South Bend News-Times, Volume 30, Number 338, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 27 November 1913 — Page 2
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES. SEND BASKETS OF I Perfect biscuit
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1913
I T IR
perfectly protected
. m V
Chickens and cranberries and fruit and candy everything that gors to make a real Thanksgiving dlnn.-r will bo supplied to some SO poor familb s in .South Pend through various agencb-s. 1he rooms of the Visiting Nurse association presented a busy aspect Wednesday morning with 0 baskets in the process of preparation. Th Associated Charities was equallv busy cheeking names with individuals and church and club committees who are preparing baskets. Twenty-live duplications were prevented by thii checking process, and consequently ':: more families T.-ill be supplied with the season's cheer. The Visiting Nurse association will giv baskets to all the nt dy families wlio have been in charge of the nurse. Some 2 4 chickens, the gift of various individuals, had to b properly distributed, the big chickens to the big families and the little chickens to the little families, more goodies" here and more staples there, and with each went a little note, conveying the best riihea of tho association. The committee in charge of the wotk.. won Mrs. W. K. Lamport and Mrs. Howard Woolverton. Jhanksglving baskets are to be distributed instead of Christmas baskets this year, although the association will remember tho children with toys at Christmas time.
Indiana Woman A Capital Bride
AXDKIISOX. Ind.. Nov. 2G. Mrs. Elizabeth Chandler, widow of James 31. Chandler of this city, taya it is u mistake to call the YVllson-ayre function the 13th White Houw wedding. Mrs. Chandler asserted her wedding was the ninth in the White J louse, preceding the Grunt-Sartoris, Piatt, Hastings, Poison-Cleveland, ILoose-veit-Lonworth atid Wiison-Sayre weddings, and that the wedding Tuesday was therefore the 14th. Mrs. Crandler and James II. Chandler of Bowling Green, Va.. eloped to "Washington and called at the White House. Pre?. Llnroln, realizing the couple -were stranger. Mrr. Chandler fiys. Invited them into the White House and ?cnt for a Baptist minister, who married them. Pres. Lincoln also suggested that they stay over night In the White House and they did so.
HUNDRED CHICKENS CREMATED BY OFFICER
Health OfllcLil Finds Nappance Man Attempting to Sell Questionable Birds.
oouth Bend's garbage crematory enJoyed its Thanksgiving feast a day in advance. Wednesday 100 chickens, which had been destined to grace iouth Bend tables Thursday, were thrust into its tiery maw and licked to ashes by the flames. The feast cost about $50. The. chickens were condemned by Health Officer Van Lake at the public market Wednesday morning. They were being offered for sale by Harry Goldman, of Jlandolph St., Nappanee, Ind. The entire, consignment had been packed closely in an unventllated barrel and it is said had been carted about town on Tuesday when Goldman made an ineffectual attempt to dispose of them in the residence streets. Their unsanitary condition attracted the attention of the health olticer, who issued the decree which sent them to the crematory.
(JIIAM) TRUNK SHOPS BURN'. PORT HUItON, Mich., Nov. 26. The general shops of the Grvind Trunk railway here were destroyed by tire Wednesday morning entailing a loss of $750,000. The shops were the largest of the Grand Trunk system. Twelve hundred men are thrown out of work.
LEARN THE SECRET OF KEEPING YOUNG
Good Digetsion. NecessaryTry Mi-o-na for Stomach Ills.
It ia what you eat that causes most of your discomfort.. Nearly till diseases have their origin In tho stomach and bowels. If you have coated tongue rerves en edge, headache, heartburn, lack an appetite, and your stomach is sour, gassy and generally upset you need Mi-o-na at once. Jt quickly and purely stops stomach misery. It is u digestive giving ;ulck relief in acute ptomach distress and second to none as a Btomach and intestinal tonic to build up tho digestive- organs. it oothe the irritated membrane and inereop-? the How of the dlcestlve Juice- so that the stomach Is always reaiy to care for the food nature Intruded. if you over-tax the ?tomneh find bowels they cannot piopr-rly digest your food ami you are improperly nourished your resistance is uow you are lacking in vitality yvi .mow old before your time. Get a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na now today delays are d.mcrrous. Always keep it with you t home' or tr.tvellng. Wetliek's Original Kut Hate Medicine Store and drmruists everywhere. Advt.
No matter what National Biscuit Company product you ask for crackers or cookies, . . . wafers or snaps, . . cakes or jumbles it will be delivered to you in perfect condition, either in packages with the famous In-er-seal Trade Mark, in attractive small tins or from the familiar glass-front cans. Freshness is assured through the distrib- - uting service of the National Biscuit Company, which affords a constant supply of biscuit to every part of the United States. Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that name
ES IT HOSPITAL
Mrs. Martha Ward, wife of Prank J. Ward, 329 N. Lafayette st., died at 2:20 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at .St. Joseph hospital after an illness of three, years. The illness was the result of a nervous breakdown and for the last year she has been confined to her bea. Seven weeks
ago she was removed from her home
to the hospital. J For some months her condition re
mained apparently the same but within the last two weeks a change for tho worse took place and her decline, was very' rapid afterward. Mrs. Ward was horn and reared in
Cass county.. Michigan. She was the t
nauguicr oi .ir. ana ..urs. Aamaniei Dennis. Mr. and Mrs. Ward were married Sept. 25, 1889, at her home in Cas3 county. They came to i?outh Bend tho following year and have resided hre ever since. She waj a member of the Methodist church, uniting with it in her girlhood. During her residence in South Bend she v. ad a member cf the First
Methodist congregation. Mrs. Ward
U survived by her husband and one
brother. C. J. Dennis, of Cass coun
try. Mich.
