The Mail-Journal, Volume 7, Number 24, Milford, Kosciusko County, 15 July 1970 — Page 2
THE MAIL-JOURNAL —Wed., July 15, 1970
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ROTARY TEAM — Enthusiastic Rotary team members in the Major League are shown here with one of their managers. Mrs. Robert Day. prior to action Friday night. Tom Jones is athletic director of the Little Leagues and they play each Monday and Friday at 6:38 in the evening. Shown here are: J. C. Schrock. Greg Robinson. Bob Day. Gary Brown, Jerry" Yoder and Allen Robinson: standing. Mrs. Day, Randy Hapner. Mark Francis. Mike Luttman. Randy Leer, Paul Schrumpf and Marc Fry. Lynn Pittman is also a manager. Absent were Chris Scarbeary and Mike Knight.
Results Os Minor League Play At Syracuse In Minor League play last Thursday evening, the Bank team defeated Pilchers. 5 to I. Bryan Smith captured honors in his third consecutive game in striking out 16 The leading hitter for the Bank was Chris Henning The Lions defeated Pilchers m their game in the bettom of the sixth inning. 10 to 9 The final run came on a Single by Doug VanLue. David Stoffel was winning pitcher with Danny Andrews pitching for the losers Standings W L Lions 11 Rotary 0 2 Bank 3 0 Pilchers 1 2 Major League Play At Syracuse On Friday, the Lions defeated Rotary by a 5 to 1 with Barry Coy. starring pitcher, striking out. 12 while walking three Jerry Yoder was leading hitter for the Rotary team with two hits in three times at bat. Rotary was trounced again on Monday night, 11 to 1, by the Bank Leading players for the Bank were Jeff Miller. Doug Pollock and Clem Lisor With two hits.and Miller as pitcher Marc Fry pitched for Rotary Standings < W L Lions 3 0 Rotary 0 4 Bank 3 1 Pilchers 2 2
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Warriors Win Number One Victory was a long time in coming but when it did. the Wawasee Warriors were quick to welcame.k. Bremen was the victim as Dan . Hasse pitched and jßnice Cumings prgj ided the bat for the Warriors in a 2 to 0 victory played at Wawasee. Hasse gave up 4 hits, struck out 5. and walked one in an impressive performance. Keeping the hitters off balance with a mixture of pitches, the Warrior junior moved -with ease in gaining the victory. All of the scoring took place in the bottom of the third inning as Chuck Rapp walked but was erased by. a fielder’s choice. Tony Mohler, showing daring base running, stole second base with a headfirst slide. Young, Bremen pitcher. walked Bill Cutter to set the stage for Bruce Cumings two out triple to left field. Donn May tripled and Tom Miller singled for the only other hits off Young. Hasse only gave up four hits in going the distance. I The young Warriors are getting much experience at various positions recently. In the Bremen victory six players found themselves at different positions. This seemed w provide the spark for the big first victory. Line Score RHE Bremen 0 4 0 Wawasee 2 3 2 Warriors Lose Three In A Row Rochester visited Warrior country on July 6 and finally won a hard fought game by the score of 9 to 6. Wawasee led 6 to 4 in the sixth inning, but a three run homerun by Elliott spelled doom for the Warriors. Two insurance runs-a*ere added on a pass ball and error in the visitors’ big sixth inning. Elliott contributed two homeruns and a double as Rochester continued its fight for the Northern Lakes Conference championship. Mark Thomas started for the host team and was relieved byDon Hasse in the sixth. Hasse has been out of action for two weeks as a result of an eye injury suffered during a practice session. His return should help
the young W’arriors. Tom Miller provided the offensive spark in the big six run third inning for Wawasee as he connected for a triple with two men on. Tom added a single and scored one run. Tony Mohler. Mark Thomas, and Jack Beer got one hit. RHE Rochester 9 10 0 W’awasee 6 5 3 Manchester Wins Manchester high school continued its march toward an undefeated season and a possible conference championship, but the record and pride were almost derailed by the hustling Warriors on July 8 at Manchester. When the smoke ojtared, the final score was Manchester 5, W’awasee 1 in ten innings. Both teams were up for the game w-ith the Warriors wanting to upset the mighty Squires. The host team scored one run in the fourth inning, but Wawasee pushed across the tying marker in the fifth when Bill Cutter singled Chuck Rapp home. From the fifth on it was nip and tuck until Manchester loaded the bases in the tenth with one out. Barnett ended the long game and best yet for the Warriors by stroking a drive over the right field fence which is a short 225 feet. Chuck Rapp, promising sophomore, started for the Warriors and did a fine job for five innings giving up four hits and one run. Don Hasse, veteran hurler, relieved with two men on and no outs in the fifth. Hasse’s excellent six innings of pitching resulted in only one hit for the Squires, but it was the big one to win. Improved baseball by Wawasee was noticeable. With the season completion only two weeks away, the Warriors are working hard for their first victory and the Concord 4-way tourney title on July 25. RHE Wawasee 12 6 Manchester 5 5 0 Conard Is Victor Visions of victory were erased by a big four run fifth inning at Concord as the Minutemen handed defeat number 12 to the Warriors. Starting off with a bang, Wawasee jumped on starter Gordan for four hits and two runs in the first two innings. Concord came back with one run in the bottom of the second inning with the Warriors adding their third run in the top of the third.
