Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 90, Number 18, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 27 October 1966 — Page 6

PAGE 6

NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS

ENTERTAINS I Opal Longfield and Marilyn RichRecent supper guests of Mrs. ] mond were Mr. and Mrs. Kent

Effective Oct. 31 Nappanee Dairy Queen will be closed Mon., Tues., Wed., Thurs. 3- 9 P.M. Fri., Sat., Sun. 1-10 P.M.

/■JSm mk - mm _ - I— TOP VALUE STAMPS iff JH MflHft loin 4Ug% : “baeeel op fuf* : r B I Illp||l nJKs ,: 111 l n | Hundreds of winners right from this area I : Jt? J rM\ Simply fill out and deposit this entry blank in official J $ I I Vl “Barrel of Fun” Sweepstakes entry barrel at any of our \ Hhml W mm mm MM ■ ■■■■BUiAnHA I ! stores. No purchase required. You do not have to be | H r early winners! j •••- (please print) , ri, Y Phnna | I O TO. wu.u WTBWWI, WO. I SWEEPSTAKES RULES: ulations and void wherever pro- -\ # hibited, £<lX6(l, restricted or re£* . . , - - _ ~ Adults only; limit one entry ulated. Nothing to buy! Enter Often blank per person per store visit. Employees and families of Top " Additional Entrv Blanks There will be no cash awards in Value Enterprises, Inc., retail- '", • lieu of merchandise prizes. ers giving Top Value Stamps et our Stores m t . . .... . . lt and their advertising agencies Tax liability on any pnze is the not eligible to win. /.k iii iiiiN ■msumi \ responsibility of the winner. 0 ■ , , , . mvVV^Si>"" \ Sweepstakes closes as adver- ' This sweepstakes is subject to tised. Winners will be notified ..—.a........ ....... /ISrrHENEW^N have a BARREL OF FUN _ / . _ \ tt RED SLTON’S f / u 331318 I cbmvJES?* 1 with command performance by Chevrolet 1 -9:00 p.m. c.s.t.) X. WTO BE GIVEN J '

//f I I 1 MILLION i //./Muy IIINI' M I TOP VALUE STAMPS / / / WII INI \ T PORTME T V SET < \\ stamps Tn I SIOOO CASH \ 250 TO fi£ GIVEN AWAY , \\ 40 MILLION STAMPS TO 1 \, - / / \\ BE GIVEN AWAY $40,000 TO BE GIVEN AWAY \\

Your dollar’s worth more whop you shop at the store that gives TOP VALUE STAMPS!

THURS. OCT. 27, 1966

** j Koontz and daughters of Bremen, Mrs. Robert Denny and daughters Pat, Diana, Roberta and Karen of Warsaw, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Longfield and sons and Miss Linda Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Richmond and sons of South Bend were afternoon callers.

OVERWEIGHT DON'T BE FAT Now available without a doctor's proscription our product called SLIMODEX. SLIMODEX is a Tablat, aasily swallowed that will help control your appetite, help you stop overeating. Your weight must come down because as your own doctor will toll you when you oat lass you weigh loss. You must gat rid of that excess fat or your money back. SLIMODEX costs $3.30 and Is sold With this GUARANTEE: You must be satisfied with results or gat your full money back. Sold at: Dunham & Love Drugs Nappanee. Mall Orders Filled.

TALK OF THE TOWN BY BARBARA REISER 773-4583

This will be the weekend for goblins and ghosts to be out. Trick or treaters will be knocking at your door and you will be wise to treat them or be faced with the oossibility of having a spell cast over you. Also, I hope you did your part when the kids played trick or treat for UNICEF, the funds from it are used for children all over the world. These funds provide food and medicines

to those who might otherwise be deprived of it. I hope everyone is making plans to see “Plain And Fancy,” which will be offered to the public by our own Civic Theater next week. I have received a request from the property committee of the play, Tor corn, squash or pumpkins. A wheelbarrow full of these is needed for several scenes in the play. If you would like to contribute any of these items, please-con-tact Mrs. Betty Johnson, phone 773-3385. Several Nappanee ladies recently took a ten day trip to Sarasota, Florida. Mrs. Winfred Pippen, Mrs. John Robinson, Mrs. Clyde Devaux accompanied Mrs. I. A. Miller, of Goshen to her winter home. The group visited with Mrs.

PLUS WEEKLY WINNERS OF CASH! OF TOP VALUE STAMPS!

