Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 29, Number 28, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 9 September 1908 — Page 4

JUI ' fPPI ■■ ‘ KgSj& ~mv . ‘, v, .\^S-gW; : Sv. v •’ iMK^K^vSA■^S.'jyapjSt^wy |'i ■■ * mmßpgßgMMi B&i *■’

New Fall *Suits We are pleased to ask an inspection of our fine showing of Men’s Boys* and CHildren’s Suits, representing as they do the latest styles, and the hast value offered any where at an equal price. The good fit of these garments is one of the best reasons we can offer you'for buying them, and another is, that they do not cost any more than some other makes that do not fit., We Have gained the confidence of the public by giving even better suits than the twice paid would indicate and assure you the fall line, will be no Exception to that rule. If you want to pay $7.50 for a suit we have the best to be found for that money. Our $lO to sls and up are gems. Buy a Sterling Suit and be satisfied. HARTMAN BROTHERS. Triple Store.

DR. J. S. INKS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Nnppauee, Indiana Office on Market street one-lialf block west of pnblic square. Office 'phone, 82; residence, 20. DR. H. J. DEFREES, . PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Nappanee, Ind, Office over Hartman Bros, store. Prompt attention given to all calls. Office phone, 60. Residence phone, 18. DR. C. A. INKS, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Nappanee, Ind, Office in Hughes building corner Marke and Main streets > Ray Laboratory. J> . Office phone 10; Residence phone 25. DR. FREDERICK 11. FERGUSON, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, . , Nappanee, ind. Office at residence one block north of the public Square. Special attention given to eye, ear, nose, and throat. £sfGlaSses Fitted. Residence phone 174, Office phone 142. J. D. SCOTT, Dentist, Nappanee, Ind. Office at residence one square north of corner hardware. In Nappanee every day. H. F, FRAZIER, Architect and builder, Nappanee, Ind, in the Dietrich block. PERRY A. EARLY, LAWYER. • Fire Insurance Written. .. oCHARLES P> LINGER, Attorney and notary, 1 * A’!, --’ Nappanee, Ind. Real Estate and tnWrance. 1. General Immigration Agent, Excursions every 1 Tuesday. Office over Farmers <k Traders Bank.

J. S. McENTAFFER Notary public, Nappanee, Ind. Loans, Collections, Real estate, and Insurance. Office in the Dietrich block. THE NAPPANEE “NEWS Nappanee, Elkiiart County, Ind. Entered at the Post-offiee at Nispanee Ind., as second-class matter. A Paper For The People. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One copy, one year ....$ l 50 One copy, six months... 75 Ttie copy, three months 40 By Gordon N. Murray. ————— To be a qualified as to residence, one must reside in the State six months, sixty days in the township and thirty days in the precinct. The first Tuesday in November falls on the 3d. To a man of thoughts there is thinking in the difference between the Cleveland letter foreshadowing support of Mr. Taft, and the letter of Henry Waterson giving his reasons for now supporting Mr. Bryan after having bitterly opposed him from 1896 to 1906. Gov. llanly’s call for a special session of the general assembly of the State Sept. 18th, Indicates that he intends to have some of his“ own ideas incorporated in the laws without depending u pon “"any successor. There is an indication in this program that the governor-lias remembered the insult in the Chicago convention. In | other words: “The-make-it-burn-for- - them”—meaning some of the Taft men—process has opened in earnest and the politicians are “up in the air”, so to speak. The call for the j special session to enact the county loj cal option law and some other tilings, simply takes the “wind” out of the eampaigru and widens, .the..breach in the party. When it comes to the process of getting “even” the governor seems to be a “standpatter”. What

