The Mail-Journal, Volume 4, Number 35, Milford, Kosciusko County, 5 October 1966 — Page 16
THE MAILJOURNAL
8
By Mrs. Pearl Lyons ■ Phone: 453-7921 Leesburg-Oswego News
(Heid from last week)
NEW LIFE CRUSADE AT LEESBURG CHURCH A New Life Crusade is currently tinderfav at the Leesburg Brethren church. Senices will be held through October 9 at 7:30 each evening. Rev. Ron Thompson will be the evangelist. Tippy Lee Has Dinner Meeting Members of the Tippy Lee club held a dinner meeting at a North Webster restaurant Wednesday evening. Baskets of artificial flowers were given as favors. Mrs. Ramon Alber, Mrs. Janet McCleary. Mrs. Evelyn Tschupp and Mrs. John Bell served on the committee for the evening. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Betty Walker in October. Meeting Os Sisterhood At Brethren Church Miss Susan Heckaman was hostess to the Middler Senior group .of sisterhood at the Brethren church Wednesday night. Karen Welborn was the leader and gave the Bible study. Edna Young presented the missionary studv and a poem was read by Gloria Vandermurk. A business meeting was held w ith 11 girls present. Mrs. Norman Hunsberger is the leader of the group. All girls in the community are invited to attend these meet- ; ings. —L— Fall Meetings Os Brigade Began Tuesday Evening Fall meetings of the Brigade started Tuesday evening with The Stockade meeting Tuesday night at 645 at the Brehren church. All j boys 8-11 are invited to these meetings. The Battalion met W ednesday | evening at 6 45 with boys 12-18 attending. All boys in the community are invited to attend. Eight Square Club Enjoys Hamburger Fry Members of the Eight Square club enjoyed a iiamburger fry at the home of Mrs. Ed Morgan Tuesday night. For roll call each member dressed as a first grader. Mrs. Rex Sausman gave the health and safety report. “Carry Me Back to Old Virginny" was reviewed by Mrs. John Buhrt and was sung by the group. Mrs. Ruth ? • Knepper gave the meditations, r Games were played during the social hour. Mrs. Glen Deeter Hostess To Club There were 18 members and one guest. Mrs. Gladys Scheumann of North Manchester, present at a meeting Monday night of the Tri
NOW, as many kinds as there are kinds of drivers to enjoy them-from the SS 396 (the Chevelle for the DRIVING MAN) to the brand new Concours Custom Wagon!
Long live Chevelle! And its tnm dimensions, sharp performance and great maneuverability. I For ’67, there're a new grille, new wraparound taillights and distinctive sheet metal changes. effect is a newer, more contemporary look. 1 As for specific models, one is completely new: the sumptuous Concours Custom Wagon shown below, featuring the rich look of wood outside. (Then there’s the SS 396 with a 396-cubic-mch Turbo-Jet VB, special suspension and an even
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Wednesday, October 5, 1966
Arts club at the home of Mrs. Glen Deeter. Mrs. Raymond Smith was co-host ess. Roll call was answered by telling of school day happenings. Devotions were given by Mrs. Avery Hall Mrs. Gladys Scheumann was guest speaker of the evening. She showed pictures and spoke on the covered bridges of the United States and a few located in Canada. A short business meeting was held. Refreshments were served by the hostesses. PERSONALS Norman Hunsberger. Howard Immel. Carl Weirick, Mike Foreman and Dave Welborn attended the Brigade Men’s conference at Camp Kaskitowa near Allegan. Mich., Friday and Saturday. Mrs Carl Andres is recovering | from surgery at her home near Leesburg. Mrs. Kenneth Hartman had surgery on her hand at the Murphy Medical Center Tuesday. Mr and Mrs. Glen Deeter and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kammerer attended the Centreville fair on SaturI day afternoon and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Spath of Huntington and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Yocum, Toni and Todd, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1. Esta Yocum Mrs. Iva Etter is spending Monday and Tuesday with her sister at Fort Wayne. Dr. D. D. and Mrs. Gill have reI turned to their home after spending : their vacation in Nassau. They went ! by plane. Mrs. Don Boggs, Mrs. Dick Allen • and Mrs. Martin Stookey attended I a dinner meeting of the presidents i council of home extension clubs ! Friday at the Westminster hotel. Mrs. Viola Smith of Elkhart is spending this week with Mrs. Ber- • nice Watkins. Sunday Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Watkins and Mrs. Nellie Ran- | dall attended the Bell reunion at j Markle. Mr and Mrs. Forrest Lyons visitI ed Mrs. Ann Britsan in Fort Wayne Monday. 