The Mail-Journal, Volume 10, Number 22, Milford, Kosciusko County, 27 June 1973 — Page 7

Mrs. Bessie Sunthimer of Milford entertained June 18 for her sister-in-law Mrs. Rachel Walker of Pasedena, Calif., and Mrs. Walker’s son and grandson, Dallas and Brian Rogers, also from Pasedena.

FOR SALE Pontoon on Lake Wawasee, 14 ft. long, 8 x 6 deck, very good condition, S2OO. Inquire red cottage, 136 Bay Shore drive or call 1-744-5162.

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School board in last meeting, honor Helvey

Members of the Lakeland Community School board of trustees met Tuesday night in an early session with all in attendance. Bids opened on June 12 were reviewed and accepted as recommended by business manager Marion Lantz. The first bid included a gasoline bid from Gulf for gasoline at Wawasee high school at a cost of 12.16 cents per gallon. Also, under category one of equipment, $2,856.88 in

audio visual; category two, $19,224.33 for industrial education. Category four was $7,881.05 for general classroom equipment and $1,900 in category five for business machine equipment. Further study is being made in category three of equipment in music. Extra curricular reports were reviewed and cash balances as certified by the various banks were verified and approved. Building Progress A building progress report was furnished by Oliver H. Ogden of South Bend on the vocational mechanics building including all four exterior walls being of bond beam height and the steel joist and decking have been completed. The front pit for the bus lift has been poured and piping for automobile lifts completed. With a continued break in the weather, there is no reason the job should not be completed on schedule. Board members approved rules, regulations and procedures for the 1973-74 school year, as provided by the school principals. No major changes were made. Members approved advertising for bids to replace the cast iron boiler at the North Webster school, with two steel boilers. All bids are to be received on July 10 at the regular monthly school board meeting. Year End Report Curriculum coordinator John Naab presented a year end report Tuesday night detailing various federal programs funded for the 1972-73 school year. In the report, title one of the elementary and secondary education act is intended to provide $35,411 for compensatory education. Os this amount, $21,812 would be for tutorial reading; $6,800 for school health program; $1,789 for fixed charges and audit, program audit and employers share of social security; and $6,010 as carry-over. Also listed in the report was $4,700 for migrant education projects, $4,693 to enable education agencies to acquire library resources, textbooks and other printed and published instructional materials not previously available in sufficient quantity for the use of children and teachers in public and private elementary and secondary schools. This is to benefit children, not schools. Another special grant provides $4,950 for use of media materials in a number of areas'; of great curriculum need. Locally the project was developed by the language arts and social science departments at Wawasee high school. Purpose of the project is to obtain audio-visual items relative to formulating and evaluating personal and social values in the disciplines of social sciences and language arts. More Mr. Naab listed an amount of $3,400 under career education at the elementary level, and $1,185 for the performance of the reading readiness program, Alpha Time. In this area, only $22,100 was available to the entire state of Indiana under this grant. The funding level has not yet been determined locally for title six to assist in the support of programs and projects for the initiation, expansion and improvement of special education and related services for handicapped children. A funding level has also not

