The Mail-Journal, Volume 23, Number 8, Milford, Kosciusko County, 19 February 1986 — Page 16

THE MAIL-JOURNAL — Wed., February 19,1986

16

Milford's Main street

Goshen; Keith Sheets. Nap- ** x» * .■ #■ panee; and Ronald Brooks and «* ? Jack Kritner, both of the * *• * »' ? Alabama plant. Honored for 10 years of service were Grant Geiger, New Paris; 1 Brice Medlock and Timothy > — -1 Yoder, both from Syracuse; ■ O r % James Showalter, Patricia 9 tL Sanders and Theo Thomas, all ."Jr from Milford; Julie Keim and FT' a Harry Tallman, both from Goshen; Robert Jaress, North ( T * Webster; James Robinson, Monroe, Ga.; and Diana George, PROW Brenda McMinemon and Truman W. ! k. il Ik Shaddrix, all of Alabama. SgW Recognized for five years of jBHL ' - taf ]B BBSBBU7 service Douglas Doty and Bruce RfyH 'X 1« »/ \7B ■’■■■■ IE Whir ledge, both of Syracuse; BKs? '• ■•'\ V B SB BHBmI Gary Peterson and Michael > / JB I /J| AfiE Schnell, both from Goshen; San\7 i dy Townsend and Michael T Jlnb Wright, both from Warsaw; Ir" Leroy Diekman, Elkhart; Kevin » Brwl Us ! Haines, Milford; Roger HollB ; wl Inger, New Paris; Don Johnson, I mV Kr Leesburg; Mark Snyder, BourZ bon; Todd Yoquelet. Bristol; and Billie Horton, Alabama. Mat.BL In addition, perfect attendance / SB BL ■- i and safety awards for Brock MBBBBBiMBUBHBB 1 employees were presented for 1985. Qualifying for perfect attenA TOTAL of 41 employees of I. me . Equipment Jne, Roger Elliott, Nappanee; Br«k Manufacturing toe, and f Chester Goodman, Pierceton; CTB Inc., were presented with for OT yeare of Mike Miller and Steve Yoder, employee service awards in 1985. vice to me companies were . Mart Cnvdor The photo at the top of this col- Robert Miller, New Paris; r f ?“ M^ rd i l *?’ k ® umn shows Marion (“Bud”) Dawson Pertans, Claypool, Tom- S°“fko”, Al z ' mmerman ' Lantz, general manager at mie Reffitt and Lester Smith, Brock, presenting the 25-year both of Warsaw; and William award to Joseph Kruger of War- Kurtz of Nappanee. Receiving safety honors were sa W Jeff Bradley, Dave Doll and Presented with 15 year awards Steve Yoder, all from Milford; According to Jim Evans, presi- were Randall Brown, New Paris; Fred Michael, Nappanee; Mark dent of CTB, the awards were Don Hoover, Roy Kelley, Lucy Snyder, Bourbon; Larry Swope, given to employees in recognition Peterson and James Sumpter, all North Webster; and Gary of the length of service each has from Milford; Ray Marttila, Weaver, Warsaw.

