The Mail-Journal, Volume 17, Number 38, Milford, Kosciusko County, 8 October 1980 — Page 15
ME33B* £3® ' i HBfjkSs jJ* ul|k ' — rh Wfn ’ W-Jl *B a wfi 1 B * S '/Bl ’* KFa ROSARY PROCESSION — Our Lady of Guadalupe Parish, Milford, held a Rosary Procession Sunday, Oct. 5, at 11 a.m. Hie procession began at the Milford Fire Station on Main Street and ended at the church. The procession was held to demonstrate love and honor for Mary. During the procession a Rosary prayer for peace, for respect for life, for those who turn away from Christ and His Church, the needs of the parish and for the families and each other was said. Hie procession was held in connection with the month of October being the month of the Rosary. Members of the church are asked to pray the Rosary with their families, or alone, as a special gift to Mary, the mother of Jesus, during October. A living Rosary was formed with 60 persons showing publicly the truth of the love of the Hispanic people for the Virgin Morena of Guadalupe. _ During the month there will be various lectors in the church. On Sunday, Oct. 5. lectors were Juan Villanueva, in Spanish and in English was a CCD reader. On October 12. Mary Lozano will have the lectors in English and Genoveva Brio in Spanish. Dora Espinoza will read the lectors ih Spanish on Sunday, Oct. 19 and Robert Topper in English. On the last Sunday. Oct. 26. Norma Villanueva will translate in Englsh and Gilbert Castillo in Spanish. Acolytes for the month will be Alex Zepeda, Jesse Brito and Joel Brito on October 12; Eddy Espinoza. Alex Lozano and Alex Zepeda on October 19; and Jesse Brito and Joel Brito on October 26-
Ethel Anderson to speak at Prime Rib
Ethel Anderson, Warsaw, will be the guest speaker for Prime Rib Fellowship on Monday, Oct. 13, from 6:30-8:30 p.m. The fellowship will be held in the Port-A-Pit banquet hall, Wakarusa. The theme for the evening will be “More Precious Than Gold.” Mrs. Richard Anderson is a pastor’s wife and mother of four children. She has spoken and presented chalk drawings and workshops for many women’s
I USED I I PIANOS I
| Write: Piano, 68062 US 33 | Route 4 Goshen, IN 46526
Ray Buhrt GENERAL CONTRACTOR Residential & Commercial Building Phone: 457-3431 Road 13, Syracuse
REVIVAL "Witness Unto Me" Ml Evangelist HI Wendell Roberts . Morristown Christian Church L— l " Song Evangelist ' *fj John Snyder ? y First Christian Church Os Hessville In Hammond October 12-17 Sunday, 7:00 P.M. — Week Nights 7:30 P.M. Milford Christian Church Nursery Available Carl Shearer, Minister Fred Walls, Associate Minister
IjR ETHEL ANDERSON
groups. She frequently appears in area musical presentations as a violist. Mrs. Anderson is also one of the founders and chairman of the Win Some Women Retreats. Reservations and cancellations must be made by October 10 and tickets must be paid in advance. Fall meetings at Syracuse this week end The Syracuse Church of the Brethren, 215 West Main Street, Syracuse, will be conducting their Fall Spiritual Life meetings, October 10-12. These meetings will be centerd on the theme of “Living Our Faith” with Rev. John Groth of the Yellow Creek Church of the Brethren as the key speaker. Meetings on Friday and Saturday evenings will begin at 7 p.m. and Sunday's services will be at 10:30 a.m. preceded by the 9:30 a.m. Sunday School hour. Following the morning worship service there will be a carry-in meal followed by the showing of the movie, “The Peace Child.” Special music for this service will be provided by O. A. Lambert, Syracuse. The public is invited to these services.
Phone in reservations may be made by contacting Earline Fisher, Milford; Eileen Kurtz, New Paris. Mail ig reservations can be sent to Janet Templeton, 505 N. Nappanee St., Nappanee. Hasting Chapel has homecoming The Hasting Island Chapel United Methodist Church, r 2 Milford, will hold its homecoming Sunday, Oct. 19. Sunday school begins at 9:30 a m. followed by morning worship at 10:30a.m. A basket dinner will begin at 12:15 p.m. and Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Stone and Dale Mikel will present the afternoon program at 1:30 p.m. Rev. David Widmoyer is pastor of the church. Everyone is invited to share the day. Committees formed for fall revival at Church of God Committees have been formed and plans are underway for the Fall Revival at the Syracuse Church of God. October 20-26. Pastor Lowell Burrus of the Olive Branch Church of God, Roann, will be the guest speaker for the meetings. Dull charged and released Over the week end, Richard Allen Dull, Jr., 23, Syracuse, was charged with driving under the influence of intoxicating beverages and public intoxication. He was released on his own recognizance.
