The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 September 1967 — Page 8

Page 8

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Tuesday, September 26, 1967

1 Real Estate 1 4 For Rent, Apts. 4

THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE Building Sites For Sale We have excellent lots raiiKing in price from $1,-00 to $5,000. Build before winter sets in. Rentals SIX ROOM HOUSE. *80 per month. Xo small children. THREE ROOM FURNISHED APT. Hanna St. *22 per week. THREE ROOMS & ENCLOSED PORCH. Unfurnished. Close in. New Listing ROAD 40. EAST OF MT. MERIDIAN. Almost new 2 bdrm. home. Stone front. W/W carpet. Attached garage. *14,500. Farms - Acreage We have sold three farms recently. W’e have some more good land available. S. OF RD. 40. 160 acres at *325.00 per acre. RD. 40. E. OF 43. 13 acres unimproved. Runs back to Deer Creek. 7 acres tillable. REELS VILLE: SO acres. Good home & barn. Many bldg, sites. 113 S. Jackson OL 3-6509 After hours, call Madge Hockensmith Charlie Carmichael Do m in Duncan P. G. Evans

Choic* Location Redbud Lane. Spotless S bedroom home. Large Living room with dining L, kitchen with eating area- Utility room, garage. Well landscaped lawn with trees. Greenbriar New, all electric 8 bedroom home, V/2 baths, carpeted living room, living kitchen. Many deluxe features. Provincial exterior In every detail. Bainbridgo Ranch. 3 bedroom home with 1 car attached garage. Oil furnace. Good condition. Priced to sell at *10,500.00. Rte. 40, near Terre Haute Located on large lot in developed area nearly new S bedroom brick veneer home, large living room and kitchen. Attached garage. Low taxes. Reasonable. 924 S. Indiana Newly redecorated 6 room modern home on corner lot. New kitchen cabinets. Automatic gas fnrnace. Priced to sell at *10.500. 401 S. Jackson 2 story frame home converted into 2 apartments. Downstairs carpeted. Gas furnace. Reasonable at $14,500.00.

tiCKMAN

R E A LT Y C O !

OL-3-9228

W///1///M

Vern Abbott OL 8-6387 Max Records OL 3-4645

For Sale: 8 bedroom house, 2 baths, large paneled family room, 2 car garage, large lot. Claude Webb. Call OL 33769 for appointment. 3 bedroom home in FILLMORE approximately eight (8) years old, extremely low down payment. Monthly pay ments $102.00 per month, in eluding tax and insurance Phone OL 3-3131, GREEN CASTLE FEDERAL SAV INGS AND LOAN ASSO CIATION, Mr. James E Ross.

3 Mobile Homes 3

The answer to your housing needs-12x53, 1966 2 hr. S3995.00! 12x60, new 3 br. $5195.00. Country living on the lake. Buy or rent a home and live at Van Bibber Lake, R.R. 1, Greencastle, phone PE 9-2341. For Sale: 10x50 mobile home. Two bedrooms, excellent condition. Phone 246-6541. 1967 Baron mobile home 12x60. Small down payment and take over payments. Phone PE 9-2456 or 522-3276.

For Rent: 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. Close to : campus. OL 3-6387. For Rent. Nice two bedroom apartment. Water and sewage furnished. Franklin Street Apartments. Call OL 3-4254 or OL 3-4090, 1 ■■■ ; 6 For Rent, Houses 6 : For Rent: 1026 Avenue C. 4; rooms, modern. Prefer single i or couple. OL 3-3918 after 4 I p.m.

Home Items

For Sale: Apples and cider at Moore’s Orchard at Raccoon. For Sale: Eureka upright vacuum, all attachments, like new Also Hoover canister vacuum and attachments. OL 3-3550. Siegler oil heater. Call 7953382 after 4 p.m. For Sale: One 9x10 wool rug, one 12x15 nylon rug with pad. Both in good condition. Also Speed Queen gas dryer. OL 3-9106.

For Sale: 5 piece dinette set,! $25. Phone 246-6181.

Employment, Men

Job opportunities for Machinist in our Tool and Die Department. Phone 362-6200 or wrrite, Sommer Metalcraft Corp., 315 Poston Drive, Crawfordsville, Indiana. Open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday, Saturday till 12.

