Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 54, Number 21, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 7 January 1932 — Page 7
THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1932
Nothing to Be Proud Os Poison ivy is u native American plant. , : 7~
IP Tmthjckn Hotel ymA MARKET m SEVENTH WM ’A'MTRlcxn'Anhix ]M MARKET AT SIXTH JB
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SANTA CLARA Prunes SIZE 50-60 ‘s* SULTANA Red Beans . • 6 can!- 25 € , AGED American Cheese 19 c GRANDMOTHER'S WHITE Sliced Bread . . I loafs c fr - ------ - FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY Pure Lard or tub 2 lbs. 17c Slab Bacon*rr72 lbs. 29c \ Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Celery Heats, bunch . .10c STAYMAN WINESAP Apples . . . 3 lbs. 23c MEDIUM SIZE FLORIDA Oranges . .2 doz. 37c JERSEY Sweet Potatoes '. 5 lbs. 13c idaho Baking Potatoes, peck . . 33c # Fels-Naptha Soap 10 BARS 49* Chipso GRANULES # • 2 PKGB. 35* THE GfiEAT ATLANTIC ft PACIFIC TEA CO., Middle Western DMiion
ANNOUNCEMENT OF MARRIAGE AT PARTY At a bridge party given Tuesday j evening of last week, in Wakarusa by! Mr. and Mrs. Laveyne Green, announcement was made of the marriage of the former's sister. Miss Virginia Green, to Victor Palmerr ySon of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Palmer. 1 1701 Prairie street, Elkhart, which took place on Dec. 5 at South Bend. | The bride is the daughter of Mr. aud Mrs. Fred Green of Wakarusa. In 1927 she was graduated from the Wakarusa High school and in 1930 from the Elkhart General Hospital Nurses’ Training school. Since then i she has* nursed in and around Elkhart.- She is a member of the Nu j chapter. Beta Chi sorority. Mr. Palmer is a graduate of the Elkhart High school, where he starred in | athletics, and he also attended Miami ! college, Oxford, O. He is affiliated | with the local chapter of the Delta Sigma Upsilon fraternity. Mr. PalI m"er is employed at the F. A. Blessing j Shoe store. The 'couple will live-in j ; Elkhart, residing, temporarily with Mr. Painter’s parents.
You’re the boss! The responsibility of ptoviding foods for your household belongs to you! Choosing high quality foods ...planning well-bal-anced menus .~. and saving on food expenditures are all problems that you can work out easier and better when you let the nearby A&P Food Store cooperate with you.
j INDIANA ! ; STATE 'HEWS \ Mrs. Edward Keeie, fifty, died in a hospital in Evansville of lockjaw which developed from a fractured thumb suf--1 sered a week before. Martin Glozak, age fifty-five, was killed in Gary when he was struck by an automobile driven by Meyer Marks, age twenty-eight, drug store manager. Clifford B. Larrimer, age fifty-one, secretary-treasurer of the John A. Morris company of Bluftton, died at his home of heart disease. The widow and a daughter survive. Ur. James Y. Welborn, head of the Walker hospital in Evansville, lists his assets at $295,007 and his liabilities at $299,433, according to the schedule filed in the federal bankruptcy court. A statue, erected as a memorial to Shelby county men who served the Union in. the Civil war, was/dedicated in Shelhyville, at exercises held in the courtroom of the Shelby county courthouse. Curl Broadstreet, age seventeen, is recovering from a bullet wound in his right shoulder inflicted when lie surj prised a chicken thief in the barn on j the Broadstreet farm, ten miles south | of Greencastle. j Tribute to the memory of Woodrow j Wilson was paid in Winchester by j Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, at a meeting which attracted Democrats from various parts of Indiana and western Ohio.' ■ , John G. Noll, age ninety, father of Rt. Ilev. John F. Noll, bishop of Ft. Wayne, died in Huntington. He was born October 3. IS4I, in Ft. Wayne, the son of Mr. aud Mrs. George Noli, the .fattier having settled there in 1833. Mrs. .fames Shoultz. twenty live, is recovering in Evansville from wounds received when she was stint by a thief trap In her chicken house. Mrs. Shoultz, forgetting about the trap, started to enter the chicken house door. A sedan driven by Fred B. Frlshe, Now Albany, struck a dog near Blanchester, Ohio, turned, over ami caught fire. Frlshe and his wife were trapped. Tlie owner of t lie dog, using an ax, cut a hirle in the flaming- car. The occupants escaped injuries. Mrs. Margaret Affiis became trustee of Deer Creek township after a series of court proceedings which started after the death of Robert Love, former trustee, September 24. Mrs. Affiis, Democrat, was appointed trustee by