The Mail-Journal, Volume 6, Number 26, Milford, Kosciusko County, 30 July 1969 — Page 4

THE MAIL-JOURNAL—Wed., July 30, 1969

4

Wv? , ® I . • Es / ■ 4' ■* * W-4 -Bfe PV> Z< - * -A fcidttf ?S ■ : L J MARRIED 55 YEARS — Mr. and Mrs. Merl Laughlin of Syracuse will celebrate their 55th wedding anniversary August 7. They were married at Ann Arbor, Mich. They are the parents of four children, Dewey and Merl D., and Mrs. Robert (Marjorie) Wiles, all of Syracuse and Mrs. Frances Trimmer of Goshen. They have six grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Fresh ’N Refreshing Summer Fare

NEW YORK — Wilting weather calls for reviving fare from the kitchen. Preferably something , that keeps the cook as cool as everyone else, and gives her time to share summer’s leisurely pace. Here are some fine examples ..-which depend on time-saving dairy foods for nutrition, flavor and “coolth.” Summer refreshments might start with soup — deliciously frosty for a change—buttermilktangy, too. Garnished with croutons, slivered almonds or a dash of curry powder, as you please. Chilled tangy pea soup even looks cool. Pour it into pre-chilled bowls and serve it icy cold. To go with this chilled soup, try a pair of dainty, open-faced sandwiches. One sandwich spread features shrimp with Blue cheese, green pepper, pimiento and ripe dives; the ether lobster, celery and lemon. Together, soup and sandwiches make a light collation, sure to charm g ladies’ luncheon group. Equally easy and reviving are “Alamode Coolers”, intriguing ways to float ice cream in drinks like Banana Froths, pineappley Hawaiian Mists and such. Fizzy, fresty and gaily garnished, “Alamode Coolers” are as festive a collection of refreshers as ever sprouted from lawn glass-holders. And just the j cool, sweet-sipping touch to please a gathering of any age! Chilled Tangy Pea Soup Yield: 3!4 cups 1 can (11 *4 oz.) condensed green pea soup 2 cups buttermilk Garlic-buttered croutons or toasted slivered almonds or curry powder (optional) , In a bowl blend together soup ‘ and buittermilk; cover and chill well. Serve in chilled bowls.* Garnish with croutons, almonds, or a dash of curry powder, if desired. *May also be served in chilled cups as an appetizer. Lobster Party Spread Yield: 2 cups 1 can (5 oz.) lobster, drained and chopped 1 cup chopped celery *4 teaspoon grated lemon rind 2 teaspoons lemon juice v 2 teaspoon onion salt 14 teaspoon pepper ’4 cup dairy sour cream In a bowl toss together lobster, celery, lemon rind and juice, onion salt and pepper. Gently blend in sour cream. Shrimp Party Spread Yield I’4 cups 1 cup finely chopped cooked shrimp ’4 cup chopped green pepper 6 ripe olives, chopped 2 tablespoons chopped pimiento 1 tablespoon crumbled Blue cheese 1 teaspoon lemon juice ’a teaspoon salt ’s teaspoon pepper % cup dairy sour cream In a bowl toss together shrimp, green pepper, dives, pimiento, Blue cheese, lemon juice, salt and t pepper. Gently blend in sour crearrj. ALAMODE COOLERS Banana Froth 4 glasses 1 cup mashed bananas 1 cup milk 2 tablespoons sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 pint sparkling water, chilled • 1 pint vanilla ice cream Banana slices, unpeeled (optional) Beat together banana, milk, sugar and vanilla; divide into 4 tall glasses. Mix in a little sparkling water. Add scoop of ice cream to each glass; fill with sparkling water'and stir. Garnish glasses with unpeeled banana slices, if desired. Apricot Fizz 4 glasses I*2 cups (12-oz. can) apricot nectar * 1 pint ginger ale or sparkling wat-

