Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 99, Decatur, Adams County, 27 April 1955 — Page 11
THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1955
Delta! I will be Out of My Office May 7th to June 22nd J. M. Burk, M.D.
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Kff □ ■ 111 1 \ Gx xT Q ff>Q | IjtAW ir — bBO B P flMk 0W W aS v b jrjmfr- ■■>w B w>ajkm. IF ynx B ' bBBhbB ™ .... 888 B BB . /a Wk B B a** BRh JBk iW B g m I _ . • j ~ Bk BEsB& Come In Today .. Big Selections.. * |jpu|| JBBM Torrilic £n,r I Imnn unit Ais Ln. U *^4l. V/i Uu..- ' ■ .. . x ■, w ,. Giw Yow Cor that "MEW LOOK" M Sfri® REDUCED! ] StMONIZ * ttS| > Htaten's . x •• • « wonderful buyl r jjy 11 •‘ 9B? I®! 11 M ■ garden hose firestone f I Tirettoitt Green Vinyl RP CHROME F SPEEDY 4 < •F«»-R®w Bra » Couplings . W ROUSH RR CAR WASH I r~ ’ CA#t | e Alt |~| ~r.T 49< 4 S:«4sd •Tops in I Inexpensive PLAY GYM Vciluee complete with deluxe slide k x-Vfcl T r Reg. Jsc Pkg. BURPEE'S ABm V\ nr i | . l | . ... HYBRID GIANT W- _ ft ,.f .. 4 ZINNIAS L. > 11®® ' # TT *** /l H Nothing to Buy - Jmi / J - ' ~ || No Obligations II I Il | a i W| 1 compare I|l m| k=i L-U. | | Holds 20 Pounds « H..MO / E | \ FERTILIZER V Tito to AR feutweal I only \ SPREADER OUTBOARDS *J 25 . \ 5’ 5 1 a week . Th r.. \ I Start As Lew As Loaded with expensive feature* for extra fun-packed hours. » Reoulate 11 <5 4 Ha* an airglide, 6-ft i - '■’s bar and gym ring*. Ruggedly built to take year* of punish- , * complete vl>* ond*" AH Sunnner to Pay I meat. Baked-oa enamel finish protects against rust. | Shut-Off YeHew MIW HOME & II TII NI lIIA ACROSS THE STREET - EAST OF THE COURT HOUSE 4t ■ •.. . . . ’ ... . • ' • ' „ , . . , • •'
SCHOCH. REPORTER (Continued From Page Nine The Junior Band program for the Lincoln P.TJL last Thursday evening and then again for the students of the Lincoln school on Friday morning. e e e e The 1955 edition of the Gab Fest was completed this week and distribution was on Tuesday. The editor, Dorcas Thieme, reported that there were still several copies left and those who wished to
purchase them could do so In the commercial room. The Gab Fest sella for 25 cents. • • • w The junior class has begun night sessions making plans for the Prom. They have also been busy compiling a term paper which is due May 1. This paper is about anything that has to do with the history of our country and is in coordination with both the English and the History departments. A copy of the thesis is due in both classes. • • • • A wish for a speedy recovery is sent to Jim Reidenbach from students of D. H. S. Jimmy recently underwent a tonsilectomy at the local hospital. The little son of the principal’s secretary, Mrs. Doty, also had his tonsils removed last week-end. • « * • Two representatives of the G. E. Apprentice School in Ft. Wayne visited with several of the D. H. S. boys yesterday morning in room 302. Richard Gebert and ißoy Brokaw pointed out the type of training offered to young men interested in careers in industry. Any other. young men who are interested in that field of training are urged to contact Gebert, Supervisor of Apprentices, General Electric company, in Ft. Wayne. • * • • Jane Rentz will provide the dinner music for a Gecode club luncheon on Sunday at the K. of P. home. Jane is the high school choir’s accompanist. • » » • Several of the junior and senior girls have volunteered their service for the forthcoming speech clinic tentatively planned for this summer and sponsored by the Adams County Society for Crippled Children. Most of these girls are interested in elementary teaching. • • • • Herb Banning, a seventh grader, spent all day yesterday in Detroit and Windsor, Canada, as a reward received from the News & Sentinel Company for having obtained 6 new customers. Herb’s route is centered around the Homestead addition.
