The Mail-Journal, Volume 4, Number 35, Milford, Kosciusko County, 5 October 1966 — Page 12

THE MAIL-JOURNAL

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THE LEAMONS KIDS — Pictured 1 above with the Leanions twins is their older brother. Richard. They are the < children of Mrs. Mary A. Leamons of ,

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THE PENNS — The four children of Mr. and Mrs. Grover Penn. Jr., North Webster, are shown in the a-

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THE GUYS — The delightful children of Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. Guy of North Webster are pictured here. They are five-year-old Bobby and eight-month-old Sarah. Doesn't Bobbv look happy as he bolds his baby sister?

THE CLARK KIDS — Mar?- and Joe Clark are the delightful children of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Clark, Jr., of North Webster. Clark is 3 and Mary is 5. Mrs Harold Bassett. Syracuse, who was accompanied by her son James on a jet plane trip to San Diego. Calif., where they attended the funeral of her brother. Charles McClintic, has returned home. Roy Riddle. Syracuse, has gone to Santa Fe. N. M., to spend the winter.

Mr. and Mrs Nelson Auer, Syracuse. have returned from St. Louis, Mo., where they attended the 1966 Mobil Dealer Convention held in the Chase-Park Plaza hotel.

SHOPPING IS MORI CONVENIENT WHEN YOU SAY “CHARGE IT* /S y'Wgrn/ BUDGET NOW AVAILABLE At Th« Following Progressive Merchants Gamble's Wawasee Motor Sales, Inc. Star Store Hubartt Appl & Repair Max's Shell Service Sportsman Center Brammer Furniture Tom Socks Sportswear Pocher's Shoes

Wednesday, October 5, UM

Sorth Webster. Richard Lee is 4 and the twins, Carla Jean and Carl, Jr., are 2.

bove photo. They are Danny, 6, Sherry, six months, Susan, 3, and Lee, 8.

V * ■ FL THE HOWE BOYS — Joseph and James Howe, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Howe of r 1 Leesburg, are pictured above. James Elmer is 10 months old and Joseph Wayne is 2. Read the classifieds.

ARE YOU GETTING READY FOR A Wedding? JO ■IMS J\w // ju • £ i Si a THEN SEEUSTORYOUR Invitations AND Announcements A distinctive selection of wedding invitations and announcements featuring the newest styles on the finest papers can be found at The Mail-Journal offices in Milford and Syracuse. You can be sure your stationery will be socially correct and perfectly printed. We feature the following invitations: STARLIGHT WEDDING LINE FLOWER WEDDING LINE Wedding napkins, bookmatches, coasters, placemats, cake bags and etc. are also available. Thank you notes, printed or plain The Mail-Journal South Main Street 103 E. Main Street Milford, Indiana Syracuse, Indiana Phone: 658-4111 Phone: 457-3666

MICKEM, Burt Douglas Mr. and Mrs. Albertis Mickem of Milford are the parents of a six pound, 14 ounce son, Burt Douglas, bom at 10:20 am. Sunday, Sept. 25, at Murphy Medical Center Warsaw. He has a sister, age seven, and brother, Har\>ld, age five. <7 Mr. and Mrs. Chester Fowler of Milford are an uncle and aunt to the j Mickem children. I HAMILTON, Stephen Eugene Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hamilton of 812 Elberon, Apartment 2. Cincinnati, Ohio, are the parents of their first child, a son boro Tuesday, Sept. 20. at 12:30 a.m. in the Murphy Medical Center. Warsaw. The infant has been named Stephen Eugene. Stephen Eugene weighed in at nine pounds, four ounces. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Claude Hamilton of Milford and Mr. and Mrs. Neil Bennett of Warsaw are the maternal grandparents. SCHHXER. Clark Allen Mr. and Mrs. Willard N. Schieler ' of r 2 Milford are the parents of a son, Clark Allen, born at 6:15 p.m. Monday, Sept. 26, in the Goshen hospital. Clark .Allen tipped the scales at eight pounds, seven ounces. He has one sister, Julie, 17 months old. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Beer of Milford and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Schieler of Remington are the paternal grandparents Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Beer of r 2 Milford. Mrs. Schieler of Remington and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knochel of Bay City, Mich. Syracuse Locals Geri Bauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Baur. Syracuse, is enrolled in St. Mary’s college. Mrs. Theodore Hertenstein and Mrs. William Bailey. Syracuse. attended the North East Lutheran church Women’s Retreat on Sunday

