The Mail-Journal, Volume 4, Number 38, Milford, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1965 — Page 12
12
THE MAIL-JOURNAL
Style Show Thursday Attracts 178 Ladies SARAH KKOH — Mrs. Charles noon. The show was put on by Tom Kroh is modeling a plaid suburban Socks Sportswear and narrated bycoat at the style show at the Pick- Nancy Prickett, wick Lounge last Thursday after- \ HL -fib' ! £"' * U—■ 9 r-* [Jngwpv -?*■ fe- .••■■■■> __'■Jk-'-iX* ' ■"* Mrs. Leon Vance is modeling a pants. ! sleeveless sweater with white stretch *1 ■HP F.' I i W< ■ M «| Miss Judy Lantz is modeling a golf I jacket and matching shorts. Ka ye Won< b modetinj , a casua | _____eater and stretch pants.
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Mte Sue Tracer b medriteg * |Mg sleeve knit sweater and stretch YOUR 1 Sm
Wednesday, October 27, 1965
< Syracuse I Personals Mr, and Mrs. Lee Poyser, SyraI vase, have left far a two week’s vacation. Mr. Poyser is a dispatcher at th<- Syracuse fire station. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin 0. Johnson of r 3 Syracuse have gone to Lehigh Acre--, Fla., to speod tbe winter. =. Mrs Hariy Strieby. r 3 Syracuse. will be leaving for Boyton Beach. Fla., the first of the week i to spend the winter.
Miss Helen and Miss Mary Gonser rs Payne, Ohio, and Delray, Fla., were week end guests of Miss Ida Deardoff and her mother, Mrs. Lydia Deardoff at Syracuse Jack Elam has returned to hb office at Budget Investment at Syracuse after a week’s vacation. He and Mrs. Elam and children visited with relatives at Lincoln, m. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Troyer. Syracuse, and Mr. and Mrs. Shirt Foos of Goshen have returned from a week’s vacation. They visited Wash ington. D. C.. the Arimgton National cemetery in Virginia and toured the southern states. Mrs. Marie LeCount, r 3 Syracuse, accompanied her daughter-in-tow. Mrs. Coriyss LeCount of Noblesville and Mrs. Jean Howe to Fort Myers Beach, Fla. Mrs. CorIvss LeCount and Mrs. Howe wffl visit their parents. Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Howe for a week. Mrs. Marie LeCount will remain in Florida for the winter.
J. C. Baumgartners Report To M-J From Switzerland
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Baumgartner of Rocky River, I Ohio, are spending a two-month vacation in Europe, visiting I the various capitals. Mr. Baumgartner is formerly a Milford | resident, having taught two years in Milford high school. He I recently retired after teaching 28 years at Lincoln high I school in Cleveland.
I He sent an interesting, albeit I lengthy, letter to his brother. Arch Baumgartner, publisher of The I Mail-Journal. He writes with par- | ticular interest of visiting distant | relatives in Switzerland, the land , of his ancestors. i .From Switzerland He writes from Switzerland: “We are spending several days at Lausanne in order to go to Zermst I and to see the Matterhorn and then to take a fast train to “Gay Paree: " “This trip has been a dream. Ten days in London just scratches the surface, St. Paul's Cathedral with cry-pts of the great such as' | “The Iron Duke Wellington. Beatty.! [Nelson. Laurence of Arabia and j many others. West Minister .Abbey I contains the remains of many ear- j ly kings and such illustrious names ' as Dagwin. G;adstone, Disralet. I "London has over 50 legitimate ' I theatres, also ballet, orchestras, and so on. We attended a perform-J ance of Camelot. i ’’We met Roy Wilkins, head of• NAAt'P in lx»ndon and had quite; a Chat with him. i I "I visited a comprehensive secondary school in a I-ondon suburb . •I received a lecture from the head-j master on British education which ] he admitted whs quite Victorian, i They have had American students, ! •iMit the freedom to which they- are 1 •accustomed is often a disruptive in-j fluence, he said . I "While the Park Land hotel in J London was good 'strickly British* I and the food well prepared, the Doelen in Amsterdam and the Des i Indies in The Hague topped every- j ■nine, with the exception of Zum j Ritter at Heidelberg. One never =ves a ‘greasy spoon’ nor ‘hot dogs’, i ‘hamburgers’ advertised here. And the finesse of the waiters is a sight to behold. I We found such cities as Mainz 70 per cent damaged or destroyed . Frankfort. Hanburg, Berlin. Nurenberg and others rebuilt with new. modern buildings. i “A typical German tells, you he disassociated himself entirely