'Simng Service FOR ALL YOUR PRINTING NEEDS | EL | IILo Creative design and layouts for newsletters, booklets and advertisements. Fast and efficient service for all of your printing needs. Photocopying service also available. Resumes Letterheads Business Forms Advertisements Rubber Stamps Envelopes Catalogues Announcements Bulletins Business Cards Invoices THE MAIL JOURNAL 658-4111 457-3666 MILFORD SYRACUSE ,
Speaking words of wisdom
By G. EDWARD GEANS Minister This Monday we will be observing Columbus Day. Before Columbus discovered the new world, the motto on the Spanish coat of arms read, “Ne Plus Ultra,” which means “nothing more beyond.” The people believed they had reached the
last of this earth’s land mass. After Columbus returned, however, the vision of Spain was enlarged and the “Ne” was dropped from the motto, leaving
Evangelistic services to begin Sunday at Milford
Wendell Roberts of the Morristown Christian Church will serve as evangelist for a “Witness Unto Me” Revival slated to get underway at 7 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12, at the Milford Christian Church. Services during the week will be at 7:30 p.m.
R ■x fL. fl
WENDELL ROBERTS
John Snyder of the First Christian Church of Hessville in Hammond will serve as song evangelist.
Manchester College honors the Brembecks
The Board of Trustees and president of Manchester College gave special recognition to Howard and Myra Brembeck of Goshen. Brembeck is president of Brock Manufacturing and ChoreTime Equipment in Milford. The B rem becks were honored at a dinner held in their honor Friday, Sept. 26, in the college Union in North Manchester. Mr. and Mrs. Brembeck donated $900,000 for endowment during Manchester College’s “Focus on the Seventies” campaign and were mainly responsible for helping the college surpass its $8,500,000 goal. Their contributions have made possible the funding of the Paul J. and Hulda M. Brembeck Memorial Scholarships. They also established the Howard and Myra Brembeck Chair of Economics. Dr. Richard B. Harshbarger will be the first person to hold this endowed professorship. Approximately 135 friends, relatives, students and college faculty and staff members attended the dinner which featured music by pianist Julie Hunn, a Manchester College senior, and classical musical selections by Dr. R. Gary Deavel and Professor Robert Jones of the college’s music department. Richard G. Bigler, chairman of the Board of Trustees, presided at the dinner. Dr. A. Blair Helman, president of Manchester College, presented a formal citation to Mr. and Mrs. Brembeck and offered remarks related
the simple declaration, “Plus Ultra,” or “more beyond.” There are many people today
who are living in their own little world. It is limited. It is a world in which they believe they have reached the end of their resources. And many of these people, assuming they can go no farther, are living by the motto, “nothing more beyond.”
But there is something more beyond. There is something beyond a daily life of despair and defeat. There is something beyond a life of emptiness and
The nursery will be open nightly for those with young children.
■b* xi
JOHN SNYDER
Carl Shearer is minister of the church. Fred Wall is associate minister. All are invited to attend the revival services and other services of the church.
to their lives and careers. “Hie Brembeck family’s ties to Manchester College go back many years.” noted Helman. "Howard Brembeck’s parents, Paul and Hulda Brembeck, lived all their lives near Urbana and were supportive of the purposes and principles of the college. Five members of the Brembeck family over two generations attended Manchester College.” Helman lauded the Brembecks as progressive leaders in the business world. He recounted how they had developed their companies, Chore-Time Equipment and Brock Manufacturing, from a small operation in a building about the size of a two-car garage in 1954 to a multi-million dollar corporation in 1980. The Brembeck’s operate six manufacturing plants in Indiana, Georgia, Alabama and Belgium. Chore-Time products are sold in more than 70 countries. When announcing the new Brembeck Chair of Economics, Helman stated, “It is appropriate that an endowed chair of economics should be established at Manchester College. Economics, which is the study of how human beings allocate scarce resources to produce various commodities and how those commodities are distributed for consumption among the people in society, is an integral part of a liberal arts curriculum. The establishment of the Chair of Economics underlines Manchester College’s historic interest in the important area of study. It is our intention that the surrounding area, as well as our students, will benefit from the programs made possible by this magnificent gift.” Motorcycle hits cor, one injured Kenneth B. Turner. 26,301 East John St., Syracuse, was injured Friday. Oct. 3, when his motorcycle hit a car pulling out from an intersection into his path. The car, driven by John A. Liberti, 36, Box 371 A ll r 4, Syracuse, reportedly stopped on 1200 N for the SR 13 stop sign. When he prepared to cross the intersection, he did not see the approaching motorcycle. Turner had a head laceration and pain in his left leg. The 1967 Honda motorcycle had a damage estimate of SBOO and the 1978 Lincoln auto had an estimated SI,OOO damage.
