The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 July 1968 — Page 6
Page 6
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana >
Monday. July 29. 1968
1 - Real Estate - 1
THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE ni Al'T Fl l. RKP HR C K RANC H HOMK VUTH AC Rl - ac;i:. on Tin: fillmori:MT. MFRIOIAN ROAD. 3 plus wooded acres. Lovely setting. Two large bdrms. and lull livable basement. F ireplace. NFU SKVFN ROOM HOMF IN GRFKNCASTLF. Frame and brick ranch. Basement. 2 car attached garage. Very quiet street. K. BFRRV. Very good 3 bdrm. older home. W carpet in liv. rm. and family-rm. Fireplace. Furl basement. Garage. S12.S00. F1LI.MORF. Two or 3 bdrm. home. Frame. Carpeted liv. rm. New water softener. Alum, screens and storms. 2 car garage. SM.OSO. ROCK VII.LF ROAD. Very attractive 2 bdrm. frame. Nylon carpet in liv. rm., din. rm. and hall. Excellent basement. White picket fence. A dream house for $12,900. 113 S. Jackson OL 3-6509 After hours, call 01. 3-6416 Ol. 3-3406 OL 3-4079 OL 3-4343
SHETR0NE REAL ESTATE 302 S. Ind. St.-Ph. OL 3-9315 - New Listings - 1006 HILLCREST Nice 3 bedroom ranch-type frame home. 1% baths, gas furnace, and carport. Stop in today and see this one. U.S. 40 n Warren twp., pretty brick home built in ’65, hardwood and tile floors, part basement, 2 baths, electric heat, rhermapane sliding glass doors, garage. 2 miles north ot i 70. 3/2 acres. HANNA ST. Older 2 story divided into 2 apts. 4 rms. bath and porch down, 3 rms., and bath up. Hardwood & tile floors, pa.t basement, gas heat, garage. Good income property. CAN'T SELL YOUR HOME? Let us do it for you. After Office Hours CallC. J. Knauer OL 3-3057 Bill Talbott OL 3-6328
ERNEST H. Collins AMO CO. fh0f£ 0L 3-3286
1117 INDIANAPOLIS ROAD 3 Bdrm. ranch home with large lot near shopping center. 634 EAST WALNUT-3 Bdrm. ranch, nice location, assume lower interest late and loan with small down payment. 105 NORTH CENTRAL2 story frame and aluminum 2 car garage and large lot. 208-210 E AST LIBERTY12) houses frame and block, investment property. 302 NORTH COLLEGE-2 story older home in good condition-2 car garage and nice corner lot. Let rented rooms make payments. 301 HIGHF ALL - 5 rm. house on beautiful corner lot in Northw'»od Addition, 472% loan can be assumed. Just right for young married couple. Ernest H. Collins & Co. Lannie Allee OL 3*5721 Bob Clark 386-7359 Lois & Ross Allee OL 3*4072
FOR SALE: Northwood 3 bedroom home 1 1/2 baths, central air conditioning, living, dining and bath carpeted. Fireplace with gas starter, storm windows, patio, disposal, large 2 car garage, trees and shrubery, near Northeast School. McKee, OL 3-3096.
Houses For Sale; $200. down to a vet. $400 to a non vet. 800 block Crescent Dr. Newly Decorated inside and out, 5 room, 3 bedroom, 1 bath, gas heat, $12,500. Payments about $100. monthly includes, insurance and taxes. For appointment call Cronkite Realty Co. Terre Haute.
1 - Real Estate - 1
For Sale
( 1 inton Township, near Raccoon Lake. 100-Acres , 10-Acres tillable. Modern 5* room and bath house. Plenty of water, year round running springs. Spring fed pone sites. Plenty of Locust, some saleable timber, also some young timber. Owner would consider a trade for suitable Greencastle property.
REALTY
II W00DJT.-P.0. BOX 195 OL 3-5000
FOR SALE: .68 Acre with 2 room house in Mt. Meridian on U.S. 40. $895.00. Phone 6723626.
2-Business Opportunity-2 WANTED: Lady to care for 1 child in our home from 3 to 12 p.m. Starting Sept. 19, would prefer someone in Fillmore school district, with own transportation. Will consider other. Call Brazil, 443-5781 before 2 p.m. or write Box 97 Harmony, Indiana.
4-For Rent--Apts.-4 Cole Apartments. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises. Being transfered- need someone to take over lease at Roban Apts- for information call OL34072 or OL3- 3286.
