The Independent-News, Volume 100, Number 43, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 23 May 1974 — Page 4
.- — _ — THE INDEPENDENTNKWS — MAT U 1*74
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1 ’Mi and Mrs. Ja-per Price, of ^asa Grande. Arizona, are spend. 'o2' this week with her parents, tyr. ind Mrs. Arno Reed and oth,!i relatives. i •’ Mrs. Edna Teegarden, of Mar. on, recently visited her mother, ^hs. Ethel Crothers. . Mrs Fred DeC mdres and Mrs. Sari Packer spent the week end hf May 11 with Mrs. DeCoudres’ aunt. Mrs. Jessie Cushman, m iulhvvn. ' Mr. and Mrs. Walter Strope have returned home after visiting Mr. and Mrs. George Worley and family. Mr. md Mrs. William ’’Strope and family and Mr. and ’ill's Philip Blown and daug/t:r. of Bolivar. Tennessee. They also attended their grandson’s graduation Dennis Strope. Ml. and Mrs. Elmer Kaiser, of Plymouth, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kaiser, of Walkerton. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sha‘ w °r, Bremen. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Bosworth, Clear. Water, Fla., and Mrs. Fred Biggs, South Bend, were Sunday 'dinner guests of Mrs. Sterling Amm. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper Price, of Arizona, called on Mr. and Mrs. Hirry Clark last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Gale Merrier, South Bend, called on Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Sheneman last Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Roush, 3^796 Pulling St., South Bend, are flie parents of a son born on May b in Memorial Hosp.tai. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard K’ust and great-grandmother, Mrs. Lulu Roush.
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500 Field Ready for Green Flag
N fd«t field of veterans and ookies is ready for the green flag at the start of the 58th anr rual Indianapolis 500-mile race Sunday at 11 o’clock. < ! Three-time winner A.J. Foyt . of Texas, participating in his Mth Indianapolis speed classic, •heads the list of veterans which includes several other former * winners. Foyt outclassed all first-day qualifiers by almost two miles an hour with a fourlap average of 191.632 miles an hour and is regarded as “the uan to beat” by most members ?f the racing fraternity. Leading the rookie contingent .3 Tom Sneva of Sprague, Wash., ,vho topped all other newcomers among early qualifiers with a nark of 185.K7. The traditional drivers meeting for all 33 contenders in the siaHAtfig lineup is scheduled for 11 o’clock Saturday morning and the colorful downtown 500 Festival parade of colorful floats and marching bands will follow at 1 o’clock i Gates to the grounds on Sun- । day morning will be opened at 5 o’clock to accommodate another huge Race Day throng of approximately 30C.000 spectators and ceremonies on the track will , get under way at 9 o’clock. ■ Andrea McCall, queen of the 500 Festival, will lead the cavalcade of celebrities from the entertainment world; and the band
Mrs. Maude Pearse spent the wet k en I with Mr. an i Mrs. Richard Glover, in Warsaw. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hornung have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rauen and other relatives. The H irnungs are fr m Sebring. Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rauen vis.ted Mi and Mrs. Lynn Phegley at LaCrosse on Sunday Mrs. Ida Kurzhal spent last week with her sister. Mrs. Edith Reason, in South Bend. Mr. and Mrs Harvev Sheneman called on Mrs. Russell Clark Sunday afternoon Clem Mamerow is a surgical patient in St. Joseph Hospital, Mishawaka. Mr. and Mrs. Merle Zimmerman and friend, Jean Troop, of Fort Wayne, spent the week end with Mrs. Hammaker and attended the graduation of Edwardo Singuenzo! from LaViMe High School, who is an exchange student from El Salvador, Central America. His host parents are Mr. and Mrs. Everett Huff and sons Tom and Steve, of Lake, ville, who held an open house for Edwardo who received many lovely gifts. Mrs. Charles Hammaker attended the ceremony and open house along with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Singuenzo, of El Salvador; his aunt,.Miss Isabell Singuenzo, Cleveland. Ohio; and she is an exchange teacher from Ei Salvador. Fisherman —One jerk on the end of a line waiting for a jerk on the other end.
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m’. It- / FF.. ' 'll I r । J Ml "wm.M , I US ^2 • - 1 A.J. Foyt, seeking his fourth Indianapolis “56b” victory, ranks as . one of the top favorites in the 58th annual running of the milUo*. , dollar event Sunday.
spectacle, headed by Purdue University’s famous All-Ameri- ’ can group, will include marching ‘ units representing all areas of । the United States. The ceremonies will reach. ' I their climax with a fast-moving series of events as follows: Our National Anthem, Purdue band, ; 10:40; invocation by Dr. Ray • Montgomery, 10:43; “Taps,” ■ combined U.S. Armed Forces I Color Guard, 10:45; balloon spec-
TO -HOST SOUTH BEND CLUB On May 29, the Liberty Belles. North Liberty Extension Homemaker's Club, will host.Normain Homemakers of South Bend for a lecture at the Potpourri in South Bend, after which both clubs will have ’refreshments at Farrell's in Scottsdale Mall. , _ North Liberty Schools MAY 28* - 31 TUESDAY Bart ecue frank on bun Buttered corn Crispy cole slaw Chiled appe sauce Chocolate brownie Milk WEDNESDAY' Macaroni and meat Crispy lettuce with 1,000 island dressing Yammy muffin Banana pudding Milk THURSDAY Sw*i.ss steak in sauce Fluffy whipped otatoes Spring salad AssorlV bread and butter Birthday cake Milk * ' FRIDAY Polish smoky snax on warm bun Oven baked beans Cris relishes Cinderella cake Chocolate or white |iillc I e® r- ?/ HOMELITE XL-2 CHAIN SAW TWO TRIGGERS ONE for big cutting jobs ONE for little pruning jobs LIGHTWEIGHT • POWERFUL • RUGGED omysng.ss * MANUI*CTU«H S SUGGESTED HiCE J, -h | Look for your loc»l Homollto J I Oealor in th« YELLOW PAGES. f
taele and “Back Home Again tn Indiana," Jim Nabors, vocalist, 10:45; and Tony Hulman’s electrifying command “Gentlemen Start Your Engines” at 10:53. The field of 33 in quest of prize money totalling more than a million dollars, will pull away from , the line on the parade lap behind the beautiful Hurst Olds pace car at 10:54 and Uien swing into the pace lap for the “flying •tart” at 11 o'clock.
TO PARTICIPATE IN CONFERENCE
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Rev. Frank Hartwig, Mid-West field representative for the Association of Baptists for World Evangelism, will participate in a Missionary Conference at the First Baptist Church, 407 W. Elm St., North Liberty, Thursday through Sunday, May 23 - 26 at 7:00 p.m. nightly. Rev. and Mrs. Hartwig have a heait for foreign missions in their ministry in the heart of America. Recruiting missionaries and uiferming chinches about the great f< reign missions task make up the major portion of Frank's ministry as Mid-West representative. Almost ten years of ministry in the pastorate with ar. emphasis on youth followed by ever six years ci ministry as a missionary fc.m the background for a know!, edgeable and enthusiastic ministry of challenge in the churches, camps, and schools in the five state area of Wisconsin, Michigan. Illinois, Indiana and Ohio. The public is cordially mvited to attend these conferences.