Special 23. 1986 NA Mb -w , g By j| ■> By Savings Copyright' ’966 0? Moo* frogs, inc, MW-feSr fcgsifel SWKI ZP-liBK I . 16fT7\J SfTTfll >4P'I wf SAVE 1.70 I ■ SAVE 3.11 _ ■ 294 I Jhirmack Gelave I m tpa I Putfs Contac | shampoo or I Pampers I Tissues Package of 20 capsules B COflultlOliei * B B I 64 large or 96 medium ■ Box of 175 B 8-oz bottle B B iMfcra 16.99 I n Afrm.^ 08 I zm*!!!!" I I I ■ |j£!h t I » T» > I IHMHIFBm WA* ml AftY ft IMißb Ay mßp JF Ji < • 1 » I|7 L, Tift M JBJKJB DHupl !qjj/IVw| EaSf II |<£s£ I l A 'X 240 I ■ |J. JJ ■ HUMS HMM mrJE— I I Afrin I I Syringes I Purina I Nasal Spray ■ Endust B Model #B4io, 8465 or #8413. I Dog Chow I V2-0Z regular or menthol B 6-oz can. Regular or lemon B Available by prescription only, where B -___ , g g g required by law. Rebate details at store, g 25 lbs. + 5 lbs. FREE ! MSAVE 80C SAVE 404 fW SAVE 80C SAVE 50C-1.16 ts. I®9 g 155 £££*.., Cff 32**r rt 1 ES» L_syi ESS. 1 5-oz assorted scents W «-oz. can of crystals Mj6l I "•b-0-aa. at More. 6.5-oz bottle 9c, ot 28 Deodorant J . or non-deodorant save 4o< save 9«« save 20c I*2.™ M 1” fe 79* r JOaita Dewtel I | ' Swabs Moathwaah *°“ I I 3oo.too free! j \SCj r 7 (/ s^? s J QQC SAVE & ||W99*lS» SX. SSL savesk J Celia’s . gf ™ r-r^BSf! Xiac | 5-oz milk or dark chocolate 24,wr plaskc bottle. gfU f* ■ H save 7o< aimEiSL I Hook’s Cotor Prtwt Flhn I »— < FT«B 1 500 lif”^iK?^S?SJS rr iJSW> 100 °y7” ■! :s “»- ! RalleTer nd A tout unotce m ■■processed VUw<* m IBfe —GeEo | ■ ■ ••< Shot Our 35mm process gives you Specira • ■ Lj ' 3 -*- 1 '- - - =B JCrOISOO ISgBBSMn W ® Slaahlin< ■ ■ cotor <■ ■ 6 glossy prints at no extra cost Lim.t one ■ 4-oz bottle r K “r“* (^s(er MjM LjM Zp.. . . SM> I.M * Ton./puls. phon. 11 COUo °" e ' l "'" F * 24 ”“ B E Model *2452 Limit two. 3 *’. B **'. 50 * . Sale 149 I /P?\ SauHwesWn Bel Mo<le ' ’ p C2SSO - Receive a coupon tor a FREE ctoar , -111 . , Bf Coupon expires ? p * 9 * ***** pho *° |Comp«« to Tylenol | Feb. 23. 1966. rwzTiaß°°" "°''' s a. _ J | j The flexibility j SAVE X«S9% aw< l *r HiilJL/ <^^^®k toniee L!2S? eCted Wander Ind Una r FmenfenCieS' «*r« A •■■Wwr aUIMMW mtxxtcsrd «any MOO* s Drug \ ir— -~ INDIANA y Winter Wanderer coupons good L hr savinos on double occupancy ft J) ✓ 2/ II ',.XF.'„. rooms at 90 Indiana hotels and . *7 y \ motels. FREE at all Info Centers. ’ <4*>»rm M^b>.sM L Coupon expiresiMarch 30,1986. / -* » ||| SYRACUSE - 457-4000 NORTH WEBSTER - 834-4772 R.R. 1, Box 1-C, Pickwick Rd. SR 13 South STORE HOURS: STOW HOURS: Mon.-Sat. 8:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M., Sun. 9 A.M.-7 P.M. Mon.-Sat. 8:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M., Sun. 9 A.M.-7 P.M.

VAN BUREN Township Trustee Marcia Baumgartner will be holding a cheese day at the Milford Fire Station on Friday, Feb. 21, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. She will have cheese, rice,

Distribution of food

Surplus American cheese, butter, flour and rice will be distributed Friday, Feb. 21, at various sites in Kosciusko County, according to Dan Mohnke, Community Services Block Grant director. In all, about 513,600 pounds of food will be distributed, beginning at 10 a.m., in a five-county area. People are urged to wait for the scheduled opening, since site volunteers will be busy preparing for the distribution prior to that time. Recipients will be required to show identification, such as a driver’s license, and it is suggested that they take a sack to carry the food home. Elderly or handicapped homebound individuals can have someone pick up the products for them by sending a signed note and a piece of identification with the person picking up the food. Indiana residents in the five counties area qualify if household income meets guidelines established by the Federal Office of Management and Budget. Guidelines for those under 60 years of age are: household of one, $7,875; two, $10,575; three, $13,275; four or more, add $2,700 for each additional person in the household.. If the head of the household is age 60 or over, the guidelines are: household of one, $9,450; two,

flour and butter for those eligible, t THE RACE is about to begin. Watch next week’s MJ for a list of 1 candidates who are running for Mayor of Milford.

