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| Ames Daily
Tribune, May 19, 1954
Remodeling has been completed at Berck Clothing,
301 Main. the store now has a visual front, enabling the passerby
to see the whole store at a glance. While not self-service, the new
setup allows the customer to reach all merchandise easily. When the
formal opening is held soon, $400 in merchandise, including three suits,
top coat, hats, shirts, ties and other accessories will be given away free
to lucky persons who register on visiting the store. |
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| Ames Daily
Tribune, May 19, 1954
Presenting our friends and customers a brand
new Berck's dedicated to easier shopping and more pleasant surroundings.
Berck's ...the home of nationally famous brands. Come in and help
us celebrate our formal store opening May 20, 21, 22. Register for
$500 free prizes! Here's what you may win...
One $65 Botany 500 tailored by Daroff suit
One $55 Campus-Tog suit
One $50 Clipper Craft suit
One $50 Marbury topcoat
One $10 Mallory hat
One $7.50 Champ hat
Three $2.50 Pioneer belts
Six $5.00 Swank Jewelry sets
Three $3.95 Manhattan "span" white shirts
Two pair $12.95 Hagger and Advance slacks
One pair $15.95 Life O'Ease slacks
Two pair $13,95 Weyenberg shoes
One pair $5.95 Stadium pajamas
Six $1.95 & $2.95 Golf caps by Sieg
One $16.00 Lakeland sports jacket
One $15.00 Weathercrest jacket
2 Doz. $1.50 and $2.50 Superba ties
Six pair $1.00 Holeproof hose
Three $5.00 Pioneer wallets
Two $5.00 Marlboro sport shirts
One $5.00 Rudofker's tux cummerbund
Six sets Topper pants hangers
Let's shop at Berck's, Ames' clothing corner,
Sheldon-Munn Hotel |
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| Ames Daily
Tribune, March 15, 1955
Dark clothes with lively furnishings sums
up the general spring fashion outlook for men, according to M.S. Berck
of the Berck Clothing company. Above, Pete Wilson, Iowa State college
senior in industrial psychology, ponders over the black lo-boy tassel oxford
which is representative of the continental influence in footwear featured
in men's fashion publications this season. He already has the remainder
of his outfit. With the gray flecked trousers he is wearing a mint
green Oxford shirt with short point, button down collar, a black and mint
necktie and a charcoal gray jacket flecked with lighter gray. Shoulders
on the jacket are only semi-padded to give a taller and trimmer appearance.
In the background - in case it's chilly - is Pete's brand new spring topcoat,
charcoal with brown and gray flecks, and styled with bal collar and raglan
sleeves. The hat is a charcoal gray campus collegian type with narrow
brim and colored ribbon. Pete, whose home town is glen Ridge, N.J.,
lives at the Beta Theta Pi house, 2120 Lincoln Way. He is a member
of Cardinal Guild, the Veishea Central committee, the Science council and
the Homecoming Central committee. |
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| Ames Daily
Tribune, March 5, 1958
FORMAL OPENING - Ames Mayor Pearle M. Dehart
is shown cutting the ribbon to open Berck's Men's and Boys' Wear Store,
229 Main St., for the formal opening today. Looking on are, from
left, Max Berck, owner; Russ Woodruff, chairman of the Chamber of Commerce
retail bureau and L.C. (Bill) Faust, Chamber of Commerce president.
An announcement of the formal opening is carried in The Tribune today. |
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| Ames Daily
Tribune, March 28, 1963
Carrying the motto, "An investment in good
appearance," Berck Clothing Co. of 229 Main St. is in its 14th year of
operation, filling men's and boys' clothing needs. The firm was opened
in 1947 with a small sales staff, and with facilities of 16 by 50 feet,
at 301 Main St. In 1958 the store moved to the current address, with new
locations completely remodeled to fill expanding sales. The store
now has facilities of 25 by 100 feet - more than three times the original
store size. Sales staff has increased to a total of eight to ten,
including seven full time employees.
The store features clothing and shoes for
men and boys, and outfits Army and Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps
(ROTC) personnel, supplying the goods on a contract basis.
Berck Clothing also carries tuxedo rentals
for college and Ames area use, and delivers purchased clothing out of state.
Max Berck, manager, said he would like to double operations some day, and
noted the firm strives to have "the right merchandise at the right time
at the right place," adding, "the customer is the real boss." College
students and faculty comprise a large percentage of his trade.
In the boys' shop, managed by Woody Thrasher,
clothing for ages six to twenty is carried. Some of the lines include
Kanee shirts, Robert Bruce, Jackie Jumper and Ray Gilbert clothing, Windbreaker
and Lakeland jackets. The firm also carries the Weyenberg-massagic
shoes for men and the Golden Horseshoe line of jeans. |
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| Ames Daily
Tribune, March 19, 1958
Ed Wixon, Chamber of Commerce secretary,
is shown above drawing the first prize winner of Berck's formal opening
registration. Mr. Berck looks on as 69 names were drawn for prizes. |
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