The Mail-Journal, Volume 1, Number 42, Milford, Kosciusko County, 13 December 1962 — Page 7
AREA LAKES ARE FREEZING Conservation officer Earl Money reported to The Mail-Journal office earlier this week that most of the lakes in the area are frozen over. Mr. Money and other area resi-
EVERYTHING •! MAKE YOUR
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Area Business Review
Warsaw Lowery Sewing & Fabric Center DEALERS FOR NECCHI, PFAFF, ELNA & yVIKING MACHINES Fast Guaranteed Service ! On AU Makes M Walter Drug Store Downtown Center St, Warsaw Warry Mosbaugh, R. PH Tjoe Mendenhall, R. PH • Phone: 267-3131 Gfcen seven days and nites Complete Prescription Dept. A Culligan Soft Water Service Serving Kosciusko County 1824 E. Market St - Warsaw Phone: 267-7471 B & B Shoe Store Warsaw, Indiana Air Step — Life Stride — Smartaire - For Women Roblee - Pedwin - Hush Puppie — For Men Buster Brown - Robin Hood — For Children Snapp Music Co. New & Used Band Instruments Repairing — Accessories Hwy. 15, South, Warsaw Phone: 267-8418 Kosciusko County REMC 523 S. Buffalo St. - Warsaw Phone: 267-6331 Electricity will do your work safer, quicker and cleaner than any other form of power Heat Youi* Home With Electricity SEE A BUG? CALL . . . Arab Termite & Pest Control Co. Phone: 267-5888 - Warsaw, Ind. 214 Detroit Street Jack Smith, Representative New Paris Stiver’s General Bulk Bottled Service Nu-Sd Paint Plumbing and Heating installations Phone: 892 New w aris Hess Bros. See Us For Your Case Farm Machinery Case Utility Equipment Howard Rotovator Foraker, Ind. - Ph.: New Paris 871
dents have stated that the Blue gills are biting on most of the lakes. Wawasee is frozen and they are fishing in the channels, Johnson’s Bay and Macy’s Slip. Mr. looney said that the ice in these places is about two inches thick.
Goshen Goshen Shoe Service SHOE REPAIRING 109 East Washington St. American Laundry & Dry Cleaners 117 W. Jefferson St. Phone: KE 3-1032 - Goshen, Ind. Complete Laundry Service Sanitone Cleaning Industrial Uniform Rental Juday’s Alignment & Brake Serv. Frame & Wheel Straightening Washington & Third Sts. - Goshen Phone: KE 3-2794 Goshen, Ind. ICbILWM IH&MUMI Goshen — Elkhart New* Bookstore 130 S. Main Phone: KE 3-4050 PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS Smith-Corona Galaxies / Smith-Corona Electric / Royal Safaris Buy For School or Home\ Goshen, Ind. E-Z Gas, Inc. 2804 S. Main St. - Goshen, Ind Appliances — Refrigeration Heating — Cooking Phone: KE 3-4181 Miller’s Downtown Restaurant 117 So. Main St. - Ph.: KE 3-6030 FEATURING Broasted Chicken, Sea Food Steaks & Chops Delicious Homemade Old Fashioned Cream & Pecan Pies Air Conditioned Goshen, Ind. First National Bank of Goshen Complete Banking Service •Bother Us, We Like It” Phone: KE 3-2175 For Complete Banking Service Salem Bank & Trust Co. Millersburg GOSHEN New Paris Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Home Decorating of Goshen, Inc. Paintins & Decorating Points ■_ \vallpaper Coverings - Window Shades Custom Picture Frames Woody Risser - Owner Phone: KE 3-2156 - 229 S. Main St. Stark & Weaver Drug Store “Gashen’s Original Rescall Store" 135 So. Main St. - Goshen ¥ Phone: KE 3-3030 Garman Bros. Lbr. Co., Inc. “Big Enough To Serve You Not Too Big To Know You” Rd. 33 At Plymouth Ave. Goshen Dial: KE 3-1582
Tippe, Waubee, Chapman, and Dewart are all frozen and fishermen are on the channels of these lakes. Read the CLASSIFIEDSI
ALUMINUM TREES 7 FT. $15.95 4 FT. $4.95 Styrofoam Blocks - Discs & Balls Revolving Lights Satin Ornaments Package Decorations CANDLES OF ALL TYPES Including Bayberry MANY OTHER CHRISTMAS NOVELTIES SMITH-ALSOP PAINT & WALLPAPER 103 East Center Warsaw
