Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 91, Number 44, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 25 April 1968 — Page 11

! £ : ■<■ - ' - *\i:P"' Wbjte *'' :': S -< : '^fML| \iK ' < v " * 4 ■Boh*: • tt* • ’ - : y/<&*;'. jmm mmßm ■ ' r K v ‘ , ' n|| •■ • J| .-. , / ■WBpimi ek|.\: m.~ ,r *" ? Bjapy

Red Weber won the scratclvall events in his own tournmftent and was presented with the cup by Jim Newcomer.

AT THE LIBRARY AIRPORT By Arthur Hailey This is a novel written in the same vein as “Hotel”. It gives the reader a picture of all the inner workings of a large municipal airport. During the course of a few hours, there is a plane stuck in a snowdrift at the end of a run. way, there’s a, stowaway discovered on one of the flights, a bomb is suspected on a flight already airborne to Italy, and a group of irate citizens from a nearby community are protesting the noise of the jets over their homes. There is much good suspense built up as the plane with the bomb aboard makes its way to Rome. The story is well written and moves rapidly. The whole thing teaches quite a bit about the problems confronting a modern airport. NEW BOOKS OP FICTION Hunter’s Green Whitney Deadly Orbit Mission Mason So Long At The Fair Vermandel Mount Joy Newman House Upon A Rock Pederson The Last Unicorn Beagle A Case In Nullity Berckman The Gossip Truth Burke House of Brass Queen The Best of Fantasy and Science Fiction Forman The Wedding Group Taylor The Spoilt Kill Kelly The Long March Styron Cynthia Cunningham To Wed A Doctor Seifert All The Dark Places Bos worth Another Day, Another Death

CONTINENTAL WVBMHT DOTH earn 7.053* INTEREST A YEAR Available In multiples of STOO CUMULATIVE TYPE: pounded twite yearly, earn? add accumulates Interest on Interest. YOUR MONEY DOUBLES IN 10 YEARS. INCOME TYPE: £■£# guaranteed rote ol 7.053% a year. Call for full information ME 8-3547 ME 9-3334 or write CONTINENTAL CREDIT CORPORATION 2019 W. Morrio St. 3159 E. 10th St. INDIANAPOLIS This it not an otter to sell Otter can ho made by prospectus only

Wul***** CMIffCM Acme 6% Cblordane Dust does the W job qvuOe, aunty. Just dust H on the ground. One pound oover* 250400 square feet Deisch Supply Cos. Inc. 151 E. Walnut Mi 7734151 Nappaaee

Bagby NON-FICTION Pictorial Guide to Machine Shop Practice Gristbrook Prehistoric Man— Braid wood Adventures in knitting Aytes Flemish and Dutch Art Hammacher f French Art from 1350 to 1850 LaClote The Search for the Girl with the Blue Eyes Steam Yoga for beauty Volin. Countdown ’6B, profiles for the Presidency Sohecbter Gift Wrapping Shaw Great Art and Artists of the World Stong Letters to an American Lady Lewis God’s Smuggler Brother Andrew Call Us Americans Chernoff This Stranger, My Son Wilson The Magic Animal Wylie Main Currents in Sociological Thought Aron Religions of Mankind Schoeps Bayou Backwaters Eckert For Us, The Living Evers How to Prune Almost Everything Baumgardt Prayer, The Master Key Freeman Nine Lives of Billy Rose Gottlieb A good horseback ride usually makes you feel better off. rnsr 1 -■ Cold cash has a way of defrosting people.

■ ■ ■ M

Kansas beauty,is miss AMERICA: Lovely Dene Barnes of Moran, Kansas, crowned Miss America of 1968, proudly crosses her regal sceptre with the Sword of Hope—symbol of the AMERICAN CANCER SOClETY—urging all Americans to support the 1968 Cancer Crusade.

