Speedway Flyer, Volume 13, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1944 — Page 4
page 4
OPEN 24 HOURS SEVEN DAYS A WEEK DAVE'S GRILLE DAVE POND, Proprietor STEAKS CHOPS ■j Home-Made Chili and Soups TRY OUR DELICIOUS SALADS /ya All Kinds of Sandwiches \ Good Food Well Prepared Jni EAT SUNDAY DINNER WITH US! SPEEDWAY 1402 MAIN STREET Belmont 4308
DR. CHARLES C. COHEE, Dentist 1462 MAIN STREET Belmont 2006 Talbot 0446 Talbot 4068 Office Hours Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday—l:oo p> m. to 6:00 p. m. Evening Hours by Appointment
Look Your Very Best . . . fThey say that it pays to look your very best at all times. Wo agree with that statement and we are prepared io help you achieve the goal! Our complete beauty service is * yours ... just call us for an appointment. MURRAY BEAUTY SHOP 1344 MAIN STREET BELMONT 2344
DIAMONDS - WATCHES Robert L. Stout, Jeweler EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING Use Our Layaway Plan For Christmas Gift Jewelry 4307 W. 14th Street BElmont 0446
Speedway Furniture Store Knee Hole Desks—Walnut and Mahogany—s39.9s $41.95 $5850 Desk Chairs $7.75 SB-95 Dinette Sets $3650 $52.25 $64.50 $69.50 Nursery Chairs $250 $4.75 $4.95 Table Lamp Shades $3.95 Floor Lamp Shades $4.95 High Chairs $12.95 1414 Main Street Belmont 2988
HEADQUARTERS FOR VITAMINS One-A-Day A It D Tablets—Benefax B-Complex Vitamins A & D Multi-Vitamins j Norwich A k D and B-Complex Vitamins Stamms Vimms Vi-Teens Norwich Eroayn: 9 Vitamins and 9 Minerals Vitapath Vitamin Products From: SQUIBB. UPJOHN. WHITE'S. GROVE. LILLY, and PARKE-DAVIS (Fair-Trade Prices on All Vitamins) Rosner Drug Store “Speedway’s Rexali Store” ( 16th at Main Belmont 1515
SCHOOLJIEWS In the Hobby Section of the A. A. U. W. Book and Toy Exhibit the following Girl and Boy Scouts of Speedway assisted the hostesses after school: TuesdayKathryn Brockman and John Powell; Wednesday—Nancy Heston and Tommy Hanna; Friday— John Nadolny and Mary Lou Brumley; Saturday Charles Cantwell, Tom Sutherland and John Nadolny. Richard Jordan, Richard Skidmore and John Guion also have hobbies on display on the eighth floor at Ayres in the auditorium. As an activity during Book Week a number of fifth and sixth grade children have put special bindings on the old copies of our National Geographic Magazines. • • • The Speedway Debate* Club met last week and completed their organization as follows: President, Charles Brockman; vice president, James Nay; secretary, Jacque Schaeffer; treasurer, Hank Hendryx. Other members of the club are Katharine Ziegelmueller, George Ziegelmueller, Harold Black, Bob Hanen, Patricia Owen, Bob Logue, Don Powderly. Miss Couch is sponsor of the organization which will participate in the Indiana State Debating League this year. ♦ ♦ • The opening basketball game of the home season will be played tonight wjth Greenwood. A large crowd is expected to be on hand tonight for the opening game at 7 p. m. The fluorescent lights arrived and are being installed in the new building this week. *. ♦ ♦ N. D. Cory, superintendent of schools, is attending a meeting of architects and superintendents at Purdue University this weekend. Mr. Cory hopes to get several ideas for the new high school building which we plan to build after the war. * ♦ * The Superintendent’s High School Committee met Wednesday morning and elected officers as follows: President, James Nay; vice president, Hank Hendryx; secretary^”Jacque Schaeffer, and treasurer, Robert Huber. The Superintendent's High School Committee has been organized this year by Mr. Cory to serve until a permanent constitution can be drawn up for a student council.
