Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 27, Number 11, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 16 May 1906 — Page 5

THE NAPPANEE NEWS Nappanke, Elkhart County, Ind. NAPPANEE, IND., MAY 16, 1906. NAPPANEE LOCAL MARKET REPORT. Eggs, per dozen ....$ 16 Butter, per pound 12 Lard,jjer popnd 08 Hams, per pound.. 12 Tallow, per pound.... 03 Shoulders, per pound .... 08 Bacon, per pound 08 Beeswax, per pound 20 Beef hides, per pound 08 Chickens, alive, per pound 08 Wheat—new, per bushel. .... 88 New Corn, per bushel 45 Oats, white, per bushel—new— 30 Clover seed, per bushel..ss.oo to 7.00 TOWN AND VICINITY NEWSGathered by The Reporters About Town and Prom Exchanges. —A bicycle path is being built from Elkhart to Christiana Lake. —The Elkhart Driving Club is putting its grounds in condition —Call for Hartman’s bread, baked goods, etc., at your dealers or from the wagon. Ilw2 —The Laughlin fountain pen from SI.OO up to $6.00 at the News Bookstore —Jacob O. Kantz, the attorney, has bought the Straus building for $3,500. —A very desirable lot for sale on East Market street. Inquire of J. S. McEntaffer. ts —Copies of the News magazine edition will be mailed to any address at 15 cents per copy. —Dr. McCormick examines eves and tits glasses. All work guaranteed. Office in Dietrich block. ts —The one year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Nusbaum, 2 miles south of Middlebury, died. —William Babcock, the stone mason, is working on the walls for the new school house in Bremen. —The Y. P. O. U. of the U. B. church attended a union meeting in Bremen last Sunday evening. —Mrs. Clara J. Blllecke, aged 70 years, died Sunday evening at her home in Elkhart. Two sons survive her.— i——The John J. Mitchell cutting system is the best. To be convinced, try Homer Neher, tailor, in Dietrich block. 10t2 —Mrs. Viola V. Carpenter, aged 43* years and the wife of Albert Carpenter, living in Goshen, died suddenly May Btb. —ls you would know what we know you would eat Hartman’s celebrated baked goods, the very best. Call at your dealers. Ilw2 —The Manuel Training School in charge of Miss Brown and Miss Swartz will open June 3rd at the public school building. llwl —Mrs. Sophia Benford, aged 53 years, died at the home of her sister near Middlebury last Sunday of hemorrhage of the stomach. —I carry a fine line of samples in dress goods—silks, wool goods, suitings, linings, and all kinds of fabrics, which may be ordered through me. 9t3 Mrs. Olive Ringler. —The livery barn of Freed & Kern, at Ligonier, burned last Wednesday night, causing a heavy loss. The firm had been in business only about a mpnth. —I can make you a nice, nobby spring suit, or a nice stylish top coat —full of style and comfort, at a reasonable priceT Homer Neher, old band hall. 10t2 —By request of the W. C. T. U. Mrs. Hannah W. Stanley will speak in the U. B. church next Sunday May 20th, at four o’clock and at the M. E. church in the evening at 7:30 o’clock. A large attendance is desired. —John Ba”shor, aged 74 years, died Wednesday morning at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. Aaron Martin, 2} miles north of Nappanee. The funeral was held Thursday at Union Center, where also the interment was made by N. A. Lehman. —Chas. Brundage, aged 22 years, died Wednesday, May 9th, at the home of his parents 5 miles northeast of Nappanee. The funeral was held in the South Union church on Friday, the interment being made, at that cemetery by N. A. Lehman. —A cure may be effected by applyings’ebamberlaln’s Salve as soon as the child is done nursing. Wipe it off with a soft cloth before allowing the child to nurse. Many trained nurses use this salve with the best results. Price 25 cents per box. Sold by J. S. Walters. - .