A. 11 V fl g-- ■ er, chilled 1 pint vanilla ice cream or lemon sherbet Divide apricot nectar into" 4 tali glasses. Mix in a little ginger ale/ Add scoop of ice cream to each glass; fill with ginger ale and stir. , . Fruit Punch Frost 4 glasses 1 cup diced fresh strawberries U cup sugar ’4 cup orange juice 1Z 2 cup pineapple juice 2 tablespoons lime juice 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 pint vanilla ice cream 1 pint sparking water, chilled Fruit kabobs Mix strawberries and sugar; add fruit juices. Divide fruit mixture into 4 tall glasses. Add about 1 tablespoon ice cream and a little sparkling water; mix. Add scoop of ice cream to each glass; fill with sparkling Water and stir. Garnish with fruit kabobs. Hawaiian Mist 6 glasses 1 cup (BT-> to 9-oz. can) crushed pineapple 1 can (6 oz.) frozen orange juice concentrate l’/2 pints vanilla ice .cream I’4 pints sparkling Water, chilled Combine pineapple and orange juice concentrate; divide into 6 tall glasses, about 3 tablespoons per glass. Add about 1 tablespoon ice cream and a little sparkling water; mix. Add a scoop of ice -cream to each glass; fill with sparking water and stir. Ever-Favorite Chocolate 4 glasses 2 cups milk J 4 cup chocolate syrup 1 pint vanilla ice cream Sparkling water, chilled Divide milk and chocolate syrup into 4 tall glasses; blend. Add scoop of ice cream to each glass; fill with sparkling water and stir. Need Nine More Teachers In Whitko Corp. A total of nine more teachers are needed in the Whitko school corporation to make up the full teacher complement of 103 for the fall school term, according to Keith Y. Carper, Whitko superintendent. Supt. Carper said third and fifth grade teachers are needed at Sidney; fourth, fifth and sixth grade teachers at Larwill; and at South Whitley a second grade teacher is needed as well as teachers for mathematics, physics and chemistry. All teachers at Pierceton have been employed. The administrative staff for the Whitko school corporation is composed of a superintendent and four principals.

AMCIE7MT ecz/priAN WfZITIMG A PICTURE 5ll»N OF A

Red Skelton’s Pledge of Allegiance Should Be Memorized.

While Don White crams for a Law School exam, I read No. I of unanswered letters on my desk. Background — beloved Hoosier born comic, Red Skelton, looked in awe at a great bridge over the Ohio River at New Albany, that he was dedicating. He told his audience, “See what God can do when we give him some money.” Red claimed kinship to all hewsmen in addressing the Press Club. He said: “My old man ws§3 in the newspaper business unfir he found there was more profit in old rags and iron junk.” J. S., an Indianapolis reader, has supplied me with Red’s remarks on Allegiance to the Flag, presented over CBS television network. By Red Skelton I remember this one teacher. To me, he was the greatest teacher, a real sage of my time. He had such wisdom. We were all reciting the Pledge of Allegiance, and he walked over. Mr. Laswell was his name. He said: “I’ve been listening to you boys and girls recite the Pledge of Allegiance all semester, and

Some Find Boating A Trip To Disaster CHICAGO — Boating is the slow-paced pleasure rapidly becoming as frustrating and potentially dangerous as a trip on the congested highways. Long summer days and the boating season are here again and so are the multiplying dangers to the part-time sailor, water skier, and motorboat captain, according to the United States Coast Guard. Pleasure turned into tragedy and loss of life for nine persons on Indiana lakes, rivers and waterways in 1968. The 47 serious boating accidents recorded last year by the Coast Guard in Indiana resulted in 29 persons being injured. And $28,700 worth of. boats were reported destroyed or damaged. Some of this economic loss was covered by insurance. But the Insurance Information Institute warns boat owners to check their insurance agents before putting their boats in the water to determine if their crafts are covered. The I. I. I. states that if a person carries insurance on his car, it makes equally good sense to do so on his boat. The Coast Guard points out that nearly 60 per cent of all boating accidents are collisions with other craft or stationary objects in the water. And more than 50 per cent of all boat accidents are labeled by the Coast Guard as the fault of the craft’s operator. , A majority of the deaths occur when the boat, an open motorboat in 55 per cent of the cases, capsizes and one or more of the occupants drown. The greatest amount of property damage results from fire and explosions caused by improper ventilation while fueling, faulty installation of engine and equipment, or just plain inexperience of the operator. About 16 per cent of those hurt were burned in an explosion or fire aboard the boat, the Coast Guard reports. The number of vessels involved in accidents tends to reach a peak in early July, the Coast Guard states. Then the number of accidents rapidly decreases as boat owners tend to become more careful. But deaths have had two peak periods in the past. With the warm weather in May, the number killed jumped to nearly 15 per cent of the yearly total in . 1968. Then there was a period of slight decrease before fatalities again reached a yearly high of 15 per cent in July, the Coast Guard indicates. Some boat owners may be protected from the financial consequences of an unfortunate accident with liability coverage under their homeowners’ policies. Outboards up to 25 horsepower, inboards up to 50 horsepower, and sailboats under 26 feet may be included as a standard feature of a homeowner’s policy,