60th Anniversary Observed Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher of Milford were guests of honor at a dinner at Foo and Faye's last Thursday evening in honor of their 60th wedding anniversary. Others present were Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher of Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Weisser of Milford and Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tom, Sr., and Peggy Jo of Leesburg. Another daughter. Mrs. Kingsley Pfingst of Cordova, Calif. could not be present. A large cake with 60th anniversary graced the table. An orchid corsage and a boutonniere were presented the guests of honor. Flowers were sent to the Concord EUB church for the Sunday service in their honor also. All returned to the parents’ home following dinner for a social time together. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wilson of Warsaw spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tom, Sr . and Peggy Jo. Go To CHURCH Sunday
New Year's Eve Nightmare A giant horn, 26 feet long and 15 feet in diameter at its yawning mouth, with a roar as great as a rocket is being used to help keep tilings quiet. Contrary to what might be expected, the horn’s neighbors in communities near the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., have reason to be grateful that it is there. The huge noisemaker makes it possible to determine when local atmospheric conditions are right for the firing of Saturn booster rockets without bombarding local residents with ear-splitting noise. Since practically every climatic change affects the way the boasters’ roar will propagate through the atmosphere, and since these factors change daily or even hourly, the horn is sounded briefly before a rocket test is started. Microphones at various angles and distances then check whether the sound produced is at an acceptable or unacceptable level at any given location. The horn was manufactured by the Blaw-Knox Company of BlawKnox, Pa. Shipping it to its perch 75 teet above ground on a tower at die Marshall Space Flight Center required a special railway car to i»ld the horn’s mouth alone. No one blows into the horn (its small opening is about 10 inches in diameter). The big noise starts out as the screech of a motor-driven air siren, which the horn directs and amplifies. Look Hear Because the human brain and not the human eye interprets the nature of distant objects, astronauts may need the h.elp of some kind of personal radar to recognize things in the unfamiliar environs of space. At Cambridge university, England. Professor Richard L. Gregory has made the suggestion that it might be possible to aid astronauts identify distant objects by sounds generated in a personal radar unit. While the brain converts the twod>mensional images we see at distances over about 50 feet into threedimensional objects, it does so with the aid of familiar perspective and already known information about the size and shape of things. If these clues are contradictory or are seen in an alien environment — such as in a moon orbit or on its surface — the astronaut’s perception could be dangerously misleading. Professor Gregroy is now experimenting to see whether the brain can be trained to interpret distances to objects and their rate of approach or retreat by means of variable pitch sound. Rev. and Mrs. W. Harlan Smith of North Manchester were last Sunday tinner guests of Mrs. Noble Neff of dilford Rev. Smith is a former pastor of the Milford Bethel Church of the Brethren.