A single tally, resulting from a Warrior error in the fourth inning narrowed the lead to 3 to 2 Wawasee until the fatal fifth. In the top of the seventh Mohler popped up to the shortstop. Chuck Rapp got his second walk but was erased on a fielder’s choice hit by Cutter. Bruce Cumings slapped a hard double between left field and center to make the score 5 to 4. Donn May ended the threat by hitting a ball between shortstop and second with the shortstop Purtlebaugh making a good play to preserve tjie Concord victory. The Warriors outhit Concord 8 to 6. but could not get the muchneeded and deserved first victory.
Team Statistics For 12 Games Team statistics for the Wawasee W’arriors baseball team are listed below in averages per game after 12 games have been played: Team batting .187 Runs scored (Wawasee) 2.67 Runs scored (opponents) 8.08 Hits 5.00 Strike outs 8.42 Walks 4.00 Runs batted in 2.17 Stolen Bases 1.17 Errors 4.17 Pitching Records W L Mark Thomas 0 6 Dwight Dean . 0 4 Don Hasse 0 2 Dale Brown 0 0 Roger Smith 0 0 Jack Beer 0 0 Chuck Rapp 0 0 Leading Hitters Bruce Cumings .333 Donn May .263 ’Dwight Dean .240 Tom Miller .227 Don Hasse .214
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FRIDAY MIXED DOUBLES Crazy Four 17 7 HiLo’s 15' 9 Van Gard’s 15 9 Odd Balls • 15 5 Kern Grain 14 10 Siree’s 10 14 Clumsy Four - 8 16 Fisher Well Drilling ♦♦ 7 9 Rebels * 6 14 No. Eight 5 19 * Makeup Games High Team Series and Game: 2097—753.— 500 series (women >: K. Knisley 531, S. Kern 574; (men): B. Simon 541, J. Francis 525, M. Simon 533. D. Van Diepenbos 521, N. Kistler 595, J. Kern 533, K. Knisley 565, D. McFarland 541. 450 series and above (women); Loraine McFarland 460, M. Reeve 474, L. Gilbert 459, S. Gilbert 467. a 200 games (men': D. McFarland 233. N\ Kistler 233-202, J. Francis 230. B. Simon 203. 170 games and above (women); L. McFarland 170, K. Knisley 183-173-175, S. Kern 190-202-182. Youths Home ■ (Continued From Page 1) Mrs. Little said that is believed that the return flight was paid for. Most of the children were in good spirits, not too upset Judy said she had a good time. Another daughter of the Littles was to leave July 9 for Europe. She will not get to leave. Some of the students called home and made arrangements to stay in Europe on their own Mr. Corson’s group stuck together, pooled their money and did things together. Some of the groups just fell apart when it happened. On the return trip, the plane flew low in some places in order they might see some of what had been missed.
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FRL • SAT. - SUN. Open 7:00 - Show 7:30-9:20 • TM FRfSHEST HLM Os THE YEA« r -MeCAAI '* BobQCarol * FMMKOVtCH FWOOUCTIOH FOO C<X.U»««‘* UttlASl No One Under 16 Admitted
r— — —n * Lakeland [Golf] Dr. Blue Has Hole-In-One Dr. A. A. Blue of Bremen made a hole-in-one last Wednesday during play at Maxwelton Golf club. Syracuse, when he used his eight iron on the third hole with distance of 124-yards. A golfer for 20 years, this is his first hole-in-one, but the third of the season at Maxwelton. Witnesses to the fete were playing companions, John Lange. Dr. V. Lopp, and George Gray. • Tuesday Winners At South Shore Winners on Tuesday for Ladies Day play for Blind Partners at South Shore Golf club were: Eighteen-hole players — Nora Speicher and Ellie Caudill, first; Stella Heckaman and Ruth Kerlin. second; and Lee Wake and Ruth Banta, third. Nine-hole winners were Eleanor Moots and Jean Niles, first; Verna Hathaway and Mary Sullivan. Bertha Lehman and Needra Beebe, tie for second; and Kate Auer and Edwina Neuhauser. third. There were 28 ladies participating in the day’s play prior to luncheon and a meeting. MEDAL IS PLAY FOR THE DAY AT MAXWELTON CLUB Ladies Day play at Maxwelton Tuesday morning was Medal with the following winners in the 18-hole group with 18-players: Low gross. Marge Newcomer, second. Delight Craig; low net, Lavon Hawk, second, Nancy Prickett; tie for low putts, Nedra Jones and Rose Mathews. Winners in the 9-hole play were: Low gross. Helen Hagen, second, Helen Hoyt and third, Bonnie Newman; low net. Vicki Arnold, second, Barbara Beemer, third. Edith Little; low putts. June Lantz and Nancy Mousley. Protecting People Against Crime There is something distressing about free people having to restrict and alter their daily pursuits and activities because of brazen cirminals. It is right that bus passengers in many metropolitan areas must always have the exact fare because busdrivers cannot carry money to make change without being robbed? Is it right that motorists in some cities must buy gasoline in amounts for which • they have exact money, or use credit cards, to keep station attendants from being held up by thugs? Is it right that downtown merchants in some areas should lose their customers, and perhaps their businesses, because citizens are afraid to venture into crime-infested streets? Let us face it. Are we, as a free society under the rule of law. shaping our own destiny, or are weheing pushed and boxed in by those who defy the law and have no respect for the rights of others’’ The truth at the matter is that more and more of our Nation's total energy and effort is needed to protect people against crime. For instance, more theftprevention devices are being installed in new automobiles More homes are being equipped FULL WEEK July 16 thru 22 Thursday - Wednesday, Walt Disney’s Wonder of Wonders “SLEEPING BEAUTY” Technicolor Open Monday thru Friday 6:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday 1:00 p.m.
