The Mail-Journal, Volume 21, Number 39, Milford, Kosciusko County, 10 October 1984 — Page 13

It happened ~ .in Syracuse

10 YEARS AGO, OCT. 9,1974 Lakeland’s newest restaurant — The Windjammer — quietly opened for business on Thursday and, according to its owners, Wayne and Jane Bowers, has had a fine local reception. Its formal opening is Friday, Oct. 11. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Baumbaugh of r 2 Syracuse will celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary on Sunday, Oct. with an open house for friends, neighbors and relatives. The Baumbaughs married October 8, 1949, in Fort Wayne and have been residents of Lake Wawasee for the past 14 years. They have two sons, Alan and Barry. Miss Cynthia Knispel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lorin Knispel, r 4 Syracuse, has graduated from a one year course of study in fashion design at Brooks college at Long Beach, Calif. A 1973 graduate of Wawasee high school, she majored in fashion merchandising and has returned to the Syracuse community for free lance window designing. Miss Dixie Diane Darr, Syracuse, was graduated from the business office accounting program of International Junior College, Fort Wayne, on

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September 27. Miss Darr is a 1973 t graduate of Wawasee High ' School. She is the daughter of > Mrs. William Darr of Syracuse. She is a member of Phi Beta I Lambda professional business I fraternity. 20 YEARS AGO, OCT. 8,1964 1 A curfew ordinance of “ordinance to control and regulate C the traffic of children on the streets of the town of Syracuse .. ‘ . during the nighttime” was pass- , ed by the town board of Syracuse : during its regular meeting on ! Tuesday. • Guests of the past week of Mr. and Mrs. James Mick and Mrs. • Mabel Kitson and son Jay, all of I Syracuse, have been Mrs. i Thomas Wood of Silver Springs, i Md., and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence ! Mick of Sumpter S.C., and Ralph i Mick of Huntington. i Mrs. Helen Erwin and Mrs. i Noel Epperson of Indianapolis I and Mrs. Harold Pollock were • guests Tuesday, Oct. 6, of Mrs. Elizabeth Pollock of Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mock and i children of Middlebury were re- ; cent guests of the former’s parents. Rev. and Mrs. Clayton i • Mock, Syracuse. Gordon was

celebrating his birthday anniversary. Mrs. Charles Frushour and Mrs. Sharon Ryan, both of Syracuse, returned home Friday evening from a two week California trip. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Treadway of 304 Frazier Ave., Syracuse, spent Sunday with the former’s brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Peter of near Logansport. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lower and daughter, Connie and Carol of Toledo, Ohio, spent the weekend* with Mrs. Lower’s mother Mrs. Ida Hibschman of Syracuse. 30 YEARS AGO, OCT. 7,1954 Mr. and Mrs. Glen Longenecker, Syracuse, announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Ann to Hugh E. Neer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gafen Neer of Syracuse. Miss Longenecker is a graduate of the Leesburg high school and the Indianapolis Methodist Hospital School of Nursing. Her fiance was graduated from North Manchester high school and served three years with the Marine corps. No date has been set for the wedding. Mrs. Edna Nevins and William Wiehl have sold the Ranchhouse, Wawasee Lake Road, to Mr. and Mrs. Christian Muellhour of Lima, Ohio, Mr. and Mrs. Muellhour have a chain of truck stops, and their program will be the serving of good meals at prices similar to those of truck stops, said Mrs. Nevins. The consideration involved was $32,000, said Mrs. Nevins, who has closed out the business, the new owners to open in the spring. Mrs. Russell Kistler and son. Nelson, were in South Bend last Saturday to see the Notre DamePurdue game. James Miner and Gary Eyer were Saturday dinner guests of Jim Gard, and the three then went to Fort Wayne, for bowling and a theatre. Mr. and Mrs. Ned Harley of Waukegan, Illinois, spent the weekend with his mother, Mrs. Edith Harley. 50 YEARS AGO, OCT. 11,1934 Workers cleaning and deepening the mill race in Syracuse, an FERA project, will commence Saturday morning, with 10 local men employed. This project is for 20 men and 3,000 man hours. Other men will be put to work as soon as others are found eligible. Mrs. Charles Abell of Garrett entertained members of the NonTalis Club of Garrett at her lake home. Luncheon was served and three tables of contract bridge were in play during the afternoon. Those who took dinner in the Jacob Click home last Wednesday were Mrs. George Held, Mrs. Wm. Swihart and Mrs. Frank Swihart. Mr. and Mrs. John Heltzell and daughter Hazel of Albion, and Ed Heltzell of Goshen were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vic Niles. Afternoon callers were: Marjorie Smith, Arnold Leonard, Milford and David LeCount. Bruce Wilcox of the South Shore Golf course and Don Routson from The Tavern, accompanied Dr. and Mrs. Fred Clark, and son Jackie to Indianapolis, Tuesday. Dr. Clark planned to attend the convention of doctors of Indiana in session at Indianapolis. Mrs. Clark and son plan to visit her parents in Bloomington this coming week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Immell and family of Dunlap spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Steve Finton. Slippery situation Never grease the sides of a cake pan. After all, how would you like to climb a greased pole? Stop runny icing When icing a cake, the icing will hot run off if a little flour is dusted on the surface of the cake.

