The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 September 1967 — Page 6
Page 6
The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indfrne
Saturday, September 2, 1967
1 Real Estate I 4 For Rent, Apts. 4
Have you visited our Display Home? If Not, Come By Sunday 2 - 5 P.M. GREENBRIAR ADDITION • All Brick • True Provincial Design • Carpeted Living Room • 3 Bedrooms • IVz Baths • Living-Kitchen • Patio • Spacious Wardrobes Many Deluxe Appointments
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REALTY CO
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For Rent: First floor 2 bedroom apartment, automatic gas heat, water and sewage furnished. Howard Moore, Phone OL 3-5789. Unfurnished apartment 3 rooms, for rent. U.S. *0 Lloyd Vaughn, OL 3-5689.
For Rent: 3 room downstairs , unfurnished apartment, close to town. Charles Butler. Phone OL 3-3121.
For Sale
Furnished 2 room efficiency apartment. Heat and water furnished. Phone OL 3-9515 or OL 3-9009 after 6 p.m.
For Rent: 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. Near campus. Don Kiger, Kiger Marathon.
2 bedroom upper aparment, new Can be furnished or unfurnished. Very modern. Call OL 3-9961 or OL 3-5326.
Garage and Yard Sale, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Livingroom suites, sofas, chairs, desks, electric and gas stoves, refrigerators, wringer washers, full and half size beds, end tables, radios, record players, baby bed. floor and table lamps, chests, dressers, chifforobe, dinette sets, tables, records, table model and console TVs, electric fans, rugs, books, baby clothing, toys, boys and girls bicycles, diningroom suite, china cabinet, lawn mowers, diningroom chairs, many other articles. 24 E. Berry (rear I.
For Sale: Good ’59 Ford pickup Vic Hudson, OL 3-3833.
Notice
Get that car finish protected before winter! Wax jobs OL 3-3033. Don’t forget Nona VanDuyne sale, Saturday, September 16th at 210 West Washington Street.
woman s view
NOTICE: Contractors, builders and individuals. Over 200,000 used bricks for sale. 25,000 good used brick now ready at $35.00 per 1,000. Also eyebeams all dimensions-4x8 in. by 14 in. thickness-15 ft. long4x15 ft. long by 18 in. depth by % in. thickness. Call Centerpoint 446-2335, ask for 65 or come to 954 Knight, Brazil. R. S. Knipper, Salvage.
22 Motorcycles 22
6 For Rent, Houses 6
PUTNAM REALTY NEW LISTINGS Neat 2 Bedroom with Large Utility Room Nice Neighborhood Quiet Street in Bainbridgc. 10.000.00. Lovely 2 Bedroom house with several nice features, Fireplace, Basement, Large Yard On Highland Street 12.800.00. Price Reduced on this nice house, 4 Bedroom In tip top shape 9,000.00 Trailer with build-ons and an acre of ground 4,350.00 50 Acres of ground will sell all or tracts of 10 acres. Will sell on contract. Brick Veneer 8 Bedroom hardwood floors 1*/* Baths Attached Garage R. R. 5 Terre Haute 18,200.00 Buying or Selling? See us. We’ll be glad to work out your Real-Estate problems. Joe & Nancy Fogle Denny & Thelma Thomas
For Rent: 3 bedroom modern house near Greeneastle. Adults only. Address Box 72, Daily Banner.
For Rent: 3 bedroom home on Indianapolis Road. Phone 5963914.
FOR SALE: “No Hunting—No Trespassing” signs. The Daily Banner.
Wanted
8 Musical Items 8 For Sale: Fender bass guitar, $125.00. Call OL 3-6885.
Home Items
For Sale: Twelve 36 inch Old Hickory tables with solid oak tops, chairs to match; all types of restaurant equipment. See after 5:00 p.m. at Blue Wolf Teen Club or call OL 3-6114 for appointment.
TREE work, Topping and Takedowns. Free Estimates. Insurance. C. Gorham OL 39031 or OL 3-9125. Wanted to do cement workpainting. OL 3-6608. Mr. Westmoreland, 211 Howard Street. Wanted cesspool pumping. Ernest Williams, 906 Illinois, OL 3-3274.
Wanted: Good used OL 3-3546.
pool table
Want ride to Indianapolis 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Call OL 3-4058.
17 Farm Equipment 17
For Sale: ’53 % ton Chevrolet truck, grain bed, Oliver 80 tractor tractor with cultivators, Case self-propelled combine. Call OL 3-3236.
For Sale: % ton air conditioner window unit, $90.00. Call OL 86994 after 5 p.m.