of the expense of an extra session of the legislature? Well,‘‘the taxpayers bed ,” perhaps, would be the answer. The legislature being Republican, the local option law will probably be sought by Gov. Ilanly. A refusal to pass the law would show the party incompetent on the issue it is making in the State campaign. To 1 t pass such a law, is simply to sidetrack the issue. Many Republicans supported the Hauly program while many bitterly opposed It. m * Perhaps, from the reputation Nappanee has of being the Prohibition stronghold of any town in the State, ttie Republican candidate for governor will speak here for the purpose of winning voters from the Prohibition party. Not losing sight of the fact that it is necessary to try to keep the independent voters in "line who have for a number of years been supporting tiie Republican cause, the effort to route the Prohibitionists will have little if any effect, since both candidates for governor of the two dominent parties have declared that their parties are not representing in their advocacy of local option the principles sought by the Prohibition party. The Republicans have only an advantage of having gone one step farther in trying to hold their temperance following than the Democrats have by the local option declaration for copnty unit over that of their opponents for the township and ward unit. Both are far from a declaration for absolute prohibition ,of the manufacture and sale of intoxicants in the State. In the early stages of the present panic the banks by mutual agreement and assistance of one another prevented “runs” and a further tie-up of the business of the country. Why should the banking business be injured, then, by a law compelling those in the national banking business to guarantee their deposit funds? There would be this difference, anyhow: The “afrairikof-the-bank” money would be called out of hiding and tind its way through the banks into business channels. Depositors would no longer be afraid that they could not get their money from their favorite bank, it would seem, when they knew that all the other banks stood sponsors for the safe handling of the money, if for any reason the one particular bank should be unable to pay on demand. There would be no cause for a “ruh” on the banks which precipitated the money panic last fall, for the banks would be accountable for peculations of bankers which would ultimately eliminate this kind of men from the business. No wonder the Republicans believe in a bank guaranty law. The Vermont election, according to former precedents, indicates- that the Republicans will win in the national contest. When the Democrats elected Cleveland the Republican majority in Vermont fell below 25,000. This time the majority lias reached ab0ut.29,000. The Republicans naturally feel confident,over this indication. The Democrats on the other hand are not “downed”.by signs and indications, as they claim that conditions are entirely different, and that the Eastern states will have no particular or acute bearing on the result in-the Western states by reason of the issues‘they have raised, placing the Republicans on the defensive. Os course, there is a question, whether the Republican policy of. ..making. Bryan the personal target and abandoning the issues he and his party have raised, will have the same effect in the Western states as it would naturally have in the. Eastern. That question will only be settled on election day, because the “Bryan scare’'* policy adopted by the Republicans wilf “be~ trr irnknown quantity until that time. It has been nearly a quarter of a century since the Republicans have acknowledged themselves to be on the defensive and at variance on the issues raised by the Democrats. Present indications, however, presage. Republican success in November, if the Vermont sign does not fail. ■ Just Exactly Bight. “I have used Dr. King’s New Life Pills for several years, and find them just exactly right,” savs .Mj. A_ A. Felton, of Ilarrisville, N. Y. New Life , Pills relieve without the least discomfort. Best remedy for constipation, biliousness and malaria. 25cents at J. S. Walters' drug store.

Obituary. Charles Clifton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dilman Rickert, was bprn in Nappanee, January 21, 1907, and was called away by death, August 31, 1908, at the ; tender age of one year, 7 months and j 7 days. Ills Illness was as brief as his life. He was baptized on Sunday Pe- j cember 8,1907, by presiding elder Rev. • J. O. Mosier of Elkhart, Ind. Little CUfton was a very precious child and gave evidence of a bright mind and a useful life. “He was the pet of the entire household and had already endeared himself very warmly to each heart. Although quite small, little Clifton occupied a large place in the parental home* That place is now vacant, but he IS: not absent from memory and the affections. “There is a reaper whose name is death, And with his sickle keen, He reaps the bearded grain at a breatli And the flowers that grow between.” Little Clifton lias been gathered to the fair eternal harvest home, never to return to us, but we may go to him. * A Traveling Man’s Experience. “I must tell you my experience on an east bound O. R. & N. R. train from Pendleton to Le Grande, Ore.,” writes Sam A. Garber, a well known traveling man. “1 was in the smoking department witli some other traveling men when one of them went out into the coach and came back and said, ‘There is a woman sick unto death in the car.’ I at once got up and went out, found her very ill with cramp colic: her hands and arms were drawn up so you could not straighten them, and with a deathlike look on her faee, Two or three ladies were working with her and giving her whisky. 1 went to my suit ease and got my bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy (1 never travel without it), ran to the water tank, put a double dose of the medicine in the glass, poured some water into it and stirred it with a pencil: then I had quite a time to get the ladies to let me give it to her, but I succeeded. I could at once see the effect and I worked with her, rubbing her hands, and in twenty minutes I gave her another dose. By this time we were almost into Le Grande, where I was to leave the train. 1 gave the bottle to the husband to be used in case another dose should be needed, but by the time the train ran.into Le Grande she was all right, and I received the thanks of every passenger in the car.” For sale by J. S. Walters. Marriage Licenses, ft. Andrew M. Sappenfield, North Liberty, la., 33; Hazel B. Keipp, Goshen, 23. —Birthday cards. News Bookstore. —We carry a complete line of school tablets ranging in price from one to 5 cents, at the News Bookstore. —Woman loves a clear, rosy complexion. Burdock Blood Bitters purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores ruddy, sound health. —The Nappanee band and the Royal Tigers will each ha.ve a day at the Bremen fair which begins Sept. 29th. The band has b§en engaged for Friday. The ball team will play some team, other then Bremen, during the fair, the date not having been announced. —Farmers along Stony creek are preparing a petition to the county, commissioners to widen and*- deepen that stream. Stony creek rises in Fish lake in Clinton township and flows south emptying Into the Elkhart river, in Benton township, two or three miles east of Benton. —Mrs. Maria March one of the old-, est residents of Goshen died Aug. 31, 1 at the age of 70 years. She had beenill for some time of a complication ot diseases. Mrs. March had been, aresldent of Goshen for a.hnilt.Jtn rivi n- removing here from York, Pa. Her husband,.- Christian March, died in •1872. / ■ —Roy, the eleven year old son of Henry Butt, of two miles east of New Paris, fell out of a tree Tuesday of last week and received serious injuries. Ilis spine was badly hurt and he was also injured internally. He was ..out- -Bunting -with fete—neeler-Moses - Rentfrow, and had climbed a tree for ■a weazel when lie fell to the 'ground. —Chas. M. Rinninger, the Elkhart man, who it was thought last week had drowned himself, in the—St. Joe river, is not dead but he is crazy. He lodged at the farm home of. Philip Yantz, five miles north of Elkhart. It is said that Rinninger has for several days been wandering aimlessly about and thatdfe has tramped, all over the country north of Elkhart. —Frank W. Tucker of Peru returned to Indianapolis, after inspecting the dairies of the state. To an Indianapolis News man the inspector said a great many Indiana dairies are rotten dirty. Np,particular mention was made of Elkhart county, although Mr. Tucker spent se\erai days here. Apparently the state authorities ale determined to make the dairymen obey the law. ' * —Doan’s Regulets cure constipation, tone the stomach, stimulate the liver, promote digestion and appetite and easy passages of the bowels. Ask vour druggist for them. 25 cents a

