The Mail-Journal, Volume 5, Number 44, Milford, Kosciusko County, 4 December 1968 — Page 16

THE MAIL-JOURNAL —Wed., Dec. 4, 1968

4

OBITUARIES

Dr. Robert H. Riddle Dr. Robert H. Riddle, 63, a prac-. ticing dentist at Goshen since 1941, died unexpectedly in ''-the Goshen hospital at 4 a.m. Wednesday. Dr. Riddle had been a patient there since November 22. He was born at Syracuse November 22, 1905, the son of Roy and Winnie (Hollaway) Riddle. He was a graduate of Syracuse high school and attended Indiana unb versity and then graduated from th*University of Louisville dental school in 1932, first practicing at Butler. Dr. Riddle was a veteran of World War 11, a member of the First English Lutheran church, the American Dental association and the North Central Indiana Society of which he served as president in 1964-65, a member of the Logic club of Goshen and the Delta Sigma Delta dental fraternity. Dr. Riddle was a retired lieutenant colonel in the U. S. army reserves. Surviving are his widow, the former Blanche Mellinger, to whom Dr. Riddle was married on June 7, 1935, at Lake Wawasee; four children, George of New York city; Robert, Jr., a senior in the Indiana university dental school at Indianapolis; Mary Ellen, senior at Indiana university; and David, senior in Goshen high school; one grandson; three sisters, Mrs. Benwood (Kathleen) Fields, Mesa, Ariz., Mrs. Travis (Joan) Skipper, El Paso, Tex., and Mrs. Ralph (Virginia) Nicholson, Santa Fe, N. M.; three brothers, Harry, Toledo, Ohio, Paul, Anthony, N. M., and Don, Artesia, N. M.; and his father at Syracuse. Services were held Saturday at 10 a.m. in the First English Lutheran church in Goshen. Rev. Harold S. Gardner officiated and burial was in the McClintic cemetery near Syracuse. Mrs. Mary Jane Johnson Mrs. Joseph T. (Mary Jane) Johnson, 93, died recently in Murphy Medical Center. A resident of Mentone, she was the grandmother of Robert Laird of Syracuse. She was born November 5, 1875, at Peabody to Jacob and Louisa (Cupp* Grace. In 1896 she was married to Mr. Johnson, who died February 1, 1941. Mrs. Johnson attended the Harrison Center United Methodist church. Survivors include a son, Clyde of Mentone; a daughter, Mrs. Goldie Laird of Saint Petersburg, Fla.: a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Kellogg of Bradenton, Fla.; five other grandchildren; 18 great-grand-children; and one great-great-grandson, Charles Lee of Syracuse. Services were held at Mentone. Rev. J. W. Jones officiated and burial was in the Mentone cemetery. Calvin O. Stahley Calvin 0. Stahley, 84, Warsaw, died at 3 p.m. last Wednesday in his home following an illness of three weeks. Mr. Stahley was born April 25, 1884, in Kosciusko county to Jacob and Sophia (Holderman) Stahley. He was married November 27, 1906, at Nappanee to Maggie Hahn, who preceded him in death in 1963. Surviving are two sons, Harold of Syracuse and Raymond of New Haven: five daughters, Mrs. Donald (Isabelle* Ringler of North Webster. Mrs. Lester (Fern) Blcugh of Waterford, Mrs. Glenn (Gladys* Riggins of Warsaw, Mrs. Howard (Wilma* Hapner of Warsaw. and Thelma Stahley at home; a brother, Albert of Goshen; 25 grandchildren; 44 great-grandchil-dren: and one great-great-grand-child. Services were held Sunday at Warsaw with Rev. Herman Smith, pastor of the Church of God, officiating. Burial was in the Leesburg cemetery.

