The Mail-Journal, Volume 2, Number 51, Milford, Kosciusko County, 23 January 1964 — Page 6
THE MAIL-JOURNAL
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»F-’O< ’ “ a.*3 Improvement Topic Os Syracuse town Board
The Syracuse town board of trustees met Tuesday evening. Jiii 21 nnd 'ijst ussed repair and remodelingrwork underway on the town half Some of the work is being done upon the recommendation of the state fire marshal, who was in Syracuse a few weeks ago to inspect town and public buildings-' j. Byron tSnnnlly read a » from the state fire marshal's off:ce is to the repairs needed in the building. The police' department needs rewiring find the flue ()• work on the town hall will be discussed at a later date. . i Walter Cainon stated a metal flue mould be install'd to eliminator the continuous caulking of-'the < flue now,being used. j Other Business Bill Hess asked the board for approval of repairs on a radio reiver, and k. This was approved by the board; . Th I re ''■■■<■• lIUCUSdon on the dl'- ■ classifiedwith the fire depart-j inent. but since they take calls for al! departments they may be in a fication in the
Indiana £*H’ers r i Top Honors, Chisago Trip Two Hoosiers from Tippecanoe and Hendricks counties recently returned from Chicago where they attended the National 4-H Club Congress. Miss Claudia Truax, 19. of Plainfield, and Mike Chandler, 17. of West Lafayette, won expense-paid trips bo-the congress as state winners in 4-H Achievement and Entomology programs. While at the national meeting they stayed with some 1.500 other delegates at the Conrad Hiltoa hotel on Chicago's lakefront, ate of the congress , lor mans years. ..Miss Truax, the daughter of Mr. and Mr*. Kenneth E. Truax. 15» Hardin cl. Plainfield, previenMr attended the National 4-H Club Congress as state dairy foods winner. She was one of two Indiana girts selected as delegates to the National 4-H Conference last April in Washington.!). C. She is a sophomore at Purdue University.
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A bit superstitious. Miss Truax wears the apron she made in first year clothing whenever she gives a demonstration. She has won many demonstration awards and was state baking winner at age 13. Miss Truax was the guest at the 1963 congress of the Ford Motor Company Fund, national sponsor of the Achievement program. Chandler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leland Chandler, 615 Dexter lane. West Lafayette, has won six grand champion county awards and several county and state blue ribbons for his entomology projects. He also has won several county and district entomology judging awards. The Hercules Powder Company sponsored his Chicago trip.
Best Buy McCulloch ZJMllpw Here’s your "best buy” in an economy saw that's fast and dependable on even the toughest cutting job*. Full-sized 17* bar, famous McCulloch Super Mac chain wfwell a* a bust of other features make the McCulloch MAC 15 the natural choice for cutting firewood or fenceposts, clearing campsites or pruning trees. It will bo KT M 24 95 j£L SERVICE AND GARDEN .CENTER ——’ R ush to Ruch —— Syracuse, Indiana ■
Thursday, January 23, 1964
future. Tffcs matter was tabled 1 fori the present. Mr. Connolly appointed Willard NUsbaum as the dispatcher’s rep- ' resen tative on the board and Wal- ! ter Cainon as the police departI ments representative. At the previous meeting Loren Longenbaugh had been appointed the I firemen's representative. No Petty Cash Fund Robert Reed. attern-ey for the town, reported that no petty cash fund could be set up and suggelled to the board that on small purchases the merchants hold the bills until a larger amount was purchased or for 30 days. Mr. Caln n stated that the ; heads of the various departments • are the only ones who are to orj der or give orders for materials to the clerk-treasurer. Mr. Cainon als<‘ Mated pay roll vouchers were to be signed and be returned to the head of the department. The he checks from > the clerk-treasurer to be, delivered by them to the men in their? department. Department heads should not hold the checks but deliver them as 'soon as possible.