been determined in the area of vocational education. Honored This beings the last official school board of trustees meeting for Jerry Helvey, president of the board, other board members presented him with a letter of appreciation for his eight years of service to the Lakeland Community schools and a plaque which read: “Presented to Jerry L. Helvey, in recognition of unselfish effort and outstanding service to the Lakeland Community School Corporation while serving as a member of the Board of School Trustees from 1965-1973 and as Board President from 1967-1973.” The letter was signed by Robert A. Craig, Floyd Baker, Billy Little and John Kroh. The next meeting of the school board will be a reorganizational meeting on July 3 and will include the oath of office to new member Philip R., Payne. 7 Sentenced on drug charges David Franklin Coppes, 22, r 1 Syracuse, appeared in Kosciusko circuit court recently and was ordered to serve two concurrent prison sentences on drug charges. Coppes received a two to 10year sentence on a charge of possession of morphine and a one to 10-year sentence on a charge of sale of marijuana. He also received a SSOO fine on the morphine charge and SIOO fine on the marijuana charge. Coppes was arrested on November 17, 1972 by Indiana state troopers James Risner and Larry Yeiter. He was charged after selling 30 pounds of marijuana to Charles Hampshire who was working as undercover agent for the state police. Following this, he Was charged with possession of morphine. The Syracuse man has received credit of six days already spent in jail. Variety marks tennis fashions By BETH MOHR Copley News Service “Variety” is the name of the game in tennis fashions. The most attractive of all active sportswear, tennis clothes are expanding their appeal by taking new ideas from street clothes and breaking limits set by old color rules. Elasticized and drawstring waistlines give bodices enough ease for swinging action and gather skirts into flippy fullness. Other skirts are pleated or flared from natural and lowered waistlines, tunics are lightly sashed . or straight and the little A-line dress maintains its classic simplicity or makes more daring appearances with halter necklines. The rule of all-white on the courts has been shattered. Most tennis dresses and shorts costumes have at least a touch of color in trims or have gone so far as to be made of solid pastel fabric. Color accents are in neckline and waistline borders, stripes encircling waistlines and hemlines, bodice appliques, pleat insets, belts and panties. Still greatly outnumbered by whites with color trims, the solid pastels favor pale blues, greens, pink and peach. TEMPLE FOUND A pagan temple, complete with frescoes and statuary, has been located under the floor of one of Rome’s oldest Christian churches, St. Stephen the Rotund, a 15th Century circular church.

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Basketball champs to continue play The finals of the independent basketball tournament at the Mermaid Festival in North Webster will be held at 7 p.m. Thursday. Semifinals are at 7 and 8 o’clock tonight (Wednesday.) Action started on Saturday evening as H & H Furniture defeated Schenkels Dairy and Wakarusa Pharmacy reigned over Wabash Clinic. Mr. Happy Burger and Amishville U.S.A. were named winners in the Saturday night schedule over Weeks Motor Sales and Rosenbaums Cothers, respectively, cm forfeitures. Amsler’s All-Americans defeated The Weatherhead Company with a whopping 69 point lead at game tixe on Monday evening while closer action saw Hickman Moving & Storage over the Mishawaka Pilots. Morris & Midwest Towel over Mishiana Foods, and Holloway Realty over Akron Exchange Bank. Tuesday night play at 7 o’clock saw H & H Furniture defeat Wakarusa Pharmacy 60-53, and Mr. Happy Burger stomp Amishville U.S.A. 120-80. Hickmans defeated Amslers in action at 8 o’clock by a score of 78-55 and Morris Towel scored 66 to 60 posted for Holloway Realty. All-American rose selections WEST LAFAYETTE — A hybrid tea rose, called Perfume Delight, and two floribunda roses, Bahia and Bcm Bon, are the All-America rose selections for 1974. Announcement of the winners was made by All-America Rose Selections. In line with AARS rules, the winners will not be offered for sale until fall 1973 and spring' 1974. But rose lovers may view these in bloom in any one of 112 accredited AARS public rose gardens throughout the nation. Some or all three may also be seen in Indiana at Fort Wayne’s Lakeside rose garden, Wabash’s Honeywell Garden, the Purdue university horticulture park and at some of the state’s larger nurseries. Perfume Delight, another origination from O. L. Weeks, Camornia grower, is a richly fragrant, clear pink rose. A single bloom will fill a room with a spicy fragrance. From a classic, urn-shaped rose bud, 30 broad petals emerge into large, well-formed blooms which often measure five inches across. Well-branched and medium tall, the plant is covered, with large, leathery leaves that completely clothe the strong, bright green canes. The leaves are disease resistant, and the plant seems to withstand both the rigors of northern winters and the dry heat of southwestern summers. Bahia, an exceedingly floriferous orange tinged pink floribunda, is a progency of one of America’s, top hybridizers, Dr. Walter Lammerts; a native of Terre Haute but long a west coast resident. Besides its abundance of bloom and attractive color, Bahia boasts a shapely plant, resistance to disease and many other awardwinning qualities. A vivid pinkish-orange with 2% inch blooms, the flower holds its bright color until the petals fall. It also exudes a spicy fragrance. The plant is vigorous, bushy and compact. Bon Bon is an ideal landscaping floribunda, densely covered with dozens of pink and white bicolor blooms. The flowers are borne in a large cluster, opening continuously from spring until the fall frosts. It is as richly fragrant as it is colorful. . Opening to inch blooms the flowers do well in all climates. The plant has good resistance to black spot and is exceptionally mildew resistant. Bon Bon, from a famous line of ancestors, was hybridized’by William Warriner of Tustin, Calif. HENRY CLAY Henry Clay, senator, speaker of the House and secretary of state, died in Washington on June 29, 1852.