J. LTWhlternan, county auditor. Or. anil Mrs. G. Bromlev Oxnam I have returned to Greencastle after three months In the Orient, where Doctor Oxnam, who Is president of DePamv university, has been serving on a commission engaged In an educational survey of Japanese schools. Arthur J. Dennis anil eleven other rural electric patrons of the Public Service company of Indiana, living northeast of Newcastle, filed a petition witli the public service commission demanding licit monthly service charges and rates for power he reduced. Stephen Weber, thirty-seven, former treasurer of the Home Loan and Savings association, was sentenced In Fort Wayne to serVh from five to-fifty years in prison bn a charge of embezzling $210,000 from the association. The sentence was imposed bv Judge Glnrenop McNabli In the Circuit court. Miss Jeanette Smith, age • sixty-one, was found dead In her apartment In Lafayette by Mrs. Fred Johnson, a neighbor. Her head was hanging over an open gas Jet. A note slipped un- ; der flip door of Mrs. Johnson's apart- | ment. in the night told where the body ! would he found and gave directions for jits disposal. Miss Smith had taught music in Lafayette for many years. A 1 brother lives at Peoria. 111. Miss j Smith was despondent over illness and financial worries. Ira Barton, sliciff of Blackford county, was placet) under an*est In -Hartford City on charges said h.v poi lice to accuse him of complicity in recpnt bank robberies at Hartford City, Montpelier and Dunkirk, Tiul. Two men who participated in the Christmas eve robbery of the First State bank at Dunkirk, in which $1,900 was obtained, ! WWWnfedfhd ht TW'tnmd to 2ff‘years in prison-each. They were Albert Frabotfa, alias Frank Trelaetta, and Frank Valentino, alias Lawrence Appolellf, both from Chicago Heights. Impeachment charges against Mayor W. R. Hinkle of South Bend instituted r by former City Controller Rudolph Ackermumi, whom the mayor discharged.’ were dropped by tlie city council without having heard-a word of evidence for or against the city’s chief executive. Mayor Hinkle and Albert M. Long. Republican members of the board of safety, had been accused by Ackertnann of permitting gambling, trying to trade somp privately owned tractors to a Wisconsin Implement firm for city equipment contracts, jmd of altering tlie board of safety records to show that llnrrp E. Hinkle, brother of Jhe mayor, bad been appointed assistant fire chief. Friends of Santa Cluus have won a temporary victory at least. Tlie PostOfllcp department will not at once change the name of the little office in Spencer county, which Is the only post office In .the world bearing flip name of Santa Claus. Tlie protests of Hoosiers, supplemented by direct activities on tlie part of Senator Jnmes E. Watson and Indiana representatives in tlie congress, lmve stayed the hand of Post-Office department officials. j Mrs.’ Alice Mary Ream, slxty-iwo, died nt her homo in Goshen from shock following nn automobile accident.
KAPPAUBB ADVAMOE-NEW6, HAPfAWBI, IND.
.Maj. George Vurzaru (left), a Rumanian officer, winching with stolid features as Colonel Pella, commandant of the army barracks at Malnmison. near Bucharest, breaks his sword over his knee. Yayzaru and four army comrades' were degraded from the army and sentenced to banishment from Rumania for life for espionage. Tlie entire corps of soldiers witnessed, the degradation.
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Dr. Mary Eumm Woolley, president of Mount Holyoke college, who lias been appointed by President Hoover t.o be a member of the United Slates delegation at the disarmament conference In Geneva.
"Even a shoe 4 clerk may marry an heiress if he gives her the riflht sigh#."
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Harry Ashley Is captain of tlie University of Chicago basketball team He pluys at guard.
Rumanian Army Spy Is Degraded
1 all bus* m I pt n WBy j ■ iTlh
* Arms Meet Delegate
(jABBY QERTIE
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Captain and Guard
Latest for Milady
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The very latest for milady Is this creation of ribbon-striped black net. posed over tea rose satin, matching tlie net in the bertha. It is featured with stiffened ruffles at the skirt bottom.
Skaters Training
• •
Under tlie able direction of Bill Taylor. veteran conch of speed skaters, the United States Olyntpie speedster# are doing some very serious training on tlie ice nt Speculator, X. Y. Two of them are shown doing a little trick work, Eddie Murphy skating through the legs of Burl Taylor.