For Sale: Baby bed with mattress and playpen, all for $10.00. Phone OL 3-3775.
THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE Want To Sell Your Property? We have buyers for all kinds of real estate—homes, farms, building lots, etc. Frequently nut of our many listings we do not happen to have exactly the piece of property the patential buyer has in mind. Perhaps your place is just w hat is wanted. You can’t go wrong by listing your property with us. We try and we care. IIS S. Jackson OL 3-6509
For Sale: One like new all wool 9x12 oval braided rug, used 18 months. One matching 4x6 rug. Call OL 3-5078.
For Sale: Green Berkline recliner chair, $50. Also Moss half-midget with helmet and goggles. Phone 246-6218. Diningroom suite, extra leaf, 7 chairs, pad, buffet, $60; chifforobe, $12. OL 3-5549. For Sale: Frigidaire refrigerator. Good, clean condition, $20. Bainbridge, 522-3352.
Gas range, late model, like new. Also 9x12 rug-both quality merchandise. Bargains. Phone OL 3-6488. 10 Lost & Found 10 Lost: Man’s brown billfold. East Seminary. Reward. OL 3-9693.
For Sale: Rye, New Idea Super one row corn picker, portable corn cribs, 40 ft. Kewanee Elevator, Charles Bourne, Stilesville R. 1, 845-3428.
Auction
4-H Calf Sale: Hereford, Angus, Shorthorn, steers and some heifers. Saturday, September 9, 7 p.m. 4-H Club Grounds, Washington, Indiana.
For Sale: 1966 Kawasaki Motorcycle, 125cc. Also Honda 90. Coatesville 386-7333. For Sale: 80cc Yamaha, CB160 Honda, ’47 Willys Jeep. Phone 795-4623.
NEW YORK UPI — Capt. Verna M. Lorette knows first hand about the “dirty war” being fought in Vietnam.
her tour of duty in the Far East where she participated in 226 “Aeromedical evacuation missions," 76 of which were in
Sharks, rayfish food of future
NEW YOPK (UPI) — The sharks and big rayfish of the oceans, long regarded as use-; less enemies of man, could beI come an important source of
food in years to come.
The flight nurse from Limes- : Vietnam, often in battle zones, tone, Maine, has spent two years From her home base at Tachiduty in the Far East, much of j ka\v r a, in Japan, she also helped it on missions to remove the | move personnel to Korea, Okinwounded from Vietnam hos-; £wa> Thailand, the Philippines
pitals and take them to other medical centers in the Orient.
When the U. S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved use of fish meal protein concentrate, made by grinding up whole fish, for human
and inside Japan. The flight | consumption, it may have opennurse's next assignment is at ed the door to utilization of
tamowuuu. H too- late! Start Saving Today at the FRIENDLY FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY MEMBER F.D.I.C
Pets
While they last. 3 black and tan pups need rood homes. Phone OL 3-5721 after 4:30 p.m.
For Sale: Walker pups, 6 wks., $25.00. Jim Parks Whitestown, 769-3381.
She has seen men die, men i Vandenburg Air Force Base
lose limbs and eyesight, men se-! California,
verely burned, men victims of j En route from the Orient, she another enemy, malaria, men visited her widowed mother, suffering bites of the poisonous I Mrs. George Lorette, in Limessnakes the Viet Cong use as! tone, and stopped off in New weapons, men with massive in-! Orleans for the convention of fections from the Viet Cong’s the ladies auxiliary to the Vetnasty trick of “mining" road- era ns of Foreign Wars (VFW). side ditches with sharp “punji” ! She is the 1967 “unsung herosticks coated with human excre- i ne> ” a service woman honored ment. annually by the auxiliary with “It is a dirty war," she said, a citation and a $500 check,
“you don’t know who your en
in | sharks.
Some sharks, such as the Mako, are edible and tasty anyway. And shark liver oil was used widely as a source of vitamin A in animal feeds until a cheaper synthetic Vitamin A
was discovered.
Former athlete drowns in lake
emy is. He might be at work in the fields by day, making
war at night.”
“But it
ing,” she
KENORA, Ont. UPI — Arrangements were being made today to return the body of
Fish meal protein concen- drowning victim Robert Dove, trate can be made out of many "3, Shelbyville. Ind., to his home kinds of “trash fish,” that are for burial.
Recommendations for the honor' too tough and flavorless for orcome from the servicewoman’s 1 dinary human consumption.
commanding officers.
Maj. Louis H. Architect,
is my personal feel-1USAF, cited Captain Lorette said, “that we are for her “Devotion” to duty and
19 Business Service 19
Pingleton Upholstering. 2-% miles north on 43. Fabrics, free estimates. Phone OL 36119.
