The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 February 1968 — Page 4

The Daily Banner, Greeneastle, Indiana

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT

1 Real Estate 1 SHETRONE REAL ESTATE SO‘» S. Ind. St. Ph: OL 3-9315 - Farms - 120 ACRES IX MADISON T\\'P.—TO arres of extra good tillable ground, large barn, tool shed. crib, and other buildings. 3 bedrm. Bedford stone home, hardwood floors, full basement —glazed tile, oil furnace, 2 car garage. 241 ACRES EV JEFFERSON TWP. — 162 tillable acres, pond., and new barn. Nice 4 bedrm. 2 story home. Has full basement, screened front porch & enclosed back porch, oil fired hot air furnace, good well, garage. ROUTE NO. 5—Approx. 6 Acres, large barn, milk house. 2 chicken houses. Older 2 bedrm. home remodeled in ’65, Hardwood and tile floors, full basement with shower, oil furnace. 15 ACRES TN WASH IN G- “ TON TWP.—Nice 4 bedrm. frame home. IVj stories, carpet in liv. rm., dining rm. & stairs, full basement, enclosed front porch, rear patio, oil heat, fireplace. 2 car garage, barn & chicken house. If it’s a Farm you're looking for We have them. After office hours call — C. J. Knauer — OL 3-3057 BUI Talbott — OL 3-6328

3800 DOWN. 8 miles west on Walnut Street Road 4 years old, like new S bedroom, all electric, beautiful kitchen, dining area, lots of closets, large two car garage, nearly I acre. S15.800. 6% interest payments less than 3120 a month, taxes and insurance Included. Being offered by the U.S. Government, VA sell* its properties without discrimination Paul Cronkite Real Estate, 305 North 13th Street, Terre Haute, Ind. 2326530, 235-2713, 234-1386. SELLING OR BUYING A NEW HOME? CHECK THE CLASSIFIED ADS.

3 Mobile Homes 3

FOR SALE: 1964 2 bedroom trailer with 13 foot living room and air conditioner. Spick and span, in excellent condition. Can be financed. Call E. H. Collins & Co. OL 3-3286

4 For Rent, Apts. 4

FOR RENT: New 1 bedroom furnished apartments and 2 bedroom unfurnished apartments. Roban Apartments, 327 Bloomington St. Phone OL 3-4072.

COLE Apartments. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises. FOR LEASE: New two bedroom apartments, available soon. Parkwood Village Apartments. Call OL 3-5015, days or OL 3-6609 or OL 34833 evenings.

6 For Rent, Houses 6

FOR RENT: Five room double with two bedrooms, full basement. Phone OL 3-5308 after 5:30 p.m. Billy Eiteljorge.

Home Items

1967 SINGER CABINET $87.10 FI LL PRICE ASSUME six payments of $6.18 per month. Nice walnut console. good condition. This machine appliques, monograms, sews forward and reverse, mends and darns, equipped to zig-zag, pastel color. Full i price just $37 10. Call OL 33987. 7 PIECE Bronzetone dinette set. Phone 795-4988. 11 Employment, 11 Men

12 Employment, 12 Men, Women HELP WANTED: Cashier. Apply at Voncastle. AMBITIOUS PERSON—Full or spare time to supply Rawleigh Household Products to consumers in PUTNAM CO. OR GREENCASTLE. Can earn | $125 per week. Write Rawleigh Dept. INB-450, Freeport, HI. 13 Employment, 13 Women HELP WANTED: Work 7:30 p.m. to 5:00 u.m. Monday; thru Friday, 7:30 to 2:30' Saturday. Starting pay $45 a week. Call Mrs. Davis, OL j 3-5128 Bus Station 6 E. Sem- j inary St. 14 Automotive 14

FOR SALE: '66 Chevy Super Sport 2 door hardtop, automatic transmission, power brakes, power steering. Ph. | OL 3-9009 after 6:00 p.m. i Remember East Side Motor ! Sales for expert body works, painting, wheel alignment | and mechanical work. Free estimates. FOR SALE: 1955 Ford 1% ton truck, new floor and grain bed. Good hoist. Phone 526-

2852.

