The Independent-News, Volume 100, Number 36, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 4 April 1974 — Page 4

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— THE INDEPENDENT-NEW* — APRIL L UH*

JOHN GLENN SPRING SPORTS SCHEDULES The baseball, golf and track s<. nedules for John Glenn High iiool h t\< lM*vn announced as 1 JoWto. i b.t.'hBALL A PRIL 2 Mishawaka 4:00 H 3 Divine Heart 4:15 r 5 S B. Jackson 4:15 T 8 Culver 4:30 H 10 North Judson 4.15 H 11 Plymouth 4:15 H 15 J untown 4.30 H 16 Argos 4:30 H ]' New Prairie 4:00 T 22 Fairfield 4:30 H 24 Triton 4:15 T 25 LaVille 4:15 H 27 Oregon-Davis (DH i 12:30 1 29 North Liberty 4:15 T MAY 1 Rochester 4:30 H 2 Jimtown 4:30 T 4 Peru (DH) 1:00 H 6 New Pran ie 4:00 H 8 LaLumiere 4:15 H 9 Fairfield 4:30 T 11 Mish Harun (DH) 12:30 H 13 LaVille 4:15 T 16 North Liberty 4:15 H 17 Bresnen 4:00 T 20 23 NSC Playoffs 2 s Sectional TKAC K APRIL 8 Triton 4:30 T 10 Westville 4:30 T 16 South Central 4:00 T ]' New Prairie 4:00 H 22 Argos 4:30 T 23 Lancer Relays (LaVille) 6:00 25 North Liberty 4:15 H 30 LaLumiere, S. Central 4:15 T M A Y 2 Fairfield 4:30 T b Jimtown 4:30 T 9 LaVille 4:15 H 10 Oregon-Davis 4:30 T i 4 NSC Conference Meet jo Sectional 20 County Meet GOLF F PRTL 8 Oregon-Davis 4:30 H 10 'Triton 4:15 T

16TH ANNUAL PRESENTATION OF THE PASSION PLAY By The Cedar Road Missonary Church Osceola, Indiana At The Penn High School Auditorium Mishawaka, Indiana SI NDAY. APRIL 7. 2:80 — 'GOOD FRIDAY. APRIL |2. 7:00 SAT., APRIL 13. 7:00 — EASTER SI NDAY. APRIL 14, 7:00

Meat Packages Explain ‘Freshness Date’

Consumers were thrilled when meat processors began putting “freshness dates" on their packages of luncheon meat, frankfurts and sausage several years ago. The dates, imprinted at the processing plant, gave the shopfier an in dicatMm of the freshness of ihe product. I liere was one .problem, hflen nt i<’< < es-i>rs chose different m inner- of expressing he date, and no one was completeiv mire what each date meant Peter Eckrich and Suns, me . a major meat sjM-cialtv processor, is the first m the meat industry to print an explanation of their date right •n the package 1 he date no longer stands •done It is pre< eded bv the statement JI IL FLAVOR 7 DAYS BEYOND . . .” meaning the shopper is awStired that the Eckrich product she buys, refrigsrate* pro|M rlx, and does not *>f>en, remains at iu j>e ik of freshnesM and flavor for a full v»-ek lollop ing the date imprinted. " realized that the date ’•v itself did not help the consumer much as she tr.ed to make imjiortant shoppmt and meal planning de< -aid Lwrrn E Gelow, Eckrich Vice president ‘ The new explanation state-

16 Northwood 4:15 H 25 L'Vil’.e 4:00 H 26 LaSalle 3:00 T 29 Culver 4:00 T MA Y 1 Bremen 4:15 H 2 Fain .eld 4:15 T 3 County 1:00 H 6 SB Jackson 3:00 T 8 South Central 4:15 T 9 Nt w Prairie 4:00 T 11 New Prairie Invit. 9:00 T 13 Aigcs 4:00 T 14 Plymouth 4:00 T 16 North Liberty 4:00 H 20 Hobart ’ 3:30 H 21 Elkhart Memorial 3:00 T 22 Rochester 4:00 H 23 Jimtown 4:30 T 2s NSC Conference JUNE 4 Sectional Hi.me matches are played at Swan Lake. LEG? NOTICE O’ I’l BLIC HEARISC NoVee is nereny give. that the Local Alcoholic Bev or age Board of St Jos ph County md:ana. will at 10:00 on the 17 day of Api:l, 1974, at the "omni ssiom rs Room, Cour* House m the C.ty of South Bend. Indian i in said County beg.n invest. gat:on of the app ication of the following named persons, ro questing the issue of the applicant at the location hereinafter set o it of Lie A'coholic Beverage Perm t of tne class hereinafter designated and will, at said time and p ace. receive information concerning the fitness of said apGas and heartbum? • Di Gel contains a unique antigas ingredient, Simethicone. • This unique discovery breaks up and removes painful gas-bubbles. Your relief is more complete because Di-Gel takes the acid and the gas out of acid indigestion. Got Di-Gel tablets or liquid today. Product of Plough, Inc. *

