The Mail-Journal, Volume 26, Number 25, Milford, Kosciusko County, 5 August 1987 — Page 11

Summer

> 998^^9' ~ As. 9 II K>< 9 I ■( 9B ** 1 r Jgtf K' / yMMfIUMT ff 1 . r. A i|||| ‘99v ''* ;? ™ H 9Bg ■m?»> ( ?~ «<Xx"„ ,r *' '»t>.r«,» a-,,- A^S?3' , A>x^3 ! <» »s **-;.\ BIKING SAFETY — Bike riding can be fun but only when safety rules are followed. Terry Waggoner, Goshen, pictured above, makes sure his 13-month-old daughter, Felicia, is safe in the bugger before riding. The bugger is recognized by most bike shop dealers as the safest way to transport children on bicycles. (Photo by Mark Weinstein)

Biking is popular

There are many ways to exercise. It's nearly impossible, though, to attempt to figure out the different styles of exercise. The most obvious forms — running, aerobic dance, athletic event competition, and walking — are losing the popularity battle. Meanwhile, an old form —biking— has resurfaced and is raising in popularity What makes this exercise format so enjoyable is the little pain that is involved. Oh there’s pain, especially when beginning the exercise. But biking pain pales in comparison to that experienced by a runner. When running, especially several miles a week, the individual’s knees take a beating. The constant pressure absorbed by the knees is devastating. Running can be good for individuals, but biking has the same benefits, only less pain. Biking is smooth, always a constant rhythm in motion. It’s fast, moving at higher rates of speed than any of the other forms of exercise. Once a biker gets in shape — legs, arms, and breathing — there’s little pain. Perhaps the only part of the body that could hurt is what you sit on. Still, that can be remedied. Special shorts are available at many bike dealers across the country. The shorts give extra padding where it is most needed. Biking is not only good exer-

Live so that when you tell someone you are a Christian, it confirms their suspicions instead of surprising them. We Invite You To Join Us For 1 j 9| Worship This Week < < 9:00 A.M. — Sunday Morninq .j-, ■ Bible School 10:00 A.M.— Sunday Morning Worship 7:00 P.M.—Wednesday Evening s ,uc *y Dale Kuhns If You Need Transportation, Call Brian Wileax MILFORD CHRISTIAN SCHOOL opens August 24. Students come for their first day August 25. It is not too late to register. For more information, call 658-9151. CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF MILFORD Fourth & Henry Streets 658-9151 -> MILFORD

cise, it also benefits the family unit. Not many families run together — from father to little daughter. But many families ride bikes together, sharing the moment with each other. Even families with infants can ride bikes, provided proper equipment is used. “I personally like to bike,” said Dr. Terry Waggoner, Goshen. “I ride as often as I can. This type of riding is for exercise.” But Waggoner’s second riding style is recreational. He, his wife Theresa and one-year-old daughter Felicia, ride as a family unit. The young daughter rides in a bugger. The two-wheel bugger gives small children a safer ride than a’bike seat, strapped above the rear wheel of a bicycle. Children are strapped in by two safety belts, limiting the chances for injury. For further protection, helmets are suggested —for children and adults. “This is much safer than a bike seat for children,” insisted Waggoner, the brother of a bike shop owner. “If the adult bike falls, the child falls. With a bugger, a child will not fall to the pavement.” Safety is very important in biking. Any safety precaution available should be taken advantage of. Biking safety includes wearing helmets, gloves, pant straps — keeping pants out of the wheel sprocket, and keeping

bikes in top form. For additional biking information, contact your nearest bike shop dealer.* , / Biking can b& verfenjoyable and profitable to individuals willing to pursue this avenue of exercise. It’s a fast, yet effective way to exercise. Poison proof your home Poison proof your homes — put all harmful cleaners and insect repellents where children can’t reach them. Keep such products in original containers. Add flour to hamburger To help hamburgers stick together when frying, add a little flour. MF*YOU WANT’TO RETAIN 1 * HOMETOWN MIDDLE SCHOOLS < \ ATTEND ! ; SCHOOL BOARD MEETING < i TUESDAY, AUG. 11, 1987 < ► 7:00 P.M. < ’ Save our kids, commun- 1 ► ities and taxes. < Sign a petition before you ’ * go. Coll 658-4235 after 7:00 p.m. < if you hove not had access to * a petition.

