The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 27 January 1968 — Page 4
F«g« 4
Th* Daily Banner, Graaneastla, Indiana
Saturday, January T7, 1968
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT
Real Estate 1 PUTNAM REALTY 1209 S. BLOOMINGTON ST. PHONE OL 3-5012 814 MELROSE AYE. Owner in Florida and ready to deal on this 3 bdrm. home. Large living mi. Large kitchen with oodles of cabinets. Family rm. New gas furnace. Bcmt. Priced at $12,500. Contract available. Why pay rent? 1006 SO. JACKSON. Price cut to the bone on this IVz story, 3 Bdrm. home with acreage. Home in excellent condition. Ground suitable for livestock (small barn) or gardening. Better take a look. MANHATTAN. 3 Bdrm. Frame home built 1955. Nice kitchen. Full bath. Full dry bsmt. 2 car garage. A good value at *13.500. MADISON TWP. 80 acres with 5 rm. modern home. Will sell all or divide. Call for details. If you don’t see It advertised—call us anyway. We may have just what you are looking for. EVENINGS Joe and Nancy Fogle 442-0864 Denny and Thelma Thomas OL 3-5022
SHETRONE REAL ESTATE 802 S. Ind. St. Ph: OL 3-9315 - Offers - NEW LISTING—15 Acres in Washington Tup. 4 bed mi. frame home. 1 '/z stories, carpet In liv. rm., dining rm. & stairs, full basement, enclosed front porch, rear patio, oil heat, fireplace. 2 car garage, Bam & chicken house. 1201 S. INDIANA—Pretty 3 bedim. Bedford stone home. Carpet in living rm. & dining area, fireplace, basement. Gas heat, Lots of Shrubs. RUSSELLVILLE — Older 2 story home on large lot. 5 rms. & bath down, 2 up, basement, enclosed back porch, oil heat. Garage. 318 DOGWOOD LN.—Price reduced on this pretty 3 bedrm. brick home. Built in ’60. hardwood & tile floors, bath & gas furnace. garbage disposal, gara"«. 1 ke Our Work L eep Us Busy. ..on’t You? If You’re Selling Your Home Call Us. After Office Hours Call— C. J. Knauer — OL 3-3057 Bill Talbott — OL 3-6328
THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE Farms Wanted WE HAVE BUYERS FOR: (1) 100-200 acres, preferably west of Greencastle. (2) 100 acres of rough ground. List Now RIGHT NOW is an excellent time to list your property for sale. Despite what one might think, prospective buyers are in the market even in the worst of weather. You may have just what the other fellow wants. It costs nothing to list, and we do the work. 1 IS S. Jackson St. OL 3-6509 After hours, call OL 3-4079 OL 3-3406 OL 3-4343 OL 3-3642
Real Estate
Distinctive Homes - "'1%
iHii
ARE SOLD BY SHETRONE REAL ESTATE AGENCY 302 SO INDIANA CALL OL 3-9315 GREENCASTLE
For Rent, Apts.
TWO bedroom, furnished.
3272 or OL 3-6874.
5 For Rent, Rooms 5
nut Street on Wednesday.
TWO sleeping rooms. OL 3-3976.
6 For Rent, Houses 6
5834.
Home Items
tlCKMA
D C A I T t
REALTY CO
W//////////////MM, fWOHC OL-3-922S OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. Arlington Heights 326 Redbud Lone Attractive ranch home located on well landscaped lot. Large living room with dining L, 3 bedrooms, large bath, natural birch cabinets in kitchen, utility room, attached garage, gas furnace. Come By and Inspect
ter 5:00 p.m.
Employment, Men
Voncastle.
phone calls.
Employment, Women
88 care of Banner.
6713 for appointment.
14 Automotive 14
16 Wanted 16
WANTED: Good used furniture,
reasonable. OL 3-9126.
