The Independent-News, Volume 101, Number 9, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 26 September 1974 — Page 8

8

— THE INDEPENDENT-NEWS — SEPTEMBER 26, 1974

Perfect Harmony Theme For Style t Show Oct. 23 ’ The theme Perfect Harmony was chosen for the October 23 MMe show of the St. Patrick man's Chfh to be held at the St. Patrick School Hall beginning at 7:30 p.m. Mrs Richard Kwieran and Mrs. Frank Sailor are co. chaidmen. Montgomery Wards, of Scot sdale Mall. South B*nd, will provide tht many fashions of ipn. women and children's clothing for the 18th annual show in Walkerton. Other chairmen of committees include: Mrs. John Cowger, tickets Mrs. Letter Bierly. door prizes Mrs. Michael Kochanowski, pub-Jic-ty and models Mrs. Alex Laskowski, posters ' Mrs. Don Wray, narrator Mrs. Richard Kwieran, table prizes Mrs. Frank Sailor, special prizes Mrs. William Carter, pianist Miss Denise Groves, vocal soJoist Mrs. Tom Walsh and Mrs. Hei. en Kochanowski. cashiers Mrs. Charles Lloyd, hostesses Mrs. Harley Mangus, decora, tions Mrs. Larry Turner, tables Catherine Keefe, salad bar — | NOTICE OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS 4 Notice is hereby given tne taxpayers of Marshall. St. Joseph, LaPorte Counties. Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipal corpordt-on at their regular meeting place at 7:30 p.m. on the Ist of Octa er, 1974, will consider the following additional appropriations which said officers consider necessary at this t-me. To be transferred from CumUlative Building Fund to John Glenn High School Remodeling Fund, Project No. 5676, $17,000. Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have a right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commit, saoners, which board will held a further hearing within fifteen days at the County Auditor's office of said county, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting to any of such additional appropr.ations may be heard. Interested taxpayers may inquire of the county auditor when and where such hearing will be held. Board of School Trustees Polk-Lincoln Johnson School Corporation Joseph D. Botorff, President Earl L. Smith, Man-in L. Bouse, ' Lynn L. Stull William E. Ocha 2ta25 LOCAL RESIDENT NAMED TO COLLEGE CHOIR Professor William Spade, chair, man of the Fine Arts department at Bethel College released the Hat of members of the -974-75 Concert Choir. All Bethel atu. dents interested in ainging in the

If You Want An Old Fashioned Soda Or A Snack and Coffee You'll Want JACOB drugs Walkerton

choir auditioned during the first two weeks of school. Mr. Wayne Feece, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Feece, route 3. Walkerton, a sophomore at Bethel, i> a second tenor with the choir. The choir w.ll perform under the direction of Professor Spade for the pwblic after several weeks of rehearsal. Their traditional performance of the Messiah will be given in early December. Their annual tour is in the plan, ning stage and w.ll be in January this year. □ □ OBIT CARIES □ > □ Mrs. May me Harbaugh Mr-. Ma\me Han augh, 88, who lived on Stanton Road. North Lib. erton, died at 7 ;30 a m Friday at South Bend's St. Joseph Has. pit al after an illness of two weeks. Born July 10, 18S6, at Hutchin, son, Kansas, she lived most of her life in St. Joseph County. She was married March 19. 1910, at South Bend, to Dwight Harbaugh, who preceded her in death Aug. ust 15, 1973, She was a member of the Pine Creek Church of the Brethren. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. John Boyer, South Bend; Mrs. Marvin Osmon, Mishawaka; and Mrs. Virgil Anderson, West Lafayette; eight grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; and one brother. Harry Schrool, Hutchin, son. Kansas. Services were conducted at 2:00 p.m. Sunday at the Pine Creek Church of the Brethren with Rev. Michael Hodson, pa«tor, officiat*ng. Burial was at Fair Ceme. tery, North Liberty. SHAMROCKS HOLD TRITON ON LAST PLAY FOR WIN The North Liberty Shamrocks were successful in stoppmg a run. ning attempt for two points on a conversion try after the clock had stopped that meant cither victory or defeat Saturday night as they held on after some late game heroics by Triton to win a thrilLng 13-12 game. The victory was their second in four out. ings this year and was played on a wet Jackson field with light rain falling during most of the contest. NL Statistics T 8 First Downs 7 122 Ru’hing 78 31 Pass.ng 121 4 Passes Attempted 8 1 Passes Completed 5 2 Had Intercepted 0 4 Punts 5 28 Average Yards 28 2 Fumbles 2 1 Fumbles Lost 2 60 Yards Penalised 40 u The late game heroics were set up with only 20 seconds left in the game when North Liberty was unable to run out the clock but Triton was still 43 yards away, w.th time almost elapsed. De. spite a prevent defense against the pass, a Brad Beagle to Bill Blackford pass gained 15 yards and a momentary clock stoppage while the chains were being ad. vanced. This gave the Trojans