Schedule of events for Village Art Festival

To celebrate 25 years of arts, crafts, music, and dance, which have been enjoyed by nearly a million people, 80 entertainers and performers have been assembled to fill over 100 scheduled sets on two stages while troupes of mimes barber shop quartets, fantasy characters, troubadours and jugglers will entertain at random throughout the festival grounds during the 25th annual Village Art Festival at Amish Acres in Nappanee, Thursday through Sunday, August 6-9. As a complement to the creative expression of the artists and craftsmen in the marketplace surrounding the historic farm’s pond, which has grown in the last quarter of a century from a single lapidarist showing from the trunk of his car to this year’s record 314 participants, the summer air will be filled with the musical sounds of blue grass, old tyme, and country-rock music performed by long-time regulars including LaMonte’s Gray Horse Band, and Cactus Creek on the main stage of the yellow and white big top tent where rows of straw bales come down from the barn to become benches of foot stampers and hand clappers for the fourday weekend. The jewel in the silver anniversary crown of the festival’s entertainment slate is easily the inaugural season of the Broadway classic, “Plain & Fancy,” the delightful live musical theater production about the quaint customs, dress, and language of the Amish which first opened in the Wintergarden Theater in New

Spacial prices in effect thru August 9. 1987 We reserve the right to limit quantities "9 Dependable Drug Stores I L 9 I 1 Kodak ■■ aa rigMl Sa ißti lirfTM SAVE 1.27 SAVE 78C-19 SAVE Hook’s Disc Mitchum 9 PreH Shampoo Kodak Kodacolor VR B HR Color Print Film Anti-perspirant 9 or Conditioner 35mm Color Print Film 9 •X n- —; o . 2 5.Q, Z.. 00, <o, aerosol [ [ I W-HT J £.e -150 I ■^ t ¥ Li dß markers JI KEI ■ § fejfTM LJ?mi a '4bf| iFMrjhy SWtt/l SAVE 89€ ■ SAVE | Hooiealaopropyl nietPemi PemiFrae B Crayola® Crayons or Clorox® I I Washable Markers Fresh Scent Bleach I nyarogen reroxiae ?««),. u-o, can. ■ 8 "? ula ' ° r s°"«ug»t o-saiionim markers or 64 crayons Rebate defads >1 Hoofc s. M kk°“ w< D “P* r * a I _ ] Package of 10 w " b FREE Stetro” *“—** | ' iRChU 111 IL 32 (While quantities last) l\\//] Gripper Oaia i 48 medium or Rebate detaHa at (While quantities last> Vecto ' RoN *'l dßnJw ®«*~" mS!’. juMtV&i Utavw i SAVE SAVES2«-70« S */ E 96< P]plsAVE9s« T 77 4 M Jlii s<» Jfsssssfi”* < * IlvV^IL/V^r--— | *d>sc *3smm no i?e 127 120300620 WAUm tTtll •« IwmUiiifiWi I 1 ~ 1 U«h» y R »>Jr j SeetTowßto JevaeFloral c -• ■taSfe B E*4r • \ I Sinaletxjlb I > < "TA 1 llßll9Tßr |V 38/ Wor bottle Choc, ot M.sr, | L-mrt i. »r u »/iO/87 M/100/1M indfaN.f.n, yZE'I i\ Timet. *- lyo- , » J * nd G*e*«a > Rkm • ceupen • FRCE ctMT pimbc 3U/IW/13U -X? 100 tablets or —.l-—eioonung jasmine Stock e r--« T rial ...T- iilFi .nil 1. kZ I *•*l UI »J.. RtUsß caplets Jumbo Single print Orchrdor Onentai Lotus ’ areceeaeU L. F \ l 9B^S^^9S//^o ,, o<tow*»O' 2 oo AWMeouarnmestow; | ■UWWy/ white tissues •—— — — ■■■■■■ —— — — ad B- 13 Mvem” | gjj s A ve2.oo J yff savei.oo CB* | £47 |g 699 I all’ stsr~ | | iS ssfir" r asx . ? n *?VTT?7 , "“ ! skm® ! liu i Kedm mtete detoaa m ■ I 1 Limit 2. thru 8/9/87 | umu 2. tnru B/»/8/ ■ - a/g/87 I LZLTT a _ ___ ___ __ J_ WBIL— I JfcU Lry 2 rh, uS /a/«7 | | IjMBB I KyfawwaMttt Kinde 'TcLitid ' / '"‘crocomputer. haa already helped us ww_ am m • 7 S ’ n* ‘ ,oow ’ yowr nam< Oo 1 1 » or Advance discount tickets are 300 at Hook s pmecnptSi and’NHpa^iw. do it all tor leas with a *2 discount on up to 4 admissions PKMg. IMW H. ma aeuwmnt pa. .nd a.Kounl. oe lodg.ng, ,n sh. ™ «"• StM. Far COTICWU «My Hook, ■fc w kK-owckly M «xur««v «* «** • Swrnea 7 IM , Owcoam .i. aMM .1 a>, IQP7 Drug SKx. SYRACUSE 457-4000 NORYH WEBSYER 834-4772 R.R. 1, Box 1-C, Pickwick Rd. SR 13 South Mon.-Sat. 8:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M. Mon. Thru Sat. 8:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M. Sun. 9 A.M.-7 P.M. Sun. 9 A.M.-7 P.M.

