Syracuse-Wawasee Journal, Volume 25, Number 8, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 28 September 1961 — Page 6

i SYRACUSE-WAWASEE JOURNAL THURS. SEPT. 21, 1»61

PAGE 6

Nappanee Man Gets "Wings" QB <QMWI|f' -/W ■ *wkß» : jyWNw * #’ wi ff ■PWIRSL jw • i» Ji - -v tB L£> • BkU.. - • .-1.../.IJ Ucaiyrwted • Ni»*l'Aviator, Aug. •6, Ens. Craig S. Kintiel, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kintiel of Route 3, Box 215, Nappanee, Ind., has his wings pinned on by his w>fe, the former Miss Sandra Johnson of Hammond, during ceremonies held at the Naval Auxiliary Air Station, Kingsville, Tex. Having completed his tour with Training Squadron 23, Ens. Kintiel has received orders transferring him to the Naval Air Station, Memphis, Tenn. '

MY TRiP ABROAD by Rita Myers Paris & Geneva Fitting Finish to Beautiful Trip What can anyone write about Pans? Each traveler must discover Pans 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 Pans. ’ Driving thru the grimy, depressing outskirts of the city. 1 felt that the French could keep Paris it looked dirty, drab, and supremely uninteresting But It took only a few minutes out in the sunshine the next morn

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ing 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 place where th? names of streets and buildings have a special ring Arc de Triomphe, Champs d'Elysce. Place de la Concorde, the Sorbonne, the Seine, the Louvre, the Tuilienes, Rue de la Paix and many more We took the four elavators to the top of the Eiffel Tower to see the star-like streets running 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 if it was spoken pne sentence at a time) and felt my four years of high school French was justified when 1 was actually able to converse with taxi drivers and chambermaids. NO SHOPPING One thing 1 did not have time for was shopping, allho 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 Jirilliant parade of Kennedy and DeGaulle and then visit the Hotel Cnllon to-talk with new siren 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 al, so we resigned oursetlves to missing him but. half way thru tne meeting, a helicopter whoshed down on the lawn outside the building and the youthful-appear-ing blonde air-force general strode m dramaticailv to greet us. FACING RUSSIA 1 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 tn a rough h:»H circle facing Russia. ■'Sime the establishment of NATO not one inch of European soil has fallen to the communists,” we w ere told. This was. of course, before the Berlin crisis, and there was great confidence expressed then in the future. Norstead Mid that after World. War 11. Europe lay almost help less before Russia. At the start of

Nicolai Machine & Repair Shop 701 S. Main St. Phone: Gl 7-3232 SYRACUSE, INDIANA Lawn Mower Sales & Service PORTABLE ELECTRIC AND ACETYLENE WELDING * JIGS - FIXTURES - TOOLS - DIES WROUGHT IRON RAILINGS & SPECIALTIES Goshen Community Auction Sales DIAL KE 3-SSBS or KE 3-1593 Sell your livestock Goshen each Monday for more take home dollars. TOP PRICES: Milk Cow 202.50; Heifers A Steers 18 to 23.75; Bulls 20.00; Fat Hogs 18.60; Lambs 18.40; Ruffs 14 to 16.75; Veal 38.50; Fat Cows 1550 to 17.30; Canners A Cutters 13 to 15.50. We Hove The Buyers SHERMAN, McDOWEU, MARTIN AUCTIONEERS JR. MARTIN, FIELDMAN, PH WAKARUSA 720-R

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. Suoreme Commander Norstead is like a head of state, never off 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 at SHAPE must be much more tense these days than it was back in May. but I feel sure there is still great confident in NATO strength and deterrent power. LEGION MEMORIAL We attended an American Legion Memorial Day service at the American Cathedral which was most impressive. I talked to a Legionaire from Boston who had 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 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 fewminutes but saw nothing of Ireland. Because the plane w-as only a third 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 fhsht 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 1 looked down and saw all those huge square fields of corn and wheat. After the little strips of farms in Europe and the NearEast. 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. | At The Library J *- ■■ " - «■« -«" «« - "REMBRANDT" by Gladys Schmitt Here is another book that's been rising fast on the best seller list. The reason for its popularity must be the fact that the author has done a great deal of research on her subject and has gone into his life and brought out many details which had not been known before. The great Dutch artist lived in the 17ih Century The Spanish had controlled Holland, or at least a great part of ti. and life was hard. Rembrandt lived aloof of many of