enough time to line up and get another desperation play under way as time ran out while the , play unfolded. Despite the piecautions, Beagle hit Blackford with a bomb in the end zone, the desperation pass pulling the Trojans Within one point, 13-12. Then came the series of import, ant decisions. Do the} go tor a tie and force overtime or do they go for the win with a play fiom s< rimmage rather than the one. point kick. They decided to go for broke and a running play was .--topped ty the Shamrock defen.se to end the heartbreaking loss for Tnton and the happy victory for North Liberty. The field dictated a lot of the style of play in this game as a wet and slippery gridiron made playing hard for b.«th sides. An early break got the scoring start, ed. The Shamrocks received ami after they weren’t able t * sus. tain a dr.ve, punted. Triton put on an early threat of moving the ball and were advancing it with normal plays until a pitchout was errant by Triton and Paul Annis picked up the loose bail and ran unmolested 43 yards into the end zone for the score with 5:22 left to play in quarter number one. A try for the extra point from placement by George Efstrth.ades was good and at the time no one could realize how big this one point would be. Lightning struck again for the Shamrocks in their favor as the kick off was not a clean one and the short kick was fielded by a Triton Lneman who, when hit, was unable to hold the ball and the loose pig-kin was covered ty the Shamrocks. From here it was a six play effort that produced the second fast score and the final yard was gained by Don Stull, who a couple of p'.ays before had' break loose for 29 tig yanks. On this score the extra point was missed but a fa«t two touchdown had a 13-0 lead on the board for North Liberty. The play settled dowM to the more normal style on a slightly hazardous field and remained at the 13-0 score through the half and into the third period when another turnover was instrumental in getting more points on the board. Triton intercepted an er. rant Shamrock pass and returned it to the North Liberty 47. it took just one play as Triton was able to immediately take advan. tage of the turnover. Beagle put a bomb in the air that found his receiver a step ahead of the de. fensive man and Don Chapman pulled the ball w.th clear sail, ing into the end zone for the first score by the Trojans. They mis. sed the conversion try and trail, ed by seven in the third period. Triton kept a httle pressure on as they seemed to gain a little advantage after their score to eventually get the situation down to the climatic final minutes. The Scoring NORTH LIBERTY: Paul An. nis, 43 yard run with recovered fumble; PAT: George Efstathi. adas, kick NORTH LIBERTY: Don Stull, 1 yard run; PAT: failed TRITON: Don Chapman, 47 yard pass from Brad Beagle; PAT: faded TRITON: Bill Blackford, 28 yard pass from Brad Beagle; PAT: failed Score By Quarters Triton 0 0 6 6 — 12 North Li erty 13 0 0 0 — 13 □ n CAF D H O F TH A * < 3 □ The family of Amelia Harrison wi he* to thank their friends and relatives for the cards and other acta of kindness shown during the recent loss of our loved one. 8.1 l and June Baker John and Virginia Bowmar EMBARRASSING, burning Itching? 7FMO relieves itching fast because its special ‘anti-itch’ medication *oothes inflamed surface ti-sucs ( »et relief with the first appheatum of soothing, medicated zEMO-omt. meat or Liquid. ejVlaAk/

