culver-citizen-1966
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THE CULVER CITIZEN<br />
ON LAKE MAXINKUCKEE • INDIANA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL LAKE<br />
72ND YEAR, NO. 30 CULVER, INDIANA, THURSDAY, JULY 28, <strong>1966</strong> TEN CENTS<br />
Philip Shields, Rose II Busari,<br />
Former Culm | Lifetime Resident,<br />
Hies Bies<br />
PHILIP L. SHIELDS<br />
Philip Li Shields, age 35, of<br />
149 Terrace Drive, DeKalb. 111.,<br />
a former Culver resident, died<br />
Sunday, July 24, in DeKalb Publie<br />
Hospital where he had been a<br />
patient for about 3 0 days.<br />
Phil, as he was known to his<br />
many Culver frjend3, wa3 born<br />
Feb. 25, 1931, in Crawfordsville,<br />
Ind., to Air. and Mrs. Lee J.<br />
Shields. He was married May 17,<br />
1952, at Crawfordsville to Phyllis<br />
Beck, who survives.<br />
Mr. Shields graduated f r 0 m<br />
^fSwfcTdsville High School in<br />
194S, and Indiana Slate University<br />
in 1953. He received lis<br />
•Masters Degree from Indiana<br />
State in 1958 and was studying j<br />
for his Doctorate at Michigan '<br />
State University. He taught at<br />
Culver High School from 1953 to<br />
1959, and was Coordinator of<br />
Student Financial Aids ait Northern<br />
Illinois University at DeKalb<br />
at the time of his death.<br />
Being active in local, organizations,<br />
Phil was probably bes.<br />
known here for his love of music,<br />
and hfa dedication to his teaching<br />
in this field, as well as the<br />
formation of the popular musical<br />
group, the Culver Choraleers.<br />
Surviving with his wife, Phyllis,<br />
are a daughter, Kimberly<br />
Jean, and a son, James, both at<br />
home; his parents, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Lee J. Shields of Crawfordsville;<br />
and a sister, Mrs. J. R. Whitting<br />
of Madison, Wis.<br />
Mr. Shields was a member cf<br />
the First Methodist Church at De<br />
Kalb where funeral services were<br />
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday, July<br />
27, with Rev. Robert Crocker,<br />
pastor of the church, officiating.<br />
Burial was made in the Fairview<br />
Cemetery at DeKalb. The Ronan<br />
Birch Mortuary, 310 Oak St., De<br />
Kalb, was in charge of arrangements.<br />
Subscribe To The Citizen — A<br />
GOOD newspaper in a GOOD town<br />
I N D I A N A<br />
vV,,<br />
Miss Rose M. Busart, 9 3-yearold<br />
lifetime Culver resident who<br />
lived at 619 Williams Street, died<br />
at 5:30 p.m. Monday, July 25,<br />
at St. Joserh Hospital in Logansport<br />
following an illness of seven<br />
months.<br />
Born July 3. 1S73, in Culver to<br />
Joseph and Mary Walle Busart,<br />
Miss Busart was a member of St.<br />
Mary's of the Lake CaChclic<br />
Church.<br />
Survivors include several nieces<br />
and nephews and a brother-inlaw.<br />
Hiram J. Messersmith of<br />
Culver.<br />
The funeral mass will be held<br />
at 10 a.m. today, Thursday, July<br />
28, at St. Mary's of the Lake<br />
Catholic Church with Father Joseph<br />
A. Lenk, pastor, officiating.<br />
Burial will follow in St. Ann's<br />
Cemetery in Monterey.<br />
The Easiterday-Bonlne Funeral<br />
Home, Main and Lake Shore, Culver,<br />
was in charge of arrangements<br />
where the rosary was recited<br />
at 8:30 p.m. yesterday,<br />
Wednesday, July 2 7,<br />
13-Year-0ld<br />
Asphyxiated In<br />
akq Maxinkuckee<br />
Dennis A. Stnrbuck, age 13,<br />
who was a summer student at<br />
the Divine Heart Seminary nt<br />
Donaldson, Ind.. was found dead<br />
at 4:45 p.m. Monday, July 25,<br />
when pulled from the waters rf<br />
Lake Maxinkuckee f r o m about<br />
15 feet out from the pier in front<br />
of the Beach Lodge in the Culver<br />
Town Park. Death was due to asphyxiation<br />
from I he water mask<br />
he was wearing.<br />
Dennis was one of a group of<br />
youths who came lo the Culver<br />
Beach to Eipend t h e afternoon,<br />
bringing their own life guard and<br />
employing t. h e "buddy" syrtem<br />
in swimming.<br />
The son of Harold J. and Rita<br />
D. Starb'uck, Dennis lived with<br />
his family at Route 1, 30th Avenue,<br />
Bangor, Mich.<br />
The body was taken Monday<br />
night from Culver's Ensterday-<br />
Bcr.ine Funeral Home to the Mc-<br />
Kane Funeral Home in Bangor,<br />
Mich., where services and burial<br />
are scheduled for today, Thursday,<br />
July 28.<br />
Final Concert Of<br />
CHS Bands Is<br />
Friday, July 29<br />
The final Culver High School<br />
Band Concert of the current summer<br />
season will be held Friday<br />
evening, July 29, at 7 p.m. i-n the<br />
Culver Town Park.<br />
Corky Overmyer, student director,<br />
will lead the band in the<br />
playing of "Blue Tango."<br />
The Junior Band will also perform,<br />
offering their rendition of<br />
"Tuotl Fluti," featuring the flute<br />
section composed of Kris Tanner,<br />
Mary Jo Fishback, and Mary-<br />
Alice Zehner.<br />
The High School Band will feature<br />
"Highlights from The Music<br />
Man"; "Man of Geld Overture,"<br />
by Clarence Hurrell; and "Italian<br />
Festival," by Glenn Osser.<br />
Mr. Schoettinger, direct o r,<br />
wishes to thank ail who have alttended<br />
the past concerts and<br />
urges that everyone support the<br />
bands in their final concert.<br />
ALLAN W. ESTEY<br />
FORT RILEY, KAN. — Army Cadet Alton W. Estey, son of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Melvyn W. Estey, Culver Military Academy, Culver, operates<br />
a field telephone at Fort Riley, Kan. He is undergoing six weeks<br />
Reserve Officer Training Corps summer training.<br />
He is receiving instruction in imlliltary skills which will qualify<br />
him for acceptance as a commissioned officer in the Army Reserves<br />
upen graduation from school.<br />
His training includes weapons handling, leadership, small unit<br />
tactics and couniterguerrllla warfare. Instruction in logistics, exercise<br />
of command and Army administrative procedures are also part of<br />
the program.<br />
The summer encampment is scheduled to end Aug. 6.<br />
Cadet<br />
Lansing.<br />
Estey is a student at Michigan State University in East<br />
uneral Serraes<br />
rid I<br />
Irs. F<br />
y<br />
Bl<br />
MRS. FLETCHER STRANG<br />
Mrs. Fletcher T. (Elwyn)<br />
Sprang, 76, of Pharr, Texas, formerly<br />
of Culver, died at 5:30<br />
p.m. on Saturday, July 23, at the<br />
Parkview Hospital, Plymouth,<br />
where she had been a patient for<br />
the past 10 diays.<br />
Mrs. Strang was born on May<br />
22, 1890, at Milford Junction,<br />
Ind. to Walter and Love (Clifford)<br />
Franklin. She was married<br />
to Fletcher T. Strang on December<br />
23, 1908, ait Nappanee, Ind.,<br />
and the couple came to Culver in<br />
1913. Mr. Strang was the Culver<br />
Postmaster until his retirement<br />
in 1956, having held that position<br />
for 22 years. Following his retirement,<br />
the couple moved to<br />
Pharr, Texas, where Mr. Strang<br />
preceded her in death on March<br />
10, 19G4. Mrs. Strang was la<br />
member of the Culver Methodist<br />
Church, and the Emily Jane Culver<br />
Chapter, Order of Eastern<br />
Star. ' ,<br />
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.<br />
Robert (Louise) Ott, of Cirtver,<br />
a son, Fletcher F. Strang, of<br />
Denver, Colo., four grandsons<br />
and one great-granddaughter.<br />
C.M.A. Presents<br />
"lark Of The<br />
Moon" Friday<br />
Adults and students will join<br />
the oadt for the play "Dark of<br />
the Moon" when it is given at S<br />
li.in. Friday, July 29, at Culver<br />
Military Academy.<br />
Director Patrick Henry will<br />
utilize faculty and adults from<br />
the Culver community as well as<br />
students enrolled in the current<br />
session of t h e Culver Summer<br />
Schools. The production will be<br />
given in the Eugene C. Eppley<br />
Auditorium and is open to the<br />
public at no admission charge.<br />
"Dark of the Moon" was written<br />
by Howard Richardson and<br />
William Berney and deals with<br />
the story of a witch boy who falls<br />
in love with a human. The witch<br />
boy tries to become a human in<br />
order to fulfill his love for "Barbara<br />
Allen," and the play tells of<br />
their love and eventual parting.<br />
Henry has selected several<br />
guest artists for some of the<br />
more mature roles. They will be:<br />
Richard Gimbel, Charlotte<br />
Walker, Lt. Col. W. B. Scruggs,<br />
Marilyn Howard, Arthur Hughes,<br />
Harry Setzler, Ted Radakovic,<br />
Heather Teichmann and William<br />
Zimmerman.<br />
Summer School students who<br />
have major roles are:<br />
Cindy Han nan, Muneie, Ind.;<br />
Sally Cooper, North brook, 111.;<br />
Lynn Pierce, Culver, Ind.; Breck<br />
Jones, Louisville, Ky.; Mary Beth<br />
Ives, Culver, Ind.; Connie Blackwood,<br />
Beaver Falls, Pa.; Sara<br />
Hoesel, Culver, Ind.; William<br />
Spaulding, Paducah, Ky.; and<br />
Jeff Karas, Dayton, Ohio.<br />
Funeral services were held at<br />
2 p.m. on Tuesday, July 26, at<br />
the new location of the Bas'terday-<br />
Bo nine Funeral Home, with<br />
Rev. Carl Q. Baker, pastor of the<br />
Culver Methodist Church, officiating.<br />
Burial followed in the<br />
Culver (Masonic Cemetery.<br />
The Emily Jane Culver Chapter,<br />
Order of Eastern Star, held<br />
memorial services at 7:30 p.m.<br />
on Monday, July 25, at the Funeral<br />
home.<br />
W. G. Roberts<br />
Leaves $189,6<br />
Estate To CMA<br />
A bequeK of $180,654 has<br />
been made to Culver Military<br />
Academy frcm the estate of Walter<br />
G. Roberts, a Culver graduate<br />
and a member of the faculty from<br />
1936 until his death April 9.<br />
Roberts, assistant dean, left<br />
virtually all of his eitote to Culver<br />
in his will. This included<br />
cash, securities, and personal<br />
property valued at $155,654 and<br />
his home adjacent to the campus<br />
valued at $25,000.<br />
The $155,654, plus .$6,2 49 received<br />
in 21 gifts in memory of<br />
Dean Roberts from alumni, parents,<br />
and student organizations,<br />
will he placed in an endowed<br />
Walter G. Roberts Memorial<br />
Scholarship Fund, it was announced<br />
by Academy Superintendent<br />
Major General Delmar T.<br />
Spivey.<br />
The house left to the Academy<br />
is being utilized for faculty<br />
housing.<br />
The first recipients of the Roberts<br />
Memorial Scholarship will be<br />
selected this summer for entrance<br />
at Culver in September, according<br />
to General Sipivey. It is anticipated<br />
income from the fund will permit<br />
a total of four Roberts Scholars<br />
to be enrolled each school<br />
year when the program is fully<br />
implemented, Ceneral Spivey<br />
said.'<br />
The Roberts bequest will permit<br />
further improvement in a<br />
schoiarship program thai is<br />
among the largest in independent<br />
secondary school education. In<br />
the la?t academic year 188 of the<br />
SSS Culver Students in attendance<br />
received scholarship aid totaling<br />
$238,052. Income from<br />
this program is derived from<br />
Academy endowed funds and<br />
from gifts of alumni, parents, and<br />
friends.<br />
"Dean Robert dedicated his<br />
life to Culver and the boys it<br />
serves," General Spivey said.<br />
"During his lifetime, he worked<br />
long hours to instruct and counsel<br />
students. He also made many<br />
gifts — all anonymously — for<br />
scholarships and for the purchase<br />
of equipment for which funds<br />
were not available. It is typical of<br />
this great teacher and counse-ler<br />
that he would provide for Culver<br />
and its students after his<br />
death."<br />
Dean Roberts was graduated<br />
from Culver in 19 32 and from<br />
Yale University in 1936. He did<br />
graduate work at Harvard and<br />
Indiana universities and Middlebury<br />
College. In addition to his<br />
duties as an assistant dean, he<br />
taught English, was a crew<br />
coach, and was chairman of the<br />
library committee. Dean Roberts,<br />
51, died April 9 following a heart<br />
attack.<br />
Marshall County<br />
4-H Fair To Run<br />
August 1 to 6<br />
The 28th Marshall County 4-H<br />
Fair will open next week at the<br />
fairgrounds in Argos. The always-anticipated<br />
event will get<br />
underway on Monday, Aug. 1,<br />
with the Volunteer Firemen's<br />
Waiterball meet at 5:30 p.m.,<br />
wi'Bh the rides a n d concessions<br />
©pernr- the same evening.<br />
plan now to attend the<br />
fair, one day, one evening, or<br />
each day and each evening —<br />
there will always be plenty of<br />
fun, excitement, and food to fill<br />
the bill! Mark August 1-6 on<br />
your calendar of events and get<br />
set for THE FAIR.
