Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 86, Number 35, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 28 February 1963 — Page 2

NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS THURS. FEB. 28, 1963

PAGE 2

READ THE CLASSIFIED ADS

STOP DRIPPING PIPES if STOP FREEZING ALUMINUM w brief cold snaps pggpg COMBINATION Insurd instant hot and cold DOORS water by insulating all pipes. Prevent water waste. nimr Save expensive hot water; PRE HUNG Good in a ufafion is a //Yetfore Jm/esfmeMt, ALL HOLES BORED SIOO package provides I double insulation on i7ffe o-f Yz" pipe. HI-LITE 1" THICK DOOR $39.95 SELF STORING 1" THICK $43.95 ECONOMY SELF STORING ----- $32.00 COMBINATION WINDOWS VERSA-TILT - MOST SIZES $18.35 CHAtLENGER - MOST SIZES .. $15.25 INSTALLATION OF DOORS $7.00 INSTALLATION OF WINDOWS $1.50 Home Lumber & Coal Cos. 205 S. MAIN ST. NAPPANEE PH 773-4941

Four kinds of sport—all super Want to make spring come in a hurry? Just pick a new car with whatever you hanker for in performance and sporty trimmings—like bucket seats, 4-speed shift,* lots of horses—and start driving it now. Chevy’s got a lot of sport in four entirely different kinds of cars.

First, the Jet-smooth Impala Super Sport with your choice of 7 different engines that range up to 425 hp and that include the popular Turbo-Fire 409* with 340 hp for the ultimate in smooth, responsive driving in modern traffic. Optional equipment, including new Comfortilt steering wheel* that adjusts to your convenience, makes it as super a sport as you’d like.

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McCORMICK MOTORS INC 1233 W. MARKET ST. NAPPANEE ™OW 773-3134

NOW SEE WHAT’S NEW AT YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER’S

Top—Corvette Sting Ray Sport Coupe and Corvair Monza Spyder Club Coupe. Below—left, Chevrolet Impala SS Convertible; tight, Chevy II Nova 400 SS Convertible. (AU four available in both convertible and coupe model,. Super Sport and Spyder equipment optional at extra cost .} See f our entirely different kinds of ears at your Chevrolet SJmwroom

| ACTIVITIES j Thursday, February 28 Legion Meeting Get Together Club Friday, March 1 Methodist WSCS Saturday, March 2 Legion Card Party Tuesday, March 5 Nappanee Women’s Club OES Past Matrons American War Mothers Lady Lions

• Install a New Bath • Install a New Waterheater You’ll save MONEY by having us install your new furnace. , M. C. HAHN NAPPANEE ALL WORK GUARANTEED

There’s the Chevy II Nova, also available in an SS version. Special instrument cluster. Front buckets. All-vinyl trim. Distinctive SS identification. Fourteen-inch wheels and tires with full wheel disks. Three-speed shift or Powerglide* with floormounted shift console. Or the Corvair Monza Spyder with complete

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instrumentation, special identification, and an air-cooled charged Six. And for a real wallop, see the stunning Corvette Sting Ray, winner of the “Car Life” 1963 Award for Engineering Excellence. All told, four beautiful convertibles, four handsome coupes. You’ll get a four-barrel kick just looking them over—and a whole lot more fun out of driving one! *Optional at extra cost.

Wednesday, March 6 Lyceum Club VFW Auxiliary Lions Club Thursday & Friday, March 7 A 8 “The Great Sebastians” Saturday, March 9 Legion Dance Monday, March 11 Jaycee Meeting Tuesday, March 12 Home Echoes Wednesday, March 13 Lions Club Jollyette Euchre Thursday, March 14 Senior Citizens Thursday Club Tuesday, March 19 Central PTA Friday, March 22 Nappanee Band Concert Wednesday, March 27 Lions Club Saturday, March 30 District Band Contest Friday, April 19 Kiwanis Division Meeting Friday & Saturday, July 19 & 20 Sidewalk Days Monday July 29 Saturday August 3 Nappanee Community Fair

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The Nappanee freshmen basketball team has again completed a successful season. They played their final game Thursday, beating Syracuse. These boys have been playing basketball together and have had a fine over-all record. In the past five years, they have lost only 7 games. They have also won every tournament in which they have participated. They are shown in the too picture at a dinner celebration given in their honor at the Ralph Greenes. The lower picture shows the whole team. (Top) they are Duncan Sinclair, Coach Robinson, M'ke Milbern, Jan Weldy, Tim Price, Tom Evans, LaMar Hochstetler, (first row) Dave Callander, Melvin Dean, Tom Greene, Don Berger, Ted Frick, Fred Fisher, Larry Harman. Manager for the team was Greg Freed. Mr. Robinson was ill at the time of the dinner, and coach Dave Nelson, who worked with the team last year was a guest.