HELP WANTED Boy wanted to clean The Mail-Journal plant Monday through Friday in the late afternoon. Apply At The Mail-Journal Milford

it seems as though it is becoming monotonous to you. If I may, may I recite it and try to explain to you the meaning of each word. I — me, an individual, a committee of one. Pledge — dedicate, all of my worldly goods to g&e without self pity. Allegiance — my love and my devotion. « To the flag — our standard, Old Glorv, a symbol of freedom; wherever she waves, there is respect because your loyalty has given her .a dignity that shouts freedom is everybody’s job. Os the United — that means that we have all come together. States — individual communities that have united into 48 great states; 48 individual communities with pride and dignity and purpose, all divided by imaginary boundaries, yet united to a common purpose and that’s love for country. And to the republic —a state in which sovereign power is invested in representatives chosen by the people to govern; and government is the people and it’s from the people to the leaders, not from the leaders to the

El I MM I i i ll 'a 1.. * I ■bsel Ik it ■ ■ i Imk it a'' ' it ■ » * -■ ; ' -V 1* ■ 4 SUPERINTENDENT AT WORK — New Whitko school superintendent Keith Y. Carper is shown at work at his office in the corporation’s administrative building at Pierceton. A native of Howe, Ind., superintendent Carper assumed his new duties July 21, replacing Frank Knight who resigned to return to his native Gibson county. Superintendent and Mrs. Carper have two daughters, Mrs. Gary Peterson, a teacher in the Westview school corporation, and Mrs. Barry Oesch, a Ligonier beautician.

the I. I. I. said. Damage to the boat itself may be insured under a separate policy. Damage suit judgments from boating accidents may easily exceed the $25,000 basic limit in the homeowners policy. Additional liability coverage for boats can generally be purchased for a small additional premium. The I. I. T. adds one word of warning. If the craft’s owner plans to use the boat to tow water skiers, he should make sure any liability coverage he has extends to skiing. Commissioners Claims The following is a list of claims to be considered by the Kosciusko County Board of Commissioners at their meeting on the 4th day of August, 1969. Edith B. Biltz 416.66 Ethna Scott 400.00 Princess Marie Frush 358.33 Frances Noble 333.33 Kathryn M. Teel 416.66 Hazel B. Harmon 400.00 Evelyn R. Adams 358.33 Mary Beth Miner 333.33 Catherine B. Gonya 271.25 F. Bonita Freeman 358.33 Margaret E. Garman 341.66 Idlee Armey t 416.66 Phyllis Munson 400.'00 Rita Miller 358.33 Lucille McCleary 333.33 Margaret Menzie 316.66 Ruth HotSpus 386.25 Helen Goshert 334.75 Roger Fellows 540.66 Stanley B. Holderman 524.00 Ronald Robinson 491.66 H. Earl Boggs 375.00 Cassius Alan Rovenstine 491.66 Rex W. Barber 416.67 Dick Kemper 432.00 Avis B. Gunter ' 416.67 Iva L. Carpenter 400’00 Alice R. Randels 358.34 Blanche E. Garber 400.00 Margaret Butts 355.25 Helen L. Howard 73.50 A. A. Pfingst 156.00 Cynthia Fry 156.00 Esther Markley 48.00 Julia Rogers 48.00 Claudette S. Himes 271.25 Billie F. Andrews 250.00 Henry Hackworth 458.33 Ralph Whitesell 450.00 Elizabeth F. Smith 175.00 Edward B. Funk 316.66 Milo E. Clase 50.00 Maxine Clase 18.75 George A. Nye 416.66 Georgia U. Nellans 416.66 Robert L. Rasor 266.66 Charles E. Hively 100.00 Shelman Marshall 100.00 Maurice Lewallen 100.00 Marguerite Hoerr 152.25 Wilson Konkle 400.00 Gerold R. Horrick 630.00 Janet Wise 285.00 Nancy K. i Robbins) Belcher 270.00 Christine Fowler 315.00 Marjorie E. Cauffman 300.00 Rita A. Golding 315.00 Harold Scott 7.50 Ray Wilson 7.50 George Watkins 142.50 Bernice Graham 225.00

