Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 46, Number 2, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 2 September 1926 — Page 3

JONAS A. MILLER auctioneer Phone R-154 Nappanee

We vulcanize tires expertly!! We neither over-cook ’em nor under-cook ’em by < our vulcanizing! process! EVERY REPAIR IS GUARANTEED Try us. SEIBERUNG ALL'TREADS

BEECHLEY’S TIRE SHOP Phone 393 NAPPANEE

ADVANCE-NEWS $2.00 PER YEAR

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1/ A New Special Six Series with 7-bearing Crankshaft Motor tsaasr • ssasasaat Seat Upholstery of Genuine Newlnstn^eatßoatd Motor Supports —standard Chase Velmo Mohair Velvet. - Noth hroctice for Four-wheel Brakes. All Instruments in Making Five Disc Wheels. Single Panel under Glass Gasoline Filter. Including Hydrostatic Gas Gauge. Vibmdtonh*f Performance. Air Cleaner. New Duotone Body Coku* New Crankawe “Breather” Oil Purifier. Preventing Crankcase Dilution. Preventing 9.1 Copulation a Full Force-feed Lubrication. in Coldest Weat . Motor Heat Control by Thermostatic Water Regulation. '* Coup*. $1165, 2-Door Sedan, sl2ls;+^rJe^n, fc *1135; 4-Paw. Roadster. tIIZS

NASH SALES & SERVICE S. G. MOYER & SON

RESOLUTIONS , The, district Confterenc.il of Northern Indiana, ascmbled at tLe Mount Pleasant Church, desires Ur j;ive expression of thanksgiving lo the Heav enly Father for the blessings which we have enjoyed from Mg bounty, and to give recognition to the contribution tha. has been so graciously and acceptably made to success of the Conference by the Mount Pleasant brethren and sisters; also to reaffirm our belief in God and Christ and to the ideals and mission of the Church of the Brethren. We also desire to give expression to our loyalty to the teachings and ideals of Jeeue upon the great fundamental and moral issues of the day. Therefore, we are gratefully thank ful for the very pleasant weather we' have enjoyed, and for the protecting hand of God which has brought us to gtther in safety. We hereby express our appreciation and gratitude to this coiigrega-. tlon fo# the use of their church house, the hospitality of their homes, and for the splendid jneals and the •courtesy with which they were served. We also extend our thanks to the neighboring Baptist brethren for their kindness in granting the use of their church house for the Elder’s meeting. Since the Temperance question is the outstanding moral issue in the coming November elections, we recommericf that our brethren give their hearty supprt to those caudi-Jaes who are known to take a moral on this issue. In view of the fact that military training and militarism are finding a very large place in American thinking, we desire to state our eonvietion as opposing any program of military! training in schools and collegers, and that we reaffirm our stand upon the question of war. Furthermore, we place” Yourselves on fecord as a district that is commited to the ideals and policies of the Church of the Brethren as expressed in the life and teachings of Jesus, and as set forth by our General Conference; and we will put forth every effort to maintain the unity and oneness of the church thru loyalty to her teachings. Fraternally, - Nettie Weybright J. Clyde Forney Bertha M. Nehei Committee. Unreasonable Beings .All would live long but none would be old. —Benjamin Franklin.

NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT, 2, 1926

CORRESPONDENCE GRAVELTON NEWS Mr. and Mrs. John Stuck man and Mr. and Mrs. Ransom Sawyer and family motored to Winona lake, Sun da y- Mr. and Mrs. Ben Stump of New Paris called on Mr. and Mrs. l>an Clevenger, Sunday afternoon. The condition of Mrs. Clevenger is greatly improved. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brumbaugh and sons, Elwyn and iSamuel attended the circus at Warsaw, Saturday evening. Mr. Clarence Smith and-Mary Malcolm motored to Winona lake, Sunday: Mrs. Smith accompanied them home after spending the week there attending the Brethren Conference. -—Mr. and Mrs. John - Homan and relatives from Syracuse motored to Benton Harbof\ Mich., Sunday. Mr. .and Mrs. Fred Holoway and family were Sunday guests*of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stahly |Jf Walkerton.— Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Grise were Sunday guests of MK and Mrs. James Callander. Charlie Wysong and family and Quincy Brown and family called Sunday evening on Mr. and Mrs. James Brown. Roy Brumbaugh of Monroe City who is visiting relatives here Conducted services at Bloomfield over Sunday. Louisa Stump was a Sunday guest of Pauline Robison Harry Gillis, who has been working at the North Shore.' Inn, at Tippecanoe Lake, returned, home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kirkendorffer visited relatives at Elkhart, Sunday. ' " ' • —-———i : __ 'v- " PERSONALS Miss Marjorie Yoder was at Winona lake, Sunday. Messrs. Cleo Weybright and Chester Moore spent. Sunday in South Bend. Prof, and Mrs. J. A. Abell and daughters, Thelma and Wilma spent Monday in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Blosser were guests of the latter’s parents, Mr. an Mrs. W. H. Dunklebdrger, at Warsaw, Sunday.Miss Madeline Bowser of North Liberty returned home Sunday after visiting a few days with Mr- and Mrs. -W. H.- Bowser and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Emmons were guests of the latter’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mode Hanjjin, at Elkhart, Sunday. Miss Fanny Davidson, stenographer at the E. V. Publishing house, is spending her vacation with her parents at Garrett.