19 Business Service 19
SINGER ZIG-ZAG
WALNUT CABINET MODEL *34.41 FULL PRICE A-l cond. Beaut, walnut cabinet. Makes buttonholes and fancy designs, sews on buttons, needs no attachments. Available to resp. party for $6.83 per month. Full price $34.41.
Call OL 3-3987.
INTERIOR DECORATING PAINTING, paperhanging, patch plastering, wallpaper removal. Free estimates. Ph. OL 3-5756. Glenn Shonkwiler.
20 Livestock 20
ELEVEN white faced feeder calves. Wayne McCullough.
Phone 672-3206.
21 Notice 21
BOYS TAP CLASS starting. Contact Jonie C. Skaggs at the Blue Wolf Club on Saturdays or call 845-3415 during
the week.
23 Wanted To Buy 23
WILL buy several old used couches and desks if durable and priced right. Rus-sells Used Furniture Store. OL 3-
6315.
WANT To Buy: Good used spinet piano. Call Coatesville
386-7467.
■ 24 Pets 24
AKC registered Dachshund and Scottie puppies. OL 3-9329 after 4 p. m. Monday through
Friday.
Business 2 Opportunity
OL 3-3517.
FRANCHISE AVAILABLE OWN A FAMOUS, PROFITPROVEN DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT THERE are over 600 highly successful Dog n Suds Drive-In owners serving the world’s creamiest root Root Beer and famous Coney Dogs throughout the U.S. and Canada. But there’s still room for you. No experence necessary. No royalties. We provide thorough training, and you're backed by advertising in Life & Look and network TV publicity to assure success. $15,000 minimum cash required. To get an informative brochure, write Wayne Norrick, Dog n Suds, Inc., P.O. Box 735, Champaign, Illinois 61820 or phone 217-352-0091.
FOR SALE: 1955 Ford truck 1% ton, new floor and grain bed. Good hoist. Phone 5262852.
1963 Pontiac Catalina convertible, sharp. $895.00. See at Hutchison’s Shell Station 43 and 40. Phone OL 3-9970.
Remember East Side Motor Sales for expert body works, painting, wheel alignment and mechanical work. Free estimates.
For Sole
FOR SALE: 32x80” aluminum storm door and gas wall furnace. OL 3-6909.
FOR SALE: ‘‘No Hunting—No Trespassing” signs. The Daily Banner
3 Mobile Homes 3
JANUARY SPECIALS 12x60 3 br. $5195.00 12x53 Rembrandt 53995.00 12x60 2 br. front kitchen 1968 Mobile Home Show Model 54895.00 New Color TV Given with every double wide mobile home sold in January VAN BIBBER MOBILE HOMES Route 1 PE 9-2341
NEW 12x50 from $3795. Used coaches from $795. Truck campers and travel trailers. New and used furniture and appliances. New’ owners. Hess Mobile Home Park and Sales, 1216 South Bloomington. OL 3-3222.
4 For Rent, Apts. 4
INTERESTED in SELLING OR BUYING A NEW HOME? CHECK THE CLASSIFIED ADS.
FOR RENT: New 1 bedroom furnished apartments and 2 bedroom unfurnished apartments. Roban Apartments, 327 Bloomington St. Phone OL 3-4072. FOR LEASE: New two bedroom apartments, available soon. Parkwood Village Apartments. Call OL 3-5015, days or OL 3-6609 or OL 34833 evenings.
COLE Apartments. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.
The Doily Banner EASY-TO-FIND CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1— Real Estata 2— Butinass Opportunity 3— Mobil* Horn** 4— For Rent—Apt*. 5— For Rent—Room* 6— For Rent—House* 7— Marine Items 8— Musical Item* 9— Home Item* 10— lost B Found 11— Employment—Men 12— Employment—Men—Women 13— Employment—Women 14— Automotive 15— For Sal* 16— Wanted 17— Farm Equipment 18— Auction 19— Business Service 20— Livestock—Fer Sal* 21— Notice 22— Motorcycles 23— Wanted To Buy 24— For Sole—Pots 25— Wont To Rent 26— Work Wanted—Women 27— Werk Wonted-Men To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD Phone OL 3-5151 And Ask For . . . SHARON Sho'H Take Your Order And Help You Writ* Your Ad Ads must b« placed by 9 a.m. the first day they are to run, otherwise they will be in next issue.