people. For which it stands. One nation—the nation, meaning as so blessed by God. Indivisible — incapable of being divided. With liberty — which is freedom and the right or power to live one’s own life, without threats, or fear, or some sort of retaliation. And justice — the principle or quality of dealing fairly with others. V For all — which means, boys and girls, it’s as much your country as it is mine. “And now, boys and girls, let me hear you recite together the Pledge of Allegiance: I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the republic for which it stands, one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice to all.” Since I was a small boy, two states have been added to our country and two words have been added to the Pledge of Allegiance ; ‘Under God. ’ Wouldn’t it be a pity if someone were now to say, “That s a prayer.” and that would be eliminated from schools too?” (End of Quote by Red Skelton J

Marilyn Phillips 157.50 Freeman E. Pence 232.50 Ed A. Rosswurm 210.00 Roscoe Nine 360.00 Eleanor M. Vanator 285.00 Cheryl L. Leedy 285.00 Mary Whisler 45.00 Educational Map & Chart 425.00 Shirley Connolly \ 75.00* Raymond Pinkerton 30.00 H. Lucille Bibler 300.00 Connie Watkins Fuller 322.50 Janet E. Garber 330.00 Norman Huffer 260.00 R. O. (Andy) Goshert 300.00 United Telephone Co. 619.34 A. E. Boyce Co. 550.70 Business Equip. Co. 72.74 Waddell Printing 65.00 NIPSCO 473.44 Sewage Treatment 51.95 Water Utilities 160.04 Westminster Press 20.17 Robert W. Price, M.D. 7.50 Lawrence Butts 6.85 A. B. Dick Products 58.80 Lincoln Graphic 177.80 Bankers Dispatch 4.60 Bledsoe Buick-Pontiac 76.55 Motorola Comm. & Elec. 34.70 Schrader's 2.10 David E. Andrews 464.75 Gast Fuel & Service 258.00 Sinclair 33.06 Texaco 18.77 Gerber Mfg. 11.52 Jack’s Uniforms 12.05 Charles M. Brower 55.36 Ind. Photocopy 20.22 Carl T. Zimmer 21.00 Warsaw’ Printing 24.35 R. Steven Hearn 520.00 Elnora S. Cox 30.40 Garlan W. Lowry 9.30 Cecil H. Paulus 10.50 V. Eloise Beroth 7.70 Nina M. Murphy 10.50 Clarence Warren Tyler 10.70 James E. Fry 11.10 Donna M. Strand 10.50 Rifhard Vanderveer 11.90 » Doris L. Camden 40.00 Stanley E. Pequignot 102.50 Roberta E. Nieser 125.00 David M. Harshbarger 25.00 Ruth L. Harshbarger 60.00 Wallace J. Manrow 75.70 Superior Legal Co. 68.75 Gene B. Lee 41.60 Holiday Inn 205.18 West Pub. Co. 222.00 Kemrad 50.00 Athens Welding 2.00 City Tin Shop' 12.50 Johnson Lumber Yard 10.60 National Bird Ext. 100.00 Wholesale Electric 24.80 Lake City Wholesale 28.50 Quality Prod. 42.00 Warsaw Dry Cleaners 49.00 Henry Hackworth 4.25 3M Business Prod. 16.98 Oest Marine & Gard. 3.43 Warsaw Clean Towel Serv. 54.55 Lake City Wholesale 17.75 Arab Termite & Pest 5.00 Reub Williams & Sons 8.63 Edward B. Funk 48.00 Milo E. Clase ' ' 6.00 George A. Batacan, M. D. 7.50 Earl J. Darr 8.00 Charles Lynch 8.00 Robert Strombeck 8.00 Stanley Weaver 8.00 Herbert Hammons 10.00 Harold E. White 8.80 Pram Midwest 40.00 Elizabeth Ganger 30.00 Mary Whisler 6.86 The Mail-Journal 292.42 Warsaw Times-Union 251.33 N. E. & E. H. Stephenson 200.00 Henry Hackworth 15.00 Zero:: Corp. 120.00 Logansport State Hosp. 29.05 Mary Jean Cochran 100.00 Harris Funeral H. 140.00 McHatton Funeral H. 400.00

