The Mail-Journal, Volume 21, Number 6, Milford, Kosciusko County, 22 February 1984 — Page 7

Community Corner

Reg/ster now for Form Bureau Women's Conference

The Faun Bureau Women’s Conference will be held March 27 and 28 at tie Murat Temple in Indianapolis. All Farm Bureau women and their men are encouraged to attend the program, “For the Good of Us All.” Registration will be held from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m. Tuesday, Named outstanding Mrs. Michael (Cheryl Lynn) Fry of Augusta, Ga., has been named to the Outstanding Young Women list. She is a teacher in Augusta. Mrs. Fry is the daughter-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Edward (Phyllis) Fry of Augusta. Mrs. Gladys Coy of Syracuse is the mother of Phyllis Fry and the grandmother of Michael Fry.

|„ £Tlianb Qjou .1 I We wish to thank you, our customers, for a great year in I 1983. We are looking forward to serving you in 1984 with good I 1 service, great prices, many sales, good selections and a nice, | neat, well merchandised store. Don Melton, Mgr. | Sale Starts Today — Ends Sunday, 2/26/84 | lA' i I I Comments ! I From I I Our WttVl | Customers a j I "I Like The '’T H I- Looks Os Your » Store In Its New 9 Look Os The Kigali "Best Thing IK That Ever I Happened To "More Wearing Apparel « F° r Whole Family” ■ ! ■ SOOO ROASTED I I OFF ALL PiAMOTS | | TENNIS SHOES $1 00 I ■ And Fall DRESS SHOES * ... | I „Ju <4 I More Selection!" ■ "More Inventory!” i "Nice Clean Store/" "Glad You ■ JV Have Fabric I" ~ "We Are Enjoying k A. Shopping Here!” Ik aj! B "Your Hew B Ambassador jIIIHEBwL Card Dept. Is Great." JMUIBr | ■ "We Need A I 1 ! 1 * /Store Like This In WZmWjr ■ Syracuse I" While Quantities Lost! M I Our Fabric Clearance Sale Still Going On! s l°J | ™ | JFR j

March 27. A display of quilted items and exhibits of a variety of quilted articles will be available. At 1 p.m., Marion Stackhouse, president of Indiana Farm Bureau, Inc., will give the opening address. Programs included in the workshop are: “What does USDA’s Farming the Classroom program mean to Indiana?” Chris Mosher, assistant to the secretary of agriculture; a panel discussion’on “There’s No Work Like Home Work”; “The Quilt Medium for Preserving History and Heritage” by Treva J. Iddings from Lebanon. At 5:30 p.m., a banquet ooen to any Farm Bureau member at the conference will be held and at 7 p.m. presentations by Juanita Detmer and Carolyn Hegel will be given. “His Tones” gospel

singers will be the entertainment. Wednesday at 9:30 a.m., Harry Pearson will open the program where awards will be presented. Presentations will als be given by Dean Bernard J. Liska and James K Merrill. The meeting will adjourn at 12 noon. Contact Paula Miller at 834-2399 before March 1 for reservations. Lakeland Local Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Knisley of Mishawaka were guests Tuesday, Feb. 14, in the Hunnicutt Grove home of Mr. and Mrs. James Mench, Syracuse.

SORORITY CONCERT THURSDAY — The Wawasee High School Varsity Singers and the Jazz Ensemble will be presenting a concert in the Wawasee High School auditorium at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 23. The concert, sponsored by Psi lota Xi Chapter of Theta Sigma, will raise funds for the Varsity Singers trip to the American International Music Festival in Nashville. The concert will feature the numbers the Varsity Singers will be performing in Nashville and the Jazz Ensemble will be presenting music from the 30s and 40s, as well as current hits.

Kiwanis celebrate anniversary *

In the first half of 1984, Kiwanis International will celebrate its 69th anniversary. In recognition of this special event, governors across the country have issued proclamations to honor the Kiwanians in 79 nations and geographic areas. The average Kiwanian donates SI,OOO worth of manpower per year for a total Kiwanis contribution of S3OO million in service work alone. An additional s3b million in cash was donated last year, according to a recent survey. Kiwanis’ two coed, youth affiliates include Circle K International, with 12,000 Circle K’ers on 800 campuses, and Key Club International’s 108,000 Key Clubbers active in 3,500 high schools. With the addition of the Hamilton, Ontario club in November 1916, the organization became international. Kiwanians’ motto “We build” was evident as the organization grew to include 8,000 clubs with 309,000 members.

Z 3_ J 3' C : _L __ — — — _ — 13 is JjJBHLi _ _ _ _____ -3J: B *3 l _3<_ — — — 4° HLii———

ACROSS 1 L. A. footballers 5 Amusing Phyllis 11 Wicked 12 Beauteous bird 13 City on the Arno 14 Play poker 15 Endures 17 Small ornament 18 Was corrosive 19 Big-eyed birds 22 Affirmative 23 Be situated 24 Wrathful 27 ....Blanc 28 White House man 29 Arrived 32 Eminent Egyptian 34 Admired greatly 37 Be worthy of 38 Kind of flour 39 Where lowa State is 40 Was theatrical 41 Defeat

MTORMYNKHn etT 60 '’ s SPIRIT J RMRINGSIM TABUS— Vl ■ | 134*4111 I a 'TH6OSASSC “MMIWSJMIKIW" I I&UUMNT4OUIIGE UNGjar-MMER COCKWU

pr Ji KK AUBREY E. IRBY President Kiwanis International Whether it’s celebrities standing on street comers soliciting donations or special kids competing in Special Olympics, chances are that the people behind the scenes are from the 419,000-member strong K-family