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The ultimate in smart styling is the 1962 Chevrolet Impala Sport Coupe (shown above). The pew roof line at first gjance closely resembles the fabric top of the. Impala Convertible. Closer inspection reveals adroit styling of roof j

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The wide range of choices Chevrolet dealers will offer for 1962 is hinted in this three-car photograph. Pictured to compare over-all length are (top to bottom) the ISO-inch Corvair 4-Door Sedan; the 183-inch Chevy II 4-Door Sedan, and

his country’s struggles. He had an intense desire to work hard on'his painting. He felt he was a genuis at an early age. People in Holland recognized Rembrantd's greatness. It became the thing to dn to have him paint your portrait. When he was hired to paint a picture of a group of local militia (The “Night Watch”), he offends many members of half covering, faces of many subjects with sleeves of others. Then he refuses to follow the new trends and methods which are being practiced by popular artiste of the times. Finally he is forced to sell everything he has to pay his debts. • The figure of Rembrandt is a strong, ominous one. He is to be admired greatly but not always liked. His life is a long series of tragedy. ' The author not only portrays the main subject with careful and painstaking accuracy, but she gives us a good picture of many of his relatives, his loves, his models, and his contemporary artists. There is his lovely wife, Saskia, who died tragically. There is the pathetic figure of his sister, disappointed in love and a housekeeper for Rembrandt until the new wife came to live in thheouse. There is the poor demented maid, Geertje, whose»unreturned love for the artist drove her to wildness. There is his mistress, the unartistic but loving Hendikje. There is his son. Titus. All of these figures are vividly portrayed. If anyone reads “Rembrandt.” he can honestly ,say that he knows a great deal about the life of this great painter He will also have a better insight into the history of Holland during these times. But if he wants a book by which to be entertained, he’d better look further on the library shelves. About 100. American cities have adopted a city in another part of the world, in an attempt to build bridges of friendship across national boundaries. Antarctica is 21 times the size of Texas.

LOANS BETWEEN PAY DAY Get Dollars For Q Days Costs Cents Takes Q Minutes See JIM PAYNE or FRANK NYIKOS Syracuse Ph GL 7-3532

sheet metal which gives the sport coupe an exclusive and jaunty appearance. The Impala tops a line of 32 passenger car models, including the Corvair, Corvette and the new Chevy II series, which Chevrolet dealers will introduce Sept. 29.

the Impala Sport Sedan which measures 209.6 inches. They are representative of 32 passenger car models which Chevrolet ■ dealers will start displaying September 29- The new Chevy II s bow in on the same date as other Chevrolet-built cars.

Home and Garden FAMILY FOOD STOCKPILE FOR SURVIVAL Do you have enuogh food on hand to feed your family for two weeks’ Do you know how to store the necessary food? Do you know how to purify water? Homemakers can find the answers to questions like these in a new publication from the U.S. Department Mjf Agrilculture titled ‘ Family Food Stockpile for Survival.” Many survivors of a nuclear attack would have to rely on their own reserve supplies of food and water, warns the U.S.D.A. Families are urged either to store and maintain a special emergency food stockpile in their homes or fallout shelters, or to build up their regular food stocks so there is a two wedk supply on hand at all times. The publication tells how to store and how often to replace food stockpiles, lists equipment needed for emergency cooking, and gives sources of safe and clean water in the home. Sample menus show how to provide a reasonably balanced diet using these foods. Emergency foods should be. in cans, jars, or tightly sealed paper containers, preferably in sizes that will supply just enough for one meal. Select foods that will last for months without refrigeration and that can be eaten with little or no cooking. Single copies of the booklet (HG 77) are free from the Office of information. U.S. Department of Agrilculture, Washington 25, D.C. PLACE TO STUDY ‘‘Good study habits, better grades and pleasant study hours can result from a well planned study area.” says Ezelle Johnson. Purdue University honib furnishings specialist. A simple and inexpensive unit can be assembled from a plywood slab door set on legs, an unfinished bookcase or a few shelves for reference books. A wood stain topped with penetrting seal or bright enamel decoratesJt to satisfaction. A good straight chair, deep enough for comfort and in proper relationship to the height of the desk, is important, reminds Miss Johnson. The student should be able to sit with his back straight in line with the chair back, feet flat on the floor, and knees well under the desk top.

