The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 January 1968 — Page 6
Pag® 6
Th® Dally Banner, Or®®neastl®, Indiana
Tuesday, January 2, T968
1 Real Estate 1 10 Lost & Found 10
SHETRONE REAL ESTATE 302 S. Ind. St. Ph: OL 3-9315 - Offers - Haven’t found that Ideal home for the family yet? Come in and look at this 3 bedrm. split-level. Has large kitchen & dining area, 2 fireplaces, carpeted liv. rm., full basement with family rm.. 2 full baths, garage. On Albin Pond Rd. Start the new year out right, see this 3 bedrm. frame home. C arpet in liv. rm., full basement, li/ 2 baths, gas hot air furnace. 409 Meadow Dr. Price reduced on this lovely 3 bedrm. Brick home, built in ’60, Hardwood and tile floors, utility rm., bath and l / 2 , gas furnace, garbage disposal, garage. On Dogwood Ln. Don’t wait come in and see this beautiful home on 43 North. Has 3 bedrms., carpeted liv. rm., guest wrap closet, planters, snack bar, walnut paneled foyer, birch cabinets, sliding glass doors, vanity in bath, oil fired furnace. Make 1968 a happy year for your family—Buy a new Home. After office hours call — C. J. Knauer—OL 3-3057 BiU Talbott—OL 3-6328
FOUND: Man or boy’s wrist watch, vicinity of Locust and Melrose. Owner may identify and pay for ad. Inquire at Banner Office.
LOST: Willie cat, Thursday night, white front and feet, multicolored. Call Prof. Cook, phone OL 3-4868. 11 Employment, 11 Men WANTED: Service station attendant, mornings, part time. Shoemaker’s Standard Service. 13 Employment, 13 Women 1 WANTED: Baby-sitter, 5 days a week in my home. Call OL 3-6263. 'WANTED: Baby-sitter in my home. OL 3-6334 after 4. 14 Automotive 14
Calf Collins OL 3-3286 If you are looking for a home or home site—Allow us to be of assistance and help you find what’s right for your needs. Bob Clark 386-7359 Lois or Ross Alice OL 3-4072
Remember East Side Motor Sales for expert body works, painting, wheel alignment and mechanical work. Free estimates.
AUTOMOTIVE parts, Holly 4 barrel, dual point distributor, 352 block, pistons, accessories, 4 barrel manifold. OL 3-3438.
1963 Chevrolet Biscayne 2 door sedan. Standard transmission. 50,000 miles. Excellent tires. Snow tires on extra wheels. Brakes just rellned. Available January 17. $475. OL 3-3593.
For Sale
3 Mobile Homes 3
WANT to buy good used house trailer. Box 425, Daily Banner
4 For Rent, Apts. 4
FOR RENT: Cole Apartments. 1 bedroom, utilities furnished. See Custodian, 519 E. Washington. FURNISHED upper apartment, water furnished. $65.00 a month. 1801% S. Bloomington Street. Phone OL 3-5326 or OL 3-9961.
FOR SALE: “No Hunting—No Trespassing” signs. The Daily Banner
SALE: 40 antique guns, Wednesday, January 3, 10:00 a m. Vaughn Auction. 1 mile east of Stilesville on U.S. 40.
Wanted
WANTED: General hauling, hay and grain. Glenn Crawley. Phone OL 3-4927.
19 Business Service 19
FOR RENT: New 1 bedroom furnished apartments and 2 bedroom unfurnished apartments. Roban Apartments, 327 Bloomington St. Phone OL 3-4072.
NEW two bedroom upper apartment, all utilities furnished except electricity. Carport, central air conditioning and gas hot water heat. Phone OL 3-5326 or OL 3-9961.
UPSTAIRS apartment, 4 rooms and bath. Utilities furnished. North Grant Street, Cloverdale. Call Foster Realty, 7954514.
THREE room upstairs apartment, heat and water furnished. OL 3-9515. After 6 p.m., OL 3-9009.
5 For Rent, Rooms 5
FFICE space on street level in Alamo Building. For details, phone Hal Hickman Realtors. OL 3-9225.
