Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 2, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 8 September 1921 — Page 7
THURSDAY, *PtfW#*#, 121
AUDITORIUM ; FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, SEPT. 9-10 Anita Stewart IN HER LATEST AND BEST PHOTOPLAY "Harriet and the Piper” From the Novel by KATHLEEN NORRIS > Down through the Agee—Woman has always been the object—- | as well as the obstacle of Man’s Intentions—and attentions—so it is > in this story. ! Also a Comedy, "TOONERVILLE NO. 11." ; MONDAY AND TUESDAY, SEPT. 'l2-13 : Alice Brady in “The New York Idea” ; Alio a Comady. "REST IN PEACE." ; WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, SEPT. 14-15 • y LOUIS B. MAYER PRESENTS i Anita Stewart in “The Yellow Typhoon” By HAROLD MACGRATH ; “YELLOW” because of her hair; "TYPHOON" because of the • human wreckage she left in her wake. "THE YELLOW TYPHOON,” they called her after the manner of the Orient, where she was notor- • ious for her vampish escapades. With a kitten’s purr but a tiger’s I heart, her carnival of reprisals against the male sex was being car- | ried to a whirlwind conclusion, when I Also “KINOGRAMS.” '[ COMING—FRIDAY and SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16-17 L “The Sky Pilot” ! A THRILLING WESTERN
1,500 ACRES OF MINT , ' IN KOSCIUSKO COUNTY. Compiling statistics on mint growing in Kosciusko county, Carlyle Barnes of Milford( editor of the Mail, finds there are about 1,600 acres of mint under cultivation, Sc-ott township leads with 819 acres and is followed by Jefferson with 667, Etna 140, Washington 80, Seward 30, Harrison 20 and small acreage in Wayne and Van Buren townships. INTERURBAN SAFE AT MISHAWAKA IS CRACKED. The safe in the office of the C. S. B. & N. L. railway company at Mishawa-* ka was blown open Thursday night of last week by robbers, who secured $35. No one heard the explosion, although the office is located in the heart of the business district, and the robbery was not discovered until Friday morning.
l|3p Prices Slashed! w j|y On Aladdin Aluminum Ware Ala( j din Aluminum cooking utensils emWi body many conveniences, features which*' jlr" ' 1 *%|i] pLI \jjn * ncrease fheir usefulness to the housewife. Hi Their capacities are measured by govern- JMm ment standards. Some of the other superior features of Aladdin utensils are shown-in I / Mm the illustrations on this page and explain ||pL jyy why these utensils are the choice of lW' ’ ’gppj thousands of discriminating housewives. lgM| 1M ' have it, but as women would design and consulted on all designs. Our prices on this ware are cut to a level where rt | FURNITURE HARDWARE HARNESS
FARM FIRE CAUSEB LOSS OF ABOUT $5,000. Fire which destroyed a barn, garage and other outbuildings on the farm of Lewis Harper, nine miles north of Elkhart, on the Cassopolis road, caused a loss of about $5,000 Thursday noon of last week. There was no one at home at the time of the fire and its origin is unknown. PIG CLUB ON TRIP. A party of one hundred persons, including members of the Milford Pig club and'their parents, motored to Hicksvifle, Ohio, Friday, to visit the Countryman Bros.’ farm, one of the model hog farms of the middle west. ELI SEEBIRT ILL. . Eli F. Seebirt, widely known South Bend lawyer and republican nominee for'mayor of that city, is seriously ill at his home.
CORRESPONDENCE * . . 1 .
