The Mail-Journal, Volume 6, Number 27, Milford, Kosciusko County, 6 August 1969 — Page 12

6

THE MAIL-JOURNAL —Wed., August 6, 1969

fl Y r Wr wIwTwBBB / ' r i^Kr r ' 'iß i f If <«®® IIIIIP!i ¥ </ lw-w v * i fli « A WIBW I ■ W i • ■ * I MBMWhMmHWMBMImMW K >»»*»: V i ’ . pl I ■■ ■ I ■ ■ fi IV r

MR. and MRS. S. C. MILLER

Becky Iden And Stephen Miller Wed In Goshen College Chapel

The Goshen college campus chapel was the setting for a lovely evening, double ring ceremony which united Miss Becky Glee Iden and Stephen Craig Miller in marriage. Rev. Harold Bauman of Goshen college performed the wedding ceremony before the altar decorated with floral arrangements of apricot gladioli and carnations accented with blue mums. Hurricane lamps and palms completed the setting for the ceremony. The bride selected an A-line gown of silk organza and chiffon with an empire bodice of exquisite Venise lace featuring a bateau neckline and short sleeves. A detachable chapel length train fell from the empire line fashioned with a border of the same Venise lace. Her waist length veil was a beautiful Spanish lace mantilla which the bride had acquired in Bogota, Colombia, S. A., attached to a toque. She carried a cascade of apricot carnations and roses with blue mums and ivy. The bridegroom wore a white dress jacket with a blue boutonniere centered with an apricot rose. The honor attendants were the parents of the couple, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Iden, Kimmell, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Miller, Mishawaka. Mrs. Iden and Mrs. Miller were attired in apricot chiffon dresses, with shoes and gloves to match and wore corsages of apricot roses. Mr. Iden and Mr. Miller wore blue dress jackets with blue boutonnieres. Terry Iden, brother of the bride, served as head usher with Bruce Miller, brother of the bridegroom, Dan Kauffman, Larry Wilkinson, ©avid Barhydt, Wilmer Stahl, Bcb Birkey and Loran Weaver, friends of the couple, serving as ushers. Reception Follows A reception was held in the college chapel fellowship room immediately following the ceremony. Mrs. Linda Barhydt, Miss Trudy Iden, sisters of the bride, and Miss Beth Ann Miller, sister of the bridegroom, was in charge of the guest book and gifts. The serving table was beautifully decorated with a wedding cake featuring diamond shaped layers at the base and arose three tiers to be topped with the Christian cross. It was adorned with apricot roses and diamond shaped cakes extended cut on the sides. Flcral arrangements of apricot gladioli and blue mums with tapers adorned the table. Serving the guests were Mr. and Mrs. David Dombek, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Schmidt. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Wierick. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Braun and Miss Rachael Troyer. Rick Lovelady of Winona Lake provided the prelude, wedding and reception music with Rosemary Rupp as soloist. The couple left on an extended honeymoon.trip to the eastern states. The new Mrs. Miller is a graduate of Cromwell high school and Goshen college and will be teaching elementary school in the fall. The bridegroom is a gradu-

ate of Penn high school, attended the University of Andes in Bogota, Colombia, S. A., and is a graduate of Goshen college. He will be doing graduate work this fall. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Miller entertained in honor of the couple with a dinner Friday evening preceding the rehearsal in a Goshen restaurant. After the rehearsal refreshments were served in the West Lawn lounge. In one second, our Sun radiates more energy than man has used since the beginnings of civilization.

am Wk, a JsssF $ w' -k .kj? \ r-a ft' I '■ ' I ... then the Beacon We want to add our support to the Syracuse mer- > chants on their Sidewalk Days Friday and Saturday, August 8 and 9. Here’s a once-in-a-lifetime chance tt> take advantage of some real sale items . . . and to wiiji some handsome door prizes by just registering. But when it’s all over, and you want to relax a moment, drop out to the Kale Island Beacon. Bring the whole family along. f tKale Island Beacon ■X

Along Main Street By GEORGIA BUSTER County fairs most all over and state fair is next. I plan to go this year. I missed it last year. Lots of citizens around town say they are almost afraid to drive on state road 13—just too many accidents on one highway in too short a time. Lon Davis, 103, of northern Wisconsin was not able to attend the annual Davis family reunion this year on July 27. He is seriously ill in a hospital. The Davis family has been holding a reuhion at the Syracuse city park from the time the park was first made. Mrs. Alma Laine, who lives at the Wilbur Ward home north of town, found a very tame, blue parakeet in the barn. She could not locate its owner. I’m not sure if she has it yet or not. Colleges will soon be starting fall semesters. Saint Francis college at Fort Wayne will begin classes on September 17. Other colleges in the state and other states will begin at about the same time. This is national sandwich month. This is something to really celebrate. August 3 to 9 is national greeting card week, and 4 to 9 is national smile week. I like that one. Then of course August 22 to September 1 is the state fair. Had a letter from a cousin in Hawaii and she said it had rained so much at Honolulu that even the gardens were water soaked. A letter from my son in Japan said their rainy season was over. The bank employees here surprised Mrs. Fred Byland with a dinner in a restaurant recently. Mrs. Byland resigned her position at the bank and is staying home—doing nothing? The driving on Dolan drive and on Pittsburgh street in the south end of Syracuse is getting to be something. Drivers seem to think those streets are race tracks. I heard one car going down Dolan so fast, when he tried to stop at Carroll, the car came up from the street like a bird taking off. Children will soon be crossing Dolan

