The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1964 — Page 5
THE DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
THURS., JAN. 2, 1964. F ice S
Classified Ads Real Estate
FOR SALE
i I
J S1AGEK COXXOEE MAHOGANY FINISH $37.63 complete price. Must sell. Payments of $5.37 monthly. Sews backward and forward, darns, mends, sews on zippers, zig-zags, only eight month old. Phone OL 3-3987. 23-tf
PUTNAM REALTY 106 South Indiana St. OL 3 - 5022 Evenings—OL 3-6416 Cloverdale 795-6603
736 CRESCENT DRIVE 3 bedroom ranch, full bath, low heat cost, extra nice built-in
kitchen, extras.
INCOME PROPERTY 2 bedroom unit down, 3 room apt. up. Both with private bath and ent. In good condition, low expense, always rented. ZINC ML L ROAD 6 room modern, garage, extra large lot with fruit trees, gas furnace, city water, built-in kitchen, low tax.
ONLY $4606.00
4 room, modern, double sink in kitchen, insulated, just right for small family.
1148 AYE. C
5 room modern, built-in kitchen, low heat cost, new alum, sid-
ing, large lot.
LISTINGS WANTED We render service without a service charge, let us evaluate your property. No obligation, no charge. 2-3t
FOR SALE: 2 bedroom modern Home in Cloverdale. Hardwood Floors. Storm Windows. Elmer O. Sutherlin, P. O. Box 117, Cloverdale. Indiana, Phone 795-4689 2-7-2p
FOR SALE: Tape recorder and 40 tapes, Stereo. $550.00 value. Ph. OL 3-6207, 24-10t. New Magnavox Stereos are here, clearance on all R.C.A. stereos Kersey Music, north on 43. 21-tf New 4 speed automatic record players. $49.95. Kersey Music Store, North on 43. 21-tf. FOR SALE: 1962 Frigidaire portable washer. Like new. Holds 12 place settings. $80.00. OL 3-4748. l-3t
FOR SALE: SO head crossbred Hampshire and Landrace shoats. Average weight 40 lbs. Casterated and vaccinated for cholera and Erysipelas. Call after 6:00 p.m. Alfred M. Heavin. Fillmore. Ph. 246-3569. 2-lp FOR SALE: Purebred Hampshire boars. Dr. B. B. Knuppel. OL-3-3918. Tues-Thurs-Sat-tf
FOR SALE: Parts for all electric razors. Mason Jewelry. (The Tick Took Shop) south side of the square. 30-tf.
Notices
HORSES: Transported any time, any place. Morris Williams. Phone OL 3-3038. Thurs-tf FOR SALE: Hampshire boars. An ample supply of proven blood lines. Earl Bridges, R. 1, Roachdale. Ph. 596-7283. 13-tf
NOTICE: George’s Shoe Hospital across from the Post Office will be open from 7:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. starting January the first, “the finest in shoe repair." 28-30t
Pets
FOR SALE: Registered German Sheperd dogs. Call PE 9-2264 between 8 a.m. and 2 p.m.
l-2p.
Wanted
WANTED: To rent parking space for house trailer in or near Greencastle. Colored. Write Box 81 c/o Banner. 2-lp
WANTED: Repairing and refinishing furniture. Custom cabinet work. Specializing in Antiques. 806 S. Maple Ave. Don Chiles. l-6p WANTED: Hauling. Corn, hay, coal, driveway stone, grain. “You name it, we’ll haul it!" Ph. Crawley’s Trucking, OL 36222. 31-5p. WANTED: Alterations and sewing of all kinds. Mrs. Keith Shinn. Phone OL 3-5537. 30-Gt
FOR SALE: Baled hay or trade for three bottom pull-type plow. Jack Major. Bainbridge.
2 ~ 4 ~ 2p Business Service
FOR SALE: Saturday, January 4th: Holstein dairy cows and heifers; 8 Holstein springer heifers, close up springers, calfhood vaccinated; 25 Polled springer cows with size and quality; 30 Angus springer cows, starting to calve; 5 fancy Angus springer heifers; 21 Hereford steers, weight 500 lbs; 10 Hereford heifers, weight 600 lbs; 17 Holstein steers, weight 550 lbs. Veal calves, lumber, fence posts and hay. Boone County Sale Barn. Lebanon, Ind. It
HEARING AID SI PPLIES Batteries and accessories for all makes and models. Mason Jewelers (Tick Tock Shop) 18 West Washington St. 28-tf
FOR SALE: One 3-year old Charolais bull. Harold Sibbitt, Fillmore. 31-3t
HAVE YOU OPENED YOUR 1964 CHRISTMAS C’LI’B AT THE FRIENDLY FIRST-CITI-ZEN’S BANK? YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID! 24-tf Victor Furnaces ana Airconditioners. Free Estimates. We service any make of furnace. Boswell Heating Co. N. College at Columbia Street. Ph. OL 3-5357. 2-tf
For Rent
WANTED: Rug, carpet, upholstery and wall cleaning. The Nation Wide Service Master System available thru better stores everywhere. For Service in Putnam County call OL 3-3562. 17-tf.
