Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 51, Number 4, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 13 September 1928 — Page 7
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1928
&^/lolfKß6'S'* Closed All Day Saturday Saturday, September 15 being the Jewish New Year, the Wolfberg store will be closed for the day.
Hi hem h (SSUI SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for 25 years. | DOES NOT~AFFECT THE HEART ] ’ /V\ Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. A # Handv “haver boxes ol 12 tablet* L,y # Also bottles‘of 24 and 100—Druggist*. j, trt x- m.rk ot B*J *ut*ctu w Aioao&ceUcctiieUr K MlpWMw
Greatest August in WILLYS - OVERLANR history* 68% gain over last year! NOW August has added its sweeping plurality to Willys-Overland’s impressive total for 1923. Fight consecutive months have broken every record for the corresponding months in all of Willys-Overland’s 20-year history. Last month 63% more people bought Whippet and Willvs-Knight cars than in August, 1927 a gain of more than two-tbirds! Experienced motorists arc quick to appreciate the superiority of the W hippet Four, with its many eng: leering advanlages never before ■ •*>■■*' ?p_ • -_ -V.: brought to the light ear field; —the Whippet Six, the world’s lowest priced Six, with 7-bearing crankshaft and other costly car features; —and the Willys-Knight Six, which now, at the lowest prices in history, brings the unmatchable smoothness, silence, power and operating economy of the patented double sleeve-valve engine within easy reach of thousands of new buyers.
11 six sedan . I fWM /M M m BBm B lOßtirs kiwist.i'ricep six % I K WITH 7-BEAKING CRANKSHAFT 3 / J MU M M Tcmrin* 6tsi R™.d.t *Bsl Coech *695 1 I £ £ y Nappanee Overland Cos. Frank Reed, Prop. Nappanee, Ind.
RECORDBREAKING MONTHS!
Miss Ardis Loudermilk of Knox was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Loudermilk. Charles Stoggan of Louisville, Ky., was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. P. H. McAndrews. Mrs. Lucinda May was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Ringenberg Several days last week. Miss Geraldine Mike! and Gerald Hurst of Mishawaka called on Mr. ! and Mrs. Claude Laser. Sunday even ing. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Lopshire and j lamily of Fort Wayne were the week- ! end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ijejius | Miller. j Mr. and Mrs. James Huff of near ! Bremen called on Mr. and Mrs. Phil- ! lip Huff, south of town. Sunday afI ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller and son I called on Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Berlin and son, Warren, at Goshen, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wambaugh and family of Elkhart were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mutschler. Mr. and Mrs. Galen Roose and family were the week-end guests of the former’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Roose at Michigan .City. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Price and son and Miss Charlotte Price were the week-end guests' of Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Johnson at Ashland, O. Mr. and Mrs. James tjlagle called on Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Slagle at Goshen, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Slagle are taking a camping trip to Niagara Falls this week. Mrs. E. Newcomer entertained at lunch Sunday evening Mr. and Mrs. | George Miller and Mrs. Mamie Pepple of Goshen, and Mrs. Sarah Doer- ; ing and George Stamake of Elkhart. Mr. and Mrs. William Phend, Mrs. Susan Heckaman, Mr. and Mrs. John Bowman and daughter, Dorothy, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Heckaman, south of | town. I.amar, Juanita, and Gwayne Stah--1 !y of Walkerton were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. David Stahly, east of town. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Mattern north of town and Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Siahly and family called at (he Stahly home in the afternoon.
WIUYS'KNICHI doub: c jn m/ sum | JL %‘ju.ve waP ■ s€| €j| COACH Standard Six Gouna ’*1045: Sedan *1005; Touring *W>; Koa.i.ler *S‘I:S. Sin rial Six *1205 to .*1495. Great Sir*lß3oto
ysmppei To urine s4"* 5; Roads* *r (2-phs..) RoatUtrr •(.with runihle neat) Coupe Cabriolet Coup© (will* collapsible top) f.'V.V. C.>hhm *■> >.. All WiUyM-Overland f. o. I* Toledo. Ohio, and Bpri-iliratioi)* Huhjerl lo rliuiiiiw Without notice* Willx M-Overland. Inr.. Toledo, Ohio.
NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS, NAPPANEE, IND.