P;iK
Society CHURCH EVENTS<br />
CLUB NEWS<br />
oJtJta. M AXIN KUCKEE AREA<br />
Please Phone Or Deliver All Items Direct To<br />
The Citizen — 842-3377<br />
DEADLINE: 4 P.M. Tuesday of Each Week<br />
Miss Carol Louise Overmyer And Wayne L. Smith<br />
Are Married In Burr Oak Church of Cod Ceremony<br />
MHS. LESLIE E. SMITH<br />
Miss Carol Louise Overmyer,<br />
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert<br />
Overmyer, Route 2, Culver, -became<br />
the bride of Leslie Eugene<br />
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Wayne L. Smith, Route 2, Zionsville,<br />
Ind., at 3 o'clock Saturday<br />
afternoon, July 23, at the Burr<br />
Oak Church of God.<br />
Rev. Robert Anderson, pastor<br />
of the Christian Church at Zionsville,<br />
officiated at the double ring<br />
ceremony before the altar which<br />
was decorated with seven-branch<br />
candelabra, palms, and baskets of<br />
white gladioli. White satin bows<br />
marked the pews.<br />
Paul White of Culver, organist,<br />
played the nuptial music and<br />
accompanied Mrs. Jean Banks,<br />
who sang, "One Hand, One<br />
Heart," "With This Ring," "At<br />
Dawning," and "Wedding Prayer."<br />
The bride was atltired in a<br />
white silk-face Peau de Solie<br />
gown with Alencon lace accents,<br />
styled with a fitted bodice featuring<br />
a baiteau sculptured<br />
neckline and 1 a c e motifs. The<br />
long sleeves came to bridal points<br />
and a controlled skirt ended in a<br />
chapel train. Her imported silk illusion<br />
veil was held by a crown<br />
of white silk organza petals, and<br />
she carried a cascade bouquet of<br />
•white roses, white etephamotds<br />
and ivy.<br />
Miss Judy Devonshire of Sumner,<br />
111., was maid of honor and<br />
wore a gown of maise chiffon.<br />
The floor-length skirt ended in a<br />
full back panel and Dior sleeves<br />
and an empire waistline accented<br />
the Muted bodice. Bridesmaids,<br />
S'heryl Hohniau and Barbara<br />
Overmyer, sister of the bride,<br />
wore dresses identical in style to<br />
the honor attendant except their<br />
gowns were nile green. The at<br />
tendants carried bouquets of yellow<br />
roses, white daisies, and ivy.<br />
Miss Cindy Starkey of Indianapolis,<br />
cousin of the bridegroom, as<br />
flower girl was attired in maise<br />
chiffon matching in style the<br />
gowns of the other attendants.<br />
Ring bearer was Doug Starkey of<br />
Indianapolis, cousin of the bridegroom.<br />
Ronald Zeller of Shelbyville,<br />
served as best man; Jim Smith,<br />
brother of the bridegroom, and<br />
David Smitih of Lebanon, were<br />
groomsmen; and ushers were<br />
Tom Smith of Zionsville, cousin<br />
of the bridegroom, and Victor<br />
Staton of Argos, cousin of the<br />
bride. Candle lighters were Brent<br />
Smith, brother of the bridegroom,<br />
and Jay Anderson.<br />
For her daughter's wedding,<br />
Mrs. Overmyer chose a blue lace<br />
dress with white accessories, and<br />
wore a corsage of gardenias and<br />
yellow rosettes. The bridegroom's<br />
mother was attired in a brocade<br />
suit with white accessories and<br />
wore a coirsage of gardenias and<br />
pink rosettes.<br />
Following the wedding a reception<br />
for 250 guests was held<br />
at the Ea-gle Lodge. A six-tier<br />
wedding cake centered the table<br />
and assisting with the serving<br />
were Mrs. Burton Feece, of<br />
Plymouth, cousin of the bride;<br />
Mrs. Stanley Reinholt of Letters<br />
Ford, Mifs Bonnie Good, Mrs.<br />
Mary Hatten, Mrs. Ferris Zechiel,<br />
and Mrs. Lucille Bradley, all of<br />
Culver. Miss Beverly Donovan<br />
presided at the guest register<br />
and Miss Janice Neidlinger and<br />
Miiss Martha McAllister were in<br />
charge of the gifts. Guests attending<br />
were from South Bend,<br />
Plymouth, Argos, Shelbyville,<br />
Lebanon, Zionsville. Indianapolis,<br />
Fort Wayne, Ind.; and Illinois,<br />
WHITEMAN & SON LANDSCAPING<br />
FREE ESTIMATES ON<br />
A Single Plant or<br />
A Complete Planting<br />
PLYMOUTH Ph. 936-7114 or 936-2828<br />
12tfn<br />
Ohio and Kentucky.<br />
Following a wedding trip to 1<br />
Michigan the cmrple will reside<br />
in West Lafayette. For going<br />
away the bride chose a beige<br />
dress with matching accessories<br />
and w
age 4 — The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, !!>««<br />
-,V»V l<br />
t<br />
, l<br />
W FOR THE WEEK<br />
hursday, July 21<br />
5:00 p.m.—American Legion picnic at W. A. Fleet Post Grounds.<br />
8:00 p.m.—Culver Home Demonstration Club Family Night at<br />
Burr Oak Church of God.<br />
ririay, July 2!)—<br />
2:00 p.m.—Loyal Women's Class of Grace Church will meet in the<br />
social rooms,<br />
ionday, August 1 —<br />
7:00 p.m.—Order of Rainbow For Girls meet in Masonic Hall.<br />
7:30 p.m.—School Board of Culver Community Schools Corporation<br />
meets in superintendent's office at 110 South<br />
Main Street.<br />
8:00 p.m.—V.F.W. Ladies Auxiliary meeting at Bank Auditorium.<br />
Wednesday, August 3—<br />
12:30 to 8 p.m.—Manitou Garden Club Flower Show at First Baptist<br />
Church, Rochester.<br />
8:00 p.m.—American Legion Auxiliary will meet at the Legion<br />
Home.<br />
8:00 p.m.—Maxinkuckee Fish and Game Club meeting in Ralph<br />
Neidlinger's Club House.<br />
Irs. Ellen Poppe Plans<br />
uly 2*> Picnic For<br />
Irea Rebekah Members<br />
Mrs. Ellen Poppe, District Deputy<br />
President of Rebekah District<br />
13., will entertain with an eveilng<br />
picnic in the Culver Town<br />
*ark on Friday, July 29, scheduled<br />
for 6:30 p.m.<br />
A carry-in supper will be en<br />
joyed in the West Pavilion, with<br />
the hostess furnishing the meat,<br />
beverage, and entertainment, and<br />
a boat ride will end the evening's<br />
outine.<br />
Memoers are asked to bring a<br />
covered dish and their own table<br />
service.<br />
§-§•§<br />
It Pays To Advertise<br />
Miss Linda Lou Banks Becomes<br />
Bride of Adolph W. Massa<br />
St. Mary's of the Lake Catholic<br />
Church, Culver, was the scene<br />
of the wedding at 1 p.m. on Saturday,<br />
July 16, which united in<br />
marriage Miss Linda Lou Banks<br />
and Adolph W. Massa.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Banks,<br />
Route 2, Culveir, are parents of<br />
the bride and Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Adolph 'Massa of Central Valley,<br />
Calif., former Culver residents,<br />
are parents of the bridegroom.<br />
Rev. Joseph A. Lenk, pastor of<br />
the church, officiated at the<br />
double ring ceremony. Mirs. Rose<br />
Strang, organist, played the nuptial<br />
music and accompanied John<br />
Stamm, vocalist.<br />
Given in marriage by her father,<br />
the bride wias atltlired in a<br />
sheath gown of silk organza featuring<br />
a lace scalloped neckline.<br />
The bodice and bell shaped<br />
sleeves were trimmed with reembroldeired<br />
alencon lace w i t h<br />
tiny seed pearls. The detachable<br />
watteau train of silk org-anza was<br />
accented with alencon lace. She<br />
carried a round'colonial bouquet<br />
of white daisies.<br />
Miss Dee Chiado of LoganspoiU<br />
was maid of honor; Miss Kathleen<br />
Banks, sitter of the bride,<br />
was junior bridesmaid; and flower<br />
girls were Miss Margaret Massa<br />
and Miss Susan Massa, sisters<br />
of the bridegroom. They wore<br />
floor-length gowns of pink organza<br />
styed with scoop necklines and<br />
MRS. ADOLPH W. MASSA<br />
(Photo By Tom Ross, Argos)<br />
cented the hell shaped sleeves<br />
and hemlines. Their veils fell<br />
from headpieces of nylon rosebuds<br />
and petals.<br />
Charles Massa served his<br />
brother as best man and Larry<br />
Banks, brother of the bride,<br />
served as groomsman. Ushers<br />
were Paul and Bill Liette.<br />
A reception for 25 0 guests was<br />
held in the church social room<br />
following the ceremony and at 4<br />
p.m. a buffet supper was served<br />
to 100 relatives and friends.<br />
Assisting were the Miss Peggy<br />
and Karen Glass of Plymouth<br />
and Miss Kathleen Liette of Culver.<br />
Miss Barbara Glass of Plymouth<br />
was in charge of the guest<br />
book and gifts were in charge of<br />
Mrs. Hazel Glass of Plymouth,<br />
Mrs. Eleanor Liette and Mrs.<br />
Randal Banks, both of Culver.<br />
As the couple left for Georgia<br />
where they will reside, the bride<br />
wore a three-piece cranberry and<br />
white suit with matching accessories.<br />
The bride graduated from Culver<br />
High School and Indiana<br />
Sltate University and taught in<br />
the L o g a n s p o r t Community<br />
Schools. The bridegroom, a graduate<br />
of Culver Military Academy<br />
and Purdue University School of<br />
Electrical Engineering, will serve<br />
as second lieutenant in the Army<br />
and will be stationed in Georgia<br />
fr»r twn mrvTiitVis<br />
BLUE RIBBON CHOICE<br />
su<br />
Steak Sale<br />
Round Steak<br />
Boneless<br />
Rump Roast lb. 89*<br />
Chunk<br />
Bologna lb. 59*<br />
Barbecue Sat. Only<br />
Chickens ea. S1.39<br />
Fresh<br />
Hamburger 3 lbs. SI<br />
Borden's<br />
Chocolate Drink<br />
SEALTEST<br />
Ice N liiK<br />
FOLGER'S — 10-OZ. INSTANT<br />
ALLSWEET<br />
Store Hours:<br />
Mon., Tues., Wed.<br />
8:00 to 6:00<br />
Thurs. 8:00 to 8:00<br />
Fri. & Set. 8:00 to 9:00<br />
New Red<br />
Potatoes 10-lbs. 59*<br />
Fresh<br />
Carrots 2 lbs. 29*<br />
Green<br />
Peppers 2 for 19*<br />
Fresh<br />
Pears 4 for 19*<br />
V?. GAL. Fresh<br />
Limes 6 for 2Sc<br />
Gd<br />
- ¥¥c<br />
FROZEN DOLE PINEAPPLE OR 6-OZ. CANS<br />
NEA<br />
ORANGE 5 FO,<br />
WHITE — REG. 24c LOAVES<br />
RED LABEL NUT<br />
BUTTE<br />
with $3.00 order
FRIDAY, JULY 29<br />
Mrs. Shirley G. Baker<br />
Dick Hoesel<br />
#1 if ford Bean Jr.<br />
Kenneth Foss<br />
SATURDAY, JULY 30<br />
Donald Miller<br />
Norma Jean Davis<br />
Charles Arthur Melangiton<br />
Rosemary Schall<br />
SUNDAY, JULY 31<br />
Robert Lindvall<br />
Cora Riggens<br />
MONDAY, AUGUST 1<br />
Mrs. Lula Henderson<br />
Larry Scheuer<br />
Walter A. Wise<br />
Sharon Lindvall Witt<br />
Richard Overmyer<br />
Henry Harrison Culver (1840)<br />
TUESDAY, AUGUST 2<br />
Theodore L. Locke<br />
Karl Joseph Walther<br />
Frank Sheppard<br />
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3<br />
Stephanie Dunn<br />
M. R. Cromley<br />
THURSDAY, AUGUST 4<br />
Mrs. Ellis Licht<br />
Mrs. Lawrence Lindvall Sr.<br />
Joanne Walther<br />
Francis Fishburn<br />
Shirli Ann Chisholm<br />
The Eugene Thomases<br />
Host Sunday Cookout<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Thomas<br />
and children were hosts Sunday<br />
for a cookout at their home.<br />
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Bud<br />
Buchanan and children and Mrs.<br />
Ed Buchanan of Waynesville,<br />
N.C.; and Mr. and Mrs. Vern Mckee<br />
and daughters, M r s. Trula<br />
McKee, and Mrs. Mary Powers,<br />
all of Culver.<br />
Afternoon callers were Mr. and<br />
Mrs. William Fisher, Sr., of Bremen,<br />
and Mr. and Mrs. Leslter<br />
McKee of Culver.<br />
§-§-§<br />
Loyal Women's Class<br />
To Meet July 20<br />
The Loyal Women's Class of<br />
the Grace United Church will<br />
meet in the social rooms of the<br />
church at 2 p.m. on Friday, Aug.<br />
20.<br />
Hostesses for the event will be<br />
Leetha Shearer and Pearl Geiselman.<br />
§-S-§<br />
Doctor: "Say 'Ah-h-hV<br />
Patient: "I didn't come for an<br />
examination. I came to pay my<br />
bill."<br />
Doctor: "Ah-h-h!"<br />
Hubby — It's queer, but the<br />
biggest idiots seem to marry the<br />
prettiest women.<br />
Wife — Oh, now, you're trying<br />
to flatter me.<br />
Hi<br />
LOCALS<br />
flip®<br />
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.<br />
Lulu Henderson were Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Max Fechner and daughter,<br />
Karen of Griffith, Mrs. Wayne<br />
Ready and daughter. Sherry of<br />
Hammond and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth<br />
Reininga of Momence, 111.<br />
Mrs. Chester W. Cleveland of<br />
East Shore Drive had as her<br />
weekend houseguests, Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Frederick C. Albersbardt of<br />
Indianapolis. Mrs. Albershardt<br />
accompanied Mrs. Cleveland on<br />
her return from Indianapolis<br />
where she had been visiting Mr.<br />
and Mrs. David B. Cleveland and<br />
infant son, Christopher.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Kelly,<br />
while in California attending the<br />
funeral of the former's aunt, visited<br />
Friday evening with Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Howard Hatten and family,<br />
former Culver residents, at their<br />
home in Covina.<br />
Saturday evening supper guests<br />
of Mr. and Mrs. Vern McKee and<br />
daughters were Mr. and Mrs. Bud<br />
Buchanan and Mrs. Ed Buchanan<br />
of Waynesville, N.C., and Mrs.<br />
Trula McKee of Culver.<br />
Saturday evening callers of<br />
Mrs. Trula McKee and her<br />
houseguests from North Carolina<br />
were Mr. and Mrs. Jesse<br />
Overmyer.<br />
Mrs. Harry Johnson of Letters<br />
Ford, past District Deputy President<br />
of Rebekah District 23,<br />
and Mrs. Al Poppe, Rebekah District<br />
23 Deputy President, attended<br />
the United Nations Pilgrimage<br />
Breakfast for Youth at<br />
the Warsaw Rebekah Lodge last<br />
Friday morning.<br />
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Harold Haltten were Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Robert Staley of South<br />
Bend and Miss Linda Gibbons of<br />
Plymouth. Sunday evening guests<br />
of the Hattens were Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Robert Gibbons and family. Miss<br />
Linda Gibbons returned home<br />
with her parents.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Kicnard Vollmer<br />
and children of Mishawaka were<br />
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Al Poppe.<br />
Santa Anna<br />
By Mrs. Guy Kepler<br />
Phone Argos 892-5459<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Burkett<br />
of Richland Center and Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Ross Overmyer of Talma<br />
spent Sunday evening with Mir.<br />
and Mrs. O. C. Gibbons.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Peer and<br />
Steven and Mrs. Trella Kepler<br />
spent the weekend with Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Darrel McGriff at Brazil.<br />
Ricky Cooper of Rochester<br />
spent last week with his aunt,<br />
Miss Bessie Flagg.<br />
Miss Beverly Peer was. a Sunday<br />
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Robert Kepler and sons. Maurice<br />
Phillips of Tippecanoe was an af-<br />
Schoonover's<br />
4-H FAIR<br />
SALE<br />
NOW m PROGRESS!<br />
Come Shop and Save<br />
And More<br />
30n<br />
By Mary Whitman<br />
The "donkey game" is a party<br />
standby.<br />
No one seems to know how long<br />
youngsters have been pinning tails<br />
on donkeys at birthdays. If you're<br />
new to the game, here's how it<br />
goes. A picture of a donkey is<br />
mounted on the wall or door at<br />
the children's arm level. Paper<br />
donkey tails are provided, usually<br />
numbered 1 to 24. Each child is<br />
blindfolded, is turned around once<br />
or twice, then goes unsteadily to<br />
the picture to pin the tail. The<br />
donkey tail closest to the right<br />
position wins — but most turn<br />
up pinned to the ears, the body,<br />
or the clouds in the sky in the<br />
picture's background.<br />
Party-givers will find that variety<br />
stores now have an extra large<br />
boxed donkey game with many<br />
advantages. The picture — a softeyed<br />
Mediterranean donkey bearing<br />
flowery baskets — could become<br />
a permanent wall decoration.<br />
It's 29" x 22" in size, can be<br />
mounted on corrugated cardboard<br />
for the game, then framed to<br />
brighten the play room between<br />
birthdays.<br />
"Another bright spot — especially<br />
for those giving parties for the<br />
first time — is the booklet of<br />
games enclosed in the box,"<br />
points out game editor Mary Hilt<br />
of Whitman Publishing Company<br />
of Racine, Wis. "The donkey tails<br />
can be used for party stunts and<br />
fortunes. Each child takes a numbered<br />
tail, and the hostess reads<br />
'assignments' and futures from the<br />
book."<br />
Other games are suggested, too,<br />
for small-fry festivity. For instance,<br />
five party games can be<br />
planned £ round a pound of peanuts<br />
in llie shell. Children can<br />
play peanut carry, peanut toss,<br />
peanut blow, ret-hot peanuts and<br />
peanuts in the bag — and eat the<br />
peanuts later. "Red-hot peanuts"<br />
is a variation of musical chairs<br />
' and hot potato. Peanuts are<br />
t passed around a seated circle until<br />
the music — radio, record player<br />
or piano — stops. Peanutholders<br />
are out. The last child to<br />
stay in the circle without a peanut<br />
1<br />
wins. Rules for other games such<br />
as Who Am I, Stop Thief and<br />
Make a Break are here, too. So<br />
are tips on magic tricks.<br />
The next party could be the<br />
easiest with helps like these.<br />
ternoon caller.<br />
Mrs. Ralph Masten and Danny<br />
were Friday dinner guests of<br />
Mrs. Trella Kepler.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Kepler of<br />
Argios were Tuesday dinner<br />
guests of Mrs. Trella Kepler.<br />
Mrs. Francis Ann (Gibbons)<br />
Brown of Rochester is much improved<br />
after her automobile accident<br />
and is able to walk again.<br />
Her husband, who came home<br />
from Viet Nam to take oare of<br />
her, returned to Viet Nam last<br />
week.<br />
The W.S.C.S. met at the church<br />
Thursday afternoon.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Overmyer<br />
The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, <strong>1966</strong> — Pay<br />
and Miss Bessie Flagg of Culver<br />
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ronald<br />
Johnson and new son at Purdue<br />
University Saturday.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rose of<br />
Battle Creek, Mich., Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Stephen Savage, and Mr. and<br />
Mrs. George Babcock and Mari<br />
spent Saturday evening with Mr.<br />
and Mrs. O. C. Gibbons.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Peer accompanied<br />
Mrs. Ernest Starr to<br />
Bloomington Saturday to get her<br />
son who spent last week there.<br />
FEDERAL TAX<br />
Cash tips amounting to $20 or<br />
more a month earned while working<br />
for one employer now count<br />
towards social security. Be sure<br />
you report these tips to your employer.<br />
FEDERAL TAX<br />
Q - How can the new system<br />
duce withholding for some peo<br />
when the lowest rate is still<br />
percent?<br />
A - The new system has been<br />
signed to take the minim<br />
standard deduction into accou<br />
This was not done under the i<br />
system. Also, the new syst<br />
makes a distinction between<br />
parate and joint returns so wi<br />
holding is lower for married i<br />
payers than it is for single t<br />
payers.<br />
A baby rabbit had been pest<br />
ing its mother all day. Finally t<br />
exasperated parent replied: "Y<br />
were pulled out of a magicia:<br />
hat — now stop asking me qu<br />
tions."<br />
A Living Memorial<br />
Contributions for Research to<br />
perpetuate the memory of an<br />
associate, relative, or friend!<br />
MAIL GIFTS TO<br />
INDIANA HEART FOUNDATION<br />
615 N. Alabama St., Indianapolis<br />
Memorial Gifts Gratefully Acknowledged<br />
Through the Generosity of<br />
THE STATE EXCHANGE BANK<br />
A community service project of the<br />
I » tana Federation of Business and Professional Women<br />
tin<br />
Hats Off<br />
to<br />
Marshall<br />
County<br />
4-H'ers<br />
ARGOS<br />
FURNITURE<br />
STORE<br />
OCKIh" R RIDERS SADDLE CLUB<br />
ANNUAL<br />
HORSE SHOW<br />
Sunday July 31,<strong>1966</strong><br />
10:00 A.M. (DST) Sharp<br />
CULVER, INDIANA<br />
South edge of Culver on<br />
Old State Road 17 - Watch for Signs<br />
Shaded Area and Refreshment Booth<br />
Donations - Adults $1.00 - Children 50c<br />
30n<br />
30n
T»„j.