The Daily Banner EASYTO-FIND CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1— Real Estate 2— Business Opportunity 3— Mobile Homes 4— For Rent—Apts. 5— For Rent—Room* 4—For Rent—Houses 7— Marine Items 8— Musical Items 9— Home Hems 10— lost & Found 11— Employment—Men 12— Employment—Men—Women 13— Employment—Women 14— Automotive 15— For Solo 16— Wanted 17— Farm Equipment 18— Auction 19— Business Service 20— Livestock—For Sal* 21— Notice 22— Motercyles 23— Wanted fa Buy 24— For Sale—Pets 25— Want To Rent 26— Work Wanted—Women 27— Work Wanted—Men To Place Your CLASSIFIED AC Phone OL 3-5151 And Ask For . • • SHARON Shell Take Your Order And Help You Writ* Your Ad Ads must be placed by 9 a.m. the first day they are to run, otherwise they will be in next issue.

19 Business Service 19

SINGER ZIG ZAG: WALNUT CABINET MODEL A-l Cond. Beaut. Walnut cabinet. Makes buttonholes and fancy designs, sews on buttons, needs no attachments. Available to resp. party for $5.72 per month. Full price $34.29. Call OL 3-3987.

Experienced Drug Salesman (Dispensing G.P/s) Supplies and Equipment (Will train on these) For Established Territory in this area Vacated by death of Mr. Phillip Acker Writ* MEDCO SUPPLY CO. P. O. Bex 2323 Muncie, Indiana or Phone 317-282-6112 between 9:30-4:30 For Appointment

14 Automotive 14

1959 Ford 2 door hardtop, Claude Webb, OL 3-3769. For Sale. 1961 Ford, 2 door, new tires, auto. trans. Phone 795-4609.

20

Livestock

20

For Sale: Duroc boars, polled Hereford bulls. Howard and Byron Gough, Roachdale. Phone 596-7693 or 596-7694.

Registered Hampshire lambs, $40.00. Phone ( 3278.

ram DL 3-

For Sale: Two spotted from reg. stock. Steve ders. Phone OL 3-9404.

boars San-

For Sale: 10 head of high quality Angus-Hereford calves, weighing around 525 lbs. Tom Webb, one mile north, one-half mile west Fincastle. For Sale: Registered Yorkshire spring barrows. Very good breeding. Call evenings 7954659. For Sale: Registered Angus bull. John W. King. OL 33636.

-Irish travel Saturday’s ICC schedule has Evansville at Ball State, St. Joseph’s at Butler, and Valparaiso at DePauw. Ball State pummeled Valpo in last Saturday’s league debut, 39-7, while Indiana State licked Butler for the very first time on the gridiron, 23-7. Taylor’s Trojans could be the outfit to beat for honors in the Hoosier Conference. The Uplanders upended Manchester, 21-! 7, while Franklin, which shared the title with Manchester last' year, trounced Earlham, 40-25. j Taylor hosts Anderson Satur-. day while Manchester is at Franklin and Indiana Central at Hanover in HCC contests. Saturday’s schedule is round- 1 ed out with Earlham at Wabash, Indiana State at Northern Illinois, and Rose Poly at Ulinois College.

Palestine

Farm Front

t a k>i> v ta ¥i a nri/iTT ¥>

Several from this community I *

caUed at the Weaver Funeral WASHINGTON UPI _ The Home in Danville to pay re- -^ ational Advisory Committee spects to Mrs. Edna Goodhart, on ^ rains nie ets with top Agria former resident of this com- c u 11 u r e Department officials munity. here Monday and Tuesday to i Mr. and Mrs. Dee Hand called discuss the 1968 feed S rain P ro *

on Mr .and Mrs. Ott Hand Sun- 8 ram -

dav afternoon hat the committee advises Mrs. Percy Rice and Mrs. Ott — and * 10w the department reHand were in Terre Haute Sat- ac t*—"hll have a major bearing urday. on whether farm income will Mrs. Dessie Solomon and Mrs. move upward next year and on Irene Shinn and daughter spent the election success of the Sunday in Indianapolis. Johnson administration in the

farm belt.