Dukes-Daupert (Continued from Page 1.) embellished with butterflies of woolse lace. Her finger-tipped veil was of illusion, cascaded from a coronet of pearlized orange blossoms. She carried a white prayer book topped with a white orchid and streamers of white knotted satin ribbon. Her “something old” was an heirloom necklace worn by her maternal grandmother on her wedding day. Miss Florence Culver, maid of honor, wore an identical gown of pale blue and carried a cascade bouquet of yellow chrysanthe-5 mums. The bridesmaids, the Misses Monay and Charla Hoppes, wore chiffon gowns of dusty rose and carried cascade bouquets of rust chrysanthemums. All wore net caps studded with sequins to match their gowns. Little Miss Reta Daupert, niece of the groom, was flower girl. She wore a dusty rose taffeta dress trimmed with blue velvet ribbon and carried a small colonial bouquet of pompon chrysanthemums. All wore gold crosses and chains, gifts of the bride. Mr. George Daupert, a brother
THE SPEEDWAY FLYE3
Cite mship By GEORG S.BENSON Mdmd of ■ i*ng College Secnfey Arkansas
ONE of the strangest quirks of human nature is the hook-up between cost and value. People so often appreciate things according to what they cost instead of according to what they axe worth. A man who falls heir to a fortune without effort is much more liable to squander it than his neighbor who may have acquired a similar amount the hard way; his wealth has cost him too little. ' It’s like American citizenship, a thing of great value that costs too little. The fee exacted from an immigrant when he “takes out his papers” is not a drop in the sea compared to what he gets. Moreover, the vast majority of * Americans acquired citizenship rights with their first conscious breath. We grew up with citizenship. We have always had it and consequently don’t as we should. ' Coveted YOU may have read Rights stories of how British citizenship, about the time America was being colonized, was keenly coveted by noble Huguenots who fled France as refugees. Almost everybody in Christendom is familiar with Nev Testament accounts of how Sau of Tarsus’ life was spared more than once because he, although ar Israelite, was born a privileged citizen of Rome. Roman citizenship in Bible times could be bought, and it cost a great price. It had great value, tod, but it wasn’t worth nearly as much as our American citizenship, that costs so little. I think everybody in the United States
of the groom, was best man. The ushers were Cpl. Charles Foltz. U. S. M. C, and Mr. Keith Foltz The gifts of the bridegroom were leather billfolds. Mrs. Dukes wore navy blue and wore a pink corsage. Mrs. Daupert wore black and a white corsage. Mr. Daupert is the son of Mr and Mrs. Wilber Daupert of Guion Road. A reception was held at the home of the bride’s .parents, 4955 West 12th Street. The dining table was laid with a lace cloth on which rested a three-tier
Let’s Talk About: Furs and Formats Coals with fur collars and parly dresses are not "run of the mill" attire. Then why ho satis! ad with "run of the mill" cleaning for special garments such as these? Buy your cleaning service from a cieening company whoso name has meant the finest in th a city for more than forty years. Help Vs Help Uncle Sam! Bring Your Own Hangers, Please! esn&uamt ounsHinEOcLEnneßs 1500 MAIN STREET g SPEEDWAY
Prosper t Saving & Loan A ssociation l 1 * . ESTABLISHED 1995 1518 Main Street Speedway Mrs. Mary Hayes in Charge of Office
Etter’s Phillips ‘66’ Station ACCESSORIES & BATTERIES j TIRE REPAIR Guaranteed Lubric dfan and Repair ”fork 14th at Main Street, Belmont 32M
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ought to be educated for citizenship. Not many are, natives or naturalized. Not everybody needs a college degree but everybody needs to appreciate his freedom. Need Fixed AMERICANS were Principle. conscious of their citizenship for a long time back of a century ago. Government held the spotlight of youth’s attention. In the last 100 years, however, invention has intrigued the interest of more and more American boys. Unfortunately a keen interest in something spells relative indifference to something else, and engineering has hid government in almost total eclipse. * r John Tyler was President a century ago. In 1844 Louisa M. Alcott was ten, enjoying the placid childhood she so beautifully preserved in print. But wait.. . the people were agog that year at the world’s first telqgraph line, one ticker in Washington and another in Baltimore. Little boys were eagerly flattening their noses against window panes to see that new invention, a, bicycle, pass by. < These five generations of high, scientific achievement are not to be despised. In them, our wage levels and national income have made America the envy of a mercenary world. But the foundation for all this was laid between Washington’s day and Tyler’s. If we are to hold up our living standards, Americans must better appreciate the rights and privileges of citizenship.
wedding cake, lighted by tall tapers in crystal candleholders. The couple left for a short wedding trip. What’s the use of being a dictator? You’re in one era and out the other. “Be grim and bfear it” isn’t the way the expression goes. It’s “Grin and bear it.” * Vse of abestos can be traced to ancient times.
C* - 1450 Main Street SPEEDWAY, IND. ■ 1 ■ THUR. - FRI. - SAT NOV. 16-17-18 BOY ROGERS AND SONS OF THE PIONEERS in Song of Toxas also LYNN MERRICK and LARRY PARKS in Stars on Parade SUN. - MON. NOV. 19 -20 KATHERINE HEPBURN WALTER HUSTON TURHAN BEY in Dragon Seed •bo 30 MINUTES OF SELECTED SHORTS NOTE: Owing to length of show. DRAGON SEED win bl shown on Sun. at 2:10. 5:20 and 8:30. Monday at 6:00 and 8:00 o'clock. , ~ '■ " TUES. - WED. NOV. 11 -11 * SPENCER TRACY SIGNE HASSO in Seventh Cross also NEWS and SELECTED SHORTS SEVENTH CROSS at 9:15 second show
Conkle Funeral Home 1934 W. Michigan Street Belmont 1934 Chapel Equipped With Organ
Ralston's Grocery Babo Cleaner \ /WBUd ' Swan Soap Johnson Wax vf>^^er^ 0 ’ < ' CS Elastic Starch Rinso Mmfatomwawim 5230 W. 16th Street Res. Phone Bel. 4815
FALL IS HERE! The fall season b here. Topcoats and overcoats should ba sent to us new for cleaning and pressing Bo sure that you will be ready for the winter weather. Store Hours: 7 a. m. to 6 p» bl—Mondays Through Fridays 7 a. m. to 1 pt nu—Each Saturday WALT’S SPEEDWAY CLEANERS COMPLETE ALTERATIONS 4723 West Sixteenth St. Belmont 2925
RADIO REPAIR 14 YEARS EXPERIENCE Repairs on all make radios .. All Work Guaranteed JEWELL ASHBY 1769 CHRISTOPHER LANE BElmoni 1725-W
EMMETTS SPEEDWAY SERVICE VENETIAN BUND SERVICE Was/un& re-taping and refinishing also % Window Shade Service “Shade work by shade man 1 ' 2002 GERRARD DRIVE BElmoni 0947-W Free Estimate ROY H. EMMETT. Proprietor