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Ifc. NEW RENT-ALL BUILDING — Bill Fisher is expanding his business in Wawasee Village — Fisher’s Rent-All and Mower Shop. The mower service and sales firm is erecting a 40x80 pole building and hopes to occupy it November 1. Fisher said his company would be more than doubling its space with the move to the new quarters. He hopes to expand his mower sales and service and small engine repair to a point where he can employ three full time mechanics. He has been in the business in Wawasee Village for seven years. '

ssraff towns representative — Sid Markley joins APC

By BRENDARHODES Staff Writer A new member was introduced to the Kosciusko County Plan Commission at their meeting Wednesday, Oct. 3. Sid Markley, a member of the North Webster Town Board, has filled the Small Town Advisory Council spot which has been vacant for two years. The board met to review three petitions, and make recommendations to the coupty commissioners on each c£se. The first case addressed by the commission was a continuance Os a petition by Jim Levandis to rezone 7.71 acres from a residential district to an agricultural district. The property is located on the west side of 13A, 650 feet north of CR 1050 N, in Turkey Creek Township. After Levandis presented the reasons behind his request to rezone, the board discussed whether his needs could be met under the current zoning of a residential area. Levandis wants to crop farm the acreage, build a residence and locate several outbuildings, including a greenhouse, on the parcel. All of these uses would be allowed under the current status as a residential area. Levandis said that he understood that residential zoning allowed him to crop farm the land, but his major concern was the future. He wanted to be protected from problems that might arise should the surrounding areas become developed with housing additions. Levandis felt he might divert objections from the residents of those additions to farm equipment and fertilizer smells if his acreage was zoned as an agricultural area. The board members voted 6-0 to deny the petition, with the reasoning that he could accomplish his goals under a residential zoning. They did not want to zone it agricultural for two reasons. First it would be spot zoning, because the property is bounded on three sides by residential areas. Secondly, agricultural zones have no restrictions on the types of agricultural activites that may take place. In other words, should Levandis sell the property in the future, were it zoned agricultural the new owner could legally confine livestock there. The second continuance was a petition to rezone 7.5 acres from a light industrial district to a agricultural district. 'Die proper ty is located on the east side of SR 15 and 375 feet south of CR 950 S in Lake Township, and is owned by James Terry Bradford and his father, Paul Bradford: Located near Wabash Valley and several other light industrial firms, the acreage was purchased with the intent of building a residence, under the belief that light industrial zoning permitted this practice. Later, learning this was not the case, the Bradfords decided to rezone the property.

