The Mail-Journal, Volume 5, Number 8, Milford, Kosciusko County, 29 March 1967 — Page 7

HICKMAN BOYS VISIT RELATIVES Joe Dale and Jackie Hickman, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hickman of near XLiford, enjoyed visits with relatives over the Easter week end. Joe Dale visited his uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Galvin at Elkhart, and Jackie spent Wednes-

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day and Thursday at Lake Wawasee with Mr. and Mrs. John Searfoss and family, also an unde and aunt of the boys. Later in the week Jackie visited his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. Dale Hickman, at Syracuse. Go To Church Sunday

Ligonier News By ROSE CUNNINGHAM Tim Shell Wins Spelling Contest Tim Shell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shell. spelled the word “antenna" to win the Ligonier spelling contest and will now participate in the Noble county contest to be held on April 7 at 8 p.m. at PerryCenter school, north of Ligonier. Tim is a student in the eighth grade al Ligonier elementary school. Mike McDonald, a seventh grade student, was runner-up. The contest lasted through 18 rounds with Tim and Mike spelling the final six. Mike tumbled on “anonymous” and Tim spelled it

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correctly, going on to spell the final word. Second In State Archery Contest Kent Stephens, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. James Stephens, placed second in the state indoor archerv championship contest held at Ball State sports field building, Muncie, Sunday, March 19. Stephens scored 273 points out ot a possible 300 points, losing to the national champion, Dennis Israel, who shot a score of 278. The boys were in the junior division which includes all archers ■ from 12 to 15 years of age. -L- ! 10 Students Inducted Into Honor Society 1 Ten students of Ligonier high ■ school were inducted into the National Honor Society in a candle- • light ceremony Monday evening. Principal Charles Beck administ- ! ered the pledge and welcomed the following young people into the society: Mary Griffith, Carol Meron'ey and Linda Saggars, seniors; Linda McFarlin. Gary Wells, Virginia Yoder, juniors; Wilma Bums, j Susan Dickinson. Jon Owen and Dan Reynolds, sophomores.

A reception was held for the new members and their families following the ceremony. GROVER PATRICK FILES FOR RE-ELECTION Grover Patrick has filed as candidate for re-election as a member of the city council, in the coming election. FHA OFFICERS ATTEND MEETING FHA officers of Ligonier high school attended the northeast district Indiana association Future Homemakers of America, annual spring meeting held at Union City high schawl, Union City, on March 18. They were accompanied by their advisor, Mrs. Retta K. Geiger, and Mrs. Robert Meroney, chapter mother. —L— s’, EDWARD C. WILLIAMS SERVICES TO BE HEID The body of Edward C. Williams, 85, who died February 15 in Indianapolis, will be brought to Ligonier for burial Saturday. April 1. Senices will be held at the UlreySedgwick funeral home at 1:30 p.m. with Rev. William R. Simmons of the Ligonier Presbyterian church, officiating. Burial will be in Oak Park cemetery. Albert F. Moser Funeral services were held yesterday (Tuesday) at 1:30 p.m.’ in the funeral home here for Albert F. Moser, 81, retired farmer. He had resided in the area since 1930. Mr. Moser died Sunday morning in Miller’s Merry Manor nursing home. Warsaw, where he had been a patient only a week. He was married to the former Clara Meshberger, who survives. Also surviving are five sons, George 8., Ligonier, Robert M.. Lewis L., and Grant, all of the Ligonier area, and Eugene, r 2 Syracuse; also one daughter. Mrs. William Donohue, Minneapolis, Minn. There are 28 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren. Two brothers. Ed Moser of Huntington and Joel Moser of Berne, also survive. Rev. Wilbur Workman was in charge of the services and burial was in Oak Park cemetery, Ligonier. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Majewski and Larry Troyer of Chicago spent twn days last week at Syracuse.

