The Mail-Journal, Volume 7, Number 8, Milford, Kosciusko County, 25 March 1970 — Page 8

8

THE MAIL-JOURNAL—Wed., Mar. 25, 1970

California-Land Os Many Faces!

By ARCH BAUMGARTNER Publisher, The Mail-Journal An easy description for the great state of California goes begging. Here is a state with the largest population of any state among the nation's 50 states, and one doesn't know how to describe it. An offhand remark we heard was that California is a land of many faces We liked this. It was our experience to visit California for the past two weeks plus, and we came away dizzy with the teeming automobiles, flying jets, tall buildings, snowcapped mountains easily visible from the desert flats of Palm Springs, roaring seashore, only to mention a few things. And then there were people, more people . . . and still some more people. An item in the giant 512-page Sunday issue of the Los Angeles Ti«mes stated California had gained over a million population in the 34 years Ronald Reagan was its Governor. Think of it! Fair-haired Ronnie blames much of this on the easy access to the state s generous relief rolls, but the trend to California isn’t that easily explained The good wife and I have reached a plateau where we think an annual two weeks in some distant spot is vital to the replenishing of the soul What a perfect alibi to get away from it all. if for only a short time! According to pre arranged plans we boarded a United 707 at busy O'Hare airport near Chicago oh March 5, and in 34 hours we were in cavernous Los Angeles International airport, met there by Hoy and Ruth Jones of Golden. Colo . former Milford residents, and brother Ted and Helen Baumgartner Ted and Helen were on the tail end of a four-month western holiday, but remained long enough to show us some points of interest they had searched out Hoy. incidentally is an inspector at the Rocky Flats Division ,of Dow Chemical Co near Golden. While Hoy and Ruth went to Leguna Niguel, south of Los Angeles, to visit Garrett Fagan, nephew of the late Mr. and Mrs. Frank S Keehn of Milford, and Alice Barnett, we went north with Ted and Helen to visit nieces and a nephew in Stockton We traveled through the fertile San Joaquin Valley for 400 miles over land that would make the mouth of any ambitious Indiana farmer water, before coming to Stockton There we were pleased to visit Mr and Mrs. Qaude Smith (she's the former Audrey Baumgartner.

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who was born in Milford), and her next door sister Janet and her family, the Pete Allisons. Janet was also bom in Milford. We hadn't seen the girls for 21 years! They had gone from little tikes to beautiful mothers. Audrey has a 10-year-old daughter Niki, and Janet has Tammy, 11,. Shawn, 8, Leslie, 6, and Torrie, 1. Tammy is freckled but erect and proud; Shawn is a boy to be reckoned with on the football field; Leslie is the talker; and Torrie. well, he wets his pants, falls down, and goes from tears to a smile and back again. We were also met by Emil Baumgartner and his attractive wife Joy and their children, from Sacramento. , Sounds like a family report, we know, but these young folks are well known in the Milford community. . Emil, a strapping man, appears to be doing well with a California distributing agency. At Stockton we also visited the Carl Esteps, formerly of Indiana Carl is in charge of the Stockton airport Upon leaving Stockton with Ted and Helen we motored south and west through some of the most beautiful country one could expect to see anywhere. There was more than a slight resemblance to the south Germany Bavarian Alps This trek ended up at Monterey where we spent the night (Saturday. March 7), then on Sunday we motored down route 1 from Monterey The ocean view from this route can only be duplicated several places in the world The road curved sharply with some hair breath turns which kept Ted's eye on the road while we breathed in a landscape that defies adequate description. Numerous places the precipitous cliffs fell away hundreds of feet to a roaring surf On route 1 we found numerous so-called Hippies hitch-hiking and loafing along the road. At one small turn-off. we saw a longhaired girl sitting on a suitcase with a small dog. Both were looking out at the ocean, miles from a stop One could not help but wonder what takes our young folks to some of these forbidden places. Coming down the mountains Ted began telling us of the wonders just up ahead, including the treasured castle at San Simeon built by the early century newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. We had to stop. Here, atop a mountain, is what appears to be a Medieval castle with mar We statues abounding. The great WRH spent S3O million