9-Home Items-9
1967 Singer Console $36.23 Full Balance Only five months old. Good condition. Walnut cabinet . Equipped to zig-zag, applique, monogram, mend and darn, sew backwards and forwards, over pins and so on. Assume six payments of 6.04 per month. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. Call OL 3-3987.
Adding Machine--$25.00, Refrigerators—$15.00 up. Electric Stoves—$10.00 up. T w i n Size Beds, complete—$15.00. Full size beds, c o mplet e—$25.00. Lamps—$1.00 up. Chests—$6.00 up, Electric sweeper--$20.00. 9 x 12 rugs—$6.00, TV’s—$20.00up. Desks—$6.00 up, Power Mowers—$15.00. Riding mowers— $60.00 up, perch swings—$7.50, girls & boys bikes — $15.00. Smith’s, 24 East Berry St. Open Daily 9-9, Sundays 1-6.
11 - Employment-Men-11 WANTED: Custodian for the Greencastle Community Schools, Apply at Office of Superintendent of Schools. OL 3-9771. WANTED: Janitor and doorman, apply at Voncastle Theatre. WANTED: Good reliable help, apply at Dave’s Clark Super 100 Station, E. Washington, v
12-Employment -12 Men - Women
SPARE TIME INCOME: Booming new field, refilling and quality coin operated dispensers in this area, for selling. To qualify you must have a car, exchange references, $900 to $3300 cash secured by inventory and equipment. Few hours weekly can net excellent income. More full time. For personal interview, send name, address and phone number to Inter-State Dist. Co., 7262 Natural Bridge Road, Suite #2 St. Louis Mo. 63121. Users of Rawleigh Products In S. Putnam Co. or Dist. in Greencastle, need service, No experience or capital necessary. See or write Rawleigh Dept. ING-450-876 Freeport, 111. 61032.
13 - Employment - Women -13 WANTED: Full time waitress and full tim^xcook at Jet. 36 and 231, Bainbridge, Y-Palace Restaurant.
15- For Sale -15 FOR SALE: 10 x 14 oval braided rug-brown shades, $50.00. 7954988. FOR SALE: 120 hens. 50? each, 1/2 mile East Mt. Meridian, William L. Huber.
15-For Sale-15
FREE $89.00 value Human Hair Wig by mailing this Ad back today. Pay for styling ONLY. Send to FREE WIGS, 102 W. Sedgwick-Philadelphia, Pa.
FOR SALE: 8 ft. cab over camper. Home made but nice. All accessories. Phone 526-2313. FOR SALE: No. 1 potatoes, 5?, No. 2 potatoes, 3?, creamers, 2? per pound, Arthur Yeargin, R.R, 2, Rosedale. FOR SALE: 14’ Philco refrigarator, in perfect condition. Call after 4:00 p.m., Cloverdale, 7954588. FOR SALE: Will have sweet corn Sat., July 27 also Sun. July 28, Ira Boswell, Ave. B. PARTS for all electric shavers. Mason’s Jewelers.
16-Wanted-16 WANTED: Names of Boys who are interested in evening Paper Routes, during SchoolYear. Apply now in order to get a choice route. Call 3-9070 after 1 p.m. daily. Ask for Mr. Knauer or Mrs. Schroeder. Office building and businesses to clean weekly or monthly have references. Phone OL 3-3244. Wanted. Rugs, carpet upholstery and wall cleaning. The Nationwide Master System available thru better stores everywhere. For service in Putnam County, Call OL 3-3562.
17 - Farm Equipment -17 New Case tractors and combines, prices wholesale and below. Free interest until spring 1969. Five crop years to pay. No payment’ til winter of ‘69 possible. We trade for anything of value. Come in, get acquainted with your new Case Dealer. P & S Inc. 1922 East National, Brazil, Ind. Phone 443-5101.
19-Business Service-19 WANTED: Cement work, sidewalks, driveways, patio’s etc. No job too large or too small. Free estimates. Phone OL 35840. WANTED: Window washing, general cleaning yard work. Call OL 3-3244. Hearing aid batteries and supplies. All makes. Open 24 hours a day. Commercial Hotel. Courtesy Beltone Hearing Service.
20-Livestock-For Sale-20 FOR SALE: 15 quality polled Hereford breeding bulls, guaranteed to please. Age 12 to 23 months. B.H. Franklin, Cloverdale, Ind. Phone 795-4636. FOR SALE: 10 weaning pigs; Hamp sow with 8 nice pigs; also 2 gilts to pig in Aug. Phone OL 3-3833. V.L. Hutson. West end Elizabeth St.