Polls Show People Think Religion Is Important By FRANK A. WHITE Polls and National Council of Churches surveys show 92% of Americans believe religion is important. How important? In the church we attend, are Wednesday and Saturday morning, prayer, Bible Study, and discussion groups. Doctors, industrialists, some retired folk, a carpenter and lay people of all walks Os life enjoy these breakfast groups. One of our Associate Pastors, in charge of Evangelism, projected this line of thinking, after we had studied St. Paul, a firebrand of Christian zeal and evangelism. Suppose St. Paul had founded our church, or your church, and written back letters such as he did to the Church at Corinth. Would he not be interested in how we are getting along with committment to Christ, since most all Americans profess that to be important? How would wh score on the things St. Paul thought important? What would be your grade or my grade on the following: 1) Alft I absolutely positive of my own relationship to Christ? A) Do I really know Him? B) Have I accepted Him as Saviour and Lord? C) Do I believe that He has the answer to ALL my problems? 64 D) Do I trust Him explicitly? El Do I consider Him in all my planning? 2) Am I concerned with the problems of my fellowmen? * A) If my neighbor’s head is aching, does it mean anything to me? B) If my employer or employee is in need of comfort or help, am I concerned? C) If I see a friend or associate doing these things which lead down, do I feel that I am my Brother’s Keeper? D) If my friend or neighbor is not a Christian, does it mean anything to me? 3) Do I believe, with all my heart, that Christ can solve my friend’s problem, even as He solved mine? 4) Am I willing to put aside pride, prejudice, fear and tell my friend what Christ has done for me and what He can do for him? A) How much time will I give this cause? (For one man?) B) Will I share with my friend my own experience with Christ? C) Will I listen with sympathetic mind to his problem? D) Will I keep his confidence? E) Will I make my friend one of my prayer circle? F) Will I make the effort to win him to Jesus Christ? Surrender Committment 5) Can I translate into a language my friend can understand

A WALL PAINT THAT Defies Comparison

l^jj^s|jj

Os the many wall paint* on the market, none can match O'Brien's Liquid-Velvet for elegant beauty, ease of application and superlative performance. Made with Alki-therm, this premium product gives you more value for your paint ddllar. When you decorate your home, try Liquid-Velvet. See the differencein the way it goes on—in the way it looks. Yeti'll be glad you did. It always gives a perfect result. Odiorne's Paints & Wallpaper Bremen, Ind.

IH O’ BRI E N p PAINTS

ilftM oBPHfc, jIBM i " Bjl M B/%. iff I m w tMBf wii W "Hißw ■ IB H \ ... I WpjfjMl BJ| Ixk i . * I. ' v.;' --Mi**-'> J ** v I- ' ° v - iS>.~ .jimh ,; % v ■ \-i-8 ' . i, <wM* mßa-mm

Members of Mrs. Rosentrateris class and their mothers have been working together on a project. Mrs. Tony King is shown with Marilyn Ingle, Pam Cunningham, Tracy Yoder, Barbara Byler, and Jeff King.

What Christ means to me and will mean to him if he will start the adventure of Christian living? 6) Will I follow through on this program of winning my friends to definite acceptance of Christ as Saviour and Master of their lives? Is it not quite probable that what St. Paul, who believed in total commitment to Christ’s will would find most Americans with ! a low grade in answer to the foregoing questions. It was brought out in the group discussions that World Evangelist Billy Graham said no person has kept all the Ten Commandments. He admitted that included himself. He believes the Ten Commandments are a mirror that we can look into and a measuring stick that we can strive to measure up i to. No one is perfect, Graham ! said. A returned Marine Sergeant from Vietnam was asked to talk in his church. He had the congre- j gation sing “Onward Christian Soldiers, Marching As To War.. He said: “Suppose the Marine Corps was run like many churches. The Marine “Top Kick” would call the roll. Where’s Brown? He j had a bad Saturday night and is sleeping late. Where’s Smith? 1 He

If you want to know what makes the Great Wide-Track Drive so great, GT0.400 cubic inches, bulging hood scoops, special suspension, and a bumper so revolutionary, competition is still kicking it in .frustration. Winner of Motor Trend Magazines Car of the Year award. Drive it and you'll understand why. See your Pontiac dealer. He's out to smash sales records for the 7th straight year! . Pontiac Motor Division.

a. ***** or l*cnu*ct n, it m \

THEGBEATmg-TMCIt DRIVE K OMI f * / ' - . . ;. • ‘ Readers of CAR AND DRIVER magazine rate Pontiac Catalina miles ahead of any other American sedan. Drive one. You will, toot

had an engagement to play golf this morning. The Speaker went right on down the list of Sunday morning excuses to show what the Marine Corps would be like, were its duty roster like that of many churches. L. M. W. of Lebanon, wrote: “I am one of your admiring and steady readers. I believe that you ‘put in a lick for Jesus Christ’ whenever you can.”

