Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 230, Decatur, Adams County, 30 September 1963 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
k home distinct in design and for less than you might expect to pay. Located in Eiting Acres, this beautiful 3 Bedroom ranch, on 100 x 264 lot, built in 1957 will surely make a hit with you. Gas heat. 2 1 4 car garage. $21,000.00. Keep your work down to a minimum in this cozy & comfy 2 Bedroom home. Newly painted exterior. New gas furnace and water softener. Garage. This property has been carefully mainlined— priced right. Easy to buy, 6 room home on large Corner Lot. '2 Bedrooms, family room, utility room, & attached garage. Owner will sell on CONTRACT. An exceptionally good home. 11/2 story frame home. $11,7.50.00 will buy this modern 4 bedroom home on Master Drive. Wall to wall carpeting in living room, ample storage space, full basement, and gas heat. Try this for condition, price, and size—3 Bedrooms, living room, family-size kitchen, & bath. Alum, screens/storms. Fenced in back yard (new). Newly'painted exterior. Lewis Drive - $11,900.00. Start housekeeping in this! 2 Bedrooms, kitchen, living room, & bath, down—unfinished upstairs. Basement (has lovely recreation room). Garage. Master Drive. $11,500.00. l^ealEstate CORNER THIRD & MADISON STREETS Office 9 '1537 - PHONES - Home 3-4143
Kroger Priced Means Lower Priced Thanks To Kroger Volume! Kroger Quality - 100% Pure Ground Beef „ 39' Choice Center Cut Ham Slices « 89' Extra large fresh Honeydews ■ * ' ~ • r?50' OFF w/mailer coupon on a 4 piece setting of Swiss Chalet Dinnerware rs R Snowdrift - w/coupon Shortening 3-lb. C Can Large snowy white heads of Cauliflower — - ♦ . ... . . ... .. Quantity right* marvad. Price* good thru Tuesday. IztfiOfe- val.uablK VAUUABLB dflK] kSJKt 9P.M F * ON _—JCml 3 COUPON Snowdrift Est Top Value Shortening JV Stamps 3-lb. QQw wi ' l ’ p««ho*o of o S lb Can W»C ’■ bog of Pdpoyo T’’" Good thru Oct. 1. Limit Lj one. pleuMO. rag Good thru Oct. 1 //; i i , Bp.' ■' 7' ’ ■ "'W"' ■! — 1.‘i’.,... . . . J KU..*
DEMOCRATS (Continued from Page 1) with a city worthwhile. Provide More Jobs “Even more important, if our new school facilities are to be good investments for our community, we must provide twice as many new jobs as are being created today-or our boys and girls must leave us, to find work in other cities and states. “We must grow with the tide. We can no longer continue to wait until, and if something, is handed us by the government, a passing industry looking for a new site, or luck. We must make our own luck. "Later in the campaign I hope to present a more detailed program for the very necessary changes Which must be made in our city government — just to keep even with our neighboring communities. “Tonight, I just want to talk about one phase of my plan to help Decatur.” Regular Hours Promised “Until four years ago, it had been the policies of your mayors to spend regular hours in the city hall or visiting, inspecting and supervising city owned utilities and services. "My first pledge to the voters is that I shall restore that policy dropped four years ago. Decatur has been for many years a big enough business to demand regular attention by its chief executive. That it has not had this attention for the last four years, in part, accounts for the lack of new job opportunities for our children. I will restore the mayor’s regular daily working hours. "Getting back to where we
I WANTED! ■ MEN - WOMEN ' I from ages 18 to 52. Prepare Lincoln Service ’helps thousands I now for U.S. Civil Service job prepare for these tests every openings In this area during year. It is one of the largest I the next 12 months. and oldest privately owned Joverment positions pay as high schools of its kind and Is not is $446.00 a month to start, connected with the Government. I They provide much greater seIcurlty than private employment For FREE information on Govand excellent opportunity for ernment jobs, Including list of advancement. Many positions positions and salaries, fill out require little or no specialized coupon and mail at once — education or experience. TODAY. You will also get full I But to get one of these jobs, details on how you can prepare I you must pass a test. The com- yourself for these tests, petition is keen and in some I cases only one out of five pass. Don’t delay — ACT NOW!
LINCOLN SERVICE, Dept. 217 I Pekin, Illinois I I am very much interested. Please send me absolutely FREE (1) A list of U. S. Government positions and salaries; (2) Information on how to qualify for a U. S. Government Job. Name Age..l City State „ |
• A A I flF* ~ * A Qui, My Good Friends ■ t' . . . b , <- • October Is Your Restaurant Hospitality Month Good News For All The whole month of October has been set aside by friendly Decatur Eating Places... as a period in which they especially invite your patronage and Good Will. , In return, they will prove to you that they are friendly places which have your best interest and Good Health at heart, at all times. So, make October a pleasureable month, long remembered for the Good Food you’ll enjoy... and the good times you’ll halve ~ , eating in the places of your choice ... with the friends you like to be with. ' Decatur Eating Places extend to You and Your Family and Friends a special, warm and friendly greeting. They hope you’ll be seeing them often during October and assure you now of the Best in FOOD and SERVICE. Il Mir >«■».« , 1 ' ■ ' _ , - Mother, Too, M > 118111 M » Take The Wife Deserves LH I U BMf IB W Out To Dine Often. H X . irllltWAl s o^m e Frequently. RESTAURANT, INC. Chores.
THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
were four years ago is admittedly not real progress — but it will do for a start. “Electing a mayor and a city administration is a two-part job. First the candidates must co-oper-ate and get out to work. This all of us can promise you we will do. Secondly, the old faithful of the party and the friends of good government must get out to work. This, I am sure will be done as it has always been done in the past. Personal Campaign “Personally, in the qext few weeks I hope to visit each of you in our home. At that time, or before,, if possible, I hope you will give me your ideas about what you would like to see Decatur do. We pledge, and this is not an idle promise, that our first object will be to see that you get the kind of government you want — the very best. “During these conversations we will hammer out our platforrn based, as it always is by Democrats, on what the voters want. “I hope you will work with ourselves and our city committee headed by Bernard Clark to do the very necessary and often tiresome work of registering and getting out the vote. I also hope you talk up our program and our party among your friends and fellow workers. Every Vote Important “I don’t need to remind those of you who remember the narrowness of the last mayority election as to the importance to be placed on every single vote. “Personally, I have worked with most of the members of our city ticket during the past years and I know they are sincere and dedicated officials. There has
been new blood added to our ticket which, will make it one of which we can be proud. » “If you will work with us before the election, we will work with and for you after the election. "Together we can make Decatur what it should be and what it will be. The best place in the world in which to raise our children. “—And just as good a place for our children to raise their children.’ Two Persons Hurt In Accident Today Two persons were injured and four vehicles damaged in an accident at the corner of Nuttman Ave. and 13th street about noon today. Sharon R. Fiechter, 20, route 1, Craigville, suffered bruises and shock and was taken to the Adams county memorial hospital, where she is being treated. Also injured was John Dierkes, 57-year-old resident of 1321 Nuttman Ave., who received a cut to the head, bruises and shock, and a possible broken left arm. Dierkes was treated, x-rayed, and later released from the hospital. The mishap occurred wfien the Fiechter girl was operating a truck loaded with beans on Nuttman Ave., or U. S. 224, headed east. As she approached the intersection, the brakes of the truck failed. Dierkes was headed east, also on Nuttman Ave., and stopped at the- traffic light at 13th St. The Fiechter truck rammed into the rear of the pick-up driven by Dierkes, shoving the pick-up some 150 feet across the intersection. Hite Other Objects The bean truck continued on, crossed the 13th street intersection, stryck a light pole and Fairway restaurant sign on the northeast corner of the intersection, and then jumped a curb in the Fairway parking lot and crashed headon into a parked car. Die auto was parked there by Phyllis A. Nidlinger, 36, of route 3, Decatur. The impact snapped the light pole and it fell onto another parked car, owned by Andrew J. Roberts, 39, of Fort Wayne. Damages to the four vehicles had not yet been estimated by investigating city police officer Grover Odle who was continuing investigation of the accident when contacted at 1 p. m. If you have something to sell or trade — use the Democrat Want ads — they get BIG results.
Welsh Cites Profit Made On Toll Road MONTREAL (UPD — Indiana Gov. Matthew E. Welsh said today that businesslike management without political interference is a necessity for the proper operation of a toll authority. In a keynote address at the 31st annual meeting of the American Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association, Welsh cited his experience with the Northern Indiana Toll Road. He said when he took office in 1961, the toll road was "a gravy train designed to benefit its employes” and a “way of life rather than a business-like and essential service to the people.” Welsh said that by removing political employes and instituting better management practices, traffic on the road increased, bond prices went up and earnings improved. He said that for the first time it became possible to redeem toll road bonds and that slO.l million in bonds had been redeemed since 1961. He said the major policy change was a decision to “appoint the best men available to the Toll Road Commission, select a good manager, then get out of their way and let them carry out their responsibilities.” “We in fact decided to let the toll road management manage the toll road without half-informed or political second-guessing,’’ he said. Welsh suggested the toll authorities in other areas consider such a step and called it a policy which “pays rich dividends in better service to the public and the bond holders alike and political dividends in public acceptance as well.”
Quality Photo Finishings All Work Loft Before 8:00 p. m. Monday Ready Wednesday at 10 a. mHolthouse Drug Co.
shop at HAMMOND'S POTATOES 50 IBS - 99 £ BANANAS . lb. 10c APPLES VARIETIES BU. 2 49 UP 240 N. 13th Street OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK-8 A. M. to 10 P. M. JOIN THE FUN! “ BIGGEST TELEVISION VALUES EVER OFFERED BEST BUY ON COLOR TV ■ IIS«I '■l |kEwB efore fi pg i|l||| — ] Model 14-G-80 D Mahogany or l(l!T0»lr Walnut WrNS?' ’579-95 • Big 262 sq. in. Picture • 24,000 Volts of Picture — Glare-Proof Power • 2 Keyed Controls—easy tuning Don't Gamble on Imitations—lnsist on Genuine RCA Victor Color TV. ft® 111 POWERFUL TABLE MODEL • Powerful "New Vista" Tuner • Big 265 sq. in. Picture • Space Age Circuitry 0 " DE ’479-95 Exciting Stereo Brilliant 4-speaker sound Studiomatic record changer. 7* \Z Free — SSO Value /I W Ten 12” Record* /Omfflnn&Q T by Famoui Artist* rv l ’149-95 ® (J) Complete with Stand FREE - For Looking and Listening Colorful Walt Disney Place Mats i Myers Home & Auto Supply Across The Street-East of the Court House Open FBI. 8:30 am. to 0 p.m. Other Days 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
MONDAY/SEPTEMBER 30, 1963