SID MARKLEY The major concern of the commission was avoiding spot zoning. However, the land to the rear of the parcel is zoned agricultural, and the land in front of it is zoned light industrial. Therefore rezoning this parcel agricultural would in effect just be moving the boundary between the two zones a little further in one direction, it would not be putting an agricultural district in the middle of a light industrial area. A motion to deny the petition was defeated 4-2; and a motion to approve was defeated 4-2. Since the board has nine members, a petition must receive a majority (five-votes) to be officially approved and recommended to the county commissioners. Because they had been unable to get a mojority vote on this petition for two months, the plan commission members decided to forward this petition to the county commissioners, with an explanation of their inability to come to a consensus. The third case before the board waS a petition by Louis Robinson to rezone 67 acres from an

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agricultural district to a residential district. The property is located on the north side of CR 200N, west of the Fox Farm Road in Prairie Township. Robinson wants to put in a development of manufactured modular homes to meet a need he feels exists in the Warsaw area. The development would afford many young families a chance to own homes they otherwise would not be able to have. He feels the land, which is close to local industries, is suited to development, and could easily handle three homes per acre. Robinson also stated that he understood the concerns of the adjacent property owners to conserve farm land, but he also knows the need for housing of this sort is urgent in the Warsaw area. The meeting room was filled with remonstrators present to oppose the proposed rezoning. Many of them were people who had moved to the country to get away from housing additions like the one proposed. Their major concerns were traffic, the size of the roads, and farm equipment competing with automobiles for use of the narrow existing roads. After a few minutes of closed discussion the board moved to deny the petition, 6-0, with the qualification to Robinson that a need for this type of housing in Warsaw does exist, but they did not feel comfortable spot zoning a residential area on excellent agricultural soil. These petitions and recommendations by the area plan commission will go before the county commissioners at their meeting, Nov. 5, at 11 a.m. for a final decisions. The next regularly scheduled meeting of the APC will be Wednesday, Nov. 7, at in the meeting room in the basement of the Justice Building.

Wed., October 10,1984 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL

Two attend dairy conference

Two Kosciusko County 4-H members participated in the 30th Annual National 4-H Dairy Conference, held October 2-6, in Madison, Wis. M.B. Tusing, 15-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tusing, r 2 Leesburg, and Richard Karst, 17-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Karst, r 1 Pierceton, were among 22 Indiana delegates to this National 4-H activity; At the four-day educational event, delegates heard speakers discuss several aspects of dairying; including marketing, nutrition, production andl promotion. Workshops focused on computers, farm management, finan* cial planning, group dynamics and interpersonal relationships. Several highlights o( the conference included: tours of Hoard’s Dairyman office and farm, the American Breeder’s Services Inc., and the World Dairy Expo. Delegates heard Charlie Plumb, former Vietnam POW, deliver the keynote address. Plumb, also a 4-H alumnus, was held as a prisoner of war for almost six years. Today he is a noted speaker and journalist. Miss Tusing and £arst were nominated by the Kosciusko County 4-H Council for this achievement trip. The conference is sponsored by Midwest Dairy Products Association, Inc., Indiana Jersey Cattle Club, Indiana Guernsey Breeders’ Association, Holstein-Friesen Breeders of Indiana, Inc., Associated Milk Producers, Inc., Indiana Brown Swiss Associa-

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tion, Indiana Junior Guernsey Breeders Association, Indiana Junior Holstein Association, Hendricks County DHIA, Hendricks County Youth Council, Indiana State Dairy Association, Whitley County Dairy Council and Hoosier Marketing Agency. 4-H Calendar October 11 — Area 10 4-H/FFA Soil Judging contest October 11 — 4-H Wildlife and Forestry update, IHETS, 7:30 p.m., Marshall County extension office October 15 — 4-H Junior Leader’s meeting, 7:30 p.m., Justice Building October 24 — 4-H Sheep Committee meeting, 7:30 p.m., Extension office October 25 — Area 10 Junior Leader Conference, 9 a.m., LaPorte County Extension office October 29 — Adult 4-H Leader Recognition Banquet, 6:30 p.m., Atwood Community Building Caffeine and asthma BOSTON — The caffeine in two cups of strong coffee works as well a common prescription drug in relieving asthma, and the brew may serve as an effective substitute in an emergency, a study concludes. Add water for texture When making a cake be sure to always add two tablespoons of boiling water to the butter and sugar mixture. This will make a finer textured cake.

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