FOR FREE ESTIMATES for spray painting or brush painting call your PUTNAM COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP today.
Distinctive Homes
ARE SOLD BY SHETRONE REAL ESTATE AGENCY 302 SO INDIANA CALL OL 3-9315 GREENCASTLE
Employment, Men
SINGER ZIG-ZAG WALNUT CABINET MODEL A-l condition. Beautiful walnut console. Makes button holes and many fancy designs. Sews on buttons, needs no attachments. Available to responsible party for $5.74 per month. Full price $34.41. Call OL 33987.
Livestock
High school boy wanted for part
time work in local retail store. | Wanted: Feeder pigs. Wingate Write P.O. Box 196, Green- j 275-2152. Warren VanHook. Cas ^ e ' For sale: Registered Suffolk
i ram. 2 years old. Phone OL 3-
3268.
The Daily Banner EASYTO-FIND CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1— Real Eilat* 2— Businas* Opportunity 3— Mobil# Homos 4— For Ront—Apts. 5— For Ront—Rooms 6— For Rsnt—Housss 7— Marino Itoms 8— Musical Itoms 9— Homo Itoms 10— Lost t Found 11— Employmont—Mon 12— Employmont—Men—Wemon 13— Employmont—Women 14— Automotive 15— For Sals 16— Wanted 17— Farm Equipment 18— Auction 19— Business Service 20— Livestock—For Sale 21— Notice 22— Motorcylos 23— Wanted To Buy 24— For Solo—Pots To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD Phone OL 3-5151 And Ask For . . • SHARON She'D Take Your Order And Help You Write Your Ad
needed there. We are slowly her “patient, unruffled profeswining. If we got out now, we sional composure even under would lose what we’ve already long mercy missions.” Once accomplished. And I’m not talk- without hesitation, she revived
ing in terms of money, so much as in lives.” “Our men must feel we’re winning, or their morale wouldn’t be so high. And their morale is excellent,” she said. But the nurse spoke sadly of the mounting casualties. “In the first six months of last year, our group (the 901st Air Evacuation Squadron) moved 10.000 men,” she said. “In the first six months of this year, we moved 43,000. Captain Lorette. in the Air Force four years, has finished
The protein concentrate is used as an additive to flour and other food components. It is not expected to meet immediate acceptance in the United States and other countries with a high standard of living hut it can have an enormous effect on the world diet in general. The potential importance of sharks as a food source is discussed in the summer issue of Oceanology International magazine by Stewart Springer, who is on the shark panel of the American Institute of Biological
Sciences.
Springer says both the U.S. Bureau of Commercial Fisher-
equipment, intravenous fluids. ies and the Qffice of Naval Re _
“We even pack metrecal for the wounded unable to chew,” she
said.
by mouth to mouth resuscitation a victim of an infectious
disease.
“He had just stopped breath-
ing,” she said.
On missions, there is rarely a doctor, and two flight nurses and two medical corpsmen care for 50 to 60 patients in one of the big cargo planes fitted with stretchers, emergency oxygen, resuscitation and tracheotomy
idea as much as $75,000 could be spent testing the market po-
tential of the product.
“An inventor would not be capable of doing this himself,” the Wham-0 executive said. For instance, prior to the
Welcome Mot For Investors SAN GABRIEL, Calif. UPI— The door is always open wide to would-be Ben Franklins or Thomas Edisons at the W’ham-
O Toy factory.
The creators and marketers of such “fad” toys as the Hula Hoop and the Frisbee perpetuate the firm on the brain power
of inventors—amateur and pro- a lty f° fluy swinging the
fessional.
search are supporting research about sharks. Scientific knowledge of the biology, ecology and other aspects of sharks is about 50 years behind the times, he says. But interest is rising. The Johns Hopkins Press this summer is publishing a new book by some 40 scientists entitled “Sharks. Skater and Rays,” that will make considerable new
Dove, a one-time high school basketball star in shelby County, drowned Thursday while attempting to retrieve a drifting boat at the Populus Sporting Camp at Fisher Lake, about 30 , miles east of here. Members of the Ontario Provincial Police detachment at : Sioux Narrows, who flew to the | remote wilderness area, recovI ered the body Friday afternoon and brought it here by plane. Dove went to the camp last Saturday for a week’s fishing with Harold Morgan, Arnold Rickless and Norman McBey, all of Shelbyville, and a guide,
John Pietlay.
Police said the men were in the shore Thursday when they noticed that their boat had broken loose from its moorings and was drifting away. Dove plunged into the water and swam after the boat but went down before reaching it.
