The Mail-Journal, Volume 16, Number 30, Milford, Kosciusko County, 15 August 1979 — Page 13

It Happened . f . In Milford

14 YEARS AGO, AUG. 18.1965 Mrs. Ernest Krauter visited Mr. and Mrs. Larry Weisser, Mr, and Mrs. Carl Walker and Mrs. Guy Fisher at the home of Mrs. Fisher Monday. All are from Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Coy, Debbie and Bob of Michigan City spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kaiser and family of Milford. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Schrock of Congerville. 111., were week end guests of Mr. Schrock s aunt, Mrs. Maurice Beer and family on r 2 Milford. The young couple was on a honeymoon trip in Canada. They were married August 8. 24 YEARS AGO, SEPT. 1.1955 Friends and relatives, num- ' bering 120. called on Mr. and

7T 2 for 89* | v SAV. J I IKw W Hlw ' ' : - ( _____ SAVE 27* I — 3 ON BACK TO SCHOOL NEEDS AVy 39 e WMy ® 59* ■fin GLUE / / PORTFOLIO save i. 50 ff JOB SQUAD • X’X«. A WW J„mb»» o ll. SAVEI.U SAVE If S 11 A 800 t? 0 99 r 899 i \i ECT tube" I 1 II NOTEBOOK vk TUBE / 11 ' I. . " | - • // ' UTILITY r I 200 pages divided Great for keeping THE ORGANIZER ■ into five sections. clothes neat. Z'Y 7/ byMeod TO TOTE ►>. Vk «>U»CHOICE Assorted C Keeps papers handy Disney characters. ■ and neat. l____— Childs Sdiool Bag II JBF 5 .v..« c „^ L ______ m dkQQ ~ ”■ ' I 1 ■ ! l ' BATTERIES | J Package of 2-AA batteries.... SAVE 40* BV 819 Package of 1 -9 VoIt SAVE 90* WgM | ■ SAVE 22* Automatic .__\J I __, SAVE 90* FOO and Cordless. iu»ine[ Black, Blue or Red. ■ ** SAVKAA* Three decorator colors. I I r — #^3 00 rmi«o«i tsAVEE. p I£| g? r Y er (S > clairoi. s LS'Sfl I |49 lj 79 h L N- s m^ to I SS I ' •Sr “ ““ E® s -’ I BOARD I I co.o, loto ,° £“**• I ■•VAKI/ £rs ,, — ■ Que w ■■ > Cinnamon I Box of 20. ■ ***Rl.#E or Sunton. Assorted designs. I JL I 1” I 88 e I \;AV»wi\ hook's I ■ I 5H Ave I .&M'i draws-a-lot YELLOW I I 2U AMP ®OOR I CRAYONS V_V SCHOOL BOX I ” 'I • I CONDITIONER Keep your supplies handy. 7 _■ S AVE 9l« |»J )6 ox. All formulas I Htorkers. I I ■O<f save sr I 899 ft 9 I * UIT J O9 I Bwlw I HOme IOfI ■ I ■Wfl alco I PERMANENT Vs W A FLICKER I COMBINATION WBM COMPASS I WOMEN’S SHAVER I LOCK KB I Su Per or Regular 5 Blade Shave | Great for smooth operation. M school lockers I Two important I v M 69 0 99 I I a V I Rrtmo on I ;«g«o 3 m I BJgr w ’ l I MMffi ejissL vitamins ja ! vitamins I I||Q Rll z/U \ \ I SUPPORTER m _ J PLUS IRON gg PLUS IRON I IWV ■■■■••■ /} Y I - — Smo|| LILLY INSULIN- I ~«nn Ilf jllH / U-100 Insulin 10cc 3.80 I ( U-80 Insulin 10cc 3.25 I Si'dl wr>nn NAME I U-40 Insulin 10cc 1.75 | WlB Vy« Reserve The Right Limit Quantities. NORTH WEBSTER SYRACUSE SR 13 South Pickwick Road

