The Independent-News, Volume 86, Number 39, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 September 1962 — Page 6

6

— THE INDEPENDENT NEWS — Sept 27, 1961

pilONewsX (XORTH LIBERTY)

Gan shade, a Ire dim »n at Mar2ni College, spent the week end vTh his parents Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shade Mrs Russell Naragon. of Walkerton. spent Tuesday with Mr and Mis John Bel >n Jr and family. William J. Donn SN is to r< - tern to Norfolk. Virginia, October S’h from a 2 m nth cruise on the N ith Vlantic lb- visited cities in Portugal, Frame Denmark, rmanv. England Netherlands ;i d N< ' A iv Tie is as-igm d to the I p I’SS Ne' ■ rt News. O P Britt, father .f Mrs Cliftn Snyder, returned h line from t • hospital last Thursday.

OLD CARDS: ' CHILDREN'S TOYS Children love to handle playing cards. They are naturally attracted to the bright red. yellow, and black colors and pretty designs on the cards. And not only do they love them for the excitement of

Playing Go Fish, Old Maid, or Slapjack, but also b ecause they can play, with the .Cards in

any number of ways without getting into a game. Here are a few: Building card houses on the living room carpet. The child's excitement increases as the "castle” gets higher. Use the narrower Bridge deck cards for arches and risers and the wider ‘‘club’ deck for ceilings. Teach the youngsters how to play "Card in the Hat" by flicking a deck of cards one at a time into a hat placed on the floor near a corner of the room. Assign points to those cards landing inside the hat. Help a child to make a playing ®ard mobile. If confined to bed. the child will watch it moving for hours. Start the child off on an interesting and unusual hobby: col-

Cowboys and Engines by Irwin Caplaa v * ? s' '■ ‘ yf / ’’OX. OX tCHOMI 0UT...) MAM | p term w PMMU IM n< MN* Tift Trml*ri s»hty Jtrrfca Young driver* ware involved in more then 27% of th* fatal acddenh fa 1961,

Mr and Mrs Bert Rudynski and family were Monday evening snap r pm-ds < f Mr. and Mrs. Harold S< hrader of Grm. rtown. Mi and Mrs Willard Naragon and family, of Walkerton, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brennan, of Mishawaka. were Sunday diiim i guests <f Mr and Mrs John Boron Jr Mis. Pauline M uris i pending a < iuple of we. k with Mr. and Mi w Ron Ven. a md family at Galion. Ohio Mi .and Mi -. Wedey Pavey were Sunday dinner guests in the home of Mr. ad Mrs Dallas Pavey and family in Import' to celebrate the birthday of Mrs Wesley Pav- < y f*.nd Laurie Jo 1 ‘a vv

lecting playing card back design®. He can swap with playmates. Stick rows of old playing card! on to a board and hang in the children’s playroom It w*il make a wonderful dartboard. Special scoring systems can easily be worked out. If your child is invited to a costume party, show him how to make a costume out of a deck of old plaving cards. A crown of Kings, Queens and Jacks can bo made for his head and the reat of the deck can be attached to his costume. ' . i Show the children how to mako their *vn greeting cards by cut- i ting out picture cards and sticking them on to plain paper. Th® King could be used for dad’® ' birthday—the Queen for mother’®, j Show the little girls how ideal , ; old cards are for decorating doll- 1 . houses: they can be used to wall- ' paper dollhouse walls, as rugs for , the dollhouse, or by cutting out : faces from court card® as picture® on dollhouse walls. । Texture of playing cards I® Ideal for model-building. Material can be cut and bent to shape, and takas paint easily. Especially true for building small models of houses or for decorating a model train layout And which young boy or girl has not at one time or another attached an old playing card by* clothespin to his bicycle frame near the wheel to make a whirring sound against the spokes t

Come in to nee out new fall laminated jackets, and United States Rubber Co. Warmstej jackets, car coats and full length, in all colois. Studio Dress Ship. Karen and Sara Jean Walters will be hosts to the Tabor EUB Youth Fellowship group in their home Friday evening. September 28. Mrs Belle Holderman left Saturday for Hilton. New York where she will attend her grandson's wedding. Her daughter, Mrs. ! Laura Mullen and husband, will return with le i to spend the winter here Monday morning Mis Marvin Kizer, M Kenneth Reed. Mis Fay O '■ Mrs. Leona td Steeb- and Mrs. Richard Wentz went to the home of Mrs Wesley Pavey to help her celebrate her birthday. Coffee and rolls w. re em jo.Ved. Mrs Z.dpha Wal.-h under.wnt major surg. ry in Memorial hospital, South Bend, on Monday, and is impnwig ■mt isfactoi Hy. Hei flaught, r and husband Mr and Mrs. Clyde Steele of Detro t. wenhere for the week end and she Is rema. dug a few days. Mr. and Mrs Shannon Clement and family of F< v ling* Green. Ohio, were overnight guests of Mrs. Clement - sister Mis GanNelson's mother, Mrs Glady BenNeLso's mother, Mi- Gladys Bender, of Middlebury, was a guest Sundav and M< nd >y. Sunday they ®attendi I a reunion at Beren for former members of the Lyric Choir of Gish cm Mrs Nelson formerly sang with tins organization. Mr and Mr- Claude Shem-man enterlaimd S md. v with a chicken barb, uc m honor of Clarence Schmeltz, who celebrated his 72nd birthday. There were 21 pi esent including Rev. and Mrs Clyde Walter, of Rochester, a former pastor of the Tabor Church; also Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ruff of PhTUouth. who came to call on Claude Sheneman, who returned home from the hospital Wednesday where he had been a medical patient for about a week Maple Grove The Steak supper at the Maple Grove Church Thursday was well attended Mrs. Bonnie Buck visited with her daughter, Mis. niui Humphrey and family Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John I. Miller and Dean, and Mr. and Miu Harold Geyer had Sunday dinner with Mr and Mrs Joe Vargo in South Bend and called on Mr and Mrs Harold Vargo in the afternoon Mr. and Mrs Donald Grooms and children were visitors in the Clarence Myers home. Dr. and Mrs. A D Hoare of South Bend, were Wednesday afternoon visitors in the Harold Geyer home.

