Speedway Flyer, Volume 31, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1962 — Page 7
Thursday January 4, 1962
APPLIANCE REPAIR Ml WORK BUMMUmEB WE REPAIR
★ TOASTERS ★ IRONS 4- MIXERS ★ PERKS ★ COFFEEMAKERS ★ FRYPANS ★ DEEP FRYERS ★ HAIRDRYERS ★ VAC. CLEANERS ★ FANS
OLDEST AND MOST COMPLETE SHOP ON WEST SIDE! ARTHUR NEIL ELLWANGER (Owner) Ellwanger Electric 2538 West 16th Street ME. 6-1911
STITCH & KNIT, Inc. 5815 Crawfordsville Road (ACROSS FROM SHOPPING CENTER) KNITTING KITS & ACCESSORIES YARD GOODS SEWING SUPPLIES & NOTIONS ALL RADY KITS . . . $2.60 (Formerly $2.49 and $2.98) Free Knitting Instructions CBapel 3-0248
GET READY FOR S-U-M-M-E-R "HAVE YOUR RODS & REELS REPAIRED NOW" SUTPHIN’S SPORTING GOODS 4832 WEST 16th STREET
Ray C. Wishmeier DRY CLEANING 1340 MAIN STREET CH. 4-5718 Speedway City NOW OFFERING . . . Free Pick-Up and Delivery Service We Also Specialize in Cleaning Drapes - Chair Covers - Blankets We Operate Our Own Petroleum Plant NOT SYNTHETIC
H im WRr II V f II yACexxXd 1, ’OCS main st. ■ S PEEDWAY, IND
CENTS' CUT FORK CHOPS 69s
SPARE RIBS 49'*
"WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMfT QUANTITIES" 95uMt*’^ <,£a fS2?L “ r - r ,r * mr ' ' * POOP toatm »«
CH. 4-1321
,7.... to S-A-VI-N-6-S!! J CH 1-2833 ★ T&SK^★ MUND “Bftt or SWISS JU lb STEAK |U GROUND BEEF 2 I 89‘
SLICED BOLOGNA 39*
★ LAMPS ★ SANDWICH TOASTERS ★ ETC. ★ REPLACEMENT PARTS ★ ELECTRIC SUPPLIES ★ LAMP BULBS (AH Odd Sizes) ★ VAC. BAGS A BELTS ★ ANYTHING ELECTRICAL
What Happened To The First Square? A glass of juice, cup of coffee and a dash for the door . . . that’s become the average American breakfast. Yet three square meals a day have long been our symbol of success. And, heaven knows, everyone from Teenager to Pop needs to start the day with a substantial meal if he is to get through to his mid-morning snack, let alone lunch. Sure, the juice is needed for its Vitamin C. The coffee helps pep you up and makes the day look a little brighter. But you also need more—perhaps enriched or whole gain cereal with milk, and
tTo Help Someone to a Speedy Recovery . . . SEND “BEAUTIFUL FRESH FLOWERS 99 Speedway City Florist 4900 WEST 16th STREET CH. 4-9523
WESTGATE Kg REAL ESTATE CO. F J| CH. 1-2823 _ WBI w -
STARK S WETZEL SKINLESS WIENERS 49s
OUR OWN SLICED RACON 59*
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
"AFFORDABLE, COMPETENT ASSISTANCE" TAX IETVIK NEMIED Personal, Small Business, Partnerships, Corporation, Bookkeeping, Audits, Systems, Monthly, Quarterly, Annual MICHAEL 6. LATZ & Associates 3422 WEST 16TH STREET OFF. ME. 1-0136 RES. AX. 1-6844 "Our 14th Year In The Speedway Area"
at least one egg. If you’ve been a juice-and-cof-fee breakfaster all your life, this menu is going to seem impossible. Just the time it takes to get it down! Well, get up a bit earlier. You can do it. For the first few days you may have to force the stuff down. But after a bit it will even get to taste like food. Before you know it, you’ll be enjoying it, and you’ll wonder how you ever did without it. Weight watchers needn’t get alarmed either. Substitute skim milk for whole milk on the cereal. Make that egg boiled or poached rather than scrambled or fried. You’ll find you may even be able to skip that second breakfast at the office and you will no longer be so ravenous that you overeat at lunch. If you help during the CARE Food Crusade, CARE will be able to deliver 450,000 SI.OO food packages to aid the most needy refugees of Honk Kong. Your dollar will deliver one of these with your name and address on the package as the donor. Help through CARE, 1 S. State Street, Chicago 3, Illinois.