News Items About<br />
Our Academy<br />
Neighbors<br />
(Culled from the July<br />
Issue of the CMA Messenger,)<br />
Welcome to Kud Peece our new<br />
plumber and Frank Dominski who<br />
will be in the electrical department.<br />
. .John Wagoner and Sam<br />
Allen are helping in the Boats and<br />
Piers department for the summer<br />
months. . .Kenny Tasch will be<br />
helping John Ely and Bill Wagoner<br />
in the Motor Pool this summer<br />
. . .Other new faces around<br />
the campus are Marion Grodowski<br />
in the plumbing department and<br />
Mack Hawkins, custodian at the<br />
woodcraft Camp.<br />
Margret and Lee Jewel and<br />
family spent four delightful days<br />
in June camping out at the Warren<br />
Dunes State Park in Mu.^igan.<br />
Charlie Hartle and daughter<br />
and family, Mr. and Mrs.<br />
Charles Young, enjoyed a week's<br />
vacaton in parts of Michigan. They<br />
crossed the Mackinac Bridge, up<br />
to the locks and wound up at Cricket<br />
Lake near Kalamazoo.<br />
Jim Nenninger and family enjoyed<br />
a week's vacation in June . .<br />
.Bob and Doris Craycraft and<br />
Bobbie and Barbara left June IS<br />
for Northern Kentucky where they<br />
picked up their other daughter,<br />
Dorothy, who had spent several<br />
weeks with Bob's folks. Then on<br />
to Paw Paw Lake, Michigan and<br />
Deer Forest for a few days.<br />
Oscar Mikesell and family enjoyed<br />
a week's vacation in Kansas<br />
'City,. . .John Kerrigan, son of<br />
Mr. and Mrs. George Kerrigan, entered<br />
Tri-State College at Angola,<br />
Ind., this summer.<br />
Bill Lewis, custodian in C. T.<br />
Barracks, will spend two weeks in<br />
the Army Reserve camp in Wisconsin<br />
. . . Dale Mangun spent two<br />
weeks at Camp Grayling in Michigan<br />
with the National Guard Reserves.<br />
Norman Hunnicutt, (30 years l<br />
old) son of Delbert Hunnicutt and<br />
brother-in-law of John Plante, was<br />
killed in an automobile accident!<br />
near his home in Ora. The acci<br />
dent occurred around midnight in Fort Wayne, where Jerry was The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, !!)(!« "age 7<br />
July 5. Norman died instantly of a teaching. Ann enjoys singing<br />
broken neck.<br />
already admirably fluent, in pre home (Blawenburg, just outside<br />
(choir work), and all kinds of<br />
paration for passing medical ex Princeton, N.J.).<br />
Mrs. Clyde Manns was taken to church work, reading, bridge, and<br />
aminations in order to practice in<br />
Starke Memorial Hospital in is an enthusiastic Hoosier when it<br />
'Twas good to see Jim Miracle<br />
this country. Temporarily, they<br />
Knox, July 5 for observation and comes to basketball and other<br />
back on campus, if only for a short<br />
are making their home in Chicago<br />
treatment . . .Gus Harness carried "spectator sports." Three children<br />
few days. He brought Jimmy to<br />
with Greta (Hughes) and Ribhi<br />
out his duties like a "pro" despite i/ccupy her spare time: Jeff (!)),<br />
CMA for Naval School this sum<br />
Kalla.<br />
the fact that he had a nasty fall -.vho is in Woodcraft this summer;<br />
mer, and will be back at the end.<br />
and cut his right arm quite badly, Linda (6); Greg (2). They live in There's no sign outside which of the session to take him home to<br />
requiring several stiches.<br />
the south brick apartment on the says "Hotel", but for 5 weeks Ma Hampton, Va.<br />
News from Jack Klomp custo East Shore, downstairs south. bel Bishop's house was almost Over the Fourth of July weekdian<br />
of the swimming pool is that Their phone is S42-2020.<br />
that! The whole family — children end B.J. Crise was pleasently sur<br />
he is home after his lengthy stay<br />
and "spices" and grandchildrenprised by a visit from her mother<br />
Babs (Mrs. Robert) Kamrow<br />
at Parkview Hospital in Plymouth.<br />
were together at one point, for the and sister, from Cleveland, Mrs.<br />
claims Minot, N.D., as home,<br />
first time in 12 years. Mary Kour- M. Schilder and B.C. They had no<br />
Best wishes from all of us for a though she was born in New Jermadas<br />
and her three boys were sooner left than Col. and Mrs.<br />
speedy recovery to Bud Craft. He sey. They came to Culver from<br />
here from Alexandria, Va. (John Charles Pregaldin (USA, ret.),<br />
is recuperating at his home at 216 Dearborn, Mich. She graduated<br />
had to stay home and work at his<br />
South Ohio street here in Culver<br />
and their children, from St. Louis,<br />
from MacAllister College, St. Paul,<br />
new job with the Urban Land De<br />
and would appreciate seeing and<br />
arrived.<br />
majoring in Elementary Educavelopment);<br />
Brently Charneiski<br />
hearing from his friends.<br />
The house-guest of David White<br />
tion. For several years she taught<br />
and husband, Lou, and two child<br />
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs.<br />
during July was Allen Feely, son<br />
third and fourth grades in Waterren<br />
(young Mary is the only<br />
Len Hoffman who celebrated their ford. Romulus, and Lincoln Park.<br />
of Bob and Mary Ann Feely. Bob<br />
granddaughter) came from Olym-<br />
3 4th wedding Anniversary June Mich., and also taught in Dallas,<br />
is former Head of Horsemanship<br />
pia, Wash.; Win Fairhall and her<br />
19.<br />
while Bob was getting his MA at<br />
at CMA, but is now in the insui-<br />
husband, Lawrence, and four<br />
Sheila Strow was married June SMU. ,She likes tropical fish, cyclanc.e<br />
business and is living in New<br />
boys, and dog, TipTop, from New<br />
10 to Dr. Jeffrey Franklin Yale in ing, swimming, reading, and<br />
Castle, Ind.<br />
Rochelle, N.Y.; Nate and Gail<br />
Chicago. Dr. Yale graduated from bridge. However, Britton, aged 9<br />
Jerry and Virginia Thomas were<br />
Stroup and their two boys, from<br />
the Illinois School of Podiatry and mo. is her main hobby and occupa<br />
delighted to have as their week<br />
Petoskey, Mich.<br />
will take his bride to Oakland, tion right now. Bab's mother, Mrs.<br />
end guests in July Dr. and Mrs.<br />
Calif., where he will take a year's Frank Holbrook, from Minot. Young' Miss Barbie Griffin (ag Tom Drucker, from Ann Arber.<br />
internship. When his internship came to help them move and get ed 6) has made a real Beach Bud Dr. Ducker is a neuro-surgeon<br />
and training are finished, the settled in Culver. Because of the dy' out of her grandmother, Helen, whom the country has recently<br />
Yales will return to Ansonia, Con airlines strike she found that she during her stay here. Barbie is "engaged," so they will soon renecticut,<br />
which is the Doctor's could stay a little longer and got spending the month of July with port for duty at Walter Reed Hos<br />
home.<br />
some enjoyment from the lake as Helen and Don, having come out pital, in Bethesda, Md. Tom is a<br />
Let's meet some of the wives of<br />
added bonus. The Kamrows are in here with Helen when she return SS graduate and returned several<br />
some of the people who are begin<br />
the KK Cottage, in Al Bunner's ed from Princeton, also Barbie's (Continued on Page 8/<br />
ning a year-round stay.<br />
apartment. Their phone is S4 2-<br />
2304.<br />
Joy (Mrs. Richard) Edwards<br />
has been to Culver for five sum Bertha (Mrs. Jack) Jones has. ASSOCIATE DEGREES<br />
mers. Now Richard is joining the joined the library staff of CMA<br />
Faculty as a Counselor. They have after being the school librarian in<br />
recently come from Wabash, Ind., Penn Hills, Pa., for the last 13<br />
but originally Joy is from Elmira, years. Her husband knows Culver<br />
N.Y. She majored in music at Han well since he is the son of Marion<br />
over College, Hanover, Ind., and Jones, well-known insurance man<br />
minored in a. fellow-student nam here. Bertha and Jack have two<br />
ed Edwards! Both the Edwards children- son Jack is in college<br />
went on to Ohio University for<br />
their Masters in Education. Joy<br />
taught for a while before young<br />
and daughter Marion is in high<br />
school. Bertha's mother, Mrs.<br />
Rowe, has come with them to<br />
COlLtCt<br />
Eric Matthew, aged one, was born. make her home in Culver, too.<br />
She likes singing (along with Jack will move his insurance bus<br />
/hone 742-1354 Fori Wayne, Ind.<br />
Richard), reading, antiquing, sewiness base of<br />
ing and decorating, and the whole Culver area.<br />
operation to the<br />
More a'oout the<br />
^J~aii ^Jerm September 12<br />
family likes to camp out. They un Joneses in a later issue of the<br />
living in the duplex next door to Messenger.<br />
the Lamberts, on the Circle. Their<br />
Dean Benson and Ruth were<br />
phone number is 842-2370.<br />
proud parents June 5 when daugh<br />
Ann (Mrs. Jerry) Miller is from ter Jane graduated from Washing<br />
*<br />
*<br />
*<br />
Business Administration & Finance<br />
Secretarial Science<br />
Professional Accounting<br />
With<br />
I.B.M.<br />
Bluffton, as is Jerry, though they ton University in St. Louis. This<br />
have spent the last several y'ears summer and next year Jane will be<br />
i;i Vale on a University Fellowship<br />
working on her master of arts in<br />
teaching (English). Son Bob res<br />
30, 32, 34n<br />
s<br />
ceived his master of business adminstration<br />
degree with high distinction<br />
from Harvard Graduate<br />
School June 1 li.<br />
Kermit (Bud) Zieg, Jr., received<br />
his master's degree in business<br />
from Ohio State in June. He and<br />
his charming bride, Suzanne, are<br />
living in Chicago now, where Kermit<br />
is putting to good use in a<br />
bank all that he learned at school.<br />
LUCK!<br />
SHALL COUNTY<br />
'ers . • 6$ • •. .... «<br />
Russell D. Oliver II, and his<br />
wife, Carol, received their B.A. degrees<br />
from East Carolina College,<br />
Greenville, N.C., Sunday, May 22.<br />
Rusty majored in geography and<br />
for the past year has been a trainee<br />
with the Greenville Redevelopment<br />
Commission. As of June 1<br />
he began work with the Urban Renewal<br />
and Redevelopment Commission<br />
in Durham, N.C. Carol<br />
majored in French and English<br />
and will teach in the Durham High<br />
School system. Their small daughter,<br />
Kimberly Ann, watched her<br />
parents receive their diplomas<br />
from the arms of her maternal,<br />
grandmother, Mrs. Howard<br />
Browning of Durham.<br />
Walter O. (Bubb) Gollnick, Jr..<br />
graduated June 5 from Purdue<br />
with his bachelor of industrial<br />
management. Later in the summer<br />
he will begin his business career<br />
with Mutual of New York, with<br />
his base in Lafayette.<br />
Tina Hughes Paniagua, with ;<br />
her husband, Angel (pronounced]<br />
Ann-Hail), is back in the States<br />
after a Peace Corps stint in Boli-J<br />
via, Dr. Paniagua's home country.<br />
Angel is working on his English.<br />
J<br />
ta"<br />
<strong>1966</strong> Marshall<br />
County 4-H<br />
Fair — Argos<br />
August 1-6<br />
<strong>1966</strong> Marshall County 4-H Fair<br />
Argos — Aug. 1 through Aug. 6<br />
Culver Co-Op<br />
Verne Weiger<br />
I On<br />
SMILEY<br />
We invite inspection and<br />
Post BiiailcJiBigs<br />
comparison. More adaptability,<br />
quality, permanence.<br />
Call: LEONARD STACKHOUSE,<br />
R.R. 1, Bourbon, Indiana<br />
Phone 219-NI 6-2515<br />
Millwood Exchaige)<br />
17tfn<br />
E BY DOING!<br />
East Jefferson St. Phone 842-3000<br />
CULVER<br />
Store Hours: 8 to 6 Service Dept. Hours: 8 to 5<br />
3 On
y Thompson<br />
• • . you're going on a long vacation this summer or just<br />
ploantag a week-end jaunt close to home, these travel tips compiled<br />
l-V Mrdison Labs, may help you avoid some common pitfalls and<br />
if.croace ycur traveling enjoyment:<br />
I. To protect your valuables<br />
cccinst loss cr theft, it's a good<br />
idea to make a list of the serial<br />
nun-bers of watches, cameras and<br />
ether numbered items.<br />
3. To avoid vacction fatigue, try<br />
to vary the pace of your trip, al<br />
ternating days of sightseeing and<br />
leisure. When driving, take fre<br />
quent rest breaks.<br />
5. First-aid supplies for travel<br />
should include medications for<br />
minor burns and c*s.Anttvy", a<br />
new spray-on treatment for<br />
itching due to poison ivy, poison<br />
sumac, poison oak and insect<br />
bites, can bring welcome relief to<br />
travelers.<br />
Academy News<br />
(Continued from Page 8)<br />
and Kelly. Mrs. Poling and children<br />
accompanied them home for<br />
two weeks. Mir. Po'.ing spent the<br />
last week in Culver with them. On<br />
June 19, they and Mrs. Delia May<br />
[pint .the day" in Indianapolis as<br />
pitcsts of Mr. and Mrs. James May<br />
and daughters.<br />
The office service staff had a<br />
farewell luncheon for Norma<br />
Mohr and Donna Kerrigan at the<br />
Shack June 17. Donna and Norma<br />
left office June 16 and June 17<br />
respectively. Norm a's husband,<br />
Bob, is home, from Viet Nam, and<br />
Norma and daughter Stephanie<br />
left Culver June 20. They joined<br />
Bob and Cindy, who incidentally<br />
were already in California. Norma,<br />
Bob and family will return to Culver<br />
before going to Louisiana<br />
where Bob will be stationed at<br />
Camp Polk.<br />
We welcome Miss Rose Schmidt<br />
to our department. Rose is learning<br />
to operate one of our offset<br />
machines.<br />
Nancy Kersey who has worked<br />
in our office on a part-time basis<br />
tias joined our staff on a perman-<br />
2nt basis.<br />
Margaret Ecknian vacationed<br />
the week of July 4th. . .Pat Hamilton<br />
will depart July 2 2 on a threeweek<br />
vacation trip to California<br />
where she will visit her sister.<br />
Doris Carlisle, a former employee,<br />
visited the office July 8.<br />
Doris was showing off their new<br />
daughter, Cynthia Kay, who was<br />
born May 30. Incidentally, Doris<br />
and Phil have moved from Elkhart<br />
to Mishawaka.<br />
Development employees have<br />
impressed co-workers that they<br />
must be the "movingest" department<br />
on campus. Eleanor Zechiel<br />
returned to Wheaton, 111., after<br />
selling her house to Edith and<br />
2. You'll be more likely to hang<br />
onto your travel (Gnds when you<br />
carry travelers checks which can<br />
be promptly redeemed if lost,<br />
stolen or destroyed.<br />
4. For stomach upsets caused by<br />
changes in water, food and sched<br />
ule, it's a good idea to carry a<br />
remedy recommended by your<br />
doctor.<br />
6. When traveling with children,<br />
you may prevent "squalls" by<br />
keeping driving periods short.<br />
Give older children some respon<br />
sibility in connection with the trip<br />
such as jotting down travel ex<br />
penses. Reassure little ones with a<br />
favorite toy.<br />
Fred Banks. They no-more got settled<br />
at 625 College Ave., when<br />
Glen and Wilma Snyder sold their<br />
home and most of their funiture<br />
and moved into an apartment on<br />
South Main St. to wait for the<br />
completion of their new home on<br />
Thorn road.<br />
Carrie Reinhold moved to East<br />
Washington St. and proceeded to<br />
move right into the hospital for<br />
three weeks of observation and<br />
tests. She returned to work Monday.<br />
Messenger editor Dave Gaskill<br />
took a hand at writing Campus<br />
Notes for the department for a<br />
change after moving from C.T.<br />
barracks back into the guest<br />
house garage apartment.<br />
Before anyone could catch a<br />
breath. Bob Reiehley got his my-<br />
GO WHERE<br />
THE ACTION !S<br />
JNDIANA QEACH<br />
Lake Shafer MONTICELLO.INO.<br />
Fine Dining, Entertainment<br />
& Dancing Nightly<br />
Friday, July 29<br />
THE OUTSIDERS<br />
2 shows-Adm. $2.25<br />
IN NEW SKYROOM<br />
Dancing & Dining<br />
ON ROOF GARDEN<br />
B. G. RAMBLERS<br />
TEEN DANCE NIGHTLY<br />
Dancing Nightly<br />
BIG CROWDS TUES. #<br />
THURS., & SAT.<br />
WE HAVE INSTALLED THE<br />
New SANTI CLIPPER<br />
The clipper that pulls away the loose hair<br />
as it is cut<br />
No more hair in your eyes or down your neck<br />
VERL'S BARBER SHOP<br />
104 S. Main<br />
30n<br />
29. 30n<br />
1<br />
sterious call from New York recommending<br />
that he accompany<br />
Bob Matson to the convention of<br />
the American Alumni Council.<br />
Ethlynde Scruggs leaves the Alumni<br />
office Aug. 5 to prepare for<br />
