Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 72, Number 52, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 21 July 1949 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
EAVESTROUGH and FIXTURES Galbreath Plbg. and Htg. FURNACE REPAIRING 756 E. WALNUT ST. PHONE 4083
What Is The /# Brannan Plan" What Does It Mean To You HEAR CARL K. KOHr] Production fir Marketing Adm. A. A. A. Thurs., July 28, 1949, 8.00 P. M. COMMUNITY ROOM Farm Bureau Hatchery GOSHEN, INDIANA SPONSORED BY Young Democrats of Elkhart County Admission - Free REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED
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HASTINGS NEWS ORGANIZATION MEETING Miss Shirley}- Kegebein was hostess on Tuesday evening to the organizing meeting of the Youth Fellowship. The Fellowship was organized according to the constitution provided by the church. Officers elected to serve until the end of the conference year were: Pres., Betty Hollar, Vice-Pres., Virginia Heckaman; Sec., Janet Weaver; Treas., Norma Fox. The Fellowship will meet this Thursday evening at the Community meeting room for the weekly study topic. Refresh■ments were served by the hostess. PROUD "PARENTS Mr. and Mrs. Loyal Haney, are the proud parents of a baby son, Robert Lee, born early Saturday morning. The Haney’s have four other chilren, Carolyn, Paul, Wayne and Donnie. Mrs. Bell Haney is the paternal grandmdther.' Miss Amanda Graber is assisting with the house work. Sunday School at 9:30 next Sunday and morning worship at 10:30 with Rev. Weaver bringing the message. “During the busy days of the summer months all need the rest that comes from an hour spent in worship. For the health of your body and soul we urge you to worship God each Sunday.” The Fellowship Convention of Indiana Conference will open on July 25 and continue till the 31st. Several plan to rent a cabin and stay full-time. Evangelistic services in the tabernacle begin each evening at 7:30. Rev. Leroy Geiger, Assembly president, will preside. Mr. and Mrs. John Rigaj, of Pennsylvania, spent last week with Mrs. Alma Stoltzfus and family and Ivan Yoder. Mrs. Stoltzfus and children returned home with her guests to visit relatives in Pennsylvania. Mr.
WMWWEE ADVANCE-NEWS. NAPPAKEE, INDIANA
and Mrs. Levi Kuhn and 2 sons and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Mullet, were Sunday afternoon guests at the Stoltzfus home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fox and Hazel Haney, were Friday evening supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hollar and daughter. Mrs. Kasper and son, of .Orlando, Fla. and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Kasper, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Tusing and family. Afternoon guests were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Baker, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Biller ancj Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Hollar. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Biller and daughter, of Michigan City, were Wednesday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Davis and James, overnight guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kendall Biller and daughter and spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Biller. Mrs. Floyd Tusing and Mrs. Harvey Hollar motored Mrs. Cloye Stone and children to their home in Peoria, 111., on Wednesday. Mrs. Stone had been visiting relatives since the first of June and was a Monday evening supper guest of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rumfelt. Mrs. Tusing and Mrs. Hollar returned home Thursday. HOOSIERS HELPED BY 4-H “BETTER METHODS” BY USE OF ELECTRICITY Lafayette, July 21—Time and motion studies are not tools of industry alone. In Indiana more than 300 farms have become proving grounds where boys and girls enrolled in the 1949 National 4-H Better Methods Electric Awards program are finding easier ways of doing a job according to the state club office at Purdue University. Everything from unloading grain to washing dishes is analyzed to save time and energy. The family and community alike benefit from more efficient practices developed through this activity. Guided by club leaders and county agents, 4-H members are “learning by doing” some of the 350 ways in which electricity is used on the farm. Doing the family wash, roasting a chicken, pumping water, milking cows and making minor electrical repairs are only a few examples of tasks the ’teenagers try to improve. And on farms where electricity is not ' available (about 5 percent), bet- j ter methods of doing everyday; chores are worked out and practiced. I Club members keep records of accomplishments and for | the best in each county, the I Westinghouse Educational Foun- ; daltion piresents a gold-filled j medal of honor. The state win- ; ner is given an educational trip to the National 4-H club Cong- j ress in Chicago, and to the six | top ranking members in the nation, S3OO scholarships are awarded. To the county in Indiana reporting the most outstanding 4-H better methods electric program, Westinghouse sends an appropriately inscribed plaque. j Lester Craig, of Greensfork, won the 1948 Wayne county and state awards. There were 19 other county medal winners. Marion county received the plaque. Aviation Pioneer First long distance flight in America was made in 1910 by Glenn H. Curtis of Hammondsport, N. Y.. from Albany to New York City