Nicaragua Behind Times Nicaragua Is a flpanlsh-speaklng republic, the population of which is about 650,000. The people are principally of mixed Spanish and Indian race. Agriculture, lumbering and mining are the principal sources of the national wealth. There lsi very little manufacturing. The climate is largely tropical, and the principal agricultural products are bananas, coffee and sugur caue, besides some grains for home consumption. The forests contain mahogany, cedar and dye woods, which are largely exported to the United States. Nicaragua Is to a considerable extent mountainous, and there are some gold mines, worked by American or British companies. Science “O. K.’s” Pie ,< Pie Is not so bad for the digestion. Authority no less profound than tha editors of the Journal of the American Medical Association sponsor this Idea, quoting "food specialists’’ to back up the contention. Cake is coming into its own likewise, and bears the stamp of d(stary approval as a real food. To refute the notion that it is "too rich” it Is pointed out that it has only 20 per cent more calories than bread, while a slice ©t the latter spread with butter is almost twice as rich in fat as the corresponding amount bT chocolate cake. Child’s Cost to Parents One of the life insurance companies estimates that a child costs 90,150. This includes birth and expense until he is eighteen yean old. This total is reached by adding to the Initial “cost of being born,” estimated at |2OO. the sums of 92,000 for food, 91.820 for rent, reckoning the share of the child as one-sixth of the total so expended; 9800 for fuel and light, 9801 for furniture and household maintenance, 9144 for first cost of installation of the home, and for clothing 9812 for a boy and 93,002 for a glrL

GOVERNMENT PLAN FARM LOANS 51/2 PERCENT |bnstock lin Commission llUßenewals HU Red Tape Cripe Abstract Cos. Elkhart County Representative GOSHEN, INDIANA

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OAK GROVE Leter Rassl, who has been attending Bible school at Cinclnnatti, 0., had charge of the services Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Chalmer Pittman' visited with Mr. and Mrs. David Lechlitner at Nappanee, Sunday. Otto Gordon and John Gordon attended the Lapojte fair Thursday. Miss Evelyt?" Scheets returned to her home in Elkhart after, spending several-days with her friends here. Richard Huff, the Standard Oil man of Bremen, was on our streets, Friday. Mrs. Evertt Gordon and Mrs. Chalmer Pittman visited with Floyd Kling at Logansport, Thursday. ——- Charles Nickerson’s have been entertaining friends from South Bend, the past week.’ Mr. and Mrs. John Bixlei; and children called on Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wisler, Wednesday evening. Miss Lillian Flory is spending thevweek with her grandparents at Mishawaka. - Dr. Price of Nappanee, was in this vicinity, Friday.—— Harold Lechlitner and John Bixler transacted business at Plymouth, on Tuesday.——Abraham Truex of near Criimstown visited with Mr. and Mrt Chas. McGowen, Sunday. A num her from here atended the Susie W T al lace sale at Wakarusa, Tuesday. H. F. Beck of Nappanee transacted business here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Gordon and children visited with the former’s parents, Mr- and, Mrs. Philip Gordon, at Elkhart, Sunday. —-'' Miss : MMrtstt' Rassi of Elkhart, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rassi. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McGowen and children called on Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mcpowen, Saturday evening. —— Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Pittman and children transacted busi ness at Nappanee, Wednesday evening.