FOR RENT: Two bedroom apartment. Inquire of custodian at Cole Apartments. 3-tf
WANTED: To rent nice two bedroom furnished house or apartment in Greencastle. Phone OL 3-6320. 31-2-4-3p
FOR RENT or FOR SALE: 6 room house on U. S. 40, 1 mile west of Reelsville. A. H. Posey. Clayton Phone 539-6799 27-6p
S-A-V-l-N-G-S Spell savings for 1964 and all the years ahead with a home you own. Start by letting Jane know
your needs —
2-8-4 N-drooms ?
garage too?
lull dining room? choice location? C all an v time—even after office hours.
EfctEST H.
Collins (
AND CO.
P)t0fi£ OL 3-3255 Even in firs — OL 8-8828
WANTED: Riders to Indianapolis. Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ph. OL 3-4488 after 6:30 p.m. Mon-Thurs-tf WANTED: Ironings to do in my home. Phone OL 3-3348. Mon-Thurs-4p Wanted - men WANTED: Ambitious High School boy with drivers license, desires work of any kind. Reply to Box No. 50, c o Banner. l-2p WANTED: Man to help clean new’ and used cars. Good inside working conditions. See Bud Strohl. Service Manager. Jim Harris Chevrolet-Buick. l-2t.
Will rent you a spinet piano as low as $5.00 a month. Mrs. Robert Loring. OL 3-4988. local representative. Riddick Piano Co. tf
FOR RENT: Three rooms furnished utilities furnished. Adults, 210 Bloomington, St. 31-4p
Mobile Homes
YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE AH Oiaches Greatly Reduced RUST’S MOBILE HOMES Gosport, Ind.
Lost
Home Items
SINGER ZiG ZAG $43.08 FI LL PRICE Beautiful walnut cabinet. Responsible person to make six payments of $7.18 monthly. Makes buttonholes, sews on buttons, appliques, makes many decorative designs, blind hems, etc., all without attachments. Call OL 3-3987. 23-tf SINGER Zig Zag sewing machine in beautiful walnut console, excellent condition. All features built in. No attachments needed to Zig zag automatically. Makes buttonholes, blind hems, sews on buttons. Plus dozens of fancy embroidery stitches. Available to responsible party for 8 payments of $5.04 per month. Will accept trade and discount for cash. Call OL 33321. 30-4t.
Electrolux Corporation hiring men: Apply at 1665 8th Avenue, Terre Haute between 8 and 10:00 a.m. 27-6t. WANTED- MAN WITH CAR to sell Rawleigh Products in Part Putnam Co. Can establish permanent business and be your own boss with no lay off. Write Rawleigh Dept. INA-450-67. Freeport, 111. 2-16-30-3p WANTED: Married man for work on farm, year round job, modern house. Must have experience and references. Oscar Clodfelter, Russellville. Phone 435-2797. 2-Ct
LOST: Black Angus cow and heifer calf, yearling. Ted Glidewell. Phone OL 3-6038. 2-3p
Automotive Remember East Side Motor Sales for expert body work, painting, wheel alignment and mechanical work. Over 30 years experience. Free estimates. 27-tf. FOR SALE: Half-ton Ford pickup. New paint and battery. Good running condition. Dallas Mangus, Zinc Mill Road. OL 3-6592. l-3p FOR SALE: 1951 Chevrolet. Harold Surber. Ph. OL 3-4049. 31-2-2t.
Wanted - Women WANTED: Clerk for retail food store, male or female. Write Post Office Box 357. 31-tf Farm Items
For Sale
FOR SALE: 400 bales of wheat straw. Kenny Sutherlin, Fillmore, Ph. 246-3626. 2-2t.
FOR SALE: Indiana and Eastern lump, egg and oil treated stoker coal. Bland Coal Co. Ph. OL 3-4732. 8-tf. FOR SALE: Stayman and Jonathan apples. Buchheit’s Orchard. Airport Rd. 30-tf
BLONDiE
By Chick Young
I'M DYING TO X HEAR WHAT t DAGWOOD. THINKS OF MY NEW PERFUME
HOW DO ^
YOU LIKE
► IT,
DEARTy
I SMELLED IT.