In an accident where both cars have State Farm collision sr«n **im coverage State Farm pays for damages to zSas both cars. And you fQwi save the deductible iNtuiANCi (usually SSO or $100). Call me: Glenn R. Morehead 2220 E. Winona Ave. Warsaw. Indiana 40580 Office Phone: 269-1315 Residence Phone: 267-2041 State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Comoanv Home Office Bloomington. Illinois

New Salem By MRS. RAT FERVERDA SUNDAY SERVICES During the morning hour of worship special number of music was presented by Mrs. Robert Hurd and daughters Brenda and Rhonda with Mrs. Everett Tom, Jr., accompaning. I Corinthians chapter eight was read by pastor Michael Ostrander for message topic, “Lest Your Liberty Becomes a Stumbling Block.” Visitors attending services were Mr. and Mrs. James Dixon and four children now living at Mansfield, Ohio. They are former missionaries to the people of Porta Rico. The Dixons were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dane Rarick of r 1 for dinner on Sunday. Miss Linda, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Shively of Syracuse, attended the services also. She spent the Thanksgiving vacation in the home of her grandmother, Mrs. Inez Shively of r 2 Leesburg. It was nice to see two of our college girls in attendance at services on Sunday forenoon. Miss Nancy Johnson,, a student at Indiana Central, arid Miss Allyson Anglin, a student at Manchester. The girls spent their Thanksgiving vacation in the homes of their parents. —NS—HELPING HANDS — MEET RECENTLY The Helping Hands were entertained in the home of Mrs. Max Shively of r r Leesburg. Mrs. Ellis Wildman served as co-hostess. During the evening quilt blocks were mad? and cancer pads finished. Mrs. Robert Hurd presided during the business meeting. The devotional period was led by Mrs. Albert Mathews reading scripture from different books of the Bible on praise and Thanksgiving and using the theme “When and What do we Give Thanks”. A poem “Thankful for All” was read and prayer was offered. Refreshments were served to Mrs. Glen Morehouse, Mrs. John Mullinix, Mrs. Gerald Dausman, Mrs. Bill Speicher, Mrs. Elmer Rapp, Mrs. John Plank, Mrs. Orvil Kilmer, Mrs. Dale Morehouse and Mrs. Robert Hurd, Mrs. Al-

IMMKI H HI! lU—l v? x a E -'J . ■ ■ Li ■Bl- -ML/ »ls if 11 rw/tgy jF**~* t ’ ‘ AwSB. ’ v/ W ElßHili]j|Pyy J P'W ’ -~J[ All3’ ; s wh—,JB 1 *& T*> * jMStef.?. A*» | J/* ■—' • ibk ■ IK-' I VI. XiJr # > J BL* jßSffjffi i A 4 • A Meet The Lucky Winners of BUSTER BROWN’S BRITANNICA JUNIOR ENCYCLOPEDIA GIVEWAY at Doug Pilcher Shoes UPTOWN SYRACUSE Mrs. Jerry (Nesta) Kern, r 4 Syracuse, is shown here with Syracuse shoe store owner Doug Pilcher with a Britannica Junior Enclopedia set she won in a recent contest sponsored by Buster Brown shoes. Standing with Mr. Pilcher is Randy Kern, 9, and with her mother is Kim, 1 I. Lisa, 4, and Laurie, 7, are seated. All the Kern children will be making good use of the encyclopedia set in their school studies. The announcement was made on Saturday. No purchase was necessary to enter this contest.

bert Mathews, Mrs. Edna Tom, Mrs. Herbert Morehouse, Mrs. Ray Ferverda, Miss 'Doris Tom and Miss Georgina Morehouse. —NS—COMMUNTTY NEWS Mrs. Ruth DeFries returned to her home in Milford on Saturday after spending a week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don DeFries and Doug at St. Joseph, Mich. She was the dinner guest one evening in the home of Mr, and Mrs. Allen DeFries and son Scott of Stevensville, Mich, The Misses Rebecca and Patricia Schermerhorn of Indianapolis spent Thanksgiving day in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Schermerhorn, Cynthia and Doug of Leesburg. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pinkerton of r 3 Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Schermerhorn of Roann soent Thanksgiving day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Sawyer, Kent and Roxanne at Waubee Lake. Harold Stackhouse of Sarasota, Fla., spent last week in the home of his mother, Mrs. Mandy Stackhouse and other relatives of Leesburg. He left on Sunday for North Manchester to visit his brother Lloyd and family. Little Jennifer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Deeter of Syracuse, spent Saturday and Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Deeter of Leesburg while her parents were in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Deeter and Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Tyler and sons of Nappanee spent Sunday evening in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Morehouse helping Mrs. Morehouse celebrate her birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Morehouse, Diana and Georgina of r 1 entertained at dinner on Sunday for Mr. and Mrs. Guy Morehouse of r 1. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ferverda of r 1 and Clara Driver of Warsaw spent Wednesday night and Thanksgiving day in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Chambers of Grand Rapids, Mich. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Rex Wildman and family of Warsaw and Mr. and Mrs. Ted Chambers of Grand Rapids. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Grimes and family of Frankfort spent Thanksgiving with Mrs. Juanita Grimes and Mr. and Mrs. James Hann, r 2 Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bookwood and family have returned to Munster after spending the Thanksgiving week end with Mr. and Mrs. Bill S. Betes and son, Bob, at Syracuse.