at Carroll, going to school, so that driving had better slow down and soon. Mrs. Bob Smith has a letter she is very proud of. The envelope is postmarked U. S. S. Hornet and the envelope is stamped Apollo II Manned Flight U. S. Navy Recovery Force. The letter is from her nephew Neil Strummer, a former Syracuse boy, Who is in the navy aboard the recovery ship Hornet. He said when he wrote they had been in training for several weeks and were waiting for splashdown at the time he wrote. Did you know on July 26 we had hail in this area? I was surprised to see and hear it and they were not very large, but hailstones they were. If you are going to the fairs, do drive carefully. Homemakers And 4-H Style Revue Tuesday A combined program of the 4-H Style Show and the Homemakers Style Revue will begin at 8 p.m., Tuesday, at the Noble county fair, August 11-16, in Kendallville. Girls in 4-H who have been involved with clothing projects and have been selected on Wednesday, Aug. 6, will display their clothing. Two divisions of 4-H girls will be entered in five categories, from aprons to sport clothes. Also, two divisions of homemakers, ages 18-37 and 38 and homemakers will enter four categories. The winners of each of the makers Style Revue will represent Noble county at the Indiana State Fair. Milford Library Has Proposed Budget Os 21( Milford’s library has : a proposed budget of 21 cents for the 1969 year, payable in 1970. The levy is in the general fund and is the same as the' current budget. , i The proposed levy* appears in a legal notice elsewhere in this issue and is signed by Bette Roderick, president; Violet Phend, secretary; and Herbert Morehouse, treasurer of the library board.

MMWw v ■ if* r ' iMihftoWfifc ii A hi ” I

CLOTHING CONSTRUCTION WINNERS — These two happy girls were named tops in the clothing construction division at the 4-H dress revue held Monday night at the county fair at Warsaw. Marsha Boggs, left, won the junior division. She is a member of the Pierceton Happy 4-Hers. Kimra Doub of the Tatapochecn club of Silver Lake was the senior winner.

T. Galbreaths Celebrate 50th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Terrence E. Galbreath of r 1 Pierceton were guests of honor Saturday, August S, when their sons entertained in honor of their fiftieth wedding anniversary. A buffet dinner was served in a restaurant near Pierceton from three until seven p.m. The reception table was centered with a bouquet of gold and bronze mums and gold candelabra. A green and gold motif

SShSSme SkKVB Men< ’ sN ■ dies ’ And Boys’ Sportswear I , Big Price Reductions Tom Socks Sportswear WAWASEE VILLAGE

was carried out throughout the room. Mrs. Galbreath wore a corsage of cibidum orchids. The couple was married in St. Joseph, Mich., on August 2, 1919, and have resided in Mishawaka and Pierceton. Mr. Galbreath retired in 1962 from the Uniroyal Company in Mishawaka where he was employed for 43 years. Fifth Great-Grandchild Born Their anniversary marked the birth of their fifth great-grand-child, a son, born to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Dahms in Memorial hospital at South Bend. The Galbreaths are parents of two sons, Harold Galbreath of Muskegon, Mich., and Earl Reiff of South Bend. They have

five grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren. Brothers and sisters of the honor couple who were able to attend included Mr. and Mrs. Alvin McCullough and’ son of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Ted VanCuren of North Webster, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Murphy of Warsaw, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Reiff and son of South Whitley, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Werstler and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Reiff of r 1 Pierceton. There were more than one hundred guests present for the dinner. "QUIZ” — This word was deliberately created, in 1780, by a Dublin theater-owner on a bet that he could invent a meaningless word and get people to use it. He and his friends painted the word “quiz" on fences, bams, and pavements all night long — and soon people were asking what it meant. Quiz became ask — and spread all over the world.

SIDEWALK SPECIALS FRIDAY & SATURDAY, AUG. 8 & 9

Ladies’ SUMMER PURSES 14 Price Straws and Vinyls Heavy WASH CLOTHS 10c 15c Value Plastic DRAPES A COTTAGE SETS 50c

National 5 & io< Store Uptown Syracuse ■

SEWARD TOWNSHIP BUDGET STAYS AT 37 CENTS • The proposed budget for Seward township is 37 cents, the same as the 1968 budget, all though some of the individual levies have been changed. I Levies in the 1963 budget are eight cents in the.general funds, 20 cents in the fire fighting funcL three cents in recreation and si|x cents in the library fund. The proposed budget has levies of 10 cents in the township fund, 10 cents in the fire fightirlg fund (township only', 10 cents in the cumulative fire fighting fuiW six cents in the library fund ai d one cent in recreation. The budget appears elsewhere in this issue and is signed by Robert L. Hoffman, trustee.

Women & Children SPORTSWEAR 1/2 Price One Group Ladies’ & Misses’ PURSES 37$ Screw On Lid PLASTIC PITCHER 47< 70 Oz.