Glamorize Your Sunday Roast
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Take one pork loin, add a spirited glaze, garnish with fruits ana dinner this Sunday will have that combination of qualities that delights the talented housewife—low-cost, good, and glamorous! ♦ It’s called Bourbon-Orange Glazed Pork Loin, and here are the very simple steps that produce itF* ■ . - BOURBON-ORANGE GLAZED PORK LOIN 6-7 lb. pork loin 1 cup orange marmalade 1 jigger (2 ez.) Old Crow hentdfky Bourbon Season pork with salt and pepper to taste and roast in a 350 degree oven, allowing 30
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NOTICE Kale Island Beacon EMPLOYEES ARE HAVE A Remodeling Opening WEDNESDAY, JAN. » • Come out and see Johnnie And Mary’s wonderful new place to dine and relax. ANN GALAHAN AT THE ORGAN Barbecue Spareribs ■ ■ , ' '' ' • ts; ’ ci 25 us “** - The Usual •* > ' The Employees
I But Kline reported he had not yet received' the blade for the f snow plow that had been ordered . some, time ago. The board will . look into the possibility that the . Made may have Veen shipped . somewhere else. Mr. ConnoHj- spoke briefly on . the two guards that have been cn duty since the “ Christmas school vacation and the amount of wages to - be paid the guards. Mrs. Lota SMilecter read the financial report of the town of Syracuse as of .January 1, 1964. Due to the absence of one of ; the members various appoint- ' ments will be made at a later meeting. • Board members present were* Byron Connolly.’ Loren Longen-. bnugh. Walter Cainon. and Willard Nusbaum: clerk-treasurer.; Mrs. Lois Schleetcr: and town at- . torney. Robert Reed. * Also present .were Walter Hag--, erdon. Don EnVcart. Fred Perscn%ttc Bov M IS-’.'. O- .ar Dahl, Wiliam Hess, Mr. and Mrs. DabSparklin, Mr. and Mrs. Emory I Guy, Bud Kline, Joe Hughes. O. C. I Eutt. Robert Smith. Leonard Cripe, and E. L. Nichols.
last hour baste often with mixture of marmalade and bourbon. Serve with a garnish of Bourbon Fruits. FRUIT GARNISH 3 oranges, peeled, thinly sliced ' % cup butter or margarine % cup white sugar 1 cup dried prunes J % cup dried apricots 3 jiggers (6 ozs.) Old Crow Kentucky Bourbon Brown orange slices lightly in butter, sprinkling with sugar. Place in shallow bowl with dried fruits, pour bourbon over, coverand soak overnight. Place orange slices around platter, ‘ and tuck remaining fruits into —vrrerre r*f
SYRACUSE Hospital Notes Mrs. George Bryan, r 4 Syracuse. was released from the Goshen hosiptal, Monday. John He Stack, r 3 Syracuse, was released from the Goshen hospital Monday. ° Court Slabaugh. Syracuse, entered the GdShen hospital, Tuesday. Mrs. Sylvester Miller, r 3 Syracuse. was released from the Goshen hospital Tuesday. Mrs. James Hawthorne. Syracuse, entered Goshen hospital. Tuesday, Mrs. William Gushwa, Syracuse, has returned home from .. the South Bend Osteopathic hospital. George, son of Mr. and Mrs. i George Ooquiilard. Syracuse, entered Goshen hospital, Thursday, i Jan. 16. He was later dismissed. Mrs. Ralph' Oyler, r 4, Syracuse, was admitted to the Goshen hospital Thursday. Jan. 16. ■ Mrs. Floyd Gingerich of Syracuse entered’the Goshen hospital Thursday, Jan. 16. Mrs Gingerich was taken to the hospital after she fell on the ice at her- home. She was released Monday. Mrs. Charles Harris, Syracuse, entered the Goshen hospital. s Saturday for. observation. She was re- j leased Tuesday. ' I Mrs. Paul L. Lantz, Syracuse’ was admitted to the’ Goshed 1 hospital Saturday. . 4 I Mrs. Ruby Worth. Syracuse, entered the Goshen hospital Satur-; ddy. She was released” Tuesday. Mrs. John L. Miller, Syracuse, entered the Goshen hospital Saturday. j Sandra Laughlin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verio Laughlin, was released from the Goshen hospital Saturday. Mrs. Alma M. Spry. Syracuse, was released from the Goshen hospital Friday. James L. Kaufman, Syacuse, was admitted to the Goshen hospital Friday.