THB DBCATUR DAILY DRMOCRAT. DOCATUR. INDIANA - ■ — -| 1 . _ |[|r M ,-t
The janitors expressed their thanks to the students and faculty of D. H. S. for the excellent way they have maintained our building this year. * • • • “Decatur Hl Lights of ’65,” ■ variety show, will be presented I Friday at 8 p.m. in the high school gym.’ Several of our students will be featured as soloists. The junior band will also participate. The program is varied enough toyappeal to everyone. • • • • DECATUR CATHOLIC By Jean Laurent The senior class will give a dress-rehearsal of the play, “Our Miss Brooks,” for the entire student body, this afternoon. The main performance will be given Friday at 7:45 p.m. The students vlll pay IP cents for the matinee and the admission for the night performance is 50 cents. • • * • Now that the Prom is only two weeks away, the juniors are twice as busy seeing that everything gets done before the night of May 12. It is a familiar sight to see the door of the junior room closed during noon hour and hear the buzzing of the juniors’ voices making their plans. . * * * • Even though prom time takes a lot of work, the juniors cannot neglect their classwork. In English, they are preparing speeches on various topics such as: “Christ is Modern,” “Don't Hate Your Job,” “Success Through Personality” and “How to Pick a Successful Career.” Report cards were passed out Wednesday of this week. This means that we are beginning the new and final six-weeks period. * • • • The journalism class is busy preparing for the last issue of the school paper, the D. C. HighLight. This issue is always a special edition because it contains the pictures of the graduates and a line or two about each one. It is hard work and takes a lot of tinge, but it is also loads of fun and the seniors are really proud of the work which they put into it
Many of the high acteol student* are rushing around exchanging pictures since the - photos, which were taken recently, have come back from the studio. * • • • The freshman home-ec class was temporarily interrupted a few days ago, when the students were salted to help fold and iron towels used for the K. C. Golden Jubilee celebration. It was good experience for all of them. • * • • Five typing II students had their classwork for on* week published on the bulletin board so that others may see the fine work these pupils did. Chuck Voglewede, Joanne Braun, Kay Borman, Marcella Giliig, and Leola Ford were the five. 1200 New Claimants Receiving Payments Report Is Released On Social Security Over 1200 persons in Northeastern Indiana began receiving monthly old age and survivors insurance payments during the first quarter of 1955, Christian H. W. Luecke, manager of the Fort Wayne social security office, revealed in Submitting his report for March, 1955. This is in comparison with 996 new claimants in the first quarter of 1954. These insurance payments are designed to replace part of the earnings lost to the families of these workers as a result of retirement because of old age and to the widows, parents and children of workers who died during this period. The report for March 1955 follows: account number cards issued, 1144; assistance to employers on wage record reporting, 116; new claims cleared, 528; beneficiaries served*,74o; general inquirers served, 1692. *’ A total of 4,200 persons were served by the Ft. Wayne office
, r COME ON iN— I the price is fine! ; ' -S JSI 'A . - * JwF ________ aB x X. \ /ocaf/yl I £? oln ‘- o „ vou womX L X \ X I sXW o*' 0 *' 0 ”* X X X —
UNLESS we miss our guess, a lot of surprised people are going to do some new back-of-an-envelope arithmetic when they see the Buick price shown here. Because we know that many folks still don’t realize how little a Buick really costs— that the dollar difference between this big Buick Special and the leading smaller cars has virtually disappeared, Buick Sales Are Soaring A» Never Before But more and more of them are finding it out. And that’s a major reason why Buick production and Buick sales are soaring to all-time highs today— and why Buick again is outselling all other cars, regardless of price range, except two of the well-known smaller cars. Big reason, too, for this soaring popularity is Buick’s full line of automobiles, giving you a choice in any price class—the rock-bottom-priced Special, the high-powered Century, the supremely spacious Super, and the custom-built Roadmaster.
Thrill oftheyearis Buick •M" MILTOM MME MMCK-Sm a- Bukl ax-tmh* TmmJov Ewni-ai i ■ WHO) BETTES AUTOMOBILES BW BUILT WICK WHL BUM) IMBM •• SAYLORS MOTOR SALES 13th St. and U. S. 27 “Established 1926’’ Decatur. Ind.
during the month of March. This was an average of 184 per day, Luecke said. The Fort Wayne office is located at 71? Fulton Street and is open from 8:30 to 4:30, Monday
1 ; ’ d > JK& X...- ~x.,< x WHj THeVz KEY to unlock new wealth from yoUr pastures The spiraled, yard-long cylinder in the Allis-Chalmers Forage Harvester is the key to a new system of mechanized grazing that can unlock a wealth of extra forage from your pastures. When you take your pasture to the cows, its carrying capacity goes up 50 percent You can chop enough in just a few minutes to satisfy the herd all day. The operation depends on the smooth cutting of the curved and cupped knives on the rugged 15-inch cylinder. Cutting edges are carbo-nitrite hardened and built-in power sharpeners make it easy to keep them keen and parallel with the sheer bar. Come in. We’d like to show you this power key to extra pasture profit L u :2x ( end Ham. H.u, _ V SMIfS AND SIKVICi J Every Saturday — NBC MORRISON FARM STORE 319 South 13th St. Decatur, Ind.
through Friday. Part-time offices are maintained in Angola, Auburn, Berne, Bluffton, Columbia City, Decatur, Huntington, Kendallville, and Ligonier.
Hut above all, more and more people are discovering that the price you pay for a Buick buys more sheer automobile than the same money buys elsewhere. More advanced styling, more deep-down comfort, more pure power thrill, more ride steadiness and handling ease and solidity of structure. More spectacular performance, too, from the modest extra cost of Buick’s automatic transmission. For here you get Variable Pitch Dynaflowf —the new wonder drive born of modern aeronautics to give you instant full-power getaway and acceleration when needed—and far better gas mileage when cruising. Why not come see us this week, for sure? We’ll be happy to have you test-pilot a new Buick, just for the sheer thrill of it—and show you quite clearly that if you can afford any new tar, you can afford a Buick. tDynaflow Drive u tUndard on Roednmster, optional of exfre toa on Other Series.
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