Nappanee NEW LOCATION Ziliak Ford Sales EAST ON U. S. 6 - NAPPANEE New & Used Cars Complete Service Phone: 773-3121 “Be Smart - Shop With Art” Evay’s Bargain Center New and Used Furniture New and Used Clothing 108 W. Randolph - Nappanee Phone: 773-4213 Store Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed. - 12-6 p.m. Thurs. - 9 a.m.-l p.m. Fri. & Sat. - 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Dunham & Love REXALL DRUG STORE Prescriptions A Speciality Nappanee, Ind. - Ph.: 778-4145 Curtis TV & Music Center RCA VICTOR - MOTOROLA STORY & CLARK- KIMBALL LOWERY ORGANS Fred L. Curtis 158 W. Market St. - Nappanee Phone: 773-4612 D. W. Greene PONTIAC SALES International Trucks 24-Hour Wrecker Service Ph.: 773-4174 - Nappanee Auto Clinic Complete Radiator Repairing and Recoring 152 W. Walnut Phone: 773-4139 Nappanee Warren’s Men’s & Boy’s Wear Home of Curlee Suits 107 E. Market Nappanee Phone: 773-3732 Leesburg The Town Shop — The Store of Famous Brands — Dry Goods, Ready-To-Wear, Shoes Gifts — Draperies Ph.: 453-7271 Leesburg North Webster | Gray’s Super Market Mid-Lakes Shopping Center No. Webster - Phone: 834-2442 Paul Scott Agency Mid-Lake Shopping Center North Webster, 834-1304 The Travelers Insurance Companies
Dribs . . . And ... Dabs By DORIS DARNELL Don’t know why you’d say that this weather is “for the birds.” They don’t like it either. The party was a huge success, even though the weather cut down' attendance. The receptacle marked “File 13” was a work of art, and if anyone is in need of such a file, •• LaVada Dean is the person to contact. She enjoys printing, painting and working with fur. Issy Carwile has little free time, since the raising of parakeets and canaries is a fulltime job, but she’s always eager to come to the aid of a friend who is having trouble with the problem of hatching young parakeets. She even supplied the eggs. Gene Hattersley stopped in to inform me that other moose have been brought in from Canada “on the hoof,” so maybe he and Burns Van Sickle can get together with their stories. We took a ride in Helen Frushour’s Mercury the other day. That’s the car she won, you know. Daughter Linda has the other one, the Comet convertible. You can see it parked in the lot at the Rubber Co. Bright red—you can’t miss it. What a bit of luck! . . . We’re all happy for her, and suspect just a little envious, too! If you invite Doris Cobum to a party, you’d better do it orally. Small son, Clark, thinks that every small envelope in the mail is a birthday invitation for him, and he latches on-to it. Since’s he’s too small to read, Doris might never, know the invitation was meant for her. Just finished a book by Dr. Joshua Liebman, and one passage in particular I remember: “To love one’s neighbors is to achieve an inner tolerance for the uniqueness of others, to resist the temptation to private imperialism. When we insist that others conform to our ideas of what is proper, good acceptable, we show that we oursel- | ves are not certain of the rightness of our inner pattern. He who is sure of himself is deeply willing to let others be themselves. We display true love when we cease to demand that our loved one become a revised edition of ourselves.” Our interdepenence with others is the most encompassing fact of human reality; our personalities are made by our contacts with others. There is, therefore, a duty which falls upon all of us—to become free, living, warm, cooperative, affirmative personalities. The fallacy of seeing in others ! an exaggerated power or superior I ability is that we see only the surface of assurance and poise. If we could look deeper and realize 1 all men and women bear withinl themselves the cars of many a lost I battle, we would judge our own failures less harshly. A man’s life is dyed the color of' his imagination, isn’t it?
