Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 83, Number 9, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 10 September 1959 — Page 3

FmiMk Ctppes, 87, leaves Family of Sf Descendants _____________ ♦ Frank Berlin Coppes, 87, died in his home at 402 N. Nappanee Saturday afternoon, victim of a series of light strokes over the past six months. Mr. Coppes was born In Marysville, Mo., Nov 13, 1871, son of Samuel D. and Elizabeth Berlin Coppes. In 1891, he was married to Susan Culp who passed away in 1913. He is survived by his second wife, Carma J. Carroll, to whom he was married in 1915. Other survivors are: nine children, Charles. Batvavia, O.: Daniel, and Mrs. Max Grimm, Nappanee; Esther Hopper, Wichita, Kans.; Mrs. Dick Jones, Ottawa, Kans.: Mrs. Gordon David, Bourbon; Evelyn at home, Mrs. Dian Campbell. Elkhart .and Airman 2/c Carroll M- Coppes, San Antonio, Tex; also 27 grandchildren, 22 great-grand-children, and two sisters, Mrs. William Rosbrugh and Mrs. Charles Mutschler, Nappanee. Funeral services were Tuesday at Wrights funeral home in charge of Rev. William Heimach of the Presbyterian church, assisted by Rev. John Hartman. Burial was at South Union cemetery. PAST PRESIDENTS PARLEY Mrs. Helen Chapman is hostess to Past Presidents Parley of the Legion Auxiliary, this Thursday at 8 p.m. Plans will be made to install new Auxiliary officers at their meeting Sept. 14. Each member is asked to bring a white elephant to use in a contest. Nappanee, THE Shopping Center

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Mrs John Smith Dies at 56 of Cancer of Lungs Mrs. John Smith, R 1, New Paris, died in Goshen hospital. Sept 7, after being confined to the hospital for 12 weeks with lung cancer. She had been ill at her home a number of years. Mrs. Smith was born July 30, 1903, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Riley Hepler. On Feb. 20, 1919 she married John Smith. Surving are a son Kenneth of New Paris, and two daughters Mrs. Herschel Rock, and Mrs. Byron Schmucker, both of New Parks, and nine grandchildren. Services were Wednesday afternoon at Union Center Church of the Brethren with the pastor Rev. Ross Noffsinger, officiating and Rev. Francis Freed, of Union Grove Brethren in Christ Crurch assisting- ' . ■ I. -w *■ ' ■ IRVEN STIVER DIES Irven Stiver, 73, co-owner of Stivers store in New Pari®, died Thursday in Elkhart hospital of complications from a heart condition. Mr. Stiver was born in Union Twp. Jan 11, 1886, and is survived by his wife, the former Ina O'Neal, two sons, a daughter, two brothers, a sister and three grandchildren. Services were Sunday at Grace EUB church, New Paris. ARIZONA VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wevgand of Phoenix, Ariz., are spending a month with their parents, the Hubert Weygands and other relatives and friends.

Gertrude Geerge Dies at 79 of Heart Ailment Gertrude Hartm; n George, 79, R 2, Nappanee, di ?d Sunday afternoon at the 1 aul Siabaugh home after being .il] for seven months with a heart a lment.. Her funeral was Wednesday afternoon at Church of God where she was a member, by Rev. Robert Fields. Burial was at Hepton Union. Mrs. George was born 3'eb 17, 1880. in* Bremen, daugl ler of Frank and Elizabeth Hus Hartman. In 1914, she married Sdward George and he -passed ; way in April of 1958. Survivors include two da ghters Mrs. Devon Moore and M: s. Paul Slabaugh, Nappanee, a so i, Forrest Murphy, Souta Ben four step-sons, Darreld, Ilersch .-1, and Wyman George, Nappan e, and Merl, Mottville, Mich.; 16 grandchildren, 16 great-grande lildren, and three brothers, Georf 3, Grover and Millard all of Soul i Bend, HEAD OF CIVIC LEAGU . TO GIVE THREE TALKS IN ELK COUNTY SUNDAY Dr. J. Raymond Selin idt of Washington, D.C.. superir endent of National Civic League, ind associate editor of rational Voice. -America’s oldest ten- peranc paper, will give three addresses in Elkhart county Sunday. He will s )eak at New Paris Methodist church at 9:30, at a county rally in Dunlap EUB church at 3 p.m. and a. Eighth St. Mennonite church. Go; tien, at 7 p.m.

