The Independent-News, Volume 100, Number 11, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 11 October 1973 — Page 4
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— THE INDFTENDENT-NEWS — OCTOBER 11, 1973
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'Pean Kn wlton. Viiginia Street, wv admitted to the LaPorte Hospital on Tutsday afternoon. Mi. and Mrs. Jerry DeCleicq. of Royal Oak. Michigan, were We k end gue ts of Mrs. Ellen Ei ie. at Koontz Lake. " inday evening gu^ts of Mr. 5n . Mrs. Robert Urbin were Mr. 31... Mrs. lb bort McDaniel and Mty and M -. L nine Wright, of Pi \ mouth. i' i. and Mrs. A. J. Kennedy Sp nt the In st of last week in Gauett where they w re called due to the death of a relative of M: Kennedy’s. Mr s. Katin yn Long and Mrs. L die Dij art will be hostesses sot the 5130 p.m. cany in dinner cd ne Koontz Lake Conservation CL- b <>n Saturday evening at the ( 1 id house. A social hour will follow th? dinnei with games and * t i^nng. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Stahly Gnu Mr. and Mrs. Roy Garman ano Judy of Leesburg, had dinner Gt Amish Acres in Nappanee and 'then went to Leesburg to spend the afternoon with the Garmans. Tn tne evening they stopped at Etna Green to visit Mrs. George Grimm tsaurday evening Mrs. Elsie Johnson entertained with a dinner honoring Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Cripe for their 40th wedding anniversary. Guests were Mr. firm Mrs. Roger Cripe. Carrie Sue «h i Scott; Mr. and Mrs. Michael Skees. Michelle and Christy; Mr. Gin Mrs. Wayne Shoemaker, all of South Bend; Mr. and Mrs. A ird Awald and Mrs. Earl Ward Ot yViikerton.
: YOUR OWN PERSONAL | POCKET j cSgili) STAMP 1 3 PtIMA STAMP -th» pocket thmp flirt goes wMrew yw p — Mat ” n dean - ready fa instant utt WITHOUT AN INK FADI Your light weight PERMA STAMP Pocket Stamp la perfect at a gereoert* | U ligniture stamp ... a time-saving check endorsement stamp ... ar a • y eame and address stamp for impnnting envelopes, identifying kooka art | . ether personal or household items. “ Every impression is crisp and clean —aslf It came off a printing press. I Smallest details end finest lines are reproduced with consistent clarity I y and cleanliness. g Snap top lid protects your stamp until you're ready to use It. Attractive A jade green plastic case keeps stamp safe from dust, lint and dirt Avail- I “ able in your choice of ink colors: violet, red, black, green and blue. 0 Best of all, a PERMA STAMP Pocket Stamp costs little more thee ee I 0 eld-fashioned rubber stamp. fl 0 I g • £ PERMA STAMP and FOREIGN are registered trademark »I. C Johnsoa I । Son, Inc., Racine, Wisconsin, ISA | U J ' OUR POLICY T -avs articles must lie subnutted by 1:00 p.m. on Tuesdays. Display advertising must be in our office as follows; t j Any size less than one page —by 11 00 a.m. Tuesdays. Page or larger, less than a double truck —by 5:00 p.m. | on Mondays. j Double truck (2 pages) —by 11:00 a.m. on Mondays. 1 Any adver' isement on which proof must be supplied the cusu»m<r by 9:00 i.m on Mondays. Clm jfjo I ads mu- 1 b subm.tK-d by 1 00 pm. on Tuesdays. Minin im ch. .g. M 20 tor fn ■ 25 w : 1- 2c a word th-n after Cla-s .. Hds w.ll not be tak n over t. e ph ne or will n»t be charg'd. 1 may be j bed up f : lowing the edition that they appear. A1 n ’ ’’i n " ■* pay.ng event will be a paid notice. (If you charge, v,e charge 1 Cards of thanks and mem »i, ims are $1 00.