from i Kilter and his movement. I “The common market seems to | have worked w-onders for the economy of the six nations who formed the organization. “A completely new generation has grown up in Germany in the last quarter century and is being imbred with democratic spirit. One detects no evidence of arrogance, , nor a trace of Nazi spirit. “Switzerland, the home of our ] ancestors, is the world of one’s.i dreams And Zurich to us will al- J ways stand out for its remarkableshops with varied products. We also met one Ida Beer, whom we had never seen before. She and her' brother drove us about in his Fenault. Her grandfather Daniel is the only one of the eight Beer boys i who never came to America. While these boys were all bom in Trub in ! (the Emmanthal valley Daniel mov- i ed to Latterback. We had dinner I in Daniel’s former home, now own- I ed by a grandson, which was 300 ' years old. ... . 1 “Toe houses in Switzerland are 1 ,of distinctive design, found nowhere dse I know- of. Their roofs ’often extend as much as 8 feet from the wall as protection against weather, and some of them contain lover 20 rooms with families averaging from 15 to often over 20 children They need room and lots of it. I “I located the famous painting of
Hans Ulrich Beer, an uncle of our ’grandfather Beer pronounced Bear .here’. It was in the Krusthaus in Zurich. It is about 9 by 12 feet, -in color on canvas. Beer was the “Schwinger Koeing”, wrestling king of Switzerland from 1850 to 1863. He later migrated to Schwerton, Oregon, and died in 1907. I “I was permitted to photograph this bs- the famous Swiss artist Fernand Hadler with about five of ; the personnel watching me. including director Dr. Rene Wehrle. who was kind and helpful. “Swiss secondary schools are said {to be second to none and I am hoping to get into one, pertiaps at Lausanne. More next week. Court News
Marriage License Issued Robert Lee Morrow, 23. r 1 Syracuse, and Lynn Ellen Van Sickle, 18, r 4 Syracuse were issued a marriage license in the Koscuisko county clerk’s office at Warsaw recently. RED \ CROSS | BLOOD LIVES
fy ■■ ■■!■■■ - ■■■ ■»<»<■■■■ taiziNMX A3?OUND An editorial was ordered written ■ on Monday morning for this issue of i iThe M-J on the merits of UNICEF. > the United Nations’ effort to help needy children in all lands, be they communist or non-communist. Little did we know that later in j , the day it would be announced that | UNICEF would be named recipient of the Nobel Peace prize. Announcing the award on the even- [ ing TV news Monday. Eric Severeid , called UNICEF a “conspiracy of j 'good will." adding that it lias helped •50,000 children. Following is some more we learned about UNICEF, so if trick or treat youngsters come to your house for this cause, you can have , some idea of where the money | g<*s. I During the first 16 years of UNICEF [operation 162 million cliildren were; ■ vaccinated against tuberculosis; ovjer 18 million mothers and children ' were treated for yaws, a crippling ■disease of tropical sores, 11.5 million, i children victims of trachoma and ajeute conjunctivitis were protected a--1 gainst possible blindness Over 700, | 000 mothers and children were treat-! ed for leprosy. In 1962 alone 24 mil-. lion mothers and children were protected from malaria and six million benefited from supplementary feeding programs. Many more millions benefited from 170 milk and food processing plants and 23,000 maternal and child health centers which UNICET’ helped equip. ♦ ♦ • We received a barrage o£ complaints from residents on the north shore of Lake Wawasee during the past week, concerning sealer the , county put on the north shore road. The most vociferous came from ! reader Arthur F. VanAnda. He said residents got the sealer all over their i cars and tracked it into their homes, iWe referred the matter to countyhighway department head Charles Cleveland, also a Lake Wawasee resident. ■ ♦ • • ■ Mr. and. Mrs. Clarence Ruch are reported to be home from a twoweek motor trip through the western states. A Lakeland school teacher told us recently, the only reason she was not! in some sort of business was the fact { that she could not bear to see a! friend buy from a competitor. We thought this an unusual remark, since we think schools should teach competition, in all forms. Oh, well. Tom McClintic will have the first of the three new buildings in the new industrial park io be completed. Roof on. workers are completing inside of building now. Incidentally. Tom reports having two dealers in the state of Florida now selling his Green Stuf. •• • ■