a move to Florida with Harriet<br />
and Billy. Mary will Stay behind<br />
with Col. Scruggs until her graduation<br />
next June and word of her<br />
father's next assignment.<br />
Pudg'3 O'Gallaghan and her<br />
mother are hostesses of Heather<br />
Teichmann, a summer theater instructor<br />
. . . Ruth Graham is<br />
caring for two members of the<br />
Girls School staying with the<br />
Grahams for the summer.<br />
Russ and Myra Oliver plan an<br />
August visit with Rusty, Carol<br />
and Kim in Durham, N.C. after<br />
which Russ will try to stretch himself<br />
between his desk and the golf<br />
course . . .Cleta Middleton and her<br />
husband spent two weeks in the<br />
mists of Niagara Falls and relaxing<br />
at home in the Hoosier mist<br />
called humidity.<br />
Kathy Kline left the Alumni<br />
office June 24 to start mixing pa Ilium<br />
for an arival in early Novem<br />
ber. Dolores Jones has worked up<br />
to full time to help fill the gap.<br />
Eleanor Zechiel made a quick return<br />
trip to help celebrate Wilma<br />
Snyder's birthday at a luncheon in<br />
the Banks-Zechiol house on College<br />
Ave.<br />
Mrs. Charles H. Bracket Jr.<br />
Phene 543-2704<br />
The Monterey Tippecanoe Pub<br />
lic Library 1<br />
received as a gift an<br />
Indiana Flag given to the Library<br />
by American Legion Post No. 399<br />
of Monterey. The flag was presented<br />
to Mrs. Claire Zehner, Librarian<br />
by Comander Miller and<br />
Lloyd Fisher, officers of the Post.<br />
Along with the flag, the library<br />
received another gift this past<br />
week, a beautiful magiazitne rack<br />
made and donated by Edward<br />
Master.<br />
On Tuesday, July 1!). the summer<br />
school class taught by Mrs.<br />
Brown of Monterey school visited<br />
the Library. Mrs. Claire Zehner,<br />
Librarian presented a program of<br />
story telling and audience participation<br />
of the "Brave little Indian"<br />
and "The fisherman and his<br />
wife".<br />
On Wednesday, July 20, Mrs.<br />
Claire Zehner, Librarian, and Mrs.<br />
Carol Eskridge accompanied the<br />
.Summer School children to Chicago<br />
for a field trip to the various<br />
places of interest, along with Mr.<br />
t and Mrs. Don Franklin and Mrs.<br />
i Wendell King. Some of the places<br />
viEiit'Ed were the aquarium, Muse-<br />
Doorn Open at 6:50 P.M.<br />
WEDNESDAY, JULY 27<br />
Double Feature Program<br />
"The Cincinnati<br />
Stove McQueen, Ann Margret,<br />
Edward G. Robinson<br />
Metroccior<br />
— And —<br />
"Young Crssidy"<br />
Rod Taylor, Maggie Smith<br />
In Technicolor<br />
THURS., FRI., SAT.,<br />
JULY 28-29-30<br />
Double Feature Program<br />
"And Now<br />
Miguel"<br />
Technicolor<br />
— And —<br />
"Wild, Wild<br />
Winter"<br />
Cary Clarke, Chris Noel<br />
|ay and the Americans<br />
Beau Brummels, Dick and Dee Dee<br />
The Astronauts, Jackie and Cayle<br />
Technicolor<br />
SUN., MON., TUES.,<br />
JULY 31, AUC. 1, 2<br />
Cont. Sunday at 3 p.m.<br />
"The Singing<br />
Nun"<br />
Starring Debbie Reynolds<br />
COMINC<br />
"Lt. Robinson<br />
Crusoe, U.S.N."<br />
Thei Culver (ili/cii — Culver. Indiana — July 28, 1 !>(> — Page !><br />
um of Natural History and Science<br />
and Indus/try budding.<br />
Miss Charlotte Brucker, daughter<br />
of Mr. and Airs. Charles H.<br />
Brucker Jr. celebrated her 15th<br />
birthday at her parents h o m e<br />
Saturday evening. Gues'ta fcr the<br />
party w ere Charlotte Brucker,<br />
Jane, Judy, and Jennie Peterson,<br />
Alice Ulm, Cathy Long, Chi-i;<br />
PugTi, Kar'.a Hoover. Agnes Stankus,<br />
Barbara Brucker, Gene Stb'tler<br />
and Greg Feece. A wiener<br />
roast and games were enjoyed.<br />
GAYBLE Theatre<br />
NORTH JUDSON<br />
Air Conditioned<br />
For Your Comfort<br />
Cooled By Refrigeration<br />
THURS., FRI., SAT.,<br />
JULY 28-29-30<br />
Matinee Saturday At 2:30 Cont.<br />
3 Unit Wall Disney Show<br />
In Technicolor<br />
"Bamfei"<br />
Air.o Walt- Disney's<br />
In Technicolor<br />
"Golden Horseshoe<br />
Revue"<br />
Plus Walt Disney's All Color<br />
Cartoon Carnival<br />
Rochester, Minn, w e r e Sunday<br />
dinner guests in the home of Mra.<br />
Ruth Overmyer.<br />
On Sunday, July 21, the staff of<br />
the Monterey Library was host to<br />
a carry in potluck dinner held at<br />
the home of Mrs. Claire Zehner,<br />
Librarian. Those attending were<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Keitzer, Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Rex Good, Mir. and Mrs.<br />
Edward Master. Mr. and Mrs.<br />
John Ringen and family, Mr. and,<br />
Mrs. Charles Kelsey and family,<br />
Mrs. Michael Kelsey and Susan,<br />
The Women's Society of Chris Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Reinhold and<br />
tian Service will meet Thursday family. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry<br />
evening, Aug. 4, at 7:30 p.m. in<br />
the home of Mrs. Ethel Johnson.<br />
The lesson leader is Mrs. Ruby<br />
Buchanan, and the devotions will<br />
be given hy Mrs. Delorils Hart.<br />
Roll call will be answered by<br />
"My Favorite Lesson This Past<br />
Year and Why."<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Amos Peterson<br />
and family and Miss Charlotte<br />
Brucker were weekend camping<br />
at "The Broken Arrow" at Winamiac.<br />
They also attended the<br />
Moore Reunion on Sunday at the<br />
Winamac Park.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton K'rne and<br />
grandson Jeffrey Morozink of<br />
1<br />
Eskridge<br />
and Jean Ann, and Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Anthony Zehner and Michele.<br />
The honored guests were th
Page 10 — The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, 1!>«>«<br />
CONGR<br />
MARSHALL COUNTY 4-H'ers<br />
WE WISH YOU THE BEST OF LUCK<br />
Pete's Lakeside Grocery<br />
Ray Wicker Ford Sales<br />
Culver Hardware<br />
McKinnis Pharmacy<br />
Gretter's Food Market<br />
Culver Sheet Metal Works<br />
Kline's TV and Appliance<br />
M & M Restaurant<br />
Quality Grocers<br />
Joe Boetsma & Son<br />
Bob's Marathon Service Station<br />
Al's TV and Appliances<br />
Ideal Cleaners<br />
Goldie and Henry Hinkle<br />
Curlette Salon<br />
Fannie Biddle<br />
Culver Press, Inc.<br />
Neal Shock Barber Shop<br />
Burr Oak<br />
Taylor's Ben Franklin Store<br />
Gordon's Texaco Service<br />
Crabb's Fu rniture Store<br />
Culver<br />
Culver News Agency<br />
and<br />
H. J. Forster, Jeweler<br />
Culver City Rexall Drugs<br />
Indiana Business & Industry<br />
Magazine<br />
Spencer Plumbing, Heating<br />
and Gas<br />
Village Lodge Motel<br />
Culver<br />
Eby's A&W Drive In<br />
Bennett Plumbing, Heating,<br />
Painting & Decorating<br />
"Johnson Tire Service<br />
Enco Service Station<br />
Isobel's Beauty Shop<br />
Culver<br />
Sims Printing Company<br />
Coffee Shop<br />
Pearl Onesti<br />
.-c-w.;. *<br />
Culver Produce Co.<br />
Don Stubbs Excavating &<br />
Trucking Co.<br />
O. T. Smith, Landscape Service<br />
Jack's Taxi<br />
Tom and Ruth Walker<br />
George Hopple Trucking Co.<br />
VFW Post No. 6919<br />
Qvermyer's Construction Co.<br />
Park 'N Shop Supermarket<br />
Chuck's Standard Service<br />
Burr Oak Hardware<br />
Winkler's Automotive Service<br />
Jim's Electric Service<br />
Three Sisters Restau:a.nt<br />
Stan and Bertie Pierce — 'Yowr Hosts"<br />
West Shore Boat Service<br />
"The Aliens"<br />
Culver Hotel<br />
The Michael Anthonys<br />
Crystal Speed Wauh<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Jones<br />
Felke Florist<br />
Plymouth<br />
5V10NDAY through SATURDAY,<br />
AUGUST 1 to AUGUST 6<br />
4-H FAIR GROUNDS<br />
ARGOS, INDIANA
Mi.
Page 12 — The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, •!»««<br />
Do You Remember<br />
'Way Back When?<br />
Highlights of Culver News<br />
of 10, 20, 30, 40, and 50<br />
Years Ago This Week<br />
Jl IJV 25, 1956—<br />
Dr. John D. Tharp, who came to<br />
Culver from Chicago last July, is<br />
closing his office at 114 Lake<br />
Shore Drive in order to join a<br />
group of five physicians and surgeons<br />
at Xenia, Ohio. Dr. Tharp's<br />
jnedical records and chants are being<br />
transferred to Dr. Ernest B.<br />
Norris, who, on Aug. 15, will establish<br />
an office here at 2 80 5 East<br />
'Shore Drive.<br />
The 14th - annual Moonlight<br />
Serenade, rendered last Saturday<br />
and Sunday evening by the Culver<br />
Military Academy Naval School<br />
Band under the baton of Col. Edward<br />
T. Payson, was profoundly<br />
acclaimed the highlight of Culver's<br />
summer season by the hundreds<br />
who heard the performance<br />
of the 5 5 musicians aboard the<br />
flagship of the Culver Summer<br />
Naval School fleet, the SS O. W.<br />
.Fowler.<br />
Lions Club set annual Corn<br />
Roast for Wednesday, Aug. 8.<br />
Services were held Tuesday at<br />
the Easterday Funeral Home for<br />
Mrs. Katherine E. Ely, age 70, of<br />
Route 1, Monterey.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lowy<br />
Three of the four Culver dogs<br />
entered in the Southern Wisconsin<br />
Kennel Show, held at Lake Geneva<br />
recently, received blue ribbons and<br />
the fourth canine rated a second<br />
place in its class.<br />
The old freight house near the<br />
depot was torn down the first cf<br />
the week by Wayne Von Ehr, who<br />
bought the structure. The building<br />
is about 30 years old.<br />
* * *<br />
JULY 21, 1020—<br />
Nearlyl 2,000 golf enthusiasts<br />
assembled about the first tee of<br />
the Academy course last Friday<br />
afternoon to witness the first<br />
drive in the Walter Hagen exhibition.<br />
,Six little friends of Helen Calhoun<br />
helped her celebrate her<br />
birthday anniversary by attending<br />
a party Monday afternoon given in<br />
her honor.<br />
* * *<br />
JULY 20, lino—<br />
Mrs. Austin is having the two<br />
rooms next to the printing office<br />
prepared for her living apartment.<br />
Victor Elick of Bourbon called<br />
on The Citizen recently and announced<br />
that a baby daughter has<br />
come to his home.<br />
A victim of heart disease. John<br />
W. Inks was found dead Saturday<br />
afternoon on the Everly farm near<br />
Ober.<br />
Next week on Thursday a spectacle<br />
never before equaled in Marshall<br />
County will be presented in<br />
Culver. It will be an all-day exhibition<br />
in commemoration of the<br />
State's 100th birthday'.<br />
were honored Monday evening at a<br />
surprise party 1<br />
marking their silver<br />
'wedding anniversary.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. King Hester celebrated<br />
their 4 6th wedding anniversary<br />
Sunday. July 22, with a<br />
family dinner at their home on<br />
West 16th Road.<br />
John Louis Kaley Jr., age 32,<br />
former resident of Delong, was<br />
.struck by lightning and killed instantly<br />
Monday evening, July 15,<br />
as he was leaving his home at 810<br />
Helm St., Logansport, to go for his<br />
•usual evening walk.<br />
• * •<br />
I l,V 24, HMO—<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Spurgeon<br />
will celebrate their golden wedding<br />
anniversary Sunday, July 1<br />
By Mrs. Carroll Thompson<br />
•hono Arssos TWinoaks 2-502S<br />
Attendance at Sunday services<br />
was 60. Rev. William Bleam will<br />
be guest minister next Sunday,<br />
July 31.<br />
Women of the community<br />
doubled the amount of cookies<br />
required and provided SO dozen<br />
of homemade cookies for the Migrant<br />
School on Wednesday and<br />
Thursday. The surplus cookies<br />
were delivered to the Migrant<br />
28, Camps. M-rs. Mildred Overmyer,<br />
with an open house. They were Mrs. Rex Oastlenvan. and Mrs.<br />
(married July 24, 189G in North Leslie Mahler assisted with ser<br />
Manchester.<br />
ving the noon meal at the school<br />
Julia and Ethel McKee, daugh on Wednesday and Thursday.<br />
ters of Mrs. Trula McKee of Cul Mr. and Mrs. Don Milner of<br />
ver, made the all-star team picked Columbus, Ohio, were weekend<br />
Ifrom four teams of girls in the guests of the Charles Cliftons.<br />
Plymouth Softball league. Julia at Mr. and Mrs. Dean Johnson<br />
first base and Ethel at second are and Barbara spent Sunday with<br />
members of the Case Eagleletters Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Gates at La<br />
of Plymouth.<br />
fayette.<br />
Francis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Miss Sharon Norris spent the<br />
Kussell McFarland, was injured weekend with a college classmate,<br />
while swimming at the Town Miss Cheryl Kizer, at Wabash.<br />
Beach Friday afternoon. He was On Sunday the Everett Norris<br />
wearing a device to see under family attended a 65th wedding<br />
-water when another boy accident anniversary observance at Marion<br />
ia dived into him, breaking the for Mr. and Mrs. Tom Bake r.<br />
glass and cutting his forehead. Paul Schoonover of Speedway,<br />
Tommy Hoffer has been select who had spent the past week<br />
ed to participate in the All-State with the Norris family, accom<br />
Band Clinic July 2S to Aug. 4 at panied them to Marion and re<br />
Indiana University.<br />
turned to his home with his par<br />
* * * *<br />
ents, the James Schoonovers, also<br />
J U L Y 22, 1980—<br />
present alt the openhouse.<br />
Irene Clemens, daughter of Mr. Randy Johnson. Roscoe Heck-<br />
and Mrs. Oliver Clemens, formerly aman, Don Thompson and Ray<br />
of Culver, has received an appointmond Miller, were among those<br />
ment for a schorlarship at Purdue from this community attending<br />
University. She was graduated FFA Camp at Lake Oliver from<br />
from the local High School in May Friday until Sunday.<br />
of this year with scholastic dis The Al Yoder, Roscoe Heckatinction.man,<br />
and Carroll Thompson fam-<br />
"Now in Progress"<br />
SAVE 20% to 50% On<br />
Quality Early American<br />
Maple & Cherry Furniture<br />
Sale Ends Saturday, July 30<br />
naple<br />
116 N. Michigan St. PLYMOUTH Phone 936-3751<br />
30n<br />
Lions Elect<br />
International President<br />
Edward M. Lindsey of Lawrenceburg,<br />
Tennessee, was<br />
elected President of Lions International<br />
at the Associations annual<br />
convention in New York<br />
City, July 6-9. Serving as tho<br />
50th President during the Golden<br />
Anniversary year, Mr. Lindsey<br />
heads the world's largest<br />
service club organization with<br />
797,159 members in 135 countries.<br />
Lions International is best<br />
known for its many community<br />
service projects, youth programs,<br />
sight conservation activities<br />
and aid to the blind. During<br />
the past year Lions Clubs<br />
around the world completed<br />
more than a half million community<br />
projects.<br />
Hies were among those attending<br />
the Marshiana Holstein Association<br />
picnic at t h e Earl Stoneburner<br />
home near Bourbon on<br />
Sunday.<br />
Mrs. Louis Null reports that<br />
her brother. Doug Feltis, a patient<br />
at Pulaski County Hospital<br />
in Winamac, is progressing slowly.<br />
As the result of a hay crusher<br />
accident on Saturday, July 16, it<br />
was necessary to remove Mr. Feltis'<br />
right arm. Recent x-rays revealed<br />
no head injuries. No visitors<br />
are allowed at this time.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cowen<br />
and their houseguests, A. N.<br />
Cowen, and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil<br />
Cowen of Florida, George Cowen,<br />
and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Davis" were<br />
Thursday supper guests of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Emery Davis who recently<br />
moved from South Bend to<br />
their newly remodelled home<br />
southeast of Culver. Later, the<br />
group adjourned to the Guy Davis<br />
home where they were joined<br />
by other relatives for an evening<br />
of music. The Florida folks left<br />
for their home on Friday.<br />
Rev. and Mrs. Ray Kuhn and<br />
Carol were hosts on Sunday to<br />
the 26th annual reunion of the<br />
Mount Olive Methodist Church<br />
congregation. Of the 25 present,<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Strawderman<br />
of Decatur, Mich., came the<br />
farthest distance. Rev. Kuhn<br />
served ae pastor there in 19.18.<br />
Sunday supper guests of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Rex Castleman and<br />