Back-To-School Cash & Carry Extra Specials Golden Rule 2-Hour Quick Cleaners < With Laundry Service Phone: 457-3553 Syracuse 3 DAYS — THURS., FRI. & SAT. (With This Ad — Clip and Save!) 5 Garments Cleaned & Pressed at Regular Price (One Free) 10 Garments Cleaned & Pressed at Regular Price (Two Free) Winter Coats (Bright & Colorful) special $1.95 & Up Drapery Special - Our Specialty - Beautify Your Home With Golden Rule Drapery Care $1.39 panel Coin-Op Like Clean Only (bulk cleaning) - Little Pressing is Required - Free Hangers & Bags - 8 lbs. $1.95 School Trousers, Slacks, Sweaters & Skirts .... 2 for $1.75 School Jackets, Rain Coats, Car Coats (special) .... $1.95 Free Pick-up & Delivery Mon, thru Sat. Ji Pockets Installed $1.25 - New Zippers Installed $1.95 & up

As a columnist, I humbly acknowledge literally hundreds of “get well” cards, better than a doctor’s medicine. All papers previously using Hoosier Day resumed, except one in difficulties. Random excerpts are: George S. Tatman, publisher, Connersville News - Examiner, wrote: It is good news to have Hoosier Day in our paper again. Twelve years ago he had a kidney stone attack and has consumed only distilled water since. I am also. Scott B. Chambers, publisher - Editor, New Castle Courier Times, said hundreds of readers had asked about the column. He recalled getting out a historic edition of his paper upon assassination of President John F. Kennedy. He did this while agonizing with kidney stones. Walter B. Lowe, Greensburg News Publisher, wrote: ‘We are proud to present Hoosier Day column that has enjoyed wide readership.” Os our first resumed columns, Den Arvin, Washington TimesHerald wrote: “Certainly the Maestro has lost none of his touch!”

Mishler Funeral H. 100.00 Rozelle Funeral H. 10'0.00 Tucker Funeral H. 100.00 Wyman Funeral H. 100.00 Luhr Alexander 66.00 Anita J. Baugher 9.00 Alton Druner 3.00 George A. Carter 3.00 Claude Christner 3.00 Scott Fiowers 9.00 Robert Frantz 6.00 Mike Gish 3.00 Connie Haney 3.00 Doug Hively 3.00 Steve Holt 6.00 Lawrence Kindig 3.00 Ed Kipker 3.00 Jce Kline 6.00 Merl Kyler 6.00 Melvin Lewis 3.00 Sue Lozier 6.00 Milan Mishler 3.00 Gary Oxley 3.00 Mrs. Jesse Perry 3.00 Paul G. Petty 3.00 Earl W. Shull 3.00 Bill Sisk 3.00 Alden R. Stackhouse 6.00 Richard Stanley 3.00 Lawrence Stevens 3.00 Roy Allen Teeple 3.00 Rc’-«rt Thomas 3.00 Larry Tucker 6.00 Joyce Wiard 3.00 David Wiley 3.00 S. D. Womack 3.00 Council for the Retarded (Kos. Co.) 1 40,000.00 Fifer’s Fire Ext. Sales 18.00 Warsaw Chemical Co. 27.40 Bashor Home U. M. Church 270.00 Ind. Girls School 1,589.76 White’s Institute 276.00 R. E. Bigelow 111.25 Robert P. Clark 8.75 Roscoe Nine 22.60 Freeman E. Pence 26.60 Ed A. Rosswurn 21.30 George Watkins 4.60 Friden 120.00 Orn Nursing Home 254.00 Walters Drugs. Inc. 12.20 Brennan's Drug Store 20.78 Paul Deaton 847.50 Phillip Dierks 200.00 Loren T. Kruger 300.00 Cyril F. Likens 300.00 Our Lady of Lakes Sem. 90.00 Stanley Scott 388.66 Myrtus Custer 80.00 Moores Plumb & Heat 195.76 Howard’s Co. 10.90 Henry Sacks 24.00 Menno Schwartz 14.00 Max Montell 535.80 Freeman Gruenwald 75.00 Miller & Sons 11.99