Mrs. Andrew J. Beer while they kept open house Sunday afternoon in observance of their golden wedding anniversary. School will start here next Tuesday and as yet there is no real solution to the problem of patrolling road 15 for crossing to the new elementary school, located in the west end of town. Mrs. Forrest Freed has been appointed to take contributions for the flood relief fund through the Kosciusko County Red Cross Chapter. Any one who is missed and wishes to contribute, contact Mrs. Freed. 30 YEARS AGO, SEPT. 8,1JM9 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Morehouse attended the Lowman reunion at Huntington, Sunday afternoon.

A new street light was added last week to the row of lights on Main street. The new light is located in front of the Milford Mail office and after dark gives the business district a lengthened appearance. James Haggarty is acting as night officer during the twoweeks’ vacation of regular officer Roy Arnold. 58 YEARS AGO. SEPT. 8.1921 George Hartter has installed a Delco lighting system in his home. George believes in keeping up with the times. Mrs. R. M. Method and daughter Melba were Wakarusa visitors Thursday evening. Mrs. Merril Chatten and daughter Betty and Mrs. LaVina

Erick were visiting with their sister Mrs. Harley Bowsher at Valparaiso, Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Lozano sentenced to two years Noe E. Lozano, 27, 119 West Portland Street, Syracuse, who was convicted of theft by a Kosciusko Circuit Court jury last month, was sentenced on Thursday, Aug. 9, to two years in the Indiana Department of Corrections. Judge Gene B. Lee gave credit for the 14 days Lozano spent in the county jail on the charge, and ordered him to pay court costs. Lozano pled not guilty to the

charge of gaining unauthorized control of two rifles belonging to James Benson on July 30. The rifles had been stolen from the home of Warren Benson, r 2 Syracuse, in October of last year. Lawyer appointed for Charles O'Dell Kosciusko Superior Court Judge Robert Burner appointed Max Reed to represent Charles Ann O’Dell, 30, North Webster. The appointment of Reed was made Thursday, Aug. 9. Her case was continued so time could be spent to consult her attorney. O’Dell has been charged with resisting law enforcement officers after an attempt to stab Kosciusko County Deputy Gerry Moser, August 1, at B. J.’s Tavern, North Webster. The attempt came after Moser and Dan Gallmeier, Syracuse Police Officer, asked O’Dell to leave the property and return the keys to John Evans, owner of the business.

Runners think faster People who run regularly may be less depressed and faster thinkers than their sedentary counterparts. Research at the University of I New Mexico Medical School has found that Marathon runners have six times the normal level of body hormones which researchers believe prevent depression. What’s more, it was found that the speed with which the eleci trical impulses traveled in the brain increased dramatically in > the runners after an 18 mile run. The improved brain rate continued for up to two and-a-half ■ hours. I Nails are distinguished in size as two-penny, three-penny , and so on up to 60-penny because they were once sold by the penny in England.

Wed M August 15,1979 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL

fl wl | <O>L S U J MILFORD BOY ADDRESSES AMERICAN LEGION — Buddy Bice, left. 17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Bice of Milford, addressed the Kosciusko County American Legion 40 et 8 post last Wednesday about his experiences at Roys’ State. Chef de Gate James L. Kaufman, right, congratulates Budny for his achievements. Buddy attended Boys* State in June. ’

