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The Culver Citizen from Culver, Indiana • Page 12

Location:
Culver, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PACK TW ELVE THE CULVER CITIZEN, CULVER, INDIANA WEDNKSDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 104 ZION NEWS NOTES WASHINGTON ITEMS Mr. and Mrs. William Kline and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kline and children were guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Elsworth Snyder near Argos Sunday. They had a family dinner for Mrs. Snyder's parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Clevenger. the Walter Our church school will meet at! 10:00 a. m. Lesson studv will he! from 11.2 per cent to 14 per cent, a 25 per cent increase. From this evidence it appears that we are already faced with the problems which will be raised by a return to pre-war driving habits, plus the added dangers of deteriorated vehicles and road surfaces.

Our communities should start now to lay their post-war plans for safer driving conditions and better-driver campaigns to reduce this needless toll of human lives. Clevenger family, Mrs. Ella Marsh mir rt ii p-li ov Wv an1 ATrc Tra followed by a message by Rev. Weidler. Everyone is invited to worship with u.

The annual Thank Offering will he held at the church on Sunday evening, Dec. Everyone is invited to attend. The Thank Of fering boxes will be gathered at' (he services. Mr. and Mrs.

Wilbur Walker visited with parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harris and daughter Cather ine in Huntington over Saturday night. They received word last week that the son and brother in .11.

a A Ringer and the Klines. Mrs. William Kline and Bobby called on Mrs. Paul Winn Saturday afternoon and her daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Mitchell and baby Victoria, who are visiting there for a short itime.

They plan to go" soon to Peoria, 111., to live as Mr. Mitchell recently was discharged from the army and is now employed by a telephone company. Mrs. B. A.

Curtis and Mrs. Carrie Curtis and children were in Elkhart Thursday to see her sisters, the Snyder sisters. Etta had the misfortune to fall down the cellar stairs but fortunately no bones were broken. She was severely bruised but seems to be getting along Ruth Kline and Betty Jean Davis were in South Bend Thursday on business. with the Snyder sisters.

Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kline and children were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ira Ringer and son Norman.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mann of Plymouth called on Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Curtis and children Saturday evening.

Whitney Kline and daughter. Mrs. Don Davis, are spending two days in Chicago on business. (Last week's items.) The Vernard Goodman family have moved into the John Kline farm now owned by Irene Bo-gardus. We welcome them into the community.

Their daughter. Jean, who is employed in Plymouth, has been home for a few days as she wasn't well, but expects to resume her work soon. Mr. and Mrs. Lemuel Crabb of Culver attended the funeral of Mrs.

Louden Sunday at Poplar Grove and called on the B. A. Curtis family in the afternoon. Mrs. Carl Finney called on Mr.

and Mrs. Miller in Argos Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Curtis were guests at the Odd Fellows home at Greensburg, Saturday and Sunday and attended a reception Saturday evening at the Methodist church for the grand masters of the Odd Fellow lodge.

The children, Gene, Bobby and Warren, were guests of their grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. B. A.

Curtis, while their parents were away. Mrs. William Kline left Tuesday for Annawan, 111., to spend Thanksgiving with her daughter, Mrs. Fred Stettbacher, Mr. Stett-bacher and daughter Lynne.

Mrs. Kenneth Mitchell and daughter Victoria left on Sunday to join her husband at Peoria, 111., where they will make their home, after visiting the past two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Winn. Mr.

and Mrs. Maurice Curtis attended a lodge meeting at Mon-ticello Saturday evening. Mrs. Whitney Kline and Mrs. Don Davis called on Mr.

and Mrs. Walter Shivers in Argos, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kline attended the state Farm Bureau convention in Indianapolis, Wednesday and Thursday and while there also got to see the Sonja Henie Ice Revue.

Lester Miller and son Ormond called on the Carl Finney aud William Kline families on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Davis and son Eldon and Elizabeth Zechiel were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.

Whitney Kline and Mr. and Mrs. Don Davis. Joyce Kline was a guest of Becky Winn. Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Curtis, Dorothy Henning and Mrs. B. A.

Curtis spent Sunday at Elkhart Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Banks were in Mishawaka on Friday attending the funeral of a cousin, who was killed in an airplane accident in Terras, where he was in training. Mr. and Mrs.