Hula Hoop craze of 1958.
Wham-O ran a consumer test knowledge generally available.
on the toy in Miami. Fla., and San Antonio, Tex. The result was the famous fad that circled the globe in the late Fifties which saw everyone from roy-
hoops around their hips.
Ideas for tops or other novel products are received warmly at the 45,000-square foot plant in the Los Angeles suburb of
San Gabriel.
“We feel we are unique in ad-
vertising for inventors,” Wham- a g es - O general manager Edward >rhe new
Headrick explained. “Ideas are a personal thing . . . your own little baby and a part of your heart . . . and we try to provide a proper home for them.”
And the product, which launched W T ham-0 on a search for other creative ideas once the fad had run its course, has now been reincarnated for a new generation of youngsters
Wanted: Line clearing Contractor has immediate opening for man desiring steady employment. Phone Reelsville 672-
3520.
In the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate NOTICE OF AOMINSTRATION No. EST 67-60. Notice is hereby given that Raymond P Martin was on the 30 day of August, 1867. appointed Administrator of the estate of Edith Harris, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred Dated at Greeneastle. Hidiana. this 30 day of August. 1967. Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Put- ! -'Uit Court. Attorneys .iOucn Calbert Sept. 2-9-16-3t •
3 Mobile Homes 3 The answer to your housing needs: 12x50, new 2 br. $4285. 12x60, new 3 br. $4995. Country living on the lake. Buy or rent a home and live at Van Bibbe Lrke, R.R. 1, Greeneastle, Phone PE 92341.
Gas station attendants. United Oil. 1019 Indianapolis Road, j 13 Employment, 13 Women Wanted: Cashier, apply in person at IGA Foodliner. WANTED: Waitress, apply in person at Y-Palace Restaurant, Jet. 36 and 43, Bainbridge. Wanted: Woman sales clerk and also some designing. Paid vacations. Eitel’s.
For Sale: Young Suffolk rams. Also, one registered 4-year old Suffolk ram. Brent Weber, phone Poland 986-2823. For Sale: 6 Hereford steers and 2 heifers. 246-6156. For Sale: 4 Hereford heifers to calf Nov. 1., Hereford cow to calf in 2 weeks. 1 brindle cow. large heifer by side. 1 Shorthorn-Hereford bull. Phone OL 3-9041 or OR 23527.
For Sale: Young Hereford bull. OL 3-5774.
14 Automotive 14
I960 Olds 88 Com*. $195.00 firm. Bob Smith. Zephyr Station, N. Jackson St.
For Sale: 8x4° ft. house trailer. Phone 596-7272.
For Sale: 1951 2 ton Dodge, 14 ft. bed. good tires. $300.00. OL 3-9563. 1044 Avenue E.
For Sale: 5 Angus cows. Hudson, OL 3-3833
Vic
Notice
Don’t forget Pritchett Sale Saturday, September 9, at Bainbridge. NOTICE: Allenhill Golf Course featuring the Manhattan Road Combo, September 2nd, 8 to 10 p.m.
STATE OF INDIANA st: COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM. 1967 Scott James Martin. Plaintiff vs. Dorris M. Martin. Defendant No C 67-220 NOTICE TO NON-RESIDENT The plaintiff in the above entitled cause, having filed his complaint therein, together with an affidavit that the defendant is a non-resident of the State of Indiana, now. therefore the said defendant is hereby notified that unless she be and appear on the 5 day of October. 1967. at the courthouse in said county and state and answer or demur to the said complaint the same will be heard and determined in her absence. IN WITNESS WHEREOF. I hereunto set my hand and affix the seal of said Court this 31 day of August. 1967. Ennis E Masten. Cleark of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorneys Hughes & Hughes Sept. 2-9-16-3t
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No. 67-56. Notice is hereby given that Ruth E. Albin was on the 23rd day of August, 1967. appointed Administratrix of the estate of Wilmer F. Albin. deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greeneastle. Indiana, this 23rd day of August. 1967. Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. Attorney Frank C. Btoessol Aug. 26-Sept. 2-8-Jt
Headrick said he shudders to think how many good ideas have gone to the grave with inventors because they were afraid to reveal their secrets for fear they would be stolen or modified. “Whom-O feels it offers the inventor more potential than any specialized c o m p a n y,” Headrick said. “What we do basically is test ideas here and then send the ones we accept out to be manufactured. This way we are not tied down to expensive machines and are more flexible.” Then the finished product is brought back to the Wham-O plants to be shipped to toy stores, etc. Marketing and advertising are handled by WhamO subsidiaries. But what happens if WhamO does not accept the idea? Headrick explains: “We developed a subsidiary about a year ago called Basic Concepts. Inc., to help investors of products we could not use to find someone who could. It is one of the extra services we provide.” Another outgrowth — the Mentis (which in Latin means ‘to think’) Corporation—deals primarily with scientific ideas. For instance, the Mentis men are working on what Headrick calls “a top-secret lighting system that will revolutionize all lighting philosophy.” Only about one in 5,000 ideas actually becomes a Wham-O
toy.