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Sechrist Repudiates Link Federal Marshals Seek Former Kale Islander

Federal marshals are seeking I James Russell Hawthorn?, 50, who I failed to report last Monday to fed- i era! authorities in Charleston. W. Va., where he was to have begun sen ing a two-year sentence on a ' federal gambling laws conviction. He maintains a home on Kale Island. Lake Wawasee. Hawthorn? was arrested by federal officers in 1964 while traveling I from Indiana to White Sulpher ■ Springs. Va. He was believed to j have been involved in operating a I busmess near the Greenbriar Country dub, at Sulpher Springs. i He was convicted of using Western Union telegraph wires to transport gambling proceeds over state lines to conduct gambling. The convictions were handed out in the U. S. district court in Beckley. Va., in 1964. Th? U. S. fourth circuit court of I appeals in Richmond, Va., in May :of 1966. upiield the conviction on j using telegraph wires but overtum|ed the conviction on crossing state \ lines to conduct gambling. Haw- ! thorne was ordered to report to I federal authorities on Monday. Reports from West Virginia are ‘ that Hawthorne has not notified ofI facials there as to his whereabouts or given any reason why he has not > reported. Hawthorne — Sechrist An article on page one of the j South Bend Tribune last week indicated that Hawthorn? and an associate. Edward Sechrist. also of • Syracuse, went to the Bahamas last • fall. Sechrist. according to the Trib- ; une, has made return trips to Syracuse, but. was believed to have - been in the Bahamas when the I article was written. Hawthorne and Secrist were at one time involved in a corporation I called Columbia Investments of i West Virginia, stated the South • Bend paper’s article. Allegedly j They had listings on the Wall Street ' Stock Exchange. . About two years ago Secrist was i ordered to cease and desist from . “practicing medicine without a liI cense”. He was treating patients in an office in Wawasee Village with an electronics device, reportedly telling patients that the more rays Ihe turned on the more germs he

Wednesday, March 29, 1967

expelled from their bodies. Patients I were not charged for treatments but were allowed to give donations to the cause. Calls Tribune Follow ing the release of the South Bend Tribune’s news story about Hawthorne and Sechrist, that pap■er received a call from Sechrist. The call was made from Miami, I Fla. j Sechrist said. “I am not an as- ' sociate of. nor have I had any dealings with Columbia Investments.” ! Sechrist also stated that sheriff i David Andrews account of his treating patients, as listed in the Tribune • article was “grossly exaggerated.” | Andrews, then a deputy sheriff, was the officer involved in that 1 case. Sechrist also declared in his conI versation with the Triune personnel, “I hereby decree that the harassment will stop.” and that he ; would have a more lenghty state- ' ment in a week. 97 Pints Os Blood Collected Robert E. Davis, 942 east Clark street. Warsaw, received a three gal- | lon pin; Waneta Klinefelter, Etna , Green, a 2 gallon pin; and Eileen Koenig and Amy Ulmer, Etna Green. : received one gallon pins; at the. visit of the Kosciusko County Red Cross blood mobile, in Mentone March 27. 1 A total of 105 donors presented I themselves and 97 pints of blood I were collected. ! Kosciusko county has three more , visits in which to make up a 300 i pint deficit in addition to the regular ’ quota of 141 pints. The next visit to i Kosciusko county will be Wednesday. | April 12. at Grace college gym at Winona Lake. The unit will be there I between the hours .of 10 and five. ! Contact your local recriiiter. or call the Red Cross office 267-5244 collect . and make your appointment to give. CUT REQUIRES STITCHES Warren Bess is recovering from a deep cut above the left eye sustained last Monday when a piece of metal struck him while he was us- ! ing a power saw at the printing plant of The Mail-Journal. Four stitches were required to close the wound. — i AIC and Mrs. Robert W. Olsen and twins, Ronald and Ronda, ari rived at their new home on W’ednesday, March 22. Their address is 719 east Kiowa street, Cordell, Okla., 73632.