Currently, both farm prices

an(1 the Johnsen administra-

S AFETY FIRST at the FSEST2 FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY MEMBER F.D.I.C

IKE HONORED GUEST

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. UPI —

116 WS tion’s popularity- are sagging in Former President Dwight D.

vr re -unaay mnnei guests of tion of the University of Pitts . Mrs. Heber’s brother and fam- L cc. t u * ily, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Wallace The administration has al- bur S h s 58 milhon Johnstown

at Knightsville ready cut wheat acreage allot- campus. Mrs. Vival Poland called on ments for next >' ear down to The dedication

For Sale: 9 thoroughbred Suffolk ewes and one buck. Artie Scobee, Brick Chapel.

Notice

Get your Zip Code Directory now! over 35,000 listings. Mail $1.00 to P. O. Box 19, Brazil, Indiana 47834.

COLDS, Hay Fever, Sinus— Hours of relief in every SinaTime capsule. Only $1.49 at your drugstore.

At the BK. Gallon root beer, 59c. Gallon orange, 75c. OL 3-3311.

For Sale: 1962 Olds, 4 dr. sedan, full power with air conditioning. Very clean, low mileage. Priced to sell, OL 3-3459.

1952 Dodge y z ton pickup. 1957 Ford 1 2 ton pickup. 1958 International 1 ton truck. Paul Blue, OL 3-6457.

1965 Buick LaSabre-4 door real clean. Will sell or trade. Phone OL 3-6114.

Experienced combination paint and metal man for very busy body shop. Must be fully experienced and reliable and have own hand tools. 50-50 pay basis. Apply Service Manager, King-Morrison-Fos-ter, 119 North Indiana. Phone OL 3-4171-after 6 p.m. phone OL 3-5777.

For Sale

No. 1 Tulip, Hyacinth, and Daffodil bulbs just in from Holland for sale at Milton's Posey Patch.

ATTENTION CONTRACTORS & DEVELOPERS. Manufacturer of quality pre-cut homes is seeking aggressive, profit minded builders. We supply plans, specifications, brochures & advertising matter. We custom build and provide many services. Contact: IBC Homes, P. O. Box 460 Charleston. Illinois 61920. Attn. Max Pearson. WANTED: Doorman. Apply in person Voncastle.

FOR SALE: “No Hunting—No Trespassing" signs. The Daily Banner. Field grown Mum plants now ready at Milton's Posey Patch. Nice selection of col-

ors.

For Sale: 40 foot Pierce-All grain elevator. 8 months old Duroc boar. Joe Hinote, l 1 ;

22 Motorcycles 22

FOR SALE: 650cc TRIUMPH. BAINBRIDGE, PHONE 5226800.

Pets

Wanted: Home for six weeks olr 1 kitten. Phone OL 3-5021.

For Sale. Black and tan female hounds. 3 months old. $25.00 each. 12 Sunset Drive, OL 3-6685.

26 Work Wanted 26

Wanted: Children to care for in my home. Mrs. Reece Marlar. Phone OL 3-9609.

Work Wonted -- Men --

Two strong high school graduates want jobs of farm work construction or 'illing station attendants. Phone OL 34691.

12 Employment, 12 Men, Women

miles

southeast of

Manhat-

tan. Phone 672-3686.

16

Wanted

16

Wanted:

Inexpensive

student

piano. OL 3-5803.

17 Farm Equipment 17

SEE AUTOMATION TRAINING AD ON ENTERTAINMENT PAGE.

Employment, Women

Wanted lady to do alteration work. Excellent working conditions. Apply at Mac’s Inc. Greencastle. Indiana.

For Sale. Several good used and new forage wagons of different makes, new and used blowers. Reasor Silo and Equipment Sales, west of Brick Chapel.

For Sale: Used two row Oliver pull corn picker. Conrad Milhon, 845-3453.

Women: Earn average $5 per hour for time spent. $200 wardrobe free. Call Rachel West, Fillmore, 246-6364.

Wanted: Maids, apply in person only. College Castle Motel

FOR SALE: Massey-Ferguson new and used Farm Equipment, parts and service. Anderson Tractor Sales, Inc., Danville, Ind. State Road 39.

19 Business Service 19

Wanted: Babysitter in my home. Will consider ■'•ours. 2 children. Call 795-4286 alter 6 p.m.

FOR FREE ESTIMATES for spray painting or brush paint ing call your PUTNAM COUNTY FARM BUREAU CO-OP today.