Congressman T , Floyd t Fithian Reports h

WASHINGTON, D C. - "We can get fuel from fruit, from the sumac by the roadside, or from apples, weeds, sawdust; almost anything. There is fuel in every bit of vegetable matter that can be fermented. There is enough alcohol in one year's yield of an acre of potatoes to cultivate that field for a hundred years. And it remains for someone to find how this fuel can be produced commercially — better fuel at a cheaper price than we now know.” That is how Henry Ford — father of industrial America — described the promise and the challenge of alcohol fuels more than fifty years ago. Rural America has always been a bastion of the uniquely American values of personal independence and personal initiative. In facing up to its energy problems — and no sector of the economy faces more serious energy problems than agriculture — it is not surprising that we are seeing these values renewed. And on-farm production on alcohol fuels for farm use — Henry Ford's half-century old dream — can become a reality within the next few years. In testimony before the National Alcohol Fuels Commission in Indianapolis earlier this month I proposed a national alcohol fuels policy which would encourage energy independence for Rural America while at the same time helping solve the Webster woman arrested after high-speed chase Charles Ann: O'Dell, 30, North Webster, was arrested at 12:20 am., Thursday. , Aug. 9, on charges of driving under the influence of intoxicating beverages, public intoxication and resisting law enforcement after leading North Webster Deputy Marshal Chester Richmond and patrolman Gerry Moser on a high speed chase. O’Dell had been arrested a week ago by police after allegedly attempting to stab patrolman Moser during a disturbance at BJ’s Tavern on August 1. O’Dell had been released on a $2,000 bond Tuesday. Aug 8, from jail. The North Webster Emergency Medical Service attempted to take O’Dell to Kosciusko Community Hospital, but she declined to be transported for treatment. The EMS then took her to the county jail where it was reported she became violent in the booking room. Richmond had stopped O'Dell on SR 13 in North Webster and called Moser to assist. She drove off speeding and went south on Huntington Street, took CR 650 N at reportedly 70 miles per hour. Moser was in pursuit the entire time. The North Webster woman then took a dirt road that went south to Tippecanoe Baptist Camp. The rear of the car was sliding from side to side and finally went out of control and down an embankment into woods. The car struck small trees and stopped when the front hit a large tree. V

nation s gasoline shortage. Here is how the plan would work. The department of Agriculture would provide farmers and farm cooperatives with technical assistance and training in alcohol fuel production through its Agricultural Extension Senice. USDA would also provide loan guarantees i where they are neededi for small-scale on-farm alcohol production units, conduct research to improve the efficiency of on-farm units, develop alcohol conversion techniques for existing farm equipment, and develop markets for the highprotein byproducts of small fuel alcohol production. The Department of Energy, which has been dragging its feet on developing small on-farm alcohol production units, would be assigned a new role .It would provide research and. where needed, financial support for large-scale commercial alcohol production plants. These plants, specifically designed to provide ethanol for gasohol, could produce as much as 10 per cent of our nation's motor fuel by 1985. This plan, by itself, will not solve our entire national energy problem. Other steps — including the development of other renewable energy sources — will be needed as well. But what it will do is to free the most important consumers of fuel in our economy — the farm community — from rising fuel prices and OPEC embargoes forever. To paraphrase the old proverb, if you allocate a farmer a tankful of fuel, he will produce food and fiber for a day. Teach a farmer to make his own fuel, and he’ll be productive for the rest of his life. Items token, from area homes A number of thefts occurred recently in the Syracuse-Milford areas and have been reported to Kosciusko County Police. Dwight Dean, Waubee Lake, reported Thursday, Aug. 9. a Zenith TV, rake, three shovels, two hoes, four lawn chairs and nine two by fours were stolen from his residence. The theft is believed to have occurred Sunday, Aug. 5. To gain entry into the home a screen was broken down. Dean reported the theft to Kosciusko County Police Dispatcher Gene Norton. Joe DeWitt, r 5 Syracuse, reported to police he had a three blade propeller stolen from a pier at Dew’art Lake. Tuesday evening. Aug. 7. The propeller, valued at SBO, is one of five other thefts of propellers atCDewart Lake i n recent weeks An orange 14 foot fiblerglass canoe was reported to county police as stolen by Kim Slocum, r 5 Syracuse. The canoe was stolen between Sunday. Aug. ‘ 5 and Wednesday. Aug. 8. County Police Radio Dispatcher Forrest Bouse received the report.

It takes two hours for aspirin to reach its peak effectiveness in the average body.

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