Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 85, Number 13, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 5 October 1961 — Page 8
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Pauline Slabaugh. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Sunday dinner guests ftfVßev. and Mrs. J. P. Reid and daughters of Warsaw. © ;'*• A carry-in farewell w'as
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DOUBLE MAIN EVENT Pat O'Connor vs Angelo Potto Fritz Von Erich vs Bill Melby Bronco Lubich ve Hercules Cortez NAPPANEE COMMUNITY BLDG. Sponsored by American Legion Post 154 Ringside Reserved $2.00 General Admission-$1.50 Children 50c All Prices Tax Included Tickets At Door Far Ringside Reserved Phone Nap 3992 or 29 after 6:30
Your Mercury dealer asks: in which size car do you want your value?
’62-MERCURY COMEt/ j/|J V ... smartly ahead of the j If | \ compact erowd... ir " Bvi fi \ ill& OAA *62 MERCURY MONTEREY m ~V\ m? ... best-looking buy for the big-ear man . " • 1 i&jjj& ft& % , : >^ JIV : rum v. |r ||§|||l|| I Jr \ HH ]j>m]<wapf’< t\ IHllllbbblmbk^mhr SMBSam -fff^BßKrf -y^hl Ipßr’?W|HHßny-4Wwi. (jri I /^^^^^aaaJaaMaaM —MalL-SWKI. 1i MB M
Get your answer in dur showroom now mi A 1962 upturn AT UR ANNOUNCEMENT SHOWING. 18 CARS GIVEN AWAY. 12,80 PARES IN ALU (See your Mercury dealer and discover oew you cud win one ol these fabulous prism. Now to October 14), MARTY & TED, INC U.S. 6 East Nsppame, Ind.
given in honor of Mrs. Katie Slabaugh, Wednesday, who moved from her Burlington home to near Etna Green where she will live with her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Qra Mast* \ Present were; Mr, andMrs: Isaac Miller, Mir. and ifWd Levi ; Hochstetler, Mr: and Mrs: Sami Jollier, Mrs? Martas Miller fold Rosie, Mrs. Monroe Hochscetler, Mrs. Mose Miller, Mrs. Oscar Helinuth, Mrs. Lizzie iSichpucker, Mrs. Harvey Siahaugh. Mrs. Edward Burkholder, Mrs. Davy Miller, Mrs. Katie HfefiSjlberger, Mb*. Ezra Hershberger, Mrs. Lsaar, Hershberger and Mrs. Bobby' Slabaugh called in the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Owen C. Stine of Bremen were t Monday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. La Verb Hollar, .Gary Paul: ; Mr. and Mis. Jacob Hochstetler were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kauffman. In the
Nappanee Theatre Nappanee Doors Open 6:45 PH. Over at 9:00 Performance Repeated 2 Shows Effh Nite Fri. & Sat. Oct. 6 and 7 "Snow White & the Three Stooges'
Friday, Saturday & Sunday October 6-7-8 2 - Hits In Color • 2 "PEPE" starring Cantinflas Also Glenn Ford - Donald O'Connor in "CRY FOR HAPPY" 0 SATURDAY FAMILY TREAT NIGHT Added 2 Guest Features Open 6:30 First Show At 7:00
evading they called on the Jerry Hochstetlers of Middlebury. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Shrock, Marion and Carl of Goshen and Mable Mast were last Sunday supper guests of tine Levi Slabaughs. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Strang of Nappanee .and Mr. and Mrs, - George Graham were Sunday afternoon callers of Mr. and Mrs. De’Vaun Watkins and family. i Sunday afternoon callers of Pete Millers were EH P. Hershbergers, Jacob .Hershbergers, and. Mrs. Susan Ssjfrartzentruber of Holmes Cos., Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kaiser were Thursday evening callers of Mr. and, Mrs. Max Watkins. Davy and Delton - Schrock spent Thursday with their grandparents, the Levi Slabaughs, while their parents, the Melvin Schrocks, went to the farm show at Rensselaer. Norma and Jr. Miller and Marion Schrock were Sunday dinner guests of Judy Slabaugh. Last week callers of Henry Watkins were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Strang, Mrs. Glen McDonald, and Ernest Watkins. Mr. and Mrs. Harley R. Miller, Milford, Mrs. Levi Slabaugh, Mrs. Henry Mullet and Mark and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Miller spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Polichek and family of Engadine, Michigan north of the Mackinac Bridge. Mrs. Polichek is a niece of Mrs. Sam Miller. She is the former Elizabeth Schmucker of White Cloud, Michigan.
