The Mail-Journal, Volume 9, Number 34, Milford, Kosciusko County, 20 September 1972 — Page 17
Blue Tag Clearance SALE Thru Sept. 24 I 11 Lll ust Bi t nil Be s boun mood '/Z Sfc. a S * o ,s, com?' e,e x X? <rtht"8 ,ne X 11 Inboard >=\ Wood B 6 Excellent Running, rH Rest Mechanic Specials 1 COME S Make An ALL BOATS TAGGED WAWASEE MARINA East Side Lake Wawasee % Mile North of Old Fish Hatchery, On Morrison Island Road, Just Off Old Road 13-A Phone: 856-2286
Hoosier Corn Crop Down; Soybeans Up
LAFAYETTE — Indiana’s 1972 com crop, as of September 1, was expected to total 463,600,000 bushels, according to statefederal agricultural statisticians at Purdue university. This represents a 13 per cent drop from last year’s crop. However, the September 1 forecast raised the size of the Hoosier com crop nine million bushels above the August 1 estimate. The statisticians forecast the yield at 95 bushels an acre —two bushels more than as of August 1 and two bushels fewer than the record 97 bushels set in 1971. As of September 8, only 10 per cent of the Indiana crop had matured, compared with 25 per cent a year ago. Nationally, the 1972 crop is expected to amount to 5.1 billion bushels, down eight per cent from the 1971 output. The September 1 yield forecast at 89.7 bushels an acre is almost three bushels more than last year. Soybean production in Indiana is expected to total 118,880,000 bushels, five per cent more than in 1971. A yield of 32 bushels an acre is 1.5 bushels below the 1971 LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Kosciusko County, Indiana, will, at 10:00 A.M. on the 3d day of October, 1972 at the Clerks Office, Court House in the City (or town) of Warsaw, Indiana in said County, begin investigation of the applications of the following named persons, requesting the issue to the .applicants at the locations hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage Permits of the classes hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of said applicants, and the propriety of issuing the permits applied for to such applicants at the premises named: American Legion Post No. 49, by Arthur Knight, Mgr., 103 W. Purl St., Goshen, Ind., (Club) Beer, liquor & wine Retailer, 301 N. Buffalo, Warsaw, Indiana Louie's Bar and Grill, Inc., by Lewis Hare, Pres., (Restaurant) Beer & wine Retailer, R.R. No. 4, Kitson Park, Indiana UNINCORPORATED Donnie Smith and Mary E. Smith, dba Pastime Case, (Restaurant) Beer, liquor & wine Retailer, 208 First Street, Pierceton, Ind. Tippy Hotel & Lounge, Inc., dba Stoneyridge Hotel, by Harold R. Huyghe, r Jr., Pres., R.R. No. 2, Leesburg, Ind., and Karl Replogle, Director, 3328 Heritage Dr., Ft. Wayne, Ind., (Resort Hotel) Beer, liquor & wine Retailer, R.R. No. 1, Leesburg, Indiana Eddie L. Smith, dba Silver Inn, (Restaurant) Beer & wine Retailer, 365 E. Main Street, Silver Lake, Indiana Lakeview Liquors, Inc., by Samuel O. Dungan 11, and Jean G. Dungan Stockholders, R.R. No. 2, Leesburg, Indiana (Package store) Beer, liquor & wine Dealer, 710 N. Detroit, Warsaw, Indiana SAID INVESTIGATION WILL BE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC, AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION IS REQUESTED. INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By MARK Y. BROWN Executive Secretary JOHN R. SMOCK Chairman
Public Auction & F Appreciation Day 1 Wednesday, September 27, 1972 9:55 a.m. Sharp Free Chickeir And Beef Dinners Again the time of year is here to show our appreciation to all our old customers and welcoming new costomers. We have a Public Auction letting the Public buy at their own price. At noon we will serve our free chicken and beef dinners. The following items will be auctioned from 9:55 a.m. until 12 p.m. Electric drills; Bits; Electric saws; Electric clocks; Radios; Binoculars (10-50); Dolls; Silverware; Lighters; Electric cords; Log chains; Truck tarps; New guns; Used guns; Push brooms; Shovels; Hammers; Screwdrivers; Pliers; Tool sets; New televisions; Elgin and Gruen watches; High pressure washers; Really most anything. After lunch across the road these following items will be auctioned. Red Brand fence and posts; Wood gates; Steel gates; Sawed cedar posts; Water tanks; Hog feeders and waterers; Hay feeders; Grain feeders; New cupolas; Pig feeders; Combination waterers; Livestock oilers; Lick tanks; Farrowing crates; Barb wire; Stockade panelling (cattle and hog). Heavy Duty tubular gate (approximately 3 times heavier than an ordinary steel gate); 1 semi load of round Penna treated posts; 1 new hog scale (500 pound capacity); Wood cribbing and steel cribbing; Plus many more items not mentioned. Come and spend the day and have dinner with and on us and see how 2 boys slave along to pay the taxes. TERMS: Cash Free Dinner Served Not Responsible For Accidents I Edd And Toni's Feed Service j E. Winona Warsaw,
average. Soybean development is naming behind last year with only about five per cent of the crop shedding leaves as of September 8; a year ago 25 per cent of the crop was shedding leaves. U.S. soybean production is expected to set a record of 1.3 billion bushels, 10 per cent larger than last year’s crop. Yield per acre is forecast at 28.1 bushels, as against 27.6 last year. Oat production in Indiana is estimated at 12 million bushels, down 32 per cent from last year. The September 1 yield forecast at 60 bushels an acre is three fewer than in 1971. Indiana’s tobacco crop at 15 million pounds is 24 per cent larger than that of 1971. However, late summer potato production at 135,000 hundredweight is 39 per cent smaller than last year, and fall potato production at 1.6 million hundredweight is off by seven per cent. v New Genealogy Course Offered The genealogy section of the Kosciusko County Historical Society aimounces the start of a course in beginning genealogy to be held at the Cardinal Learning Center, 504 North Bay drive, Warsaw. They will start September 20 at 7:30 p.m. and will run for nine sessions, one of which will be a trip to the Fort Wayne and Allen county library in Fort Wayne. James A. Foester of Columbia City will be the instructor. He has given courses in Warsaw before and is a well known genealogist. RELEASED AFTER HOSPITAL TREATMENT David Bean, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Bean of 218 South Lake street, Syracuse, and an eighth grade student at the Syracuse school, was taken by his parents to the office of a local physician and then to Goshen hospital last Wednesday afternoon for injuries sustained when the youth was struck by another on his way home from school. David suffered abrasions and contusions about the eye in the fracas. The youth striking the blow was suspended from school for three days.
