The Mail-Journal, Volume 2, Number 27, Milford, Kosciusko County, 15 August 1963 — Page 6
6
THE MAIL-JOURNAL
/gam WsKSfe MFgF Agf SOME TjPS FROM THE Crftt&D MoTbRCLM: • DRESS THE YOUNGSTERS IN COOL, EASH/-WASHED CLOTHING-. ~ it> • ALWAYS EAT IN CLEAN RESTAURANTS. DRINK ONLY APPROVED WATER. DON'T OVERINDULGE IN CANDY. ' • STOP FOR A STRETCH AT LEAST EVERY TWO HOURS. • CREATE AUTOMOBILE GAMES TO OCCUPY THE CHILDREN WHILE TRAVELING. PLAN TO LIMIT YOUR DRIVING TO ZOOofMO MILES A DAY. START EARLYAND CHECK-IN EARLY.
Milford Locals ■ * Sunday evening birthday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Dippon and family of Milford who are spending several weeks at .the Howard Haab cottage at Waubee Lake were Mrs. Gordan Neterer and children, Mr. and Mrs. Jame Barnes and children and Mrs. Howard Poe, all of Mishawaka, Mr- and Mrs. Wayne Bucher and children, Mr. and Mrs. Junioi Bucher and children, ah' of Milford. , Mr. and Mrs. Arch Baumgartner of Milford entertained guests for dinner Friday evening at their home. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon McClain of Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bucher of Dewart lake, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Dippon and Mr. and Mrs. Howard ,< Haab, all of Milford, and Mr. and Mrs. Mike Stafford of Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Mr- and Mrs. Bryce Baumgartner and son Billie returned Monday from Dallas, Texas, where Mr. Baumgartner was attending school. He plans to return to C. S. Myers Ford agency in Milford as a mechanic, beginning on Monday. .■. i ■ Mrs. Jocob Rink, Mrs. Merril ) Rink; and Mrs. Frank Rink all of Milford, attended a wedding shower last Wednesday evening in the home of Louann -'Myman of Nappanee. The shower was for Max-' ine Weldy who will, become the bride of Donald Rink this week end. Sunday evening dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kreider of Milford were Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Teeple, Pam and Jack, of Leesburg, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Speicher, and children Carla and Larry, and Mr. and Mrs- Ronald Kreider, Vickie and Don, of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Donn Kesler of Milford and Warren Angle of : Peru, "who is spending the .sum- , mer with the Keslers, attended the 1 Sunday , evening wedding of Miss , Joy Miller and Ronald Boswell at - • Peru. 1 Miss Sherryl Kreider, daughter - of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Kreider of j Fort i Wayne spent last Friday j with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kreider of Milford. ■.' ■ I Mrs. N. E. Kirkdorfer of Ogden I Dunes, Ind., is visiting with her I mother Mrs. C. R. Brittsan of Milford- They attended the Kirdor- i fer reunion Sunday at New Paris. < 1 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Henne and j children of. Bradenton, Fla., and ( Mr. and Mrs. John E. Erown and - daughters of Alma, Mich, spent last week with Mr. and Mrs. Henry - Beer of Milford. Mrs. Henne and , Mrs. Brown are daughters of the , Beers. Mr. Brown recently return- ‘ ed from-an archaeological expedition in Israel. Mr. and Mrs- Merle Fox of Watervliet, Mich., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Keller of Dewart Lake. Mrs. Fox is a sister pf Mr. Keller. Mrs. Dewey Losee of Rice Lake, Wis., is visiting with her son-in-law and daughter Mr. and' Mrs. Daryl Johnson of Milford. Donn Kesler and daughter Linda and Fritz Wolferman and daughter Kathy, attend the baseball game Wednesday afternoon at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
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Thursday, August 15, 1963
Mrs. Harold Pennick, Mrs. Faye Shaw and Mrs. Cheryl Drago of St- Louis, Mo., are staying with Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kreider of Milford. Pam Teeple of Leesburg is staying this week with Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kreider of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ostendorf, Jr., and family of Milford' are leaving Friday for a vacation in Arkansas. They plan to visit Mr. Ostendorf’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ostendorf, Sr., in the Ozarks. Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stutzman of Milford were Mr. and Mrs. Sall Yoder of Benton and Mr. and Mrs. Ora Miller of Middlebury. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Stackhouse and children of Indianapolis are staying in a cottage at Lake Wawasee this week. They have been visiting, with friends in the Milford-Syracuse area. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Estep of Milford were Sunday dinner guests ol; the Floyd Galbreath family of Elkhart- Mrs. Estep and Hrs. Galbreath are sisters. Mrs. Wayne Riggs and two sons of Indianapolis spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beer of Milford. Mrs. Barbara Braun and children, Blake; Debbe, Kandy, and Mindy, of Arleta, Calif., are visit- I ing with Mrs- Braun’s father) Charles Traster of Milford. They are staying at the Fuller cottage on Waubee Lake. They will leave Sunday for Chicago where they plan to . visit with friends. From there they will return to their home in California. SANDRA KNEPPER HONORED AT SHOWER Miss Sandra Knepper of Milford was honored at a bridal shower Wednesday evening. Aug. 14. The shower-, was held in the home of Mrs. Carl Duncan with Mrs. Vera Miller serving as co-hostess. There were 26 neighbors and relatives present at the, party. Miss Knepper will become the bride of Charles McKibben, of Leesburg on Sept. 14. FOUR MILFORD YOUNG PEOPLE TO ATTEND MYF CONVENTION Four young people of the Milford community will be among the 32 young people from the Mennonite church in Nappanee leaving today for Bellville, Pa., where they will attend the Mennonite Youth Fellowship convention. Those from Milford going are Ralph Stutzman, Darrell Yoder, Karen and Carlyle Kuhns. The group will return Monday. V#
Discuss Widening Syracuse Bridge
Syracuse town board member Byron Connolly and Loren Longenbaugh and clerk-treasurer J. Barton Cox met with members of the Kosciusko * county board of commissioners last Tuesday at Warsaw and discussed the repair and widening of the Main street bridge in Syracuse. The county commissioners told the local board that funds were available for the- repair, but asked that the Syracuse board get an estimated cost of the job from an engineer. Wednesday clerk-treas-urer Cox and street supt. Walter Hagerdon met with Ronald Brown, of the Phend and Brown construe-
Vegetables Yba've Never Tasted J Mißi fl . T ••••■• This unusual-looking vegetable is a cross between cabbage and winter cauliflower. Its name is Caulicab and its flavor is mild, unlike that of either parent. Why- not try to grow it?
To paraphrase a famous ditty, “I never saw a purple bean, I never hope to see one” yet there is a purple-podded snap' bean now on the market. It’s called Royalty for that royal purple hue. The pods turn green when they’re cooked in boiling water for
precisely two minutes, thus providing a built-in blanching indicator for home freezing. Not only is there a purple bean, out there’s a red celery. This is named Holiday and keeps its color when cooked. When the celery plants are young, stems are tinged pink. This color deepens as the plants mature. Use Holiday for a winter crop in the south, sowing seeds in August. Start seeds indoors in the north. There are also, among the vegetables you’ve never tasted, two varieties of “salad” potatoes brought to this country by the first German settlers. Both of these have yellow flesh and are far superior for salad than any other type of potato. One is named German Purple for its skin color. Round tubers average an inch and a half in diameter. The other, called Fingerlings, has tubers from two to four inches long and about an inch in diameter. Both skin and flesh are yellow. Both varieties should be boiled with the skins on, then sliced for salad. Stock of seed Is small, so order early.
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tion company of Milford, and inspected the bridge and discussed what might be done. Mr. Brown indicated he would have an estimate of the cost in about 10 days. The town has agreed to help in the project, by labor and some materials, if necessary. The present structure is 19 feed in width and 29 feet long. It is on a main traveled street and is an anger to school busses and all traffic towards Milford and Warsaw. The county bridge tax fund would be used to finance the project, if the county agrees to go ahead with the project. '
Among the newest vegetables there’s a spinach called Malabar that grows like a vine and thrives in hot weather • when, ordinary spinach varieties bolt to seed. Train it on a fence or similar support and use the large, bright green leaves for summer greens. Have you ever tasted Caulicab, a cross between cabbage and winter cauliflower? Flavor is different from either parent and very mild. Depending on when it is planted, this new vegetable acts differently. When planted in spring with early cabbage, it makes solid heads by fall, with large ribs running nearly to the tops of the heads. When planted in late summer, heads form the next spring with ah outer layer of leaves like cabbage but the inner portion filled with tightly folded, sprouts and buds, amber in color. If you’d like to know where to procure seeds for any of these new and unusual vegetables, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope with our request to this newspaper.
