The Mail-Journal, Volume 2, Number 8, Milford, Kosciusko County, 4 April 1963 — Page 9

REMEMBER .. . WHEN IT HAPPENED IN SYRACUSE One year Ago . George Cox was grand champion winner in the science fair held at Syracuse Friday and Saturday, March 23 and 24, and Derrison Miller was reserve champion. Jerry Clark, 26, *son of Mrs. Alice Clark and the late Dr. Fred Clark of Syracuse, recently returned home from an expedition to the South Pole where he spent more than four months with a seven-man research team qh a po-

NICOLAI MACHINE & REPAIR SHOP 701 S. Main St. Phone: 457-3232 SYRACUSE, INDIANA Lawn Mower Sales & Service Portable Electric And Acetylene Welding JIGS - FIXTU RES - TOOLS - DIES Wrought Iron Railing* & Specialties

Everyday Low Prices _ n- .== ' Phone: I Ts L I N K ’ H P= SYRACUSE SYRACUSE 457-3351 jr Y SUPER MARKET „ , - - - _ -- 1 Parrot Roll C fi I F Bacon 2 lb. 69c April 4-13 Parrot or Yellow Creek ■■A Bl A Butt Half... 45< Reynold's MA M W Whole 43c Heavy Duty Foil 55c ■mi IV Shank Half.. 39$ Banquet “ . Meat Pies 7-$l Tenderloin *• 79c 01 Pickled Beets 19c Mustard 2—25 c sh.nst<Miwivis» Green Giant 303 Creamed Or - [TUNA 3-85 c Niblets 12 Oz. Vacum Pak. Duncan Hines - Devils Food, White, Yellow, Golden Corn 2-31 c Cherry, Fudge Marble, Coco., Spice or Lemon 46 Oz. Can Red or Yellow Cake Mix 29c Hawaiian Punch 31c r lMo^e2^ Size .. .. 0 CQ REDSPAK.-12Oz.Cans ...» Fl*Ult COCKtail 2 -59 C ———————-t— Borden's 1 lb. Carton JELL'O O 45c Cottage Cheese 19c CTODC TDQ« Sun. Mon. -Thur. Fri. Sat WE RESERVE RIGHT 0 1 VzIxIL JTv/L/IAW* 9-12 9:00 un. - 7:00 p.m. 9-8 8-8 TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

■ lar ice cap. • Five Years Ago Two unidentified, fishermen were rescued from the melting ice . off Buttermilk point on Lake Wawasee late Saturday afternoon, March 22, by Ralpn Heil, Bill Hare • and Carl Brazel. I The first white wedding ever to > be held at Roni, 63 miles north of 1 Kano, Nigeria, took place in the Roni Boys’ Home dining room re- . cently when Lois Held, known in I Syracuse as the daughter of Mr. • and Mrs. Sam Houser of Elkhart, i became the bride of Charles W. : Forster, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charl les W. Forster, Sr., of Tulsa, Okla- ■ homa.

Ten Yeare Ago The Lillian Hamman F. T. A. club of Syracuse high school received its charter at the Syracuse high school Saturday evening. The ceremony was given by candlelight. Rev. Carl Sorenson gave the invocation. Those hourly bells you may have heard in the vicinity of the north shore of Wawasee Lake for the past week are the carillonic bells recently purchased by the seminary. Twenty Years Aga® Pvt. Jack Stoelting, Pvt. Forrest LeCount and Pvt. Kenneth Willard of Fort Custer, Mich., spent a few hours here Sunday. Pvt. George Harvey’s address is Camp Hood, Texas. « Roy (Doc) Miller has been promoted from rank of corporal to sergeant. The number of Syracuse boys who are now receiving the Journal

Ray Buhrt general contractor Residential & Commercial Building Phone: 457-3431 & 457-2531 Road 13, Syracuse

totals more than 200. Thirty-five Years Ago Dan Klink and son Orval were business visitors in Chicago on Monday, Ross Osborn, Sol Miller, Frank Yoder, W. T. Colwell, R. C. Howard, S. Freeman and S. J. Stookey attended a road meeting at Ligonier last Friday evening. Miss Lilliam Hamman entertained the teachers and their wives at a six o’clock dinner at her home on Saturday. The whole affair was symbolic of Easter and a very pleasant time was had by all. Forty-five Years Ago Maurice, little son of Merritt Lung, fell from the porch Saturday evening about 6:30 and broke his arm. Several of the boys who are in the service spent Easter at home ' here. They were: Harold Bowser, who is in the naval officer’s reserve at the Municipal Pier, Chi-