THE "N MOMENT I TURNED
JOHNNY HAZARD
By Frank Robbins
GOT ULCERS—Biologist Karl Switak gives attention to Notchy, the dyspeptic dolphin, at Steinhart Aquarium in San Francisco. Notchy’s playmate, Smoothy, died, and Notchy began to show the same symptoms. Ulcers, he’s got. They’re treating him with antibiotics, and he’s improving.
DELCO BATTERIES Headquarters at Morrison’s Tire and Retreating Co. 317 N. Jackson Street. Phone OL 35015. Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.-tf
CURRIES TIN & FURNACE CO. JOE ELLIS Jr. Owner Have your furnace serviced for winter by your Bryant & Majestic dealer. Free estimates on now installation. 101 E. Franklin St. Phone OL 3-6712. Tues. & Thurs. tf AUTHORIZED HOOVER Cleaner repair. Headley Hardware. Tues.-Thurs.-tf
WASHINGTON
MARCH OF EVENTS-
GOLDWATER "YES" COMING SOON?
HIS BACKERS HAVE BEEN SOUNDING OPINION
Why buy a Carpet Shampooer? We ll loan you one FREE with purchase of Blue Lustre Carpet and Upholstery cleaner. Headley Hardware. Thurs-tf.
mi
Goldwater He wants
to be shown.
By HENRY CATHCART
Central Press Washington Writer TTrASHINGTON—Sen. Barry Goldwater, the Arizona conservaW tive leader, is getting ready to say "yes’* to that all-im-portant question—whether lie plans to run. for the Republican
presidential nomination.
Goldwater’s friends are convinced his answer will be affirmative and that he will take the plunge some time in January. He’ll make it a not-too-cozy twosome in the GOP race. New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, one-time political front-runner but now far in the rear in popularity polls, announced his candidacy early, probably because be
knows he needs a head start.
Apparently Goldwater’s backers around the nation have made some delicate soundings to test sentiment for their man in the aftermath of the Kennedy assassination and have found the response encouraging. Indications are that they found Goldwater sentiment slightly diminished in the South, but untouched in some other sections of the country, and perhaps even enhanced in sections in the East. Anyway, Goldwater is not buying the snap decision of many political experts that the bullet that killed President Kennedy also
struck his political aspirations fatally. Goldwater always has been a “show me" kind of politician, insisting on good evidence to back up sweeping conclusions. Perhaps these very qualities made him the top leader in the national conservative movement.
* * * *
• MILITARY REVISION—For most of the post-World War H period, American military leaders have taken an extremely pragmatic approach to the value of some of our foreign allies in the event of another war. The predominant feeling was that in such a struggle we could count only on those countries that would become involved through direct action of a common enemy. In a strange way, the assassination of President Kennedy has caused some of these leaders to re-examine their position. The reaction of shock and sympathy that was shown by people all over the world, whether in democratic. Communist or neutral areas, was far more extensive than anyone in Washington expected. Government officials have unanimously interpreted it as evidence of a much larger reservoir of good will for the U. S. throughout the world than they had dared hope for. From this, they deduce that an attack upon the U. S. would likewise stir up immeasurably greater shock waves than hithertoanticipated throughout the world, and that some border line and neutral countries might move further toward the American camp.
* • • •
• SINCERITY—President Lyndon B. Johnson has usually been depicted as a tough, persuasive, realistic politician whose talents and ruthlessness carried him to the top of the legislative heap. Although he once taught public speaking in his youth, no one has ever described him as an orator or a person who could electrify or inspire an audience. Until his occupancy of the White House, Johnson was always considered a ma-
neuverer.
Recently, the President addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York to reaffirm United States adherence to the aims and
aspirations of that body.
At the conclusion of his address Johnson received a standing ovation. He had convinced that bunch of hard-bitten world politicians of his, and this country’s, “sincerity’’ in 15 minutes. Johnson’s carefully selected words, spoken in measured tones, radiated that most precious quality of a public speaker, the ability to convince his audience he menat what he was saying.
Ha Mean!
What
He Said
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam County, Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Central National Bank of Greencastle. Indiana was on the 17th day of December. 1963. appointed. Administrator of Uie estate of Walter R. Reeves, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same in said court within six (S> months from the date of the first publication of UUs notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle. Indiana, this 17th day of December. 1963. Jack P. Hinkle, Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam. Indiana. Probate Cause No. 10351. James M. Houck, Attorney 19-26-2-3t
3 Bed Room New Homs V.A. LOAN AVAILABLE Full basement, nutural gas hoat, attractive location. 3 miles South of Greencastle on Slate Road 43, Call OL 3-5593
YOU'RE TELLING ME!