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Tom Myers 111 at Exhibit of Pix In Calif. Tom Myers 111 is in Sacramento .his week for the State Fair where he has pictures and color slides accepted in the international pho;ography exhibit. He is visiting his sister and her family, Mr. and Mrs. Ken Harvey, Mindy and Hiliry. Ken is conductor of Sacramento’s leading orchestra which is playing at the Fair. He is also a music teacher. Mrs. Harvey is a third grade teacher. 7 Tom has had 45 pictures accepted in international exhibits in Calcutta, India, London," Hong Kong, Montevideo, South America, Argentina, Mexico City and Yugoslavia. He is the only photographer from Indiana in the international exhibits except for a man and wife downstate near the Ohio river. Tilson King Supt. of 4 Air Base Schools in Japan Tilson L. King has been appointed new superintendent for the four Johnson Air Base schools in Japan. Before arriving at Jqhnson he was principal of Clark Air Base School in the Philippines and prior to that served as principal at Nagoya Air Base school in Japan. His wife, Dortha, teaches sth grade in Johnson school. They have three children: Philip, 12 Beverly, 10, Steven, 9. Mr. King states, “A larger per•ent of parents are interested in education overseas and I consider he educational standards equal 'nd in some cases higher than in the states.” He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn King, 452 W. Walnut, and a graduate of Nappanee high school.

• Exclusive Dri-Wall Condenser assures dry cabinet exterior in any climate. • Food-Finder Lite. • Free Food Protection Warranty for 5 years. • Full-width Roll-out Basket for storage of small or odd shaped items.

Callers Friday evening of the J. K. Millers were the Ora Helmuths and son; Mrs. Mary Ann Stutzman, the Irven Jesses and baby of Arthur, 111; Callers Sunday were Mrs. Jennie Nissley and Howard Millers and Stevie Otto spent Monday night there. SPANISH SERVICES OVER WEEKEND AT MILFORD Saturday night more than 100 people representing various Spanish demoninations attended a Spanish program at Church of the Good Shepherd in Milford, wdth all services in charge of Rev. Irven Kanode of Nappanee. Mrs. Kanode led congregational singing, accompanied by Emerson Kanode at the piano and devotions were by'Rev. Garzo of Monterrey, Mexico. A San Benito, Tex. man played “The Old Rugged Cross” on a saw and testimonies were given by persons from San Antonio, Ra.vmondville, Tex., Muskegon, Mich., and Monterrey, Mexico. Rev. Frank Topez of San Bonita led the group in choruses and Noble Neff of Milford showed the Spanish film, “From Eden to Calvary”. *ln the afternoon an offering of $29.24 w’as received for mission work at the “Air Mail from God" mission in Oaxaxa, Mexico. Sunday night there was an open air service a few miles from Milford for those who could not attend the previous night. Ruth Jo Eppley, Nappanee, showed the same film. WCTU MEETING WCTU will meet Sept 11 at 2 p.m. with Mrs. Curtis Geyer as hostess. Devotions will be by Mrs. Curtis Miller. New officers in charge of the program are Mrs. Lawrence Blosser, president: Mrs. Curtis Geyer, vice president; Grayce Miller, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Charles V. Holderman, treasurer; and Mrs. Frank Lehman, recording secretary. PVT. MARVIN ROSLHRIG Army Pvt. Marvin L. Roahrig, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. Roahrig, of Bourbon, is scheduled to complete eight weeks of advanced individual artillery training Sept. 25 at the Artillery and Missile Center, Fort Sill, Okla. Roahrig is receiving training in the duties of a cannoneer in a 105 millimeter howitzer section. H e entered the Army last May and completed basic training at Fort Leonard Wood Mo. The 23-year-old soldier is a 1954 graduate of Bourbon high school. METHODIST WSCS Regular September meeting of Methodist WSCS will be this Friday at 2 p.m. at the church. Worship is by Mrs. Clayton Pletcher, lesson by Mrs. Harter Wright and special music is by Mrs. John Armantrout; Hostesses are: Mesdames LaMar Stoops, Herb Cripe jr., Kacy Calbeck, Owen Lentz and Pearl Callander. If you don’t need it anymore, sell it thru one of our classified ads.

4.7* from & High-Grade Utility Preferred Stock Exempt from Indiana Intangibles Tax Indiana & Michigan Electric Company Cumulative Preferred To Order Shares or To Ask for Information WRITE PHONE —VISIT Burton A. Uline Nappanee, Ind. Phone 616 - -. v representing W. F. Martin, Inc. ‘Tor All Your Investment Needs” 301 Franklin JAckson 3-2375 ELKHART. IND.