Miller for a few days before motoring home. One of our local young men is home again after ending his service. Lance Corporal Billy L. Hollar arived in Nappanee about three weeks ago after spending a year in Viet Nam. Welcome home, Billy! Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jensen recently enjoyed a week’s vacation touring and visiting in Michigan, Canada and Wisconsin. They traveled into Michigan on a Sunday and after attending church in Kalamazoo, they went on to Harrison for a visit with their son in 'aw’s parents. In Charlevoix, they had a visit with a cousin, Mrs. Leonard Espech. Their next drive was on the new road above Lake Superior, which led them into

Canada where the fall scenery was beautiful. After a stay at a ottage in Wisconsin, they took a ioat ride across the Manitowac liver and then returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Chalmers and children, Theresa and Peter Schepman, made a weekend trip co Rockford, Illinois, where they attended the wedding of a nephew, Kenny Newsome, which took place in the Cathedral Church. The Chalmers were joined there by another daughter, Margaret Chalmers, who resides in Milwaukee. The various Cub Scout dens and Bluebird and Campfire groups have really been taking advantage of the fall weather by getting out for various field trips. They have paid visits to the library and Miller’s Orchard, among others. These trips are undoubtedly very educational and helpful as well as very enjoyoble to the youngsters and their leaders. Hi Pat! I AM AN AMERICAN By Pvt. Carol Ashley (Note: Pvt. Ashley is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walls. She is presently stationed at Fort Gordon, Georgia). To begin, I am an American. A female serving my country, the United States of America, as a member of the Women’s Army Corps. Basically, flesh, blood, mind, matter am I, plus soul and heart. Above all, I love God, my country, and my people. If it ever be necessary, I am willing to give my life for any noe of these, or for all three. 1 have heard my call, and have answered it to the best of my ability by serving in the United States Women’s Army Corps. I miss my family and my friends, but I hope to see them again soon. In the meantime, I shall do my best, wherever I may be, to help in any way possible those about me, to make new friends everywhere I go, to respect myself and this my calling, and to receive respect from all others by the manner in which I carry myself forward.

>25 to >IOOO

CASH

LET US PAY OFF YOUR OLO BILLS OR NEW EXPENSES FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE

Come in or Phone Today

OWNERS

DISCOUNT CORP.

of Napponoo PHONE 773-3313 106 E. Market Napponoo

People who like people want to find you. Make it easier for them, when the telephone where ) live is listed in someone else’s name. Call our business office and order your own listing in the telephone directory today.

UNCLE EB from EBENEZER Says: Dear Mister Editor: We was coming down to the end of the Congresisonal campaigns all over the nation and they was running about true to form. When I was a boy all a Congressman had to do to git relected was to be a good fencestraddler. And I can recollect we had some good ones in them days. They was a Congressman named Bob Doughton from North Carolina, that come from a mountain district where the moonshiners was his good supporters. .L was election time and a group of preachers ask him to state his platform on liquor. “Well,” said Congressman Doughton, “if you’re asking about the necktar of the gods that relaxes a man after a hard day, the sure cure fer snakebite, the amber fluid that promotes fellership, the relief fer high strung nerves that warms a man’s innards on a winter evening, I’m all fer it. But if you’re talking about the Devil’s brew that drives good men mad, that vile poison that leaves precious children without bread and destroys the greatest of the American institutions, the family, then I'm agin it with all my mind and all my strength.” They say he stayed in Congress 40 year and died in office. It’s easy to see how he done it. They wasn’t no fence too wide or too high fer him to straddle. Farthermore, they say he was born in a log cabin and he never allowed his constituents to fergit it. But in the political campaign fer Congress we got now things was a little different. The candidates has still got to straddle the fence, but they got to talk prosperity, higher wages, shorter hours, more benefits, and not mention no log cabin. That’s a dirty word in the Great Society. And they got to stay away from the subject of sizes and prices. Fer instant, a plug of chewing tobacco that cost 15 cent five years ago still sells fer 15 cent, but the plug ain’t but half as big. To be on the safe side, Mister Editor, a candidate fer reelection skips over the matter of sizes and prices. One of the main things he has got to stress in these days and times is them benefits. If all the people they got living off the Guvernment or working fer it votes fer a candidate, be has got a ready-made landside. And I nave took note that some of the new candidates around the country ain’t too smart in these matters. I heard one feller say on television he was in favor of making money and credit so tight it would be as hard to git it as to pay it back. That feller, Mister Editor, ain’t got a chanct. But politics in the Great Society was gitting mighty complicated. I don’t understand ’em enough to discuss ’em, but I shore am enjoying my ignorance. Yours truly, Uncle EB