$12,690; three, $15,930; four or more, add $3,240 for each additional household member. The distribution sites in Kosciusko County are: Robert Hoffman’s home, r 1 Claypool; Claypool Fire Station, Claypool; Etna Elevator, Etna Green; King Funeral Home, Mentone; Sidney Fire Station, Sidney; Jesse Berger’s home, CR 1350 N, r 1 Nappanee; Silver Lake Fire Station, Silver Lake; Fred Slabaugh’s home, CR 1350N/950W, Nappanee; Chester Clampitt Jr.’s home, Gault St., Atwood; North Webster Fire Station, North Webster; Milford Fire Station, Milford; Nutrition Site, SR 13 Pierceton ; Leesburg Fire Station, Leesburg; Scout Cabin, SR 13S, Syracuse; Winona Lake Fire Station, Kings Highway, Winona Lake; Dail Barber, CR 1000 S, Mentone; Salvation Army, 501 E. Arthur St., Warsaw; Fire Station 1, 108 E, Main St., Warsaw; Fire Station 2, 2204 E. Center St., Warsaw; Julia Goon’s home, r 4 Warsaw; Merl Wertenberger’s home, r 2 Warsaw; American Red Cross, 501 N. Lake St., Warsaw. These commodities are donated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and are not to be sold or exchanged. The commodity distribution program is administered by the Indiana Department on Aging and Community Services.

‘IN WITH THE NEW’ — Purchasing agent Jon Dewart of Milford Motors, SR 15, hands over the keys of a 1986 GMC pick up truck to Milford Fire Chief Max Duncan. The pick up truck, to be used to transfer the Amkus Rescue System equipment (including lighting and a generator), replaces a 1968 model previously used by the department. Purchased with tax funds from Van Buren Township, the passing of the keys completed the deal last Thursday, Feb. 13.

It happened ... in Milford

19 YEARS AGO, FEB. 18,1976 their son, Victor Beer, and Mrs. Milford’s sixth annual “Citizen Beer and family. of the Year” will be named at the George Rechkemmer of Cissna Milford Area Development Coun- Park, 111., is visiting his son, Jack cil’s annual banquet set for Satur- Rechkemmer, and family on r 1 day night. The banquet will be Milford. held at the M and M in North Mrs. Ed Lentz of Milford Webster with the starting time returned home last week after set at 7 p.m. spending a month in the homes of Members of the Milford Lions her son, Dr. Owen Lentz, Mrs. club entertained their ladies at a Lentz and family, and her swiss steak supper on Monday daughter, Mrs. Donald Anglin, evening in a Warsaw restaurant, and Mr. Anglin at Nappanee. It was the second ladies night Mrs. Esther Charlton and event of the club year. Willard Charlton, both of Milford, Dr. W.J. Zehr of Our Town is were Sunday dinner guests in the among 169 Hoosier veterinarians home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom named to 1976 membership in the Pinkerton at Goshen. They prestigious Indiana Academy of celebrated Mr. Charlton’s birthVeterinary Medicine which is the day which was February 12. educational arm of the state 30 YEARS AGO, FEB. 16,1956 VMA. Town marshal Donald Enyeart The Bible bowl team from the began reading water meters on Milford Christian church placed Monday and will be about two first in competition at Brook last weeks at the task. He is asking all Saturday. These kids are doing a water using residents to make argreat job with a record of 31 and rangements with him to gain enthree. They plan to compete in trance to their meters in case national competition at Denver, they will be gone during the Colo., later in the year. daytime. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Neff and Tickets are being sold so the daughter Nicole returned Mon- joint Milford-Leesburg Lions dinday, Feb. 9, from Fort Myers ner meeting, to be held at 7 p.m. Beach, Fla. They spent three Monday at the dining room of weeks with their parents Mr. and Milford’s new elementary school. Mrs. John S. Fisher of Syracuse. Leesburg Lions are selling The Fishers spend their winters tickets, and at Milford they may in Florida. be purchased at The Milford Miss Melissa Ann Evans, Mail, Milford Electric Shop and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max at Sharp’s Hardware. Tickets Evans, celebrated her seventh should be purchased before Fribirthday on Valentine’s day. day, Feb. 17. There will be no 26 YEARS AGO, FEB. 16,1966 tickets sold at the door. David Cory, son of Mr. and Twin daughters, Marla Jo, Mrs. Neal Cory of near Milford, weighing four pounds, 11 ounces, has received the certificate of ex- and Carla Jean, weighing four cellence for Milford high school pounds, seven and a half ounces, students who took the Time Cur- were bom this morning, Feb. 16, rent Affairs test recently. Acer- to Mr. and Mrs. Don Hoover at tificafp of merit went to Fred Goshen General hospital. Mr. and Hoerr. Special mention was Mrs. Robert Hoover and Mr. and received by Becky Brown and Mrs. Elmer Hartter are the •Jsnct Fisher. grandparents. The town of Milford received A large bam, measuring 40 by $1,138.61 in motor vehicle funds 118 feet, burned to the ground Saturday from the state accor- early Monday evening at the ding to town clerk-treasurer Harold Umbaugh farm lo S at oo Edith I. Baumgartner. She said five miles northwest of Milford, the money is for local road just north of road 6, destroying repairs several farm implements, much Mr and Mrs. Fred Ruch and hay and straw and a pet pony, son of Warsaw visited his mother, 50 YEARS AGO, FEB. 20,1936 Mrs. Henry Ruch, at Milford Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Russel Stout of day. Akron, 0., visited here last week Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beer of with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milford left Friday for Laßelle, John Stout. Fla., where they will visit with Delbert Replogle, Charles