York in 1955. The play is in the midst of a scheduled 15-week run in Amish Acres new theater, The Locke Township Meeting House. Special 2 p.m. matinees will be presented each of the four festival days and evening performances Thursday through Saturday will be at 8 p.m. Additional variety will be added with square dancing by the Swinging Hoosiers, and first year fiddle tunes from The Blind Steer String Band with old-time dances called by Lynn Frederick. Each day, the Enchanted Hills Playhouse from Lake Wawasee will perform a review of their Broadway musical hits, “The Pirates of Penzance,” “Godspell,” and “Gypsie.” A trio of story tellers from Enchanted Hills’ renowned children’s theater will roam the festival’s grounds. The festival’s own children’s theater will again feature the hand puppetry and marionette shows of the Steven’s Puppets known world wide and skillfully presented by Elton and Jane Hummel. Retired Methodist minister Stephen Gubi returns with his mastery of the magic for the children’s delight. On the children’s stage in the steepled round white tent and elsewhere about, will be the Intuition Theater Company of Cincinnati, Ohio, professional mimes who entertain over 100,000 school children each year. As if part of the entertainment, the fancy food presentation for the festival is well supported by connoisseur and pedestrian tastes as* well. From the roast pork at the main food tent to the

homemade ice cream in the mint still and Amish Acres familystyle restaurant, thousands of cravings will be satisfied for another year. Schedule Os Events Thursday-Sunday, Aug. 6-9, 10-8, Sunday 10-5 — Artist Marketplace, popular voting all day, spaces lighted; Amish Acres gift shops, bakery, meat market, fudgery, and refreshment cabin 10-7 — Amish Acres house tour, Amish buggy rides 10- — Free parking lot shuttle. Red Cross mobile unit 11- — Amish Acres familystyle restaurant, threshers dinner only 11-7 — Free shuttle between Amish Acres, Pletchers, The House Across The Street and downtown. Entertainment tent-ET, children’s stage-CS, greeting bam-GB, festival grounds-FG, competition tent-CT, gazebo-G Entertainers At Random Daily — Folksongs & Foolers FG; the Story Peddlers FG; Raggedy Ann and Andy FG; Miss Piggy and Kermit the Frog FG; mimes FG; juggler FG Thursday-Friday PM, Saturday, Sunday — Barbershop quartets FG, G Thursday 9 — Marketplace registration 9:30 — Judging, competition tent, closed to the public 11,1:15, 5:45 — Blind Steer String Band ET 11:30, 3:15, 6:15 — Marionettes CS 11:45, 3:30, 7:15 — Cactus Creek, ET 12:15; 2:30, 5:30 - Stephen Gubi, magician CS

Wed., August 5,1987 — THE MAIL-JOURNAL

12:30, 5, 6:30 — LaMonte’s Gray Horse Band ET 1 — Story Peddler CS 1:45,4:45,7 — Hand puppets CS 2 — Style show, Lee Holdeman, piano ET 2 — Plain & Fancy matinee GB 2:45 — Enchanted Hills Playhouse ET 4 — Folksongs and Follery CS 4:15 — Intuition Theater Company ET 8 — Plain & Fancy musical play GB 8 — Intuition Theater Company ET Friday 11, 1:15, 5:45 — LaMonte’s Gray Horse Band ET 11:30, 3:15, 6:15 — Marionettes CS 11:45, 5, 7:15 — Cactus Creek Et 12:15, 2:30, 5:30 - Stephen Gubi, magician CS 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 - Blind Steer String Band ET - -1 — Story Peddler CS <— 1:45, 4:45, 7:30 — Hand puppets CS 2 — Style show, Lee Holdeman, piano ET 2 — Plain & Fancy matinee BG 2:45 — Enchanted Hills Playhouse ET 4:15 — Intuition Theater Company ET 8 — Plain & Fancy musical play GB 8 — Square dance, Blind Steer String Band, Lynn Frederick, caller ET Saturday 11, 1:15, 5:45 — LaMonte’s Gray Horse Band ET 11,3,6:15 — Marionettes CS 11:45, 2:15, 5:30 — Stephen Gubi, magician CS

11:45, 3:30, 6:30 - Blind Steer String Band Et 12:30, 5, 7:15 - Cactus Creek ET 12:30, 4:45, 7 — Hand puppets cs 1:15-TheStory Peddler CS 2 — Style show, Lee Holdeman, piano ET 2 — Plain & Fancy matinee GB 2:45 — Enchanted Hills Playhouse ET 3:45 — Folksongs & Follery CS 4:15 — Swinging Hoosier square dancers ET 8 — Plain & Fancy musical play GB 8 — Square dance, Blind Steer String Band, Lynn Frederick, caller Et Sunday 8:30 — Church service ET 11, 1:15, 3:30 - LaMonte’s Gray Horse Band ET 11,3,5:45 — Marionettes CS 11:45, 4:15, 5:45 - Cactus Creek ET 11:45, 5 — Stephen Gubi, magician CS 12:30 — Blind Steer String BandET 12:30,4:45 — Hand puppets CS 2 ~ Style show, Lee Holdeman piano ET 2 — Plain & Fancy matinee GB 2:45 - Enchanted Hills Playhouse ET 3 — Popular awards announced G 4:30 — Visitors’ prize drawing G 5 — Intuition Theater Company ET Schedule subject to change without notice.

11