I Kitchen Idea File: I OVEN-ON-THE-COUNTER ——l ! ’ I 4 -K - -’'*l I] '» i 1 Th ■HHI For the homemaker who wants a second oven but doesn’t want to replace.her present range, new “mount-it-anywhere” units may be the best answer.
An example is the Caloric o—?as ® ven shown located on a and it has new controls that au« counter. It can also be wall- tomatically keep food at readya slld e-in range or to-serve temperature for as Ca v- b ? -° ne as five hours after cooking' ®®n into cabinet is completed. The Caloric “sec-hodt-in ’ umt. ond” oven is also ideal for oven easily warming rolls, thawing frozen accommodates a large roast foods, or rehe .ting leftovers.
Shop The Mail-Journal Ads & Save! Real Estate For Sale On Summit Street, in Ligonier, Ind., a dwelling—four rooms, full bath, glassed in. porch downstairs, two rooms upstairs, nice lot, with one large bam thereon, and one large metal siding building. Right in Ligonier. This is the Bill Reed and Vera Reed Residence. See or call Albert J. Kuster, Attorney at Law, 110 South Main Street, Ligonier, Ind., Attorney For Estate or Sanger E. Reed, Administrator — Phone Ligonier 894-3612.
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I GOOD UVING- OFFERS THREE FREE BOOKLETS — One on [ the type of clothes to take on your trip abroad or ja-the AJ.S. (for comfort in various climates) and shows how to cut luggage overweight . . . One on MAIN DISHES tells how to vary your favorite recipes by adding the right soup mixes and shows which goes with what for new compliments on your cooking ... And another shows you how to keep FRUIT from darkening or losing taste by using nature’s own ingredients to prevent deterioration, and gives new recipes for FRUIT SALADS for • freezing or canning. Write GOOD LIVING, P.O. Box 409, N.Y. 21, N.Y., sos- these three helpful Free Booklets. I ’ . — AT — C. S. MYERS MILFORD 21 New Cars To Choose From Immediate Delivery on Following '63 Fords J THUNDERBIRD Full Power, Leather, Diamond Blue GALAXIE CONVERTIBLE XL, 4-Speed, 390, V-8, Rose Beige GALAXIE CONVEFITIBLE 220, V-8, Automatic, Power Steering, White W/ 2 MODELS V-8, Galaxie 500, H. Tops, 3 To Choose From GALAXIE 500 4-Door Sedan, V-8, Automatic, Power Steering — 5 To Choose From, - Colors: White, Glacier Blue, Burgandy, Viking Blue, Chestnut WAGON 9-Pass., ,289 V-8, White, Automatic XL SPORTS COUPE — Burgandy, White Leather Automatic, 390 V-8 FAIRLANE V-8, H. Top, Automatic, Glacier Blue FALCON CONVERTIBLE 260 V-8, Automatic, Peacock Blue FALCON WAGON 260 V-8, Stick, Red, 4-Door FALCON WAGON 1 70, 6, Automatic, White, Deluxe FALCON 4-Door, 85 HP, Stick Pickups F 250 V-8, 3-Speed, 8’ Bed FIOO 6, 8’ Bed, Red FIOO 6, 8’ Bed, Turquoise J . T —— — Once again our community Is honored by your presence. You have one of the most responsible, exacting and exhausting jobs in the world and we admire your dedication. Our best wishes go with you. During the coming term there are many bank services you will find useful, such as a chec<ing account, savings account... perhaps a loan for an emergency.’ V/e look forward to making your acquaintance and hope youh will stop in soon and say "hello". 3% Paid on Time Certificates 2% Paid on Savings Accounts All Accounts Insured Up To SIO,OOO by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Start a Savings Account With Us Today First National Bank H Os Warsaw BL, MILFORD BRANCH QQQiI C. D. BARNES, Manager