„ 21 - Notice - 21 REEVES WELDING & REPAIR is now open for Business see Jack Mendenhall. June’s Beauty Shoppe Bainbridge, Appointments Tuesday thru Saturday. Owner and operator June Sharp, 522-3305. Borrowing makes enemies. Rent tools and equipment from Castle Ren-tool, 730 Main. Open Weekdays 9:00 - 7:00 . Saturdays 7:00 - 5:00. OL3-3092.
Bryant means comfort and Joe Ellis has a complete line of Comfort including Gas or Electric air conditioning, gas, oil or electric furnaces, electronic air cleaners, humidifiers and water heaters. For complete comfort and immediate installation, call Joe Ellis Heating and Air Conditioning, OL 3-6712.
* 24 - For Sale-Pets - 24
FOR SALE: AKC registered Collies, phone* OL 3-6630.
Pope says ‘No’ to use of Pill
By RAY MOSELEY VATICAN CITY (UPI)—Pope Paul VI today overruled Roman Catholic liberals and condemned the pill and all other artificial means of birth control. The Pope also appealed to heads of government around the world to outlaw programs involving artificial birth control. In a 38.page encyclical to his bishops, the pontiff upheld centuries of church law against demands for change. Paul said, “The direct interruption of the generative process already begun . . . (is) to be absolutely excluded as licit means of regulating birth.” The 70-year.old pontiff said the ban—in some of the strongest, most unequivocal words of his pontificate— also applies to abortion, permanent or temporary sterilization and to every act that would “render procreation impossible.”
Thus the Pope rejected the recommendation of a liberal majority of his birth control study commission. Vatican ob. servers predicted today’s document would provoke a major crisis within the church. Msgr. Ferdinando Lambruschini, the Vatican theologian who announced the Pope’s decision to a crowded news conference, called it “an act of great courage by the Pope.” The monsignor said Paul acted “knowing it would not be easily accepted by all.” The Pope did not exercise the church doctrine of papal infallibility in making his pronouncement. But, like all decrees and decisions of a Pope, it must be accepted and obeyed by all church members, according to Catholic teaching. A Pope speaks “infallibly” only on matters of faith and morals. The last such infallible declara-
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Rocord-Holdor in ModoiV Individual Championship Play)
FAMOUS South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH A K 7 3 V 52 ♦ Q954 + J754 WEST EAST ^ J 9 5 4 A A 10 8 6 2 f K 8 ¥10 7 4 A J 7 3 2 A K 1086 A 9 8 3 A 6 SOUTH ♦ Q A A Q J 9 6 3 ♦ A £ A K Q 10 2 The bidding:
South
West
North
East
2 4
Pass
2 ♦
Pass
2 ¥
Pass
3 NT
Pass
4* 6*
Pass
5*
Pass
Opening lead monds.
— two
of dia-
Sam Fry, Jr., (South) was playing with Harry Fishbein in the 1954 summer nationals in Washington, D.C. They were using ■weak two bids, reserving two clubs as the only forcing bid. The two diamond response was negative, but Fishbein’s leap to three notrump announced a few scattered values. Fry later contracted for a slam in clubs. Six clubs would ordinarily go down one, but Fry made the slam by executing one of the neatest swindles ever recorded. West had a difficult choice of
HAND opening leads and finally selected a diamond. It was at once apparent to Fry that the slam depended on the heart finesse, since he had a spade loser to start with. The problem was to make the hand even if the heart finesse lost, and declarer sized up his chances perfectly when he played the queen of diamonds from dummy faster than you can say Sam Fry. East played the king and South the ace. Declarer then led a club to the jack and took a heart finesse, which ’ lost. West, after first stopping to congratulate himself on his sagacity in having chosen a diamond lead, triumphantly led the jack of diamonds — which Fry ruffed. Declarer drew two more rounds of trumps, cashed his hearts—on which he discarded dummy’s spades — and ruffed the queen of spades to produce the twelfth trick. One must sympathize with West, who could not imagine that Fry would waste the queen of diamonds on the opening lead, holding the singleton ace. West had no way of knowing that East had the ace of spades, and it simply did not occur to him to return any card but the jack of diamonds when he won the heart. Fry had taken the precaution of leading only one trump before taking the heart finesse, and East had no opportunity to give a nice juicy spade signal.
