Walkerton Independent, Volume 83, Number 22, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 28 April 1960 — Page 4

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— WALKERTON INDEPENDENT — April 2*. 1960

Band to Present Concert ;■* . t . • '■ ■. ■< K vS ' ..? - * Al i Bi® JIK-i f Ik J| w W %it ■ S .- Hf Ar* 5 A Rhw®rf^ JbL »? K3^E» A^S ‘■■ I ■ T® । jME . w Iff jSn S I x y/. ■ * B J^oWiiSk ^Mw >-. -$h < ■ ' ' : ,:< ■ • '■ J i "^^^^^^^^^■HHHHHHHHHHHHI <• W The featured students on the program for the band concert Sunday are pictured here with director, Donald Weil, right From the left, they are: LaMair Kronk, who will play a trumpet solo; Lmda Huhnke, Judy Wiktorowski, Dennis Guard. June Dill and Pat McKesson, members ot the woodwind quartet.

The WalAlon High Scho> 1 Bind will Arseni their annual Spring Condit this coming Sunday. May 1. at 3:<l0 p in. jn the high school gym. Tickets may be purchased from my high school hand member, adults 75 cents and students 40 c ents Pre-schoi 1 children are admitted free. La Marr Kronk will he the featured soloist on this concert, playing a newly published trumpet solo, ’ Have Hom, Will Travel". written by Robert Logan. LaMarr has been a vital part of the band during the past year and will now have a chance to show his versatility as a soloist. He was also a first division winner at the state solo contest held in Indianapolis in February Also featured on the program will be a woodwind quintet playing “Five Mellow Winds ’, an arrangement, by David Schanke an ■ dedicated to the late Glenn Miller. prominent di nee band leader of the late 30s and 40s. This number is written for the type woodwind section that made Miller s music so popular. The quintet is composed of Linda Huhnke, clarinet; Judy Wiktorowski and Dennis Guard, alto saxophones; and June Dili and Pat McKesson, ten or saxophones. The Arion award will also be presented to the outstanding senior band member who lias conti ibuted outstandingly to the activities of the band. This award is made on the basis of 10 categories, and voted on by fellow band members The awar i is kept secret until the time of presentation. The entire program includes: Elmira, Abbott A Mozart Festival, Johnson Have Horn. W.H Ti ,vel. Logan Fantasy for Band. Ei ickson National Defer se March, Becker American Folk Suite, Walters Five Mellow Winds, Schanke El Capeo, Parent Cypress Silhoi -ties Bennett Manhattan Thwei Overture. Brighton Th ach Lathant » Serenade to Spring Warrlk* v>n g; Me lody Maid M <rch T dbot® "Hiis is quite a varied prog®/, that . hoald sit the t.iW t'.ste of aim st anyo^jia** s all bi pref-tn’ Sunday to htiar a program of band music which fiejyone is cert; in U» enjoy We’ll sec you Sunday’ To Honor Band At Sunday Banquet There will be ; supper in honor of the hand st tiling promptly at 600 p m Sunday. The Band Booster^ and any >nc interested in the band arc in Jed and asked to bring a weh-fi del basket. Th< 1.l verage will he supplied. Round a.id square dancing v.Hi follow to conclude an enjoyable evening.

YOUTH EXJOY TRIP TO । SLOCUM STATE PARK Members of the High Schoo’ Sunday School Class taught by Leanord Beaty and the Youth Fellowship group of the Evangelical United Brethren Churc h enjoyed a trip to Slocum Stale Park near Peru. Sunday. A picnic dinner was enjoyed and al! explored the park. On the way home they stopped at Turkey Creek for their evening meal, after which the Youth Fellowsh p meeting was hold.

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WORTH MORE BECAUSE THEY WORK MORE! CHEVROLET STURDI BUTTOCKS See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer Powell-Mann Chevrolet Co., Inc. Phone 43 Walkerton

6B (.LASS — MR. KI( RBI ML Last Saturday we had a pap< i drive. We all want to thank, the men that drove trucks and help’d in any way. Tn geography we are studying about Mongolia and Korea In English we are writing sentences with the eight parts of speech. We have finished our Science books an<l are doing’ our health work bookc. We are changing fractions to decimals in arithmetic. Jerry Gaddis, reporter

Attention — Day Camp Help Needed Th? Brownie and Girl Scout Dav (’amp will be starting June 21-22 and 23rd and June 28, 29 and 30. Our girls are in need of leaders and co-leaders for those wok- Please notice, mothers, you do not have to be registered at Girl Scout Council to help with Day Camp training Lessons for beginner leaders are being offered on April 2R and May 12

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nt Stuntz Pine Forest Our o\< pericuoed leaders will have a rofresher course on Wy l^th at Stuntz Forest. The Day Camp Committee is hoping for a res|x>nse from y< u gala, otherwise our Day Camp may’ be forced to cancel camp this year Let's don’t disappoint our Brownies and G-irt Scouts Charity covers a multitude t,f sins—not yours, of course, but the other fellows.

jwHUlirsv’ OVER BACK COUNTRY ROAOS AT C WITH A SKY-HIGH LOAD OF TIMBER Chevy middleweigtt shows the big rigs how it's done! That's a 6303 medium*duty Che&* rolct powered by a 283-cu.’4n. VB. But there's sure nothing medium^ duty about the load. Mr. J. E. Blankinship, Arkansas logging, contractor, says both of hie torsion-spring 6303? s "move along at 40 to 50 miles per Iwur with 55,000 pounds gross weight and maintain a 5-trip-a-day schedule with no trouble at all." Figure tht money you save when you've got a medium-duty truck that can cover 30,000 back-country miles a year with a high-tonnage loadl We’ve never seen anything like the amount of praise truck owners are heaping on Chevy’s new torsion spring suspension. Owners like the fact the truck handies a whole lot easier, can move faster off the road without beating the driver to death and shaking loose all the sheet metal. They like the idea of extra thousands of miles liefore trade-in! . . . Drive a ‘6O Chevy just once. It’s a whole new experience. ^C/ict y middleweight averages 200 miles (>f bat k roads a day dog^tng tost of the t >ods and delict ring u to die mill at Crossett, Arkansas.