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Ed Buchwald, manager
Mrs. Willadeen Barton, head of wallpaper department
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| The business was started
back in 1951 by a couple of Marshalltown men who were already in a similar
business in that city. They were Melvin Finkle and Jim Moehrl.
They operated the business through a local manager E.H. (Ed) Buchwald,
then about the first of this year sold the business to L.C. Ankrum.
Ankrum, who had spent many years farming near Readlyn is active in the
business, but Buchwald was retained as manager.
Buchwald, who started on a career as a painter,
spent some ten years as head of the paint shop of the Lenox Furnace company
in Marshalltown. He also spent a similar period as a traveling salesman,
selling industrial finishes. All of that experience in addition to
several years in the retail end of the paint business fits him unusually
well for the job he now holds, where his advice is frequently sought by
do-it-yourself decorators. Mr. and Mrs. Buchwald and their daughter
Barbara, a student in Central Junior High, live at 220 East 9th street. |
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| L. C. Ankrum, owner |
| A few minutes spent browsing
around the Paint Spot will make one feel like he has just leafed through
a popular homemakers magazine, for almost every brand name one sees is
that of a nationally advertised product. One of the most prominent
names in the paint department is that of Glidden's Spred Satin. Spred
Satin was the original water base paint to employ the use of latex rubber.
Its rapid rise to popularity with the do-it-yourself painter is easily
explained in that it dries quickly and evenly, and mighty important to
the novice is that splatter spots can be easily wiped up with a damp cloth.
The wide range of colors and tints available possibly explains why now
about 62 per cent of all paints used is applied by the individual himself
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. . or herself. |
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| 1951 Formal Opening photo |
| The wallpaper department
at the Paint Spot would set the average housewife into a redecorating frenzy.
Here the big names you find are Nancy Warren, Enterprize and United.
Many of the wallpaper patterns are available with either matching or contrasting
curtain and slip cover materials. Incidentally, if you like, the
drapes of slip covers can be had ready-made . . . or you can buy the materials
and do-it-yourself. Mrs. Willadeen Barton, who assists you in the
wallpaper and drapery department, says that a very high percentage of wallpaper
used today is being applied by the housewife. |
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| The Paint Spot also stocks
a supply of drapery rods and metal cornice boards.
In the floor coverings department, stress
is put on linoleum as the ideal covering for the kitchen and bathroom floors.
Wayne Purvis, who has been in the business for ten years, does the linoleum
laying for the Paint Spot. He also handles the installation of linoleum
wall coverings and plastic, metal or linoleum table tops. Miraplas,
a styrene plastic tile that is guaranteed for the life of the wall itself.
Picture framing is another of the many Pain
Spot services. You select the frame material, and they will build
the frame, or they will sell you the molding and you can do-it-yourself.
The do-it-yourselfer can have a field day
at the Paint Shop. They'll help you with advice and ideas as well
as supplying your needs in materials, and as a special service to you they
have many pieces of equipment that they will rent to you. Such items
as wallpaper steamers, floor sanders, hand sanders and wax polishers are
available on a rental basis. |
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Demolition of the building at 215 Fifth
Street, November of 2006
Ed Coe Seeds had operated from this
building at 215 Fifth Street until 1941. Irvine Paint was
the tenant from 1941 until 1946, when that business moved across the street
to 214 Fifth Street. The building was then occupied by Puffet Plumbing.
The Paint Spot's grand opening was held March
30 and 31 of 1951. In 1957, the business name changed to Strand's
Paint Spot, and after the following year, was known simply as Strand
Paint until 1986 or so.
Although Linda Glantz Interior Decorators
and Designers operated from the site for a few years in the late 1980s,
the building was largely vacant until it was razed in 2006 to prepare for
future expansion of the Ames Public Library. |
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A rain garden has been planted waiting
for possible expansion of the Ames Public Library.
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