Sunday of last week Mr. and Mrs Orville Khmdinst visited Mr. and Mrs. Le.-tei Rowland in Nappanee. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hannagen, having sold their home on route 1. Walkerton, hive moved into their recently purchased home at 611 Adams Street, Walkerton. Harold Ernsberger, route 1, Walkerton. who suffered a severe h'art attack on Wednesday of last week, is slowly recovering in Ba kv.cw Hospital. Plymouth. He is ut of intensive cai ? and can have visitors. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Murphy and Mrs. Alta Bov. ms spent the week end in Fort Wayne. Mr. an ! Mis. Murphy visited friends an 1 Mrs B wers visited with Mrs. Helen Stock who lives in the retirement homes built there. On Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. James Money visited Mrs. Gen Hjallquist, in Chicago. On Monday they entertained the following guests in their Koontz Lake home, Mr. and Mrs. E. Franks and Mr. and Mrs. J. Smith, of Fish Lake. They spend most of the year in Jennings Camp, Lake Wales, Florida. Other guests from Lake Wales were Mr. and Mrs. George Cartwright. Mrs. Newton Williams, Mrs. Russell Lawrence, Mrs. Harry Doll, Miss Dorothea Brenner, Mrs. Jacie Radamacher and Mrs. Vivian Hillis attended the Scottish Rite Ladies luncheon on Tuesday. October 2 in the South Bend Masonic Temple and enjoyed a pro. gram. "The Joy of Daring to Be Yourself," presented by Mrs. Rhyl, lis Brinkley, of Waunakee, Wise.
Mrs. Orville Klinedinst and Mrs. C. H. Mauer and son, of Wakarusa. were in Hobart on Sunday to visit with Mrs. Leota Lemut and daughters. Mrs. Frank Faimr, of Jackson, Miss., flew in t r th* wedding of her brother. L umy Savoie, and returned home on Tue-dav afternoon. Sharon Earner spent the long week end with h r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Savoie and other relatives. Albert and Bill Brenner and Miss Dorothea Brenner. Koontz Lake, were in Urbana, Illinois on Sunday to help their aunt celebrat 1 her 90th birthday and visit with other relatives from various places who had come for the celebration. Miss Linda Brown, of South Bend, and her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Brown, of Koontz Lake, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Schultz, of Hanna, were in Chi(ago on Sunday as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hopman and family. There were IS guests pies nt and Miss Margaret Kean, a former K<> ntz Lake resident, was assistant hostess. Gary Rensbergdf. of Roana, and Miss Sue Pammerlin, of Wa. bash, were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mr.s. Harold Rensberger, After their departure. Mr. and Mrs. Rusnell Betz and son, of Warsaw, called on the Rensbergers and also on Mr.s. Cora Betz. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ullery and Mrs. Lucy Ullery visited with Mr. ami Mrs. Howard Folk in Plymouth, on Sunday afternoon. They also stopped at the Pilgrim Manor Nursing Home to visit with Anthony Culp.
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SHE’S A LADY... and sh« loves it in ker nw narrow silhouette eoat from HBA. The tortoise dyed Swakara* broadtail lamb from South West Africa stays on the slim side with slit pockets, and a capelet bodice slit down the back. Detailing takes on small scale elegance: tiny bone buttons an,d a little snuggle of a * collar are all she needs.
TAKING THE WRAP, this year’s woman knows the value of the double-duty classic. By day, Ben Kahn’s polo coat in natural white Swakara* broadtail lamb from South West Africa covers casual sweater and pants uniform. At night,, the self belted wrap-around takes on increased importance over satin pants and shirt. ■ MMLr . • ■ * 'xir
Sunday was a most enjoyable day when 15 guests arrived to spend the day visiting in the home of Mrs. Bertha Urbin. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Herbcit Blue, Mis. Ethel Grubb, of Syiacuse; Mrs. Pearl Tice and Mis. Eliza! th Metzger, of Ligonier; Mr. and Mrs. Grover Jacksen and Mrs. Ruth Hughes, of South Bend; Mr. G. E. Metzger and Mr. and Mr.s. Robert Metzger, of Monticello; Mrs. Anna Allen, of Winamac; Mr. and Mrs. David Metzger and Fred Byers, of Kewanna. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Erdelyi and sons entertained Sunday at a pot luck dinner. Among their guests was Fred Lloyd, Yung Mai Kim and Allen, of El Paso, Texas, brother of Mis. Erdelyi. Also attending were Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Cripe and Kari; Mr. and Mis. Charles Lloyd and family; Mrs. Bob Holland and Andy Minnix and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dixon, all of Walkerton. Guests from LaPorte were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lloyd and ^.n-; Mr. and Mrs, Ri n Padgett and son; and Mr. and Mr.s. Bob Messick. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Ries? of Mill Creek and Mrs. Charles Baxter. Lloyd and Dot of Stillwell completed the guest list. Fred Lloyd is on leave from the Army and is spending a couple of weeks with his family and friends in the Walkerton area. Mr. and Mrs. James nook, Chicago. and her mother, Mrs. Fayette Dunn, returned on Friday evening after a seven day vaca. tion in the eastern part- of the United States. They visited Mr.