with bigger and more complex door locks. Banks are taking action to reduce the amount of cash exposed to bank robbers. In some cities, police patrol school corridors and grounds to keep troublemakers from disrupting classes and assaulting students. The list goes on and on. We are attempting, in effect, to erect a protective barrier between society and the criminal. However, history dating back to Biblical times teaches us that high walls as such do not necessarily provide sanctuary. If we are to find relief from crime, we have to shire up our legal walls to prevent lawbreakers from slipping back and forth through loopholes to prey on the public and then hide behind legal sanctions to avoid just and adequate punishment. If we are to contain the spiraling crime rate and bring a higher degree of securuty back to the law-abiding citizens, then we must make justice swift and certain. In spite of what some courts and legal theorists may proclaim, justice is all-inclusive; it means justice for the victims and the public as well as for the accused. boon, we will have to stop granting concessions to marauding criminals and stop reshaping our lives to conditions thrust upon us by excessive am fully convinced that one of the most effective moves we could make to combat crime in the 1970’s would be to speed up and improve our judicial processes so that the time element between a criminal violation and its disposition in court is sharply reduced. The old truism notwithstanding, it would appear that not all criminals and their attorneys today believe that “justice delayed” is “justice denied.” Let us stop reacting aimlessly to the pressing demands of the lawless. Rather, let us start applying the legal remedies and safeguards of the law which is meant to penalize those who break it, not those who abide by it. \ NEW FRONT FOR NEWMAN BARBER SHOP IN MILFORD Leon Newman’s Barber shop in Milford is sporting a new brick front. Recently the old-fashioned high windows were replaced with smaller, modem ones and the front refaced. Rising Cost For Purdue U. At Fort Wayne Purdue university at Fort Wayne will need more than $3.6 million in 1971-1972 and $4.7 million in 1972-1973 to meet rising enrollments, fight off inflation, provide reasonable pay increases for faculty and staff, and maintain its academic programs at their present high level, according to Dean and Director L. O. Nelson, as he described Purdue’s operating fund requests for Fort W’ayne for the next biennium. The requests were forwarded last week to the State Budget Agency for consideration by the 1971 Indiana General Assembly together with those of other Purdue for Regional campuses and the Lafayette Campus. [w] D |w| D di THURS. - FRL - SAT. Open 8:30 Show at Dusk Action - Action - Action ELI WALLACH in “M” “ACE HIGH” Also at 11:15 Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are “The April Fools” S A Mwai Cxnml IMtair SUN., MON , TUES, WED, SB Duke Cxskx b, DeU-e Also at 11:15 Tony Curtis Henry Fonda GeoroeKeroraiv 22 the M 4MB BOSTON STRANGLER ■■
Objections Raised To Closing Triton Elementary Schools
Tippecanoe and Etna Green residents met Friday night with members of the Triton school board and voiced their objections to the closing of elementary schools in their respective towns. More than 200 were in attendance. A recent opinion poll showed 406 persons were contacted in Etna Green with 354 wanting to keep, the young children in that town, seven were in favor of the move to Bourbon where the Triton school corporation has its high school, and 45 did not voice any opinion. In Tippecanoe 190 of the 191 persons contacted were in favor of keeping the school in their town. Superintendent Nicholas Richer told of the advantages and disadvantages of keeping the schools in their existing locations and of moving the students to Bourbon. Cost-wise the school corporation expects to save $35,375 per year by making the move. The savings would be in operational expenses and should lower the tax rate 22 cents. Presently the corporation has proposed adding 27 classrooms to the Bourbon building with an average of 614 square feet. It was pointed out that in new school construction the state regulations demand 875 square feet in each elementary classroom. Savings Questioned William Price of Etna Green, who had presented the figures on the poll, stated the figures presented by the superintendent did not give a true picture. He said it would be necessary to hire a third janitor at Bourbon to take care of the additional rooms and one additional bus would be necessary to transport the children. He contended that little or no money would be saved, education would be downgraded. classrooms and restroom facilities would be woefully inadequate. He continued