Curly hair era dawns once more NEW YORK UPI — Teenagers who iron their flowing locks to make them straight can put mother’s ironing board away. The big word in hair fashion this year is CURLS — from big fat sausage curls to tiny tight mini-curls. And that holds true in wrtgs as well as milady’s natural hair. Hair styles as well as clothing styles have taken a step backward to the romantic days of Scarlett O’Hara and “Gone With The Wind.” A recent New York showing of wig styles from the cavewoman to modem times wound up with curls, curls, curls. The olden time segment featured the cave woman in wigs made of animal skin; a Chinese girl in ornate robes and sever-ely-styled black wig; A Cleopatra wearing a dark wig highlighted with rope and gold braids, and the Marie Antionette wig, a towering white creation with an ornate feather headdress. For the “now” segment of the showing, wigs made of “chapelli,” a new synthetic fiber,, were used. The people behind the new process say the fiber simulates the finest human hair, holds a curl through four or five washings with regular shampoo, and can be sprayed, teased and set at home. And it is inexpensive. A 22-inch fall costs only $25. The Chapelli wigs and falls shown were curlable and curly. Among the models were blonde shoulder length tresses puled severely back from the face and cascading into fat sausage curls in the back. A brunette wig styed in fussy tight litle curls was worn with a mini-dress. One of the most striking styles was the one and only straight haired wig shown, a dark brunette creation that hung straight down to the model’s hips, a la Tahitian.
A Woman's
View
By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK UPI —“Obesity, whatever the cause, is a disease that can only be con-
The discouraging statement for the fatties of the land comes from an eminent physician and authority on treating overweight, Dr. S. K. Fineberg, of New York. Fineberg calls obesity the “No. 1 public health enemy of the country.” Certainly, it Is one of continuing concern not only for its victims but for medical science and public health people. And at the moment, it’s a fat-in-the-fire topic for a U.S. Senate subcommittee in Washington holding hearings on the use of prescription pills for weight re-
liction.
Fineberg talked on some of Is thoughts on control of weight through “education of the patient in diet, caloric dietetics and good nutrition.” The physician says the overweight person must learn to accept the “fact that a new way of life in regard to food intake must be permanent. Without mental adjustment to this fact, the lifetime control of obesity is not possible . . . the treatment of an Individual who has developed a significant degree of obesity may never be discontinued even if he has reduced to his normal weight.” To ease down in treatment, Fineberg holds, would be like stopping the therapeutic control of diabetes or hypertension. Fineberg is chief of the diab e t e s and obesity-diabetes clinics at the Metropolitan Hospital in New York and assistant clinical professor of medicine at the New York Medical College and Flower Fifth Avenue hospitals. His thoughts on obesity as a disease that can only be controlled are in an article In the current “Nutrition Today,” a publication of the Florida Citrus Commission.
BOAT SINKS TOKYO UPI —A Japanese fishing vessel that collided with an American freighter sank with 12 crewmen aboard today. Rescue ships found one crewman and were searching for other possible survivors.
OFF and RUNNING By Tony D. Manuel General Manager
Interest On Certificates Of Deposit AT FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. Greencastle, Indiana Member FDIC
CLOVERDALE FHA NEWS The Cloverdale FHA met after school in the home Ec. room on January 24. Devotions were given by | Shirley Sutherlin. Songs were led by Annetta Routt and Pam Rubendall. A panel discussion consisting of a representative from each class answered questions about teenagers and their problems. The panel was as follows: Freshman, Pam Rubendall; Sophomore, Brenda Barron; Junior, Marlene Hewitt; Senior, Vicki Alexander.