Michigan POTATOES 10 39c Crystal Sp v ing BUTTER • • * 69* Pillsbury ; I CAKE MIX •••• -2^S9T All Fhvors JELL-0 3 pkgs 25*

IGA No. 2V2 can am PEACHES can Ole Rexford RED BEANS 2 for O? 0 IGA No. 21/2 can ftft^ HOMINY 2 for ZVO

MILLER'S

just the ticket for greater TV enjoyment... —-—as**?"* , I \ an o frlE ram FOR l _oj.iT FA"”'" J V.HLL I Vl\ i t*" FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION OPEN SATURDAY NIGHTS HEADQUARTERS FOR COLOR TV Curtis TV CENTER ICQ til MADI/TT NAPPANEE PH 773-4612

Chef's Delight |?ft w CHEESE 2 lb loaf J7C TOMATOES pkg 290 Jonathan m am APPLES bos 450

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Happy Birthday

FEBRUARY 28 Karen Van Dyke Mrs. Arthur C. Miller Bertha Silberg Mrs. Albert Robison Gary Longfield Mattie Pippenger 29 Sue Reprogle Mrs. Cora Snider MARCH 1 Velma Farrington 2 Mrs. Fred Hockert Mrs. Donnie Sechrist Jay Miller Emma Beezley Judy Lynn Grimm Sue Hamilton Janice Lakins Diane Gardner 3 Tom Dunn 2nd Mrs. Robert Warren James Lutes Betty Cleveland Dorothy Kanode Roger Hollar Mrs. Guy Pippenger 4 Susan Fox Shelly Gildersleeve Margaret Metzler Tim Maust Minnie Weimer Louisa "Shirk Myrtle Krull Ronnie Martz Miss Esther Hoover 5 Mrs. Ralph Stump Jane George 6 Mrs. Wayne Snapp Delbert Fox Ida Taylor ” Mrs. Esther Zentz

\GROCERY J 155 E. Market, Nappanee We Deliver Phone 7734195

NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS ? 156 W. Market PHONE 7734127 . i t> Entered et the Pott office at Nappanee, Indiana at Second Clatt Matter Under tht Act of March 1> 1(79. PUBLISHED THURSDAYS iS $3.00 PER YEAR in Indiana $3.50 PER YEAR Outsids Indiana NOTICE Pictures for publication are welcomed, but no picture will be returned by mail unless e -3 self-addressed stamped envel- t ope is sent with it. No chargo for publishing pictures, nows stories, or announcements. Publishers Joseph W. Zally Donald E. Nichols, Jr. Carolyn Longfield Mrs. Phil Lehman 7 Mrs. Arthur Hively Mrs. Barry Gillis Mrs. M. E. Hostetter Richard Vinke 8 Mary Duckwall Charles E. Weaver Glen Lewis 9 Michael Yoder Mildred Hoffer " Lewis Pippenger 10 Dan V. Yoder James Tobias Rosemary Hartman Sandra Miner 11 Beth .Ann WidmoyOr Jerry Rock 12 Harley Geyer Roy Pippenger Norman R. Millet Inez Mae Anderson Ivan Rae Anderson Mrs. John Morris Zae Haney •* Edward Zentz 13 JoAnn Schwartz Mrs. Donald Wagnet Anna Mae Gay AT THE LIBRARY I TAKE THIS LAND By Richard Powell Richard Powell is a former advertising man turned writer. He now has three successful books to his credit, all vastly different. This book is the story of Florida before the turn of the Century. The hero, Ward Campion, wine the right to build a railroad in a poker game in which the stakes are high. There are three men involved in the plot. All of them are initially in love with the same woman, a school teacher in c°ntral Florida. These men, although they share this rivalry, are forced to work together for the building of Florida. The area where the climate is better and where orange crops seldom freeze should be a tremendously good farming l and a railroad should be the. answer to getting crops shipped) quickly out. But there are a series of unfortunate incidents kr-j; eluding floods and crop failures!; which lose vast fortunes for mere; interested in developing the area/ The story takes place against; the backdrop of beautiful but fot* bidding swampland in which mei hunt alligators, shoot the egret for their plumes, and attempt t< tame this wild land. The tali takes us almost to the presen and brings in the second an< third generations of the principa characters, something which usua!s' ly seems to be an unnecessary way of prolonging the book. Aljf in all, it makes for good reading and is, on the whole, a well told tale.