cago; Orrin Klink and Dallas McClintic, who though they are still in Indiana university are enlisted and will go into training in the officer’s resmwe at Indianapolis soon; and Lieutenant Forrest Bowld, who is home from Camp Shelby, Miss. After publication of this notice no sugar or flour will be sold in Kosciusko county, excepting on official sugar and flbur cards which are being gut out today. Flour consumption is limited to three pounds per month per capita. Transportation Bids For Clay Twp. To Be Accepted According to a notice which appears elsewhere in this issue of The Mail-Journal, Clay township officials will receive sealed bids until 7 p. m. Thursday, April 18, at the Clay township trustee’s office for school transportation contracts. Definite specifications, which describe the routes to be traveled, the equipment to be furnished and other conditions which will be required are on file in the office of the trustee. The legal is signed by Raymond Reed, trustee of Clay township.

Linda Young Is Student Teacher At South Bend V I LINDA YOUNG Linda Young, daughter of principal and Mrs. Harold Young of Milford, is a student teacher at South Bend’s Washington high school. Linda is a senior at Indiana university. Two other Kosciusko county students doing student teaching are Maxine Mason of Etna Green, teaching at Bloomington high school, and Frederick Zell of Winona Lake, teaching social studies at Franklin junior high school in

Electric Sewer Machine PLUMBING — HEATING & ELECTRICAL WORK — New Installations — Repair Work — - MILf ORD ELECTRIC SHOP Phone: 658-5151 — Milford, Ind. Dry Cleaning Pick-Up

j Now Is The Time To Buy Fix-Up Materials. Use Our One-Stop Service. SAVE TIME ... SAVE MONEY Every Day Cash and Carry Prices Dry Spruce Dimension Lumber sllO per M Dry Hemlock Dimension Lumber $l3O per M Dry White Pine Studs 56 each Ixlo KD Spruce Shiplap $99 per M Ix 6 to Ixl2 White Pine Sheathing $95 per M Ixß KD Spruce Patt 116-lb. Siding $l2B per M Cedar Bevel Siding $l2O per M Cedar Bevel Siding $l3O per M %xlo Cedar Bevel Siding $lB5 per H Insulated Sheathing Board $57 per M 25/32 Insulated Sheathing Board SBB per M Heavy Galvanized 28 go. Steel Roofing .. $9.90 per Sq. 3-in-l Seal Tab Roofing Shingles $7.95 per Sq. 255-lb. Dble. Coverage Lock Shingles .... $8.25 per Sq. 15-lb. and 30-lb. Builders Felt $2.50 per roll 45-lb. Roll Roofing $2.25 55-lb. Roll Roofing $2.50 65-lb. Roll Roofing $2.75 90-lb. Roll Roofing $3.45 Style “D” Metal Roof Edging 07 If. 5 gal. Roof Coating, Fiberated ......... $3.15 per can Fiberglass Insulation 2” 45 per M 3” SSB per M Zonolite Economy Insulation $1.09 per bag Interior Doors - 13/»”l 3 /»” Top Grade - Birch & Mahogany 2/ox6/8 $7.20 $5.15 2/6x6/8 SB.IO $5.70 2/Bx6/8 $8.60 $6.00 3/ox6/8 $9.40 $6.40 Hardboard 4xß Std $1.60 Tempered $2.24 Hardboard 4xß Std $2.56 Tempered S3J& Ceiling Tile Smooth White Bevel Edges, 12x12 ea. Ceiling Tile, Acoustical, 12x12 ea Ix 3 White Pine Furring Stripping 03 If. Plywood—Certified Grade Marked — per 4xß Sheet Int. GIS Ext. GIS CD Sheathing $2.72 $2.96 $3.68 $4.16 $2.85 $4.64 . $5.12 $3.48 , H” $5.28 $5.95 $4.15 $6.24 $6.72 GARAGE DOORS — Sectional, Glazed — 8/ox7/0 $55.00 9/ox7/0 $66.50 16/ox7/0 $126.50 Exterior Doors — 2/Bx6/8xl%” $ll.OO —l%” $13.95 Prefinished Wood Paneling, 4xß Sheets — Per sheet Mohogany .... $4.48 Colonial Birch .... SB.OO Prefinished Hardboard Paneling — 4xß Sheet .. $6.00 Many Other Items in Stock at Comparable Prices! WHY PAY MORE AND GET LESS? — Save At Tri-City Lumber THESE ARE YOUR TRI-CITY LUMBERYARDS HOME LUMBBI ft SUPPLY CO. W. Washington Goshen, Ind. CROMWELL LUMBER COMPANY State Road 5 Cromwell, Ind. NEW PARIS LUMBER CO. State Road 15 New Paris, Ind.