The courtesy motorists traditionally have shown funeral processions is becoming out of date and a potentially dangerous custom in today's heavy and fast-moving traffic, notes the Indiana Automobile Association. In most communities, both on-coming and paralleling drivers come to a complete stop in an effort to show respect and consideration for the bereaved. However, a spokesman for the Indiana Automobile Association stated, this is a form of courtesy, like so many others we have given up in our hurried times, that we must—if reluctantly—discontinue. As most processions emerge from downtown funeral homes or churches and follow a route to an outlying cemetery, they involve both heavy in-town and speeding out-of-town traffic. The respectful motorist who stops constitutes a menace to those who do not, and who often are unaware that the procession is approaching. Any unexpected stop in a traffic lane is a serious hazard. It can be condoned only for motorists with car trouble, as a result of a situation completely beyond their control. Certainly, it is folly for the public to arbitrarily continue a practice that is equally as dangerous because of a custom that is no longer practical.
Sleuths study group of lefties
TRI E ECUMENICISM RITZVILLE, Wash. UPI — St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in this little town was too small for the number of persons expected to attend the ordination of the Rev. John Knowles Dempsey as an Episcopal priest. So the ceremony was held instead at St. Agnes Catholic Church. The Rt. Rev. John R. Wyatt, Episcopal bishop of Spokane, obtained permission for use of the church from the Most Rev. Bernard J. Topel, Catholic bishop of Spokane. Episcopalian, Catholic and Protestant 1 clergymen joined in the ordination procession.
ATLANTA UPI — Lefthanded children born to “working class” families are more apt to be trained to use their other hand than children born to professional people, reports a prominent U. S. geneticist. Dr. Arthur Falek. chief of the division of human genttics at the Georgia Mental Health institute, said his theory is that parents in the “working class” jobs, such as construe-1 tion trades, would rather train their children to be righthanded to save them from fighting the problems they would encounter as a lefty in a
right-handed society.
Falek conducted a study of Fil,ek - an ^ciate professor nearly 6.000 “working class” j of Psychiatry at Emory Uniparents in New York City, and wrsit y who hi,s <1,,ne 13 > Mrs is now trying to extend the of ^search in this field, takes evaluation of his theory with the Position there’s nothing an experiment on children wron 8 with trying to switch a whose father's were lefthanders, youngster’s handedness. This
is contrary to the view of many Where “working class” mothers and fathers are left-hand-ed, Falek said, he has found the higest incidence of right-
handed children.
right-handers. The father retrained his own handedness to be able to take the job. And he made sure his children were right-handed so they would not be handicapped for work,
either.
On the other hand, parents in the professional classes who are left-handed seldom encounter problems in their work because of that, Falek said. Therefore they are not so concerned about encouraging their children to be right-handers. Falek found that the higest frequency of left-handedness with left-handed fathers was found in this professional group.
TOLL RISES PALERMO. Sicily UPI — The death toll from last week’s Sicilian earthquake rose to 236 today and disaster teams continued to search eight smashed villages for more bodies.
Falek cited the case of a
child psychologists.
He hopes his current study with universities in the Atlanta area will show that a child has about a 75 per cent chance to become righ-handed If he is
left-handed father who could encouraged.“even if he may be not become a postal clerk be- genetically left-handed.” cause he was not able to file But. he stresses, “children letter In slots designed for| shouldn't be forced.”