8 Musical Items 8
CHORD Organ Owners. Seehear Conn Showcord full sized spinet organ that you can play easier than your chord organ. Kersey Music.
SALE SALE: Magnavox color TV and Stereo. Kersey Music.
USED drum sets. One 3 piece used sky blue drum set. $79.50. One 4 piece red pearl set, $159.50. Kersey Music. USED Magnavox color combination. Beautiful Early American AM-FM, Stereo, color TV. Kersey Music. INVESTIGATE our continuous rental on electric guitars and amplifiers. What you pay for that inexpensive student outfit applies on a better one later. Kersey Music.
FOR SALE: 21” RCA color TV. Del’s TV Sales & Service, PE 9-2713. 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 responsible party for $5.86 per month. Full price $35.16. Call OL 3-3987.
Livestock
DUROC boars; polled Hereford bulls. Howard and Byron Gough, Roachdale. Phone 5967693 or 596-7694.
KESSLER Farms offer for sale 50 open June Poland China gilts: boars. 100 fall gilts; 30 boars. New Ross 793, Ladoga 942-2405.
FOR SALE: 17 good Hereford cows, bred to Angus bull. Also 18 feeder calves. Call 5965777. FOR SALE: Ten 350 lb. first litter gilts to farrow last of January; 2 young male hogs; 1 York; 1 Hamp. Robert Fisher. Phone 528-2667. 26 Head Hereford and Angus feeding calves. 1% miles west of Limedale. James Torr.
23 Wanted To Buy 23
WANT to buy. 2 bedroom modem house, close to town, with yard, small garden. Will pay cash. Phone OL 3-5579.
The Daily Banner EASY-TO-FIND CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1— Real Estate 2— Business Opportunity 3— Mobile Homes 4— For Rent—Apts. 5— For Rent—Rooms 6— For Rent—Houses 7— Marine Hems 8— Musical Items 9— Home Items 10— Lest A Found 11— Employment—Men 12— Employment—Men—Women 13— Employment—Women 14— Auotmotivo 15— For Sole 16— Wanted 17— Farm Equipment 18— Auction 19— Business Service 20— Livestock—For Sale 21— Notice 22— Morotcydes 23— Wanted To Buy 24— For Sale—Pets 25— Want To Rent 26— Work Wanted—Women 27— Work Wanted—Man To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD Phone OL 3-5151 And Ask For . . . SHARON She'll Take Your Order And Help You Write Your Ad Ads must be placed by 9 a.m. the first day they are to run, otherwise they will be in next issue.
-Tigers win
(PAY HIKE
SEOUL UP! -U.S. militan’ authorities announced Korean workers hired by American
points, cut it to 23-15, but Jack- forces would be granted an son, McCormick and Browning average 31 per cent pay inignited the Tigers again for a crease beginning Jan. 1. This 32-15 reading. will bring the average worker’s Denison was down at half- monthly pay to $92. time, 43-31, and managed to
get only as close as 15 (71-56)
in the game’s last 13 minutes. The Big Red shot nearly as well as DePauw (.414), but got 33 fewer shots (91-58) and 14 less (38-24) baskets. Denison stayed in the game by converting 23 of 33 fouls. DePauw lost Mike O’Connell and McGurk on personals. Wabash, the only small college team to defeat DePauw this year, took a 9-8 lead against Denison Friday and kept it until the Big Red finally tied the game at 38-all with 17:03 to play. The Ohioans went ahead for good on one of Claggett’s 13 baskets, 47-45. The smaller
INCREASED RANGE
SACRAMENTO. Calif. UPI — The California highway patrolis equipping 500 patrol cars with loudspeakers and variable pitch high-low sirens to aid slightly deaf, forgetful or day-
dreaming motorists.
The spakers will be used mainly for crowd control and advising motorists to fit tires with snow chains. The special sirens will be for the driver who doesn’t hear the regular siren.