THE MOORE TWINS —ln this photo are Sandra Jane and Cynthia Joan, nine-month-old twin daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Moore of r 1 Sullivan road, Leesburg. Do you know which twin is Sandra and which one is Cynthia? MASTER LADD — In the above photo is Philip Ladd H. the two-year-old sou of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ladd of North Webster. Last Sunday evening guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hickman of near Milford were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Boggs of North Webster. and Monday, Sept. 18 and 19, at Pottawatomi Inn, Pottawatomi State park. Mr. and Mrs. Noble Blocker, Syracuse, were in Indianapolis last Wednesday and Thursday, where Mr. Blocker attended a meeting of county auditors.

NOWCARS

WWW’S®®

•> ■■■ wWWI Sr ■rnri Mow—th* first ExcttOffiont MacMnos in tho intormo- high. More people-space inside than any other cars their size, comers, untwist curves. An SSTconvertible (above) that seats KDIL diate etas*! Can for Now that never existed baton! A choice of five engines, topped by a 343 cu. in. Typhoon V-8. 3 in back comfortably. Rebel: SST hardtop and SST conA 114' wheelbase. Excitement that's 19r long, 78” wide, 54' A wide road stance and 4-link rear suspension to glue down vertible; 770 hardtop, sedan, wagon; 550 sedans, wagon. ■», Ik \ r~ — ——— IIMICCIIMID Now—toil-sizs luxury cars cnatsd tor A DPL convertible with room for 3in the rear. Choice of 5 D|UD| CD lUCOIPiII Now-Typhoon V-8 thunder comes to the lowBNIORuORIHni today, priced tor the young man who smooth, silent engines to command. Your choice of lutm DLL II Hint Hlunll priced economy champs. Two Typhoon V-8s; wants Ms luxury car right now. 118* wheelbase. Interiors Ambassador DPL hardtop (above) and DPL convertible; three big 6s. America's only complete line of compacts: Rogue hardtop now as spacious as the most expensive full-size cars. 990 hardtop, sedan, wagon; 880 sedans and wagon. (above),convertible; 440 sedans, hardtop, wagon; 220 sedans,wagon. IKE 1967 AMERICAN MOTORS SgAMSASSADOR-MJmUN-RfBH-RIMBIER *MERKW-AIYOURUIERICAN MOTORS/RilMßlf R DHLER MW. Sm the first American Motors TV Special cf the season! "Friends and Nabors." starring Jim Nabors, Andy Griffith. Tennessee Ernie Ford. Shiriey Jones, others. Wednesday evening, October 12, CBS. See TV listing for time.

State Wheat Crop Yield Sets Record At 44-Bushel Average

Indiana’s 1966 winter wheat crop established a record yield of 44 bushels an acre, topping the previous high of 41 bushels an acre established in 1963. State federal agricultural statisticians at Purdue university pointed out this year’s yield was 10 bushels higher than last year. Wheat production of 45.7 million bushels was 16 per cent larger than the state’s 1965 output. As of September 1 the state’s corn crop is estimated at 432,304,

General Electric Gibson Refrigerator, — Freezers I appan Washers & Dryers Sub-Zero Elec. & Gas Stoves Lockinvar D “"* w “ h "‘ Kitchen-Aide . Air-Conditioners Sunbeam Small Appliances Hire Electric & Appl. St Rd. 13 South Phone: 457-3744 Syracuse Electrical Contractors Specialists In Electric Heating