We’H See YOU At The I CONCORD MALL BOA T SHOW (Near J.C. Penney’s) I Thursday thru Sunday, Feb. 20-23 I — Watch For Our Show Specials! - ★ VIP ★ LARSON ★ AQUA PATIO ★ MANY OTHERS! | Tohatsu And Force Outboard Motors] WATER WORLD SRI3S. _ 457-2jls_, _ _ swum One may have visited Indonesia a number of times before discovering Sumatra. It is little known to westerners although it is one of the largest islands on Earth. Its most natural port of coll is Medan, a large commercial city that serves as gateway to the intriguing interior. About a four-hour drive from Medan, through plantations rich with rubber trees, tea, coffee, and tobacco, the road runs to Lake Toba. One of the largest lakes in the world, it fills the crater of on extinct volcano. In the future, Sumatra plans to establish safe, efficient park areas to better show off its rich wildlife of elephants, rhinos, gibbon, and the famed Sumatran tiger. If the exotic and exciting is what you're looking for come into the WARSAW TRAVEL SPECIALISTS (269-6771 or 1-800-342-5221) and discuss it with us. We plan excitement from take-off to return any place in the world. For pleasure or business we are located at 1301 N. Detroit Street, Monday thru Friday 9-5:30 and Saturday 9-1. Most major credit cards are accepted. TRAVEL NMT: Wl* M sicspHsa «f fcrs ten, Ml has wsre upubtivii

Traster, Phyllis Jean Miller, Marian Replogle and Betty and Barbara Traster were in Warsaw, Thursday. Messrs, and Mesdames Cletus Myers, Melvin Markley and Harlan Stoller enjoyed an evening at bridge playing at the M.D. Chatten home last week. Mr. and Mrs. Pell Clayton, who have been in the state of Florida for several weeks are now visiting in various places along the eastern coast of the state. Dr. Eldon Hurd gave an address on Construction of Artificial Teeth with Luxene, at the monthly meeting of the Kosciusko County Dental society held in Warsaw, last week. Local rural mail carriers were assisted during the latter part of the week by their assistants. At times it was found almost impossible to cover certain portions on the routes.

—ls Ul

NATIONAL MANAGER — Lawrence Boyts, Syracuse, has been appointed to the position of National Manager Agricultural Products according to Wolverine Technologies, Inc., Lincoln Park, Mich. Boyts, a native of New Paris, will be responsible for all sales functions and product development in the new division. Wolverine Technologies is a major vinyl siding extruder for the home building industry. The agricultural.division will be providing new plastic products for equine, poultry, cattle and hog markets. Boyts will be continuing his efforts in the vinyl fence markets that he has worked in the past year. Prior to his involvement in vinyl fence he worked six years for Brock Manufacturer, Milford. He serviced five years as a district manager in the agricultural division before becoming the sales supervisor in the agricultural and industrial divisions. Boyts and his family will e relocating this summer to the Ann Arbor, Mich., area. High technology may help fanners A new application of high technology may eventually help farmers plot their own financial paths. The Federal Extension Service and the University of Nebraska’s Cooperative Extension Service are pairing videodiscs with computers to create a self-help program on cash flow planning. Their two-pronged goal: To help farmers get the technical assistance they need to obtain financing, and to help them make informed financial management decisions. The program will walk farmers through the cash-flow planning and lending process, from learn'ing to speak ‘loan language’ to experiencing simulated sessions with loan officers. They will also be able to prepare personal cashflow plans which include all the financial information farmers should have before setting foot in a loan office.