8 THE BIBLE | SPEAKS | TO YOU WSBT 960 K. C. South Bend “Take Good Care of Yourself M Sunday 9:15 a.m. WLS 8:30 a.m. This week’s Christian Science procram

14 I >l . jff r E Jay?* ±KP AT JOURNALISM WORKSHOP — Bridget Davenport, Wawasee high school senior, completed an 11-day journalism workshop at Ball State university, Muncie, last Thursday, along with 164 other student editors. She will be the editor of the Smoke Signals at Wawasee high school next year. Also seated is Mrs. Paul (Norma) Rush, faculty advisor to the Smoke Signals. Standing is Don Hines, who was teacher at WHS last year. He will teach at the Fort Wayne schools in the fall.

Stanley Custer 1 292.00 Arthur E Quier 12.76 CO. HIGHWAY DEPT. PAYROLL & CLAIMS Allan Anders 475.20 John Artnold 475.20 Emerson Cain 475 20 Robert Clevenger 344.25 Ermal G. Coy 475.20 Robert Danner 475.20 John Deaton 387.00 John Davis 475.20 Muri A Dawalt 475.20 Raymond Faulkner Don Forney 475.20 Harold Gerard 475.20_ Gilbert Griffis 481.80 Larry D. Harter 405.00 Walter Jontz 102.96 Frederick E Kammerer 475.20 Russell Krichbaum 23.76 Alvin H. Miller 475.20 Bobby D. Miner 475 20 Larry T. Montel 475.20 Paul Randall 475.20 John D. Shively 384.75 Gars- W. Teel 405.00 Luther Van Cleave 475.20 Wayne L. Wood 483.12 Garl P. Young 475 20 John Alexander 494.57 Clifford F. Baker 484.98 Charles Edward Bucher 493.20 Charles E. Cotton 474.02 Francis R. Denny 475.20 Merritt Hartman 498.68 Marshall' Hawley 493 20 Lawrence Kindig 474.02 Ellis Koher 493.20 Bernard Kuhn 466.20 Ponald E. Kuhn 495 94 Etwl G. Long < 493.20 Ralph E. Linn 493.20 Donald Metzger 493.20 Leo Mosier 493.20 Ronald Norman ’ 482.24 Roswell Robbins 482.24 Glenwood Secor 463.06 Harley Slater 493.20 Max E. Brown 493.20 Wilfred Fretz 532.93 David Baker 481.95 Kermit F. Summers 427.50 Worley Spitler 493.20 Donn L. Shoemaker 494.96 Claude Christner 725.00 Berton A. Retz 1083.33 Prudential Ins. 2101.23 United Telephone 60.88 Kos. Co. Hwy. Dept. 4.43 Courier-Newsom Exp. 19.76 Ind. Eauip. Co. 71.31 NIPSCO 132.20 Warsaw’ Skelgas , 38.00 Crum Garage 26.15 Emergency Radio r 246 40 Exec. Office Mach. 25.00 Mac Allister Mach. 78.69 Millington Bros. 51.50 Ace Hardware 49.30 Coverall Rental 491.15 Edd s Feed Serv. : 9.20 Fifers Fire Ext. 3.25 Gulf Oil Co. 2734.80 Gast Fuel & Service 358.25 Ginter Electric 4.34 Ind. Textile Co. 44.98 Holcomb Mfg. 96.60 Lubrication Engrs. ’ 46.00 Bernard T. Minear 62.50 Moellering Supp. 38.10 Monteith Tire Co. 1424 52 Purity Cylinder 45.99 Standard Oil Co. 171.11 Mossman Yarnelle 174.55 Texaco 252 80 Warsaw Dry Cleaners 14.00 Wolford Hdwe. 8.50 Schrader 114.29 Business Equip. Co. 53.05 Lincoln Graphic 3.52 Warsaw Printing 2.16