family were Mr. and Mrs. Dee<br />
Shafer and family of Argos.<br />
First steno — I hear you had a<br />
date with our handsome new office<br />
manager last night.<br />
Second steno — Yes, we went<br />
to a fancy supper club. The orchestra<br />
played soft music; the<br />
lights were low. It was just lovely<br />
— until he put his hand under the<br />
table and I thought he wanted to<br />
hold my hand!<br />
First steno — What happened?<br />
Second steno — He slipped me<br />
the check!<br />
BACK YARD<br />
SALE<br />
Miscellaneous items including antique<br />
chairs, horse-drawn buggy,<br />
wooden beds, oak thread cabinet,<br />
some glassware, bar stools, 2 electric<br />
mangles, wooden table & chairs, hassock<br />
plus interesting odds Or ends.<br />
East on W. 1 5th B Road<br />
(1st Road South of Burr Oak)<br />
to DIZZYLAND<br />
FRIDAY, JULY 29 AND<br />
SATURDAY, JULY 30<br />
9 A.M. to 4 P.M.<br />
30*<br />
"1<br />
The .honeymooners were wa<br />
Ing arni-in-arin along the bea<br />
Suddenly inspire! by the oceasi<br />
hi' exclaimed, "Roll on, thou di<br />
and dark blue ocean, roll on!"<br />
His bride gazed at the ocean<br />
awhile, then cried, "Oh Henri<br />
you're wonderful! It's doing it<br />
The qualifications of a Cnl<br />
Citizen Classified Ad are fi<br />
profitable results. Call 842-88<br />
the<br />
Bible<br />
(.<br />
speaks to you<br />
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE .<br />
RADIO SERIES<br />
n<br />
SUNDAYS<br />
8:00 a.m. WLS (890)<br />
9:15 a.m. WSBT (960)<br />
PROFESSIONAL<br />
DIRECTORY<br />
PHYSICIANS<br />
Lake Shore Clinic<br />
JOSEPH D. HOWARD, M.<br />
PHYSICIAN<br />
M. GEORGE ROSERO, M.I<br />
PHYSICIAN & SURGEOh<br />
General Medicine & Obstetric<br />
Office: 921 Lake Shore Driv<br />
Office Hours by Appointmen<br />
Mon.: 10-12 A.M., 3-7 P.M.<br />
Tues., Wed., Thurs. & Fri.<br />
10-12 A.M., 2-6 P.M.<br />
Sat: 9 A.M. - 1 P.M.<br />
- Office & Residence Phone<br />
842-3550<br />
OSTEOPATHIC<br />
MEDICAL PtjYStCJAj<br />
CULVER CLINIC<br />
222 N. Ohio St.<br />
Phone 842-3351<br />
JAMES R. LEACH, D.o4<br />
PHYSICIAN<br />
General Family Practice<br />
and Obstetrics<br />
G. W. STEVENSON, JR., D<br />
PHYSICIAN<br />
General Family Practice<br />
and Obstetrics<br />
Office Hours by Appointmen<br />
Phone 842-3351<br />
DENTISTS<br />
JOHN W. OLDHAM, D.D<br />
DENTIST<br />
Office Hours by Appointmer<br />
Phone 842-2118<br />
Northern Indiana Public Serv<br />
Company liiiilding<br />
OPTOMETRISTS<br />
DR. F. L. BA6COCK<br />
OPTOMETRIST<br />
Phone 842-3372<br />
Office Hours:<br />
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.<br />
Closed Mondays and<br />
Wednesday afternoon<br />
203 South Main Street<br />
COMPLETE<br />
Optical Service<br />
Eyes Examined<br />
OPTOMETRIST<br />
GLASSES<br />
CONTACT LENSES<br />
Acousticon Hearing Aid<br />
Glasses<br />
DR. HERSCHELL R. COI<br />
102 W. Main - SYRACUSE<br />
Call 457-3712 for Appointme<br />
PODIATRIST<br />
RICHARD J. DIETER, D.S<br />
Foot Orthopedics<br />
Surgical Chiropody and<br />
FOOT SPECIALIST<br />
Thursday by Appointment<br />
223 North Ohio St.
METHODIST CROUP<br />
MINISTRY<br />
fellowship of Methodist<br />
urchcs in the area south and<br />
east of Lake Maxinkuckee.)<br />
ULTON COUNTY PARISH<br />
Norris L. King, Pastor<br />
EITERS FORD METHODIST<br />
bert Lancaster, Superintendent<br />
,'hurch School at 10 a.m.<br />
iVorship at 11:15 a.m.<br />
MONTEREY METHODIST<br />
ohn Ringen, Superintendent<br />
Vorship at 9:15 a.m.<br />
Church School at 10:05 a.m.<br />
DELONG METHODIST<br />
labcth Hoover, Superintendent<br />
Church School at 9:15 a.m.<br />
Vorship at 10:15 a.m.<br />
CULVER CIRCUIT<br />
MT. HOPE METHODIST<br />
'aul E. Winn, Superintendent<br />
Jhurch School at 10 a.m.<br />
Vorship at 11 a.m. every 2nd<br />
. 4th Sunday.<br />
SANTA ANNA METHODIST<br />
'hillip Veer, Superintendent<br />
"hurch School at 10 a.m.<br />
Vorship at 11 a.m. every 1st<br />
3rd Sunday.<br />
OPLAR GROVE CHARGE<br />
W. Ray Kuhn, Pastor<br />
illiam Lake, Superintendent<br />
Church School at 10 a.m.<br />
Vorship at 10:45 each Sunday.<br />
SAND HILL CIRCUIT<br />
BAND HILL METHODIST<br />
Russell Good, Pastor<br />
Glen Hart, Superintendent<br />
'hurch School at 10 a.m.<br />
Vorship at 11 a.m. on 1st and<br />
. Sundays.<br />
GILEAD METHODIST<br />
•over Shaffer, Superintendent<br />
Church School at 10 a.m.<br />
iVorship at 11 a.m. on 2nd and<br />
Sundays.<br />
RICHLAND CENTER<br />
CIRCUIT<br />
g RICHLAND CENTER<br />
! METHODIST<br />
Edward Miller, Pastor<br />
•bert Warner, Superintendent<br />
lunday School at 9:30 a.m. on<br />
and 3rd Sundays. (10:30 on<br />
and 4th Sundays).<br />
Vorship at 9:30 a.m. on 2nd<br />
I 4th Sundays, (10:45 on 1st<br />
3rd Sundays).<br />
l.Y.F. at 7:00 p.m.<br />
>rayer and Bihle Study on<br />
irsday at S: 00 p.m.<br />
BURTON METHODIST<br />
liam Belcher, Superintendent<br />
Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. on<br />
I and 4th Sundays (10:30 on<br />
a ad 3rd).<br />
Vorship at 9:30 a.m. on 1st<br />
1 3rd Sundays, (10:45 on 2nd<br />
. 4th Sundays).<br />
I.Y.F. at 7:00 p.m.<br />
Evening Worship at 7:30 on<br />
. and 4th Sundays.<br />
'rayer and Bible Study on<br />
dnesdays at 8 p.m.<br />
liVER MILITARY ACADEMY<br />
MEMORIAL CHAPEL<br />
inplain Allen F. Bray, USNR<br />
[oly Communion — 8 a.m.<br />
lervice for Woodcrafters —<br />
a.m.<br />
lervice for Troopers, Midshipt,<br />
and Girls, School —11 a.m.<br />
3TTY LAKE EVANGELICAL<br />
TED BRETHREN CHURCH<br />
Thomas Rough, Pastor<br />
ank Bair Jr., Superintendent<br />
lorning Worship 9:15 a.m.<br />
unday School 10:00 a.m.<br />
Ivening Worship 7:00 p.m. on<br />
mate Sundays.<br />
rayer meeting 7:00 p.m. Wediay.<br />
SAINT ANN'S CATHOLIC<br />
CHURCH, MONTEREY<br />
ev. Edward MatusSak, Pastor<br />
snday Masses: 7:30 and 9:30<br />
Weekday Masses: S:05 (Win-<br />
7:00 (Summer),<br />
[oly day of Obligation. 6:30<br />
. Evening as announced on<br />
ish bulletin.<br />
!oly Communion distributed<br />
i weekday at 7:00.<br />
onfession: Saturday 4 to 5<br />
. and 7 to 9 p.m. Before Sur,-<br />
Masses.<br />
CHURCH<br />
NEWS<br />
CULVER BIBLE CHURCH<br />
718 South Main Street<br />
Rev. Eric Ryser, Pastor<br />
Sunday .School 10 a.m.<br />
Classes for all ages.<br />
Morning Worship 11 a.m.<br />
" Training Hour 6:30 p.m.<br />
Evening Service 7:30 p.m.<br />
Nursery available for all Sunday<br />
services.<br />
Prayer Meeting and Bible Study<br />
7:30 p.m. Wednesday.<br />
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />
__. City Library (Culver)<br />
R. J. Mueller, B.D., Pastor<br />
Phone: Rochester 223-5624<br />
Worship Services every Sunday<br />
at 9:00 a.m.<br />
Sunday School at 10:00 a.m.<br />
Children's Confirmation Class<br />
at 5 p.m. Fridays.<br />
Communion on last Sunday of<br />
the month.<br />
ST. MABY'S OF THE LAKE<br />
CATHOLIC CHURCH<br />
"The Church With The<br />
Gold Crosses"<br />
Rev. Joseph A. Lcnk, Pastor<br />
Sunday Mass 7:00 a.m., 8:00<br />
a.m., 10:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.<br />
Daily Mass 9:00 a.m.<br />
Confession Saturday 7:00 a.m.<br />
to 9:00 p.m.<br />
Confession Saturday 7:00 p.m.<br />
ZION GOSPEL CHAPEL<br />
Rev. Jerry M. Browning, Minister<br />
Marion Kline, Superintendent<br />
Dwight Kline, Class Leader<br />
Manson Leap, Lay Leader<br />
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.<br />
Preaching Service 10:45 a.m.<br />
Evening Worship 8 p.m., every<br />
4th Sunday of the month.<br />
Prayer Meeting Thursday 8:00<br />
p.m.<br />
Everyone welcome.<br />
TRINITY EVANGELICAL<br />
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH<br />
Rev. Robert Berkey, Minister<br />
Raymond Morrison, Supt.<br />
Sunday School 10:00 a.m.<br />
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.<br />
Evening Worship 7:20 p.m. on<br />
alternate Sundays.<br />
Choir Practice 6:30 p.m. Thursday.<br />
Prayer meeting 7:30 p.m.<br />
Thursday.<br />
CULVER LARGER PARISH<br />
E.U.B. CHURCHES<br />
Rev. Arthur Givens, Pastor<br />
Joseph Haney, Assistant Pastor<br />
EMMANUEL EVA NGELHIAL<br />
UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH<br />
Lawrence White, Superintended i<br />
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.<br />
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.<br />
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.<br />
HIBI3ARD E.U.B. CHURCH<br />
Richard Overmyer, Supt.<br />
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.<br />
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.<br />
BURR OAK E.U.B. CHURCH<br />
Russell Ulery, Superintendent<br />
Morning Worship 9:00 a.m.<br />
Sunday School 10:00 a.m.<br />
ROLLINS CHAPEL<br />
Rev. Lewis Carter<br />
Afternoon Worship, 3:30 p.m.<br />
1st and 3rd Sundays each month.<br />
BURR OAK<br />
CHURCH OF GOD<br />
Rev. Ellsworth RoutSOB<br />
Donald Overmyer, Superintendent<br />
Carl Heiser, Asst. Supt.<br />
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.<br />
Worship Service 10:45 a.m.<br />
Evening Study Hour 7:30 p.m.<br />
Holy Communion observed the<br />
first Sunday of each month during<br />
the morning worship service.<br />
A cordial welcome is extended<br />
to all to worship with us.<br />
CULVER METHODIST CHURCH<br />
School-Lewis Streets<br />
Carl Q. Baker, Minister<br />
Mrs. Ted Strang, Director<br />
Christian Education<br />
9:30 a.m.—Church School<br />
10:40 a.m.—Morning Worship<br />
4:30 p.m.—Junior MYF (1st<br />
and 3rd Sundays)<br />
5:30 p.m.—Senior MYF (2nd<br />
and 4th Sundays)<br />
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST<br />
M. G. Johnson, Pastor<br />
(>;J1 Thayer St., Plymouth<br />
Worship Service 9:30 a.m.<br />
Sabbath School 1P:3P a.m<br />
GRACE UNITED CHURCH<br />
Rev. H. W. Hohman. Pastor<br />
Margaret Swanson<br />
Mrs. Robert T. Rust<br />
Music<br />
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.<br />
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.<br />
ST. THOMAS EPISCOPAL<br />
Center and Adams Sts., Plymouth<br />
Father William C. R. Sheridan,<br />
Pastor<br />
Winter Schedule<br />
7:30 a.m. Holy Eucharist.<br />
9:30 a.m. Family Eucharist.<br />
9:30 a.m. Church School.<br />
9:30 a.m. Parish Nursery.<br />
UNION CHURCH OP<br />
THE BRETHREN<br />
State Road 17<br />
Leo Van Seoyk, Interim Pastor<br />
Amiel Henry, Superintendent<br />
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.<br />
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.<br />
The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, 1 !>(! — Page 13<br />
TEMPLE OF FAITH MISSION<br />
Rev. B. R. Cross, Pastor<br />
Located west of State Road 35<br />
on State Road 10 to California<br />
Township School and one mile<br />
north.<br />
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.<br />
Morning Service 10:30 a.m.<br />
Song Service 7:00 p.m.<br />
Evening Service 7:30 p.m.<br />
Fourth Sunday evening of each<br />
month there will be a full evening<br />
of spiritual singing and special<br />
music with vocal and instrumental<br />
numbers.<br />
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST<br />
SCIENTIST<br />
428 S. Michigan St., Plymouth<br />
Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.<br />
Evening Worship Wednesday<br />
7:45 p.m.<br />
Reading Room open in Church<br />
Edifice 2 to 5 - Wed. and Sat.<br />
"Love is the subject of the Lesson-Sermon<br />
to be read in all Christian<br />
Science churches this Sunday.<br />
The Golden Text is from the first<br />
Epistle of John: "God is love; and<br />
he that dwelleth in love dwelletii<br />
in God, and God in him."<br />
Related passages to be read<br />
from the denominational textbook,<br />
"Science and Health with Key to<br />
the. Scriptures" by Maryf Baker-<br />
Eddy, include the following lines:. 1<br />
"Whatever holds human<br />
thought in line with unselfed love,<br />
receives directly the divine power<br />
. . . Hold perpetually this thought<br />
— -that it is the spiritual idea, the<br />
Holy Ghost and Christ, which enables<br />
you to demonstrate, with<br />
scientific certainty, the rule oE<br />
healing, based upon its divino<br />
Principal, Love, underlying, ovei •<br />
lying, and encompassing all true<br />
being."<br />
Now it's just an antique, a relic of a bygone era. Formerly it served a practical purpose, R<br />
special need. Today, Grandfather's horseless carriage is completely outmoded.<br />
Some philosophies are also out of. date. New ideas grip our minds and challenge the intellect.<br />
We would not want a "horse and buggy" philosophy in this modern world of growth and change.<br />
Some things do not change, for they are eternal. For example, man's soul and his need of God.<br />
No modern invention can ever make God and the Church obsolete. Society is different today than<br />
it was in Grandfather's day, but man's spiritual needs are the same.<br />
Discover the value of the timeless in the midst of time. Worship God in your church this week<br />
and find the eternal truth which spans the ages.<br />
This Feature Is Made Possible By The Following Firms Who Invite You To<br />
Attend A House Of Worship Each Week<br />
Gates & Calhoun<br />
Chevrolet, Inc.<br />
Complete Automotive Service<br />
East Jefferson<br />
842-3000<br />
Culver, ind.<br />
Co-Op Elevator<br />
Feed, Grain & Fertilizer<br />
Verns Weiger, Mgr.<br />
Culver, Ind.<br />
Phone 842-3450<br />
McKinnis Pharmacy<br />
Phone 842-2871<br />
Culver, End.<br />
Walter Price's<br />
Abattoir<br />
Wholesale & Retail Meats<br />
VA Mile South of Plymouth<br />
on Muckshaw Road<br />
The McGill Mfg.<br />
Co., Inc.<br />
Culver, Ind.<br />
Manor Market<br />
At Maxinkuckee Landing<br />
East Shore Drive<br />
Cuiver, Ind.<br />
The State Exchange<br />
Bank gj<br />
Member FDIC '""'<br />
Culver, Ind.<br />
Forgey Dairy<br />
Logansport, Ind.<br />
Phone Logansport 3057 1<br />
The Culver Press<br />
and<br />
The Culver Citizen
Page 14 — The Oiilver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, 1»H«<br />
CLASSIFIED<br />
ADS<br />
Culver's Four-County Trading Area's<br />
Recognized Market Place<br />
RATES: Up to 25 words, $1.00; 2 weeks, $1.80; 3 weeks, $2.40; 4 wveks,<br />
$2.so. Up to 50 words, $2.00; 2 weeks, $3.60; 3 weeks, $4.80; 4 weeks,<br />
$5.6C. Additional words 4c each. Minimum charge $1.00.<br />
RATES quoted are for cash with order; add 50c if charged. Service charge<br />
of $1 for blind ads in care of The Citizen. Classified display, $1 per inch.<br />
Card of Thanks, In Memorisms, and Obituaries, $1.50. Front page reading<br />
notices, up to 25 words, $7.50. Local display advertising rate 70c per column<br />
inch. Ads accepted until 9 a.m. Wednesday, day of publication.<br />
SERVICES OFFERED<br />