Hula Hoops are
painted in bright psychedelic colors and pellets have been molded inside so that they produce sounds when swung. Actually Wham-O got started on a whimsical idea of its two founders and co-chairmen.
Sharks and big skates and rays hardly could be safely ground up generally into fish meal for human consumption without much more detailed knowledge of their physiology. But the supply of these creatures in the ocean is enormous. In the same issue of Oceanology International. Dean Richard Van Cleve of the University of Washington’s College of Fisheries writes that time is growing short for the nations of the globe to explore and negotiate general agreements on sane conservation and harvesting of ocean fisheries. Van Cleve says present laws on fisheries of all nations are based on two traditional assumptions that scientists now know to be false.
When Richard P. Knerr and
Arthur K. Melin were at the The first assumption is that
the supply of marine fish is unlimited and the second is that
University of Southern California they decided to manufacture slingshots to aid in feeding
the birds in their favorite sport 1 ^ u P set the of marine
man lacks the power to serious-
fish.
of falconry. The food is slung into the air for the falcon to
retrieve.
Hunters liked the slingshots, which were called "Wham-Os,” and the plant was born. From Wham-Os. the firm has gone on to the Frisbee, Super Ball, Super Stuff. Slip n Slide and other products. In 1962, the company became a public corporation and now employs 800 workers in the Southern California area. Last year, it earned a net profit of
$938,885.
The idea men such as Headrick. who says he's still a kid
at heart, have a lot of fun while | p 0rte( j
researching toys. And sometimes their findings lead to important uses in other fields. The linear polyetheline plastic of which hula hoops were made subsequently was em-
ployed in aerospace.
Recent graduate takes own life VINCENNES UPI-Gary C. Freye, 22, Villa Grove, 111., was found dead of poison Friday in the back yard of a home here. Police said Freye's car. containing a bottle of rat poison and another of potassium cyanide. was found parked in front of the house. Officers said Freye committed suicide with the potassium cyanide which he took from a laboratory at Vincennes University. Authorities said Freye went to the laboratory to have some powder analyzed. He left after being told it was rat poison. Laboratory employes later discovered that a bottle of cyanide was missing. Police said Freye apparently consumed some of the cyanide, drove to a residential area, parked in front of the home of Allan Stafford and staggered to the back yard where he col-
lapsed.
Officers said they had not determined the motive for the suicide. Freye, a recent graduate of Eastern Illinois University, had been teaching at Allendale. 111., since the first of this
week.
Treaties to protect whales or seals or halibut have been only partially successful in protect-
ing even these species, Van — Cleve says. What is needed, he| T* ie Var of 1812 was declared says, is worldwide legal cooper- on England on the ground of
ation to establish all ocean impressment
fisheries on a permanent basis
of maximum sustained yield. Van Cleve scoffs at some estimates that the oceans could produce upwards of 1 billion metric tons of fish a year. A more practical top estimate, he says would be in the neighborhood of 80 million metric tons, compared with an actual re-
catch of 45.8 million
tons in 1965. Van Cleve puts the maximum productive capacity of U. S. coastal fisheries at 20
million metric tons.
violation of the
three-mile limit, paper blockade and orders in council.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Putnam Circuit Court of Putnam County. Indiana. Notice is hereby given that Mary Virginia Shaw was on August 23. 1967, appointed Administratrix of the estate of Florence G. Lenard, deceased. All persons having claims agalntt said estate whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greeneastle, Indiana, on August 23. 1967. Ennis E Masten. Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Attorneys Estate No. 67-57 Foley. Berry & Tulley. Crawfordsvllle. Indiana. Aug.26-Sept. 2-9-3t
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No EST 67-55. Notice is hereby given that Martha M. Whaley was on the 22nd day of August. 1967. appointed Executrix of the will of Morton B. Smith, deceased. AH persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greeneastle. Indiana, this 22nd day of August, 1867. Ennis E. Masten. Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court
WELDERS NEEDED IMMEDIATELY Union Rates BRYANT-POFF, INC. North on State Road 75, Coatesville Phone 386-7231
But if Wham-O is sold on an (LyoiT* boh aui. aweot. a-t-st