dollars gathering his treasures from over the world to build a memory to his name. Figure its cost today. He entertained the world’s great and mighty here and showered them with gifts and attention. His dinners resembled those of King Arthur’s and they were studded with current movie and professional personalities. Well, this was certainly worth the $3 and the two hours we spent there. Incidentally, Hearst gave the expensive property to the California department of parks and recreation, and why not? Who could afford to keep it up but another Hearst. A stop at Andersen's at Buellton, Calif., was next on the list to enjoy some of their famous split pea soup. Ted insisted we stop here. I never ate so much pea soup and enjoyed it so much. . and probably never will again. When we left there Ted said “Solvang is next.” Where and what is Solvang’ We soon came upon a small town done entirely in the Danish motif — we mean all done in the Danish Motif — and the town drew a crowd that had us walking in the streets. Then it was time to return home, and we went through Santa Barbara where Milford’s Phil Snyder practices dental surgery, but we didn't stop, thinking Phil would not appreciate Sunday evening drop-in company. The Glen Tavern Hotel at Santa Paula where we stayed our first night looked mighty good again. This quaint, homey but small hotel is run by the former Ferry Estep, well known in the Milford area and with many relatives here. She was generous to a fault, as Ted reminded us she is to all Hoosiers. Ted and Helen returned us to Knotts Berry Farm on Monday, March 9, and we were met by the Hoy Joneses and Garrett and Alice. We went to Leguna Niguel for the remainder of our stay on the Coast, where our quarters soon became dubbed the Royal Inn of Niguel. The hospitality was royal, to be sure. The home, perched on a mountain top, has visibility to the ocean. Santa Catalina Island, and just 12 miles below us is the winter White House at San Clemente. We found the Nixon compound well guarded during one afternoon's trek to that area. One day’s sojourn took us to San Diego where we looked up Marsha (Dewart) Prevlec and her little son Rick. Marsha's husband was at work. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall Dewart, granddaughter of the Amos Orns and the Lloyd

■ ' • I A Mh I Bl 11 I Della At The Hearst Castle At San Simeon

Dewarts of Milford. While there we motored over the huge new bridge to Coronada. then to Tijuana, Mexico, where we went trinket hunting. I’ve been in Mexico, including Tijuana, before, but on each return I'm appalled at the poverty and dirty streets. Howgood America looked upon our return, for all its faults. We were pleased to yj£it the romantic town of Legurja Beach with its numerous art studios and small shops. It has the ocean on the one hand and behind it are the expensive hilltop houses. We’re told lots on some of these mountains sell for as high as $100,000! At the present time Leguna Beach is overrun with Hippies, and the community doesn’t particularly mind. Although there is a city council effort to put more foot officers on the streets. We got a new view of Hippies, finding most of them we saw clean, polite, not in the least overbearing. We felt an urge to get to know them better, to hear (from them* why they are , “turned off.” We had the good fortune to be at the Mission at San Juan Capistrano on Thursday. March 19, when the Swallows returned. The sleepy little town of 3,500 had as many visitors that morning to crane back their heads to see the first Swallows return from South America. Legend has it that the Swallows have returned each March 19 for 173 years. Os course the bands played, a parade was held and we Hoosiers craned our necks with the rest of them. Hoy commented, “The local people probably think they are just so many dirty birds!" When we could get out of the hot Jucuzzi bath and the ceramiclined 20 by 40 swimming pool at our mountain retreat,, we did motor around the city. One such trip took us to Pasadena where we went down famed Colorado Avenue where the Rose Parade is seen each January 1, and to the nearby Rose Bowl where the classic atjfracts 100.000 football fans from across the countryfollowing the parade each year. Then to Hollywood and up famed Sunset Strip where more Hippies congregate. We passed the Chinese Grauman Theater on Hollywood Boulevard. We went to Santa Monica, then to Long Beach and back to Leguna Niguel Visiting California is. not complete without a visit at Internationally famous Disneyland. We did this with an honorarium from John Sipes, Kodak man on the grounds whose acquaintance we made John told us he was with Disneyland since it opened and saw it falter before finally taking off. He said Disneyland had an original $lB million dollar investment, with Paramount Studios owning a third interest. Old Walt didn’t even own the parking lot. and he was $7 million in debt when it opened. His estate owns it all now, you can bet. One ride — the Pirates of the Cambean — now represents sl7 million investment alone. Disneyland has to be a moneymaking machine, but it was all so much fun. Another such trip after the Joneses had returned to Golden took us to the San Fernando