Lester (-Griff and family of Argos visited with Mr. and Mrs. William O'Conner on Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs.

Estel Eakins aud children of near Marion have tome to live on the Walley farm which Ira Faulkner recently purchased of William Dashe. Morris Banks. of Plymouth visited last Wednesday with his son, Owen Banks, and family. C. W.

Newman was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Newman. Iva Bowie spent the week end in the S. A.

Kal.y and John Milner home. John Newman and family were Sunday dinner guests of the Wal To dry-store beans, black-eyed peas and peppers, spread in a shallow pan and heat 20 minutes in the oven at 150 degrees Fahrenheit, then store in fruit jars or cans with tight lids. This treatment insures against insect Whey for Penicillin Little Miss Muffett. who sat on a tufftt eating her curds and whey, must have been well fed. because whey although almost an orphan among U.

S. dairy products is nutritious. A by-product of cheese and also of casein, whey contains about half the solids of whole milk, the War Food Administration reports. It is rich in protein, riboflavin, vitamin B-l, calcium, phosphorus, and milk sugar or lactose. This milk sugar has gained importance.

Scientists find that the mold which excretes penicillin the miracle drug grows well in a milk sugar culture. Until this year, most of the whey produced here was used as animal feed, and quantities went to waste especially cheese whey which had too little commercial value to pay factories for salvaging it. Milk sugar for infant foods, pharmaceuticals and a few other purposes came mainly from casein whey. However, just about the time penicillin manufacture required quantities of milk sugar, easein whey production declined. With urgent need for milk powder by our military forces and our allies, it had seemed more desirable to import more casein and to use skim milks for milk powder.

So manufacturers turned to cheese whey as raw material for milk sugar. Cheese whey production has been mounting steadily since early 19 41 as a result of Lend-Lease. and later U. S. military requirements for cheddar cheese.

To encourage salvage of cheese whey. WFA recommended higher ceiling prices for whey products, and cheese factories found it profitable to save whey for processing. The output of milk sugar has been practically doubled within a few months. Production is now sufficent for all needs in prospect including penicillin and WFA finds it is no longer necessary to allocate milk sugar. ter Peters family tast of Winamac.j "Tf AIi-c I vy.yrf.s'-"'-- i 11', til ai I 1 1 ited Sunday with their son.

Clem, and family near Argos. Mr. and Mrs. Noah Wagoner and Mrs. Listenberger called Sunday afternoon with their son William and family in Culver.

v- --iy" '-fit---- "'i "'J '-w 1 MED W. BRAUN Much is being written about post-war problems but have you ever thought of the many traffic problems which we shall encounter when some of our war-time driving restrictions are lifted? The National Safety Council reports that nearly 1.000 more persons were killed on the nation's streets and highways in the last quarter of 1143 than in the quarter of 1 1 4 2 During the samp period the death rate climbed tffirr---i. jLninr.rVfiiiViir-wtT ttuHmtmr njjf iaiiiii tin nfe lii vm ti 'nS 1 urnir rr A child's sorrow is as intense as it is brief. J4ave you (Been too J3u3y, to REMEMBER EYESTRAIN? The war has changed our lives. We all have new duties extra responsibilities.

And too often we forget some of the important rules of everyday living; Eyestrain for example. Children whose precious eyes are endangered by improper habits of reading or studying. We forget that four college students in ten have defective eyesight. Until the war is over let's at least remember these four rules for conserving eyesight; Avoid glare from bare bulbs. Don't sit facing the light.

Glare strains eyes. Do all reading, studying, sewing, or game-playing close to a good light source, preferably a modern reading lamp; See New Authentic Mar FiDmnis and hear about new powerful 'Shells and Explosives. MOTION PICTURE SHOW AND LECTURE Presented to the Community by Todd Brown, Inc. KINGSBURY ORDNANCE PLANT Tuesday, Mv. 2S 8:00 p.

m. Culver Community Building jrToVf Have eyes examined regularly. If eyes are defective, vision can be greatly helped with proper glasses; Aroid shadows. Make sure you have good light directly on your book or work. Shadows strain eyes BUY WAR DONDS GEORGE C.

McLAUGHLIN, DISTRICT MANAGER.

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About The Culver Citizen Archive

Pages Available:
34,932
Years Available:
1903-1964