WHAT'S TRUMP EUCHRE CLUB What’s Trump Euchre Club met at the, home of Mrs. Ruby Schultz, Sept. 26, with two guests pres°nt, Mrs. Marlene Hep 1e r and Mrs. Pearl Pletcher. Prizes won were Mrs. JoAnn Method, high; Mrs. tylidge Adams, traveling; and Mrs. Marge Adams, low. Mrs. Marge Adams will be hostess to the October meeting. MEETING CALLED OFF Nappanee Camp Fire Board meeting which was to be held October 9th, has been canceled.
Cool - BREMEN THEATRE - Cool THUR - FRI - SAT - SUN - MON - TUES. Open Sunday 2:45 See Irwin Allens Thriller, Aboard The New Atomic Sub, Under Polar Ice Cap. 'Voyage To The Bottom Os The Sea' ' in Technicolor with Walter Pidgson • Joan Fontaine Peter Lorre - Robert Sterling - Frankie Avalon Also Really Big Act Clowij Jewels Coming Oct. 12 to Oct. 21 "Ben-Hgr", One Show Each Night at|7:ls.
MY TRIP ABROAD I
by Rita Myers Pork & Geneva Fitting Finish to Beautiful Trip What can anyone write about Paris? Each traveler must discover Paris for himself. We arrived there at the end of our trip, utterly exhausted and in black moods after a whole day of bumpy plane riding in the rain from Belgrade to Zagreb to Munich and Paris. Driving thru the grimy, depressing outskirts of the city, I felt that the French could keep Paris. It looked dirty, drab, and supremely uninteresting. But it took only a fey: minutes out in the sunshine the next morning to change indifference to infatuation. Someone wrote of Paris, “There is an airiness abroad in the city ... a sense of elegance in the vistas. Everything delights the eye.” For two jam-packed days we were delighted with this lovely piace where the names of streets and buildings have a special ring: Arc de Triomphe, Champs d’Elysee, Place de la Concorde, the Sorbonne, the Seine, the Louvre, the Tuilleries, Rue de la Paix and many more.
fnv *ti <oht ainvators to fhr top of the Eiffel to see *- - - .kO turning into central plazas far below;' rushed thru the Louvre; drank in the view in every direction from the Arc; went to a lavish night club; walked in the wide boulevards; and ate a perfect and very fattening lunch of melon, snails, coq au vin, wonderful bread, chocolate cake, and strawberries witth thick sour cream in a small side-street restaurant. For the first time in Europe, I could understand the language Os it was spoken one sentence at a time) and felt my four years of high school French was* justified when I was actually able to converse with taxi drivers and chambermaids.
NO SHOPPING One thing I did not have time for was shopping, altho the stores were filled with the most exciting lingerie, jewelry, shoes and clothing. On the second morning, some of us stayed in town to watch the brilliant parade of Kennedy and DeGaulle and then visit the Hotel Crillon to talk with newsmen reporting the visit. The rest of us took a bus to SHAPE, Supreme Headquarters of Allied European Command, where we had one of the best briefings of our trip on the accomplishments of NATO. We were told that General Norstead was attending the Kennnedy arrival, so we resigned oursetlves to missing him but, half-way thru the meeting, a helicopter whoshed down on the lawn outside the building and the youthful-appear-ing blonde air-force general strode in dramatically to greet us. FACING RUSSIA I was impressed by the tremendous physical establishment that NATO has built up in Europe; we do not hear much of the air fields, communications networks and miles of oil pipelines that now cover the continent in a rough half circle facing Russia. “Since the establishment of NATO not one inch of European soil has fallen to the communists,” we were told. This was, of course, before the Berlin crisis, and there was great confidence expressed then in the future. Norstead said that after World War 11, Europe lay almost helpless before Russia. At the start of NATO operations there were only 40 military phone circuits in Europe and a call to Norway took six hours and was routed thru East Germany. Today there are 1,600 circuits with more being installed. The attack warning system in 1951 operated only eight hours a day on a five day week and there were large gaps in coverage. Today communications is instantaneous. Supreme Commander Norstead is like a head of state, never off
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FULL WEEK Thursday, Oct. 5 thru Wednesday, Oct. 11 GREGORY PECK DAVID NIVEN ANTHONY QUINN GIA SCALA in "THE GUNS OF NAVARONE"