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SYRACUSE IS SECOND IN CC MEET The Yellow Jackets placed second in the four-way cross country meet held Tuesday Sept. 27, in Warsaw. The host Tigers were first with a 27. John Shively of Leesburg passed the Tigers with a running time of 10:05. Syracuse had 46 followed by Nappanee with 47. Manchester placed fourth with 106. Finishers were Shively W. Doug Chokey N, Kermit Welty S, Cornelius W, Schooley W, Chris Busch S, Ron Longenbaugh W, Sassaman N, D. Kaufman N, Doug Ault W, Ulf Postulka S, Tom Mullins S, Middaugh N, Dave Wickstrom S, Don Sheets N, and Jim Sams M. New Address For Gary Hepler Mrs. Elmer W. Hepler reports she has received a new address from Garry. He is serving with the army in Maryland. The address follows: Pvt. Gerald-P. Hepler RA55851841 6th Etc. USAOC and S Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Maryland 21005 Box "138 Milford Locals Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lauber and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Lauber and son Mark of Dundee, Hl., were last week end guests of Mrs. Joe Lauber’s sister, Mrs. Henry Ruch, at Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lauber and Mrs. Ruch were overnight guests Saturday of Miss Martha Ruch at Syracuse. Mrs. Ruch and her guests ate dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ruch and family at Milford on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ezra Beer of r 1 Milford and their guests, Mrs. Lydia Moser and daughters, Misses Lorene and Erma of Valparaiso, had dinner last Sunday at Foo and Faye’s. Miss Martha Ruch. Syracuse, and Miss Edith Baumgartner, Milford, enjoyed a Chinese dinner last Sunday at Foo and Faye’s. Mr. and Mrs. Theo Beer, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Beer, and Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Beer, Milford, spent last week end with relatives al Mansfield, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. William Ramsey, Sr., and Mr. and Mrs. Ramsey, Jr„ of Waterford, Charles Weisser and Larry Weisser and sons of Milford, and Mrs. Maxine Cox Miller of Elkhart spent the last week end visiting in the homes of the Ernest Krauters, and the Ezra Beers at Milford, end Albert Krauter at Goshen. Mrs. Jesse Arnold’s sister passed away in Flordia last Saturday afternoon. She was formerly of Fort Wayne, but had lived in Florida for the past eight months.
ARE YOUR (SAVINGS earning] ►7,4 | THEY CAN AT Budget hmstaeat
How Did Your Child Learn To Swim? “How did your child learn to swim?” asks the American Red Cross. Probably through a planned Red Cross program as a beginner through intermediate junior life saving, senior life saving, and perhaps to become a certified water safety instructor. Where did you or your neighbor receive first aid instruction? Red Cross classes are organized and taught entirely free. Our local hospital is served by hospital volunteers (formerly Grey Ladies), five days a week, supplying services to patients that paid personnel has not time to do. Six nursing homes are also served by Red Cross volunteers. A food service prepares and serves food for 3540 persons on each bloodmobile visit as well as sandwiches, juice, etc., to every blood donor. They are trained to provide mass feeding, should major disaster occur. They also serve coffee, milk and doughnuts to departing inductees and those going for physical examinations. If you need transportation to or from a bloodmobile operation, a call to 2675244 brings a transportation volunteer to your door to take you home safely after your donation. All activi-
TERMITES Universal Termite Control Ph. 267-7372 120 N. Scott St Warsaw, Indiana OR ALLIED LBR. CO. (formerly Coon & Buhrt Lbr. Co.) Phone: 457-3331 ANDERSON PAINT AND SUPPLY CO. Syracuse, Ind. Save with State Fann*! low insurance I rates for ciffiui snvwie ■ See me. K GLENN R. MOREHEAD LOCAL AGENT Warsaw, Indiana Office Phone: 269-1315 2220 E. Winona Avenue I StMt MM 1 *•470 I I STATE FARM I I Res. Phone: Milford 658-4433
Phone: SYRACUSE 487-3351
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ties of Red Cross Volunteers must be planned, executed and recorded. Records and all paper work is done by office volunteers who donate a half day or more whenever possible. The amount of time or unit which a volunteer serves is entirely up to the individual, and is scheduled aheaa month by month. Do you have time to help? Discover the wonderful world of lielping others, and plan now to attend the required Red Cross Orientation course which will be given Tuesday, Oct. 4, at the Lake City Bank community rooms from 12 until 4 p.m. Call your Red Cross office, a United Fund agency, at 267-5244 or stop in at 121 south Detroit street, Warsaw September 29 or 30 between 1 and 4 o’clock and discover the many ways in which you can help. Mrs. R. P. Gast, Warsaw, chairman of volunteers, Mrs. J. R. Baum of Winona Lake and Mrs. Robert Whiteneck, Chapman Lake, training chairmen, will give the orientation course. READ THE CLASSIFIEDS
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PRIMARY MOTHERS PLAN SPRING PARTY At the meeting of the Syracuse Primary Mothers club Monday Sept. 26, with Mrs. Art Mousley, the plans for the Spring party were discussed. The party includes all four ayea
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Mothers clubs and this coming spring the Primary Mothers will be hostesses to the other clubs. There were 16 members and one guest, Mrs. Suzie Leamon present Mrs. Jack Darr won the door prize. Mrs. William Dieterly and Mrs. Jack Darr were co-hostesses.
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