The

Daily Banner EASY-TO-FIND CLASSIFIED DIRECTORY 1— Real Estate 2— Business Opportunity 3— Mobile Hemes 4— for Rent—Apts. 5— For Rent—Rooms 4—For Rent—Houses 7— Marine Items 8— Musical Items 9— Home Items 10— Lost 4 Found 11— Employment—Men 12— Employment—Men—Women 13— Employment—Women 14— Automotive

15— For Sale 16— Wanted

17— Form Equipment

18— Auction

19— Business Service 20— livestock—For Sale

21— Notice

22— Motorcycles 23— Wanted To Buy 24— For Sole—Pets 25— Want To Rent 26— Work Wanted—Women 27— Work Wonted—Men To Place Your CLASSIFIED AD

Phone

OL 3-5151 And Ask For . . .

SUSIE

Shell Take Your Order

And Help You Write Your Ad Ads must b« placed by 9 a.m. the first day they are to run, otherwise they will be in next issue.

ing at the Naval Training Cen- j

ter here.

FOR SALE: '67 Camaro con- w j|| j n n#x | j SSU f a In the first weeks of his navvertible. 327 4-speed positive i al service he studied military traction. 5000 actual miles.: subjects and lived and worked Phone OL 3-6431 after 5:00 ] 9 BusinOSS SorviCG 19 under conditions similar to i

EARN 5% Interest On Certificates Of

Deposit

AT

FIRST-CITIZENS

BANK & TRUST CO.

Greeneastle, Indiana

Member FDIC

Appomattox manor in danger of ruin

HOPEWELL, Va. UPI—The Union Army’s “Pentagon” established at Appomattox Manor during the Civil War is in danger of ruin unless Congress approves $900,000 for its sale to the National Parks System. The manor, an original land grant by England's King Charles 1 to Capt. Francis Eppes. has been owned by the Eppes family for 332 years. However, financial problems today threaten the preservation

by the Eppes family for more than 250 years. The manor. is open to tourists, but attendance has been small. The house was damaged by fire during a bombardment by a British fleet, led by Benedict Arnold, during the Revolutionary War. During the Civil War, Grant made his headquarters at the manor in June. 1864 and remained for the final 10 1 months of the war. President Abraham Lincoln

News of

servicemen

p.m.

FOR SALE: *63 Volkswagen, Sunroof Call Mrs. David Sacket, OL 3-5256

those he will encounter on his

On The

Farm Front By LARRY HATFIELD

-Summaries AT RUSSELLVH.LE

Cloxerdale (84) FG Barker 6 Nees 5 Ford 6 McCullough 7

FT PF 4 3

For Sale

FOR SALE: “No Hunting—No Trespassing” signs. The Daily Banner

FOR SALE: A B Dick Mimeograph Model 420. Phone OL 3-3520.

Hearing aid batteries and sup- first shi P or at his first shore WASHINGTON UPI — The Staley 4 plies. All makes. Open 24 station. Johnson administration has Steele 3 hours a day. Commercial Ho- In making the transition moved to meet SOi " e of the ob * * r ° i Wn 1 tel. Courtesy Beltone Hearing | from civilian life to Naval serv- lections to its strategic grain Nickerson 1

Service. ice, he received instruction un- reserves der veteran Navy petty offi- The administration’s move cers. He studied seamanship, as f ’ame Tuesday in hearings bewell as survival techniques. fore a Senate agriculture submilitary drill and other sub- committee considering grain re-

! FOR SALE: Gilts to farrow inljg^ serves legislation. The adminis-

tration-backed bill is spon-

With U.S. Combat Air Forces, sored by Sen. A. S. Mike Mon-

Vietnam — First Lieutenant roney, D-Okla.

Paul F. Vermillion

Livestock

Totals S3 Russellville (67) FG ?4)ller 6 R. Carrington 3 Simpson 7 D. Carrington 4 Cuchman 1 Everman 0

B-Game: Cloverdale 61, Rus-

FOR SALE: 100 Locust line posts. 7 foot, seasoned. Harry Mabb. Belle Union. Phone 5262513.

three weeks. 1 mile north and % mile east of Mt. Meridian.

