The Mail-Journal, Volume 11, Number 25, Milford, Kosciusko County, 17 July 1974 — Page 2
THE MAIL-JOURNAL—Wed.. July 17. 1974
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SOX ON THE MOVE — Pictured here are the Sox. one of the five Little League teams at Milford. They have worked hard training and it has paid off for them. They have been in top position for two weeks in the league. From the left on the front row are Ernie Morris. Brett Grove and Sam Beer. In the center row are Buddy Bice. Jeff Sorensen and Gary Gerencser. In the back row are Scott Brown. Ron Haines. Paul Sleury and coach Ale* Morris. Other members of the team not shown are Brian Felkner and Terry Miller.
Summer recreation results are given
Following is the Cults of the Milford Little League. T-Ball and girls softball for the past week:
New Paris Speedway * — Saturday — Mid-Season Hi-Lite 50-Lap Feature ' For Late Models Plus 16 Other Thrilling Events Time Trials 6:45 First Race 8:00 Mottville Sundays
XQW THRU TUESDAY AT BOTH THEATRES! Evenings: 7:W* »:M—Sunday : 3:UO. S:UO. 7:00k >:•• — Saturday Dollar Matinee At 2:M — —Sinbad battles the—creatures of legend IN THE MIRACLE OF JBSN ftXwwMtJH J| 1 < \ **”*•• »’ M 7 W 1 , ■ 1 \ Sa’ ASemMy J
Sox 9-Tigers 1 Ernie Morns was the w inning pitcher as the Sox defeated the Tigers 9-1 on July 8 Brett Grove collected two triples Mark Evans led the Tigers in hitting with two singles and Doug Rheinheimer was the losing pitcher T-Ball The Cubs defeated the Athletics 13-1 last week to extend the team s winning streak to three with no defeats. Ryan Wuthrich led the Cubs with two doubles and one triple and Brian Henson contnbuted to the Cubs’ wm with a single and two doubles , Giris Softball In the Milford girls softball action last week the Braves defeated the Indians 13-7 and lead the teams with a record of five wins and no defeats Brenda Skelton was the win-
rang pitcher for the Braves and hit a double and a triple during the game Teammate Renee Lindzy also“hit two doubles Kathy Beer was the losing pitcher for the Indians but along with Julie Garza hit home runs for the losing team. AU Stars Milford's AU Star Little League team defeated Sidney 8-7. Randy Blackburn was the winning pitcher for Milford Dave Meade was credited with a fine save in holding Sidney scoreless in- the last three innings. The team was led in hitting by Mark Evans Milford has now won three and lost one They play North Webster tonight The top 10 hitters in the Little League have been listed as follows Dave Meade .688. Randy Blackbum 588. Paul Steury 571. Brett Grove .563. Mike Reichert 556. Ron Haines 545. Vince Price 533. Pat Speicher .500, Jay Auer .500 and Sam Beer .471. Standings Standings and win-loss records of the Utile League are as follows: Won Lost Sox 4 1 Cards 4 3 Reds 3 3 Tigers 3 4 Twins 5 Open At 7:15 Show Xi Dusk Xd m ission S3.M Linda Lovelace In The Film That Made Her Famous Shown Intact Rated X And Worlds OX Immow' vt I 2nd Love
Mixed scramble at Maxwelton A mixed 18-hole scramble was held at the Maxwelton golf club on Sunday night. There was a tie for first place as two teams finished with 65 s. Members of the winning teams were Gene Kay, Dons Sedgwick. Rex Hagen and Nancy Baker and Butch Hossinger. Betty Kline. Rick Baker and Marilyn Deck. Finishing close behind with a 66 was the team of Gary Baker, Dottie Hossinger. Bob Sedgwick and Katie Zook Results listed at Wawasee Golf club Taking first place in a playoff at the Saturday night scramble at Wawasee Golf club was the team of Jim Owens. Jack Bullock. Mose Troyer and Margo Holmes The group posted a 32. Also in the playoff with a 32 were Merrill Postma. George Young. Ron Bauman and Evelyn Kilmer Joe Hartsough posted a low net of 64 in the Sunday men’s tournament to take a first, followed by John Elliott with a 67. Coming events include a stag and doe on July 20. the Sunday men’s tournament all day and the men’s association handicap tournament Saturday and Sunday of this week League standings for the season Major league standings in ball action at Syracuse has Rotary at . 