LOCAL LIVESTOCK CENTER HOGS S19.10-SI9.60 LIVESTOCK Hogs 3.500: barrows and gilts 25 to mostly 50 higher; 1-2. 200240 lb. 20.15-20.35: 1-3, 190-250 lb. 19.75-20.00. large showing at 20.00: 2-3. 250-270 lb. 19.5019.75; few lots mostly 2. 250260 lb. 20.00; 2-3, 270-300 lb. 19.00 - 19.50: 1-2, 180-190 lb. 19.00 - 20.00: 1-2, 160-190 lb. 18.00- 19.00; sows 25 higher; 1-2, 270-325 lb. 18.25-18.50; 1-3, 300400 lb. 17.50-18.00: 2-3., 400-500 17.00- 17.50; 3. 500-60 lb. 16.40-. 17.00: boars 15.25-16.00. Cattle 1.500: calves 35: steers and heifers steady to strong; cows fully steady; bulls steady; vealers scare: low to high choice steers 27.25; choice 26.0027.00; good and choice 25.0026.25.

Want Johnson to step aside NEW YORK UPI—A California clothier today urged President Johnson to step aside in favor of a successor who might end the war in Vietnam. He pledged $100,000 to a campaign by Johnson’s replacement, and suggested Arkansas Sen. J. William Fulbright. Harry Roth of Beverly Hills, who devised the plan after feeling a sense of “frustration” over the failure of “this and that kind of little cause,” said the campaign pledge would go to any successor named by the President. Roth’s open letter to Johnson was in the form of a full page advertisement in the New York Times. The ad cost $7,800. Roth told Johnson in the letter that the President had “inherited the war and had since been caught in a web of circumstances.” “You must have considered and rejected many solutions,” Roth continued. “The hard truth is that there is no possible way that a man who has been forced to shoulder the blame for the whole mess can gracefully for himself and country make peace in Vietnam.” Roth said he has done “little things’’ in the past months to protest the war, but he added "we seem to be spinning our wheels a bit, doing as much harm with these little protests as we are doing good. The only way is to have a new man propose peace.” The clothing manufacturer, head of an organization whose annual volume is $22 million. | said he would liquidate some assets to raise the $100,(«90. He said he was pursuing the matter of Johnson not seeking renomination as an experiment. “It’s simply to get a yea or a nay,” he said. "We’ve got to show the President somewhat that a great deal of support is behind this drive which asks him to do nothing but give his blessing to another man. “I believe the President might respond. I would hope so.” Roth, who does not know Ful-1 bright, said he picked the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee because of his knowledge of foreign affairs. He said he hadn’t consulted | Fulbright, a persistent critic of ! the President’s policy in Vietnam. but considered the Arkansas lawmaker “eminently qualified.” Roth’s letter conceded a decision by Johnson not to run again would be “heartbreaking” but added “you will have the immense gratification of knowing that you have brought the country and the world safely out of this terrible dilemma and will be so remembered for all time.”

Mr. and Mrs. Joy Cummings

Thursday.

ceremonies,

59.3 million acres and is expect- J presided over by Pitt Chancellor ed to call for big cutbacks in Wesley Posvar. were to start at

Mr. and Mrs. Bill Perrv en _ 1 feed grain average. 3:30 p. m. EDT, on the 455tertained with a baby shower Some sources in the Agricul- acre hilltop campus in Richland Sunday afternoon in ‘honor of tule Department indicate that j and Adams Townships. Mrs. James Baugh of Green- the acreage cuts could g0 as The six buildings opening this castle, at the home of Mrs. high as 8 to 10 million acres, week were part of the first Perry’s grandparents, Mr. and whicb wou ld have the politically construction phase of the campMrs. Ernest Heber. Mrs. Baugh beneficia l effect of driving farm us. offering two-and three-year received many nice and useful prices up next fal1 i ust before undergraduate programs, gifts. Refreshments were served P les id en tial election. They accommodate 1.300 stuto fourteen guests. Prizes were addition, the administra- j (j en t s . The campus will be exwon by Mrs. Nadene Burks and tion 5 new era f arm program p ant j e d to handle 1,900 students Mrs. Lee Perry. is desi & be d to fluctuate so de- and eventually 4,000 students. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fidler mand and su PP lies are ke Pt

of Thomas Lake were Monday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.

Ernest Heber.

Dennis Cook of Greencastle spent the weekend with Mr. and

The last Saxon king of England was Harold n, who wa»

fairly closely in balance; a downturn in supplies is indi-1

cated for 1968 anyway.