OAK GROVE. Corn cutting is the order of the day- 3 The road men began working obi the road Tuesday. Mrs. Foster Pittman and daughter Kathlyn visited at Levi Madlem’s on Thursday. Miss Gladys Scheeta spent Saturday and Sunday with Miss Bonnie Yeasel. Bert McGowan and family of Bourbon, called on Mrs. Wm. Gordon on Friday evening. Our school began Monday. The pupils are all pleased with their teacher, Charles Schurr. Miss Addle Truex of Bremen visited witlj Jiep parents, Mr. and Mrs. Amos j Truex, on Sunday. - Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Scheets and Mrs. John Bixler were at the Champion Fruit Farm, near Syracuse, on Wednesday. Charles Schurr purchased anew Ford last week. Charles SJcGowan and family attended the Price and Ryman reunion which was held at the home of Samuel Hollar, southwest of Milford, on •Sunday. The Misses Fredia and Grace Andrews were in Bremen Saturday evening. Miss Almedia Skinner spent Tuesday in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Wise called at Wm. Hygema’s Tuesday evening. Wm. Schlosser of Bremen transacted business hree Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Fisher and children visited with the former’s mother at Milford on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gordon and daughter Laura spent Sunday witlf Roy Truex and family at Wakarusa. Mrs. Geo. Truex has been helping care for Jjer mother, Mrs. Blyle, who has' been ill, at Wyatt, several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Johnson attended a reunion at Elkhart, Sunday. STONY KOINT. We are having fine weather. Farmers are busy cutting corn and sowing rye. . s Wm. Estep his the foundation in for his new house and is ready for the carpenters. Ralph Stackhouse is putting up a fence on the north side of our new road. Wm. Estep and family attended his uncle’s funeral at Leesburg Monday. Lloyd J, Rummel helped J. 0. Thompson cut com Tuesday. Benjaniin Hepler’s visited J. 0. Thompson’s Sunday. About 40 of Mrs. G. L. Rummers neighbors, friends and relatives called at her home last Thursday evening and helped her celebrate her 43rd birthday. •Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Davis are gone •on their honeymoon. We all wish them a happy and prosperous life.' Most of the schodls of this county will open next Monday, Sept. 12.’ A few of them opened Sept. 5.. There will be three teachers at Olunette this winter. Prof. C. M. Christian, of south of Atwood, will be the new principal.
THE NAPFAXBB ADVANCE-NEW*
Get the Boys Ready For School! Now is the time to do it, and ’ this store is the place to do it. —Koontz’s
► — ————— ► i Mother ► : will ► ; like ► ; the , * v ♦ ; quality
This is Boys’ Week at Koontz’s Boys Du B £EJ-B I LTdothes $3.95, $4.45 GUARANTEED FOR 6 MONTHS' SERVICE CA Q£ DUBBELBILT—the famous boys’ clothes that are GUARANTEED tpUitlV/J M r\J***J to give SIX MONTHS’ WEAR, WITHOUT RIP, HOLE, TEAR; OR SUIT WILL BE REPAIRED -FREE. Reinforced at every point of ff *7 ACZ Cfi QK wear and strain. P POe*/*J Smart style—sturdy fabrics—reasonable prices. But above all, ** m mt ih< A GUARANTEED service. Full money’s worth—no mending for six ©|(| A k Ss |2 / months. Two and one pant spits. Come In and see th<m, at reduced <{/ avi sir j t" Ams • prices. —t —7 ”7^ Boys’ school shoek Caps Sweaters Hats Shirts Underwear Blouses . Odd Pants Neckwear Hosiery
See Windows! See Windows! KOONTZ’S • € * ' *- * —the House of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes. Walkerton * NAPPANEE Fowter
METHODISTS WILL NOT SELECT ASSEMBLY BITE BEFORE EARLY APRIL. Necessary for Conference to Choose Between Webster and Lake Wawasee. The selection of a site for the Methodist Assembly will not be made until the meeting of the Northern Indiana Conference which will meet in session at Elkhart next April. This fact was announced Saturday by Rev. Croxall, of Warsaw, Methodist minister. Some tirSe ago'a meeting was held in Warsaw for the purpose of taking some action. At that time it was practically determined to select the site on the north.shore of Webster Lake. However, Syracuse residents came in with a proposition and the committee then had no power to act. Following the meeting it was announced' that in all probability - the conference would choose the Webster Lake site as part of the purchase price had already been paid. BIG SUNFLOWER. A sunflower 14 inches in diameter 'is on a stalk 10 feet, two inches high at Hartford City.
