Speedway Flyer, Volume 33, Number 18, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1964 — Page 3
Thursday, April 30, 1964
CUSSIfim TOR SALE—FuII length yellow formal, never worn, size 9, % price. CH. 1-4652. EXECUTIVE DESIRES minimum 2 bdrm., carpets, drapes and major appliances needed, with long leases with option to buy. Preferably in Speedway. CH. 46343. TOR SALE—4xB home pool table, good cond., SSO; 2117 Fisher St. TOR SALE—boy’s 24” J. C. Higgins bike, good cond. CH. 44266. TOR SALE Royal standard typewriter, excell. cond. SBS; elec. Coke cooler, store size, S2O. chest type. G. R. Veal, 5941 Cadillac Dr. CH. 4-5360. TOR SALE —Companion crypts in beautiful Floral Park. S4OO below present price; also 2 platform rockers, one almost new. CH. 1-4313 or CH. 1-3901. FOR LEASE—Office space. 1612 N. Lyndhurst. AX. 1-6089 or CH. 4-8787. FOR SALE—RoII-a-way bed, 48” innerspring mattress, clean. sls. CH. 4-3165 after 5 p.m. TIMES HAVE CHANGED, but has your home? There are new products, appliances and styles now being used in new homes. These are not just for new construction, they can easily and inexpensively be used to modernize the home you are now living in. Call me for ideas in modernizing. JIM COUGHLIN, Designer-Mod-ernizer. UL. 2-2445. 6446 W. 12th Lovely hillside two-bdrm, brick, din. rm. or family rm., full base., heated gar. North on Glenarm drive at West 10th St. Near Cloverleaf. CH. 47145. WANT TO BUY Paddock, Tower Terrace, A, B, or E. ME. 6-1087. FOR RENT —Nice bedrooms next to bath, twin beds or double bed. See 2025 N. Lyndhurst Dr. or caR CH. 1-0194.
FOR SALE—Pink nylon chiffon formal, size 11-12, worn once. Cost $26, will sell for sl2. CH. 12252. FOR SALE —1963 Buick special, station wagon, excell. cond. CH. 1-2252. FOR SALE—Washer and dryer, SSO, or best offer for pair. Also daveno-bed, cheap. CH. 1-3101. FOR SALE —Maple twin bed and springs. $lO. CH. 4-9789. FOR SALE—Boy’s 26” bicycle, $lO. 1762 N. Lyndhurst. CH. 41368. 1367 N. FURMAN AVE.—3 bedroom brick, all electric with den and family room. FHA appraised, owners selling for less. Near excellent schools. CH. 4-5857. Drexel Garden's Ladies Auxiliary Euchre Party The Ladies Auxiliary of the Drexel Garden’s Fire Department will sponsor a Euchre Party Friday night May 1, at the Fire Station, 5245 W. Naomi St.’ Game time 8 p.m. Refreshments served all evening. A nice selection of prizes. The public is invited. BENEFIT TELETHON The lovely and talented Miss Virginia Gibson, from “Discovery ’64,” will appear on the Variety Club “Telethon” scheduled to be televised live from the ballroom of the Continental Hotel, 410 N. Meridian St. in Indianapolis over Channel 4, WTTV-TV. The spectacular show will begin at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 2 and continue without interruption until 5 pjn. Sunday, May 3.
JUNIOR CHOIR FESTIVAL The seventh annual Junior Choir Festival, sponsored by Christian Theological Seminary, will be held at 5 pm. Sunday, May 3, in the Second Presbyterian Church, 7700 N. Meridian St. Approximately 500 boys and girls from Indianapolis and surrounding cities will participate. At 6:30 pm. Friday, May 1, a dinner and workshop at 7:30 pm., will be held at North Methodist Church, 38th and Meridian Streets. Mrs. Kemp will rehearse the Festival Choir at Second Presbyterian Church on Saturday, May 2 at 10 am. . The concert on May 3 is open to the public. FOLK SING A Folk Sing meeting will be held on May 2, Saturday evening at 8:30 pm. at the Jewish Community Center, 6701 Hoover Rd. The public is welcome to attend. There will be no charge. Dr. Harvey Narrol, Chairman, and Pat Dunford will lead the group in a teaching process. A tape recording of Joe Hickerson ringing will also be used.
PERSONALS (Continued from page 1) A Speedway student was among those listed on the Dean’s List of Honor Students for the Winter term at Manchester College in North Manchester, Indiana. The Dean’s List of Honor Students includes those students whose grades are sufficiently high to place them in the upper tenpercent. of their class for the term. Listed from this area is: Terry Heiser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Heiser, 4980 W. 13th St ALUMNI DANCE The annual George Washington High School Alumni Dance will be held Saturday, May 2 at Westlake Terrace. Music will be provided by Nick Craig’s orchestra.
