The Mail-Journal, Volume 10, Number 4, Milford, Kosciusko County, 21 February 1973 — Page 12

THE MAIL-JOURNAL — Wed., Feb. 21,1973

12

AROUND. K WE w We are advised this week that a part of the dog problem being suffered at Papakeechie Lake is the fact that a wild dog pack is running on the tri-county game area. Maybe the dogs running through yards making a mess, belong to this pack, and not to the neighbors, concluded the note. Perhaps conservation officers are’checking on this by now. Guess what persons are sporting Singapore vaccinations — AEB, no less, and wife Della. An unscheduled overnight stay in Singapore was necessary due to engine trouble, while en route to Djakarta. Snowmobilers were numerous over the week end after temperatures dipped to as much as 12 below making ice on the lakes again with six units in a meet on Syracuse Lake Sunday afternoon. Several ice fishing houses were again seen, however no great fishing stories were heard. Syracuse police received their new police car Saturday morning. Another of the older homes in Syracuse is gone, that of the O’Dell sisters on Indiana avenue and longtime home of the Fred Traster family.

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Good J BBSs & ■•1 I'iilNl ln!<‘W Foi, r> HO,ts "HiH 4 * Ijlgl 11 "J II|W ■1 I ■ IvOt AdC JUST MAIL IN 3 QUALITY SEALS FROM 3 PACKAGES OF big roll A Cl flfl SCOTTOWELS ANO HANDY ORDER »“ V | V V \ Cat at aar stara lac -31-73 " W/ ■ | Copr. Advertisers Exchange Inc. 1973 BONELESS ROLLED Mardi Gras time at KLINK’S is a gay parade of GREAT I I DINO'S FROZEN ■BF 4R ■ ■* ■ YIA BUYS in fine foods! Get the nourishing, first quality foods K SIKLOIN Tlr y° u w ® nt ,or v° ur fami, y' <,nd SAVE with our Low ' lOW rCD* jLO PI77A K III x PRICES and MARDI GRAS SUPER SPECIALS. There’s no mas- lIAAM EA. K K OR Tro querading these BIG VALUES. Come and get them. ■» »■■—■■—•<rRUMP ROAST L. I DUBL knit TT~| Green Giant Sole /minglesX PORK AFr WAS D H WATER 69 C CREAM STVIE ’“"" 4 “" CTUK 95 — 0R HIBtETS — ROC 9IEAIV 18. mDM O K SMUCKER'S X FROZEN NABISCO tUKN W '°« TING PEANUT BARS"-AQC cu/EET A rr /ketchupW “"«> ) p, MWHiils 4* M» 25 c vWv.'iT B .*r7 . CHICKEN OF THE SEA SUCED 0R CHUNK lIGHT AQc WHOLE —ooc (™°) ITALIAN SAUSAGE « TUNA «,, «» QV MUSHROOMS ° L *. si ZY v 39 *-/ BR iL W X S , T PILLSBURY 102 79 C .. BUTTERMILK # R| k I /■AWEMI — mon.-thurs. fri. sat. JI HOURS We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities

The structure was burned to the ground by Syracuse firemen Sunday morning following a request by American Legion commander Bud Kline. Hie local Legion purchased the land last year and {dans are being formulated for building of a new legion home at the north edge of town. Mr. Charles and his assistant, Linda Richardson, attended the 50th midwest beauty show at the Conrad-Hilton in Chicago on Sunday. The Jack Forrests of Nappanee (she is the former Esther Wilkinson of Syraucse) left Tuesday on a two-day Bahaman holiday. Sunday is Heart Sunday! Give! Although defeated in his first round at the state wrestling meet Saturday in Indianapolis, Brad Lemberg, Wawasee high school senior, made an excellent showing for our school with quite a number of area fans in attendance. Brad emerged sixth in the state. Wawasee’s only other wrestler to take part in state competition was the 1969-70 school year when Kent Wilson also made an excellent showing and came out in fourth place. Smiling Mary Williams has joined the staff at The Star Store and Christine Clodfelter is filling in for several weeks at NIPSCo where Diana is on a Florida holiday prior to assuming a new position in the company’s Goshen offices. Ground has been broken for another new home on the north shore of Syracuse Lake, across from the lake proper.

1 ’ — __________ „ r ~ B MF P** ’■■SB NEW CAR AT SYRACUSE —Jack Stump, right, general manager of C. S. Myers Ford is shown presenting keys to the new police car for the town of Syracuse to board president Louis Kuilema, center. Syracuse police chief Orvil Vanderßeyden is shown on the left of the photo. The car is a 1973 Custom 500 Ford police interceptor.