Sheriff Asks Cooperation On Suspicious Actions In Area

Sheriff David Andrews has asked citizens who see suspicious activity around unoccupied rural homes to report the action to his department. Two abandoned farm houses have been burned recently in the Hastings - Nappanee area. One of

Valley, and the Canyon ridges that overlooked the sprawling Valley towns. Last Friday we drove over the 4.000-foot mountains that make up part of the Cleveland National Park area, coming out at Elsinore. From atop this rocxy mountain range (God made this the rock pile of the west) we could look down on the desert valley. There on the left was snow, and miles of sand below. Like pearls in the desert sands were Palm Springs. Palm Desert, Indio and other smaller communities. We called at the home of Blanche Culp, a sister of Edith (Mrs. Herb) Baumgartner’s whose former home was Mishawaka. She was surprised to see us, stating that an hour and a half later Herb and Edith were to fly in from Phoenix (They had gone to Phoenix with John and Babe Augsburger.) W’e also found out Ted and Helen B , en route home to Indiana, stayed the night in a Palm Springs motel. They planned to meet Herb and Edith, too. Knowing it was the first plane ride (in a jet at least) for both Herb and Edith, we decided to make it a homecoming. They came off the Air West plane with cameras clicking. Others crowding the airport gate must have felt sure they were some important people. Well, from there the crowd dispersed, and we all x ent our separate directions. Herb and Edith were still at Blanche's at last reading, ‘ Coming back to Leguna Niguel, we were on a four-lane freeway, and to our left was an oncoming four-lane freeway. The difference being that traffic was at a standstill on the oncoming freeway. We saw cars lined up for miles, and couldn't help but imagine how many cold suppers were on the table that night. Our computer mind fuzzed out when we tried to calculate how many cars passed a given point on the freeway, moving at 65 miles per hour, four lanes coming and four going. There’s a good one for a WHS math class. Back to where we began, howdoes one describe a state like California? There are more cars registered in Los Angeles county than there are in the state of Indiana; Wages are high but living is costly. A good threebedroom apartment is from S2OO monthly up — no dogs or pets, please. Commuting has to be the tough part of living in so sprawling a place as Los Angeles. California, to be sure, has many faces, and most of them speak volumes. We gave it a little over two weeks of our vacation time, necks craned and eyes wide most of the time. While it was all a lot of fun, it was good to climb aboard the United 707 on Saturday morning to fly out over the desert and Grand Canyon and back to mid-

these two houses was not even wired for electricity. Sheriff Andrews asked citizens to watch these unoccupied rural ( homes and to report any f suspicious activities as the recent fires appear to be the work of arsonists.