HARD TIMES
LONDON UPI —Notice in a
Londan pub:
“We regret that due to staff
LIVESTOCK CENTER HOGS fl7.50-$18.00 LOCAL LIVESTOCK Hogs 6.900; barrows and gilts mostly steady, instances 25 lower; 1-2, 190-230 lb. 18.25-19.25; 1-3, 220-250 lb. 17.25-18.25; 240260 lb. 16.75-17.50; 2-3, 220-240 lb. 17.25-18.00; 240-260 lb. 16.7517.25; 260-280 lb. 16.00-16.75; 280-320 lb. 15.50-16.25; sows steady to mostly 25 higher; 1-3, 300-400 lb. 13.75-14.75; 400-500 lb. 13.00-13.75; 2-3, 500-600 lb. 12.25-13.00; boars 10.50-11.50. Cattle 2,400; calves 35; fully steady on choice or better steers and heifers: good and low choice steady to 25 lower; cows fully steady; bulls steady to strong; vealers steady; high choice and prime steers 27.50-28.00; choice 25.75-27.50; good and choice 24.50-26.00; high choice and prime heifers 26.25; a few high choice 26.00; good and choice 23.00-25.50; utility and commercial cows 15.50-18.00; utility and commercial bulls 20.0023.50; choice vealers 33.00-34.00.
only have time to listen to one New Year’s resolution per cus-
tomer.”
West Clinton Township
Cavemen edged to within two, .
73-71, with 1:51 left, but Deni-1 sh ? rt f our barmaids wlU
son iced it with a field goal and a pair of free shots when Wa-
bash was forced to press. It was this same press—under
different circumstances — that hauled the Cavemen off the deck Saturday night. Down 59-50 to Wesleyan which seemed to be sailing to its fifth win, the Cavemen scored three baskets in 37 seconds off a full court press to narrow the deficit to
59-56.
The two clubs traded two baskets and a free throw before Wabash struck again and forced a Wesleyan error on the
WE ARE
NOW PAYING
THE HIGHEST RATE IN INDIANA ON SAVINGS ...
FIRST-CITIZENS
BANK & TRUST CO.
Greencastle, Indiana
OFF and RUNNING By
i
Tony D. Manuel General Manager
By MRS. R. CLODFELTER
Christmas Day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Cruse were Mr. and Mrs. Jim Abbott, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Mangus and families. Mrs. Abbott and Mrs. Mangus are the Cruses daughters. Also Mrs. Cruse’s mother, Mrs. Helen Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Martin Jr. and
press. Dan Jordan. Wabash for- j their gons jQe from Ft Rucker ward, converted this turnover AJa aild Qary a freshman in into a three-point play that Indiana state ' College. And a knotted the score 64-64 with gister of Mrg Cruse , g and her 6:43 to go. Strangely that was husband Mr and Mrs. William
Crawley from Christmas, Fla.
Wabash’s last basket until Terry Smith’s tremendous 50foot plus shot when the gun
sounded.
In the meantime the Cavemen converted 10 of 11 free throws when they put the ball into the deep freeze at the 3:22 mark with a three-point lead. Wesleyan got three free throws and a single basket over the same route. Reserve Dave McDaniel’s bucket with 25 seconds left made the score, 72-69, Wabash. Wesleyan had another change
afterardo
Christmas Day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Barker were Mr. and Mrs. Don Jeffries and children, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Jessup and daughters of Mansfield, Mrs. Velma Hobson and son, Jolin, Rockville, Mr. and Mrs. William Barker and daughters, Mrs. Helen Bosley and Mrs. Mary Barker, all of Indianapolis; Mr. and Mrs. Mick Rooksberry of Rockville, Mr. and Mrs. Vem Sigler, neighbors. Harold Barker’s mother, Mary
Wesleyan had another chEtnce Barker entered the St. Frances after Jordan missed a free Hospital in Beech Grove on throw, but missed the shot. I Tuesday.
Harry Staley then drew a pair of foul shots and hit for a 74-69 lead. Terry Smith, retrieving a Wesleyan pass, fired his twohanded set shot from the intersection of the midlcourt line and the north sideline for the
final count.
Her room number is
485.