Ivan Clark. | Vietnam — First Lieutenant roney, D-Okla. 1

. , r ; ~ sellville 50.

! son Mr. Both Monroney and Agricul-

FOR SALE: 2 black cows and and Mrs. Mace Vermillion of t ure Undersecretary John A AT PATRICKSBURG

calves: 3 feeder calves. Ben 2 09 W. Washington St

5 4 0 0 5 0 0 18 FT 3 3 7 5 7 0

Jarvis, Phone OL 3-5828.

FOR SALE: 4—7 month old

Undersecretary

Green-j gdujjttke,. called for revisions Russellville (86)

FG FT PF

castle, Ind., is on duty at Tuy j n hi s kju which would give Miller 8 Hoa AB. Vietnam. farmers more control over the R- Carrington 2

FOR SALE: Beige suede Car coat, size 14. $14.00. Phone OL 3-9072.

6310. Bob Sibbitt.

Lieutenant Vermillion, a con- rp <.p,.vp<

n l C l b ° arS - 246 * I struction engineer, is a mem-

ber of the Pacific Air Forces. Before his arrival in Vietnam,

was

AFB , Fla.

FOR SALE: Good second cutting alfalfa hay. Phone OL 3-

9636.

FOR SALE: 2 Chester White boars; 4 black feeder calves. Phone OL 3-3435 after 3:00.

One of the major objections to a similar bill defeated by a House agriculture subcommittee

! he was assigned to MacDill las( . session was that the gov _

Simpson 7 Everman 1 D. Carrington 6 Cushman 8 Totals 32

Harriett Hood.

The lieutenant, a 1961 gradu-

ernment would hold too much P*tricksburg <82> FG , , ,, Mitten 5

control over how the reserves

10

ate of Greeneastle High School, would be handled to aff e C t mar- J insley received a B.S. degree in fores- , , Houser 12

2 1 try from Purdue University and Ljrrowe 0

was commissioned there in 1966 Basu ally, the Agriculture De- Brum f ield 5 metal cabinets; wardrobes: 5 NOT1CEIw . llnotbe ns ._ upon com p le ti on of the Air Pytnient proposed that the

FOR SALE: Child’s swing set;

Notice

piece dinette set, dressers, chests. beds, refrigerator, electric and gas stoves: 9x12

ble for any debts but my own.

Woodson Inman.

Force Reserve Officers Training resene be half owned

Corps program.

His wife, Mary, Is the daugh-

rugs and pads: utility and base glLLERY’s Barber Shop. Same 1 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Estel

cabinets; radios and ‘ J

players.

record

records. Electric

heater, porch swing on frame; file cabinet; TVs. Many other articles. 24 E. Berry Street, (rear). 9:00 to 9:00 daily,

1:00 to 6:00 Sundays.

hours. NO RISE IN PRICES. , O’Conner of R.R. 1, Fillmore. FREE PARKING. |

by the government and half by

farmers.

Under the program. Schnittker suggested a target of a

2 3

8 0

9

0 22 FT

3

0

6 1 2 4

16

2

0

4 1 4 4

15 PF 5

3 1

5

3 1

19

DuBois 1 Totals 33

B-Game: Russellville 52, Pat-

ricksburg 30.

PARTS for all electric Shavers Mason’s Jeweler. FOR SALE: Special 2 for 1 sale—Now until February 15. Buy one Foliage Plant and get another free. Rejuvenate your planters now and save at Terrace View Gardens, on Indianapolis Road Phone OL 3-6932.

RENT a Water Conditioner. Culligan of Greeneastle, OL 3-5910. We’ll be here tomorrow 7 to service what we sell today.

LIVESTOCK CENTER HOGS *18.50-$19.00 LOCAL LIVESTOCK

Celery enters machine age OXNARD. Calif. UPI—Three years ago a pair of Ventura County farmers pooled their resources with an engineer to design and build a machine to

harvest celery.

