Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 56, Number 79, Decatur, Adams County, 3 April 1958 — Page 11

IftURSBAY, AfrML 3, l>st

SCHOOL REPORTER is hard on the music department’s candy sates!! Interested!!!! see some certain Bth grade girls. —P.M.H.S.— Speaking of the bandy sales of the music department, candy te selling like mad. Although all of the candy bars are not sold yet they still have two weeks to sell and they have only been at it about one week. —P.M.H.B.— The junior high music students are having an Easter bake sale. It will be at the Western Auto starting at 8:90 Saturday April 5, all of you who need baked goods for Easter better hurry because it won’t last long. Besides the baked goods they will be selling candy bars. They will probably have

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colored eggs but they WiU go Atari the quteinri of all. M Wary otte nah out there Saturday to gat cakM, pies arid The freshman home ec. girls have planned another luncheon for the teachers, today. They were given very pretty Easter invitations. The girls have reported that there will be on more luncreon before school is out. —P.M.H.S.— The music department will be doubly busy with their candy sales and the music festival which will be put on April 11, in the auditorium at Pleasant Mills. The choir will be formally dressed and the festival will contain many numbers. A free will offering will be taken up but their will be no admission charges. Everyone is

invited to attend. -4PMXB.— Last ftursday the senior ware surprised to hear that their annual was all together and the publishing company was now ready to make all of the copies they had ordered. / Before they started they brought a copy to the school and the whole senior class went over it to check for errors before it went to press, The seniors feel it is a nice year bqpfc. - P.M.H.S.— Fire Extinguisher z SEYMOUR, Conn, m — John Van Der Laan of Oxford ran into a diner and ordered a pot of coffee. He rushed out .with it and extinguished a fire under the hood i of his panel truck.

Tttt MCCATUR DAtLT DEMOCRAt, BECATUR, IWDIAMA

ABAMB CENTBAIb WMMf By Shh-tey Oetertesa

I?p ■■ ' "'t W"

Lucile Beavert; and her junior cast ot “Come Over To Our House” are to! be lauded on the fine play they turned out last Friday. Credit

should also go, of course, to Wanda Neuenschwander, student director, and to all the behihd-the-scenes workers who helped to make the occasion the success it was. But not everything went, well.’ The day before the play Card Helmrich was stricken with laryngitis, but she went on just the same and did fine, despite a squeaky voice. Nice work, juniors! —A.C.H.S.— Centralites will be thankful for

the one-day vacation coming tomoffdw. it Ms betel * W bW week and the “rest” will enable many to catch, up on Studies. * —A.C.H.S.— Was that your locker with the Cpers sticking out? If so, it should clean now after principal Herman Frantz took time out of each class for locker clean-up time last week. You’ll have to admit the halls do look better! - —A.C.H.S.— After the juniors’ class play Friday night, Wanda Neuenschwander was hostess to an “after play” party. Approximately 30 juniors and their dates were entertained with refreshments and fhusic. —A.C.H.S.— State math and English contest entries from Central will probably bg high. Although the scores have

not been officially affirmed, English and math teachers, Imogene Beihold and Lucille Beavers, believe that there will be at least a car load to take to Bloomington April 26. —A.C.H.S— Central’s favorite song these days, sadly enough, seems to bq “Pop Goes The Measle!” With two people out, Nancy Raudenbush and Glen Yager, and possibly more by now, this is very understandable. —A.C.H.S.— April 5 at 8 a.m. the Sunshine society wDI have its bake sale at Stucky’s in Monroe. Pies, cakes, cookies, etc., will be on sale. -A.C.H.S - ~ Representatives from Purdue University, Ball State Teachers' College, Parkview memorial hospital, Warner College of Beauty

Culture, and Huntington CoUagg will be present at a new program at Central called college night. It will be at the Adams Central gym Thursday, April 10, at 7:30 p.m. The initial purpose of "college night” is to acquaint high school pupils with the different colleges t they may want to attend after graduation. « —A.C.H.S.— Adams Central's FFA chapter has three boys who will be awarded the Hoosier state farmer degree, according to Martin Watson, FFA advisor at Central. These boys are seniors Richard Meyer and Richard Hirschy. Wayne Byerly, a ’57 graduate of Central, was also named. They will receive the degree at the state FFA convention April 4. -A.C.H.S.—

PAGE THREE-A

—,— l Three mutate argnaMMitaM a* i Central, the chorus, glee club, aM t the band, went to Greentown last i Saturday. The chorus and glee • club, directed by Lean Gerig. both 8 were rated excellent. The head, 1 directed by Don Gerig, placed 5 third, or good. r —A.C.H.B.— “He Lord’s Prayer" and "Were You There" were the two Sdecr tions the girls’ glee dub sang for • those assembled at chapel yester- • day. These were two ofthe battgn • the glee dub sang at tM QrOso- • town contest. The Rev. J. O. Penr rod of the Trinity Evangelical • United Brethren church at Dtca- ' tur was guest speaker. He refold ’ the ever-famous Banter story. —A.C.H.S.— Trade in a good town - Deeatur - -