tion came in 1950 in Pope Plus XII’s proclamation of the dogma of the assumption of Mary. The Pope said in the encyclical, “God has wisely disposed natural laws and rhythms of fecundity which of State hospital quarantined WESTVILLE, Ind. (UPI)State Board of Health officials were scheduled to inspect the kitchens at Norman M. Beatty Hospital here today after one case of acute infectious hepatitus was confirmed and the hospital put under quarantine Saturday. The health officials were to attempt to isolate the source of the disease which is usually acquired by eating food contaminated with the heptatitus virus. The ailment affects the liver and is sometimes accompanied by jaundice, or yellowing of the skin. Hospital superintendent Theodore A. Hill announced Saturday that the hospital would be quarantined. It was to be closed to visitors and volunteer workers until further notice. He said all hospital employes and the other patients in the 2,000 - bed mental institution were immunized with injections of gamma globulin to prevent further outbreaks.
themselves cause a separation in the succession of births. “Nonetheless the church, calling men back to the observances of the norms of the natural law, as interpreted by her constant doctrine, teaches that each and every marriage act must remain open to the transmission of life.” The Pope re-emphasized the teachings of his predecessors who have held down through the ages that all contraception is evil. Paul particularly stressed a 1961 statement by the late Pope John XXIII that “human life is sacred.” The title of today’s document was “Human Life.” Appeals to Leaders In an appeal to world leaders, he said: “Do not allow the morality of your peoples to be degraded, do not permit that by legal means practices contrary to the natural and device law be introduced into that fundamental cell, the family.” He said governments must and can solve the problem of overpopulation by other means — “namely, the way of a provident policy for the family, a wide education of peoples in respect of the moral law and the liberty of citizens.” Paul specifically rejected the liberal contention that birth control should be permitted to safeguard or promote individual or family well being.
TV review By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI)-In the past television season,CBS-TV’s Monday night lineup demolished the opposition and earned the network ratings supremacy. The lineup consisted of “Gunsmoke,” the Lucille Ball and Andy Griffith series, “Family Affair,” and the Carol Burnett show. In the coming season, however, a battle royal is shaping up for Monday night ratings supremacy— and the outcome may determine which network scores best in the overall statistical competition. CBS-TV’s chief challenge will come from NBC-TV, which lost out last season with “The Monkees,” “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” gave way at midseason to “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh In,” and the other three series simply won’t be back in the fall. “Rowan and Martin’s LaughIn,” however, will indeed be back, and it has been a phenomenal success against the potent CBS.TV Monday pairing of “Gunsmoke” and “The Lucy Show.” Furthermore, NBC-TV will follow “Laugh-In” with its now Monday night movie series—the third weekly motion picture for the network,” which also shows feature films on Tuesdays and Saturdays. Continued on Page 7
Nixon plans autumn campaign in city ghettoes
(C 1968, King Features Syndicate, Inc.)
7-29-68
MIAMI BEACH (UPI)-Rich-ard M. Nixon, confident of winning the Republican presidential nomination, is planning and autumn campaign which will concentrate on pivotal states and carry him into big city ghettoes. Nixon’s proposed battle plan represents a marked shift from his unsuccessful 1960 campaign in which he lost the presidency to John F. Kennedy in the industrial states and the big cities of the East. A glimpse of Nixon’s plan was given by his campaign advisers as a sizeable force of Republican leaders gathered in this resort city for the preliminaries of the party’s 1968 national convention which opens a week from today. Dirksen Presides Senate GOP leader Everett M. Dirksen, chairman of the
DELINQUENT TAX SALE Notice is hereby given that the Treasurer ot Putnam County, Indiana will sell at the door of the Court House in the city of Greencastle, Indiana the following tracts of real estate for the payments of Delinquent Taxes against the same. Said sale will begin at ten o’clock A.M. Monday August 12, 1968. The following properties will sell for full amount of Delinquent taxes, plus current taxes for the year 1967, payable in 1968. CLINTON TOWNSHIP Walker, Wm. C. & Estella, A part of the east one half section 4-15-5 56.8 Acres S50.88 FLOYD Whitley, Cas. and wife, Groveland lots 8, 9, 10 $27.07 MARION Robinson, Ruby, a part of the east onehalf of the northwest section 9-14-3 3 and 2/3 Acres S220.39 Stuck, Gertrude, a part of the northeast section 30-14-3 20 acres $29.01 GREENCASTLE TOWNSHIP Calidonio, Frank and Freda, Keightly outlet 7 $210.98 GREENCASTLE CITY Home Building Corporation, Hillcrest 2nd outlet 72 C, D $49.37 Rader, Kenneth E. and Barbara J. Commercial lots 1. 2. 