ADDIE'S PIE SHOP<br />
119 E. LaPorte St.—Plymouth<br />
Featuring Home Style Baked<br />
Goods<br />
FRESH DAILY -<br />
Pies — Cakes — Cookies<br />
Breakfast & Dinner Rolls<br />
Doughnuts<br />
Complete Line Of Delicatessen<br />
Foods<br />
Phone 936-3867<br />
2tfn<br />
HUDON TYPEWRITER SERV<br />
ICE, 103 W. LaPorte Street,<br />
Plymouth, Sales-Service-Rentals,<br />
Typewriters and Adding Machines.<br />
Repairs on all makes. Royal Portable<br />
dealer. Phone 936-2728.<br />
38tfn<br />
FELKE FLORIST<br />
Plymouth<br />
Cut Flowers and Ported<br />
Plants Of All Kinds<br />
Funeral Work A Specialty<br />
We are as close as your phone<br />
936-3165 COLLECT<br />
IS tin<br />
LIMESTONE DRIVEWAYS —<br />
$4.30 ton spread. Also gravel, top<br />
dirt, fill. Agricultural limestone,<br />
A.S.C.P. approved $4.50 ton<br />
spread. Also backhoe work, excavating,<br />
filter beds, etc. George<br />
Hopple Trucking. Viking 2-2514.<br />
ll-4*tfh<br />
TRASH HAULING<br />
Insured, scheduled pick-up.<br />
Call TOM FISH BACK<br />
Culver 842-3590<br />
18tfn<br />
SILOS & SILO REPAIRS — Unloaders,<br />
roofs, chutes, banding,<br />
ladders, innercoats, screw feeders.<br />
Stormer bins, drying equipment,<br />
grain augers, aerators. Genie Garage<br />
door openers. Chester C. Dlettert,<br />
North Judson. 18-20*<br />
SCHWINN & LIBERTY<br />
BICYCLES<br />
Sales - Parts - Service<br />
New & Used Schwinn Bikes<br />
Bicycle Repair<br />
ARTS BIKE & SAW SHOP<br />
Marshall County's Only Authorized<br />
Schwinn and Liberty Dealer<br />
709 W. Adams — Plymouth<br />
Open Evenings<br />
20 tfn<br />
Furniture & Wood Products<br />
Made to order<br />
Antique Restoration<br />
Furniture Refinishing<br />
DEVOE BERKHEISER<br />
Argos, Ind. 892-5684<br />
26tfn<br />
CONCRETE SEPTIC TANKS g50<br />
and up. Grease traps and distributions<br />
tanks. Shirar Brothers,<br />
1203 Chester St., near Cemetery,<br />
Plymouth, Ind. Phone 936-3410.<br />
10-52*<br />
BILL STOKES SKWINO MA<br />
CHINE REPAIR. Service for all<br />
makes. For free check over call<br />
Argos. 8 9 2-50 1 2. 34>tfn<br />
JOHN DEERE<br />
"Quality Farm Equipment"<br />
•J, \ >->«^..\ V'V-A<br />
"We Service Everything We Sell"<br />
PLYMOUTH<br />
FARM SUPPLY<br />
SHARPENED<br />
At<br />
CULVER<br />
HARDWARE<br />
HELP WANTED<br />
30n<br />
Experienced typist for permanent<br />
position in pleasant, congenial<br />
surroundings at Culver Military<br />
Academy. Telephone Mrs. Glaze<br />
at 842-3311, Ext. 223, Culver,<br />
for appointment. 30-2n<br />
ROUTE SALESMAN WANTED -<br />
excellent opportunity for one<br />
that wants a long term rewarding<br />
future. Call 842-2171 for evening<br />
appointment. Zechiel Farm<br />
Service. 30-2n<br />
HELP WANTED: Experienced<br />
mean cutter; also man 20 to 40<br />
years old for grocery management<br />
trainee to work in largest<br />
and most modern super market<br />
in area. Good starting wages,<br />
pleas a n't working conditions,<br />
good future, also many fringe<br />
benefits. Apply in person at Five<br />
Star Food Center, Knox, Ind. 3On<br />
WANTED<br />
SPINET PIANO BARGAIN<br />
WANTED: Responsible party to<br />
take over low monthly payments<br />
on a spinet piano. Can be seen locally.<br />
Write Credit Manager, P.O.<br />
Box 215, Shelbyville, Ind. 28 4*<br />
BOATS FOR SALE<br />
West Shore Boot Service<br />
• Sales • Service • Storage<br />
•Rentals •Gas & Oil 'Launching<br />
— Mercury Motors —<br />
Crosby and Lone Star Boaits<br />
— All Marine Supplies —<br />
688 West Shore Drive, Culver<br />
Phone VIkinr 2-2100 tfn<br />
FOR SALE: 14 foot Starcraft<br />
aluminum boat. 5 % h.p. Johnson<br />
motor. Trailer with lights. Phone<br />
8 4 2-32 79. 29-2*<br />
We sell and service MCCULLOCH<br />
(SCOTT) OUTBOARDS<br />
Easy summer deals amd shopping<br />
convenience.<br />
HONDA OF MI CHI ANA<br />
220 E. Jefferson<br />
Downtown, South Bend<br />
Plenty of free parking in<br />
adjacent lot<br />
30n<br />
Need a generator for your next<br />
fishing or camping tri p ? ? ?<br />
Honda has two models with the<br />
usual fine quality that Honda<br />
puts in all its products. See Dave<br />
for a special demonstration.<br />
Hours: 9-9 Daily, 9-6 Sat., 12-5<br />
Sun.<br />
HONDA OF MICHIANA<br />
220 E. Jefferson<br />
Downtown, South Bend<br />
Plenty of free parking in<br />
adjacent lot<br />
30n<br />
PRODUCE FOR SALE<br />
FOR SALE: BLUEBERRIES, you<br />
pick, 20£ per pound. (Also orders<br />
taken). Thompson's, \% miles<br />
south of Plymouth on Muckshaw<br />
Road. Phone 93 6-7740 or 93 6-<br />
4760. 29-4n<br />
FOR SALE MISC<br />
Reduce safe, simple and fast with<br />
GoBese tablets. Only 98e\ McKtnnis<br />
Pharmacy. 26-6*<br />
Buying u new mattress puzzle<br />
you? See and hear about, then<br />
test, the four major lines. All at<br />
one place, then choose to fit your<br />
deires. Where? Pieiteher Furni-<br />
I ture Village. Highway 6. Nappanee,<br />
Ind. 30n<br />
FOR SALE — Mahogany Upright<br />
Piano. Made by Tvers-Pond, Boston.<br />
Gramd piano soundboard inner<br />
construction. Reasonable.<br />
SPINET ORGAN<br />
May be had by assuming small<br />
monthly payments. See it locally.<br />
Write Credit Dept., Box 172, Elkhart,<br />
Ind. 30^2*<br />
FOR SALE: 19-inch fan on sixfoot<br />
pedestal >SLand. $35.00.<br />
Phone 842-3513. 30nc<br />
FOR SALE: Boat dry dock on<br />
wheels, 80 ft. track, 234 S. Shore<br />
Rd., call Wednesday or Sunday.<br />
29-2*<br />
FOR SALE: Raven sailboat, 24<br />
ft. molded Mahogany, aluminum<br />
spar. Mainsail, Jib, Spinaker,<br />
Cock pit cover, complete with<br />
trailer. 234 S. Shore Rd., Call<br />
Wedenesday or Sunday. 29-2*<br />
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE<br />
Sales Rentals<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
see<br />
C. W. EPLEY REALTY<br />
Lake Residential<br />
Only $2.20 Per Acre<br />
500 ACRES<br />
Good Farmland<br />
$1100 Total Price<br />
$110 Down, $33 Per Month<br />
Free Colored Brochure<br />
500 acres of good farmland<br />
where vegetables, rice, wheat,<br />
corn, fruits, and most anything<br />
planted thrives. Annual rain fall<br />
45 inches. Temperatures range'<br />
from a low of 50 degrees to a<br />
high of 85 degrees. Pioneers from<br />
all over the world are pouring<br />
ittto this country seeking their<br />
fortunes. Some of the largest<br />
companies in the world are building<br />
factories throughout the<br />
land. We have 750 farms of 500<br />
acres each to sell. They are located<br />
400 miles from the capita!<br />
of Brazil, South America. Each<br />
farm has beem fully surveyed,<br />
staked and registered. Mineral<br />
rights included. AM of our titles<br />
are free and clear. Free booklets<br />
showing pictures and giving complete<br />
details sent upon request.<br />
Selig Bros. Real Estate Company,<br />
42 W. South Street, Indianapolis,<br />
Indiana. Telephone area code 317<br />
634-8328 or residence phone 283-<br />
1256. We are members of the Indianapolis<br />
Chamber of Commerce.<br />
30n<br />
FOR SALE: Modern ranch tyj)©-:<br />
home 3 bedroom, 2 bath, electric'<br />
heat, screened patio, furnished or<br />
unfurnished. Tel: Culver 842-<br />
3368. 29-4n<br />
Business Lake<br />
To Buy or Sell<br />
REAL ESTATE<br />
Call<br />
Dale or Rebecca Jones, Salesmen<br />
Chipman, Jenkins & Chipman,<br />
Brokers<br />
Phone VI 2-3128<br />
Residential Farm<br />
1-26* tfn<br />
FOR SALE: Two houses 211 and<br />
213 E. Wash. St., Both for $3000.<br />
Call after 6 p.m. 842-3292. 30*<br />
MARY y beamed recently at a public<br />
, *ffl*- * - function.<br />
The Eisenhowers' July first golden wedding anniversary marks the first<br />
time in 119 years that a former President and his lady have reached this<br />
milestone. John Quincy Adams and his wife celebrated their 50th anniversary<br />
.on July 26, 1847. Respecting the wishes of General and Mrs.<br />
Eisenhower, a committee headed by Bob Hope, comedian, and Robert B.<br />
Anderson, former Treasury Secretary, is urging that in lieu of gifts to the<br />
couple, contributions should be sent to Eisenhower College, a new coeducational<br />
libero! arts college named after the General. Contributions<br />
are tax deductible and may be sent to Eisenhower College, Senecu Falls,<br />
New York (or c/o Postmaster) where they will be permanently recorded.<br />
Card of Thanks<br />
In this manner I wainit to thank<br />
all of my neighbors, friends, and<br />
relatives for their .personal concern,<br />
expressed through their<br />
many visits, cards, flowers and<br />
other gifts. TheSe- many kindnesses<br />
have been greatly enjoyed<br />
and appreciated and have been a<br />
real source of encouragement to<br />
me. Thank you.<br />
- WILFRED Cs -CRAFT<br />
30*<br />
I would like to express my<br />
deep appreciation, MM also that<br />
of my..-paceBts'^tib^the•-. following<br />
prgB'nSzlalt&ons ' th'ait Supported my<br />
recent band flour of Europe. It<br />
yrju&ju.-g re at,.ed'u^ttonail and ex.citing<br />
•'tftp'C Kappa Kappa Kappa<br />
.lYiaxinkuckee Junior Women's<br />
,(^h^S^e^jB^^aj^;«fefk: —<br />
Culver ilaycees — Culver City<br />
Club — Union Church of the<br />
Brethren • •Iferion C.B.Y.F.<br />
Class. W<br />
My thanks also -to individual<br />
friends who helped in many ways<br />
to make this trip possible.<br />
ANDREA!., SIPLE<br />
m»- 30*<br />
The gratitude ln*ouf hearts can<br />
never be fully expressed, but we<br />
want our friends, relatives, and<br />
neighbors to know?-' how much<br />
their kind wwrds irnd expressions<br />
of sympialthy have meant to us<br />
during our time of sorrow, the<br />
sad loss of our mother, Mrs. Fletcher<br />
T. Strang.<br />
MR. AND MiRS. ROBERT OTT<br />
MR. AND MRS. FLETCHER F.<br />
STRANG 30n<br />
NOTICE TO<br />
TAXPAYERS OF<br />
ADDITIONAL<br />
APPROPRIATIONS<br />
Notice is hereby given the taxpayers<br />
of the Town of Culver, Marshall<br />
County, Indiana, that the proper legal<br />
officers of said municipal corporation<br />
at their regular meeting place at 7:30<br />
o'clock P.M., on the 1st day of August,<br />
<strong>1966</strong> will consider the following<br />
additional appropriations which said<br />
officers consider necessary to meet the<br />
extraordinary emergency existing at<br />
this time.<br />
General Fund<br />
CI 13-Salary of Marshal and<br />
Deputy Marshal $1,000.00<br />
C622-Cross Income Tax 134.41<br />
Park Fund<br />
Park 599-Cross Income Tax 46.98<br />
Taxpayers appearing at such meeting<br />
shall have a right to be heard thereon.<br />
The additional appropriations as finally<br />
made will be automatically referred to<br />
the State Board of Tax Commissioners,<br />
which Board will hold a further hearing<br />
within fifteen days at the County<br />
Auditor's Office of said County, or at<br />
such other place as may be designated.<br />
At such hearing taxpayers objecting to<br />
any of such additional appropriations<br />
may be heard. Interested taxpayers<br />
may inquire of the County Auditor<br />
when and where such hearing will be<br />
held.<br />
RUTH B. LENNEN<br />
The head of television netwoi<br />
who was having trouble with h<br />
program department called in h<br />
executives for a lecture:<br />
"Look," he said. "You gu;<br />
have got to get on the bull. That<br />
all there is to it. If we have ai<br />
bottlenecks around here, I wd<br />
you to get rid of them, and get r<br />
of them immediately. Now, wl<br />
has any suggestions?"<br />
From the rear of the eonferen<br />
rooMi a junior executive piped u<br />
"Sir," lie said, "I've linri son<br />
experience with bottles and fro<br />
that experience I can tell you, tl<br />
necks are always at the topi"<br />
Forkltft Operator:: VI ;<br />
sleep nights.""<br />
ShippingClerk: .VHave you<br />
taking a couple' of^drinks<br />
night?"<br />
Forfclift Operator: "Yes,<br />
that's why I can't sleep . . .<br />
I go home afterwards, my<br />
won't let me in the house!"<br />
cat<br />
tri<br />
ea<br />
a<br />
wh<br />
FOOD & BAKE<br />
SALE<br />
Saturday, July 30<br />
9 a.m. to<br />
In old Eostcrday-Boninc<br />
Funeral Home Building<br />
Sponsored By<br />
Ladies' Auxiliary to<br />
V.F.W., Post 6919<br />
30n<br />
Wi<br />
NOTICE OF<br />
HEARING ON<br />
FINAL ACCOUNT<br />
ESTATE NO. 7685<br />
STATE OF INDIANA<br />
MARSHALL COUNTY ss:<br />
IN THE MARSHALL CIRCUIT COUF<br />
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTA"<br />
OF Charles H. Muehlhausen, deceas<br />
Notice is hereby given that the u"<br />
dersigned personal representative<br />
the above captioned estate, has pr<br />
sented and filed:<br />
(a) A final account in final settl<br />
ment of said estate and petition<br />
settle and allow account.<br />
(c) Petition for authority to dish<br />
bufe estate.<br />
and that the same shall be heard in tl<br />
court room of said Court on the 12<br />
day Of August, <strong>1966</strong>, at which tin<br />
all persons interested in said estate a<br />
required to appear in said Court ai<br />
show cause, if any there be, why sa<br />
account should not be approved. Ar<br />
the heirs of said decedent and ;<br />
others interested are also required<br />
appear and make proof of their he»<br />
ship or claim to any part of said estat<br />
ROBERT J. MUEHLHAUSEN<br />
CORDON D. MUEHLHAUSEN &<br />
THE STATE EXCHANGE BANK<br />
Personal Representatives<br />
HARVEY E. PHILLIPS<br />
Clerk of the above captioned Court<br />
W. 0. OSBORN<br />
A .. L C..-._
Culver Community<br />
I School<br />
Corporation<br />
1965-66 ANNUAL REPORT<br />
Statement of receipts and expenditures<br />
of Culver Community Schools<br />
Corporation for the fiscal year ending<br />
June 30, <strong>1966</strong>:<br />
SPECIAL SCHOOL FUND<br />
Receipts:<br />
Balance July 1, 1 965 $ 85,643.96<br />
Local Taxes 102,003.29<br />
State Distribution 17,042.56<br />
State Intangible Tax 13,254.53<br />
Property Tax Relief 32,612.00<br />
Corporate Tax 12,313.24<br />
Special Education<br />
Reimbursement 470.08<br />
^Transfer Tuition 17.53<br />
N.D.E.A. - Title III 1 ,792.86<br />
Insurance Refunds 605.69<br />
Rentals 75.00<br />
Miscellaneous 324.20<br />
Total Special School<br />
Fund<br />
266,154.94<br />
Total Disbursements 200,366.52<br />
Balance July 1, <strong>1966</strong> $ 65,788.42<br />
Disbursements:<br />
ABC School Supply 39.39<br />
Allegri-Tech, Inc. 89.57<br />
Allen, Cynthia 10.00<br />
Allen, Gertrude 1 5.00<br />
Allied, Inc. 415.13<br />
Allyn and Bacon, Inc. . 7.1 1<br />
American Air Service Inc. 1 14.1 1<br />
American Art Clay Company 92.18<br />
American Assn. of<br />
Teachers of French 10.10<br />
American Council on<br />
Education 32.80<br />
American Education<br />
r--International 5.00<br />
American Education<br />