America’s O’Hare airport 34 hours later to be met by son Ron. his wife Gloria (who have been holding down the place in our absence) and inquisitive little Crissy. Home never seemed so good! Cub Scouts Hold Pack Meeting The Leesburg cub scouts had their monthly pack meeting in the United Methodist church on March 23. The opening with the pledge to the flag was given by den three. Skits were by den four and den two. The closing was by the webelos. Those receiving webelo awards: Sam Timmons, Jeffy Felts. Kent Golf. Bob Fawley and Ted Elliott. The webelo leader is Herbert Timmons. Perry Mack, head of the boy scouts, was present and talked of activities for the boy in cub scouts in the summer months. Kent Golf received the sportsman, athlete and citizenship award, Jeffy Felts received the naturalist and athlete and citizens awards. An election of new officers for 1970 was held with the following results: Scout Master — Robert Brookins Assistant — Bob Bean Assistant — Mr. Gunderman Committee chairman — Jim Stouder Webelo leader — Herbert Timmons Den leaders — Carl Ashston. Barbara Hammon and Linda Stouder Sponsor — Rev. D. Gossert. The cub scouts of Leesburg will continue to use the United Methodist church for headquarters The next den meeting will be on April 27. SUNDAYSCHOOL PARTY HELD AT WAWASEE BAPTIST The Adult I Sunday school class of the Wawasee Heights Baptist church had a fellowship meal near Middlebury last Friday evening. Jim Storey, teacher, was in charge. • The meal was smorgasbord with country style cooking and setting. A portion of scripture was read and a time of devotion was observed prior to the meal. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Young and daughters. Sherry and Dawn, of Milford were the Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Chapman and family of South Bend. Mrs. Young and Mrs. Chapman are sisters.