% POTPOURRI l ? i Emery Dust y Emery, which has- for cen- •}• A tuples been used for polishing A ' y gems, stones and metals, is T ! X found in large boulder-ijke A“ x masses. ’ It Is ah' impure op run- Y | ] y dun) composed chiefly of nlupil y j A "urn and ipiartz. It will not X J y melt ami acids w ill not act on it. -5* I l % In crushed it Is put on .X y bands for attachment to polish- y j A- ing machines, % y I<*o. 1932. Weatr-rn Wwsoaaet t’nlon.'V y ,y^"X"KAXd“!“X“X^“!“!"!"Msx4 i . LADIES RURAL CLUB TO MEET THURSDAY, JAN. 7 ♦ ■ . Tile Igidies Rural Club will meet next Thursduy, Jan. 7 at the home of ! Mrs. Jesse Price. The program wilt be as follows: roll call. Something I hope to do In 1932 to improve my home; Mending Day. If- you have a sewing problem bring it to the club, Gertrude ITnmsher, Clara Blosser and Lucinda T’lery are on the committee. Not a Scientific Fact* There is no authentic case on record where a scientist has, been able 1 to create life from a cell In which life did not already exist in some form, j
rs Ruth Stove,
WHEN BABY GOES A-VISITING V • ' The very early training in personal habits now urged by physicians and bnby specialists is probably one of the most radical and desirable of all ttie changes in infant care which have oc eurred since grandmother's day. Along with strained vegetables, shortened clothes and the ban on rocking and pacifiers, this sensible and labor-sav-ing practice of very early training is being adopted by modern mothers everywhere. But just the same, it’s a wise mother who takes precautions, especially when she Is going visiting or traveling with the baby. At these times, especially. Hickory rubber baby pants become a boon nnd a necessity. She may select those of high-grade gum rubber, rub her dam, rubberized sateen or naln sook or, for special "dress up” occasions, of silk rubber sheeting, bn*
whatever tlie basic material used, It Is j the cut that is the important feature j in selecting baby pants. They should be cut with a full back, - to give the active baby plenty of room for sitting or creeping and must be well ventilated, for the sake of tlie baby's health. For very warm weather one may choose those with tlie entire top of marquisette. ' Several pairs must be kept on hand, as they should never be worn after one i notices they are damp. Wash them. Immediately if possible, in lukewarm ■water and soap flakes, rinse and rub dry with a clean towel and air them j before putting them back on the baby or in Ids dresser. In this way the i little pants will weny much longer and - he sweet, clean aud non-irritating.
**********4t*************** J POVERTY AND J * OLD AGE t * * * I % By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK $ | Emeritus Dean of Men, j i|c University of Illinois. * * v * **************4:-->:--x-********#
Nancy was just telling me today that Brewster had gone into an old
folks’ li om e. It gave me a shock. \Ve have known Brews t e r for a great niuny—years. He was a young man when we were children —a p r o sperous young man, too, it seemed lo me then. At least lie had a good salary, lie dressed well, he lived com fort ably, and lie spent money freely.
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It "wns noi that lu‘V;is lazy nr incompetent. Hard work (lid not daunl i Him. Uesponsibilily did not weigh ! heavily upon Him. lie was a real ' force in (lie firm with which lie was i eonueeleil for forty years or more, ; and as. time went on In* rose to one j of the liesl positiohN in the organize tlon. Brewster's weakness was that he 1 "ave no thought to the future. Thrift 1 lie did not know the meaning of. lie | spent his money as freely as it came to him. The mole lie made the more j easily it seemed lo slip out of Ids J ■hitret'*:- - this :woec-.t;-aH#l-V'frieaids.a.^t.s to say to him. “Brewster, what are you Koine to do when yt.ni get old i Yon won't be-able to earn* tts rhue'i then as \oii do now, and you won't like living on,a lc-- elegant scule than.ton now do.'' ' ■ said; “Mmie one will take rare es 1 me. Maybe 1 vvoii'l ever get old Any ".D. I'tn going to begin to. save one of These days. '. Hill lie never did, apparently, and here lie is an old inafi, dependent upon the charity of other*. No matter how small his income Is every one can save a little, and he who saves regularly anil intelligently will not have, as Brewster has, tin Improvident old age. (©, 1932, West; t u Newspaper Union.) Children’* .Speech Defect* The more common forms of speech defects in children Include retarded speech,’ Imperfect speech associated with partial deafness, Imperfect speech j caused by certain malformations- of the organs of speech, and the nervous speech disorders, such us stammering. Stuttering and nervous hesitation. Mocking Bird Imitative The blologh at survey says that a mocking bird s s-nig la. both uatural and Imitative. It has a good song of lta own, hut It Is such un incessant i mimic that It would rather imitate | than sing Its own song. *
PAGE SEVEN
