The Mail-Journal, Volume 19, Number 41, Milford, Kosciusko County, 27 October 1982 — Page 17

e>. i ~ e >B fIHHE ■tar bfp /jfe l^r ?; I" Ifl^nvW /; ®^i#i’ i x l ’ \ \ At ■ ' liar' r' Im l LjIUM iJ iF%' ■■*7 jMTjy' ■ jfin ' bHSk ‘GOOFY COMMITTEE* WINNERS — These community leaders showed their true colors during the award program after last Thursday’s Moonlight Madness sale. Top row. Don Robinson. Susie Kern. Sue Losee. Dorothy Jones. Mim Speicher. Jon Miller. Front row. Bill Seivey. Jackie Dunithan, Linda Crow. Barb DeWitt. <Photo by Gary Lewis) By* '•I KV* “"'i& -f- * w ■ m^' > .X->i i a. ' IBam H| MOONtIGHT WINNERS — Here's a group of winners from the Syracuse Moonlight Madness “goofy committee" awards program Thursday night. Top row. standing. Jim Stillson, Jean Stillson. Bonnie Workman. Rich Timmons. Bob Pilcher, Marie Seivey. Front row. Mike Skevington, Pat Stillson. J.B. Stillson. Bruce Buitemeier. Jill Mishler. (Photo by Gary Lewis)

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Vent-sure Before baking, insert tube-type macaroni in the center of the top of your pie so that juice can bubble outl Or cut a paper drinking straw into three pieces and place them in the center of the pie for the same effect. Grate hint Brush a -little oil on the grater before you start grating, and cheese will wash off the grater easily.

MOONLIGHT MADNESS — It was a strange sight in Syracuse last Thursday night. The streets were full —of traffic and people — as the annual Syracuse Moonlight Madness fourhour shopping spree was underway. The big deal of the night was the awards program after the sale. Several of the merchants, some pictured here, were into the spirit of things with every kind of costume from a pear to a sheik. A free movie by the Pickwick, entitled ** International Velvet'* was offered and several of the merchants had plenty of coffee, apple cider and other snacks for mun-chies-minded customers. The winners were awarded in the following categories: Wittiest — Oops, Too; Most Outrageous — Bonnie Workman; Strangest — Rich Timmons; Most Authentic — Bob Pilcher; The Fruitiest — Marie Seivey; Best of Theme — Gropp’s Fish; Best Group Effort — Syracuse Police Department; Honorable Mention — My Store; Star Store; The Papers. Inc.

Carmel youth struck by car Mathew Mitchel. 17. Carmel, was struck by a car as he was playing on CR 775E. south of Pickwick Road near Syracuse on Saturday afternoon. Oct. 23. at 12:19 p.m., Mitchel sustained a * possible broken left leg and abrasions to the leg. According to police Mitchel ran onto the road from in between a van and a garage and was struck by an auto driven by Glenn A. Laughlin. 32. r 1 North Webster. Laughlin was northbound.

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SAFEGUARDING — Cars were lined up in the parking lot of The Papers Incorporated on Saturday. Oct. 23. for window etching performed by the Indiana Vehicle Theft Association. Members of the Milford Kiwanis Club assisted State Police officers in etching numbers on windows of 111 cars from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. The program’s purpose is to help make automobiles more theft-proof by burning numbers in all windows for identification. Flat paint is first applied, then a ball-point pen is used to mark numbers in the paint. Acid poured on the etching burns the number into the window and a razor blade was used to peel off excess paint. Workers finished each car by washing the windows. Pictured on the right are Rev. Clarence Fike, retired minister at the Goshen Church of the Brethren on north Fifth Street and resident of Waubee Lake, and Det. Sgt. Dave Petgen from the Bremen State Police Post who were among several volunteers performing the window identification.

Announce job option for welfare recipients

Final regulations which will allow state and local jurisdictions the option of incorporating a job oriented workfare program into the food stamp program were announed recently by an official of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “This innovative program is designed to provide many of our food stamp recipients with on-the-job training as they improve their job skills and employability,” said Samuel J. Cornelius, administrator of USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service “We are hopeful that skills learned in this program will enable more recipients to graduate to private sector employment.” Under the workfare program, able-bodied food stamp recipients between the ages of 18

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and 60 can be required to do public service work in return for food stsmp allotments. Qualifications for entry into the program will be considered on a case-by-case basis. If an eligible recipient refuses without good cause to comply with the workfare process, the entire household will be ineligible to receive food stamp benefits for two months. Cornelius said work Tare pilot projects, in operation since July 1979, already have been successful in training recipients for permanent employment in a variety of professions. The recipient’s work will be valued at a rate equivalent to the federal or state minimum wage, whichever is higher. A maximum of 30 hours work per week may be required of any recipient.

Wed., October 27,1982—THE MAILJOURNAL

The regulations also allow participating jurisdictions to combine food stamp workfare operations with those of other workfare-type programs that states and local jurisdictions might already administer. The state agency will be responsible for referring eligible recipients to workfare operating agencies, establishing and processing sanctions for noncdttipiTahce, and disbursing federal funds to operating agencies. The operating agencies, besides monitoring job sites, also will interview and assign recipients. USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service will provide 50 per cent funding for costs incurred in administering the program, including reimbursing participants up to $25 a month for

MR.FORn MEADOWS — Fourteen new apartments are now available at the Complete Property Management Inc., Milford Meadows apartments, located on Meadow court west of SR 15 in MBM. The apartments offer four one-bedroom, four two-bedroom and six townhouses. The townhouse model has three bedrooms, two baths and a patio. Owned and operated by SJ. Pulver, Avilla, Indiana, the apartments are bring managed by Gary and Pam Vance. For more information concerning these apartments, call Vance at 658-9522. (Photos by Gary Lewis)

transportation and other workrelated expenses. Flour shuffle To clean plastic playing cards, drop the deck into a paper bag and add a few tablespoons of flour. Shake briskly, then wipe completely clean. Last drop When you reach the last of the jelly, heat the jar in a pan of hot water and use the jelly to top waffles or pancakes. , Time to strip When it’s time to strip the old wax from your floor, try this solution: One cup of Tide laundry detergent, six ounces of ammonia,. and one gallon of warm J water.

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