Publications 44.00<br />
American Guidance<br />
Publications, Inc. 10.35<br />
American Library & Education<br />
Service Co. 605.31<br />
American Library Assn. 9.25<br />
American Literature Records 1 1.85<br />
American Standard Corp. 38.81<br />
Amond, Frank E. 660.00<br />
Anco Office Equipment 82.80<br />
Atlas 4.00<br />
Aubbee High School<br />
Shop Fund 16.00<br />
Aubbee School Cen'l. Fund 21.75<br />
Autrey, Ron 20.00<br />
Babcock, Dr. F. L. 3.20<br />
Baroid Chpmicals, Inc. 28.25<br />
3arron's B I 1<br />
Davis, Leroy 5,1 1 7.08 Marshall County Fire Dept. 10.40 | The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 28, 19fifi — l'age 15<br />
Davis Plbg. & Htg. 1.60 Marshall County Lbr. Co. 352.27<br />
Demco Library Supplies 55.35 Mayfair Subscription Agency 7.50 Speyer, Harry R. 1,057.50 Garber, Ronald R.<br />
6,456.00<br />
T. S. Denison & Co., Inc. 27.67 McClurg, A. C. and Co. 606.68 The Sportsman, Inc. 9.31 Garver, Billie Dean 5,615.00<br />
Denoyer-Ceppert Co. 89.74 McGlothin, Woodie<br />
100.00 j St. John Business Machines,<br />
Good, Onda P.<br />
8,597.00<br />
A. B. Dick Products Co. 994.71 McGraw-Hill Book Co.<br />
9.74 Inc. 2,195.18 Good, Rex Adren<br />
8,655.00<br />
Dick Blick Co. 289.93 McKee, Robert Lee 1 ,620.00 State Exchange Bank 1,420.62 Good, Hazel<br />
9.00<br />
Dictaphone Corporation 40.50 McKee, Vern B. 2 ,392.30 State Exchange Ins. Agcy. 5,241.72 Hand, Lois Bess<br />
5,400.00<br />
Discount Record Shops 80.80 McLane, Alice<br />
7.10 Stayton, Ralph E. 120.00 Harris, William Richard 6,156.00<br />
Dittrich's Lakeside Service J3.00 McLane, Frank 1 ,138.39 1<br />
Stegemoller, Bill 5.00 Hartman, Phyllis Caroline 6,056.00<br />
Don Electric Service 14.00 Mel's Standard Service 49.93<br />
Sterling Publishing Co., Inc. 47.02 Henning, Mary Esther 6,556.00<br />
Doubleday & Co., Inc. 141.00 Melton, Lula<br />
5.00<br />
Stevens & Wampler 1 50.00 Hiatt, Shirley J.<br />
4,691.68<br />
Douthitt's Office Equip. Co. 2.99 G. E. Meyer & Son, Inc. 121.73 Stromberg Hydraulic Brake<br />
Hooley, Ronald Lee 5,755.00<br />
Dowd, Everett 100.00 Mid-America Products, Inc. 32.40<br />
& Coupling Co. 32.96 Hoover, Mary Elizabeth 126.00<br />
Doyle's Hearing Service 390.00 Middle Atlantic<br />
Stubbs, Don 10.00 Horban, Robert Henry 6,436.00<br />
Dunning, Joe 800.00 Transportation Co. 1 1.42<br />
Summy-Birchard Co. 14.09 Howard, Wanda Lee 3,400.78<br />
Dyna-Vac Power Cleaning Ser. 90.00 Mider, Walter A.<br />
52.91<br />
Sunbeam Appliance<br />
Howard, Jerry Arthur 7,500.00<br />
Earp, Florence 270.00 Mikesell, Norman L.<br />
31.32 Service Company 2.55 Huff, Dorothy Gene 3,502.00<br />
Easterday Const. & Supply 1,232.1 3 Miller, Jack P.<br />
10.00 Sunray D-X Oil Co. 5.18 Hughes, Barbara Whan 7,066.00<br />
Economy Handicrafts, Inc. 35.00 Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co. 10.35 Superintendent of Documents 9.25 Hughey, Philip Charles 6,921.00<br />
Education Digest 5.00 Misco Biological, Inc. 342.53 Starke Co. Democrat 1.05 Kaiser, Naomi<br />
558.00<br />
Educational Audio Visus'.<br />
Mishek Supply Co.<br />
8.06 Sytsma, Albert J. 4,902.50 Kaiser, Shelton<br />
9,617.00<br />
Inc. 250.73 Mittler Supply, Inc.<br />
82.02 Taber, William W. 30.00 Keller, Alice C.<br />
7,006.00<br />
Educational Music Bureau, Inc. 9.05 National Biological Supply<br />
Thomas, Keith Chapman 3,596.51 Keyser, Sandra Kay<br />
918.00<br />
Educators Progress Service 33.98 Co., Inc.<br />
172.25<br />
Keith Thomas Repair 35.05 King, Ruth<br />
396.00<br />
Epley, Jeanne K. 10.00 National Council on<br />
Elmer Thornton,<br />
Kline, Carolyn Jo<br />
848.23<br />
Envelope Sales Co. 4.41 Schoolhouse Construction 7.00 Forney Distributor 21.60<br />
Kline, James Robert 6,305.00<br />
Ervin, Constance 2,113.18 National Exterminators<br />
5.00 Time-Life Books 23.70 Kline, Nancy Ellen 2,901.48<br />
European Publishers<br />
National High School<br />
Todd Chemical Co., Inc. 92.42 Knox-Center-Washington<br />
Representatives 1 1 .00 Math Contest<br />
6.40<br />
Town of Culver, Ind. 2,075.49 School Corporation 10,548.06<br />
Fagerstrom, Dr. William H. 3.40 National Mill Supply,<br />
198.24<br />
Trans-World Films, Inc. 36.50 Lawson, Latham L. 7,540.00<br />
Farm Bureau Mutual Ins. Co. 815.20 National Time & Signal Corp 5.84<br />
Tullis, Charles W. 10.00 Lawson, Rita Jane<br />
54.00<br />
Fields, Gerald D. 5.26<br />
Geographic<br />
Unified College Press, Inc. 5.90<br />
National<br />
6.75<br />
Leiters Ford State Bank 12,000.00<br />
Film Center, Inc. 19.60<br />
School Methods,<br />
United States Chemical Co. 1,223.49<br />
National<br />
Lindvall, Mildred Caroline 7,717.44<br />
U. S. News & World Report 8.00<br />
Filmcraft 144.22 Inc.<br />
30.05<br />
Linhart, Barbara Lee 5,255.00<br />
United States Pencil Co. 15.59<br />
Fishback, William S.,<br />
Nation's Business<br />
19.75<br />
Manis, Dorothy Marie 7,006.00<br />
United Telephone Co. of<br />
NAFT Chairman 6.90 Nation's Schools<br />
4.00<br />
McLane, Alice<br />
6,967.08<br />
Films, Inc. 29.00 Neidlinger, Ralph<br />
642.00 Ind. 297.62 Melton, Lula Thomas 7,606.00<br />
Flora, Robert R. 436.50 Nelson, John Riley<br />
800.00 Unruh, Gary 5.00 Mikesell, Nellie Irene 180.00<br />
Foreign Language Review, Inc. 9.75 New York Times<br />
28.50 Unruh, Nola Jean 2,825.00 Mikesell, Neva Ellen 8,805.00<br />
Frain, Charles Stevens 441.00 Nelson Equip. Co.<br />
1,037.91 U. S. Chemical Co. 50.40 Miller, Jack P.<br />
8,980.00<br />
Frazee Fire Brick &<br />
Newsweek<br />
8.00 U. S. Dept. of Labor 10.00 Mishler, Martha Lea 5.656.00<br />
Materials, Inc. 3.95 North Central Assn.<br />
35.00 Village Hardware 651.71 Mishler, Terry Martin 6,480.00<br />
FrieSen, Helen 5.00 NIPSCO<br />
7,416.31 Vonnegut Hdw. Co. 22.71 Nelson, John Riley<br />
8,806.00<br />
Frontier Press Distributing Co. 37.05 W. W. Norton & Co., Inc. 5.02 Walker, Thomas K. 1,620.00 Opitz, Charles I.<br />
18.00<br />
Carber, Ronald R. 500.00 A. j. NyStrom & Co.<br />
141.56 Warner, Ruth 3,025.00 Overmyer, Mildred Violet 8,655.00<br />
Carver, Bill 86.61<br />
Wayne Camera and<br />
Page, Florence May 8,655.00<br />
Oak Ridge Atom Industries,<br />
Gates and Calhoun<br />
Visual Equip. 953.12 Perry, Kent E.<br />
7,231.00<br />
Inc.<br />
12.02<br />
Chevrolet, Inc.. . 467.80.<br />
Welch Scientific Co. 3,153.07 Pulaski County School<br />
Office Engineers, Inc.<br />
15.21<br />
Caylord Bros., Inc. 298.45<br />
Weldstar Company 60.47 Corporation<br />
Oliver Ford Sales, Inc.<br />
12.20<br />
1,076.06<br />
Wesson, Nedra Ann 1,260.00<br />
Gilbert, Donald Eugene 2,312.50<br />
Rochester Community<br />
Olson Electronics, Inc. 53.26<br />
Schools<br />
Wesson, Oscar 100.00<br />
Cinn and Company 213.38 Overmyer Body Shop 546.37<br />
Corporation<br />
353.72<br />
O. M. Whitcomb Supply Co. 259.12<br />
Coble, D. H. Printing Co. 730.58 F. A. Owne Pub. Co.<br />
6.00<br />
Rust, Bertha May<br />
7,006.00<br />
Ray Wicker Ford Sales 3,642.34<br />
Good, Onda 10.01 Page, Florence<br />
5.00<br />
Ryser, Eric R.<br />
720.00<br />
Wilcox and Follett Co. 24.90<br />
Coodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. 5.52 Pan American Union<br />
7.00<br />
Schricker, Jean Laramore 6,759.80<br />
H. W. Wilson Co. 21.00<br />
Good-Lite Company 53.85 Park 'n' Shop Super Mkt. 53.88<br />
Shanks, Cladah Ruth 8,522.00<br />
Cordon, Frank 200.00 Parker Publishing Co.<br />
6.57<br />
Wisconsin Council of<br />
Shirrell, Omer Carl 8,522.00<br />
Grade Teacher 10.49 Passon's Sport Center, Inc. 402.60<br />
Teachers of English 2.78 Shirrell, Corine<br />
8,522.00<br />
Graphic Books 3.75 Patton, Henrietta<br />
2,1 30.00<br />
Wolfe, Jerry 48.00 Smith, Delbert M.<br />
6,056.00<br />
Great Lakes Scientific Corp. 5.78 Paxton Equip. & Supply 454.02<br />
Wolverine Sports Supply 69.21 Smith Virginia Stiles 6,706.00<br />
Cretrer's Food Mkt. 129.51 Peabody Seating Co., Inc. 82.41<br />
Woodlawn Hospital 18.00 State Exchange Bank 45,000.00<br />
Guidance Associates 27.44 J. C. Penney Company, Inc 10.89<br />
Transfer of Property<br />
Stegemoller William 5,946.00<br />
Gulf Oil Corporation 5.55 Perry, Kent<br />
10.51 Tax Relief Fund 25,700.00 Shook, Patricia B.<br />
18.00<br />
Crosvenor, Wilma 364.00 Pickett, Inc.<br />
27.55<br />
Stinchcomb, Judd T.<br />
TUITION FUND<br />
54.00<br />
Harcourt, Brace & World, Inc. 674.50 Pioneer Flag Co.<br />
7.00<br />
Tanksley, Norman<br />
8,905.00<br />
Receipts:<br />
Hartman, Phyllis 5.00 Plymouth Office Supply 177.31<br />
Unruh, Gary Lee<br />
6,756.00<br />
Balance July 1, 1965 58,907.70<br />
Harvey's Dime Store 4.51 Poe, Ben<br />
20.00<br />
Vondra, George Charles 7,186.00<br />
Local Taxes 270,427.64<br />
Hawk's Garage 1,712.35 Poppe's Appliance<br />
45.90<br />
Welling, Leon Milton 7,006.00<br />
Cash Tuition 492.28<br />
Heckman Bindery, Inc. 92.60 Frederick Post Co.<br />
275.46<br />
Wesson Oscar, Treasurer 187.22<br />
State Tuition Support 157,079.30<br />
Hiatt Electric Co. 355.75 Powell Tool Supply, Inc.<br />
75.21<br />
Williams, Jean Aber<br />
558.00<br />
Teacher Retirement 13,513.75<br />
:"3ticnal<br />
Highsmith Company 40.08 Precision Equip. Co.<br />
140.41<br />
Winters, Barbara A. 6,056.00<br />
Summer School<br />
Service Corporation 7.62<br />
Hill and Son Sound Eng. 45.75 Prentice-Hall, Inc.<br />
12.30<br />
Wolfe, lerry Wayne 5,706.00<br />
Reimbursement 1,401.43<br />
Barton, Ruth 10.00<br />
Hinkle, Henry W. 1,620.00 Prestige Publishing Co.<br />
13.47 Special Education Payment 255.95 CUMULATIVE BUILDING FUND<br />
Bear-Cat Stores 2.24<br />
Hissong, Wayne 2,144.05 Robert F. Price<br />
360.00 State Transfer Payment 1,193.96 Receipts:<br />
Beckley Cardy Co. 93.86<br />
Wayne Hissong Bldg. Ser. 408.67 Program Aids Company<br />
266.25 County Wide School Tax 28,256.49 Balance July 1, 1965 37,386.54<br />
Behfer, Winfield W. 80.00<br />
Hodges, George 3,065.00 Psychological Corporation<br />
17.45 Congressional Interest 190.14 Local Taxes<br />
57,452.68<br />
ten Franklin Store 35.76<br />
Hoffman Bros. Auto-Electric,<br />
Public Employees' Retirement<br />
Transfer Tuition 303.93 Transfer of Funds from<br />
Bennett's Plumbing & Htg. 5.00<br />
Inc. 52.89 Fund - OAS I<br />
2,240.59 Temporary Loan 20,000.00 Tuition Fund<br />
187.22<br />
Bete Co., Inc., Channing L. 5.27<br />
Holcomb, J. I. Mfg. Co. 223.25 Publishers Central Bureau 48.26<br />
Transfer of Funds from<br />
Better Homes & Gardens 3.00<br />
Holt, Rinehart & Winston, Inc. 15.30 Purdue University<br />
76.88 Total Tuition Fund 552,022.57 Special School<br />
25,700.00<br />
Bill-a-Pak Co. 14.53<br />
Honeywell, Inc. 148.80 Popular Science Pub. Co. 60.00 Total Disbursements 517,814.20<br />
Black Magazine Agency 110.37<br />
Hooley, Kathleen Janet 735.00 Railway Express Agency 4.93<br />
Total Cumulative Building<br />
Blue Products Co. 195.20<br />
Hoosier Book and Supply Co. 470.99 Ramsey News Company 14.40 Balance July 1, <strong>1966</strong> 34,208.37 Fund 120,726.44<br />
Baker & Taylor Co. 704.42<br />
Hoosier Fire Equip., Inc. 71.40 Random House School and<br />
Disbursements:<br />
Total Disbursements 33,170.00<br />
Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc. 9.68<br />
Houghton Mifflin Co. 265.06 Library Services<br />
4.66 Allen, Cynthia Dare 5,881 .00<br />
Boetsma, Joe and Son 75.00<br />
Howard, J. Arthur 20.00 Rawles Grocery<br />
68.71 Allen, Gertrude M. 7,006.00 Balance July 1 <strong>1966</strong> 87,556.44<br />
Howard, Joseph D., M.D. 48.00<br />
Boiler and Pressure Board 8.00<br />
Readers' Digest Services, Inc 53.47 Barton, Opal Ruth<br />
7,006.00 Disbursements:<br />
Bosworth's Home Shop 45.14<br />
Hudon Typewriter Service 478.93 Regent's Publishing Co., Inc 1.30 Brown, Jerry Earl<br />
5,300.00 Easterday, Russell<br />
33,1 10.00<br />
Hughey, Philip 48.00<br />
R. R. Bowker Co. 35.50<br />
Regent's of the University<br />
Carter, Margaret<br />
8,655.00 Kleinke, Frank<br />
60.00<br />
A. E. Boyce Company 6.38<br />
Indiana Bell Telephone Co. 641.32 of California<br />
76.80 Charlton, Mary Ann 4,848.25<br />
30n<br />
Indiana Manufacturers' Assn. 1.50<br />
Brown, Jerry 5.00<br />
Redigas, Inc.<br />
66.00 Cole, Kenneth Lankford 7,232.00<br />
Ind. Univ. Audio-Visual Ctr. 333.05<br />
Brown, Winifred Norma 120.00<br />
Report Card Company 62.36 Crabb, Larry Wayne 7,062.00<br />
Indiana University Press 4.65<br />
Bruce Publishing Co. 2.85<br />
Rhythm Band, Inc.<br />
15.08 Crosley, Donald Eugene 9,357.40<br />
FEDERAL TAX<br />
Industrial Research Unit 3.00<br />
Bumpa-Tel Sign Co. 27.50 I<br />
Ridge Company<br />
10.49 Dillman, Ernest Lee 6,046.00 You are always welcome at the<br />
Bureau of Tests 22.53<br />
Instrumental Music, Inc. 147.55 Riverhouse Publishing Co. 20.70 England, Mary Frances 6,1 31.00 social security office. If you are<br />
Burke's Audio-Visual Center 271.50<br />
International Bus. Machines<br />
James R. Robertson, M.D. 10.00 Epley, Jeanne Keller 7,456.00 nearing retirement age, are disabl<br />
Burr Cak Coal & Fuel Co. 2,670.27<br />
Corp. 302.37 Rochester Sentinel<br />
156.50 Fields, Phylliss<br />
6,056.00 ed, or have had a death in the<br />
Burroughs, Edgar 2,890.66<br />
Jim's Electric Service 1 1 9.76 Wayne Roe Agency<br />
10.00 Fouts, Harry Ronald 6,780.00 family<br />
Johnson, E. F. Company 538.52<br />
Business Education World 4.50<br />
Howard H. Rowe, M.D. 10.00 Frettinger, David Paul 7,156.00<br />
Johnson, Walter 100.00<br />
Butler, R, E. 1 10.00<br />
Royal Typewriter Co., Inc. 718.50 Frettinger, Shirely Anne 6,256.00<br />
Johnson's Tire Service 179.84<br />
Campbell Music Co., Inc. 237.50<br />
Russ' Garage<br />
20.35 Friesen, Helen Kathleen 6,356.00<br />
Jones, Chester Roland 1,620.00<br />
Carl Mfg. Co. 43.90<br />
Russell, Thomas<br />
100.00<br />
Kain s Motor Service Corp. 4.91<br />
Carneal-Thompson Clinic 20.00<br />
Ryser, Eric R.<br />
,179.00<br />
Kaiser, Noami 1 15.75<br />
Cass Hudson Co. 94.10<br />
Saniway Company<br />
28.00<br />
Kepler, Robert Cuy 1,620.00<br />
Central Publishing Co. 15.00<br />
W. B. Saunders Company 5.40<br />
Kerlin Bus Sales & Serv. 3,299.40<br />
Central Scientific Corp. 305.00<br />
Sav-On Products<br />
39.21<br />
Keyboard Jr. Publications, Inc. 17.40<br />
Champion Knitwear Co., Inc. 55.27<br />
Sax Arts and Crafts<br />
480.77<br />
Chesterfield Music<br />
Kiger and Co., Inc. 710.74 Scholastic Magazines, Inc. 32.75<br />
King School Equip. Co. 84.00 School Library Journal<br />
5.00<br />
Shops, Inc. 39.82<br />
Kline's Appliance & TV Store 267.61 School Music Service<br />
68.89<br />
Clark Subscription Agcy. 91.57<br />
Kline, Robert C. 55.00 School Service Co., Inc. 10.65<br />
College Blue Book 48.00<br />
Kowatch, Edward 5,194.14 Schoolcraft, Inc.<br />
55.88<br />
College Entrance<br />
Kowarch Plbg. & Htg. 15.00 Schrimsher's Hauling Service 85.00<br />
Examination Board 4.00<br />
Kraning Clinic 10.00 Science Research<br />