These Prices Good Thru Saturday, Aug. 9 INSECT FOGGER KIT Just attach to your mowed 1 739 i g REG. 9.98 —-- INSECT FOGGER JUDD RINGER “ F(JE|_ Attachment fits four-cycle power lawn mowers up to 4 HP. Installation takes only a few minutes. Kit contains: I pt. Fogger Fuel, I adapter J ■ M plate for bdit on muffler mount. 704 562/401 REG. 4.98 JUDD RINGER *.;.Xv:*<X::*XwX*X«*:*:C or genera? purpose outdoor use. Won’t harm shrubs or animahs. Effectives for days, I-gallon. S PORTA-PUMP - wV'OHPS allpurpose booster pump Connected to the hose line, Porta Pump .: v - j] adds 40 lbs. pressure for lawn sprinkling, filling, fire protection. This light, easy to I carry pump has 101 uses! Also REMOVES waler from boats, cellars, swim pools, etc. 1/2 HP. 7500 RPM motor. 420 752/PC-4 Syracuse Hardware UPTOWN SYRACUSE

Dalton-Miller 2.133.13 Mae Friedman 417.00 J & M Gravel Corp. 406.21 Hosea’ Rosbrugh 635.25 Pierceton Equip, Co. 15.242.69 Johnson Lbr Yard 58.68 Amco Steel Corp. 2,149 47 American Steel Co. 253.80 Carl Uhlig Mach. 27.75 Deeds Equip. Co. 51.01 DeGood Tractors 23.51 Ind. Tractor & Equip , 46 39 Kerlin Tractor Sales 21.65 Korte Bros. 14.45 Mac Allister Mach. 80.48 McCormick Motors 18.16 Munson Motor Sales 2.30 Napco Ind. 15 28 Plymouth Radiator 271.20 Rosco Mfg Co. 45.62 Schrader-Warsaw 61.42 Stockberger Mach 172.86 Superior Pipe Spec. ' 568.99 Union Tool Corp. 2.00 W & W Truck Sales 192.98 Warsaw Auto Supp. 214.28 Wholesale Electric 35.42 Walmer Supp. 10.20 Sharp Hdwe 15 36 Fitzpatrick Paint Co. 1.456.46 Brooks Const. 2.148.88 CO. HEALTH DEPT. PAYROLL A CLAIMS George M. Haymond, M D. ’ 400.63 Carroll Sherman 739.16 Loren J. Pound 616.66 Barbara A McClure, R. N. 520.83 Nellie Van Marcke 383.33 Barbara Olds 203.00 Robert L. Conrad, D V.M. 10.00 A. F. Ferguson. D.D.S. 11.60 William L. Myers. M.D. 12,10 Max E. Reed 10.00 Wymond B. .Wilson. M.D. 12.50 United Telephone Co. 49.47 Warsaw. Ind. Postmaster- 15.00 Barbara A. McClure, R.N. 17.92 Loren J. Pound 62.48 Carroll Sherman 73.28 Business Equip. Co. 6.65 Cox Studio 14.25 Warsaw Printing Co; 32.50 CO. WELF. DEPT. PAYROLL & CLAIMS Howard B Johnson 700.00 Opal Joy Harman 430.00 Mary Ruth Wilson 430.00 Willie Hush Nine 430.00 Jean Grubb 460.00 Lillian O. Davis 385.00 Yvonne Sue England 315.00 Esther B. Hoover 300.00 Marjorie E. Himes 325.00 United Telephone Co. 110.26 Jean F. Grubb 54.70 Opal Joy Harman 2.3.50 Howard B Johnson 27.84 Willie H Nine 57.80 Mary Ruth Wilson 22.10 Business Equip. Co. 3.86 Brennans Drug Store 46.75 D. L. Hull. M.D. 200.00 I. U. Medical Hosp. 1.066.15 Lutheran Hospital 38.00 Marks Drug Store 4.10 Council tor Retarded of Kos. Co. 8.00 James C. Miller. Opt. 36.00 F. L. Rheinheimer. M<D. 3.00 D. T. Stouder, DSC 23.50 Walter Drue 4.00 Paul R. Honan; M.D. 6.00 « Ind United Meth. Child. H. 300 00 Jean s Children's Home 165775 St. Vincent Villa 1.050.00 Parkview Memorial. Hosp. 518.00 I. Lawrence Butts, do hereby certify th :' the above is a true list of claims to be presented to the Kosciusko Ccunty Board of Commissioners on the 4th day ot August. ’969. LAWRENCE BUTTS Auditor. Kosciusko County. Indiana