THE MAIL-JOURNAL

Statewide Time Uniformity Possible After April 30 INDIANAPOLIS — Action by local communities to preserve total statewide uniformity of time observance in Indiana during the "daylight time” period beginning Sunday, April 30, has been urged byjthe Indiana State Chamber of Commerce in a bulletin sent to the chamber’s 197 affiliated local organizations. It was recommended that all areas now in the official Eastern Standard Time zone remain on that time, without advancing clocks, and that all areas in the official Central Standard Time zone advance their clocks one hour to observe Central Daylight Time. The entire state would be on the same time “by the clock,,’ as it has in past years during the official daylight time period winch this year ends Sunday, Oct. 29. Under terms of a 1966 federal time act, the official Eastern Standard Time zone in Indiana would be required to observe Eastern Daylight time during this period, a practice which no area in this zone has followed in the past, and which would put a one-hour time-differential line from north to south roughly down the center of the state. John V. Barnett, executive vice president of the state Chamber of Commerce, said the recommendations to local communities were based on a “consensus" of an informal committee on Indiana’s time situation which has been meeting for several weeks. Members of the group, he said, were representatives of the Indiana Farm Bureau, the state Chamber of Commerce, the Indiana Manufacturers Association, Theatre Owners of Indiana, broadcast media, the Indiana Retail Council and transportation agencies. The remedial local action recommended. Barnett said, is based upon a law recently enacted by the 1967 Indiana legislature aft,er repeated efforts had been unsuccessfully made, with support from Indiana members of congress, to amend the federal act to recognize the burdens the act would place on the commerce and citizens’ convenience in Indiana and states similarly situated. The Indiana law—overwhelmingly approved by votes of 40-1 in the senate and 69-10 in the house—permits communities to adopt a “local time” for government, school and commercial purposes if one clock in each public building, such as the court house and city or town hall, shows the time specified by the federal act and is designated as “official time”.

WSCS District Meet To Be April 5 At Syracuse

The 27th annual meeting of the Warsaw District Woman’s Society of Christian Service will meet in the Syracuse Methodist church on April 5 at 9:30 for an all day meeting. The theme for the day is “Mission in Action” with Mrs. J. Earle Roose, president, presiding. Following the business session there will be a sacklunch in the fellowship hall. The afternoon session will include a concert to be given by the Syracuse elementary choir under the direction of Mrs. Richard Ditmer, a missionary message by Mrs. Robert Fenstermacher of Walkerton, and the installation service to be conducted by Rev. Robert Yunker, district superintendent of Warsaw district. Mrs. Robert Fenstermacher served as a missionary in what was formerly Belgian Congo and worked in the Congolaise Woman’s Society of Christian Service. Due to the political upheaval in the Congo, families of missionaries were not permitted to return so the Fenstermachers asked for assignment elsewhere. Then they went to Nome, Alaska, where Dr. Fenstermacher became the doctor administrator of Maynard Mac-Dougall Memorial hospital — 80 miles south of the Arctic Circle and a little east of Siberia. Here they spent four years during which time Mrs. Fenstermacher was busy with church and community affairs as well as looking after her family. She and her husband are the parents of five children. Since the summer of 1966 they have lived in Walkerton where Dr. Fenstermacher is a practicing physician. Mrs. Ed Coy, Syracuse, president of the Woman’s Society of Christian Service, will be in charge of arrangements for the day, and Mrs. Ralph Clingaman, district vice president, will be in charge of the program. All Methodist women of the Warsaw district are invited to attend. A well staffed nursery is provided for the day. entertain at EASTER BREAKFAST Mr. and Mrs. T. L. (Bud) Kline and son Leonard, Syracuse, entertained at an Easter breakfast for Mr. and Mrs. Herman Broekers, Mr. and Mrs. Dolphus Sheline, Mr. and Mrs. William Hess, Mr. and Mrs. William R. Hess and daughter, Anita. Mr. and Mrs. Pat Bomman and son Troy, Wilma Hamman of Middlebury, Joan Schlotterbadc of Milford, Mrs. Edith Miller, Jim Robinson and Howard Kime and daughter, Stacy.

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