Quality Child Care Lakeland Day Care Center 457-4983 5:30 A.M. To 6:00 P.M. Fee Based On Income Top Fee $36 Per Week
Wed., October 8,1980 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL
hopelessness. There is something beyond a life enslaved to sin and death. There is something beyond this life of pain the temporal pleasure. There is more beyond, much more. There is Jesus. Life’s greatest discovery is Jesus Christ. He is a whole new world. With Him the chains that bind are broken, new seas are charted and new life is discovered. “If any man is in Christ, he is a new creature; the old things passed away; behold, new things have come” (II Corinthians 5:17). Discoveries in science, medicine and technology are being made almost daily. Many
Daughter of late Milford man robbed in Goshen store
A gunman made off with about slls from a Goshen store and taped the hands of the store owner, Linda L. Gross, 43, to a clothes rack pipe shortly after 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 4. Mrs. Gross is the daughter of the late Frank Troup of Milford. Mrs. Gross, owner-operator of Linda’s Casuals at 208 South Main Street in Goshen was not harmed. After waiting to make sure the robber had left the store, she managed to free her taped hands. She ran out the back door to Goshen Auto Electric and Brake Service to call the police. The gunman had ripped the telephone line loose at her store. The robber was described as around five feet, nine inches tall and weighing about 185 pounds. He had curly medium-length sandy hair, hazel eyes, a clear complexion and a pleasant voice. He wore light blue jeans, a dark blue denim jacket and a dark colored shirt. The suspect first walked into Linda’s Casuals about an hour before the robbery took place. He walked in twice and left without buying anything. He reportedly said he was looking for a gift. Mrs. Gross became suspicious when she saw the man looking in store windows across the street. She was just about to lock the store when the man entered again and walked to the back of the store. She asked if he had made up his mind about what to buy. He pointed a small handgun at her and replied, “I’ll tell you what I want.” The gunman at first decided to take her upstairs, but Mrs. Gross talked him out of it. He then was going to tape her hands to a pipe leading from the furnace in the back room, but she told him the pipe was too hot. He touched the pipe and agreed it was too hot to tape her hands to it. The man ■■■■■■■■■■mbbim
Whoever BORROWED Our 18" Bucket Please Call And We Will Come Get It KLINE EXCAVATING, INC. 457-3677. 457-4658 buy Save Now! NOW OCTOBER >"' SAV E - 12526 P Tn i £ W 25 Diagonal 11 hi I I I \ * GC y SALE 1 & II f| i ColorTV jm UN PRICED!! I SAOC9S The GREENBRIER £ O O 8 8 I SYSTEMS W/T W < O BLACK & WHITE TV ■■ Allegro 2000 Speakers Features 8-Tract Tape Recorder I 111 iW 1 Stereo! II "INSTANT CREDIT'
of them are very helpful discoveries. But there is not discovery anywhere that can even begin to compare with the discovery of Jesus Christ by faith. Not even the discovery of America, Take inventory of your life. Do you really believe there is nothing more beyond? Listen carefully to the Bible, “Now to Him who is able to do exceeding abundantly beyond all that we ask or think, according to the power that works within us, to Him be the glory in the church and in Christ, Jesus to all generations forever and ever” (Ephesians 3:20-21), Friend, there is more beyond!
finally decided to tape her hands to a pipe at the back of the store which was used as a clothes rack. When he ordered her to open the cash register, he asked if that was all the money. She told him she had made only four sales that day. He was apologetic and agreed money was hard to come by these days. He asked for the keys to the store. She told him she did not have them, but he found them and locked the door. He put a scarf in her mouth as a gag and left the store with the money in a zippered People’s State Bank money bag. Police are continuing their search for the robber Man fires shots at Legion Post Robert Harrison Drum. 42. 217 South Arlington, Indianapolis, was charged with public intoxication and discharging a firearm inside town limits in Syracuse, on Saturday, Oct. 4. - ( Drum allegedly fired gun shots into the air at the American Legion Post 223. at 1006 S. Huntington St., at 10:55 p.m. When arresting officer D B Gallmeier arrived, the handgun had five empty rounds. No reason was given for the shooting in which no one was injured. He was arrested and jailed at the Kosciusko County Jail. Leer arrested Randy Lee Leer, 22, of Syracuse’s Haviland Trailer Park, was arrested this past week end. He was arrested on a warrant for failure to comply with county court orders on charges of criminal conversion, furnishing alcoholic beverages to a minor and illegal possession of an alcoholic beverage. No bond was set.
15