i _ < ~ * \ r JB-,? W xa* || ~ ' jib 1 I ! ENGAGED — Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Miller of Millersburg, Ohio, - announce the engagement of their daughter, Miriam Joanne, to Roger Dale Rheinheimer, son of Dr. and Mrs. Floyd Rheinheimer of > Milford. Miss Miller is a graduate of Central Christian high school, Kidron, Ohio. Her fiance is a grad- . uate of Bethany Christian high . school, Goshen. Both are presently attending Eastern Mennonite col- ■ lege, Harrisonburg, Va. The wedding will take place next summer. SB,OOO Damage At Glen Stiffler Home A fire at 1 a.m. Wednesday at the home of Glen Stiffler, r 3 Syracuse, resulted in SB,OOO damage. Assistant fire chiefs, Robert Penick and T. L. Kline, said the fire started in the chimney area and spread to the roof, destroying the upper story of the house. The Syracuse firemen responded to the .call. North Webster firemen assisted with water supply. The firemen worked until 3 a.m. to bring the fire under control. TERMITES UNIVERSAL TERMITE CONTROL Ph. 267-7372 511 So. Union St. Warsaw, Indiana ALLIED LBR. CO. formerly Conn & Buhrt Lbr. Co.) Phone: 457-3331 Syracuse ANDERSON PAINT AND SUPPLY CO. Syracuse, Ind.

Librarians From Area Meet At Wawasee High School

Seventy-five school librarians, administrators, library aides, teachers and other guests attended the Area V meeting of the Indiana School Librarians Association at Wawasee high school last week. Miss Carolyn Butt, library supervisor of Huntington County Community high school south campus, was elected the 1969 vice chairman of Area V. Mrs. Joe Long of Galveston, librarian of Southwood high school, Wabash, 1968 vice chairman, will serve as chairman next year. After tours of the new Wawasee high school facilities, guests heard musical selections on tape of the Cardinal Learning Center bell choir. Don Arnold, superintendent of Lakeland Community schools, presented the. formal welcome, observing the changing role of the school library today. Mrs. Ronald Sharp, junior high library supervisor of Lakeland Community schools, introduced the speakers: Mrs. William Carter, Mrs. Duane Larsen, Mrs. Pauline Buck, Robert Ahrns and Miss Ida Mae Langston. Mrs. Carter, Cardinal Learning Center coordinator, pointed out the goals and special features of their training programs at the center for retarded children and young people. Among important considerations for the children are development of muscular coordination, good social behavior and skills that will help them adjust to life situations. Mrs. Larsen, a Cardinal Workshop assistant supervisor and social worker, described the workshop, its purposes and social values for the young person in being accepted, receiving job training, and in gaining self-es-teem through success in his workshop experiences. Mrs. Carter