IN WHO’S WHO Who’s Who Among American H gh School Students honors Miss Denise GHssman, former Walker, ton resident, who is a senior at Ancilla Domini High School now of Plymouth. Miss Gli-snian was notified lecently that she is to be featured .n the Eighth Annual Edition of the large 4 student award publication in the nation. Miss Glissman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Gliss. man, route 3. Plymouth. She at. tended Hoosier Girls’ State in 1974 and is acLve in mission and bazaar work, community service and enjoys the arts; sewing and hmses as her hobbies. In addition to her senior work at Ancilla she is beginning her college work abo at Ancilla College, majoring in pre-pharmacy courses. She has maintained high honor work and is past winner of several Re. gional Science Fair awards, home economics and 4-H dress revue honors and has received the Ser. ra International Vocational Essay first place award. Denise will also compete for one of 10 schol. arship awards of SSOO to SI,OOO funded ty the publishers and will be invited to participate in the firm’s annual Survey of High Achievers. Denise plans to con. t nue and attend Ancilla College upon her graduation in June. WOMAN’S CLUB TO MEET The St. Patrick Women’s Club of Walkerton will meet Wednes. day, October 2at 7:30 pm. in fit. Patrick School Hall. A candle, light ceremony will install the 1974-75 officers of the organizetlon. They are the following: Mrs. Alex Laskowski, president; Mrs. Frank Jackson, vice-presi.

Dr. Elliott Fraah, Optometrist I 418 Michigan Stibet Walkerton. Indiana S Phone SM-3TB HOURS; Ev«ry Other Monday Afternoon 1:00 • 5:30 Ail Day On Thursdays 9:30 • 5:80 ‘luaiiuwtiMMuiiHiiMMumiHuaihtiiitiiiinftn^^ inmumui oaiMSMalwwNiaaMMi'n jiiOiiiiiiiunt»uuiitwtQrmmuiouimmiia)uiiii;wmiimiiNaiiuiHiimaiHiin'uiicjniiuuiOiiiiiiiiin^ I MAX E. STEELE INSURANCE iLenro Building, North liberty gtW^ltt Bea Pbm* MO-4MI r OUR POLICY News articles must be submitted by 1:00 pm. on Tuesdays. Duplay advertising mu*t tr in our office as follows: Any size less than one page —by 11:00 a m Tuesday*. Page or larger, less than a double truck —by 5:00 pm on Mondays. Double truck (2 pages) —by 11:00 am. on Mondays. Any advertisement on which proof must be supplied the customer -by 9:00 a.m. on Mondays. Classified ads must be submitted by 1:00 pm. on Tuesdays Minimum charge Si 25 for first 25 words. 2c a word thereafter ^t^eds will not be taken over the phone or will not be charged. Pictures submitted may be picked up fellowing the edition ® t. at they appear. A.! notices stating a pay.ng event will be a paid notice. (If I J u charge, we chargr.) trds of thanks and memoriunvi are SI (X).

dent; Mrs. John Shields, secre. tary; and Mrs. Al Klinger, treas. urer. Entertainment will be a pei. formance by the Dixie Walk* Square Dance group. The grou will conduct an audience parth pation lesson on basic squat dance movements. Hostesses for the event at* Mrs. Donald Wray, Mrs. Lest* . Bieily, Mrs. Thomas Chamberlai and Mis. Carl Christensen. Five Generations fittiittb - -BLS > \ jgg Pictured above arc five genet . tions with Mrs. Nellie Stickler great-great-grandmother. age so Standing in the front at the h and beside her is great-gran mother, Mrs. Thelma Watts, hoi - ing her great granddaught* Aaron McG*-e, who is six montl old. In the back row left ’ * right is Barbara MeGee. moth* of little Aaron, and Mis. Neil • Smith, grandmother. ANNUAL CONVENTION OF 13TH DISTRICT IFC OCTOBER 1 The 64th annual convention < I the 13th District IFC will I held October 2, 1974, at the Hi! . crest I’n.ted Methodist Church or Pahs Road. Michigan City. Mr.Raymond Harris, of Mishawaka will be the principal speaker Registration will begin at B:3‘ am. Rolls and coffee will l< served. There will be a craft display and all clubs are invited to pai ticipate. At hast one or tv enrtries from each club will cr. hance the exhibit. The Key word of all Feder * tion themes for 1974-76 Is "Ur ty.” A large attendance w ! show the 13th District banded t * gether for Unified Service.