Mrs. Olma Clodfelter spent
Christmas Eve and Christmas Day with her son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clodfelter
and daughter, Beth Ann. Christmas Day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irwin and Mrs. Aileen Overstreet were
DEFENSIVE TACTICS Mr. and Mrs. Max Causey and DENVER UPI —A would-be children, Julia and Jim of bandit was the only loser in a Bloomingdale. and Raymond holdup attempt at Boilermakers Kendall of Beech Grove. Union Local 101. Mrs. Helen Martin of Clinton Police said an armed man Falls is on the sick list. Tuesthrew a paper sack on the desk day evening guests of Mrs. Marof office manager Marie A. tin’s were Mr. and Mrs. Marion Carlson and demanded money. Cruse and son. Doyne, Mr. and Mrs. Carlson went screaming Mrs. William Crawley of Floriout of the office. The bandit da, Mrs. Cruse and Mrs. Crawmade a rapid exit, too, leaving ley are Mrs. Martin’s daughters, his paper sack behind. And Mr. and Mrs. John Martin
^ wciiciai rvidiidyci s ^ Jim Houck, Putnam County’s Prosecuting Attorney, made a prediction at the start of 1967 that he probably would file on tha average at least one criminal affidavit a day. As of the end of the year, he informs us that criminal affidavits filed for the year totalled 367. How’s that for hitting the nail on the head!
* * *
I stopped Norm Peabody (our new Mayor) the other day to ask him if he would please check on the reasons why The Daily Banner cannot seem to get cooperation from our local Fire Department. It seems that everytime the fire truck or emergency vehicle goes out on call, we cannot find out just where they are going. When we call them, their most common answer is, “I don't know where it’s gone; you'll have to wait until it gets back.” Now I'm sure that when the fire truck leaves, they know exactly where it’s going. As a news media, we have a responsibility to our readers to report the news as it happens. As taxpayers they have ! a right to know where and when our fire trucks are going. If we do not get cooperation from our local fire department we cannot do this. By the time we do get the report from the fire
and daughter of Geencastle; department, the fire is out, the house is burned down, etc. A picM. and Mrs. Don Martin of In- time which contains nothing and a story about little of nothing dianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar does not make very good reading. So, the next time you pick up Martin Jr. and sons of Clinton The Daily Banner and read a story about a fire that happened Falls, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Man- yesterday, and you say to yourself, “This is old news,” just regus and Mr. and Mrs. Jim member, it may not be The Banner’s fault. If there is some Abbott of Greencastle. legal reason for not giving the information to us we are cer-
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Williams tainly not aware of it.
had their Christmas dinner on e e e Sunday. Guests were Mr. and Harold Mason and I were also talking to Norm Peabody Mrs. Louis Bertram and chil- about the parking problems we seem to have here in Greencastle. dren, Mrs. Paula Welch, and a Both Harold and I offered Norm our “professional” opinions on grandson Ronnie Long from In- the subject. I believe Norm has some real good ideas about how diana University, where he is to solve these parking problems. Given a little bit of time to get a student and also a teacher his feet wet as mayor, I’m sure we’ll see some action on this
In the university. He teaches matter.
African language. e • e
Mrs. Floyd Fowler Is in Cul- There are two things I really enjoy. One Is playing golf and ver Hospital after undergoing the other is watching football. Well, yesterday was truly a great eye surgery. day. Like a good “Hoosier” I hung an IU pennant up on my front Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bennett p orc h early in the morning, so that everyone could see that I was
-Bing leads NBA points in 27 games for a 28.4 per game average to Bing’s
27.5.
Hal Greer of Philadelphia was
third in the scoring race with Fjght on inflation can hurt housing
912 points, closely followed by Elgin Baylor of Los Angeles
with 896 and Nate Thurmond of
San Francisco with 888. Completing the top 10 were
Wilt Chamberlain of Philadelphia 880, Bob Boozer of Chicago 871, Zelmo Beaty of St. Louis 835, Willis Reed of New York
834 and Rudy LaRusso of San against inflation tight mo-
ney.
spent Sunday in Jasonville with Mrs. Bennett’s mother. Mrs. Mary Phillips, a brother and
three sisters.