Two reports made the rounds last week, and neither seemed to jell. One was that Louis Hare of Milford was going to purchase the Blue Snmgle tavern near Lake Wawasee. The other was that Lee Schacht was going to purchase the place. We Later heard Mrs. Schacht was interested in the purchase of the Sleepy Owl. 'None of the rumors has materialized as yet. • • • Seth Ward, a sometimes student of Shakespeare, wants to know more about the Old Bard. He re- . cently wrote to Dr. Gay Becknell at Tampa, Fla., to get some Shakespeare references. He called Becknell. a former Milford resident, “an authority” on Shakespeare. • • • |1
NOTICE I Wawasee Bowl I Open At Ip. m. Sunday I SPEND AN AFTERNOON OF REAL FUN AND EXERCISE WITH US . I
9 r The last Thursday- style show at [ the Pickwick Lounge, put on by Nancy Prickett of Tom Socks Sports- “ wear was real interesting, even for one who just showed up to take a few photos. The affair drew 178 women of the Lakeland area, and showed fall fashions for men and women. Local ladies, and a few youths, made up the models. And Nancy did a “bang up” job of describing the fashions on display. • . • I r s > i : We found out that Ken Harkless and Dale Butt, his right hand man. i. are a couple of clowns, if given half a chance. When our photographer turned up to take a photo of wortanen erecting a new boat showroom. Harkless grabbed a sledge hammer :and Dale a stake, to make with the make-believe work bit. Two people who are avid bridge I
zl Tragedy' oj~ Errors by Jerry Marcus _____ > I u ’ n n r tn n or ‘ •> n “V Z -Is this a pit »top?" Tb« TravWerj Safety Service Speeding killed 16,400 and injured 1,344,000 in 1964. - ' - DANGER 1 EuECtRtC Vi©?'' a s •Si?rr3\ t . v »,,,v * t i K ■ ■ . " ' Ka== * ■ Super Values Support Mail-Journal Advertisers
DINNER MUSIC Tuesday— Wednesday — Thursday Dancing Every Friday and Saturday 9-12 p.m. Dining Room & Cocktail Lounge Open Monday Thru Saturday YELLOW BANKS HOTEL On Beautiful Lake Webster NORTH WEBSTER Your Hoste: -John <fe Konnie Bowden
I players are Bill and Betty Brammer. Mrs. Brammer teaches groups the intricacies of the game. She adds, “But then you should see how I play the game!” Don’t be too surprised if you hear the Brammers are soon to build a new borne at Lake Wawasee. • • « Thornburg’s drug store reported a fine opening of their new store -at Nappanee last week end. They are located east side of the city. The firm will open a new store in Columbia City in the spring. • • • We didn’t know Betty Schlotterback (Mrs. Floyd) is a Republican, until she showed up at the speaker’s table at Marley’s the other day at a GOP women’s dinner meeting. We always thought she was a Democrat! I Spied on Rotary room blackboard I (at Marley’s': “I, Jack Clark, being of sound mind and over 21 years of age, feel that I should be fined heavily for tipping the canoe over in Syracuse lake this past week end.” Jack is a local physician, and can take the ribbing of his fellow Rotarians in good order.
*--* ~ ~ ~ “That was some drive! Not many people can reach that water holer s'"'' ‘ “Unless I can convert these to frozen fish sticks my wife won’t know- what to do with them!” STAHLY & STILLSON Buick, Olds, Rambler, GMC Trucks We Are Loaded To The Gills On Used Cars COME OVER AND SEE OUR NEW FACILITIES PICK OUT THE CAR OF YOUR CHOICE MAKE US AN OFFER 15 NEW 1965 CARS ALSO SOME EXECUTIVE CARS BIG REDUCTIONS 1965 Electra 225, 4-dr„ H, T. 1965 Electra 225, 4-door 1965 Rambler Ambassador, 4-dr., H.T., very sharp 1965 Rambler 770, Wagon 1964 Rambler 660, Wagon 1964 Buick Special 1964 Olds 98, Hol. Cpe. 1964 Chev. Imp., Spt. Cpe. AND MANY, MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROM STAHLY & STILLSON U. S. 6, East NAPPANEE Phone: 773-4171 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■>■■ ■■■■ ii L pgVl ’ 11 ■■■£[ : $5 - 95 Ironing is for the birds! TAJ BUTTON-DOWN keeps its “just-ironed” look for keeps Simply toss it in your automatic washer, tumble dry (do not wring).--and it’s ready to wear again. No ironing! Get this great permanent press sportshirt in Million Mile fabric of 65% Macron* polyester, 35% cotton. Bright colors in handsome plaid. Authentic button-dqwn model with trim, tapered body and sleeves. TM SNYDERS MEN S SHOP GOSHEN, INDIANA