After spending thousands of dollars on numerous design and engineering ideas, they now

j have

AT REELSVTLI.E

Reel

lion bushels; up to 200 million bushels would be in the farmerheld reserve, about 200 million in the government-owned reserve. and another 100 million bushels would be held privately by farmers and grain traders. For feed grains, the government wants a 40-million-ton reserve: 15 held by farmers. 15

Hogs 7,200: barrows and gilts

FOR SALE: That good Ball-' unevenly 25-50 lower; 1-2, 200- cro P-

band rubber footwear, those 240 lb. 19.00-19.75; 1-2. 185-200 Doing the work of as many good long wearing Wolverine pj, 18.75-19.25; 1-3, 220-250 lb. as 30 Tnen • the mechanical cel * shoes. that excellent Osh Kosh ig.50 - 19.25: 2-3, 220-270 lb. er Y harvester not only cuts the

vately. Soybean reserves should total 100 million bushels. Schnittker said, with 60 million

a machine which could ^ded equally between farm- ^ revolutionize the harvesting of ers and £ tne,nment - and California’s $17 million celery the other 40 miUion held pri -

vately.

Despite the move towards

Reelsvile

(62)

FC.

FT

PF

TP

Raab

.. 0

0

1

0

S. Peeler

.. 1

1

4

3

Chism ....

.. 7

3

3

17

Wallace

2

3

18

R Peeler

. 8

2

3

18

Hansel ....

.. 2

0

2

4

Victor ....

.. 0

2

0

2

Totals

26

10

16

62

Staunton

(60)

FG

FT

PF’

TP

Kumphf ..

.. 4

1

2

9

Campbell

0

3

0

Grisbv ....

4

0

10

Heaton ..

5

2

13

Gibson ....

4

2

20

Mitch el ..

.. 3

2

3

8

Totals

22

16

12

60

Monday, February 5, 1968

OFF and RUNNING By Tony D. Manuel General Manager

of the historic manor where and his family visited the Gen. Ulysses S. Grant made his manor after Grant notified the headquarters during the deci- president the war was near an sive months of the Civil War. end. The Lincolns stayed aboard The U.S. House has passed a the steamer, River Queen, bill by Rep. Watkins M. Abbitt. which was moored near the D-Va.. to permit the National manor. Grant and his staff Parks Service to purchase the quartered in cabins built on the property. It is still pending be- manor grounds and used the fore the Senate Appropriations main house as a headquarters. Committee, and action has been Appomattox Manor is fur- j postponed until 1968. nished in much the way it was Appomattox Manor is the during the Colonial period and oldest estate in America still during the Civil War. The outowned by the same family. It buildings, kitchen, dairy house was established in 1635 when and smoke house still have the Charles I gave a grant of 17 original appointments, acres to Eppes. In the parlor of the main Parks Service officials feel house is a round center table the manor should be preserved and dining chairs made by the as a historic shrine. The $900.- grandfather of Mrs. John F 000 price tag includes the cost Kennedy, a French cabinet of refurbishing the house and maker named Bouvier.

GREAT LAKES. HI. — Sea- grounds and the sale price of The house s kitchen is unique man Apprentice Samuel R. the property. in that it is divided into two Baird. USN, 20. son of Mrs. Presently the manor is fur- rooms, each with a large cookPauline D. Baird of Roachdale, nished with many articles used ing fireplace.