GRIMM VICINITY Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Yoder and daughters, Verna and Inez spent Thursday with their daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chupp and son, Merl Deen. • 'MfiMf MArjbrie; Esther, “Bessie and Treva Marquart visited with Miss Lottie Spicher and Marjorie and Cleo Spicher -Thursday. Russel Spicher spent Monday with his cousin, Junior Spicher. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Burßey and family of Bremen were the Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and ~MrsT ’ Roy Strauss and family. '■ Miss Gertrude Spicher visited her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert =Meher and family Sunday, j Mrs. Levi Hochstetler and Mrs. Reuben Yoder spent Monday with Mrs. John Hershberger of Ayr. Reuben Yoder made a business trip to Topeka Tuesday. Cora. Marie and Mattie Hochstetler spent Sunday with Mary, Inez and Verna Yoder. Ralph. Charles, Irene and June Tobias spent Sunday with the children of Mr. and Mrs. George Marquart. Mrs. Henry Rohrer and children Agnes and Jack of Mishawaka spent Sunday with Mrs. Joseph Rohrer and Mary and Eldon Rohrer. Mr. and Mrs. George Janssen visited Mr. aftd Mrs. Annanias L. Kinney Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs Robert Spicher and family attended a birthday dinner on Mrs. Spicher’s father, Frank Hepler on New Years day. He was eightytwo years old Roy Strauss called on Harvey Moore. Monday afternoon. Berlin Marquart is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hepler and children. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Yoder spent Tuesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Yoder and family. Miss Mary yoder spent her Christmas vacation with her sister. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Chupp and son Merl Deen of Bourbon. Mrs. John Snyder and son Carlyle of Nappanee spent Tuesday with Mrs. Snyder’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Janssen. Mrs. George Marquart and son. Vern visited Mrs. Edward Tobias and children Friday. Misses Shirley and Elta Holloway of Nappanee spent Thursday and Friday forenoon with Misses Lara Mae and Dorothy Strauss. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Greenawalt and daughter Rose Marie spept Saturday evening with her mother. Mrs. Joseph Rohrer and Mary and Eldon Rohrpr. Mr. and Mrs. tiovi Hochstetler and family and Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Yoder and daughter Susie spent Sunday ev-_ ening with Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Hochstetler. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Chupp and fam-. ily spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Yoder and family. John Muffley, who has been spending a few weeks with his daughter. Mr. and Mrs. George Marquart and family is now spending a few weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Deisch of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Leßoy Fisher and son Robert of Milford, P. H. Strauss and Misses Shirley and Elta Holloway of Nappanee assisted Mr. and Mrs. Roy Strauss and family In tniti'h<*ring Thursday. Frank Pinkerton spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Yoder and family. Miss Cora Hochstetler spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Mahlon Hochstetler. ' Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Callander and Mr. and Mrs. Levi Deisch visited Mr. and Mrs, Robert Spicher and family Monday afternoon. Levi and Elvina Yoder spent' Sunday with Edward and Sarah Ann Miller. * Miss Lizzie Yoder is assisting Mrs. Charles Warner in housework. Mr. adn Mrs. Ora Anglin and Mrs. Etta Doty and children visited Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Moore and children i Devon and Mildred, j Howard and Clarence Boettger j called on Chester Marquart Sunday forenoon, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Strauss and | daughters Jean and Betty assisted i Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hochstetler and family and Mart Hochstelter of Ayr Wednesday in butchering. Thick Clouds The thickest clpuds are more than ten miles through.
ESBgBO
WHITTLE FOR A PRIZE SIOOO.OO in cash prizes and one thousand other prizes are offered for examples of Skill with a jackknife. Entries may lie any kind >of model, figure or special carving, requiring skill and ingenuity, made entirely of wood, and with no other tools than a jackknife. Flnt : PrfXt .....MJO Second Prize.. ..,,...SIOO Third Priit..,.. S7S Fourth Priit SSO r Fifth .......... SJS . And alio there ire twenty-five $lO prite* and fiftv of $5 00 each In addition. 1000 special M> kknive* will be distributed to all winner* of cash award* and to those -receiving honorable mention. In case of tie* dufluate (vice* will be given. All rule* and detail* of this content arr in the i**ue of Popular Mechanics Magazine now on tale. Buy a copy at any newsstand or consult one at your library., .You do not have to be a regular reader. POPULAR MECHANICS MAGAZINE *OO East Ontario Strati CHICAGO, ILL.