ODAKOTA CAMP FIRE GIRLS MEET The Odakota Camp Fire Girls held a meeting on Wednesday, March 18. at the scout cabin. Debbie Bailey and Ginger Harris were hostesses. Their table was decorated with a St. Patrick’s theme and they served ice cream, cookies, candy and green Koolaid. The 19 girls present responded to the roll call by Jeannie Grim and Barbara Yoder. The business meeting was conducted by vicepresident Jeannie Grim. Red felt heart symbols to be placed on their boleros were awarded to the girls attending church in ceremonial costume on Birthday Week Sunday. Each girl then practiced her part in the Seven Crafts demonstration-skit to be presented at the FatherDaughter dinner Friday night. Performing at this program will help the girls to pass their WoodGatherer rank. The group is looking forward now to studying proper flag etiquette, and to designing felt symbols for their Indian names. The girls are assisted by Mrs. Wendel Shank, Mrs. Paid Beezley and Mrs. William Bailey. Commissioners Claims The following is a list of claims to be considered by the Kosciusko County Board of Commissioners at their meeting on the Ist of April. 1970 Edith B Beltz *33 33 Ethna Scott 416.66 Princess Marie Frush 375.00 Frances Noble 150.00 Norma Jean Messmore 133.31 Jean Tuka 302.60 Kathryn M Teel 433.33 Hazel Harman 416.66 Evelyn R. Adams 375.00 Mary Beth Miner 350 00 Catherine B Gonya 333.33 F Bonita Freeman 375.00 Margaret E. Garman 358 33 Olga J.Tusing 286 83 Janet Wise 78.00 Idlee Armey 433.33 Phyllis Munson 416.66 Rita Miller 375 00 Lucille McCleary 150.00 Margaret Menzie 333 33 Naomi Tuttle _ 98.40 Rita Golding 7 40 Ruth Hoppus 433.33 Helen Goshert 416.66 Roger Fellows 585 66 Stanley B. Holderman 569.00 Ronald Robinson 533 33 H Earl Boggs 400.00 Cassius Alan Rovenstine 533.33 Randy Lindzy 433 33 Lorraine Moser 130 00 Avis B Gunter 433.33 Iva L Carpenter 416.66 Alice R Randels 375.00 Thelma J Leedy 416 66 Nancy K. Belcher 157.40 Wayne R Johnson 100 00 Carl Klotz 84 37 Robert O. Jones 100.00 Ray 0 Eckert 112 50 Arma L. Eckert 144.00 Sandra Simpson 48.00 Amer Koontz 100.00 Charles A Mikel 100.00 Austin I. Neher 100 00 Alton Boggs 84.37 Darrell Phillips 112 50. Bernice Graham 144 00 John Lutes ’OO 00 Warren Hawley 84.37 Robert L Hoffman ” 100 00 Adrian R. Howell 112.50 Virginia Spry 300 00 Donna Joan Baker 36 00 Helen R Baker 180 00 Harold C Kuhn 13125 A. A Pfingst 174.00 Julia Rogers 186.00 Cynthia A. Fry ’M 00 JohnDavidsen 112.50 Lena Dav idsen 132.00 Claud Stahl’ 112 50 Billie F. Andrews 283.33 Bernard t. Minear 383 33 ' Henry Hackworth 512.50 Ralph Whitesell 500.00 Beatrice Weller 183.33 Edward B. Funk 316.66 MiloE Clase 50 00 Maxine Clase 18.75 B James Baker 833 33 George A. Nye 416.66 Howard Silveus 36 00 Robert LRasor 300 33 Charles E Hively 80 00 Shelman Marshall 80 00 Maurice Lewallen 80 00 C W Weaver 85 00 Janet l Wise 37 50 Nancy K Belcher 136 89 ChristineS Fowler 75.00 MariorieE Cauffman # 30.00 Connie W Fuller 118.17 Darrell Phillips 300 00 Robert L. Hoffman 300.00 . F reeman Pence 390.00 Eleanor M Vanator 45.00 Educational Map 8i Chart Service 350 00 Evelyn E Boggs 84,00 United Telephone Co. 668 S 3 A E Boyce 483 60 Business Equip Co. ’B9 36 Addressograph Corp. 446.79 Lake City Wholesale 39 90 Waddell Printing Co 349 50 Warsaw Office Supply 974.40 Water Utilities 99’4 Sewage Treatment 51 95 Inf , Business Mach 105180 No Ind Public Serv 666 95 Plymouth Clean TowerServ 42.80 Sharp Hardware 84.82 West Publish ing Co 487.50 Vector O. Connell 7.50 E Mazie Alexander 30 00 Bankers Dispatch 2.60 Kodak AC ’45 00 Bledsoe Buick 154.10 Ford's Auto 16.50 Motorola 8. Comm 83 90 Schrader's ’4OO Warsaw License Bureau 18.50 David E Andrews 550.55 Gast Fuel & Service 336.70 Shell Oil Company ’4.44 Warsaw Auto Supply 7 13 David E Andrews • 103 65 G A. Thompson Co ’3 40 Hoile Towing Serv 72.00 Thornburg Drug Co 26.10 Charles M Brower 35.04 Lincoln Graphic ’4.19 Carl T. Zimmer 73.20 mt. Aircredit Publ. ! ’5 00 Garold Horrick 54.40 R Steven Hearn 333 00 Gene B. Lee ’4O 00 Paul J Gimme 32.20 Warsaw Printing 95.00 Matthew Bender 362.61 Lawyers Cooperative 356 50 Allan A. Rasor 50.00 Doris L. Camden 32 00 David M Harshbarger 15.00 Nick's* Joe's TV Puckett's Cafeteria 28 82 Moore's Plumbing * Hts ’2 65 Robert Frantz Cons. 767 00 B A Railton Co 8 80 Cull <gan Water Cond 54.63 Arab Termite Y Pest Cons 5.00 Harveys Mart 23.16 Wayne R. Johnson 198 00 Fitzpatrick Paint Mfg 8 33 Johnson Service 123.15 Kelley Tile* Floor 84 84 Nat Bird Exterminating 100.00 Power Plant Service 147 01 Westron Corp 59.97 Laketon Asphalt 1443.00 Carl E Kiser 14 20 Coverall Rental . 37 05 Warsaw Dry Cleaners 49 00 Simon Bros 54.00 MiloE Clase 400 W A D'ddei Agency Robert Werkman Co 8.00 Teledyne inpls 26.97 Harvey Anglin 175.00 Maurice Dorsey 150.00 Fredrick W Gilliam 150 00 Roberto Jones 40 00 RayO Eckert 51.50 Lakeland Printing 33 10 Cornelius Printing 273 34 Mail Journal 165.50