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Oswego Bridge How Open
The Oswego bridge, the con- i , ; troversial bottleneck for east-west) - traffic from Leesburg to North Webster, is “unofficially” open, I it was learned this morning. -; While highway barriers are - still up, and no “official” opening
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I Court News Offers To Pay Robert Vice of Syracuse, defendant in a 1 Qote suit filed by the Ccppes Federal jcred- I >t Union, has been orderedpay ■ the plaintiff $244.90 as judgment in the suit. ? , Marriage License Issued Carl Leonard Phillips, 20, r 3J Syracuse, and Mildred Carmen j i Perkins. 21. Warsaw, have ap-j | plied for a marriage license at j the Kosciusko county clerk's office.- ! Files Suit Lakeland Motors, Inc., of Syraj cuse has filed suit against John E. Holloway. Syracuse? to foreclose a j lien on a motor vehicle. The plaintiff seeks judgment of $350.18. Fined Recently Elson R. Wilson. Syracuse, was fined $18.75 in Wilbur Gill’s justice of the peace office in Warsaw, recently. The fine was for running a stoplight. Mrs. John W. Peters, r 1 Syracuse, was released from the Goshjen hospital Friday.
WiKm S Hl ; ii ' . ■ Northern Indiana Public Service Ccynpany ' 0 I- ■ ” • • symbol of service in Nipscoiand * ,j ... . ... ;
of the bridge has been announc-1 ed by' Kosciusko county commissioners, traffic continues to trickle over the new bridge. Official announcement of. the opening awaits an insurance re- | lease which is expected to be |
WARM WEATHER WARNING | sidents of the Lakeland area j are asked to check the ice befofe * allowing children to play on it. ■ With the warm weather the ice is melting, especially in the chanels near Lake Wawasee. j One boy, of junior age, fell | through the chanel between Kale j Island and the railroad bridge last evening. c
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"Clever of you to teach therrft to beg like that . . . but I don’t want n &P?y!”
©s=s=s ■ Z '— l ' - Warren Miller had a feeling he was forgetting something when he left Goshen, Indiana. His blacksmith shop was sold . • • along with his farm and implements. Thirty-seven years later, among some musty old papers, Mr. Miller discovered what had been bothering him—s long-misplaced electric bill for SB.IO. This impeccably f honest man promptly mailed the bill and payment to the "Interstate Public Service Company” ? which is now NIPSCO.
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' forthcoming at any hour. i According to county highway ' j department head Ray Nine, when 1 ! the bridge is officially opened his department will put up the usual I highway signs. . The long delay in getting the [
RESEARCH, CHILDREN AND CHERRIES
Amer,cans eat more than 200,000 tens flf cherries year ’ They are 3 par * ticular * awite of children. ' Z A test conducted by Abbott / > Liboratories of 858 children ages / . ,/ /• 5 to 8 showed a 2 to 1 I f preference tor cherry over f f 4 i I other flavors in chewable / .>, • « / vitamins. As a result, * ! the company's Vi-Daylia \sr" y TStz; r /Vitamins for children / arelnow sold with a S fbvor. X Ni Research in taste as weH ’ as in product quality helps X American business determine what the public needs and ' wants. In the case cf vitamins, the \ "V |A study helps parents get the ? -- illßL* • young fry to take their vitamins \ j more willingly by predetermining t their tastes. vUA IKh J \\ VI I * r A zrw •
•.,■'-V . ■ ■ ‘ PUBLIC SERVICE CO.brj . 1 UM Daw«rt D.W *M«I *. MtT O' • • ELECTRIC SERVICE t. i. »Mt ?£ j j MM« «-i>x rrM I* 7 ‘ Q 3 s r, « 1-1 Gna. Di* < | ELICT.K ■ » J. I — 2 „ J , j M/ - j! I | -J • *i* oaw o»»« - • —; ' • a —. ~ - • •_, "5 = = . ’Z 1 ’ tour - • * t ' t
Mr. Miller used 81 kilowatt hours of electricity from January 1 to April 1, 1927. At that fcime the rate was lOp per kilowatt hour. . ' At today’s low rates, this same amount of electric service would cost Mr. Miller only $5.27. .. 35% less than in 1927 • MW
! new bridge built has been cause [ for controversy around that area, particularly in Oswego. A lengthy detour around the closed area has been the source of concern among i residents of Oswego.