PERSONALS
AIR CIRCUS AT LIGONIER, SEPT. 22-23 The American Legion Air Circus in Ligonier, September 22-23, will be one of the biggest and best air meets ever attempted, more than thirty| planes will be on the field both days| and a number of manufacturers are! sending planes for display and demonstrations The fields selected for holding the i meet are on the farm of George | Walker, two miles north of Ligonier! and are ideal for such purposes. The landing field comprises more than SO acres and is surrounded on three sides by separate fields of tin acres ; each" that are suitable for parking cats and for the attending crowd. Parking space for automobiles, is Lee and with adjoining auxiliary fields it is estimated that room for -5.000 cars" krill' be in use by the, Air Circus committees and with the weather suitable, a crowd of lo.tjOO or more is expected. The -program committee is busy working out the special events and a rough draft of the program shows plenty of excitement and thrills tin both days. An aerial parade will start the air meet on Saturday at 10 o’clock flying over Ligonier and returning to the field where the other events will be staged. Several para chute jumps are scheduled for Saturday and there will be ladder climb-ing,-wing walking, etc., both Saturday and Sunday. Sunday’s program does not . start until 1 o'clock and an equally inter-
esting program has been arranged. SPANISH WAR VETERANS MEET AT GOSHEN One of the largest reunions ever held by members of Company C, 157th Regiment, Indiana .Volunteer infantry, Spanish-American war, was en-j joyed Sunday at Blosser’s park, Goshen. Forty-eight veterans of the; company, with seven other .Spanish-. American veterans and the families! Present made the attendance about 150. The forenoon was spent, in it general visit and reviving stories of the veterans' service with Uncle Sam 30 years ago. A wonderful dinner, with Mrs. Milo Bradford as Chairman in charge, was served at noon. The annual camp fire meeting was called to order at 2 o’clock by Chairman WR liam Burkett when the colors of the Charles Slade Camp U. S. W. V. were paraded to the front with Comrade Howard Salsbury as bugler. The 10th annual reunion will tie held next year as usual on the first Sunday following Labor day,- the location to be selected .by the officers of ihe association. The officers are: William H. Burkett, president; Joseph A. Collins, vice-president and assist anl Q. M., and Joe Hawks, treasurer. Mr. and Mrs. John Richmond ami Dora Prickett of this city attended, the reunion.
MORE REUNION HELD AT COMMUNITY PARK SUNDAY One of the biggest and best family reunions of the year , was held last Sunday at Community Park when the More family held the annual meeting. 140 were presefht, thi-s city and vicin ily being well represented and many out-of-town families helped to make the gathering a success. Officers elected for the coining year at lie business meeting follow; President, Chester More; Vice-president, Floyd Klaus; Secretary-treasurer, Mrs, Irvin Phillips. Among those present from out-of town were the following: Mr. and Mrs. E. S. More and two daughters, Juanita and Helen. Kirksville. Mo,; Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hoffer, Fredericks-. burg, O,; Mr. and Mrs. Edgar More and daughter, Marie and Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, Anderson, Ind.; Mr. and ] Mrs. Wm. Poling and Mrs. Doty.) Marion, ind., and K. 1,. Doty from Nashville, Tenn. The reunion will be hold here next year the second Sunday in SepteinI her. LOCAL PEOPLE ATTEND HOMECOMING AT PLEDNA, SUNDAY About twenty-five people from this vicinity attended the second annual Pledna homecoming at Pledna, Ind., Sunday. Those present from here were Mr. and Mrs. Lynn King, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Troyer, Mr. and Mrs. John Troyer. Mr. and Mrs. Merino Mishler, Mrs. Barbara Mast, Mr. ami Mrs. Phillip Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Stahly, Charles Miller and] daughter, and Dr. and Mrs. J. S. Sla-j baugh. The next homecoming will be j held the second Sunday in September. 1929. Phone 27 and give us the details rs that party you held or are going to hold. +
INKS! E IS A HOMELIKE HOME Tilo Alto Neighbors Praise Kindly Hospitality of Their Most Famous Residents. MRS. HOOVER VERY POPULAR She Planned Her California House Herself and Superintended the Building of It on Stanford University Campus. By Ruth (Jomiort ilitrlieU PALO ALTO The town of Palo Alto and the campus of Stanford University fairly pulse and glow with the presence of the Hoovers. It isn’t only the visible nr:,:: ruioh of flags and banners and liawms and printed placards in the-shop windows, but something which is at once less tangible and yet more real and permanent —the genuine warn th of pride and loyalty which radial's from faces and voices everywhere. The Hoovers are and always have been an integral part of the picture here, and it is interesting and illuminating to see them through the eyes of college mates, old friends, neighbors, and newcomers, promt to share their world eminence. Men and women of their own generation remember their, university days and sketch two fine and vital young people who showed in youth the keenness, the energy, and devotion and balance which have made them what they are today. , It is a community rich in members of the “I-Knew-’Em-When-CUib.” Peo,ple like to. paint them as they have known them through the years—college students, the young married couple taking the great out-trail of the mining engineer, forging steadily and