Aerodynamic ttyling just one of Many New Features in ’63 Corvette » ■MSL *' • ' ' I Lt- ' ■t *r ! WMR ’ '■•■ F W HS—. ' " --? * FI i '* e' Sr J?< • •:. r । * * '* c * - ****^^*^" »-**»*■ ■• '*w» ~ "'"' ' '— K^ : nl **'"" ' $' " r • * mhh^ ' '•« p*^ , * ’’ ^' t * I *S;-— "•*4'" | t^BBOHMMa^ |

ibe turwtie Miro Hay fiber xl*M body is comti«t«lv new for IWiTand inlroducrs for the first n>» Id Conrttr history new controlled co*l top ••utHatton, curved side window glas*. an adjustOM« Ueerlng wheel, irtractahk heediempa. Steel b ioiacrated with body panel* for increased

U. S. Food Costs Lowest In World An American housewife spends 2o percent of her family’s net inconie for food. A Russian housewife spends 56 percent; an Italian 38 percent. Peruvian 40 percent and Nigerian 70 percent. John Strohm cites these fig mes in a September Reader's Digest article, "Why Our Food Ia Bargain ' 'Hie average American, he says, works just 38 hours a month to buy food for hi.- family A pound of butter costs him 21 minutes' work, as opposed to 193 minutes work by the average Russian worker The American works five minutes to earn a pound "f rice; a Japan se. whose nation has Un high' s' iic> yield in the world has to w a h 25 minutes f< r a pound "And lest you 1< ng foi the good old days’ when prime beef wa 15 cents a pound and bread two loave.r for a nickel, consider the real cost of food then and n iw," Strohin wTn In RRJ Gr nddads family • uned sll a week ami <nt Hl per < nt < f it for f -d Hi- ; rand m ■ 1•. ily earns mm than <125 we* kly p< nh- $25 for food, and buy •n on ,d b - ter food. "Re-can hers have b: < d i ,i .• vitamin C mt" tomat ■ more protein into < i rn im-rr I. an mr./ into pork Agri it iral r< mhh i

5 / LAST 37, / GOY'S N T LA,^‘D >*-- z f CV 22 r ^669. ' -— I DAVS A C!7VAROSE (^-WR/C^A A AAS 5 r AR r SD TENT CAPfTAL OS SSOOOO, „ MOTTO (Z Di* ^■■cA'prro'f ctet.aiJt r j ^7 (CMS s. many) ddFr/F l ^ As by | /f L • AND f wl JO/A, ADAMS • ^5-^ EL DO‘.4 nIL AL’AAys MSM rb AND PRFSCRYEIT, CAS CXD YODR SNARE TOA'ARD OEEFWA/O U.S. SAVINGS BONOS TODAY J in Ml M l

rigidity. Wrap-over doom and wrap-over rwo» windows are advance-designed feature* of sport coupe model*. The sleek-line styling of the convertible and sport coupe Corvette* a feeling of motion even when the car la «&■» ing at ill. Shown above io the eport coupe.

developed fertilizers ihai farmers to triple crop \ ’worn-out’ soil. Imaginath ists have found ways to n pies hang on trees until stimulate corn while kilim to grow bug-resistant ere, "Instant" and "heat-1 foods, he writes, can red housewife’s daily food pr» work from 5> 2 hours to 1 He cites Agricultural | Service figures saying t.l pared meals cost $6.70 fni ily of four can be fixed housewife for 11.80 ]e should she work for four ) 1.5 cents an hour to sur money, or devote the ex* to < hildi’en. to communit ities and keeping up world ? Many instant food writes, save money. A p fresh frozen jieas costs cents; bought fresh, they cents. A devil’s food c from prepared mix and ‘ <■ sts 11 cents; made from it c< 4s 53 <' m Frozen t rated orange juice cost half as much a < that sqm home from fiesh orJtnges of concentr.i t cost 2 7 more to pi < pal e. but 3 7 < to transp »rt I * 5 cent mer< handise Strohin i a past jnc the Ame> can Agtitultui tors' Association a J ha f'«.d in 70 < ountrivs.