Mrs. Dale Terhune had as house guests on Tuesday evening Mrs. Harold Lairson and
two daughters.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Terhune spent Sunday in Jasonville with Mr. and Mrs. Dean Terhune and a sister and family from Ander-
son.
Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bennett were Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Smith R. 4 and their daughter-in-law and family from the northern part of the state. Their son Robert is in Vietnam. Tuesday evening dinner guests of Mrs. Olma Clodfelter were Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Irwin, Mr. and Mrs. George Irwin and their daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Thomas and two daughters from Vincennes, Fred Snively, Mr. and Mrs. Morris Irwin, Mrs. Aileen Overstreet, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clodfelter and daughter, Beth Ann. Mrs. Mary Emily Garrett Hellinger of Palm Beach, Fla., left by plane on Thursday evening for her home after spending Christmas vacation with her mother, Mrs. Lebbie Garrett of Greencastle.
pulling for IU all the way. As soon as the final gun sounded in the Rose Bowl, I rushed out and took my pennant down. Gee, I sure hope none of those hardened Purdue fans saw it. I’ll keep my personal remarks about Indiana's first Rose Bowl appearance to toyfcelf and let our sports editor stick his neck out.
Rv .iniTN PrF’RSOV i* t • I NOTICE of annual meeting of JOHN PIERSON for a 10 per cent income tax members greencastle federal
WASHINGTON UPI — A hlk *’
member of the Federal Reserve (2) The FED sees that it’s Board, who’s an expert on E oin g to have to fight inflation housing, has issued a strong slone. It makes credit more warning against overuse of the expensive and scarcer by rais-
“FED’s” biggest weapon tng the
discount rate, increas-
ing bank reserve requirements and selling securities to soak up Tight money, which means fun< * s -
higher interest rates and less (3) Higher Interest rates credit supply, can stop infla- ra * se the cost of borrowing on
York’s Walt Bellamy and in; t ion in its tracks all right, says horne mortgages fairly rapidly.
Francisco 814.
Chamberlain retained his lead in field goal percentage with a .563 mark to .544 for New
rebounding with 958 recoveries, i Sherman J. Maisel. But look
26 Work Wanted 26
21 better than Thurmond. Larry Seigfried of Boston,
idle last week with an injury, continued to set the pace in free throw percentage with an .862 mar kand Len Wilkens of St. Louis was the leading play-
maker with 293 assists.
what it does to housing. On a recent address to the American Bankers Association. Maisel estimated that up to
This lowers the builders’ profit and makes homebuyers less willing to buy. Homebuilding receives an initial setback. (4) Stock and bond yields rise
three-quarters of last year’s faster than financial institurecession in homebuilding was tions such as banks and sav-
FED’ tight ings and loan institutions can
raise their interest or dividend
WANT to do alterations and plain sewing. OL 3-3054.
WANTED: Baby-sitting in my home. Can give references. OL 3-4076.
REGISTERED NURSES
Your training is irgeatly needed by the U.S. Army urse Corps
the result of the
money policy.
Maisel wasn’t just giving a history lesson. He was also laying it on the line to Congress, saying in effect: “Look, either you raise taxes fas President Johnson has requested > ~r we
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Notice is hereby given that the annual meeting of members of the abovenamed Association will be held at the DePauw Union Building. Greencastle. Indiana on the 8th day of January. 1968 at the hour of 7 p. m. of said day. The business to be taken up at the said annual meeting shall be: I. Considering and voting upon reports of officers and committees of the Association; 3. Considering and voting upon ratification of the acts of directors and officers of the Association; 3. Election of directors to fill the offices the terms of which are then ex-
piring :
4. No other matters, except as required by law or regulation. By Order of the Board of Directors. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, December 20. 1967 Harriet Sutton, Secretary Greencastle Federal Savings and Loan Association Dec. 26-Jan. 2-2t
A Canadian town spawned the telephone
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Probate Court of Putnam
rates. Banks are a little more Count, • IndianB EsUte * 7 ' 90 '
_ „ , ,, j In the matter of the Estate of H.
flexible and can defend them- ; Lee Osborne, deceased.
selves move their money out of Notice is hereby given that Roach- _ , . dale Bank & Trust Company was on S-and-Ls, prime suppliers Of , the Hth day of December. 1967,
mortgage credit, and into banks ^ f d, ^“ lst e r g ^ 0 t r e or even into the stock and band borne, deceased.