> J THIS WEEK’S JACKPOTS a WCIgJ ({( ARE WORTH MsQiWvj J' oo I K* No Purchase Necessary B Snappy weather calls for meals that are I 'x**~">\B B ■ \ B V “rib-stickers”. So our big sale happening I B w zB V >. at IGA this week is on “Pork-Pleasers”. You can’t serve better "rib- I I 4 V Bk B stickers” than “Pork-Pleasers", they’re rich in “B” vitamins and food I 11" jB X-z ' ron •• • h ' gh *y digestible too. Please your palate .. . please your I I B “ BLJOJb purse ... with IGA Tableßite Pork! - ~ UUILiiIJ mx —— VALUABLE W H \*WS» . COUPON e-e ■ W _ r- 111 n I /ft' - U 5 lb. bag WITH COUPON I I W GOLD 39« I I '.V WfraSilWlh ? MEDAL I flours _ ■ m \ n! "H rLU Un g| \ Xi Coupon ■ X. kX Good week of OI I Good at Aupburger’» ▼. /I I BEECHNUT STRAINED ft A- <:O ffil |BABY FOOD OV PORK STEAK 4B<I |p°± MateWC j ± r °° mS - PORK ROAStJBJB I ■DOG CHOW $25? FRESH SIDE I Icoffk .. $1.15 s; .Lgl Ischmucker’s 12 oz. 4£■ CHIPPED MEATS Pkg. 25c| ■preserves For «P | < UU|SLENDA SUE —MEADOW GOLD I Apricot, Peach, Blueberry or Orange Marmalade JMILK GALLON QjIC I I TABLEFRESH PRODUCE [TANGERINES SI.OO | I LARGE VARIETY OF fjSgffljP I

stated that she could supply a bibliography of material on retardation although not very much has been written on this field. Mrs. Buck, remedial reading specialist in the Lakeland Community schools, spoke about her work particularly the book collections she has available for classroom use with slow and reluctant readers who need easy reading material at a high interest level. Mr. Ahrns, speech and hearing therapist in Lakeland Community schools, described the most frequent speech difficulties found among his pupils. Stuttering, he pointed out during the question and answer period that followed, cannot be treated as a simple speech disorder as it is rooted in an eriiotional or psychological problem. Miss Ida Mae Langston, Title II consultant from the state department of public instruction, division of instructional media, noted that the role of the school librarian has been expanded to include all types of media — print and nonprint — an the librarian now is, in fact, a “media specialist . Miss Langston presented many

8 THE BIBLE B SPEAKS j g TO YOU WSBT 960 K. C. South Bend “They Shall Recover’ Sunday*\lo:ls a.m. WLS 8:30 a.m. This week’s Christian Science program

helpful sources of audio-visual and reading material available for librarians and teachers who have contact with the slow reader, the deaf, those with poor eyesight and other handicaps. Much of this material, she explained, is available through the Indiana state library. She also brought invaluable aids for the librarians, including the following: ALA Bulletin: “Providing School Library Services for the Culturally Disadvantaged”, February 1965. "Aids in Selecting Books for Slow Readers”, from the American Association of School Librarians. “Lists of Books for Retarded Readers” from the department of health, education and welfare. “Bibliography of the Culturally Disadvantaged”, from the state department of public. instruction. (Note: Purchases of library materials under elementary and secondary education act, Title IL are selected with the educationally and culturally disadvantaged child in mind.) During the business session, Dorothy Wilson extended an invitation for the 1969 meeting to be at Lancaster elementary school. Huntington County Community schools. The theme “Involve - Share-

See our beautiful Highlander suede coats. The perfect gift for your lady. - Ike House Across Open Every Wed., Frl. and Sat. Nights Nappanee, Indiana

Learn - Adapt”, was carried out also in the table decorations provided by Mrs. Varner Chance, elementary library supervisor of Lakeland Community schools. Hostess for the meeting was Mrs. Keith Whiteman, librarian of Wawasee high school, aided by Robert Ritchie, audio-visual director of Lakeland Community schools. Mr. Ritchie arranged the building tours, with the Wawasee Y-Teens as guides. The dinner was prepared under the supervision of Mrs. Maurice Koher and served by the home economics students of Wawasee high school. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Scheuer and children, Syracuse, visited with Mr. and Mrs. ’James Scheuer and son at Plymouth on Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bates. Syracuse, returned home Monday from Chicago where they visited with their son. Lional Bates and Mrs. Bates over Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Graff. Syracuse, attended the wedding of Miss Matilda C. Graff and L. C. Kasbaum of LaPorte at Goshen on Saturday.