Walk Away * Cr from all tiie worries fire can bri/ig. Accept the protection of a fire insurance policy in an old,_ well-known company. Your house is your most valuable possession. Cover it by full insurance. Our rates are the same old rates—and we represent the same gld* reliable companies. Avoid losses that fire causes. The sooner you insure, the safer youMI be. T. J. Prickett & Son Phone 218 Nappanee
CORRESPONDENCE
LOCKE. Wm. Shaum and family and Mr. and Mrs. Russel Stahly attended the Hartman reunion at Elkhart, Tuesday. Mrs. Andrew Dauma of New Paris visited here on Thursday. Some outlaw cut Noah Long's corn at the corner of the field, 3 1-2 miles north of Nappanee on Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. George Dennison of Elkhart were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Dennison. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hunsberger spent Sunday with Mrs. Susan Culp at Yellow Creek. Mrs. Mary Bliley went to stay with her son, Wm. Bliley, at ElkharL Mr. and Mrs. Manford Freed are the parents of a baby girl: ■ Mrs. Charley Pletcher returned home after spending several weeks In North Dakota with her brother, .John Herr and her sister, lire. Hattie Stoutsenberger. The following were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Burkey: Mrs. Baker Hoogeboom and daughters, the Misses Minerva and Mary, Merl and Miss Mandela Bachtel of Wakarusa, Miss Hattie'Bachtel and Lewis Salisbury of Claudeville, Mrs. Jacob Holaway, Mrs. Clarence Holaway, Miss Rhoda Beery, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Maust, Mr. and Mrs. Yost Yoder and Mrs. Ezra Mullett of Nappanee and Mr. and Mrs. 'Samuel Smeltzer of Wakarusa. Mr. and Mrs. Alph Miller of Wakarusa spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Clouse. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Bliley of Buffalo, S. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bliley spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Bliley. Mrs. Frank Clouse spent Saturday and Sunday at Winona Lake. COMMISSIONERS AGREE ON 33 FOOT BRIDGE. At a joint session of the cfiunty commissioners of Elkhart and Kosciusko county held on the inter-county bridge three miles east of Nappanee, Friday morning, the joint boards agreed on a 33 foot bridge that will tie built soon. County Auditor Charles A. Croop attended the meeting. RECEIVE DIVIDENDS. Goshen veterans of the World war who retained their army insurance are receiving dividends on all insurance in force one year or more.
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HASTING. We are having plenty of rain. The pickle crop is almost ovetwith in this vicinity. - Rev. McClure talked to a large congregation Sunday morning. Miss Neva Haney of Elkhart, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Haney and family. The Price and Rymen reunion was held at the home of Sam Hollar last Sunday. Charley Geiger and family of Akron spent Sunday at the old home place. Rev. McClure took Sunday dinner at the Frank Pinkerton home, Mr. Biller is improving. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. Preaching at 7:30 p. m. LABT CONCERT OF SEASON. >- The final open air band concert of the season was given in Wakarusa Thursday evening by the Wakarusa band, an excellent organization. The New Paris band also gave its final concert Thursday evening.
HARNESS-RUNNING-MOTORCYCLE RACES \ Sept. 13. Farm Exhibits. “ 14. Auto Polo. “ 15. A Midway of Mirth. “ 16. Free Attractions. “ 17. 10 Acres of Displays. SOUTH BEND MISHAWAKA ■ * * . • ‘ ■ FAIR - ■ . *s..• - - A MILLION DOLLAR SHOW
Dad will lik^ the price
MAKE BIG CITY CALL YOU, ADVIBEB BANKER. “If you want to be a La Salle street bank president, young man, stay awpy from La Salle street and get a job iu the small bank in your horns town. Stay there until the city bank calls This, writes a reporter in a Chicago morning paper, is the success formula of Charles A. Burns, one of the best known bankers in Indiana and the middle west, who assumed his new duties as vice president of the Foreman Brothers Banking company last week. Mr. Burns started as a messenger with the Indiana Bank & Trusty company of Rochester, Ind., 20 yeara. ago. In 1918 he accepted the posltlttir of first vice president of the St. Joseph Valley bank at Elkhart, Ind., which position he resigned to accept the office he assumed yesterday.
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