BRANTFORD, Ont. UPI — White-bearded Alexander Graham Bell, in unveiling the impressive Bell Memorial here 50 years ago, stated for the occasion: “The telephone was conceived in Brantford in 1874 and born in Boston in 1876.” It is not widely known today that the first actual transmission of the human voice over live electrical wire took place in this Canadian city. As Thomas B. Costain noted in his book “The Chord of Steel,” “Brantford's share in the great achievement has been overshadowed if not overlook-
ed.”
But it has not been Ignored here, since Bell’s monument and home are the area’s main
tourist attractions.
Bell first got the idea for the telephone in the summer of 1874. That was also the year the word “telephone” was used by the young inventor for the first time, according to the diary kept by his father, Alex-
ander Melville Bell.
By fall the bearded young man had completed working sketches of his device. The following year he went to Boston
to have it patented.
In August, 1876. at sge 29,
Bell staged his first long-dis- spanned by the longest bridge tance tfive-mile) comriiunica- in station experiment. It was a sue- Plans are being made to build cess access roads, picnic and parkBell went to the telegraph of- areas, campgrounds, overfice at nearby Mount Pleasant looks and boat launching ramps
Pleasant: “To be or not to be.” That Shakespearean quote from “Hamlet” thus became the first telephone message. The second phone test shortly after that carried a message from Brantford to Bell’B home at Tutelo Heights, three miles distant. Since there was no telegraph line near his home. Bell “bought up all the stovepipe wire in Brantford.” He said later: “We tacked It along the farmers’ fences from the highway to my home and
it worked.”
The third test transmitted voices from Brantford to Paris, a town seven miles away. This time, however, the messages were actually carried 130 miles, since they were directed through Toronto, the power
source.
In 1922, at age 75, Bell pnssed away at Nova Scotia.
PONDEROUS POOL
KNOXVILLE. Iowa UPI— The Red Rock Dam, now being constructed on the Des Moines River near here, will create a 9,000-acre permanent pool. The reservoir created by the dam will be the largest body of water in Iowa, and will be
with the of H. Lee
•Pwill Os-
money managers are again markets,
going to be forced to tighten money, which would be sure to
hurt housing.”
Maisel sketched out the road from failure to raise taxes to another homebuilding slump: (1) Congress refuses to go
(5) Institutions that still have money to lend look around for a better Investment than mortgages, where rates, although up, are prevented by law or cusom from rising as fast as other rates. Homebuilding receives a
along with Johnson’s request ( one-two punch.
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 claim will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 14th day of December, 1967. Ennis E. Masten. Clerk of the Probate Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Attorney j Ernest Knox. 402 North Meridian i Street, Indianapolis. Ind. 4620s. Doc. 18-26-Jan 2-3t
to await a message from his uncle, David Bell, at a prear-
along the shore.
ranged time. The uncle spoke into his instrument at Brant-
The island of Bermuda
ford and the young inventor
achieved full independence from
1 heard the following at Mount
Britain Nov. 30, 1966.
COAL
U.S. CIVIL SERVICE
TESTS!
• Virginia • Kentucky • Indiana
Delivery Anywhere JIM COFFMAN
Men—women 18 and over. Secure jobs. High starting pay. Short hours. Advancement. Preparatory training as long as required. Thousands of jobs open. Experience usually unnecessary. Grammar school sufficient for many
jobs. FREE booklet on jobs, salaries, requireemnts. Write TODAY
Phone after 4 P.M.
giving name and address. Lincoln Service, 75-1B, Box 450, Doily
OL $-3441
Banner,