Foreign News Commentary
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate j No. EST 68-5 Notice is hereby fiven that Freda Allee was on the 10th day of January. 1969, appointed Executrix of the will of Albert W. AUee. 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 Greencastle. Indiana, this 10th day of January, 1968. Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. Attorneys Lsoa * Borg #u. M-XkK-St
By PHIL NEWSOM In Paris, on the neutral ground of France, West German and Yugoslav diplomats are shuttling back and forth between their two embassies in an effort confidently expected to result in a renewal of diplomatic relations broken in 1957. Assuming success, the negotiations mark another important breakthrough for West Germany's economic drive to the East and. perhaps ironically, another triumph of hard Western currency, whether it be the dollar, the West German mark or the French franc over the soft currencies of the East, whether they be the Yugoslav dinar or the Czech crown. For, simultaneous with the negotiations in Paris, was the arrival in Prague. Czechoslovakia of a West German trade mission to implement an agreement the Germans hope also will lead to the establishment of diplomatic relations with the Czechs. Establishment of a trade mission in Czechoslovakia follows similar exchanges with Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria in 196364. For both sides it represents a major change in policy and fqr the same reasons. West Germany broke relations with Yugoslavia because of the latter’s recognition of Communist East Germany. The policy formulated by Dr. Walter Hallstein, former state secretary m the Foreign Minis*
The Lighter Side
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON UPI — There
„ . . , . . , is a growning feeling among
try, called for a break In rela- 6 , ,
. . . .. political experts here that the
tions wuth any country outside 1 f
1968 presidential race will be
won by a hair.
the Soviet Union that recognized the East German regime. On the Communist side, the
The question is: Whose hair? As recently as last month, it
Romanians became the first of appeared that the modified mop the Warsaw Pact nations outside crop adopted by Sen. Robert F. the Soviet Union to establish Kennedy might he the deciding full diplomatic relations with factor. West Germany. It was accom- Kennedy began climbing in plished over violent opposition the polls almost immediately of the East Germans, who saw after revising his tonsorial in it their further isolation policy. It proved to be a stroke from the world family of na- of hirsute astuteness on his part, tj ons j but also a calculated risk.
1 The imponderable factor was
West Germany already is Ro- whether a^ented support by mania’s biggest trading partner the youlh bloc would offset lhe
in the W r est.
By the exchange of trade mis-
loss of the barber vote. In the opinion of many quali-
sions the Czechs hope to in- fied observers, a continued rise crease their owm trade with in his popularity curve could West Germany from around persuade Kennedy to challenge $200 million a year to $1 billion. President Johnson for the DemThat pact was concluded last ocratic nomination. August But Johnson's televised state
1 of the union address last week
For more than a year Yugo- ma y have headed off his slavia has been anxious for a potential rival, restoration of diplomatic ties My wife and countless other with Bonn. perceptive viewers detected a
change in Johnson's hair style. Inquiries at the White House produced the information that
Romania is known to have ob- he had quit using greasy kid
tained extensive credit from the , stuff.
West Germans. Yugoslavia Subsequent polls will reflect
would like the same.
The reasons, once more, are
i economic.
The Yugoslavs are in the
the political impact of this de-
velopment.
While there is no confirmation
midst of a drastic economic re- that the Johnsonian name was form. They seek to put its in- de-lubricated as a stop-Kennedy
dustry on a competitive basis with the West and free exchange for the dinar. But last year, economic growth ground to a halt
and unemployment rose. Yugoslavia needs a shot in the
arm if srowth is to be resumed.
maneuver, there is little doubt that the administration is reacting to Bobby’s thatch. At a recent public event, a colleague of mine stood directly behind a high administration official who is expected to have
a prominent role in the campaign. He reports that the official’s hair was two-toned, the new growth being a different shade from the extremities. This Is usually evidence of a color rinse. Can potential Republican candidates afford to stand pat and let Democrats widen the scalp gap? Hardly. I have a sneaking suspicion— it creeps up at twilight, when the lamps are low—that at leari one leading GOP hopeful already is touching up his tresses. Only their hairdressers know for sure. But as the campaign heats up, lock tampering is likely to intensify. And may the better wig win!
MALLORY CAPACITOR CO. Needs Production Workers, Assemblers Experience Not Necessary To learn about our Company and Job openings and complete program of Employment benefits, Visit our Personnel Dept., 8:30 A M. to 4 30 P.M. Job Openings Days and Nights An Equal Opportunity Employment Company MALLORY CAPACITOR CO. Greencastle, Ind.