1 "o’- . ment was designed to re hex e her liHoerPwnty wlxiut the meaning of ths- package freshness date." All but a half dozen of the .5 pre packaged Eckrich meat jiroducts now cam- the expl inatiun wLifrmvnt '1 he rest will soon include it Headquartered in Fort " r ne Indiana. Eckrich markeU ;:» pr'iduct Lne through<a,' the Midwest, m the states < f 1 • x is and Oklahoma, and in *’i h other n cimpolhan Atlanta Baltimore, Buffalo UhMtanwoga. Kansas * its I oui-xii|p. PhfM-ntx, Pittsburgh. St Louw and *’ ashmgton, D C

plicant and the propriety of issuing the peiniit applied for to such applicant at the premises named: RR7L13053 Indiana Royal Knight Inc., C, Oberlin, Pres., South Bend; G. Oberlin, Sec., South Bend. 114 Ireland Rd., South Bend, Ind. — Liguor, Beer and Wine Retailer. SAID INVEST IGATfON WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By ARTHUR R. ROBINSON

IKENOS IN FEDERAL DOLLAR DDTLAYS 1955 1975 (Estimate) HUMAM INO HUMAN AND NATIONAL PHYSICAL NATIONAI PHYSICAL DEFENSE RESOURCES spACE RESEARCH DEFENSE RESOURCES \ \ ANO TECHNOLOGY / / 29.4% \\ \ j\ 58.0% j J* other I GOVERNMENT SPACE RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY .1% Between the post-Korean War year of 1955 and the post-Vietnam War fiscal year of 1975 the U. S. has achieved a complete reversal of national emphasis in its budgeting for Federal dollar outlays. National Defense has declined from • 58.7 percent to 28.8 percent of the Federal budget, trading places with the Human and Physical Resources sector which has grown from 29.4 percent in 1955 to planned outlays of 58.0 percent in Fiscal Year 1975, beginning this July. Looking at it another way, proposed U. S. defense outlays for the new year represent about 6 percent of the estimated $1.4 trillion Gross National Product (GNP). Recent reports place current Soviet arms spending at about 40 percent of the U. S. S. R.'s GNP. (The Human and Physical Resources sector covers education and manpower, health, income security, veterans benefits and services, agriculture and rural development, natural resources and environment, commerce and transportation, community develooment and housing. Some Rural Road Signs To Vanish

One of the latest demonstrations of environmental concern by a major agricultural firm is the Asgrow Seed Company’s decision to minimize the placement of their signs along public roads and highways. • Tho company will place signs only to mark test plot locations, and to identify dealers in the future, according to Bill Schapaugh, general manager of the firm’s agronomic division. Previously, salesmen and dealers often placed signs where crops were planted with the company’s seed along well-traveled thoroughfares, Schapaugh says. This amounted to thousands of signs around the country. “Although some states are taking action to prohibit or limit placement of signs along public roads, such signs remain legal in many areas,” Schapaugh explains. “However, we feel that the trend to scenic beautification is dear and we plan to help lead in supporting this cause on a voluntary basis.” In the past, Asgrow has Used three types of signs, including dealer identification signs, small signs for crop variety identification, and larger (40" x 48”) road signs containing the familiar company trademark. In the future, these road signs and crop identification signs will Im> limited to educational crop demonstration locations. Only the dealer identification signs will iw- used as before.

Executive Secretary JAMES D. SIMS Chairman While lecturing the Sunday schoolers on the nature of sin and damnation, we rural minister asked one lad: "Do you know where little boys and girls go when they do bad things?” Harry: "Do you know what they call a man who doesn't believe in birth control?” John: “No, wnaTf” Harry: "Daddy.’’

I . fr7T|^ '• X* "fes ml- a- '‘J r\ : BEFORE X, ? l think that I shall never see A billboard lovely as a tree. Perhaps, unless the billboards fall, I'll never see a tree at all. —Ogden Nash These t«o drawings illustrate what has happened to the scenery along much of America's roadways and what the landscape could look like again if the road signs were removed.

r Cu y b-^ ~ Ut ^l TRADE- | _ J YOUR OWN HORN in The Advei 3ung 2olumo« I OF THIS NEWSPAPER * I>■ * —■■ WMF. ■ - ■■ I