WMK i*. jNHI -» - - -Taj' J.’. ~ -,: i M K // M? I 7 r 7’Zjl I ah/hm * GUESTS FROM GERMANY — Walter and Sophie Schnur of Oberkirchen, Saar, Germany, have been the houseguests of Joe and Barbara Todd of Lake Wawasee since June 4, and planned to leave by jet from Chicago today on their return to their homeland. In this photo the Todds appear with Mr. and Mrs. Schnur in front of the Todds’ lakefront home. A number of neighbors came in Monday night to visit with the foreign guests. Mr. and Mrs. Todd lived in Germany during 1964 and 1965, when Mr. Todd was an armed forces officer, and were neighbors of the Schnurs. During their stay in America, the Todds took them to visit friends in Gatlinburg, Tenn., and other friends came to the Todd home from Detroit to visit Mr. and Mrs. Schnur. Todd was stationed in the neighboring town of Baumholder, Germany. Mr. Schnur is a coal miner.

Os cats, - elephants and love By JOHN SINQR Copley News Service Spring days and a touch of romance in the air. The season of love is upon us again. Not necessarily the season of marriage though. The marriage rate is dropping. ♦ Still, plenty of females have their eye on the blue-bird. Determined to get into a wedding gown. They read the ladies’ magazines for clues on how to build a better mousetrap. “How Far Should A Girl'Go If She Wants To Marry.” I read that one. It wasn’t a travel article. * Spring is over for Rotten Ralph the cat. We checked him into the neighborhood pet hospital the other day;. He checked out the next day a little peaked. (Pretty tough for a coal-black cat to look peaked.) But he came out without a single thought of love pn his mind. Forever, ever more. Rotten Ralph was truly rotten. His coat full of burrs. Underweight. He could have used one of those seven-day deodorants too. The vet said: “It’s a pretty tough life being a tomcat. He doesn’t have time to think about grooming himself. He doesn’t even bother to eat half the time. He is in a constant state of lovesickness.” Ralph said good-by to all that at the hospital. In dark Africa the elephants are all in love. The results of this is an elephant population explosion. The government is to blame. I Officials in Kenya dug permanent water holes for the elephants. Now, for spme reason, a water hole Sets like candlelight and wine on the elephant’s mind. There wasn’t enough land to support that many elephants, so the government had to start shooting them. There’s a moral to that story somewhere. Meanwhile, back to Ralph. He sat in the living room with a strange, peaceful look on his face. As if to sajJ: “I see everything SO differently now.” ; So, he’s no longer Rotten Ralph around here, He’s just plain Ralph. Very plain. Love and kisses days. But always somebody to spoil the fun. The health magazines say a kiss is one of the surest ways-to infection. “In time of flu and colds, it wduld b*> better to shake hands.” One of our teen-age daughters caught mononucleosis some months ago, I took her to a throat specialist. He took one look at her throat and said: “Heh, heh, the kissing disease.” . After we left his office and

UVf Mtr PETERSEN KALE ISLAND BAIT HOUSE

Wed., June 27,1973 — THE

picked up her prescription, she said: “Honestly, daddy! There’s LOTS of other ways to get mono.” <■ 1 I said: “A likely story, kid.” She said: “Well, I certainly didn’t kiss anybody! I can’t even think of anybody I would

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want to kiss.” I said: “Take your time. You’ll think of someone one of these days.” Ralph looked up at me and gave a strange, questioning meow. “What happened, anyway?”

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