Ind., has been graduated from I nine weeks of Navy basic train-

4 4 2 2 4 1 1 21 | PF 3 3. 4 5* 3 2

The following remarks were taken from an address by Dr. Milford O. Rouse, president of the American Medical Association: To a society as large and diverse as this one, large government is a necessity. To a nation as strong as this one, strong government is indispensable. There are many things that can be done only by government and best by government. There are other things, however, that can be done only by the private organizations and individual citizens working together and best by them. There is a feature in the nature of government that keeps it from accomplishing many things that need to be done. An understanding of that factor both inside and outside of government would do much to explain the frequent frustration caused when well-intentioned programs do not live up to expectations. The feature is that no matter how positive a government wants to be and no matter how positive the statements of its officials are, its efforts are often negative in execution. Government can pass laws against theft, but no law can make a people want to be honest. Government can pass laws forbidding the abridgment of freedom of religion, but no law can make a people want to worship God. Government can pass law* against drunkenness, but no law can make a people want sobriety. Even in its attempt to assure basic civil rights to all citizens, which appears positive, government can only pass laws against denying a member of any race the right to live wherever he wants and to work wherever he qualifies. No law can make families, neighborhoods, employers or workers want to share what they have with members of another race. Government can and does try to stop people from doing undesirable things, but it cannot make them want to do desirable things. The real danger to freedom today, as well as the cause of much frustration, anger and bewilderment, is that too many people are looking to the government to grant freedom, assure rights, build prosperity and create brotherhood — things no government in history has ever been equipped to do alone. Many people expect the government to do what only they can do for themselves. Our nation faces an apparent widespread deterioration in personal integrity, seen in practically every segment and level of society, from the repairman who does shoddy ... to the factory worker who gives no thought to the quality of the product he is making . . . the clerk who takes office stamps . . . the salesman who pads his expense account . . . the manager who cheats on his taxes . . . the attorney who recommends an unjustified lawsuit ... to the physician who might expand a medical report to inflate the insurance payment to himself and his patient. It also is seen at every level of government, from censure proceedings in our highest legislative bodies to a city where national guard troops are mustered to prevent election abuses. Government alone cannot solve this problem. There already are laws against all of these things. The solution can come only from a heightened desire by all people to be honest themselves and a willingness to insist on integrity in their neighbors, associates and elected officials. Leaders in government understandably see it as their duty to do for the people of this country whatever they believe, or whatever they are told by citizen groups, is not already being done equitably, effectively and efficiently by the private sectors of society. When private citizens abdicate their responsibilities and ask the government to do a job, government responds in the only way it can: it passes more laws and usually appropriates more money. And every time another law is passed, it means another small or large restriction on somebody's freedom. As citizens, in other words, we have this choice when facing a situation that needs correcting. We can do it ourselves; or we can ask the government to pass a law that says we must not fail to do it—and that sets up an administrative mechanism to enforce the prohibition. The former choice is by far the best way to meet a situation, at least from the standpoint of economy and independence; and often from the standpoint of speed, efficiency and effectiveness, depending on the nature of the problem. The government will be called on to help. Its resources and responsibilities certainly cannot and should not be overlooked. But the initiative, leadership and work should remain in the hands of the citizens.

B-Game: Staunton 36. Reelsville 33.

Six more killed in state traffic

B’Gosh clothing and hundreds of other items at Boesen Stop-

18.00-18.75; 18.25; 1-2.

270-315 160-180

lb. lb.

17.25- stal ^ s out of the ground, but 16.00- a ^ so t r i ms them and puts them

Shop Store. Putnam ville. 18 2 5; sows steady, 25-50 lowCome see us, you will be glad e r; 1-3. 320-350 lb. 16.25-16.75; you did. 350-500 lb. 15.50-16.25; 2-3. 450600 lb. 15.00-15.75; boars steady at 14.00-15.50. Cattle 2.300; calves 50; steers uneven; choice or better fully steady: good and low choice •steady to weak; heifers steady; cows fully steady; bulls and WANTED: Ride to Indianapolis. ' vealers steady: high choice 8:00 to 4:30. Call OL 3-4058. P nme steers 28 00: choice 26 ’ 25 - | 27.25 good

16 Wanted 16 3 or 4 bedroom home, please write 431 W. Washington St Sullivan, Indiana 47882.

and choice 25.25-

into portable bins. The machine, now operating regularly near Oxnard, stems from the joint efforts of growers Roger D o n 1 o n. Tobias Grether and engineer Bob Raymond. California leads the nation in celery production with nearly 55 per cent of the U.S. Total. It ranks 23rd in value among the state's crops.