FIGURATIVELY SPEAKING
NEW YORK, N.Y. (ED)—The most revealing item to emerge from this year’s fashions is the new womanly figure. Women are no longer tents, layered in L wraps or weighted down with a 1 myriad of accessories. Instead, B fashions follow a woman’s shape, not vice versa. And one of the most surprising areas this is occurring in is furs. That’s not to say that the thick, opulent coats so dear to any woman’s heart are disap•pearing ... but the latest furs make a woman recognizably so ... even when she’s well wrap- . ped against winter winds. Today a woman can choose from as many fur shapes as dress shapes. And the fashion shapes, not surprisingly, are classic. Consider the sleek, It single-breasted coat with a slight flair from the waist, a u trim topper to wear town or L country with an evening skirt ^or pants; an elegant wrap|^^a round that ties you up warm
A WOMAN CAN NEVER BE TOO SKINNY...or too elegant ...as Bill Blass proves in his single-breasted coat for Re^illon. (Below) It’s pure sleek in brown-dyed Swakara* broadtail lamb from South West . Africa, detailed with slash pockets, panel front and a small, flat reefer collar...for luxurious body-hugging. ft 1 HR z A 1
and Mrs. Fred Harris, Charlette, North Carolina, and two nephews in Williamsburg and at Haggers. town, Maryland. They spent three days with Mrs. Dunn’s giandsons, Mr. and Mrs. Gaither Dunn and Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Dunn. A beautiful autumn trip through the country roads in the east and perfect weather made a most enjoyable trip. □ _ q hospital note s □ RECENTLY ADMITTED TO ST. JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND Mrs. Sarah Pehrson, Walker, ton. RECENTLY ADMITTED TO PARKVIEW. PLYMOUTH Harold Ernsberger, Walkerton, and Mrs. Lawrence Snyder, o£ North Liberty. RECENTLY ADMITTED TO LAPORTE HOSPITAL Mrs. Vera Amor, John Clemmons, Richard Hough, Mrs. James Perscnette, Mr.s. James Long, all of Walkerton; Mrs. Mathew Wiec. zork, Grovertown; Mr.s. Fred Shemman and Richard Michaels, of North Liberty. Freezoneis for corns that hurt Absolutely painless Nodangerouscutting, no ugly pads or plasters In days. Freezona eases the hurt safely helps ease off the corn. Drop on Freezone-take off corns. REMOVES G-X, ( CORNS ANO CALLUSES
... and more. Easy to work •with furs like Swakara* broadtail lamb from South West Africa offer limitless silhouette possibilities to designers — and they’re taking full advantage. Detailing is more important than ever in this year of tl 3 shape. And these coats have it. Slit pockets keep the lines of the coats slim, while capelet bodices, reefer and notched collars, and tiny bone buttons add to the feeling of eleganco on a small scale. All this luxury is practical, as well. Both topper and wrap coat do double-duty. Casual by day, they can be swathed around a pair of nifty gray flannel wide-legged pants and a turtleneck; then go elegant for evening with satin-pined pants and a satin surplice shirt. The single-breasted coat goes to meetings, theater-and-party hopping, while the classic narrow shape sails gracefully through all events. This fashion year is one of quiet impact, with a woman’s figure making a statement even before she removes her coat. And figuratively speaking, it should be interesting to watch.
THE PARED-DOWN TOPPER goes everywhere this year, showing off its new revealing shape. (Right) Designed by Pierre Cardin for Michael Forrest Furs, the hip-length doublebreasted jacket makes a dramatic splash in natural black and white Swakara* broadtail Lamb Xxom South West Africa.
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