The feed grain program will : killed at the Battle of Hastings, be announced probably by the . .

Mrs. James Clark and son, mlddl « of October. This would state of Indiana

David.

be unusually early—three weeks

Mrs. Joy Cummings called on earUer than last year’s anFrances Nelson in Greencastle nouncement—but officials say

Friday.

they want to give farmers as

Mrs. James Clai’k and son and muc h time as possible to make Mrs. Gene Cook of Greencastle planting decisions, spent Thursday in Terre Haute, i 1° addition, they want to give Mrs. Nadene Burks and fam- t arm commodity dealers an earily, Mr. and Mrs. James Clark l*' - indication of the size of next and son attended a pitch-in sup- y ear s S ra l n supplies, per at Robe-Ann Park to honor And, as some Republicans Rev. and Mrs. Eddie Sullivan and °ther critics of the adminand family who have returned istration and its farm programs as missionaries from Japan. point out, it gives the DemoMr. and Mrs. Bill Perry and cra t s more time to tell farmdaughters were Sunday dinner ers that things are getting bet-

guests of Mrs. Nadene Burks j t er -

and family.

Government farm officials

Mr .and Mrs. Ross Paris of are almost universally agreed

Rockville were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Heber.

^Vi's true //>

'64 FAIRLANE 500 2 door hard top $1495 '65 FAIRLANE 500 4 door sedan $1595

King Morrison Foster SINCE 1910 Sfi/lAKJCk A-1 Used Cars

that acreage cuts have to be made, although there is widespread disagreement over how big they should be.

COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM -• CIRCUIT COURT SEPTEMBER TERM, 1»6T IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF ANDREW PAYNE STONER. DECEASED Eastate No. EST 67-JO NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF ANDREW PAYNE STONER In the matter of the Estate of Andrew Payne Stoner, deceased. No. EST 67-20. Notice is hereby given that Donovan Heber as Executor of the above named estate, has presented and filed hi* final account in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for tlie examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 23 of October, 1967, at which time all persons Interested in said estate are required to appear in said court ond show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estte. Donovn Heber. Personnel Representative Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney J. Frank Durham Sept. J6-Oct. J-Jt

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Birdland CARACAS (UPI) _ Of the 6,000 species of birds in the world, 1,200 of them are found in Venezuela, according to a recent report by the Ministry of Agriculture,

AUCTION Equipment & Furnishings 100 SEAT RESTAURANT Motel & Gift Shop OCT. 3, 1967 10:00 A.M. HUNT'S PLEASANT ACRES 4 mi. last of Brazil, Ind. on U. S. 40

■■eZtZISSr

rr in a series. David Graham Phillips’ first book was issued under a pseudonym, “John Graham,” when he was thirty-four. The Great God Success, it brought him success as a novelist after numbers of rejections. He might have survived longer if he had retained a nom-de-plume and kept his identity obscure. Phillips, bom in 1867 at Madison, Indiana, was murdered at forty-four, when stirring fiction published under his own name had made him well known. A Princeton graduate at twenty, Phillips worked for newspapers in Cincinnati and the New York Sun on his way to being a star correspondent in Europe and editorial writer for Joseph Pulitzer's New’ York World. After writing extensive exposes of criminality in high places for The World, Phillips turned to novels as more far-reaching means of crusading against municipal, state and national political corruption, financial manipulations in Wall Street, and declining standards of morality in so-called high society. His fifteen novels following The Great God Success within a decade had such indicative titles as The Fortune Hunter. The Cost, Light-fingered Gentry, The Plum Tree, The Deluge, The Conflict, The Price She Paid, Old Wives for New, Golden Fleece. One of the growing legion of readers, a youth named Fitzhugh Goldsborough, decided that Phillips was falsely depicting Goldsborough women and men as characters in the novels. He wrote letters of protest to the author, who had let himself become well known by sight in New 7 York. Then Goldsborough confronted Phillips publicly, shot him dead, and killed himself. The ensuing furor (during which Goldsborough was adjudged Insane) made a Phillips novel published post-hu-mously, Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise, his biggest bestseller. Numbers of different women were “recognized by impressionable readers as the original of Susan. CLARK KINNAIRD

Camera study of David Graham Phillips. He never married.

jHdrtbBfra by Kins rtttun* iyiliia»