The NOW Cars. More than just “new” cars. The Now Cars are designed from scratch for today’s driving by today’s drivers. They are cars on top of today, from a company on top of today: The 1957 American Motors. 1967 is the year we’ve been planning for, pointing toward. The year we bring you cars fu'l of today's spirit, bursting with today’s ideas. Cars with more room, more power, more safety; cars more exciting than any we’ve ever built! Engines for Now. Three sixes that go like eights—and four V-8s that weren’t here a year ago. The most modern engines in the industry, from an acceleration champ Six to the 343 cu. in. 4-bbl. Typhoon V-8. Innovations for Now. Convertibles that are true six-seaters. Wink lights visible from the side; rally lights that herald your approach.

000 bushels. 8 per cent smaller than last year. The yield is forecast at 82 bushels an acre, five bushels an acre below the July 1 estimate. “The condition of corn varies widely from area to area and from field to field,” the statisticians noted. Soybean development is later than average, the statisticians add, and a crop of 73.2 million bushels is expected. This is 12 per cent smaller than the 1965 crop. Yield at 25 bushels an acre is three bushels

A road-smoothing 4-link rear suspension — the first time ever with a single-unit body. Safety for Now. Every 1967 American Motors car includes: long-awaited energy-absorb-ing steering column and deep-dish wheel; warning signal light to monitor both brake line systems; shoulder belt anchors; and the Double-Safety braking system we made standard five years before the rest of the industry. All built into solid, single-unit bodies. Quality for Now. Our past is one of quality. Quality built in—like the Deep-Dip rustproofing and Ceramic-Armored exhaust systems pioneered by American Motors. And when quality is built in, the value stays in. See your American Motors/ Rambler Dealer today. He’s the only Now Car dealer in town.

below last year. An oat yield of 52 bushels an acre, two bushels lower than on August 1, is expected. The 1965 yield also was 52 bushels an acre. Total production of 18.7 million bushels is 7 per cent higher than last year. Indiana hay production is expected to total 2.4 million tons, 11 per cent smaller than the 1965 crop. Hoosier dairy herds produced 262 million pounds of milk during August. This is 6 per cent smaller than die August, 1965 production. Egg production, too, was lower in August than in the same month of last year. Production was estimated at 169 million eggs, down 4 per cent.

Dry Cleaning PICK-UP AND DELIVERY IN THE LAKELAND AREA / WAWASEE LAUNDROMAT / NORTH WEBSTER LAUNDROMAT / STALEY’S GROCERY / JOT’EM DOWN STORE / DEWART LAKE GROCERY Phone:4s7-2043 WARSAW DRY CLEANERS AND SHIRT LAUNDRY

And now—this great new warranty. In addition to 2-yaar or s-vear or mooo-mile warranty 24,000-mile warranty on the entire automobile. Ameri- Lg W-Jj | can Motors Corporation warrants the engine block, head on the engine ano drive train and internal parts, water pump, intake manifokytransmission case and internal parts (except manualclutch), torque converter, drive shaft, universal joints, rear axle, differential and rear wheel bearings of its 1967 cars to be free from defects in material or workmanship for 5 years or 50,000 miles, whichever comes first. The owner must change the engine oil and install new oil filter every six (6) months or 4,000 miles, whichever comes first, clean oil filler cap (filtered type) and carburetor air cleaner element every 4.000 miles and replace it every 24,000 miles and furnish evidence of this service to an Authorized American Motors Dealer every six (6) months and have him certify its receipt and the car’s mileage. Further, American Motors Corporation so warrants the remainder of the car for 2 years or 24,000 miles, whichever comes first, except tires (warranted by tire manufacturer). Any part so defective, will be repaired or replaced, in accordance with the applicable portion of the warranty, without charge at an Authorized American Motors Dealership. Owners are responsible for deterioration, misuse and normal maintenance. Quality built in—so the value stays in.

A SWEET MISS — In this photo is a very sweet young Miss by the name of Londa Lynn. Londa, 24 js the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry G. Harris of r 1 North Webster.