The Mail-Journal, Volume 5, Number 16, Milford, Kosciusko County, 24 May 1967 — Page 27

WATER FRONT EQUIPMENT < boat 45F PIERS Mfe • f I H ■d ■ B >s E MB

L-^—^L^*CL^--^C-^- zZ TLx^ , C-- x * ,^2^x^C^-x^TL^ SUDLOW'S PIER SHOP " V South Side of Lake WawaseeSYRACUSE, INDIANA :

- ■ • ■ - _ _ I " + Mercury Outboards I IL I Bflfltefe 4J + Mer Cruiser Stern Drives | I + Correct Craft Inboards I flg + Mark Twain Stern Drives I t And Outboards I g Ng r. H I IHK}*Z2| I BjBIBr!S&' •1 1 + Riviera Cruiser Pontoons I I / + Hydrodyne Flat Top I I IBBBBHBraHBBB ■ 1 complete marine sales, I I WHERE YOU EY BEFORE YOU BUY I SERVICE AND STORAGE I GRIFFITH'S * L teS i ? * '* • — ■ ■ WAWASEE MARINA, Inc. I Indiana's Oldest Mercury Dealer - 21 Years! | • ( i .A Just Off ’4 Mile North of Junction with 8 CROMWELL fl I L ( - Owner - I L« %• I Mil 4 MIII II*II Vffllvl 856-2410 I B > . -J / \ / -I

I PHONE I | 457-3514 |

COUNTY SAVINGS BOND SALES UP Joe Ettinger, chairman of the Kosciusko county U. S. savings I bonds committee, has received a'' report revealing that the county’s! ! savings bonds sales for March were •

We Are Proud To Announce I We Have Been Named Representative For The New "Correct- U7 Craft" FIBERGLAS INBOARD BOAT In The Tippecanoe Lake Region >■ ' • v ■£» w X - - * w,- • n Patona Bay BOAT SERVICE WEST SIDE OF TIPPECANOE LAKE

$61,004 compared with $47,552 for the corresponding period of last year. The state’s sales for March were $11,569,063 which is a lost of 5.3 per cent compared with sales of last March. Thirty-nine of the state’s 92 coun-

4-H Gils Have Edge On Most Home Sewers There is a big difference in dothtres reported sales gains for the month when compared with sales of March 1966. Starting May 1, a 4*4 year U. S. savings note, known as the “Freedom Share’’, is being offered for sale to individuals only, with the simultaneous purchase of series E Bonds on payroll savings or bond-a-month plans. They will yield 4.74 per cent compounded semi-annual-ly if held to maturity.

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Wednesday, May 24, 1967

es that have the “handmade” rather than the “homemade” look. And it is (he distinctive “handmade” look that 4-H girls can perfect when they make their own clothes, say 4-H clothing leaders. The national 4-H clothing program annually enrolls about threequarter million girls from 9 to 19 years of age: Many mothers of today’s members learned to sew when they were enrolled in this program now in its 27th year. What is so special about the clothing program?. First of all, it is flexible enough so even a nine-year-old miss can learn to operate a sowing machine and make easy things like a poncho or head scarf. Twelve-year-olds make skirts

THE MAIL-JOURNAL

blouses and straight line dresses. Teenage gii‘is who stay with the project wind up making the most important clothes in their wardrobe such as suits, coats, party dresses, spwts attire and basic outfits for sdiool. But there is much more to the clothing program than cutting out a garment and running it up on the machine, extension clothing specialists point out. The young seamstresses design, color, fabrics and finishes. They learn how to use time, energy and money wisely in planning and making their own clothes. Keep Our

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