The Mail-Journal, Volume 21, Number 21, Milford, Kosciusko County, 6 June 1984 — Page 20

THE MAIL-JOURNAL - Wed., June 6,1984

20

Milford's Main street

DR. DOUG Strycker, who will* be practicing in Milford with Dr. Dick and assuming many of the full-time responsibilities of Dr. Rheinheimer, was in town Monday and will be in Milford most of the week talking with office personnel and inventorying office supplies. Dr. Strycker will begin seeing patients July 23. The doctor and his family are currently living in South Bend, f where he completed three years residency and family practice at Memorial Hospital. He and his wife, Helen, and two sons, Glenn, three, and Paul, 1 Mt, will be moving to Milford at the end of the summer. Dr. Strycker completed his undergraduate work at Goshen College. He studied post graduate chemistry at Butler University, and is a graduate of the Indiana University School of Medicine. THE FIRST summer reading program will be on astronomy and will feature telftcopes, other equipment and a . study of the stars. Donna Angle, children’s librarian at Milford, said the program will be presented at 1 p.m. next Wednesday, June 13, at the library. All students participating in the summer reading Flowers stolen from graves Milford Town Marshal David Hobbs recieved a complaint from Steve LeCount, Warsaw, concerning the stolen flowers from the grave of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Rial Troup, at the Milford Cemetery over the Memorial Day weekend. LeCount and his wife were visiting the local cemetery Saturday and noticed flowers from his parents’ graves, and an aunt’s grave were missing. They returned to the same cemetery on Memorial Day, and flowers from the Troups’ graves were gone. “I think this is the lowest thing possible that anyone can do,” said LeCount ‘‘l can’t imagine anyone stealing flowers from a cemetery, that’s lower than the ground itself.” Milford Police officials have looked into the theft of the flowers, and are continuing their investigation. Motorcyclist is injured in truck-cycle crash Jimmy Kirkwood, 25, r 4 Syracuse, sustained neck, wrist and leg injuries in a motorcycle/truck mishap in Elkhart County at 5:35 a m. Friday, June 1. He was taken to Goshen Hospital. Kirkwood was injured when his 1984 Kawasaki 700 cc motorcycle collided with a 1964 GtyC truck driven by Denver Mosley, 21, Wolcottville. Both drivers were northbound on SR 13 when Mosley attempted a left turn onto CR 34, as Kirkwood was attempting to " pass. Elkhart County Sheriff’s Sgt. Walter Miller investigated Syracuse man in one-vehicle crash on CR 400E Stephen E. Yoder, Jr., r 3 Syracuse, was involved in a one-vehicle mishap on CR 400E, 80 feet north of CR 200N on Friday, June 1, at 10:48 p.m. Information available from the Kosciusko County Police states the Yoder vehicle struck a fence and utility pole. Other information on the mishap was not available. Damage to the utility pole and farm fence was estimated up to SI,OOO to each. No damage to the vehicle was listed.

rNOTICEIi I Do we need another | E liquor outlet in Milford? ■ I" If you oppose having one ■ make your wishes known by I ■ signing a petition . and/or m attending the hearing on I ■ Permit No. DL4384119 at the! Kosc. Co. Courthouse, Wed- 1 nesday, June 13 at 10:00 a.m. ■ For more information J I contact any Ideal minister. Lwi

program are urged to attend. REV. KEITH and Lydia Jones of Wethersfield, Conn., spent several days in Milford last week visiting friends and relatives. They were returning home from a three-month tour of the United States and the Hawaiian Islands. On the tour they spent three weeks with his brother Hoy Jones and Hoy’s wife at Ventura, Calif., and enroute home they visited their children in the San Francisco area. Daughter Wanda Corn, who has a Ph.D. degree in history and art, is a nationally recognized art historian and is curator of the Grant Wood Art Exhibit touring the country. She has had the program on network television several times and is recognized by local relatives. Keith graduated from Milford High School with the class of 1928 and retired as minister of the First Church of Christ at Wethersfield, Conn., following 35 years with the same charge. MILFORD STREET Commimssioner Bill Knowles was a little let down last week when his host of friends failed to mention the retirement publicity his brother H. James Knowels, Jr., of Shipshewana, received. Bother Jim, known throughout Indiana State Policedom as ("Ligonier”) for his long tenure as a state police officer at the now-defunct Ligonier Post, retired after 24* years and one month of service, and was feted at a retirement banquet attended by more than 90 officers, family and friends, last Tuesday evening. ’ Knowles signed on at the Ligonier State Police Post February 14, 1960, and transferred when the post closed, to South Bend November 30,1981. On April 20, 1982, he went to the new Bremen Post and retired as telecommunications spec/5 on March 15,1984. He is now director of communications for the Elkhart Fire and Police Departments. W’E FOUND the following in the Fairbury (III.) Blade this week and thought it worth passing along to our readers: Great American fibs: * I’ll start my diet tomorrow. * We service what we sell. * Money cheerfully refunded. * One size fits all. * This offer limited to the first 100 people who call in * Every cloud has a silver lining. * Your luggage isn’t lost, it’s only misplaced. * Leave your resume and we’ll get in touch with you. * I. just need five minutes of your time. * Your table will be ready in a few minutes. 1 Money can’t buy happiness. * You don’t look a day over 30. * Let’s have lunch sometime. * It’s not the money, it’s the principle. Since reading the list editorial staff members have added to it. The following are just a few of our additions: * It will only take a minute. * The check is in the mail.

* I’ll do it next. ★ It’s so simple, a child can do it.

LA-Z-DOT Official Entry Blank. |I i < / \ j Ok I gtea* j ’ WAP : otv« s e i JHr £JJf/ I JR * ' I 7\ w I / 1 PUT YOUR DAD IN THIS PICTURE. I Glover's Father's Day Draw Your Dad In A Recliner Contest. Winner Gets A Free Recliner For Dad. Horo's How To Enter: Draw your Dad in the space chase required to submit in entry. Just leave your provided above. See how good he looks in a La-Z- entry and on Thursday, June 14, the best entry will I Boy Recliner. Bring your completed entry to be picked and the winner notified. You need not be I Glover Furniture by Wednesday, June 13, 1984. present to win. If you have purchased a recliner Every person who submits an entry will be ent It led from us between now and June 14, 1984, the purto S2O off the Sale Price of any recliner. No pur- chase price will be refunded. Pl.tar.Dad Thaw L.-1-t.r ««»k.r R..li..rs „« BEtWE || T I FREEDEUVERT RVER 4D ■ STROK MD ELL ME DELE PRICED! I n (£37 wpß / I GLOVER'S ~ S W W flMi Shop Daily ~ . ~ M • *ao io 5:30 Um comfortable terms FINE FURNITURE | • . . .. ..... : A—Ml

WORD HAS been resceived of the marriage of Mrs. Harold Plattner of Goodfield, 111., and

Richard Laukhuf of Payne, Ohio and Sarasota, Fla. The rite was read on Wednes-

day evening, April 11, at the Apostolic Christian Church at Goodfield. Each has two sons, whom with their wives where the

only persons in attendance. The couple is residing in her home and will spend the winter at

Sarasota. Mrs. Laukhuf is the former Geraldine Steffen of Milford.