5-2. Lions 5-2. Bank 2-5 and Pilchers 2-5. Leading hitters are Jeff Beezley .555 Pilchers. Craig Ewing 550 Rotary. Scott Slough .529 Lions. Daryl Stahley .500 Lions. Jeff Spitler 428 Pilchers. Chuck Miller 400 Bank. Mike Martin 390 Lions. Greg Carpenter 363 Pilchers. Sam Coquillard 363 Rotary, George Coquillard .353 Rotary and Scott Heady .348 Lions. _ The next game will be at 6 p.m. this Friday for Lions vs Bank and at 6 on July 22 for Pilchers and Rotary Minor league standings are Bank 6-0. Rotary 2-4. Lions‘2-4 and Pilchers 2-4. Rotary vs Lions at 6 on July 23 and Pilchers vs Bank at 6 on July 25 Leading hitters are Kevin Blake 700 Bank. Kevin Smith .511 Rotary. Ron Cripe .538 Bank. James Butlee.s2l Pilchers. Mark Dewitt .500 Bank. Pat Morganthaler 470 Pilchers. John Cannon .454 Rotary. Ron Pollock 444 Bank. Lester Booher 437 Lions. Tim Cox .421 Pilchers and Kris Cox 375 Bank In T-Ball action. Thornburgs has a 3-0. Love 2-1, Klink s 1-2 and Socks 0-3 Socks vs Love at 10 a.m on July 19 and Klinks vs Thornburgs at 11 a m the same day.
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BIG CATCH — Reginald Vanderßeyden. son of police officer Orville Vanderßeyden of Syracuse, is shown here with his big four pound. 10-ounce large mouth bass caught in Lake Wawasee this past week. The fisherman was using night crawlers as bait.
Enchanted Hills ♦ Playhouse t Proudly Presents ♦ FOR THE CHILDREN ♦ ♦ The Hastey Pudding ♦ Puppet Company ♦ Saturday, July 20, 1974 ♦ 10 A.M. & 2 P.M. ♦ Children: 75c Adults:sl.oo 6 For Ticket information: ♦ Call 856-2328 | Or Write Enchanted Hills Playhouse. P.O. Box 41 Syracuse
BOWL
Men's Thursday NiM Doubles No 5 27’s 7’ 3 No 11 20 IS No 8 19 16 No > $ 19 16 No 10 7 19 16 No 6 18 27 No 2 17 It No 3 17 IS No 9 16 19 . NO 4 15 20 NO 7 12'1 22' j No 12 10 25 High seam series and gam* No 5 — 1454 417 750 series and above J Kern 759 700 series B Simon 733 650 series K Knisley 695 200 games J Kern 225. J ©ean 205. R Ockey 203 £l.ake'« Pl ■ Xou'h Y>L ® Center Lakeland youth center director Dan Caskey has released the following schedule of events at the youth center for the next 10 days: July 17 — Girls softball games at Milford with the first game at 6; judo at center at 7:30; center opens at 4. July 18 — Chicken barbecue at center from 5-8. plus bake sale; dunk tank night hours are 5-9 p.m ; men’s karate class is canceled for the night. July 19 — Center open 2-5 and 7:30-9, July 20 — Girls softball banquet and awards night at 6 p.m. July 21 — Center closed. July 22 — Weight Watchers 7:30-8:30; ladies exercise class 8:30-9:30 July 23 — Center open 3-9; men's karate 7:30-9. July 24 — Center open 3-5 and 69; judo 7:30-9. ( July 25 — Center open 4-9; men’s karate 7:30-9. July 26 — Center open 2-5 July 27 — Center closed and departure time for Cedar Point is 5 a m. Invitational In the first Lakeland Swingers softball invitational tournament. West Noble was the champion besting the Swingers 15-14 in eight innings. The West Noble team won the championship game over Milford 9-8 in seven innings. Milford had gained the finals with a 10-0 forfeit over Mentone. On Thursday night, July 18. the center willMiost it’s annual chicken barbecue, bake sale and a ‘‘Dunk Dan” night. Proceeds of the dunk tank will go for little leaguers and baseball with monies from the other going for a Cedar Point trip. The center will be closed the entire month of August. Watch this column for news of the fall programs to be featured at the center.