Reslavinits In County Rated Only ‘Half-Clean’ A survey of public restaurants in Elkhart county in July shows a sanitation rating of only 47.34 percent, Dr. Paul H. Martin, commissioner of health, announces. The sanitation defects were uniform enough to make him believe that those defects are county-wide in restaurants and retail food establishments, he states. They include: lack of adequate and convenient toilet facilities, lack of proper hand-washing facilities, improper construction, poor sanitation practices in cleaning and storing equipment and utensils, improper refrigeration and improper storage, display or handling of food. Northern Lights Make Brilliant Display In Sky j The Aurora Borealis was visible late Thursday night until midnight, a strong display of the Northern Lights, putting cloud banks in the NW sky into sharp outlines, outlining trees in the north of Nappanee and very strong by the handle of the Big Dipper . Mostly the light was in shafts oi eerie green, flaring ancT receding end sending shafts of light high in -he sky until after midnight. “The North Lights swept in bars,” said Robert Service in ballads of the Klondike where the North Lights are on regular display almost every clear fall night. Mrs. H. Eugene Yoder, Bremen R 3, says she saw them last year in early fall. * Thursday night had the first chill of the fall season in the air. SHROCK SENTENCES GOSHEN MAN FOR OBSCENE PHOTOS Maynard Shrock, serving as judge pro tern in circuit court last week, sentenced a Goshen man, Oliver Barton, 25, to nine months on the state prison farm for possession of obscene photos he had taken of neighborhood children. Shrock ordered the obscene photos destroyed and lectured Barton on using his photographic skills for good purposes. Shrock granted Rudy Guzman, 18, Milford, probation in lieu of serving a one year reformatory term for petty larceny, Guzman promised to repay $lO in coins taken from outdoor soft drink machines at filling stations.

WE HAVE IN STOCK... 34 colors of plain Cloth of Gold CA c Sanforized Dress Material - 36 in. Wide # i i—--12 Plain Colors in Drip Dry CQ C y< * Crease Resistant Springknight Broadelot i Indian Head All Purpose Cottons OA c y€ * 22 Plain Colors, Sanforized, Fast Color O / . . . and Fall Prints Galore in Our Dry Goods Store . . . SJmxJys NAFFANEE

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Outdoor Donut Fry To Open Camp Fire Year Nappanee Camp Fire Girls and Indianapolis Central Indiana Conference joined in putting on an exhibit at the State Fair last week in Indianapolis on the theme, “Today’s Youth-Tomorrow’s Leaders”, featuring the seven crafts of Camp Fire._ Among the items displayed by Nappanee 1 were several curtains Sf'jKL made by Mrs. Owen 1 I Senff anc * donated to the CF room at Community park by the Pukwajinie group. The white case curtains are appliqued in colorful Indian symbols. A bulletin board donated by Hi-wa-sta girls for use at the park was shown along with girls’ beadwork, symbol-decorated pillows and ceremonial jackets, lolls dressed in Camp Fire and Rue Bird fashions and a Blue Bird feeder. Fall season of Camp Fire will open with an outdoor donut fry for the girls and the council Monday, Sept. 14, at 6 p.m. at the park with community singing around an open ire led by O A. Lambert, assisted by Mrs. Rolland Joihnson. The council will have a business meeting in the CF room at 7:30.

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LOWS S'.TNPTPER OF BREMEN CHIEF NURSE IN GERMAN HOSPITAL Ist Lt. Louis F. Schneider, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey H. Schneider, 121 S. Alexander, Bremen, recently was assigned to thte Bth Evacuation Hospital stasis in Germany. Lt. Schneider, chief nurse at the hospital hi Landsiuhl, entered the Army in eptemlier 1956 and arrived in.: urope last July. He is a 944 graduate of Bremen high scho >’ and a- 1955 graduate of Mount 5-iani School of Nursing in Chicag 111. His wife, Gloria, is with hi: r in Germany. PROHIBITION PARTY NAMES CANDIDATES Nearly 300 delegates and observers from 17 states and the District of Columbia attended the three day prohibition convention in Westir nster Hotel, Winona Lake. Dr. Rutherford L. Decker, pastor of Temple Baptist Church, Kansas C y, Mo. was nominated for presidi at, and E. Harold Munn, assistant c ?an and director of the departmei of education at Hillsdale Col jge, Mich., was nominated for vice president. LO JCKS REUNION Jonas L pucks family reunion will be next Sunday at Letherman grove. |

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