Herbert Hoover aolidly ahead by reason of grit and endurance and cleverness, coming into professional and material success and taking it simply‘and sensb blv. coming back to build a typical Califorjiia home on a California hill overlooking the campus where they worked and played and found each other in a community of interests and character. The Hoover house is reached by a winding, ’ mounting road from the campus, and is built on a hill, with the mountains piling up behind and beyond it, and the red tiled roofs of Stanford just below. It is a low, rambling edifice of the pueblo type and fits so perfectly into its, setting that it seems as component a part of the landscape as the trees and the rolling ridge itself. Neighborly House The Hoover house is symbolic of the Hoovers themselves in the way in which it merges into its background. . There is nothing aloof about it; it is tucked in cosily between its neighbors. Hoover trees shade neighbors’ lawns and neighbors’ roses spill over Hoover fences. There is a gate cut into the wall so that the neighbors can come through, without going round to the front, to share the swim ' ming pool. Neighbors come and go, now, in these dramatic days, as they always* did, slipping in with baskets of fruit and armfuls of flowers; there is no tension, no sense of strain or impending strain in the atmosphere. Mrs. Hoover feels strongly that the California out-of-doors is so brilliantly,. often, harshly bright, that the insides of houses should be- cool and restful, and she lias attained that effect in her own. In all decoration she I is fonder of the beauty of line, or design, rather than color. One steps Into a rather small reception hall, round in shape, with stairs leading down from it to sleeping rooms, and the living room and the open root beyond beckoning from it. Everything is low-toned and restful to the eye which has just come in from emerald lawns and turquoise sky-brown on floor and wall and‘window, with an Indian basket filled with, hearty hued zinnias for the only robust color note. The guest rooms are below, and they, too, are in the same color scheme. They are delightfully inviting, deliciously comfortable, plain, homey, simple. Comfortable and Livable There are generous beds and deep chairs really made to sit in. There Is not a stiff, badly angled chair in the Hoover house! There are more of the cheerful zinnias in pottery bowls, and books on the table which are meant to be read. And there are *o delicate, monogrammed. toox-
quisite guest towels—the sort which make a well meaning visitor feel she should wipe her hands on her handkerchief—merely a quantity of plain, soft, beautifully laundered linen towels which are manifestly made to be used. That is the keynote of the whole place. Everything is genuine, comfortable, livable. Everyone knows, nowadays, that Mrs. Hoover planned the house her-! self and superintended the building of it, so that it is a definite expression of her ideals of home making, and that she said she had walls only where it was absolutely necessary to keep books and papers and clothing In, or the amiable California weather out, and for the rest, roofs, in true pueblo fashion, flat roofs on different levels, where they read and rest and meet their friends,.day dream or doze or dine! For practically all the year they use the roofs for sitting rooms. There are cushions on the stone ■ copings, and hammocks and swings and reed and wicker chairs and everything Is comfortable and well used,- and just a little worn shabby here and there—the sort of things which are reluctantly discarded because they are so deeply entrenched in the life of the household.
No Ultra Modern Ideas Mrs. Hoover manages .the very ; rare arid satisfying effect of an absolutely unstudied ensemble; Her things seem to belong together by right of convenience and fitness and harmony. It is cheerfully evident that no ultra modern decorator has been given a free hand to experiment with bizarre combinations: Mrs. Hoover's house is as clearly her own, and an echo of her own personality, a* her-.clothes are. —"There is-just one picture in the, large, finely proportioned indoor liv- ; ing room, a painting by the California artist, Francis McComas, of an ancient Indian pueblo dwelling, the motif for the whole thing. Mr. Hoover, standing before it with , friends one day, said, “Well, give us a couple of hundred years and this house will look as mellow and interesting as that does!’’ In the dining room there is a single picture, likewise a California desert scene with a lot of glamour and magic in it, by A. L. Grot!, ■ Mrs. H6over feels that the walls of a California counffy houso do not need much in the way .of .decoration when the I windows offer so much' The whole easi end of the dining room is a big rounded window, and there the Hoovers have breakfast, looking out on the hearty and high colored garden, over ..the rod roofs of Stanford, down to the bay, and across the Santa Clara Valley to the Coast Range Mountains with the Lick Observatory on Mt. Hamilton shining sharply in the sun.