k kitty (J/jSI ) AN P CLASSIFIUD* Xjy V UVEBY WEEK
OPEN HOUSE Beautiful Ranch Type Home Only MERRILL Offers These Outstanding Features -• Distinctive all aluminum exteriors. • All kemper fruitwood custom birch • 3-Twin sized bedrooms. Mlchen cab “ ete - • Vanity in master bedroom. * Buil ‘- in oven & ran * e with venle<J hooA • Spacious closets. * AU formlca work surfaces. • Sliding thermopane glass door to - * Formica splash wall. large concrete patio. • Silent light switches. • Paneled living room, dinette & kitchen • All aluminum windows. • 2 full baths with vent fans. Btorm ™<h>ws & screens. • Large attached garage & concrete drive * Natural gas heat. • Many other luxury features. • Insulated ceiling & walls. - PL US - Beautiful Landscaped Lot On Wide Channel With Access to Lake Wawasee LOCATED: MERRILL’S ADDITION TO LAKE WAWASEE, SYRACUSE, INDIANA South of Syracuse on rd. 13. Turn East at Dairy Queen, on Pickwick Road (Kale Island Rd.) % mile or 4th house east of Road 13 on south side to signs. Merrill K. Norris Builders Saturday & Sunday 15th & 16th 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
Proposed Legislation For Retarded _ Children Discussed Members of the Kosciusko County Council for Retarded Children attended a district meeting sponsored by the Indiana Association for Retarded Children on Tuesday evening, Dec. 4, at the First Presbyterian, church in Elkhart. Proposed Bill The executive director of the St. Joseph County Retarded Children’s association, Myron Berkey, presided at the meeting which featured a discussion of the state association’s proposed bill to make education mandatory for retarded children in the state of Indiana in counties with populations of 100,000 or over. This bill will be introduced in the state legislative session in January. Those attending were Mrs. John Anglin of Leesburg; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Johnston of Claypool; and Mrs. Donald Wells, Frederick Kuhn, DeWayne Monee and Mr. and Mrs. William Snoke, all of Warsaw. The Kosciusko council will hold a Christmas party Friday, Dec. 14, at 7:30 p. m. in the Civic Center in Warsaw. All retarded children of Kosciusko county and their parents are invited to attend. DECORATE CERAMIC TREES
The Syracuse Arts and Crafts club met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Otto Rhode and daughter Miss Priscilla, who instructed the ladies in the decorating of ceramic Christmas trees. A dessert course was served to the 14 members and three guests, Mrs. Donald Rapp, Mrs. Howard Woodward, and Mrs. Blair Laughlin, as they arrived. The next meeting will be held on January 10 with Mrs. A. L. Miller. MILFORD SCHOOL MENUS Mon. - Hot dogs, potato chips, peas, carrot sticks, pineapple and cookie, milk. Tues. - Roast turkey and dressing, green beans, relish salad, bread, butter, jelly, pear half, milk. Wed. - Meat loaf, potatoes and gravy, applesauce, bread, butter, jelly, pudding and cookie, milk. Thurs. - Hamburger and spag-hetti-cheese, Waldorf salad, bread, butter, jelly, French cheese cake, milk. Frl. - Beef-vegetable stew, emerald salad, bread, butter, jelly, Christmas ice cream, milk. LEESBURG SCHOOL MENUS Mon. - Sloppy Joe sandwich, French fries, cabbage salad, cookie, milk. Tues. - Creamed dried beef on toast, mashed potatoes, green beans, carrot strip, fruit salad, bread, butter, jelly, milk. Wed. - Vegetable soup-crackers, celery, cherry cobbler, bread, butter, peanut butter, milk. Thurs. - Sauerkraut and wieners, mashed potatoes, lettuce salad, peach half, bread and butter, milk. , . Fri. - Turkey - dressing, gravy, sweet potatoes, peas, cranberry relish, bread, butter, jelly, milk.