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Hamburgers Have Become Big Business Capable of producing up to 600 broiled hamburgers every hour, the local Burger Chef drive-in, typical of those across die nation, is a new business force in the community which is contributing substantially to daily purchases of foods and supplies. Open each day from 11 aan. to 11 p.m., the Burger Chef operation when at full capacity can turn out well over two and a half million hamburgers a year. Thousands of dozens of buns and tons of lean, select quality beef plus many gallons of catsup and mustard are purchased from local food suppliers to swell the total area sales. A steady flow of milk shakes and other beverages calls for daily deliveries from local dairies and soft drink suppliers. The average store uses 10,000 gallons of milk per year for milk shakes. In addition to the - purchase of supplies, the Burger Chef drive-in also contributes to area payrolls through employment of local individuals who operate the automated hamburger and milk shake equipment. Part of a national organization. Burger Chef stores are all locally owned or managed by individuals who have entered the growing drivein food field from a wide variety of previous occupations. Each Burger Chef, therefore, .is entirely srlocal business, permanently established to grow with the community-
When Your Freezer Stops No matter what the weather, when your home freezer stops, there’s bound to be trouble. How much trouble depends upon how much you know about handling the situation. According to the USDA’s Federal Extension Service, there are several steps you can take to keep your food from spoiling. Keep the freezer closed. Move the food to a locker plant. Add dry ice if you can get it. In a closed, fully-loaded freezer, food usually stays frozen about two days after the electricity goes off. With less than half a load, it probably won’t last more than a day. If you think it may take longer than a day or so to get your freezer back in shape, you might use your local locker plant. Wrap the food in plenty of newspapers and blankets or use insulated boxes, then make the trip from freezer to locker as quickly as possible. Dry ice is another possibility. The more dry ice you use, the longer the food will keep frozen. Fifty pounds will keep the temperature down to 15 degrees F. for about 2 days in an average-size freezer. For added protection, cover the freezer with blankets or quilts. It will help to put crumpled newspapers or excelsior be-
X II ftlllV " Get a Re ' n f° rce< l Concrete NUn ■ Incinerator to Protect Your Yard" Clean, Safe Disposal of Paper— Trash—Garbage
PRE-FABRICATED CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION . . . EASILY ASSEMBLED OR MOVED, YET LASTS A LIFETIME. • This is the original and only “Burn-All” incinerator designed and engineered for maximum efficiency, safety, and appearance. Proven by laboratory tests and use in the field, it combines safety with tremendous burning power. m INSTALLED Completely Safe • • • The “Burn-AIF hu been designed to solve efficiently and inexpensively your disposal problems. 11 eliminates the old fashioned wire basnet which is not only unsightly but omo a proven tiro haaard that to dangerous to surrounding buildings. Children can play safely near the "BumAB" incinerator. SPECIFICATIONS Height 54 inches Width 20 inches Bese 25 inches sq. Fire Door 13 inches wide Fire Grate 20 x 20 inches B f sMeAb vAaal AtaM%aamln/>siP KemrorcM wirii stmi rnrougnotii
Speedway Hardware 1012 N. lovOhunt CM. 4-3158
In Speedway at DeLapp Motors 16th & Georgetown Rd. Ask For Jim DeLapp • Charles Sexton • Jerry Reynolds “The Home of Fine Service fill 1 CQAQ And Clean Cars? 9 Ulla I
*59 CHEVY $1095 3- 6-CyL, Stick. Vary Lov Mlloo. '55 CHEVY $395 4- * Cyl. Vary Good Condition. *55 STUDEBAKER $395 Station Wagon, Very Good Condition. '55 RAMBLER $395 Station Wagon, Very Good Condition.