Mrs. uards early death cut short it a h'ippy and useful life. She was in- j f
terested and active In the work of her church and in the club work and social life of the city. In tho 23 years cf her life here she endeared
herself to manv friends. The funeral!
- -
on X. Lafaycete t., at 2:. "50 Friday afternoon and will bo public. Hev. Henry I,. Davis will officiate. Burial will be In Iliverview cemetery and will be private.
0 Hi
k f We Tthoi'
re
6 M
Jf ' appreciation for the unprecedented volume of fall business f to our clientele. Opportune thankfulness to the thousands
of women in this community who have made this store, in soshort time, an institution whereby their dependable needs, and reauisites of the home, are obtained at advantageous prices in
better assortments in oetter qualities.
WANT LAWYERS' PAPERS Three Apply for Permission to Practice Law Here
Applications for admission to the bar have been filed by three students of tho Indiana College of Law who have completed ihel:. courses. They are Guy Bever, Joseph Kouser and Rodney Bayless. The applications were tiled by Joseph M, Callahan, head of the school. Hester Jensen, was granted a divorce from Louis Jensen in the superior court Wednesday on the ground of abandonment. S?FKS. Carload of second-hand safe. 117 E. Washington a v. Adv.
MRS; CHAMP CLARK'S RULE FOR ROASTING THE TURKEY WASHINGTON', Nov. 26. Mrs. Champ Clark, wife of the speaker, Wednesday told for the benefit of housewives in general how to roast the Thanksgiving turkey properly. Old fashioned, dry dressing is the secret of Mrs. Clark's method. Her recipe calls for two quarts of Ftale bread, crumbed and seasoned with two level teaspoonsful of salt, a heaping teaspoon of pepper, two teaspoons each of powdered summer. savory and minced parsley and one of powdered sage. Then rub a, cupful of butter through the crumbs, and fill the cavity of the turkey with this and sew up. Mrs. Clark then rubs salt all over the turkey, puts it in it roaster pan, spreads a tablespoon of butter over the breast and places it in a medium hot oven. The turkey should be basted every ten minutes with its own gravy, until done. MORE REPORTS ARE FILED Lalicvillc Candidate Spent Only $2.20 During Campaign.
Additional reports of campaign expenses were filed in the county clerk's ofhco Wednesday as follows: James Kenned.v. for city clerk of Mishawaka. $76; James A. McCullough, candidate for councilman at large, $70.3..; George Zimmerman, candidate for council in Mishawaka, $20.50; H. Solnrek. for council, nothing; Joseph Steinbaugh, for council, nothing; Sim Harrington, for marshal Lakeville, $2.20.
WOOD!
WOOD! WOOD!
We now have nicely racked up some five hundred cords of nic dry hard wood at your command. Phone, Bell 129, Home 5129. Loughman'g. Advt. Ill 31 OVA l xotici:. After Dec. 1, Dr. Baer will be located in suite 718, J. M. S. Bldg. Adv.
Our $1.00 ALATtM CLOCKS FOR 63c. Our $2.00 WATCH for $1.00. Both guaranteed for a year at Coonlev Drug Store.
CRKPK TOILKT. Good quality. Large rolls. Special price r.c a roll, 6 for 2 5c at Coonley Drug Store. Adv
"STAR OF BETHLEHEM" PLACED HEART OF NEW YORK BY UNKNOWN WOMAN FOR WORLD TO SEE.
Kvery night in the year, Christmas to Christmas, this man-made "star of Bethlehem" gives to the little world surrounding it the message of "hope, peace and good will to all men." A woman unknown placed this star In Madi?on square park, New York city. It is at the top of a 30-foot pole, the cost ot erecting and maintaining it was borne by the unknown woman. Iist year there was an immense "Christmas tree." brilliantly lighted, placed in this park, the home of many wanderers. That tree touched a spot In th "unknown's" heart. She thought of that star of Bethlehem shining over the Babe's cradle! When the tree came down she wrote the people who had placed it there, offering to bear all expenses iT they would keep that "star of Bethlehem" shining the year round, carrying its message of lave and hope into the hearts of the hundreds of thousands who nightly pass the park. Xo one knows aught of the "unknown" beyond ihe fact that a woman's hand penned the letter. The "star" shines ther tonight as it did last night and as it will tomorrow night and the next night!