Scramble Results given at Maxwelton Results of the Friday night scramble at Maxwelton golf club have been released by pro Bob Auer. Winning first place in the evening’s competition were Gene and Gloria Stoffel and Lou and Jan Byland. Second place went to Ed and Katie Zook and Scrappy and Ellie Graff. Makarios—(Continued from page 1) and with a large fireplace blazing to fend off the early morning chill. He is still a young man, and striking in his black, floor-length clerical attire which most newspaper readershave seen, he went around the room and shook hands with each of our group. He said he attended Cyprus high school, Athens school of theology from 1938 to 1946. a school of law for two years, then was on a World Council of Churches scholarship at the Boston University'school of theology when he was elected a Bishop of Cyprus and returned He said President Kennedy had him return to Boston where he received an honorary doctor’s degree. He said the Greek-Turkey population mixture is a salt and pepper thing, otherwise partition would settle their problems. He said UN-sponsored talks which lasted for three years and were deadlocked are about to be resumed. He said he is more optomistic than pessimistic about the talks, and he spoke about Enosis. which means an anschluss or union with Greece. He is known to favor this, and the island Turks simply won’t allow it. Makarios said the island economy is good but that they are trying to develop industry. Tourism may become the main source of income, he said. In t±ie Mid-Elast crisis the island has adopted a non-alignment policy. An agreement among the two super powers could settle the Mid-Elast crisis at once, he said. He said while there are no universities in Cyprus, 70 per cent of the youngsters go to high school. Education is 10 per cent of their budget. After our most cordial audience with Archbishop Makarios, he invited us out on the lawn for photographs. He had several staff photographers available. snd all of us were given photos back at our hotel after we went there to pick up our bags. He appeared to want his picture taken as much as any American politician A City Divided When we went to Kyrenia and moved about by bus in Nicosia, we soon found a city divided. Our guide was a Greek and our bus driver a Turk and they got along very well, but the Greek had to get off the bus before we could enter Turk territory. However, the Turk was free to go anywhere on the island. They laughed about it, but armed guards checked our bus and lifted the draw arm across the road so we could pass only after they were satisfied. Cyprus is 40 miles from Turkey and 500 miles from Greece, and during the 1967 uprising where Greeks killed a number of Turks and burned a number of Turk homes, the island was sealed off by Turk airpower. The constitution has it that the Greeks will elect a President for the island, the Turks the vice president, with the vice president
Thank You! The Milford Lions would like to thank those who helped at their eat stand at the Mermaid Festival and to thank the many who patronized the stand , A during the Festival week. — Max Beer, President ft Jarvis Schafer, Secretary . Leon Newman, Treasurer
having final veto on any law passed by the House of Representatives or on any decision of the council of ministers concerning foreign affairs, defense and security. The council of ministers is composed of 10 ministers, three of whom had to be Turks and be nominated by the vice president. The Turks a!lso have 30 per cent of the members of the House of Representatives It all sounded so impractical and unworkable to us. W e Hear Turk Side As good Americans we believe in the equal time principal. We asked and received equal time from the Turks, and at 10:30 a m. Thursday, F’eb. 11, we were taken into the Turk sector, to the Savoy Hotel, where we heard an hourlong talk by Rauf Denktash. President of the Turkish Communal Chamber. He held us for a full hour as he talked, most fluently, about the history of Cyprus that has led to the current impasse. He said Cyprus lived in peace from 1931 to 1945. and that Archibishop Makarios said he took a holy oath that in his lifetime he would achieve Enosis Aft«- the picture taking. Della stepped off the small curb and after a step or two on the cobblestone street she fell with a resounding thud, injuring her left knee. It has been the source of considerable pain and attention for several days. Denktash said the Turks will never bow to Enosis. He said the Turks got nothing from Cyprus government in the past eight years, no. ministers’ pay, no money for roads, schools — but that money for aIL this comes from Turkey. When Makarios is asked where