DOWN 1 Second showing 2 Fly 3 Fails to catch 4 Skinny stick 5 Popular pet 6 Man’s name 7 Tree parts 8 Lung part 9 Singer Fitzgerald 10 Swamp plant 16 Concert number 20 Achieve 21 Permits 24 Title 25 Lessens 26 Dislike heartily 27 badges 29 Eating place 30 *... Bede” 21 Moslem Malay 33 Desert dweller 35 Compass point 36 Breadwinner

(Answers on page 15)

comprised of Kiwanis International, Circle K International, and Key Club International. Some 7,500 Kiwanians from 185 clubs in the New England District of Clubs pooled financial resources of $245,000 to build the Kiwanis Pediatric Trauma Institute in Boston, Massachusetts. Club members also committed to donating $245,000 annually for operating costs. Each club has the option of seeking out a specific goal of community service for his own community. The projects include a wide variety of programs, as exemplified below, and, in most cases, no two are the same. • Eleven hundred Missouri and Arkansas Kiwanians banded together last year and raised $500,000 to restore Camp Wyman for underprivileged children in St. Louis. • Kiwanis service is loud and clear to Winnipeg, Canada’s 600-member deaf community. Twenty-two members of the Kiwanis Club of Elmwood saw five years of labor come to fruition last year when a $3.8 million Kiwanis Centre of the Deaf was dedicated. • In Switzerland, the children needed to walk three miles to school after the local school was closed. The Kiwanis International club in FondS-LeLocle. Switzerland went to work and built a chair lift for the children at a cost in excess of $1 million. Astronomy presented to Columbians Clarice Stump entertained 17 members of the Columbian Reading Circle of Milford in her home on Feb. 13. Margaret Cousins introduced Jim Tague of the First National Bank. Tague presented a program on astronomy. He took the members on a short trip through the solar systems, adding interesting bits of information along the way. He explained a light year is six trillion miles away, then told how many light years away many of the systems are from the earth, naming the moon as the closest heavenly body. Newly elected officers of the church are: Kathleen Heath - president , Kate Doty-vice-president Diane Fulp — secretary Dorothy Haney - treasurer Inez Bieswanger - reporter. The next meeting will be March 12 in the home of Dorothy Haney. Dorothy Williams will be giving the book review at the meeting.

PICKWICK—n THIATRI I snuoiH I 457-41 W | Show Times: Fri. & Sol. 7 4 9 Son. 54 7— Mon.-Thurs. 7 cSnufraoM) “Sudden Impact" RATEDR STARTS FRIDAY "Hat Dog" RATH)R s , .

Wed., February 22,1984 - THE MAIL-JOURNAL

CALENDAR Week Os February 22 To February 29 WEDNESDAY Ladies Aid 7 am., Syracuse Church of the Brethren Syracuse Fire Department 7 p.m., regular meeting in the fire station Al-Anon 7:30 p.m., in Sacred Heart Church, Warsaw Al-Anon 7:30 p.m., Saint Andrew’s United Methodist Church, Syracuse. Alcoholics Anonymous 7:30 p.m., Wawasee Episcopal Center, All Saints Episcopal Church, south shore of Lake Wawasee, one-half mile east of South Shore Golf Club on Vernon Road ' 4'" 1 ' THURSDAY Al-Anon 9:30 am., Saint Andrew’s United Methodist Church, Syracuse ‘ . . North Webster Lions Club 7 p.m. Kappa Omicron Chapter Beta Sigma Phi Sorority 7:30p.m. QfBK) Lakeside VFW Post 1342 qjggjP 8 p.m, Syracuse FRIDAY Milford Kiwanis 6:45a.m., Community Building Alcoholics Anonymous 7:30 p.m., Wawasee Episcopal Center, All Saints Episcopal Church, south shore of Lake Wawasee, one-half mile east of South Shore Golf Club on Vernon Road Alcoholics Anonymous 8 p.m.. Saint Andrew’s United Methodist Church. Syracuse - "i SATURDAY Wawasee Kiwanis V ) J 7 a.m., Gropp’s, Syracuse SUNDAY Alcoholics Anonymous 10 a.m., North Webster Fire Station MONDAY Lakeland Kiwanis 7 a .m., Church of God meeting room. North Webster TOPS 4:30p.m., Calvary United Methodist Church FOE Men’s Meeting Aerie 3760 7 p.m., in Lakeland Eagles, 404 Sycamore St., Syracuse Al-Anon 7:30p.m., United Methodist Church, Milford Milford Jayceettes 7:30p.m., Jaycee Clubhouse TUESDAY Syracuse-Wawasee Rotary 12 noon. Beacon Restaurant Syracuse Park Board 7:15 pm, in Syracuse Town Hall, open to the public Wawasee American Legion Auxiliary, 223 7:30 p.m . in the Legion Hall Aloteen 7:30 p.m.. Church of God, Syracuse WEDNESDAY Ladies Aid 7a.m., Syracuse Church of the Brethren Eagles Auxiliary Meeting Aerie 3760 7 p.m., Lakeland Eagles, 404 Sycamore St., Syracuse Al-Anon 7:30 p.m., Saint Andrew’s United Methodist Church, Syracuse AL-Anon 7:30 p.m., Sacred Heart Church, Warsaw Alcoholics Anonymous 7:30 p.m., Wawasee Episcopal Center, All Saints Episcopal Church, south shore of Lake Wawasee, one-half mile east of South Shore Golf Club on Vernon Road

<;• • • • 11 * 1 > MINTIM IMSUUD O INTERIOR • EXTERIOR fftt BTUUTB < • RESIDENTIAL — COMMERCIAL 3 457-3313 jbdjty 11111 r tnTftft ft f NewU j I Sunday Lunch | I Open At 11 A.M.~ A nbsMMr>spMW--• f I Boneless Chicken Breasts A | And J " Beef Stroganoff I f Also Available: |

7