AL, A Rom where I sit... fy Joe Marsh A "Moving" Story

A couple of nights ago. Bud Holmes, who runs the town's local drive-in movie, got to talking about a “boner” he had pulled last summer. Seems one night he was waiting to close up when a customer came over and asked if Bud would get his car started. Turned out his battery was dead. Bud drives over to where he thinks the customer’s car is parked and starts to give it a big shove. All of a sudden, Red Dolan’s head pops out of the front window! “Listen. Bud,” Red says with a grin, “if you want me to go home so you can close up,

" Copyrig/u, 1961, tailed States Brewers Association, inc.

A scratch-resistant, low-gloss finish is desirable for any study desk. Shadows and glare result if the finish is shiny, says the specialist. A light desk top is easier to work on because there is little contrast between the desk top and book or writing paper. Cover a dark or shiny desk with a light colored blotter to avoid eyestraining contrast. A bulletin board over the desk may lessen contrast between the light desk top and the wall area, in addition to serving a useful decorative accessory. A table or floor lamp or two wall lamps, correctly placed, will provide suitable light. Light source should be 12” from front of desk and 15” from center of work area Shaded and diffused light prevents eyestrain. FALL ROSE CARE Rose care does not end when you pick the last rose. For best blooms next summer. Purdue horticulturists say, that care of garden roses should continue into the fall and winter. Without proper cold weather care, such as mulching, your roses may be severely damaged .and bloom next year may be reduced greatly, or. your roses may even be winter killed. The first step is to follow’ cultural practices that will encourage early maturity of the wood so that it will be hardy by winter. Don’t cultivate, fertilize or prune during the fall since this might encourage new growth which will not harden sufficiently before winter. After the first killing frost, protect your garden roses by mounting soil up 8 to 10 inches around each plant. Added protection may be given by the addition of a straw mulch; then more soil may be put on top of the mulch. With proper protection, your roses should winter over the severest weather in any part of Indiana. A last word from the horticuljurists: Be sure to wait until spring to plant new, roses. Sincg most stock is immature in the fall, you’ll avoid winter injury by planting in the spring. BRACING FRUIT TREE LIMBS Props or poles placed under the limbs of fruit trees will prevent them from breaking under the heavy load of fruit, points out Jerome Hull. Jr.. Purdue pomologist. Bracing is another method of supporting the branches. This is more permanent than the prop or

I'll go. But you don’t have to push me! * From here I sit, a person always has to be careful not to interfere with other people’s enjoyment by “pushing” his preferences. Whenever Bud has me over to dinner, he's always considerate enough to make sure there’s some beer on hand for me, even though he prefers tea himself. He’s respecting my right to think for myself, and not trying to “drive home” his own views.