WANTED: Good home for Dal- : 2fi 25: P°od 23.50-25.25: standard niatian dog. OL 3-3740 eve-' and l o w g o od 21.50- 23 ..50: choice

nings.

heifers 25.25-26.00.

Fair rated top travel attraction

more farmer control of the reserves. The American Farm Bureau Federation will maintain its vigorous opposition to the

Monroney bill.

In testimony prepared for today’s subcommittee hearings. John C. Lynn, the Farm Bureau’s legislative director, said government - controlled resenes are “bad from the standpoint of producers, expensive from the standpoint of taxpayers, unnecessary for the protection of domestic consumers, and not necessary for exports or foreign relief.” He said farmers do not w 7 ant to compete with the Government in the marketplace

By United Press International

A fatality-free Sunday held down Indiana's weel.end traffic

-Cubs lose

who showed the only real po-

t e n t i a 1 for firing the ball de ath toll to six and the 1968 _ . . o- t jthrough the hoop during the toll to 107 compared with 101 a ° , eI ps r > '» n ><<n

| several hours after she was struck by a car while crossing a street intersection in Indianapolis. The car was driven by

game, was also in and out of! year ago.

the game, but managed to pick up 28 points to lead The Cubs. Linton controlled the boards

apolis.

Earlier in the day and Friday night, these fatalities were

added to the list:

WANTED: Service Stat on Attendant. Shoemakers Standmrti Service.

WANTED: Rugs, carpet up- Putnam Court Notes

holstery and wail cleaning I The Nation Wide Sendee Master System available thru better stores everywhere

Edward Banzhaf vs. Gottry Corporation. John Lipkin, com-

plaint for damages.

No matter how tightly Con-

SAN ANTONIO, Tex. UPI — gress attempt to lock up reThe United States Travel Sen'- sen-es, he said, ma ket prices ice has designated HemisFair will be affected because the ’68. as the prime travel attrac- trade will always know that the tion for overseas visitors in reserves can be released under 1968. specified conditions and those

Two fatalities Friday night

and four Saturday were record-

oo , ed - and Martin Countv bec ame

32-21 with Greeneastle getting, 1hc44th . nthestatptoregister E . F . Grizzle ^ Terre only nine grabs the first half. a blat . k mar k against its 1968 Haute, whose car collided with The Cubs ended up with 28 of ^ ra ffj C safety record. another in Terre Haute.

In addition to the weekend) Terry Lee Edwards, 17, Latoll. Leo Welp. 76, Birdseye, died; fayette. whose car went out of Sunday night in an Evansville control on Indiana 25 near Lahospital from injuries suffered j fayette and collided with an-

Jan. 25 in a collision of a truck j other auto,

and a farm tractor west of

Birdseye on Indiana 64. Elmer Parish. 75. Burns City,

died in Daviess County Hospital at Washington Saturday night

87 attempts from the field coming through with 18 buckets the last half, for thirty-two per cent and 24 of 33 from the free throw line. Linton hit 34 of 77 buckets and 26 of 34 free

throw's.

The Miners are 13-6 with the tw’o WIC wins over the weekend while Greeneastle stands at 12-5. The Cubs are 6-1, leaders of the conference, and Linton is 5-1 with three conference games left—West Vigo, Brazil, and Honey Creek. Gerstmeyer

Raymond Field, 23. Hartford City, who suffocated when mud fill the cab of his truck after it overturned in a rainsoaked median between lanes of U.S. 30

from injuries suffered earlier in near Wanatah in Porter County,

the day when his car collided with a truck on US. 231 near

Loogootee.

For service in Putnam Coun-1 Doris Jean Ash vs. Charles HemisFair opens here on conditions can be changed at is Lh® final WIC opponent for Mrs. Edna Schreiber, 85. In ty, call OL S-3562. W. Ash, suit for divorc*. April 6 for a six-month run. iany tims. ' Cub*. I dianapolis, died in a hospital j street.

Sue Kelly, 18, Cincinnati, a student at St. Mary's of Notre Dame, who was struck by a hit-run vehicle on a South Bend