PERSONAL MENTION. Jacob Good went to Ktoontz’s Lake Monday. Mrs. H. C. Fldler went to Elkhart yesterday. William Pollock was over to Casso- , polls Sunday. William Rowell, of Goshen, was in town Sunday. ,:/ Missßoblna Mac Kay has returned from South Bend. Michael Snyder was a passenger to Claypool yesterday. Mr. Ed Franger, of Chicago, is visiting relatives here. Miss Ivy Stauffer, of Indianapolis, is visiting relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hatfield were here Sunday from Leesburg. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Fligor, of Warsaw, were in town last Friday. Dr. Chas. A. Inks and Jesse Ulery were over to South Bend Friday. J. D..Coppes transacted business at Rochester Monday and Tuesday. Miss Flo Wilkinson, of near Cromwell, was visiting friends at this place. Rev. and Mrs. B. H. Flora, of Chicago, are visiting friends at this place. Miss Ella Robinson, of Brookston, is visiting her cousin, Miss Merle Gwin. Mrs. Harley Holderman, of Elkhart, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Elda Hayes. Chas. Craige, of Chicago, spent Sunday here with his father, S. W. Craige. Carl Ereese and Miss Mabel Prickett spent Sunday with friends in Valparaiso. Mrs. Dora Hamilton, of South Bend, Was visiting friends here over Sunday. Miss Mosciline Jackson, of Syracuse, is the guest of Miss Grayce Mackey. - Mrs. J. D. Coppes is spending the week in Chicago, the guest of Mrs. H. Strohm. Miss Nettie Hoover, of near Bristol, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Milo Pliley last week. Albert Weyburn, of Milford, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Weyburn. Mrs. Otto Walters was here from Bremen Thursday visiting her parents, Mr. and N. Arch. Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Wagner, of Brethren, Mich, are visiting friends and relatives at this place Miss Ethel Stiver, of Nejv .Paris, spent a few days last week with Maybelle and Grace Gentzhorn. John DoeriDg, the all around farmers’ friend at Wakarusa. was in town on business last week, Tuesday. Miss Ella Ponader, of Bremen, and Miss Myers of Milford, were the guests of Miss Elbe Weyburn last Friday. The Misses Olive and Winnifred Fluegel, of Warsaw, .attended the commencement exercises last Friday. Daniel Doering, one of Wakarusa’s substantial business men, was transacting business in Nappanee last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. John Rupert and daughter, Mabel, and Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Stewart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Rupert near Mentone, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coppes, Madames Edw. Kerr, Minnie Bauer, and Chas. Burbach spent Sunday in Garrett with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Felty. Noah Flowers, foreman of the tank department of Brown Bros. Mfg. Cos., spent Sunday, in Goshen, where his wife had been visiting for several days. „ Mr. and Mrs. Bert Radibaugh of South Bend, and Harry Gocser, of South Haven, were here to attend the funeral of the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Warreu Gonser. Mrs. C. H. Lutz, of Wakarusa, has been visiting her parents here, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Spicer. They have also been entertaining the Misses Hazel and Mabel Moore, of Cromwell. Goshen Democrat: Mrs. E. A. Dausman and daughters, the Misses Ina and Gertrude, left this morning for Nappanee to attend the commencement of the Nappanee high school. Chas. Hoback, who served ' three years in the Philippines, and who has recently, been working at Mishawaka, has again gone into the service. He is now located at the Columbus, 0., barracks as drill master. Mr.|pind Mrs. Will Woodbury, of Mishawaka, and Mrs. Ada Thomas, of South Bend, were here over Sunday, The ladies came to see their mother, Mrs. W. W. Best, who has been quite poorly for some time. Messrs. Daniel Zook and John D. Coppes drove their cars to Goshen