READ THE CLASSIFIEDS

IN THE MOST EXCLUSIVE RESIDENTIAL section of Nappanee —3 bedrooms and living room with wall to wall carpet, plus a family room with fireplace, and game room for real' living. But this is not all and 2 car garage with a stone front. Sound exciting? Call us. PRICE REDUCED $2,000.00 1 Acre Plot High and dry overlooking Nappanee Area. Only 3 minute drive to the loop. Beautiful tan brick home —3 bedrooms luxurious wall to wall carpet this world with dishwasher built in stove and oven plus a desk to match. Full basement Windows and gas furnace. If you want to know about any o>f the extra conveniences not mentioned see Chuck - Bill - or Dewey. Charles Dye Agency Phone 453-3208

Happy Birthday

APRIL 25 Marvin Eastlund A1 Van Dyke Amos Whetstone, Jr. Mrs, Ralph Arnott Gladys Kegebein Bertha Yoder Kerry Miller Wanda Sue Slabaugh Donald Fervid* 26 Isabelle Deardorff (Mrs. Richard) Jan Edwin Jensen Kenneth L. Weaver Irvin W. Kanode Jean Roberts 27 Mary Ann Best Clara Weaver Jesse Frazier Mrs. Lowell Harman, Jr. Chuck Mitschelen 28 Dick Deardorff Cynthia Ann Yoder Janet Guckenberger James Weaver 29 Letitia R. Gessdnger Carl Morris Ron Kiester * Bruce Tobias Keith Yoder 30 Todd Adams Bobbie Martz U. J. Shively Tim Alan Fink Danny Slabaugh Sam Houston, of Texas fame, lived for 3 years with the Indians as a youth ate their food, wore their clothing, and joined their hunting and migratory trips. He spoke their language fluently.

THURS. APRIL 25,19 M NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS - . , , 4-, „ - .i. .. . • -

if f wM Bfl WBmmpf ' ‘y®

"to Mane meiior blue bird Karen Dixon greeting Girl Scout Jill Quackenbush who along with her mother Mrs. Max Quackenbush taught the Blue Birds new songs at a recent "Sing-along".

SCncftcweecS to- for com SELECTIVE PRE-EMERGENCE HERBICIDE Knoxweed 10-4 Granular pre -emergence herbicide so. cornds new! It gives you early control of annual grasses and many broadleaf weeds that means fewer cultivations, Iqwer labor costs, less time in the field. The hew low price of Knoxweed 10-4 Granular makes possible band applications requiring only 614 to

7 pounds of material per acre at a cost of about $2.35 per acre . . . depending on row spacing and bandwidth. This makes it the most economical granular pre-emerg-ence herbicide for corn. With Knoxweed 10-4 Granular or its companion product Knoxweed 42 Liquid, you have a choice of the just-right herbicide for your particular operation. So come on in!

Central Soya Farm Supply

We’ve got everything for everybody.

We are a Full Service Bank. Step right this way, holies and gentlemen. Why run all over town to do yourbanfcing? We have everything you need under one roof. See us for savings accounts, all types of checking accounts, loans, mortgages and more. Consolidate your financial affairs. Enjoy the convenience of complete, one-stop banking. Come in today. For safe, convenient cash on trips, always carry First National City Travelers Checks. They’re as acceptable as cash in more than a million places throughout the world. In case of loss or theft, the fastest global refund system of all goes into action. There are over 25,000 banking offices around the world that give on-the-spot refunds for lost checks. ■II 111 l FIRST NATIONAL , '• ' v,y . ./ •'

j KrtoVweecf 10-4 GRANULAR x •**. >•* wmocav "'VW ’ ’ v h. •••'** VAW cAuWov <• WWK ( X.</w> .1 CO. \ w

PAGE 5B