in showing the correct things in Children apparel, the very latest creations are shown in our immense assortmentsßndthe prices they are going to be sold at will please you all—s2.oo t 0.59.00. We solicit your patronage on a basis of proper values and mutual benefit. GI)S REISS & CO. Sfce SQUARE MEN.
This Looks Good!
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P. D. BURGENCR, The Market Street Grocer. Phone 96.
We Sell rftc'xct lZ n^emecUe^. One for Each Ailment. Guaranteed to give satisfaction or /our money back? COPPES PHARMACY. MILLER LUMBER 5 COAL COMPANY, ZW° Dealers in Lumber, Shingles, Lime, Cement, Brick Plaster, Fence Posts, Coal and wood. • " ‘ m A ‘ Secure Hit Hews Mu. l H Hung
ntLP YOURsm, msn mncirnm who'sent that box won’t forget
