Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 27, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 2 September 1908 — Page 5

Farmers k Traders BANK. (COPPES * SON. Banker* > 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. Corines, President Harvey E. Coupes, Cashier nARRY B. Greene, Asst. Cashier Fred E. Coppes, 2d Asst. Cashier

> SAMPLES OP, FALL FABRICS are here for your selection. They are fronj some of the best domestic and foreign mills and contain just what you will like for. A SUIT OR LIGHT OVERCOAT. Better stop in and leave vour measure for either or both. We’ll make up the garments so that your discriminating friends will know that you employ lirst-class tailors, even though our prices are under the standard for such work. J. L. NEHER, The Tailor LEHMAN’S Anti-Pain Tablets For Headache and all Pains. Tablets Contain no Opium, or Morphine; Entirely Free From Injurious Ingredients. IW- Perfectly safe and take immediate effect. Call for FREE Sample at Lehman’s office 118 N. Main street, and you will use no other kind, 25 doses 25 cents. Prescribed- by all physicians.

House Cleaning a Pleasure fflSj when the living rooms are free from ashes and soot / \\ produced by [\ |V stoves, grates \ V \ and hot-air j \ I,lk furnaces, f! Besides, the (T modern Hot Water and Steam Systems AMERICAN Radiators V. T. WEATHERHEAD.

—The attorneys of Ray Lamphere of Gunness notoriety, are making preparations to free their client from the Laporte county jail on habeas corpus proceedings. *

THE NAPPANEE NEWS Nappanee, Elkhart County, Ind. NAPPANEE, IND., SEPT. 2, 1908 NAPPANEE LOCAL MARKET REPORT. Eggs, per dozen 17 Butter, per pound 22 Lard, per pound 10 Hams, per pound 12 Tallow, per pound ... 03 Shoulders, per pound 08 Bacon, per pound 08 Beeswax, per pound 20 Beef hides, per pound 04 Chickens, alive, per p0und....... 08 Wheat—per bushel 89 New Wheat—per bushel 89 Corn, per bushel ........ ... 70 Oats, white, per bushel 45 town undlicinity NEWS, OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO NEWS READERS. Items Gathered by Reporters in and Out of Town and From Exchanges.

—For sale—(i-octave parlor organ, solid oak case, natural finish. 27t4 —When you go to the county fair at Goshen see the Cutter Stock company at the Jefferson theater. —Mrs. Catherine J. Quilliam, of Elkhart, who attempted suicide by cutting her throat, will recover. —The venerable R. D. Benham, one of Goshen’s oldest and most highly esteemed citizens, celebrated his 90th birthday anniversary at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Levi Nusbaum, Aug. 25th, —Through causing the publication of newspaper articles, Mrs. Jessie Hyde, of Warsaw, has found her son, Chas. Bowman, 15 years of age, after having been separated from him for 12 years. Young Bowman is in LaPorte county. —For the first time in many years, it is said, the town of Milford has an empty storeroom. Milford has quite a number of-business rooms with modern fronts and better than the average small town. One of these, a double room, is now empty. —The report that the Chicago, South Bend & Northern Indiana Railway company had acquired a large tract of land on the shore of Simonton lake, near Elkhart, and intended to establish an amusement park, is emphatically denied by S, E. Mulholland, an official of the railway company. —Mrs. John Koffel, aged 64 years, died at the tamily home at Hammond’s corners Aug. 25th. She is survived by her husband, ope son and a daughter. The funeral was held at Stony Point Thursday at. which cemetery the interment was made by N. A. Lehman. - Charles Clifton, the 19-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Dilman Rickert, died at 5 o'clock Monday mo'fning after a short illness of about two days. The funeral will be held this Wednesday afternoon at the Evangelical church. The interment will be made bv N. A. Lehman at the South Union cemetery. —lnjustice Whisler’s court at Goshen, Melvin Russ, the son of Edwin Buss, a rich St. Joseph county farmer, paid S3OO to settle an action for paternity brought against him through Mary Stiver, the daughter of Frank Stiver of Baintertown, Pa. Miss Stiver was accompanied in court by her mother. *