Friendly Neighbors Club In Christmas Party The Friendly Neighbors club of near Syracuse met Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 5, for its annual Christmas party and the re-elec-tion of officers. A dessert course of Christmas cakes and ice cream decorated with poinsettias was served by candlelight to 27 members and two guests, Mrs. Hodler and Mrs. Walton. The tables were graced with golden holly and evergreen with other appointments of gold and silver. Candy canes, nuts and mints were also enjoyed. A Christmas gift exchange then took place with the gifts being distributed by number. Club History- New Officers President Mrs. Eugene Hattersley opened the meeting and read the history of the club. It was organized in 1937 by Mrs. Phoebe Kirkley and the club has grown to a membership of 36. The newly elected officers are: President, Mrs. Elmer Schoeff; vice pres., Mrs. George Myers; sec., Mrs. John Benninghoff; and treas., Mrs. William Brandt. Other positions will be filled by appointment at a later date. The hostess committee for tnis Christmas party was composed-of Mrs. William Brandt, Mrs. John Runge, Mrs. George Myers, and Mrs. H. A. Graf.
PYTHIAN SISTERS PLAN PARTY, ELECT OFFICERS Royal Temple 130 of the Pythian Sisters of Syracuse met December 5 for a regular stated meeting with MEC Florence Moore presiding. Reports were given and during the business meeting, plans were made for a Christmas pot luck dinner to be held at Mrs. Elva Connell’s home on December 19 at 6:30 p.m. A 50 cent gift exchange will take place at that time. The group also voted to send $lO to the Pythian home at Lafayette. New Officers The new elected officers are: MEC, Florence Moore; E senior, Mrs. Agnes Causer; E. junior, Mrs. Marguerite Forrest; manager, Mrs. Paul LeCount; secretary, Mrs. Lee Poyscer; treasurer, Mrs. Zerola Zook; guard, Mrs. Estelle Swartz; proctor, Mrs. Ella Unrue; pianist, Mrs. Orlie Brown; assistant pianist, Mrs. O. C. Stoelting; trustees, Mrs. Nell Sloan, Mrs. Unrue and Mrs. Swartz; installing officer, Mrs. William Whetten; and templem other, Mrs. Nora Caldwell. Delegate to the district convention is Florence Moore with Mrs. Elizabeth Pollock as alternate. The delegate to the Grand Temple convention is Florence Moore with Mrs. Pollock as alternate. The degree staff captain is Mrs. Leonard Nichols and Mrs. Causer is press correspondent. Hostesses for this meeting were Mrs. Zook and Mrs. Causer assisted by Mrs. Forrest. Ice cream and crackers were served. Read the CLASSIFIEDS
Thursday, December 13, 1962
Milford Locals Mr. and Mrs. Walter Steffen of Milford spent the week end in Elgin, 111., with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Theo Steffen. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stutzman of Milford were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sol Yoder near Benton. Mr. and Mrs. James Stuckman of Milford attended the funeral of John Moore held Monday in Mishawaka. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hatfield of Warsaw were Thursday callers of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Taylor at Milford Junction. Sheri and Doug Whetten of Milford spent last week with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Scott at Dewart Lake. Misses Mildred and Ernestine Meister of Bremen were Saturday overnight and Sunday guests of their aunt, Mrs. L. D. Rock, and Mr. Rock at New Paris.