BROTHERHOODS TO HAVE
FOUR SPEAKERS MONDAY? A union .brotherhood service of all the churches in the city will be held at ,St. Paul's M. K. church Monday nisht. when the newly elected oMlcers will be .installed. Four speakers will talk on vital social problems of the city. Atty. Dan Py'.e will speak on "A Bi-tter Plan for the Peculation of tho J Saloon"; F. 1 Sims, principal of the high school, on "That Boy. That Girl and, the City"; J. Q. Anns, general, secretary of the V. M. C. A., on "Th.-By-Products of Social Pvll"; Dr. S. W. I'.;r on the "Social Kvils from the j Physicians' Standpoint". '
;OLI AND SILVKIt FISH. .Pretty;
nine per, w in live ror year "Lost little and please everybody. Two M?h with Jar 15c. larger ons 2 3c, 30c and 73c at Coonley Drug Store. Adv.
COMBS. .A beautiful line of Lu-di-s' drefsing combs. White and black. Coarso and tine. Strong and
durable at very low prices at Coonley I It.-,... . . 4.1. .
rA S- '.'1
We are thankful for this unprecedented fall business. We are thankful for the prosperous
winter which is at hand. We are thankful for the trade of the multitude of Jouth Bend women. We are thankful for the manner in which our efficient salesforce has cooperated. We are thankful for our bounding growth of the closing year. 1 We are thankful that we'll be able to still advance in a short time. We are thankful to be known as South Bend's foremost and largest store. We are thankful to be situated in the "Heart of South Bend." We are thankful to have made important foreign negotiations the passing year.
fa fill
nk
We are Thankful to be able to
offer a near-perfect system of store service. We are thankful that the confidence of South Bend's purchasing public is slowly but surely coming our way. We are thankful that we are better prepared than you could dream of for the
holiday business, and, we are thanking you in advance for the share of this buying you may do here. We are thankful to be known as "South Band's
Best Christmas Store.'
STORE CLOSED TODAY
In the Heart of South Bend
4
HUSBAND WAS NEVER AT HOME, LOSES WIFE Mrs. Agnes Hcrtsch la Granted a ivorce and $0.30 Alimony In Superior Court,
Agnes Ilertsch was granted a divorce from $650 alimony by Acting Judge Woodward in the superior court Wednesday. The case wascontested by Ilertsch, who ?nalntained he wanted his wife to return to him and make a home for their 14-year-old son. Mrs, Hertsch declared, however, that her patience wan exhausted and refused to entertain the idea of a reconciliation. She charged her husband with cruelty and habitual drunkenness, declaring that he threatened her life and never spent an evening1 at home. The case has been on trial for two dayp. Ida Anger was granted a divorce from Fmil Anger In the circuit court. Wednesday on the ground of cruelty. She was ordered not to remarry for two years.
The Elks will give their annual Thanksgiving dance for all teka and their friends Thanksgiving afternoon and evening at Elks' Temple. Dancing for children from 2:30 to 5 p. m. Come and enjoy yourself. Advt.
That's the name of the coal going like wild fire. We still have a few of the policies left that go with the three ton orders. Loughman's, The Home of the Big Ton. Advt.
PIPKS. Finest line ever brought to this eitv. Genuine Briar Root and Meerschaum. 2:c to $3.00 at Coonley Drug .Store. Advt.
flHICHESTEfTSmiS
IL? irii ) u 1 'FUBHITBHE
When our wagon delivers Furniture to your home your neighbors will know that it is paid for.
Smith
DIAMOND DDI M Q LuU ;
j Furniture, Rugs, Stoves.
THE NEW STORE. 326-328 S. Michigan St.
w Kvcry Patient a Booster for SWEM, The Chiropractor, Rheumatism. .,02-300 Dean Puildinjr. Home Phone 23G5.
EYES EXAMINED liAd Ilcadajcbe limbered without xv tj of Iruc by
PATENTS And Trad Marks Obtained In ail
OLT3CH, Reylatered Patent Atty., 711. rnr a n ' P Th rkT W Vb 2? TL" til 6tudbakr Bldx SouU BndL It Ll3lIVlO.nl 1 MibiL 0cth Beta's Lender Opteznertot .td Mnufacrnrlnf Optician. W.J.NEIDHART pHTT,S!? H 114 E. Jefferson St. " I Painting, Wall Papering FORGED OUT" SALE f and Picture Framing PUBLIC DRUG STORE j tLZsZznz
If you cannot come, telephone Phones Homo 5392; Bell 202. The Eliel Pharmacy lIIIi IMCYEK. Ph. C, 3Icr. W e deliver orders promptly
For a Quick Job we can put enough skilled men to work' to finish it la any given time. The workmanship nnd materials are always the rama the best tc bo had anywhere. No matter whether your Job be large or smaJl. or what kind of a plumbing job it may be, we ran handle it to your perfect iatIffaction. Get our estimates. Heat what your neighbors tajr of our work. Thos. Willi am 3
STOVES FOSR HEATING STOVES FOR COOKSMG OLSjE3E or
E2) IL: la
HARDWARE COFslPAWY