State Bank No. 477 CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION OF FARMERS STATE BANK OF NORTH WEBSTER OF KOSCIUSKO COUNTY IN THE STATE OF INDIANA AND DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES AT THE CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON JUNE 30, 1970 ASSETS Cash and due from banks (including $ none unposted debits) $ 265,411.73 U. S. Treasury securities 1,248,086 50 Securities of other U. S. Government agencies and corporations ' None Obligations of States and political subdivisions .. 89,270.8.'' Other securities (including $ None corporate stocks) 956,494.84 Trading account securities None Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to resell None Other loans 4,408,211.03 Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other assets representing bank premises .... 42,541.89 Real estate owned other than bank premises ... None Investments in subsidiaries not consolidated .... None Customer’s liability to this bank on acceptances outstanding None Other assets 3,111.09 TOTAL ASSETS 37,013.1?7.93 LIABILITIES Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, * and corporations ’ $1,484,6.4.87 Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations 4,222,464.35 Deposits of United States Government 24,877 28 Deposits of States and political subdivisions ... 217,594.73 Deposits of foreign governments and official institutions Deposits of commercial banks 26-22? un Certified and officers’ checks, etc 56,734.92 TOTAL DEPOSITS $6,032,346.15 X X X X X (a) Total demand deposits $1,697,212.68 x X X x x (b) Total time and savings deposits $4,335,133.47 x x x x x Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase S° ne Other liabilities for borrowed money t? one Mortgage indebtedness • • • None Acceptances executed by or for account of this bank and outstanding' Other liabilities •••■•? 313.550.4TOTAL LIABILITIES $6,347,896.57 MINORITY INTEREST IN CONSOLIDATED SUBSIDIARIES - None RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES Reserve for bad debt losses on loans (set up pursuant to Internal Revenue Service rulings) ... 44,088.99 Other reserves on loans One Reserves on securities None TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES 44,088.99 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital notes and debentures None (specify interest rate and maturity of each issue outstanding) Equity capital, total 621,142.37 Preferred stock — total par value None (No. shares outstanding $ None) Common stock — total par value■- 50.000 00 I No. shares authorized 500) (No. shares outstanding 500) Surplus 400,000.00 Undivided profits 171,142.37 Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves None TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS 621,142.37 TOTAL LIABILITIES, RESERVES, AND CAPITAL ACCOUNT $7,013,127.93 MEMORANDA Average of total deposits for the 15 calendar days ending with call date $6,012,347.11 Average of total loans for the 15 calendar days ending with call date 4,375,136.48 Unearned discount on installment loani included in total capital accounts None I, Dolores M. Bachelder, Vice President, of the above-named bank do solemnly affirm tliat this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and belief. DOLORES M. BACHELDER Correct —Attest: J. HOMER SHOOP EDWARD R. LIKENS Directors WALTER E. SHOOP State of Indiana, County of Kosciusko, ss: Swom. to and subscribed before me this 10th day of July, 19 <O, and I hereby certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank. " My commission expires March 15, 1973. BEVERLY J. HAMMAN, Notary Public
that the move would lead to a demand for a new elementary school in Bourbon. This, he said, would place an impossible tax load on the school patrons. Others also commented. No decision was made at the meeting. Members of the board, met again on Monday evening and discussed the problem at great length. They then tabled any decision until a later date. SYRACUSE LAKE ASSOCIATION SETS MEETING The Syracuse Lake Association’s annual dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 25, at the new Maxwelton Country club. The association’s summer membership mailing list to members and potential members covered the announcement. « The next issue of The MailJournal will carry more information on the dinner-meeting « program and general association activities. > When you put off work until tomorrow, you put off profits until nqct week. The MAIL-JOURNAL PuMtoh«4 by The Mall-Juarnal •vary Wednesday and entered aa , Secend Class matter at the Post Office at Syracuse. Indiana 465C7. Second class yostaye aald at IM X. Main Street, Syraense, Indiana 4SM7 and at additional entry offices. Sabseription: S.I.M per year In Koaeiaska County; 53.. W outside county.