he gets his orders from, he says I get my orders from God. Denktash said Makarios is making money out of the present situation. “For eight years we have had separate parliaments, separate armies, separate schools. Turkey will not allow us to be wiped out. We feel Greece must come to their senses. We must co-exist.” Denktash was talking to a tired group, as it was by now 12:30 p.m., and we were scheduled to be at the airport for our trip to Tel Aviv, Israel. There was little time for questions and answers. Denktash said. “I had a lot to say. and I wanted especially to say it to you.” One got the idea on our trip so far. that if it were not for the United Nations the world would be aflame There is so much unrest in the world, and especially in the Mid-East — completely different nationalities, with completely different languages, living in close proximity. They have a history of strife where one power gets strong and overruns its neighbor
;*♦♦♦♦♦♦ LAST WEEK ♦ Enchanted Hills ♦ Playhouse ♦ Proudly Presents | "Sweet Charity" $ July 18, 19, 20 6 Curtain Times p.m. Thursday-Friday 8:39 p.m. Saturday Fnr Ticket Reservations: 6 Call 856-2328 ♦ Or Write Enchanted Hills Playhouse. P.O. Box 41 Syracuse ▲ Next, Fiddler On The Roof. July 25-27 and Aug. 1-3
LEGALS LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Kosciusko County, Indiana, will, at 10 00 on the Sth day of August. 1974 at the basement court house m the city of Warsaw in said county, begin investigation of the application of the following named person, requesting the issue to the applicant at the location hereinafter set out, of the Alcoholic Beverage permit of the class hereinafter designated and will, at said time and place, receive information concerning the fitness of said applicant, and the propriety of issuing the permit applied tor to such applicant at the premises named DL43 15283, Hook. Drugs. Inc. 232. N. P. Reeves, Pres.. Knightstown. J. R Roesch, Sec indpts., Box 241 St. Rd. 13 S North Webster, Ind , Liquor and Wine Dealer Said investigation will be open to the pubi ic. and public participation is requested • INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION By ARTHUR R ROBINSON Executive Secretary » JAMES D SIMS Chairman LEGAL NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice is hereby given that the Local Alcoholic Beverage Board of Kosciusko County, Indiana, will, at 10 00 on the 3rd day of September. 1974 at the basement court house in the city of Warsaw in said county, begin investigation of the applications of the follow ng named persons, requesting the issue so 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 tor to such applicants at the premises named: 0L43 05967, Service Liquors, inc., Dennis Blue Pres , Patricia Likens Sec . 108 S. Lake St , Warsaw, Ind . Liquor. Beer and Wine Dealer RR43 14165. Russell A Buchan, R. 1, Box 270 Ogden island. Syracuse. Ind . Beer and Wine Retailer. RC43 13115. Smith Walbridge Camps, Inc.A Nelson Auer, Robert Reed. R 4. Syracuse,’ Indiana. Liquor Beer and Wine Retailer. Club Said investigation will be open to the public and public participation is requested INDIANA ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE COMMISSION BY ARTHUR R ROBINSON Executive Secretary JAMES D SIMS Chairman NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Town of Pierceton Kosciusko County, in diana. that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular meeting place at 7.30 o'clock P M., on the 12th day of August 1974, will consider the following additional appropriations which said officers consider necessary to meet the ex traordmary emergency existing at this time MCNAMARA BEQUEST FUND: AMOUNT: 11 2 221 Electricity * NO 11 2 263 Other Contractual Services 200 11 7 721 Properties 3,700 Total S4.IM Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have a right to be heard thereon The additional appropriations as finally made win be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, which com mission will hold a further hearing within Fifteen days at the County Auditor s office of Kosciusko County, Indiana, or at such other place as may be designated At such hearing taxpayers obiecting to any of such additional appropriations may be heard, interested taxpayers may inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing will be held Janet Miller, Clerk Treasurer Jy.l7 24 TH! MAIL-JOURNAL Published by The Mail-Journal every Wednesday and entered as Second Class matter at the Post Office at Syracuse. Indiana 46567 Second class postage paid at 183 E Mam Street. Syracuse. Indiana 46567 and at additional entry offices Subscription, 86.09 per year in Kosciusko County. SA 00 outside county