Sheri and Doug Whetten of Milford are visiting Mr. and Mrs. David Hartter at Milford this week. , They are children of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Whetten of Milford. Mesdames H. W. Baumgartner and H. L. Beer of Milford attended the Christmas party of the Oriental Shrine Ladies of America of Warsaw last Tuesday evening at the country home of Mrs. Hobart Creighton near Warsaw. Mrs. Robert Perkins and sons of Milford will leave Dec. 14 for a visit with her parents, Rev. and Mrs. I. C. Paul, at Windber, Pa. Rev. Perkins and daughter will leave on Dec. 23 to join them for the Christmas holiday. Robert Spence, son of Mrs. Ernest Vestel of Granger, was a week end guest of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Taylor, at Milford Junction. Mrs. Vestel and Robert are former residents of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rhodes of Los Angeles were Monday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arch Baumgartner. Mr. Rhodes was a member of the Milford high school class of 1934 and is a building contractor in Los Angeles. He formerly lived at Milford Junction. Sunday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Haab of r 1 Syracuse were Miss Edna Lehman and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Haab of Warsaw, Miss Ilene Kammerer, Leesburg, Miss Evelyn Beer of New Paris, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Haab of Goshen, Miss Marceil and Ervin Furrer of Wolcott, and Misses Joan and Edith Streitmatter, Susie Beer, Carol Weisser, and Glenn Price, Jr., all of Milford. Advertising
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THE MAIL-JOURNAL
•* Si'-: - . .. • COMPLETES TRAINING — Marine private Willard D. Free, son of Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Free of Milford, completed recruit training on Nov. 27 at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S. C. The indoctrination to Marine Corps life includes instruction in basic military law, discipline, physical conditioning, and other military subjects. Mr. and Mrs. Free will travel to O’Hare field in Chicago tomorrow to meet Willard and bring him back to Milford for a 20-day leave. ;
Second District Legionnaires Meet At Pierceton The Menzie-Reece Post 258 at Pierceton was host to the Second District meeting on Sunday afternoon. Commander • Max Miller stated that the meeting began at 2 p.m., with Second District Commander Milo Lewis of Monterey, in charge. Seventy-five members from 19 posts in the district were represented. Commander Lewis congratulated the group saying that 27 posts out of a total of 51 made 100 per cent quotas in their membership drives. The Second District is made up of 12 counties in northwest Indiana, and is one of the largest districts in the state. Commander Lewis commented on the Pierceton Legion hall saying it was a fine building and giving the Post much credit for it. James Cole and Dale Hursey, local membership chairmen, were in charge of arrangements for the meeting. Ham and hamburger sandwiches were served during the afternoon. ,
WEKAYATASO CAMPFIRE GIRLS MEET NOVEMBER 29 The WaKaYaTaSo Campfire Girls met at the Scout Cabin Thursday, Nov. 29, at 7 o’clock. The following officers were elected at th it time. President, Susan Kirkdorfer; vige president, Jeannine Conn; secretary, Cindy Felts; treasurer, Judy Ridings; and scribe, Nancy Kinder. . For three months Nancy Kin-,, der, Brenda Smith, Cindy Felts, Jeannine Conn and Sally Pittman are to plan the games. It decided to take candy and cookies to the shut-ins around Christmas time. A Christmas party will be held on December 19 with a gift exchange. There gifts are to cost 50c to SI.OO. Christmas refreshments including cookies will be served at this party. CALVARY LOIS CIRCLE MEETS WITH MRS. PAUL BIXLER “That They May Be Oaks? “Baskets of Blessing” was the lesson presented by Mrs. Edna Thomas at last Wednesday’s meeting of the Lois circle of the Calvary EUB church of Syracuse. Assisting her were Mrs. Raymond Bitner, Mrs. Opal Nolan, Mrs. Blanche Starkey, Mrs. Jessie Weingart, Mrs. Lillian Brown, Mrs. Clifford Ott, Mrs. Harry Nicolai, Mrs. Esther Osborn, Mrs. Juanita Grimes, Mrs. Vernon Fawley and Mrs. Ralph Loose. Held in the home of Mrs. Paul Bixler, Mrs. Harry Nicolai served as co-hostess. They served a dessert course as the guests arrived. Twenty members and one guest, Mrs. Alva ’Ketering, were present. Mrs. Thomas, circle leader, conducted the business meeting. The next meeting will be held on December 26 with Mrs. Esther Osborn and Mrs. I. J. Byland as hostesses.
Christian Science Lesson For Sunday Is ‘God The Preserver Os Man’ The availablity of divine protection and safety will be explained Sunday at Christian Science church services. Highlighting the Lesson-Sermon entitled “God the Preserver of Man’’ is the Golden Text from the Bible (II Timothy): “The Lord shall deliver me from every evil work, and will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom.” One of the citations to be read from “Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy states (p. 151) : “The divine Mind that made man maintain His own image and likeness.” These verses from Psalm 121 will also be read: “The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil: he shall preserve thy soul. The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in from this time forth, and even for evermore.”
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