Bledsoe Buick 100 00 W. A. Diddel Agency 31.2$ Henry Hackworth 20.00 E. H. Stephenson 200.00 Zerox I 120.00 Appleget Lawrence Mortuary 100.00 Mrs. Allee Gerard 100.00 Harris Troxel Funeral H. 100.00 King Memorial Home 100.00 McHatton Funeral H. 500.00 Mishler Funeral H. 100.00 Titus Funeral H. 100.00 Tucker & Sons Funeral H. 100.00 Wright Yoder Funeral H 100.00 James Ebbinghouse 3.00 Warren Goodman 6.00 Gail Harrold I 3.00 Mrs. Larry Jefferies 3.00 Mrs. Edward Kuhn 15.00 Millwood Fox Hunters 30 00 Clifford Newsome 3 00 Jerry Phillips 3.00 Jimmie Setser 3.00 Gorden Teeple 180.00 Eugene Lee Warner 3.00 Council-Retarded of Kos. Co. 3590.00 Indiana State Farm 63.05 Norman M. Beatty, Hosp 221.05 Healthwin } 969 57 Freeman Pence 11.20 Joe A. Auker 93.10 Dr. Robert P. Clark ? 163.75 Dr . O. L. McFadden 66.10 Dr. T. A. Miller 37.65 Dr. A. G. Schafer 82.75 Dr H F. Terrill 15.35 Dr. Floyd F Warren 27.10 Dr p. R. Whriledge 12.95 Wabash County 10,00 Brennan's Drug Store 13.12 Roland S. Snider 9.00 Dept, of Correction 99.23 Paul Deaton 180.00 Phillip Dierks 234.00 Tony Heiman 50.00 Loren T. Kruger 334.00 Cyril F. Likens 334 00 Lady of Lakes Seminary I 90.00 Stanley Scott 420.66 Miller & Sons Lumber Cd. 194.35 Jack Bumgardner 35.33 James W. Kayden 21.16 Mrs. Grover C. Allen J . 22.45 Hobart Stiffler j 77."75 Willard Pence 24.75 Dean L. Frantz I , 40.00 Lawrence Sawyer 170 60 Ward Bradway 88 35 Elbert Basicker 147.22 CO HEALTH DEPT. PAYROLt & CLAIMS George M. Haymond 400 00 Carroll Sherman '[ 791.66 Loren J. Pound 666.66 Barbara A. McClure 562.50 Nellie Van Marcke 416.66 Barbara Olds 208 33 United Telephone Co 30.21 Warsaw. Ind. Postmaster 15 00 Barbara A. McClure 26.32 Loren J. Pound 26.24 Carroll Sherman 97.52 Business Equip. Co. 2.15 Cox Studio 7.97 Supt of Documents 22.00 American Journal of Nursing 6.00 CO. HWY. DEPT PAYROLL * CLAIMS . John Alexander 610.20 Charles Cotton | 518.40 Francis Denny 518.40 Raymond Faulkner 518.40 Merritt Hartman 650.88 Lawrence Kindig ; 518 40 Ellis Koher ! 518.40 Bernard D Kuhn j 518.40 Ralph Linn 518.40 Donald Metzger ’ 518.40 Leo Mosier 518.40 Ronald Norman 558.72 Gene R Ousley 545 76 Roswell Robbins 518 40 Glenwood Secor . 466.56 Harley Slater 4 518.40 Donald Phillips Stiver 492 48 Garl P Young 514.30 John A. Armold 25.02 Charles Edward Bucher 500.40 Emerson Cain 500 40 Ermal G Coy 1 505 96 Robert Danner 514 30 John Davis 500.40 Muri Dawalt 528.20 Don Forney 505 96 Harold Gerard 514.30 Gilbert Griffis , 514.30 Frederick E. Kammerer 475.38 Russell Krrchbaurri 500.40 Donald E. Kuhn I 500.40 Alvin H Miller J 514.30 Bobby Miner 500.40 Forrest D Mitterl ing 475.38 Larry Montel 500.40 Paul Randall 514.30 Luther Van Cleave 500.40 Wayne T Wood 503 18 David L. Baker 610 20 Ronald Ray Himes 491 40 Arthur A. Smith 116 10 Wilfred Fretz ; 606 51 Max E Brown 518.40 Worley Spitler 518.40 Donn Shoemaker 53*20 Claude Christners 750.00 Berton Retz 1166.66 Ronald J. Leiter s 541.67 Gary Frenger .. 