—Wakarusa Tribune: Roscoe Miller, of Nappanee, will attend our high school this year and take a prominent ■position in our football squad. Tins andgive them license to take.the measure and deliver the gdfeds to any , high school team in the state. Notice how we say it, Goshen tmd Elkhart. —Harry B. was arrested in Laporte county, charged with car breaking, proved to be a deserter from the battleship Kansas. Scott is a resident of Pittsburg, Pa. It was learned that he was a deserter by a letter found on his person, written by his sister. Scott will be held in the Laporte county jail pending information from the navy department. —John Jaquith, an Elkhart county farther residing about two miles southeast pf Osceola, is in a serious condition through having been stung by bumblebees yesterday while working in a field on his farm. Mr. Jaquith was attacked by a swarm of bees and was stung 25 or 30 times. He was found unconscious and carried to his home when physicians were summoned. —— —- —" —South Bend soft coal consumers have, after much fighting, succeeded in getting better rates from Indiana mines. Rates from Linton field to St. Mary's and Dame will be 90 cents instead pf $1 as now and from the Brazil field will be reduced from $1.05 to 95 cents.' A complaint had been, made tliat the rates to South Bend suburbs were higher than to Chicago. ’ , .

PERSONAL MENTION. Willis Olinger was at Berne Saturday. '"■( ' ... Mrs. H. J. Shellei went to Bremen Friday. Will Mutschler was over to "Goshen Sunday. Chas. Arch was here from Bremen Monday. E. P. Rummel went to Chicago, Tuesday. . Mrs. Love Franklin spent Sunday at Wawasee. W. W. Best went to Elkhart Saturday night. Amos Young was here from Leesburg Thursday. Otto Wilt left Tuesday on No. 7 for Spokane, Wash.. Rev. Henry Wysong went to Fort Wayne Thursday. John Bushong returned Thursday from Sterling, 111. Dr. E. Li. Sterehman wan l*ere from New Paris Monday. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Finch spent Sunday at South Bend. Geo. Babcock was here from Ligonier last Wednesday. Fred Freese went to South Bend Wednesday on business. Warren and Mrs. Berlin were here from Goshen Saturday. Miss Myrtle Stuckman was here from Milford Saturday. Patrick McLaughlin’s family moved to Westville last Friday. Miss Elwyn Franklin went to South Bend Friday to visit friends. Orin Batchelor was here from Goshen Sunday visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. L, B. Branham were here from "Winona Wednesday. E. Mohr went to Westville and vicinity hunting last Wednesday. Newton Swearengen went to Argos Saturday to visit his daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Chas.-Rernoehl came over from South Bend" Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Jacobs were here from Goshen Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Will G. Fluegel were here from Winona last Wednesday. Attorney J. O. Kantz was transacting business in Goshen Wednesday. Mrs. Mary -Bechtel was here from Goshen on business last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Lasey, of Bremen, were here Thursday on business. Geo. L. Lamb was transacting business in Chicago Tuesday of last week. Mrs. John Mellinger, of Goshen, was here visiting relatives last Thursday. Miss Cora Culp spent several days with her sister at South Bend last week. Mrs: Melvin -Hartman tmd children went to Bremen Saturday to visit her people. Prof, and Mrs. Flatt, of Bremen, were guests Sunday of Prof,.and Mrs. Miller. Mrs. Albert Matzdorf and children were visiting relatives and friends here last week. Mr. and Mrs. John Hill and daughter, of Lima, Ohio, spent Sunday here with relatives. Miss Minta Fisher went to Kokomo Saturday where she teaches school the coming term. Mrs. Elda Hayes went to Elkhart Friday to visit her daughter, Mrs. Holdeman. and family. .. Mrs. E. I). Stuckman and niece, Miss Mabel Stiver, were here from New Paris - Wednesday. Mr. Mrs. David Anglin went to Winona Thursday to attend the Ang-lin-Hall family reunion.

Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Kantz, and Levi Buss and Martin Gordon went yesterday to Las -Vegas, New Mexico. The. Misses Nettie find Lizzie-Culp from near VTakTlrusa spent Sunday Hilda, Freda, and Mary . Price, daughters of Dr. W. A. Price, went to Ft. Wayne Saturday for a visit. Mesdames W. E. Smith, E. Martin, and J. McCucn attended the AnglinIlall reunion at Winona Thursday.. ' Chester and Raymond Walters were home from Valparaiso Thursday where they have been attending school. Abe Mishler and Mrs. Cullers were here from Elkhart last Tuesday, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Oswalt. Miss Rosetta Nye, who was the guest of Miss Dinah Frazier and other friends, returned to South Bend-Mon-day. Josephus Nell attended the Laporte county fair last week, attending to a machinery exhibit Nell Bros, had there. Mrs. G. N. Murray and daughter, Miss Mary Murray, and Mrs. T. J. Burns were .over to South Bend Thursday. • Mr. and Mrs, Luther Swartz, of Chicago, have been visiting relatives at Nappanee and vicinity for*the past ten days. Mrs. C. Phend and daughter returned Wednesday evening from a visit to her son, Delvin Phend, at Kalona, lowa. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Coppes, Mrs. T. J. Burns, MrS. G. N. *Murr&£, ar)d M4ss Mary Murray, wer/ over to Elk

hart Monday afternoon in Mr. Coppes' automobile, Dr. i!. E. Stauffer and children, of North Manchester, were "visiting with Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Chilcote and family last week. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Chilcote and daughters. Misses Pearl and Ruth, attended tin: Stauffer reunion at Elkhart Saturday, Mrs. P. A. Early left yesterday for Cheyenne, Wyo., to visit her son, Clyde Early. Mr. Early accompanied her to Chicago. Miss Lena I lans," of Mishawaka, and Miss Laura Brenamine, of Bremen, were guests of the Misses Weyburn Wednesday night. Jacob Good went to Koontz’s lake Friday to try fishing, his first trip this season. Mr. Good and family will go west soon. Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Phillips and Mrs. Mary Ann Penrose attended the Ohio, last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Anglin went to Winona Wednesday night where they attended on Thursday the AnglinHall family reunion. Mr. and Mrs. Gotleib Scheiber returned from New Washington, Ohio, Monday where they had been attending a family reunion. Mr. and Mrs. John Miller, of Howard county, who had been visiting Eli Burkholder and family near town, returned home Saturday. Geo. Shearer, of Bunker Hill, Kans., accompanied by his wife and daughter has been spending a week with his brother Jas. jshearer at Nappanee. Miss Bird Yockey and Miss Hazel Bondurant were here from Bremen Wednesday night ttie guests of Mrs. Glen Stauffer and Mrs. Will Strycker. Mr. and Mrs. Noah Hoover, from near Goshen, were in attendance at the Mennonite services at the North Main street church Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Coppes and their guests, Rev. and Mrs. Campbell L. Mac Kay, and sister Miss Mac Kay, of Worthington, Ohio, were here from Pickwick Park, Wawasee, last Thursday night. • Miss Ollie Snyder, daughter of Lafayette Snyder formerly of Nappanee, now residing in Weiser, Idaho, arrived here Thursday evening to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tobias Hartman, and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Tintsman went to Kendallville Wednesday night to attend on Thursday a reunion of Battery A, First Regiment of Ind. Heavy Artillery, with which Mr. Tintsman served during the war of the Rebellion. About thirty of the Mennonite and Amish congregations leave to-day for Goshen to attend tlte Mennonite Sun-day-school cpnvention to be held at the. Goshen College Thursday and Friday. Moses Yoder will take a number in his automobile.