J ii I Iwill' nm liftmmßßiß In WM R The dresser shew n lieivwith belongs to a il-piecr 5&I bedroom suite !!.j! n;>resent;, one of ; !,, - a <s. WfJ, *" 81 ou our lloor. Tin n.-ath I designed carvings and beautiful rolls on the bed ■ will win'your admiration, q__ The large bevel-plate mirror adds to its beauty as 1 well as its usefulness. The well-constructed deep drawers provide a maximum drawer-space. Made of ash, finished golden: sells for the modest sum of $24.00 which cannot be equaled anywhere In quality and price. Because we save you freight, packing and jobber’s profit by buying direct from our local factory, N. A. Lehman, Nappanee

After Fifteen Years, Revival of the FAIR AT GOSIIEN The Natural Fair Center. On the New Grounds with the New Grand Stand. Stabling equal to the Grand Circuit. Monday, September 14 TO v Friday, September 18 ( Inclusive.) Member of Indiana and Michigan Fair Circuit. Member of American Trotting Association- $3,400 in Speed Purses. Afternoon Band Concerts on all daysRogers Goshen Band and Elkhart Trumpet Notes Band will play together one clay making A Band of Forty Pieces No Where Equalled Outside State Fair, Fifteen minute, train service on the Lake Shore railroad taking passengers at Main, Fifth and Ninth streets and landing them within a stone’s throw of the grand stand, ~ Owing to the nature of the soil and the drainage- the tract- ia always In good condition; even immediately after a rain, so .there will be races daily, just so it is not raining in the afternoon. ADMISSION --- — 25. tatoi . o>. • - % . ' 'OFFICERS—Frank J. Irwin, president; Valentine Berkey. vicepresident; John Sqjmage, secretary: Joseph if. Lesh, treasurer; harles Neidig. privileges.

—Gail, the 3-year-old son of Anthony Yoder, at Wakarusa. died Thursday night. The funeral was held at the house Saturday afternoon and the remains were - buried at Shaum’s cemetery by N. A. Lehman. —Burglars forced ahentrance to the Goshen Motor Works Thursday night: amd carried away aboutsloo. worth of tools. A verjL.jqdjcious choice was made of tools so as to give the thief or ; thieves a full outfit- A pair of black j overalls was also taken. ' ' , I —Harry G. Sommers of the Ktifcker-! bocker theater, New York city,-and lessee of. the Jefferson theater in Goshen, and. theaters in Marion, Elkhart, South Bend and Grand Rapids, lias just'closed a lease for the Gennett theater at Richmond, Ind. ■+■■■■ ♦ For a Sprained Ankle. A sprained ankle may be cured In about one-third the time usually required by apiplying Chamberlain’s Liniment freely, and giving it absolute rest. For sale by J.S. Walters. 1

—Torturing eczema spreads its burning area every day. Doan’s Ointment quickly stops its spreading, instantly relieves the itching, cures it permanently, -At any drugstore. — Combine a visit to the Jefferson with your county fair day at Qeshen next week. The Cutter Stock company will give excellent performances every night and. Saturday afternoon.., —A card with the words “Safe not Locked,” probably saved Harley Bros, of Leesburg from having their safe blown to pieces when thieves entered their general store and stole a; quantity of merchandise. . —The 2-year-old child of Lawrence Ham man, at Millwood, died Saturday morning. The funeral was held at Stony Toint Monday forenoon and the interment was made in that cemetery by N. A. Lehman. —Earl E. Denslow, 17 years old and son of George W. Denslow of Elkhart, has been declared insane by a commission. He is violent and will be confined in tlie county jail pending his care at Longcliff. 1