duty. His colonel told us that when Norstead plays golf he is followed by a man with a walkie-talkie so he is never out of touch. (He has to pay greens fees for the man.) There are 15 nations in NATO and all but Iceland have officers at SHAPE. Ten different languages may be heard in the long corridors altho English and French are the official languages and every officer must know one and be studying the other language. (The officers’ children learn new languages so fast from their schoolmates, they can carry on complete conversations about secrets in front of their parents!) The atmosphere at SHAPE must be much more tense these days than it was back in May, but I feel sure there is still great confidence in NATO strength and deterrent power. LEGION MEMORIAL We attended an American Legion Memorial Day service at the American Cathedral which was most impressive. 1 talked to a Legionaire from Boston who bad made the trip to Paris just to attend the annual Memorial Day event. After leaving Paris, we had to fly to Geneva, Switzerland, to get
SHIVELY’S NAPPANEE SELLING ENTIRE REMAINING STOCK OF HARDWARE & FIXTURES AUCTION SATURDAY OCT. 7h SALE STARTS AT 10 A.M. RAIN OR SHINE - SALE INSIDE WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO BID MYERS BROS AUCTIONEERS CHUCK - KE 3-2154 GOSHEN KEN - TR 5-1265 DUNLAP BUILDING & FIXTURES FOR SALE
Introduction of a new Custom series and extensive styling improvements distinguish the Mercury Monterey for 1962. The crisp roof is four inches longer and there are major styling changes in the rear of the car. The Monterey and the Monterey Custom series offer a total of 12 models, including the Custom four-door hardtop shown here. Nine engine-transmission combinations are available. Cost df ownership for the Monterey is reduced by extending normal servicing intervals to twice-a-year for the average driver.
Sewing Machines New— Used Repairs Free Estimates Fast Guaranteed Service LOWERY SEWING - & FABRIC CENTER On Court House Square, S. Warsaw
our Swissair plane. The airlines entertained us as their guests, putting us up in a small and very comfortable hotel and giving us an elegant three-hour lunch at a charming inn on the lake, Le Perle du Lac, followed by a boatride across the lake. ' Geneva was so charming that one of the girls in the party cancelled her return reservations to stay there a few more days. This international city, home of the Red Cross, League of Nations, and meeting place of countless international conferences, is so cozy and comfortable that we all would have enjoyed a week of rest there. But that night we were off again across the dark Atlantic, (after a five-hour delay because of a loose wire in the plane), We dropped down at Shannon airport for a few minutes but saw nothing of Ireland. Because the plane was u.uy a thud full, some of us had three full seats to stretch out across, nearly as good as a berth, and we slept most of the way. The flight west takes two hours longer because of headwinds, but we sighted New York in eight hours, which still seems quite wonderful. Only five years ago, the trip took 19 hours. I did not really feel I was home again until our slow hedge-hopping plane from New York to South Bend approached Ft. Wayne and
FOR SHELL NO. I PRIME WHITE AND SHELL FURNACE OIL PHONE 500 Courteous Service TYNDALL OIL CO.
I looked down and saw all those huge square fields of corn and j wheat. After the little strips of farms in Europe and the Near, East, an Indiana field looks absolutely gigantic. Europeans say all, Americans are rich and they are ‘ right. We do not know how rich ‘ we are until we leave home and see the rest of the world. FIRE LADIES—The fire ladies of the Pine Township volunteer fire department in Porter County aijE to have help from the distaff side Wives of the firemen are receiv ing training in fire fighting techniques and resuscitator work. R. C. Geissler, who is instructing the women, says that when their train- ? ing is finished they will be able to help put out fires and perform ; rescue work. “We’re teaching them almost everything except the driving of the fire truck,” says Geissler. VILLAGE SMITHY The art of shoeing horses is not completely 1 lost. At Vernon,’ in Jennings County, a blacksmith still plies his trade. He is 63-year-old Russell Thomas, who began shoeing horses when he was 18 years old and has kept it up as a sideline although he has few calls for his services these days. He keeps his shop open only on weekends. Most of his work is the making of shoes for gaited horses and for the pony pets of children. Asa sideline, he j fashions small tiny horseshoes for use as paper weights or decorations. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walters had as callers this past week Mr. and Mrs. George Grise, Chicago, and Mrs. Arthur Schoenfeld, Mishawaka. Mrs. Grise and Mrs. Schoen- : feld are sisters of Mr. Walters.