— By WILLIAM RITT — Central Press Writer
FORESTERS armed with shotguns Have begun patrolling some 1,500 square miles of Britain’s New Forest on the lookout for trespassers chopping down and carting off Christmas trees. The woodsmen are pretty sure the interlopers wouldn’t be Santa Claus’ helpers. t ! ! A power failure blacked (nit for JfS minutes an electrical and home appliance show in Sun Diego, Calif. Exhibitors viust have taken a dim view of this. ! ! ! On hearing someone mention the Elizabethan Age the office boy today butted in with "My guess is she's about 37." ! ! ! When Zadok Dumkopf read that blonds average 140,000 hairs on their heads while bru-
nets have but a mere 105,00(1, he immediately dyed his locks yellow—so he could get a better bargain at the barber’s. ! ! ! William Penn, according to an historian, once paid $bG5 for a pound of coffee. It couldn't have been the instant variety, though it does sound like ihstant bankruptcy. ! ! 1 A critic refers to football as "a form of organized madness." If he means we're c-azy about the game, he's so right! i i « Brazil, writes an expert on Latin America affairs, should become a great world power by the year 2000. Well, that ought to give Brazilians enough time to decide if it would be worth while.
VMM HEALTH
By LESTER L. COLEMAN, M.D.
Transfusions Become Safer BLOOD transfusions are no fects of saturated fats and tin-
longer an emergency procedure in hospitals. They are given with great frequency for a wide variety of reasons. An unpleasant complication of repeated transfusions is a special kind of hepatitis that often delays by many weeks complete recovery from illness. This posttransfusion hepatitis ( has occupied the scientific attention of doctors for many years. Many special Dr. Coleman safety techn i q u e s have been instituted in an effort to prevent this complication. The results have been gratifying, yet hepatitis still occurs in a small percentage of cases. The Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit has just issued a very encouraging report of their success in preventing hepatitis after transfusion by a newly developed technique. Over a six-year period, 581 patients were given 1,410 transfusions. Not one single case of hepatitis occurred in any of these patients. New Method This outstanding success Is attributed to a new method of “sterilization” of the blood plasma. Dr. Bonnie R. Wolfram and a team of hematologists (blood specialists) mixed the blood plasma with a complex chemical — beta-propiolactone. The plasma was then exposed to ultraviolet light before being Used for transfusion. In the large series of cases that were reported by Dr. Wolfram, there were no unusual Bide effects or allergic sensitivity to the “treated” blood that was given the patient. This research, is a significant contribution to the additional safety of one of the most important tools in modern medicine, the blood transfusion. * • * DIETS AND CHOLESTOROL The public has just begun to understand the relationship between cholestorol and fatty diets. During recent years, they have been bombarded with complicated statistics about the ef-
saturated fats on the choles-' torol level of the blood. Because high cholestorol levels in the blood have been identified with structural changes of blood vessels, housewives have diligently tried to pkm family menus based on their newer knowledge. New Study An interesting new study suggests that science may not yet have reached a point of definitive knowledge about this important concept. Three medical groups Independently undertook a comprehensive study of diets and cholestorol in order to leam more about their relationship to each other. These medical observers, in New York. City, Framingham, Massachusetts, and Albany, New York, performed special studies on large groups of men and women of middle age. Their diets consisted of varying amounts of saturated and unsaturated fats. Cholestorol studies of the blood were made at specific intervals. More Than One Factor The observers concluded from this study that diet alone was not the only factor responsible for high cholestorol levels in the blood. They believe that hormone deficiencies, exercise and changes in metabolism may be equally, or even more responsible. The doctors were in complete agreement about one important fact: they again substantiated the belief that high cholestorol does lead to greater frequency of coronary heart disease. They emphasized that detailed adherence to diets should not replace medical supervision, especially when vascular disease is suspected. Science repeatedly review’s its present knowledge for th» eventual control of hgart disease. These columns are designed to relieve your fears about health through a better under* standing of your mind and body. All the hopeful new advances in medicine reported here are known to doctors everywhere. Your individual medical problems should be handled by your i own doctor. He knows you best.
© 1963, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
They'll Do It Every Time
U. S. Pot#nt OfRc*
By Jimmy Hatlo
Roquefort ruaor warned tfje SALES FORCE ABOUT THE NEW GENERAL MANAGERS QUIRKS, LIKES,DISLIKES,£10.*
So EVERYBODV DRESSES LIKE A FUNERAL DIRECTOR TO GREET HATCHETT—AND IN HE BLOWS —
FAIR LADY—Mr. John comes up with a chapeau fashioned after a World’s Fair pavilion (background^ in New York.
IB