tween the cabinet and the blankets. Anti Litter Campaign Yard Parks has received word that Keep America Beautiful, Inc., of New York City, has accepted the invitation of Yard Parks on behalf of the City and metropolitan area, to hold the Midwest Workshop for the National Anti-Litter Campaign for 1962 in Indianapolis, March 15th and 16th. The meeting will be centered at the Marott Hotel and it is anticipated that it will stimulate interest in greater accomplishment in the campaign for cleanup and beautification of the metropolitan Indianapolis community and for the whole State of Indiana as well. The sponsors of this program anticipate that in view of the interest shown by many Indiana cities in the national cleanest town contest, many people interested in, and dedicated to such civic improvement attended the sessions of the Workshop meeting. Mr. Edward D. Pierre, noted Indianapolis architect, whose unflagging, sincere and determined devotion to projects offering the highest degree of community betterment, is hopeful that statewide interest in this meeting will serve to further the movement td make Indiana an outstanding state for cleanliness as an stecomplishment of the sesquicentenriia} program of the state, with the objective of full realization of such a goal by 1966. Plans for holding a successful meeting have already begun to take shape and this community can view, with justifiable pride, its standing and record as one of the cleanest communities in • America, as evidenced by top I awards received the last six years ■in succession.
wsmOII SIL* Cheek these “Bsm-All” Features • • • • Any pert replaceable • Bums in any weather 9 Eliminates fire danget • Superior combustion • fatily dismantled and • Lifetime use • No black spots ta
'6O PONTIAC $2295 Povor. Uko Nov. *59 OLDS $1795 Powor Steering A Broken. RAH. Can’t bo told from Nev! '56 VOLKSWAGEN $895 I-Door Sedan '6O TRIUMPH TR3 $895 4-Door.
McHUGH STANDARD SERVICE "We Give Top Value Stamps" • TUNE-UP • BRAKE WORK • WHEEL BALANCING • VALUE GRINDING • MINOR REPAIRS "Complete 1-Stop Service" 16th & Cunningham CH. 44772 "FREE PICK-UP and DELIVERY"
Mother's Know-How MMMRBDBRI HR |w| HH t \ Y * | \ il !>■' 'JUI IMB 3 JU Photo by Daniel J. Ranaohoff A young mother shows her Red Croce Heme Nursing Instructor how much she profited by a course in Mother and Baby Care she took before her baby waa barn. Thoueanda es expectant mothers and fathers—have gained knowledge and confidence through taking the couree.
ST. ANDREW'S LUTHERAN CHURCH (Continued from Page 1) Vespers, while at 8:30 p.m. there will be a burning of the greens on the church lawn. Communion will be. celebrated at the 9:00 a.m. service on Sunday, January 7. The regular schedule of services—Sunday church Schools continues, with one addition. Beginning January 7 there will be a Nursery-Kindergarten Sunday Church School class at both the 9:00 and the 11:00 hours. The 11:00 session is being added for the convenience of families with small children who wish to attend the 11:00 worship service. Confirmation classes and youth choirs will resume their regular Sunday night schedule this Sunday. Senior Luther League also meets at 6 pm. Sunday evening. A Senior League planning session will be held this Sunday afternoon at 4 p.m. This month ths Brotherhood is sponsoring a family night program. Mr. John Bunch will be showing slides and discussing his recent European trip. The event is to be on Monday night, January A The time is set at 7:30 p.m. so that the whole family can see and hear this presentation. The women’s circles will be meeting during the coming week. Esther Circle meets at 8 p.m., January 9, at the home of Mrs. Blanche Wagle, 1652 DeSoto, with Mrs. Earl Armbruat as co-hostess. Martha Circle meets at 9:30 a.m., January 11, and Mary Magdalene Circle at 8 p m. on the same day. Speedway Alcoholics Anonymous will gather at 8:30 p.m., Tuesday, January 9, in Fellowship Hall. Senior Choir rehearses at 7:30 pan., Wednesday, January 10. St. Andrew’s Nursery School meets each Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, from 9-11 a.m.
Rolles PI 111 Oil SERVICE 5052 w.ietast. cH.4-eese LUBRICATION—OiI—WASH—MINOB REPAIRS MUFFLERS—TAIL PIPES-MINOR TUNE-UP VALUE GRNDING - WHEEL BALANCING MAE SERVICE I I, sm vllh Fwo
(5) *6O-'6l CORVAIRS M>r*a.. 4-Drha. Coanoa FROM $1295 up (2) *SB OLDSMOBILES 1-Dr. Hardtop and 4-Deor. Your Choke $1295 '57 CHEVROLET $1095 Station Wagon. 4-Dr„ V-8. P.CL. RAH. 1 Owaor, Like Novi *59 CHEVROLET $1295 El Camino, Rod a White
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