305.04 Prudential Ins. Co 2226.75 United Telephone Co. 1 58.22 No. Ind Public Serv 334 76 Sewage Treatment 23 65 Man Journal Reub Williams 2 40 AutoHaus 30.00 Emergency Radio Serv 248 60 Millington Bros ; 84.30 Plymouth Radiator 10120 Kos. Co. Hwy Dept 12.54 Carl Uhlig 44.39, Cummins Diesef 574.99 Friden Division J 41.00/ MacAlliSter 59194 Stock berg er Mach 1628 35 Ace Hardware 14.45 Coverall Rental 517.20 Gas Fuel * Serv 2366.46 Glass Service of Warsaw 23.38 Hydrotex *8 64 Ind Textile COi ' 50 ’5 Ind Photo Inc. 5 40 J I Holcomb Mfg ’ 7 ’ 30 Judd Drugs ’4-34 Kelley Tile o ’0.40 Lincoln Graphic «. ” 30 99 Lubrication Engineers 95.88 Monteith Tire Co. 2.48 Purity Cylinder Gases 95.67 Sharp Hardware ”-94 Standard Oil ' 24.70 WAR.Equipment 246.95 Warsaw Chemical ’6.20 Warsaw Dry Cleaners 14.00 Business Equipment 9.26 Waddell Printing 30 00 American Research 370.08 International Salt 2600.46 Erie Stone Mae Friedman 180.75 Jack Garman 71.25 J * M Gravel Corp 709.74 Mill Creek Stone*Gravel 91.26 Hosea Rosbrugh 173.25 Elmer Zimmerman 108.75 Johnson Lumber Yard 32.48 Logansport Metal Culvert 3226 50 Stello Products inc 153.00 Bearings. Inc 28.10 Cummins Dibsel 23.87 Earl Buchanan 50.00 Ft Wayne Clutch 60.06 Ft. Wayne Spring Serv. General Truck Sales 541.46 Ginter Elec. Serv. 3.70 Ind. Equip Co., 8.40 Ind Tractor * Equip. ’9 85 Lemler Machine 16.00 Mike Gill Auto Parts 10 00 MacAlliSter 128.32 Pierceton Equip. Co. 206.68 , Schrader,, 79 96 Superior Pipe Spec 1398.79 Union Tool Corp 9 98 W* W Truek Sales ,351 90 Walmer Supply 5 14 Warsaw Auto Supply ‘ 558.28 Yeiter * Gansnorn 18.25 Kimm Paint CO 149.12 W. A. Diddel Agency 1100.00 Fitzpatrick Paint Mfg. 36.79 Kos Co. Treasurer 889.11 CO WELF DEPT PAYROLL * CLAIMS Howard B Johnson 750.00 Opal Joy Harman 450.00 Mary Ruth Wilson 450.00 Willie Hugh Nine 450.00 Philip K. Carr 450.00 Madelyn l'. Lbwman 335.00 Yvonne Sue England 335 30 Esther B Hoover 325.00 Marjorie E. Himes 345.00 United Telephone Co. 142.36 Philip K. Carr 18.30 Opal Joy Harman 19.60 Howard B Johnson 23.68 Willie Hugh Nine 20.10 Mary Ruth Wilson 20.90 mt. Business Mach. 159.60 Landis * Chamness Funeral H. 95.00 Ft Wayne Anesthesiologists 80 00 Ind. university Med. Center 21.00 Lutheran Hospital 5 00 McHatton Funeral Home ‘ 350.00 Council for the Retarded 3100 Walter Drugs , . Comm. Drive Up Pharmacy 2.00 Ft. Wayne Children's H. 308.00 Ind Unffed Meth. Children's H 280 00 R S. Kepner, M.D. 25 00 st Vincent Villa 784.00 Turtle Creek Convalescent C. 364.00 1. Lawrence Butts, do hereby certify that the above is a true iist of claims to be presented to the Kosciusko County Board of Commissioners on the Ist day of April, 1970. LAWRENCE BUTTS Auditor, Kosciusko County