Thanks goes this week to Turkey Creek township trustee Joe Shewmon, Col. Joe Gray of the Syracuse plan commission and Harry VanHemert, township . assessor, for their help in locating the official information on the jurisdiction of the plan commission and bow it was received. * If your memory is failing you on the zoning foundries see the map elsewhere in this issue. Town clerk-treasurer Betty Dust was in Frankfort over the week end on business. Troop 150 has meeting By DARCY DEAN On March 1 Milford’s Girl Scout troop 150 is planning to go to church together. The troop is also planning to go camping. Their February 19 meeting started at 3:45 p.m. and ended at 4:30. Next week the Girl Scout cookies will arrive and orders will be delivered. The next meeting will be March 5 at Mrs. Howard Wdferman’s. First aid responds The Syracuse First Aid unit was called Thursday afternoon to assist Mrs. Alice Scarbeary of Syracuse for an injury after slipping on some ice at the north edge of town. She was taken to Goshen hospital and admitted for treatment of an injury to the hip. The unit responded to a call at Liberty Hones on Friday afternoon when a frozen pipe for the sprinkler system set off the alarm. rl

As the editor

Re — Jim Baker presents

Dear Editor: You use a whole page for Arch why can’t you use a whole page next week to show us what Jim Baker proposes? Certainly, no one expects any intelligent questions or thinking by just being told something. Obviously, there are maps, etc. Reproduce them, give us a chance to study what is proposed.

Who wants equal rights

Dear Editor: The news yesterday in our state told of the passage of the Equal Rights Bill by the Indiana House. It has just been in the last week that I have really become aware of how fast this bill is advancing in our country. The ratification by all the states is necessary before it can be brought before Congress. To my surprise, at the most recent count I have heard, 26 states had ratified it. In my home town paper “The Francesville Tribune” was this article which I am placing within this letter. I feel our community and the general public should be made aware of what this bill would do to our country and should promptly write to our state senator

Thanks, H. A. Leach EDITOR’S NOTE: The presentation Mr. Baker gives on area planning is done with slides and a written script. He perhaps would have maps available at the court house for preliminary study before the presentation for your township. Why not check with

representing our area, since the Indiana House has already passed the bill. Following is the article from “The Francisville Tribune” and which I feel should be made public: “The proposed Equal Rights Amendment now under consideration by State Legislature pretends to improve the status of women. Actually, it is a fraud which will take away from women some of their most important rights. “There is nothing the Equal Rights Amendment can ‘give’ women which they do not already have, or have away of getting. ‘Equal pay for equal work’ is guaranteed by the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and by the Equal

Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 . . . “On the other hand, the Equal Rights Amendment will take away from the American women her most important right of all — namely, the right not to take a job, the right to care for her own baby in her own home, and to be financially supported by her husband. The laws of every state now require the husband to support his wife and children and to provide a home for them to live in. The Equal Rights Amendment will remove this sole obligation from the husband, and make the wife equally responsible to provide a home for her family, and go to work in a paying job outside the home in order to provide 50 per cent of the financial support of her family. It is admitted by all those for and against the Equal Rights Amendment that it will positively make women subject to the draft and for combat duty on an equal basis with men. Such a radical requirement is opposed by the overwhelming. majority of Americans, both men and women. The Equal Rights Amendment is a fraud which will wipe out a woman’s present freedom of choice to take a job — or to be a full time wife and mother supported by her husband. Please urge your Legislators to vote NO on this Amendment which will deprive wives, mothers, and draft-age girls of precious rights and privileges they now possess.” Following was addresses of the local representative and senator. A Concerned Mother Too many people work themselves to death in an effort to retire.

Kale Island Beacon Lake Wawasee —Tuesday Nite Special — Liver and Onions, Mashed $lB5 Potatoes, Salad or Vegetable —Thursday Nite Special— Smelt — All You Can Eat $] 75 KITCHEN OPEN DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY 11 A.M. to 10 P.M. Week Days 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. Friday & Saturday

Sentenced Wednesday on drug charges A 20-year-old r 1 Syracuse man, George Edward Thornburg, was handed two one-to-10 year sentences last Wednesday afternoon in Kosciusko circuit court on two separate drug charges, one for possession of and one for sale of marijuana. Thornburg was found guilty on January 25 in a. two day court trial presided over by special judge Jack P. Dunten of LaGrange county and a presentence investigation was held. Thornburg was fined SSOO on the sale conviction and an additional SIOO for possession, ordered to pay court costs and remanded to the sheriff’s department for execution of the imposed sentences, to be served concurrently. Marvin L. Komisarow of Fort Wayne was attorney for Thornburg. He announced he did not know whether an appeal would be made. The Syracuse man was arrested on September 27 of last year following a police raid at his place of residence.

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Junior Merry Maidens meet February 13 By KRISBREMBECK The Junior Merry Maidens met on February 13 at 3:30 p.m. The meeting was called to order by Cindy Rapp. The American pledge was given by Debby Green and the 4-H pledge by Janet Wall. We then talked about officer’s training that was held at Warsaw mi February 14 at 7:30 p.m. We decided to send a breakfast menu to the radio station and are going to do an act for Share the Fun. Jhe first practice will be on February 22 from 3:30 till five. Demonstrations were given by Lori Kleinknight and Marla Wolferman. Refreshments were served.

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