last Thursday taking with them Rev. Metzler, B. Uline, G. N. Murray, S. W. Craige, Jesse Ringenberg, and Dr. J. S. Inks. They went to attend a session of the commissioners’ court. —Wanted: Traveling salesman. Must furnish references and invest SIOOO.OO in first class 6 percent bonds. Salary and expenses paid. Experience not required, we teach business nt our mills. Wheeling Roofing & Cornice Company, Wheeling, W. Va. 6w6 —Elkhart will soon have submitted for its consideration a written proposition for the erection of anew water plant by a responsible Chicago contracting firm. Already verbal propositions have been made by local representatives of the company to the Board of Works. —Frank Gillen, a prisoner from South Bend, who was being taken to Jeffersonville reformatory, jumped from a Big Four train at Reed Station south of Warsaw Wednesday in an effort to escape and broke bis leg. The train was stopped and he was again taken aboard. —J. C. Mast, a deaf mute, is under arrest in Elkhart, charged with larceny. Not being able to furnish SSOO he has gone to jail until his hearing. J. P. Helfrick, a mute, caused Mr. Mast’s arrest. A $75 diamond .ring and a purse containing $1.50 have missed from the Helfrick home. —Brice Larimer, one of the pioneer settlers of Elkhart county, who resided here since 1835, died Wednesday morning at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. Margaret McClure', in Goshen. He had been ill for about six weeks, being first attacked with the grip and later suffered with dropsy. —Mrs. Sue Martin, an oldyand highly respected resident of Miss., was sick with stomach trouble for more than six months. Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets cured her. She says:. “I can now eat anything I wantand am the proudest woman the world to find such a medicine.” For sale by J. S. Walters. Sample free. —Goshen Democrat: Roy Bartholomew who left here about the first of March and has been staying at the home of his aunt, Mrs. J Blue at Beatrice, Neb., since that time, was operated upon at Lincoln, Neb,, last Friday for appendicitis. He stood the operation all right. The last heard from him was that he was Improving rapidly. —While tightening nuts on the side-rod of a locomotive, Andrew Lofdahl dropped his wrench and his body fell into the arms of Engineer George Hunter, at Elkhart,, who was assisting in preparing the engine for a run. In the hope that he might be revived the company’s physician/ was summoned but he could do nothing, as the man was dead in a few minutes. His sudden death was attributable to heart disease. —Mrs. Mipnie $. Strouse, of Garrett, Ind., filed suit in the United States district court at Indianapolis demanding SIO,OOO from the Baltimore & Ohio railroad company, for the death of her husband, Reuben W. Strouse, in a railroad collision. The accident occured November 22, 1904, between Albioh 'and Cromwell, and the plaintiff declares was caused by the negligence of a train dispatcher, who gave orders for two trains to pass in opposite directions on the same track. Marriage Licenses. . Eston D. Prough and Bertha Prough. Albert G. Bohn and'Mabel Rogers. Harlan A. Stauffer and Sadie Truesdell. Jesse C. Stutsman and Ellen Hoke, Wm. I. Walters aa,d Ida Belle Stull. i / Real Estate Transfers. B G Schaefer to Amasa H Corps and wife lot in Elkhart SSOO. James A Beck et al to W W Brinley land in Elkhart tp SBOO. Frank Hale and Anna Hale to Chas KoMetioJUn Goshen $1,600. . Chas McKibbon to Warren Rohrer li acre in Jackson tp $325. ft. F Williamson and wife to Clarice E Beverstein lot in Goslien SBOO. B D Hogenboom to J O Kantz lot in Nappanee SI,OOO. J O Kantz and wife to Sophia Miller lot in Nappanee $1,200^ Hermit Remedy company to Alexander Montgomery and wile lot in jPlkhart $1,050. Katharine Rice and husband to F E Brumbaugh lot in Elkhart SI,OOO. T A Penland and wife to Levi A Kauffman 1-6 acre in Elkhart tp sl,080. - - -=^K Ann Beeson Purdy and husband to Wm B,Curtis lot in Elkhart $650. J W Fieldhouse and wife to,A Frank Tyler lot in Elkhart S2OO. J W Fieldhouse and wife to CD Atkinson and wife lot in Elkhart $450.