Thursday, April 4, 1963

Fort Wayne. They figure among 230 I. U. students who began internships Monday, March 25, in junior and senior high schools throughout the Hoosier state. This is the second group of I. U. students entering, Indiana schools for secondary student teaching this semester. Under the new plan, the sessions are doubled into two eight-week periods, enabling twice as many students to complete their internship requirements each semester. A student teacher, under the supervision of a qualified teacher, takes over full instraction of the classes he is to direct. An I. U. School of Education faculty member regularly visits each student teacher in the classroom. TERRY MUSSELMAN HOME ON LEAVE Terry Musselman of the U. S. Navy arrived home Tuesday for a 30-day leave. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. L. (Kie) Musselman of Milford. Terry, a 1960 graduate of Milford high school, has been stationed on the USS Aeolus (ARC-3). ON DEAN'S LIST Dennis Cory, a freSliman at Manchester college, son of Mr. and Mrs. Neal Cory of r 1 Milford, is listed on the Dean’s list at the college.

THE MAIL-JOURNAL

Hr i ? Mi gjjraMßßMk

INITIATED — Earl Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Roberts of r 3 Syracuse, has been initiated into active membership in Farm House fraternity at Purdue university. A freshman at Purdue, Mr. Roberts is a 1962 graduate of Syracuse high school and is enrolled in the School of Agriculture under the agronomy option. His activities include Collegiate 4-H : club, “Agriculturist” staff and Inter-Frater-nity council worker. Farm House fraternity is a national fraternity of 18 chapters with 57 men in the Purdue active chapter. These are all men studying agriculture or related fields. God's Law Offers Help And Healing, Hord Affirms The divine law of perfection and harmony is ever operative and ever at hand, Frank T. Hord of Washington, D. C., said Tuesday night. A member of The Christian Science Board of Lectureship, he came to Goshen in the course of an extended speaking tour, upon the invitation of First Church of Christ, Scientist. He spoke in the church auditorium at 111 north Fifth street on the subject, “Christion Science Preaches the Kingdom of God and Heals thb Sick.” Earle Waltz of Syracuse, First Reader of the church, introduced’ him. “On battlefields, in the air, on the sea, or under the sea, the GodPrincipal is the omnipresent law of good protecting and healing those who turn to it,” he declared. Mr. Hord held that the solution of every problem - family, business, church, or government - is based on the spiritual understanding of God, divine principle, love. When Christ Jesus was asked when the kingdom of God should come, he answered (Luke 17) “The kingdom of God cometh not with observation: neither shall they say, lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you,” Mr. Hord stated. Rotary Club Accepting ; Fellowship Applications Applications for Rotary Foundation Fellowships for one ! year of study abroad are now being accepted by the Syracuse Rotary club, it was announced today by Lewis Immel, club president. Rotary Fellowship awards are for graduate study and include all transportation, education, and living expenses, in addition to a limited allowance for travel within the country of temporary residence. The awards for. which applied tions are now being accepted are for the 1964-65 academic year. The deadline for applications is April 15. There are two types of Rotary Foundation Fellowships: regular and additional. Regular Rotary Fellowships are available to unmarried men, aged 20 to 28, inclusive, who hold a college degree or will hold one by the time the Fellowship is to begin. They must be able to read, write, and speak the language of the country in which they will study. The purpose of this Fellowship Program is for the advancement Os International understanding. Additional Rotary Fellowships are available to men and women with a college degree, though this requirement may be waived in certain circumstances. There is no maximum age limit for this type of Rotary Fellowship and the language requirements are less stringent. This grant is awarded for study only’ in certain countries. The applicant sponsored by the Rotary club of Syracuse will be considered along with candidates sponsored by other Rotary clubs in this district, which includes 54 clubs. The local Rotary club can sponsor two applicants for a regular Fellowship and two for an additional Fellowship. Winners of Rotary Foundation Fellowships are regarded as ambassadors of good will to the countries in which they study, and through their association with Rotary clubs abroad they increase their opportunities to meet people and become better acquainted with their way of life and their institutions. Begun in 1947, the Rotary Foundation Fellowship program has awarded more than 1,700 Fellowships to students in 70 countries. Awards average $2,600 and total grants have been in excess of $4,500,000.

9