IMril» w JI! It has been estimated that the School Safety Patrol has saved thousands of lives since it was pioneered by the Chicago Motor Club in 1920. This commendable record has been possible only because of the cooperation of many individuals and organizations. "Help Your Safety Patrol” is the message of the October school poster, distributed by the Chicago Motor Club to some 33,000 grade school, classrooms in Illinois and Indiana. To successfully continue the w-ork of the Patrol, your cooperation is needed. Do your part to help trained Patrol members keep your children safe!

pole device. Hull suggests using heavy screweyes or bolts and smooth no. 9 wire to reinforce a heavily laden tree. The screw-eyes or bolts should be placed in limbs about one-third of the distance from the crotch to the tip of the limb. Large trees must be braced higher than small ones. Run the wire from one limb through the center of the tree to the limb on the opposite side. Or. a heavy ring may be used in the center and wires from all the limbs fastened to the ring. Dig and store dahlia and canna roots and gladiolus corms after the first frost, advise Purdue University horticulturists. • * £ They recomend picking pumpkin and squash with their stems intact to prevent injury and early spoilage. They should be picked before frost and stored in a moderately warm, dry place w here air circulates. Start new peony beds during the fall for best results. Make certain each plant has a bud or "eye” from which the plant , will grow. The “eye” should be planted no deeper than two inches. ♦'- ♦ * Ground cover should be planted in areas where it is hard to mowgrass or in heavy shade or on step banks. Fall is a good time to start ground cover. Mulch trees and -shrubs which were transplanted this fall, remind Purdue horticulturists. ♦• ■ • Som; of the newer bluegrass varieties, such as Merion. Newport. C-l, Park or Delta, are well worth the extra seed cost, according to Purdue turf specialists. •’* ' * Luncheon sandwiches will keep

ANGLER'S COVE WILL BE OPEN YEAR ROUND : ’J;• ii ’ ■ FOR SALE ★ Two bedroom bungalow with full basement, oil heat 50 x 170 ft. lot with channel frontage, tub bath, house well insulated, water softener, cenetian blinds Located next door to Angler’s Cove on Ogden Island. Priced at $9,500. / Year-round, two bedroom, bungalow located across road from Papakeechie Lake. Lot is 66*2 x 150 ft., wood floors, basement, gas heat, shower bath, enclosed front porch, draperies and carpet, washer and dryer included. Rear lot available. Can be bought for $7,950 with SIOOO down. 419 South Main Street, Syracuse. 4 bedroom two-story frame home with much living space, full bath, good location. Price, $7900 with SBOO down. Route 1. with eye-view of Wawasee — snug 3 bedroom home with carpeted living’room, dining room, kitchen, back porch, full bath, easement to lake. Lot, 81 x 13Q. Priced at SBSOO. ★ Homes, Large and Small, For Every Need. Full Choice In Lake and Town Property. RENTALS APPRAISALS INSURANCE EARLE WALTZ, Realtor CURA WARNER, GL 7-3405 - WALTZ, Gl 7-2189

cold for hours if > made from frozen slices of bread, report Purdue food specialists. Slices are easy to seperate from frozen pre-sliced loaves and are easy to spread. As they thaw gradually, they help keep other contents of the lunch box cold. ♦ ♦ * Cover locks on doors with masking tape so that young children cannot lock themselves in a room. SCHOOL LUNCH PROGRAM “Four hundred thousand (400.J 00) children in Indiana are benefiting from ‘the hot lunch proggram.” Sen. Vance Hartke said this week at Columbia City. He described the federael-state hot luhch program as Indiana’s largest single food service operation. Opening another of the eight farm .field educational, programs, he said that in the 15-year history of the hot lunch program jointly administered by the U.S. Dept, of Agriculture and. the State Supt. of Public Instruction, naerly 60 million meals have been eaten at school by Indiana children. Sen. Hartke noted that the federal share of these meals was over a quartr million dollars in cash and over 10 million pounds of food worth some three and one-half million dollars. State-federal agricultural statisticians at Purdue University report that Indiana evaporators produced 47.692,000 pounds of bulk, unsweetened condensed skim milk during 1960. This was a seven per cent drop from the record production of 1959. However, production of 16,498.000 pounds of unsweetended condensed whole milk was the largest since 1951. It’S hard to get ahead of anyone, when you’re trying to get even with him. 0