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2 Fertilizes for that allimportant spring feeding. 3 Kills Soil Insects that feed on grass roots. Don’t give crab grass a chance this year. KHI it now, keep it off all season with one application of Greenfield Triple-Action Crab Grass KHler. . ZaiSX Speedway Lawn & Garden Center 5242 CRAWFORDSVILLE RD. CH. 4-5811
SCHOOL NEWS (Continued from Page 1) pan. May 9, Junior-Senior Prom, 9:00-12:00. May 11, Golf meet with Wash-
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" , " 1 Meet the ' u daredevil of a Pumpkinvine Pike! jHHBW J 4 I 1 f»11 bhMHHBL ifffl ELWOOD G. HAYNES. | & -g W WEBh LM born las?. ~ * v '- W PORTLAND. INDIANA ''''fit aW 1 Sb wMaW IO SMlO' kk ,/wWW Mr fltlh Hi I I OH < vzjmu z I I"t AhS/ 1 Wil fl BO : Zv* : -i £ AMMEWd IWIISh l! J ' yVMWd
Skirt ruffles rustled and derby bats bobbed. The folks were crowding in for a doser look at Pumpkinvine Pike. For the crowd was curious in Kokomo that sunny Fourth of July, in 1894. They had been promised a look at a “horseless carriage.” And they were ready for a hearty laugh. But suddenly all eyes turned up the Pike. And a strange-looking contraption came sputtering and sparking along in the ruts —with Elwood Haynes at the tiller. He flashed by in a blur of speed (they say he hit six miles-an-hour that day!). The thrilling trial run of America’s first clutch-driven automobile with dectrical ignition was a rousing success. Haynes was talented in other fields, too. He was a gifted metallurgist who developed many important alloys and created “stainless steel.” But he’ll always be remembered by the world for his wonderful “horseless carriage.” It’s been a long time since the automobile was merely a good source for a joke. Today, it’s as essential as, say, your telephone. And, in a way, it’s essential to your telephone. More than 1300 cars and trucks are needed by Indiana Bell to keep your telephone service the finest in the world. Constructing tdephone lines. Inspecting and maintaining these lines. Installing new phones, and equipment in homes and offices. Delivering electronic marvels that increase the efficiency of business and industry. All this depends, in large measure, on the automobile. Yes, the automobile has done much for Indiana BdL. And we’ve done a little for the automobile. Have you seen, or used, one of the newest automobile radio telephones? A pretty amazing—and dependable—instrument. Just one result of the continuing progress in research from the Bell Tdephone Laboratories. And the best is yet to coma.
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
ington, Here, 4:00 pan. May 12, Junior High County Track Meet May 12, Varsity baseball game with Danville, There, 4:30 pan. May 13, PT A Meeting at Wheel-
dft 7 a.m. Io 10 p.m. Daily *° ® P* m ’ Sunday
er School, 3:00 pan. The annual Career Day program is scheduled for this Friday, May 1. High school students will have an opportunity to hear talks
CTVft COOK’S best FRIEND What a wonderful convenience a phone in the kitchen would be. So much time is spent therecooking, doing the dishes, preparing shopping lists. It’s surprising the time and steps a phone saves. Try a new wall phone—always within reach, but never in the way. Choose from rich, decorator colors. Call our Business Office for details today.
INDIANA BELL SERVING YOU
I’firom representatives of several occupational fields. Rehearsals are underway for the presentation of “Oklahoma,” which will be given in the high school auditorium two nights, May 15 and 16. One of Rodgers and Hammerstein’s best known musicals, it takes place in Indian Territory in the 1900’s before Oklahoma is granted statehood. Speedway won a triangular track meet last week with Decatur Central placing second and Greenwood, third. In golf Speed-
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way won its meet with Pike, white the varsity baseball team teat to Center Grove 6 to A Speedway placed 3rd in the Mid-State Conference Junior High track meet held last Saturday. Plainfield placed Ist and Danville placed 2nd. LIBRARY NOTES The Senior High School Library is open four late afternoons each week for the convenience of students and adults of Speedway. Hours are from 3:30 to 6:30 Monday through Thursday. These titles are new:
Trevino, Elizabeth—Where the heart is Burns, Ted—Tumbling techniques illustrated Sutcliff, Rosemary—-Knight’s fee Burke, Edmund—Field and target archery Kerr, Jean—Mary, Mary Braymer, Marjorie—Walls of windy Troy Scudder, Kenyon—Twenty billion dollar challenge Stambler, Irwin—Find a career in engineering Shirreffs, Gordon—Action front! Funk, Charles—Thereby hangs a tale Irwin, Keith—Romance of writing
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