Congressional Quarterly, Inc. 15.75<br />
Krcll, John Martin 15.40<br />
Continental McClurg 113.06<br />
Associates, Inc.<br />
15.93<br />
Kubley, James D., Dr. 10.00<br />
Continental Press 13.37<br />
Science Service<br />
5.50<br />
Lafayette Radio Elec. Corp. 12.96<br />
Cook, Charles E. 544.50<br />
Scientific American<br />
7.00<br />
Lancaster-Deamer Ins. Agcy. 165.00<br />
Coop Electric Supply Co. 1 1.61<br />
Scott, Chester Clifford, Sr. 1,710.00<br />
Larry Lape, Remington<br />
Cooperative Test Div. 42.53<br />
Scott, Josiah<br />
3,060.00<br />
Office Machines 350.00<br />
Costello Mfg. Co. 73.14<br />
Scott, Foresman & Co. 34.72<br />
Courier-Newson Express, Inc. 9.82<br />
LaPine Scientific Co. 148.80 Sears, Roebuck & Co.<br />
60.17<br />
Lawson, Latham 15.00<br />
Crabb, Larry 15.00<br />
Seventeen Magazine<br />
5.00<br />
Lawson, Rita Jane 315.00<br />
Crill Plumbing Service 115.70<br />
Shaffer, Lorin Elvis 1,71 3.45<br />
H. J. Lease Office Machines 248.50<br />
Croft Educational Services 54.48<br />
Shemberger's Music, Inc. 36.00<br />
Lebo, Charles Edward 4,932.50<br />
Croner Publications 1 2.52<br />
Shepherd's Sales & Service 175.37<br />
Lee School Supply Co., Inc. 214.00<br />
Crosley, Donald Eugene 507.60<br />
Shorewood Reproductions, Inc. 14.00<br />
Leiters Elevator & Lbr. Yard 2,410.13<br />
Crull Ready Mix Or<br />
Sikora Musical Instrument<br />
Materials Co. 17.24<br />
Leiters Ford State Bank 2,636.24 Repair<br />
510.38<br />
Listening Library 30.10<br />
Culver City Rexall Drugs 20.17<br />
Silver Burdett Company 173.60<br />
Leonard Supply Co. 125.38<br />
Culver Clinic 210.00<br />
Simon and Schuster, Inc. 3.30<br />
Lockett, Willie, Sr. 30.00<br />
Culver Clothiers 1.98<br />
Simon Brothers, Inc.<br />
866.19<br />
Lockridge Studio, Inc. 10.50<br />
Culver Hardware 368.26<br />
Sims Printing Co.<br />
131.50<br />
Culver High School Bookstore 556.57<br />
Lorraine Music Co. 30.50 Sinclair Refining Co.<br />
500.85<br />
Culver High School Cafeteria 96.13<br />
Lyons Band Instrument Co. 124.21 Singer Sewing Mach. Co. 305.12<br />
Culver Inn 278.65<br />
Macmillan Co. 80.00 Singleton, Chester<br />
3,060.00<br />
Culver Post Office 304.75<br />
Magna Sales Co. 1 2.32 Sinton Supply Co., Inc.<br />
8.61<br />
Culver Press, Inc. 382.00<br />
Maiben's, Inc. 44.79 Snyder Motor Sales<br />
13.50<br />
Culver Seating Co. 1 50.25<br />
Manis, Dorothy 10.00 Sonneborn's Sport Shop 290.15<br />
Culver Tcol and Eng. Co. 15.95<br />
Manlove, Dr. Donald C. 25.00 Scuth Bend Iron and<br />
Curtis Pub. Co. 3.95<br />
Marathon Oil Co. 2,102.63 Metal Co.<br />
18.00<br />
David-Stewart Publishing Co. 3.70<br />
Marocco's Music Mart 605.44 South Bend Lathe, Inc.<br />
7.50<br />
3<br />
aul Davidson, Leiters<br />
Marshall Co. Auto<br />
South Dakota Press<br />
27.08<br />
Ford Postmaster 154.85 License Bureau 2.50 South Whitley Trucking Co. 15.08<br />
;ldon Davis, Aubbeenaubbee<br />
Marshall County Farm<br />
South-Western Pub. Co. 4.99<br />
Twp. Trustee 2,276.24 Bureau Co-op.<br />
2,991.38 Spencer Plbg. & Htg.<br />
1.25<br />
1<br />
recently, you should come<br />
in and discuss the situation — and<br />
don't forget medicare!<br />
FULTON COUNTY COMMUNITY SALE<br />
Rochester, Indiana<br />
Hoi. Cow Springer Bugsby & Sarver, Kewanna 340.00<br />
Hoi. Hef. Springer 340.00<br />
1410-lb. Bull |ohn Foster, Roanoke cwt. 24.00<br />
1250-lb. Bull Dan Shriver, Rochester cwt. 23.75<br />
1245-lb. Steer James Lease, Rochester cwt. 25.20<br />
1325-lb. Steer James Lease, Rochester cwt. 25.20<br />
1100-lb. Steer James Lease, Rochester cwt. 25.10<br />
1220-lb. Steer James Lease, Rochester cwt. 25.00<br />
900-lb. Hef. Weldon Worl, Bunker Hill cwt. 24.60<br />
935-ib. Hef. Weldon Worl, Bunker Hill cwt. 24.30<br />
1040-lb. Hef. Noel Finster, Bunker Hill cwt. 24.80<br />
1370-lb. Hoi. Steer Harley McCroskey, Rochester cwt. 23.75<br />
930-lb. Hoi. Steer Hale Dawald, Macy cwt. 22.60<br />
1010-lb. Cow Bill Trapp, Winamac . cwt. 18.50<br />
1325-lb. Cow Addie Crindle, Monterey cwt. 18.40<br />
1240-lb. Cow Fioyd Creen, Twelve Mile cwt. 18.30<br />
1 365-lb. Cow Ben McCloughan cwt. 18.30<br />
62-lb. Pigs Richard Smith, Bremen each 20.00<br />
59-lb. Pigs Ronald Coleman, Michigantown __each 19.75<br />
37-lb. Pigs Paul Brucker, Rochester each 14.75<br />
223-lb. Hogs Fred Wagoner, Rochester cwt. 26.30<br />
8 Hogs 1840-lbs. Evers & McNabb, Kewanna cwt. 26.30<br />
8 Hogs 1775-lbs. Dr. dinger & Town, Rochester cwt. 26.20<br />
335-lb. Sows Maurice Helvey, Akron cwt. 21.70<br />
15 Sows 4685-lbs. Clem Miller, Rochester cwt. 21.00<br />
445-lb. Sows Dale Helley, Bourbon cwt. 19.20<br />
105-lb. Lambs John Kraning, Peru ewt. 24.70<br />
If you want an appraisement or want to sell at home, call Carl Newcomb,<br />
Rochester, collect 223-2615 or 223-5168.<br />
Vern Schroder & Burdett Garner, Auctioneers Carl Newcomb
Pago 10 — The Culver Citizen — Culver, Indiana — July 38, 11MW<br />
Indians Lose<br />
Baseball Games<br />
To Triton, Tyner<br />
By ROBERT YOXDRA<br />
The erstwhile Culver Indians<br />
'lost to Triton last Wednesday,<br />
July 20, by a 7-5 score. Confucius<br />
say, "Team who have younger<br />
players get wrinkles ironed out<br />
this year, have one heckuva good<br />
season next year." This is maybe<br />
the reason [ o r Culver's lower<br />
than usual end of the season record<br />
(four wins to 14 losses).<br />
Brian f'ndvnll pitched, and<br />
gave up eight hits and seven<br />
walks.<br />
The Indians got off to a good<br />
start and scored two runs in the<br />
first inning on errors by the Trojaivs.<br />
However. Triton came back<br />
wi:h two runs in the first also.<br />
Efeti Lowtry scored on a single by<br />
Jtack Lucas in the third, and in<br />
the fifth inning Phil White and<br />
Terry Clifton crossed h o m e on<br />
wingles, giving Culver a throe-run<br />
lead.<br />
However, in the bottom of the<br />
ftilth, Triton erased the lead by<br />
scoring four times on two singles,<br />
as pif.-.her Brian Lindvail lost his<br />
control and advanced men with<br />
Wild pitching. Triton sco'red once<br />
more in the seventh for added insurance<br />
that proved unnecessary.<br />
The tribe finished off their season<br />
against Tyner, losing 7-3 on<br />
Thursday, July 21.<br />
Terry Gentry was the pitcher,<br />
giving up nine hits a n d three<br />
walks.<br />
Culver scored one in the first,<br />
one in the fourth, and one In the<br />
seventh inning, and seemed destined<br />
to score more on all three<br />
occasions, but the runners died<br />
on base.<br />
ELAINE KAISER ATTENDS<br />
SECOND I.I . WORKSHOP<br />
Elaine Kaiser, Lake Shore<br />
Drive, Culver, is among some 275<br />
high school .juniors and seniors<br />
chosen from Indiana and neighboring<br />
stages to participate in the<br />
Yearbook Workshop of Indiana<br />
University's High Schoi 1 Journalism<br />
Institute July 24-Aug. 6 on<br />
the Lloomington campus.<br />
The two-week Workshop is designed<br />
to instruct; h I g h school<br />
journalists in page makeup, copywriting<br />
and editing, picture<br />
cropping, proofreading, photography<br />
and managing the business<br />
phlase of ithe high school annua'.<br />
'Students attending the session,<br />
the third and final part of l.U.'s<br />
20-yeair-old summer Journalism<br />
Institute, are housed in undergraduate<br />
residence halls w i t h<br />
resident counselors.<br />
The two previous sections June<br />
26-July 22 concerned the school<br />
newspaper. Institute director is<br />
Miss Grotohen A. Kemp, professor<br />
of journalism at I.U.<br />
Attend Church EVERY Sunday<br />
CMA Canoe Team<br />
Places In Natl.<br />
Championship<br />
Culver Mlitary Academy's canoe<br />
team brought home a first,<br />
second, and third place in competition<br />
last weekend at the National<br />
Canoe championships in New<br />
Rocihelle, N.Y.<br />
Working under American Canoe<br />
Coach Kataan Blaho, w h o<br />
may take the U.S. team to East<br />
Berlin for the world championships<br />
next month, the Culver canoeists<br />
flashed home with a victory<br />
in a gruelling race in the<br />
nine-man war canoe event. Since<br />
the war canoe classification is a<br />
new event, Culver's time of<br />
2:28.1 established a record for<br />
"JOO meters.<br />
The Academy paddlers edged<br />
nil the Vonkers, N.Y. squad in<br />
the war canoe race after the New<br />
York team took an early lead.<br />
PI a ho described the race as "combat<br />
— all the way," and it was<br />
not until the final section of Ithe<br />
PVPII! that Culver pulled ahead.<br />
The Eagle i edged Yonkers by one<br />
and one-tenths of a second.<br />
Culver's war canoe squad was<br />
composed of nine Wirier School<br />
youngsters who have been working<br />
out on Lake Maxinkuckee for<br />
several weeks. They are: Robert<br />
Pogle, Attica. Ind.; Casper Martin,<br />
Elkhart, Ind.; Steve Kling.<br />
Wayne, 111.: Keith Oldham, Durham.<br />
N.C.; Chris Greenleaf, Culver,<br />
Ind.; James Etchen, Pittsburg.<br />
Pa.; John Benner, Culver,<br />
Ind.; Fred Mann, South Bend,<br />
Ind.; and Ted Prison, Cherry<br />
Hill, Clo.<br />
Along with the firsit place, four<br />
Academy paddlers placed in the<br />
5,000 meter C-2, two-man racing<br />
canoe competition. Fogle and<br />
Martin combined to grab a second<br />
place and the team of Kling<br />
and O'lham won third in the<br />
same event.<br />
T h i s ye'ar's championship at<br />
New Rochelle is the first attempt<br />
by Culver in national competition<br />
in the sport. Hlaho. former Hungarian<br />
canoe champion and twice<br />
coach of the Italian Olympic canoe<br />
temr.-i. joined the Culver<br />
staff V.st winter. He was named<br />
American canoe coach this spring<br />
by the American Canoe Association,<br />
and he has served the Olympic<br />
Development Committee as a<br />
consultant in canoeing.<br />
It remains indefinite ait this<br />
time whether or not Hlaho will<br />
take the American team to East<br />
Berlin for the world championships<br />
next month. Hi' will be in<br />
charge here when the North<br />
American canoe championships<br />
are held at Culver, on Sept.<br />
17-18. The North American event<br />
will involve American, Canadian,<br />
and possibly Mexican paddlers.<br />
Subscribe To The Citizen — A<br />
GOOD newspaper in a GOOD town<br />
ROGER E. PARKER<br />
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. Airman<br />
Roger E. Parker, son of Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Homer K. Packer of<br />
Route 1, Culver, has been selected<br />
for technical training at Amarillo<br />
AFB, Tex., as a U.S. Air<br />
Force supply specialist.<br />
The airman recently completed<br />
basic training at Lackland AFB,<br />
Tex. His new school is part of the<br />
Air Training Command which<br />
conducts hundreds of specialized<br />
courses to provide technically<br />
trained personnel for the nation's<br />
aerospace force.<br />
Airman Parker was graduated<br />
from Aubbeeenaubbee H i g h<br />
School, Leiters Ford, in 19 65 nnd<br />
attended Manchester College,<br />
North Manchester, Ind.<br />
Maxinkuckee<br />
Yacht Club News<br />
By BEVERLY SUVERKRCP<br />
Slteve Speer won the Skylark<br />
race of the Junior Fleet secies<br />
again this week. He has a perfect<br />
record so far this season. His<br />
brother, Scott Speer, served as<br />
his crew. Although Steve is 1 :i<br />
years old, he is quite an experienced<br />
sailor. He sails his parents'<br />
C Scow in 'the Senior Fleet Saturday<br />
races. He was in first place<br />
around the last buoy 'this week.<br />
The race had to be'cancelled due<br />
to lack of wind.<br />
The C Scow races are supposed<br />
to be approximately six m i 1 e s<br />
long. There is a definite time<br />
limit for each race. If the first<br />
boat is unable to comp'i te the<br />
course in the al'otted time, the<br />
race is cancelled. The Sunday ('<br />
Sccw race also h a d to be cancelled.<br />
Tom Kniesley sailed the second<br />
place boat in the Sky'irk<br />
race. Tim Kniesley served as<br />
crew on this boat.<br />
Joe Scihaub sailed the first<br />
place boat in the Sailfish race.<br />
He sailed without a crew.<br />
Susie Speer sailed her Sailfish<br />
alone and placed second in the<br />
race.<br />
The members of the Yacht Club<br />
were entertained royally at a<br />
party Saturday evening given by<br />
Mr. Robert E. Hollowell, Sr., our<br />
Commodore Emeritus. Mr. and<br />
Mrs. Don Speer, Mr. a n d Mrs.<br />
Robert E. Hcllowe'.l. Jr. and Mr.<br />
and Mrs. Carl Steely assisted<br />
their father with this marvelous<br />
party.<br />
There will be a moonlight race<br />
Saturday night.<br />
Kewanna Harvest<br />
Festival Set For<br />
August 25, 28, 27<br />
Entries are new being accepted<br />
for floats for the 196G Kewanna<br />
Harvest Festival Parade<br />
to be held in Kewanna. Ind. on<br />
I Aug. 25, 26, 27. There is no en<br />
try fee and entries are due b<br />
Aug. 20. Entries are open to a!<br />
clubs, individuals, associations<br />
and groups in Fulton County an<br />
surrounding counties.<br />
First prize is $30, second priz<br />
$20 and third prize is $10.<br />
Judges will be on the review<br />
ing stand during the parade t<br />
judge these floats..<br />
Organizations building float<br />
for fairs and other celebration<br />
might like to keep their float<br />
and enter them in several pla<br />
rades including the Kewann<br />
Festival.<br />
Entries Should be mailed t<br />
either John Overpeck, Kewann;<br />
Ind., or to Francis E. Sander:<br />
% Bank, Kewanna, Ind.<br />
Ask your employer for a coi<br />
of Document 5642, which explaii<br />
the new withholding system ai<br />
contains a Form W-4. It will e<br />
able you to figure out how mm<br />
will be to your total tax libility.<br />
6R 11 i Li. If<br />
Wl FOOD MART<br />
I WM «ac>2j jfaAi Mkt QUALITY MEATS<br />
mXm I———• 106 N MAIN ST., CULVER<br />
SWIFTS PREMIUM ROLLED<br />
Rib Roast Lb. 89<<br />
Swift's Premium<br />
POT ROAST<br />
lb. W<br />
Swift's<br />
Premium<br />
Ron IK 1 Stcsk<br />
lb. 79*<br />
BANQUET FROZEN<br />
For Barbccueing<br />
BEEF RIBS<br />
All Beef<br />
Oround Bed<br />
3 lbs. $1.51<br />
f&atPies 5 F<br />
° r<br />
89<<br />
Defiancs -<br />
Table Quality<br />
10<br />
5 lbs! , $1.00<br />
Diamonc<br />
Aluminum<br />
F! ML<br />
roll 25<<br />
Fould's SPAGHETTI OR<br />
MACARONI<br />
7-oz. box 10<br />
Van Camps<br />
Pork & Beans<br />
52-oz. can<br />
39*<br />
ALL FLAVORS — THROW AWAY BOTTLES<br />
Faygo 10.<br />
Page<br />
NAPKINS<br />
200 Count<br />
25«<br />
U. S. No. 1 White<br />
POTATOES<br />
10 lbs. W<br />
Family Fare Liquid<br />
DETERGEN1<br />
qt. 39*<br />
Colored Bathroom<br />
TISSaE<br />
10 rolls 99*