Find Music Beneficial in Mental Disorders Music hag recently been used In prison and Insane asylums to give pleasure to U>e Inmates and to arouse, ff normal community spirit among them. The results have been very ( gratifying, according to an article In! Welfare Magazine. Music furnishes a safe emotional outlet and has a decided relation to human conduct. Persons suffering from mental disorders behaved sanely and normally, some for the first time In many years, when Influenced by music. No claim Is made to cure or improve abnormal mental conditions by music, but great pleasure and benefltj may be derived from group singing; bands and the like. The cost of bringing music to stats wards Is relatively small and It la thought that It may be counterbalanced by the amount of property saved from destruction when the emotional energy of certain violent types Is given an outlet through music.—Hygela. Honesty Still Best Policy Why are nice women nice? Because of the knowledge that being nice pays, and Is easier than being tough. The greatest sermon ever written, or ever will be written, Is that honesty Is the best No one man wrote this sermon;-all men lived, proved It Those who violate the sermon know better ; they are actuated by meanness, recklessness. Many of them are put In Jail; a few hanged; all punished in one way or another. —E. W. Howe's Monthly. Since You're So Wise Prom a ladles’ paper: “When the gay bard of Avon fondly Inquired, 'What so rare as a day In June?’ he was probably thinking of the smiles and tears and tenderness of the wedding day." Now tell us what James Bussell Lowell was thinking of when he wrote “To be or not to be.”—Boston Transcript

Neighbor: Must have been beating the market, eh? Thought shingles like those came high, don 1 they?*,.,, j?*' Owner. "Don’t worry, Old Man. Guess yoji havent Investigated the Barrett U*- / ¥ ♦FBarreft Wedgelock Shingles.

Pay YOURSELF a Salary Each Week ( You’ve a right to keep at least 10 percent of your income. At' least ten percent of your income belongs to you. Save it. Pay yourself a salary each week by depositing at least ten percent of yonr. income in this savings bank-. You have a right to it! Too many people pay out all of their income for living expenses. They are gambling with tomorrow. Play safe now. You won’t be oblidged to depend on immediate earnings' in the future. Make your savings regular. Set aside a definite amount each week. Your salary to yourself, your savings, compounded every: three months at 4 percent, will not only create comfort and success for you tomorrow but confidence and success today. Start a ' savings account in this bank now—today. Pay vourself a salary—a deposit each week. Be successful NOW! First National Bank NAPPANEE, INDIANA

Mrs. John . Edgell of Chicago and the Misses Bessie and Treva Anglin spent Sunday in South Bend. Miss Estella Culp spent several days last week with her brother, Roy Culp, and family in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs. David Hoover attended the Barkey reunion at Goshen Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Dillman Callander anil family visited Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Beyler at Warsaw, over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Rensberger were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Claude , Miner Sunday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Simon Hepler and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Miller have returned home after a week’s visit with relatives in Toledo. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Anglin and Mr. and Mrs. Owen Lentz spent the latter part of last week at Chapman lake. Miss Carrie Rummell returned to her home at North Manchester, after spending the summer visiting relatives in and around Nappanee. Miss. Ruth Barnhart returned from a visit with her sister, Mrs. Philip Rassi and Miss Edna Barnhart, at Elkhart. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Moore and Russell Deuner of Elkhart spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hartman. Mrs. Russell Lantz has returned from Chicago to the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weber. She underwent a minor operation while in Chicago. Mrs. Henry Hartman and son, Wilbur, returned Friday from a visit with her sister, Mrs. Charles Benner, at Milford, 111. t Mrs. Benner and son, Theodore, retumedJKtth them, for a week’s visit here.. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weber entertained at dinner/ Sunday, Everett Lantz, Miss Marguerite Lantz and Mrs. Alice Lantz and grandson, Billy Baker, of Topeka, Miss Blossom "Lantz of Liberal, Kas, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Lehman and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Herr called in the afternoon.

OWEN N. LENTZ DENTIST Over Rexall Drug Store Main Street Phones—Office, 154; Res. 55

Gangers Tin Shop 152 W; Market St, Nappanee Phone 4

PERSONALS

i The right roof — at the right price! That’s what you get when you let us handle the complete job. We point with pride to our roofs. Their fine appearance and their durability prove our skill and judgment in selecting and applying roofing materials. And our prices speak for themselves. The Barrett Wedgelock Shingles we’re using today are the last word in beauty and serviceability—fire-safe, rot-proof and richly colored with a special interlocking feature that makes tnem permanently weather-tight!

Right over the old roofs we lay them. Phone us and let us explain how diis saves on cost and gives a better job. I fe endorse

PAGE THREE

PERSONALS. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Stahly and Mr. and Mrs. Homer North returned Saturday from a motor trip to Tiskilwa, 111., where they visited Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Albright. They also visited at Starved Rock, Ottowa, 111., and other places of interest. Elkhart Business College Fall Term Begins ... Tuesday, September 7 —to— Monday, September 13 COURSES TAUGHT Full Commercial Bookkeeping and Accounting Stenographic and Private Secretarial Course. WE SECURE POSITIONS FOR OUR GRADUATES Call, write or telephone for information and catalogue. Monger Building Phone 851 ELKHART

JEROME SHERMAN AUCTIONEER Phone 723 NEW PARIS

L. C. THAYER DENTIST Office One' Block West of Auditorium