Blue for Rugs and Gowns Mrs. Hoover has a great fondues* for blue, a cool 'clear blue, which, in a gown, picks lip the color of her. eyes, and in her own room there is. a Chinese rug which strongly features it. Mr. Hoover’s study with l-’ronch . doors and windows reaching down to the floor opens out on it. All day long, when the Hoovers are at home, as they were in .early August, a line of men passes in and out of liL room, waiting out in the tuny driveway or strolling in the garden. At four o’clock old friends ami. neighbors and college mates came in to see Mrs. Hoover and for a couple of hours there is a quiet, comfortable visit, with California fruit punch and home made cookies, and, good talk. Mrs. Hoover, in the quiet combinations of gray and black or black with white which she lias worn since her father's death, bare headed, move* from group to group with a quiet friendliness which is delightful. Sh* has a very alert social consciousness, the more pleasing because it functions silently and unobtrusively. In the midst of an anecdote of Australia—and Mrs. Hoover tells a story excellently well —:she is aware of a small, lonesome figure in a corner, and presently she gathers up one or two of the chattier callers and moves casually toward the quiet one and wonders if she would mind taking the friends up to the top roof for the wider view. Kreqm ntjy, during this period, they dine on the roof, in the full glory of the sunset. _ Never in a Hurry The most amazing thing is the feeling of leisure which Mrs. Hoover manages to radiate, in spits’ of all that is before her and upon her. There is no sense of crowding hurry; she is that rare and blessed person, a woman who has learned to do the next tiling next —who doesn’t wrestle with tomorrow’s problems today. She j has kept the comfortable habit of her girlhood of being able to relax instantly. Between two important : functions she can drop on the couch and sleep ten minutes like a well - regulated baby, and that perfect bal- 1 ance and poise is reflected in her ap pearajice and personality. JVIrS. Hoover’s clothes are Mrs. Hoover’s Clothes. Just as her house is free, from the standardizing of the j professional decorator, so her gowns and wraps . are clearly ,of her own choosing, stamped by her very definite individuality. No one "dresses Mrs. Hoover." Some time during the afternoon hours of visiting Mr. Hoover comes out of his study and takes fifteen or twenty minutes of air and freedom, and chats with the callers. He looks always in the pink of condition, well, buoyant, vigorous. Mrs. Hoover secs to it that the most modest and inconspicuous visitors meet him fir t. He, . too, gives the sense o: tin . ied calm, although relentl ■ inline I calls him back to th *:.• h work, II
PAGE SEVEN
INTERESTING LECTURE GIVEN ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUNDAY (Continued from page 1)
Him. Mrs. Eddy loved God For this reason she was so chastened, made so pure by Him, that through trie right idea of.Him she was able to see Him, -fee-discover Him. and to make God and HiS Christ known to all who are willing to receive Christ, Truth. More than this, she so loved God that she was willing to devote herself entirely to making Him known" so that all might "taste and see that Ike Lord is good;” that he is the only healing, saving, regenerating power. . THE WAY TO GOD GOOD "He that eometh to God. ” says the apostle, "must believe that he is.” All religions have taught this. All. have also taught that God is unini present, omniscient. and omnipotent. meaning that God. good, is everywhere present, all-knowing, allpoweriul. But have they taught that because of this great and all-impor-tant truth evil is non-existent, and therefore without power? All will ad mit that they have riot. For this - reason their teaching has been a [bouse divided againsl itS'elf that cannot stand, and cannot do trie, Christian healing of which there ie j such urgent need. To come to .God, Unit is..to come to the one true good, ; which, as God, would necessarily be I infinite and include all that, is right, and possible in the way of peace, safety, health, ability, prosperity, all ■j that is absolutely true and consequently absolutely intelligent, and, ] therefore, good; to come to all of j this, to arrive at our complete, good, we must, according to the Bible, “bci lieve that he is.” in other words, we must have, as Christian Science teaches us. a trustful, constant, firm < untidenee that all that - really is, meaning all that, has presence with : us. power over us. intelligence to enlighten and direct ns. is God. am) thus good. Is not-this the "Acquaint now thyself with him. and, be at peace.” and: is there any other way in which a trustful, constant, firm con fide nee ill God can be obtained, ex
■' pi through learning, (hat in very nuth (foil is I lie only Mind, the drily cause, as Christian Science declares Him to be? THE 1-0 WE It OK-.CHRISTIAN SCI KN'CE TO HEAL AND TO SAVE - Like. Jesus, Christian Science has "nor conn- to .destroy. bill lo tulfill” the law (it God and oiMis Christ, and thus to fulfil! every right, every just law. The right application of the law qt Clod leads in Its; fulfillment. Tin- law of (lod fin that ’"man, the reflection ul God. must be obedient to God, lo ail Unit is good; for only in ! this’, way care he show forth his pure, Ila '.’li el. harmonious well-being, and '] he able, in ’nliill all right demands | upon him God is Mind -and God is Love. Mind always expresses its taw ; and its power through its idea, through Truth. Christian Science is .the id*'a' nt Gild. Os Mind and of Ixtve ■ For ibis reason it is the law or en : foi’cement of the power of God; and j the right-: application of it aceom plishes tin- works of God, heals all | diseases and saves to the uttermost.
PROVING UP Back in - school-days a.’tcr a season Was completed, there usually was a way to "PROVE IT” the answer. . & Ihe proof was’the thing - counted, Your bank account is tin only way you can "PROVE" your industry Don’t be . afraid ul , small beginnings, lie race idecided at the finish- -not .at ihe Start. Wc have a great ■ many depositor* and most "of : them were small beginners Get a batik account mider win 4% on Savings Farmers Loan & Trust Company
