The Independent-News, Volume 92, Number 49, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 May 1967 — Page 8

- THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS — MAY I. 1967

8

JGHS To Crown Prom Queen And King From These Ten Candidates This Friday Night A U A 43^ vb * ** 4 flii v f i ’ I “o i. ter*a r'3 ’ W f t A t ?4 » 4 *ll vHT !? tl * A’s t tl i r 'a <r i 9 )i I w I Ir IF •’ ■ l f 7 ISHT' T Ikv*. t J*. ■( [ 1 MEg, , $ . - *•* 1 fl ■ I KKkQ4 M ft®? * . 'i> .-.5». ... .IKKKKK^Ks ...» -—A—..—

The five senior girls selected by a committee and then voted upon b\ the junior and senior classes

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[ CAMBY BY TOM DORR I HOW PlpM ] BEST DEER-HUNTING\ 1 c / IT GO, TRIP I EVER HAP—I I - I Hr- J ' Jg* i yr i ■ J XjTTn I WwWß^ DIDN'T BAfi A THING.A / AND MISSED. \ BUT MV PARTNER r- ’ ' MISTOOK ME FOR \ < A PEER— | ' - ' ~]L^ <*^^*s »*? r^ ?<- ® 1 ^7T\ ’ < x// u ji! Lfft r 1/ \ / a\ 1 «■ > \ i‘ V \ J 'T'rfr IWI * *n j u Qq — Ip 7 TcMA£>ja«.. |7"\ < H

for Prom Queen, are left to right: Peggy Kinney. Beverly Leininger, Ingrid Pommer. Pam Dyer and

Wanda Awald. One will reign as queen with the other four composing her court.

The five senior boys competing for the King’s sc dion are, left to right . Koger N Jim Place, Jerry Sheaks, Mil sthues and Phil Patrick. T hoy chosen will join the Qu< rule over the John Glenr j ir - Senior Prom Friday nig New Car \ Tops G In I Meet The New Cai .s ran over John Glenr ns in a dual meet Tues night by a 91-27 score in tr ck. Once again, the Falcons were winners in only two events, the sh I put with Ron Schroeder tossing the steel ball 44’6" and in the mile run as Larry Neiswend-r dipped this distance off in 5:11.45. New Carlisle swept the broad jump, pole vault, 100 and 220 yard dashes and won both relays. The summary: 120 yard high hurdhs: 1. Wroblewski. NC; 2. Hoot. n NC; 3. Bellinger, G. Time: It; 7. Broad jump: 1 Shuey, NC 2. Cohen. NC; 3. Nickerson. N<’. Distance Is <’. High jump: 1. Niiker-on, NC; 2. H. Curti<, G; Brewer, NC; Height s’B" Shot Put: 1. Schf.<der, G; 2. Heil G; 3. Nelspodzinski, NC. Distance 4 Ib’ Pole Vault: 1. Pixld, NC; 2. Sh. ff, NC; 3. Nod, NC. Height 10'6” Mile Run: 1 Nelswender, G; 2. Brewej, NC, 3. Bails. NC. Tune

5 11 45 100 yard dash: 1. Cohen, NC; 2. Anderson. NC; 3. King, NC. Time :11.2 440 yard dash: 1. Lai vie, NC; 2 .Johnson, G; 3. Hope, NC. Time :67.8 880 Yard run: 1. Akin. NC; 2. King, NC; 3. Trost. G. Time 2:17 220 yard dash: 1. Krause, NC; 2. Martenson, NC; 3. King, NC. Time :26.5 180 yard low hurdles: 1. Hooten NC; 2. Belling< r, G; 3. Hooten, NC. Time 24.6 2 mile run: 1. Anderson, NC; 2. Stafford. G; 3. Skaggs, NC. Time 11:24.6 Mile Relay: New Carlisle.

DAM BACKWATERS ■ TOM ANDREWS I can recall lures unlike anything today's young angler has ever seen. Some looked like torpedoes, and even had propellers.^ Others were heavy enough to clobber smaller fish. These primitive monsters are gone, but some anglers still figure that the screwier the lure, the more fish it will attract. Seems to me, the more a lure looks like a shiner or chub, the better my t chances of taking fish that feed on them. This observation held true, in one memorable instance, even, for a good lure that didn't get a chance to show itself to best advantage in a normal cast-and retrieve situation. Three of us were fishing dam backwaters in Michigan's Upper Peninsula. It was late June of a summer that hadn’t yet arrived. We got just enough action in the first three days, however, to make us hang on for a fourth. We woke to a drizzle that stopped as we reached Peavey Back-^ water. I soloed in a skiff and worked the shore; my companions. trolled in a 14 footer. I came on a tiny bay blocked by a tree I trunk thick with limbs. Casting and retrieving were nearly lm- z

possible. So, naturally, I just had to try! I needed casting accuracy, plus a lure that gave good action while swimming in a 1 straight Une. The gold Sprite I chose was one I knew could do the job. Like all of Johnson’s spoontype lures, the Sprite is forged. That extra weight, combined ‘with the lure’s special teardrop shape, gives controlled, bulletlike casts. And the tapered ledges created by forging cause ithe lure to swim in a straight

line, but with a flashing, exciting wobble. | , My first cast was nearly perfect. The lure, however, brushed a branch. So I wound up with the Sprite dangling in the water, and the mono draped over the branch. I grabbed limbs with my free hand, pulling myself closer to the trunk. Then BAM! —a smashing strike nearly pulled the rod from my hand. By tugging at the limbs, I had set the Sprite to , jiggling. Now I had a 13 p< ind northern digging deep into the little bay, and lifting me right off my seat. Before the battle was over, I had a foot on the trunk and the other in my skittish skiff. But I finally got most of the giant Into the net hanging from my belt. My buddies, bless ’em, stopped laughing and helped me back into the skiff. If there's a moral, I guess it's that a first class lure can make ^you look good no matter now poorly_^ou fish it!

iMww — ithiiiii ■wmnn^ PUFF OF THE WEfK 1 \ \ j™*"** ....1 1 * vM./ f T•Well, when are you going to stop staring and start burgling?"

Timo: 3:55.8 880 yard relay: New Carlisle, 1:41.6 * The lady was trying to impress those at the party. “My family’s ancestry is very old.’’ she said. “It dates back to the days of Kink John of England." Then turning to a lady sitting quietly in a corner she asked condescendingly: “How old is your family, my dear?" "Well, said the women with a quiet smile, “I can't really say. All our family records were lost in the Flood." Our Classifieds - Only 75c.

24? < A'" ■ ~ 5 3$ -> Z’4 '-• • ~ ♦’rv’ - < I