Miss Lida 0. Murray, who had visiting selatives at Nappanee and South Bend, accompanied by her sister, Mrs. T. J. Burns, of Lafayette, and her nephew, Chas. Murray, of Washington, I). C., returned to Colorado Springs, Colo., leaving Nappanee Tuesday afternoon. The following named Nappanee people attended the Heckaman-Gall family reunion at the Bremen fair grounds last Thursday: Mrs. Jacob Hahn, Mrs. Nancy Gall, Ernest Strang and wife, Geo. Wyman and family, Thos, Witham -and wife, Jacob Hartman, wife and son, Joseph Kensinger, Michael Ileckaman and family, Geo. Carl and wife, Jas. Shearer and brother, George Shearer, wife and daughter. —'Blanche, the nearly two-year-old daughter of Friftl Richmond, jr., died at i o'clock Monday morning. The funeral was held Tuesday afternoon at the Progressive church, and the Kkut-fenaeqC was mads; aG’-Soafek- Union ■ by N. 'A. Lehman. ~ Quarterly meeting will begin jit the Evangelical church, Friday, Sept. 4th. The presiding elder Rev. J. 0., Mosier, of Elkhart, will preach Friday at 7:30 p. m., Saturday at 7:30 p. m., Sunday at 10:45 a. m. and at 7:30 p. m. The quarterly conference convenes ’Saturday at 2:30 p. m. The public is cordially invited to these services. —Henry. Grider, who was killed by a falling tree, near Silver Lake Monday, bad a premonition of coming death. • After he and his brother had started to the woods yesterday morning, he returned and told his wife that he felt that something terrible was going to happen to him. His wife tried to persuade him from going to work, but he persisted. After the brothers had been gone for some time, Grider’s wife became so worried that she started to the place they were cutting trees, and arrived just in time to see her husband kilted. It CanT Be Beat. The best of all teachers is experience. C. M. Harden, of Silver City, North Carolina, says: “I find Electric Bitters does all that’s claimed for it. For stomach, liver and kidney troubles it can*t be beat. I have tried it and find it a most excellent medicine.” Mt. Harden is right; it’s the best of all medicines also for weakness, lame back, and all run down conditions. Best too for chills and malaria. Sold under guarantee at J. S. Walters’ drug store. 50 cents,

FRESH GROCERIES l! ■ . - V Queensware That’s All CEAIGE & SON.

The Features of Our Fruit

P. D. BURGENER, o • The Market Street Grocer. Phone 96.

SCHOOL DAYS will soon he here. Uo the wise act by having the eyes of your children examined by us before school begins. We examine without charge. If they need glasses

we will tell you; tell you. But, side before gin. Bring in dren! Attend eyes! Come child’s eyes troubthe time for’aeter life.

DO IT NOW! . . NUF CED! STOOPS-SANDERS, Jewelers and Opticians, NAPPANEE.

BE A SUCCESS! Have an, aim in life. Live for something. Save your money and you will be able to grasp a business opportunity. Start an account with Til IS BA X K with $1 or more. We invite all or part of the business of INDIVIDUALS. C O R P O RATIONS and FIRMS who appreciate CONSERVATI VE BANKING. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of NAPPANEEr l ly/v. Best Thing On The Market Thousands of bottles sold and not ond complaint heard Lehman’s Cholera Balm For All Bowel Complaints, * Only one or two doses usually sufficient for the most obstinent cases. Call for a Free Sample at Lehman’s office 118 North Main street, Nappanee, Ind. Sold bry all druggists. <§ This wipnatuse i on every box of the genuine Laxative Brorao-Quinine Tablet* •he remedy that rurcs a cold In one <l*7

MUCH OF THE OUTFIT required for school, if nqt all of it, can be purchased here. It is only possible to sav here that our assortment of SCHOOL SUPPLIES is complete. Impossible to give anybus things, carried.. . We give below the: names and prices - of a few articles, but it is merely a hint of the remarkable quality of what we offer: , School Bags from 10 to 25 cts., etc. Phone No. 24. C. W. JOHNSON. EYES EXAMINED FREE'

And headaches cured. Glasses fitted at moderate prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. Dr. J. Burke & Cos., Opticians,. 230 S. Mich. St.. Paxson ‘ Bldg., South Bend, Ind. Established 1900. Jacob o. Kantz, ATTORNEY AND NOTARY, LOANS# REE ESTATE I©“Especial attention to collections and. insurance. Office over Hartman Brothers store. f . —. FOLEYSHONEf™>TAR fir children- *af*, turt. To *ptotM

are its freshness and ripeness. Some of it comes from the far corners of the earth but. it is just as tine as if it grew in your back yard. TASTING IS BELIEVING So come and for use at- home. There’s nothing healthier you can give to your family. And when they taste it, that will settle the question. The only complaint you will have is that you didn't buy enough to satisfy.

if not, we will be ou the safe their studies beyottr school chilt o their yourself. If the le him now is tion— not in la-