W. C. T. U. COLUMN Articles under this head "are furnished by the Local Superintendent of Pres* Work, pertaining to the work of the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, for which there is no charge or responsibility by the publisher. < ’ Mrs. Willard Price will entertain the W. C. T. U. ladies in Parlor meeting at, her home next Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Our county president and some other workers from abroad will be with us. Let every member be present, and bring a friend with her. lam sure all will feel to say, “It was good to be there.” Local Supt. Press Work. * SUBSIDY IS VALID. Winona Interurban Company Wins Suit. Judge Carter,of Indianapolis, sitting as special judge in the Kosciusko county circuit court, decided that the subsidy of $25,000 voted to the Winoua Interurban company for the line between Warsaw and Goshen by the people of Wayne township, was valid. At the time the money was appropriated some weeks ago, an injunction suit was filed by Joseph McCleary and 83 others, all property owners who had been assessed, in which they sought to eojoin the county treasurer and county auditor from either collecting the tax or from putting it on the tax duplicate. Local Society Notes. Prof, and Mrs. Charles Miller entertained the Senior class at their home on East Market street last Wednesday evening. Mrs. G. N. Murray entertained the Thimble Club last Thursday afternoon. Married m Goshen. Will Waiters, day clerk at the Coppes Hotel, and Miss Ida Stull, of Locke, were married at the M. E. parsonage in Goshen, last Saturday evening. They will reside in Nappanee. ___ M Notice to Water Consumers. Notice is hereby given that by the order of the town board of trustees all water consumers of city water were to put in meters by May Ist, 1906. There are some of the town’s patrons who have not put in meters. It is expected to give any reasonable time for consumers to go to a meter basis, but it is also expected that there will be no unnecessary delays In complying with the ordinance. A prompt compliance will save en- , forcing the ordinance by turning off the water. John W. Brown, Supt. Landlord Branham Again at the Coppes. Landlord and Mrs. L. B. Branham return to .Nappanee to again take charge of the Coppes Hotel, having bought out Mr. Michael who retires from the business after one year’s experience in business which was too confining for a man reared to farm work. People generally will be glad to welcome Mr. and Mrp. Branham back to Nappanee fdr they are adepts at “keeping” hotel. Famous Strike Breakers. The most famous strike breakers in the land are Dr. King’s New Life Pills. When liver and bowels goon strike, they quicklysettlethe trouble, and the purifying work goes right on. Best cure for constipation, headache and dizziness. 25c at J. S. Walters druggist. WHAT THE KIDNEYS DO. Their Unceasing Work Keeps Us Strong and Healthy. All the blood In the body passes through the kidneys once every three minutes. The kidneys filter the blood. They work night and day. When healthy they remove about 500 grains of impure matter daily, when unhealthy some part of this impure matter is left in the blood. This brings on many diseases and symptoms—pain in the back, headache, nervousness, hot dry skin, rheumatism, gout, gravel, disorders of the eyesight and hearing, dizziness, irregular heart, debility, drowsiness, dropsy, deposits in the urine, etc. But if you keep the filters right you will have no trouble with your kidneys. ' Jerry Clewell, 1921 Broadway, Logansport, Ind.. stationary engineer at the Panhandle shops, says: “I was subject to the attacks of kidney corbplaint for all of five years. There were times when it almost disappeared for a few days, but soon my back ached as severely as ever. If I sat down sos awhile I could hardly get up again on account of sharp pains darting through my kidneys. I read about Doan’s Kidney Pills and tried them- Their action was prompt and direct on the kidneys. The terrible backache and other irregularities disappeared. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milb'urn Cos. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other.

Perry A. Early, Some Rare Bargains in Real Estate

Do you want an abstract QSTOf yonr Property?

nQliranPO Tire and Tornado InsurllOUl uIIUU; a nee in the best of companies Office in the Dietrich Block, NapPanee, Ind.

OUR AIM Is always high, as we give the freshest goods possible at a minimum price. We also make a special effort on Queensware and crockery in various grades of these goods. B. W. CRAIGE THEE GROCER

You Should Try our pure Mocha and Java “Barrington Hall Steel * Cut Coffee,” in 1 lb. tin cans. It is cut (not ground) into small uniform particles by razor like knives, which practically preserve all the tiny oil cells, and thus prevent the evaporation of the nutrition and flavor. By this method of grinding, the bitter tannin-bearing chaff and dust is all removed; and the nervous producing effect much lessened. We also carry four grades of the celebrated “White Star” line of coffees. P. D. Burgener.

The right kind of a man wont sell you the wrong kind of goods.

In the repairing of Automobiles and Gas Engines, two blocks east of the Main Square. Call and see me.

CHAS. F. VOLRMANN.

Os equal importance with the selection of a car is the place where you go for repairs.

REFRIGERATORS!

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HOWfNSTEIN, BURBACH & RUSHER.

Something Doing!

Lawn Mowers, Garden Hose, Raints, Brushes,- ■ ■ J ' and Screen Doors. Gasoline * Stoves. #

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Taking good care of customers means much to all concerned.