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Source of Don and Steel Minnesota The Gopher State
One small section of Minnesota the Mesabi produces most of America’s better grade iron ore. From Duluth great ships carry it to steel mills where electric furnaces smelt steel for razor blades and locomotive parts. Minnesota is also noted for its great flour mills and as being the home of the “Gcldeh Gophers'’ of Minnesota University. Perennially a top ranking football team of the country. First Whites to set foot in this territory were the French in 1659. The first settlement did not come until 1700 however. Many of the early pioneers could not stand the rigors of the severe Minnesota winters and perished. The first permanent settlement that really survived was at Fort Snelling. The state is also a popluar vacation ground for sportsmen, having plenty of both fish and game. Many lakes and streams dot the country side, the largest of these being Red Lake with more than 400 square miles of water. In 1858 the state consisting of 84,682 square miles of land, was admitted to the Union with St. Paul as the capital.
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CORNER STONE CLASS OF METHODIST CHURCH MET FRIDAY, JULY 15TH The Corner Stone class of the Methodist church, met on Fri- 1 day, July 15, at Center Lake I Park, at Warsaw, for a swin and j picnic. There were 30 guests present. The hostesses were: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ringenberg, Mr. j and Mrs. Roy Slagle and Mrs. Laurabelle Burt. End of Passenger Pigeon The- air once was filled with passenger pigeons—unlimited billions. Hunters shot them down by hundreds and then thousands in-every, new excursion. Eventually they exterminated them, not because of their food value, but because they made nice targets for gunfire.
NEWS NOTES AND PERSONAL ITEMS LUBRICATE YOUR CAR WITH THE NFW D-X GREASES BEECHLEY’S Mr. and Mrs. Russel Bailey and sons, were week-end guests of their parents, in Liberty, Ind., and Richmond, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Deisch, their son and daughter-in-law, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Virgil Deisch and daughters, of Leesburg. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Bleile and. daughters, of Ligonier and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Weldy and sons, of Nappanee, were Sunday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Msr. Jesse Bleile. George Henry Bock, spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bock. Sunday evening guests at the same place were Mr. and Mrs. Howard Bock, of Warsaw. Randy Best, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Best, spent from Tuesday to Sunday, with his grandparents, Mr. and ! Mrs. Vernon Neterer and daughter, Karen, at their cottage on Syracuse Lake. Meet Fannie Ward, the 70 year old beauty! Read “The Girl Who Wouldn’t Grow Old” in The American Weekly, the great magazine distributed with Sunday’s Chicago Herald-Amer-ican. Mr. and Mrs. Ulery Shively and daughter, Helen, left Sunday for a trip through the western states, national parks, Salt Lake City and other points of interest being places they will visit before returning home. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Byers and daughter, Marilyn, attended the John Ringenberg reunion in Rochester, Ind., on Sunday afternoon. There were 100 guests present. Sunday evening the Byrers were guests of her brother, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Burkeypile, at their cottage on Tippecanoe River. Mr. and Mrs. M. S, Pletcher, entertained Mr. and Mrs. Asher Culp, of Tampa, Fla., on Saturday evening at their lake cottage on Syracuse. The Pletcher’s have received a letter from their daughtr, Carol, who is on a ten weeks conducted tour and she is now in Basel, Switzerland and writes that she is enjoying the trip to the fullest extent. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Ruple, returned last week from a trip out west. Mr. Ruple visited the Reinhardt ranch, in Sterling, Colo., where he worked as a cowboy when he was a young man They also visited Mrs. Ruple’s brother, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ganger and son, at Colorado Springs. Returning home through Yellowstone Park and the Black Hills.
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THURSDAY. JULY 21. 1949
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