Wed., Sept. 20,1972 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL
k1 ■ * a ™ JU Br ° 'jl FLAGSHIP OF THE FLEET—The all-new Chevrolet Monte Carlo is among the most changed of all seven Chevrolet cars in the 1973 line. Featuring beautifully sculptured side and rear-quarter metal, new grille, and an optional Landau or opera-type vinyl roof, the Monte Carlo is a styling classic. Many months of advanced chassis and suspension engineering work have given the Monte Carlo handling the roadability said to equal or surpass that of Europe’s most expensive personal touring cars. All of the 1973 Chevrolets are being shown this week end at Cutter Chevrolet, Inc., Syracuse; McCormick Motors, Inc., Nappanee; and Silveus Motor Sales, Inc., Cromwell.
Annual High School Day Set Vincennes university’s annual high school day, which allows high school students to visit the campus and become familiar with the programs offered and the facilities available, will be held on Monday, Oct. 9, with the planned program getting under way at 12:45 p.m. Each year more than 1,000 students from Indiana’s high schools attend the half-day orientation program at Indiana’s only public comprehensive junior college. Another open-house day is held in the spring for those students or parents who could not come on Monday or were not sure of which school they might like to attend in the early fall. The
Four Students In Ball State Honors Program
MUNCIE — Four students from the Kosciusko county area are freshmen enrolling in the Ball State university honors program for the 1972-73 academic year. They are: Leesburg — Robin Marie Lursen, r 1, Warsaw Community
spring date will be Saturday, April 14. Dr. Isaac K. Beckes, president of Vincennes university, will address the visitors in the opening session. His message will - concern the college transfer and the vocational education curricula offered at the university. He will also develop the philosophy of the open-door college so that students will know that all high school graduates have an equal opportunity to succeed in their chosen field of study. Following the general session in Beless gymnasium, campus tours and visitation periods have been arranged. Student guides are reponsible for taking guests to each of the study areas where faculty members will be on hand for advising. They also will show their younger counterparts the dormitories, food-service units, libraries and other general points of interest on the campus. Following the tours, in which ample time has been planned for visits to one or more areas of major interest for each student, all high school students and their counselors or parents will reconvene in Beless gym for refreshments and student entertainment. That session will close at 4:30 p.m. A special coffee hour for counselors, parents, teachers and principals has been arranged with university administrative staff and faculty to coincide with student tour period. No reservations are needed to attend the program, and ample parking arrangements have been made for autos and buses. If there should be questions concerning the program, interested persons are invited to write or phone Vincennes
Dr. Petritz Outlook Speaker
The outlook for agriculture meeting will be held Wednesday, Sept. 27, at the Atwood community building in Atwood, starting at 7:30 p.m., according to Don Frantz, extension agent for Kosciusko county. The outlook will be primarily pointed to the livestock industry. The speakers will be Dr. David Petritz, livestock economist at Purdue. “We want to take a particularly hard look at the present price situation to determine if it really calls for expansion or if it is a temporary, short-cycle price rise,” said Mr. Frantz. Dr. Petritz will analyze the supply and demand situation for livestock and feed grain prices. He will also take a look at the foreign and domestic price and production factors. The meeting is open to all farmers, land-
high school Milford — Joann Router, r 1, art, Fairfield high school Pierceton — Cynthia Rusher, r 2, box 92, Whitko high school Syracuse — Lawrence Stidham, r 4, pre-law, Wawasee high school
university. The admissions office is in charge of arrangments for , ■ the day. STANLEY E. PEGUIGNOT o Stanley Peguignot Appointed Chairman Professional Division John Hall, general chairman of the United Fund, announced today that Stanley E. Peguignot, attorney, has accepted the position of chairman of this year’s professional division. Pequignot is a member of the f board of directors of the United Fund and an attorney with the law firm of Rockhill, Kennedy, Pinnick, Sand and Bent. He is a member of the local Rotary club. He resides at 1605 Greenhill thrive, Warsaw with his wife, Diana, and son Tyler, age three.
Si DR. DAVID PETRITZ owners and related agricultural industry business men. Refreshments will be served.
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