3 blk 15 plus 20 ft $114.06 Smith, Donald, Commercial lots 1, 2 blk 36 $228.10 York, Von E., Commercial lot 13 blk 28 $3.62 York, Von and Laura, Commercial lot T4 blk 28 $108.62 MADISON McMullen, Elbert and Grace part of the north one half of the northeast sec. 12-14-5 1.46 A $100.76 WASHINGTON Craig, Robert, Improvement on leased ground $78.22 WARREN Stpddard, Ernest E. and Ruth E. Putnamville lot 121, 122, 123 outlot 124 $58.42 CLOVERDALE TOWNSHIP Helm, Robert R. Sr. and Catherine D. Part of the northeast of the southeast of section 9-12-3 A $2.45 Moss. Glen E. and Gladys, a part of the southwest of section 3- 12-4 7.5 Acres $96.45 NOTICE -SALE OF REAL PROPERTYNotice is hereby given that each parcel of real property in the foregoing list will be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, said sale to be held at putnam County Court House cormnencing at ten o’clock A.M. on August 12. 1968. and continuing from day to day until all real property is sold. Said sale shall be for an amount not less than the sum of: (a) Delinquent special assessnients and taxes whether or not delinquent for more than 15 months, (b) Taxes and special assessments due and payable in 1968, whether or not delinquent. (c) penalties which may be due thereon, or due from the owner thereof with respect thereto: and, fd) five dollars ($5.00) costs. Dated this 19th day of July, 1968. Eston C. Cooper, Putnam County Auditor Roland Lane, Putnam County treasurer July 22-29-Aug. 5-3T
Nobel Prize winner dies
GOETTINGEN, Germany (UPI)—When Otto Hahn rea* lized the potential of his discovery he threatened to kill himself rather than tell Adolf Hitler. When the allies dropped the first atomic bomb his genius had made possible Hahn considered suicide again. Hahn finally died of a heart attack Sunday, 30 years after the discovery of nuclear fission that won him a Nobel Prize but which he came to regret. He was 89. On Dec. 18, 1938, Hahn, a professor at the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, raised the curtain of the atomic age by bombarding uranium with neutrons. He didn’t fully realize the implications of his feat but other scientists did. One of them, the late Dr. Lise Meitner, a Jewish colleague who was forced to flee Nazi Germany, tipped off allied scientists. They began to build the bomb. By that time Hahn saw the potential too. But, instead of developing nuclear weapons for the Nazis, Hahn encouraged top.ranking German scientists to stick to peaceful nuclear research. “If Hitler gets an atomic bomb I shall kill myself,” Hahn confided to trusted colleagues shortly after the outbreak of World War n. Largely as a result of his prestigious influence, Third Reich scientists always stressed the difficulties and enormous costs of developing nuclear weapons, influencing Hitler against the project. The Americans captured Hahn in April 1945. Interned in
a British country home in August 1945, he learned the bomb he shunned had been dropped on Hiroshima. “But this is horrible,” Hahn cried. He wept and collapsed in bed. He later said he spent the night considering suicide. The world judged differently. Hahn still was interned when he was awarded the 1944 Nobel chemistry prize in November 1945.
Search for killer in Huntington HUNTINGTON, Ind. (UPI)— Authorities here were searching for a man believed to have fatally shot Joseph Lyles, 22, Huntington, and to have stabbed and raped Karen Cogar, 19, Huntington, Saturday night. Police said the couple were parked along a Huntington County road when a man approached their car, shot Lyle in the back with a .22-caliber rifle, and later raped the girl. Miss Cogar told police she was thrown into the trunk of the assailant's car and taken to a wooded area where he stabbed her as she resisted his advances. She said he dragged her into the woods and, with her hands tied, stripped and raped her. Miss Cogar was listed in good condition in Huntington County Hospital Sunday. Police apprehended one suspect Sunday and took him to the girl’s hospital room for identification, but said they are investigating a lead on a different suspect.
temporary platform committee, was on the scene to preside over the start of hearings on the party’s basic campaign document on which the Republican nominee will stand or fall in November. Supporters of both Nixon and Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, the chief active contenders for the nomination, saw no battles in sight over the platform. There were bitter platform quarrels at both the 1960 and 1964 Republican conventions which were blamed in part at least for subsequent GOP presidential defeats at the hands of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Early % talks between key members of the 1968 platform committee were reported to have glowed with harmony. Rockefeller backers gave no indication they sought a convention test over any of the platform plans, including Vietnam. Despite this show of amity there was sharp disagreement between the Nixon and Rockefeller camps as to how the delegates were lined up at this point. Nixon’s lieutenants claimed privately that their man had more than the 667 votes needed to win a first ballot nomination. But a memorandum circulated by Rockefeller forces said Nixon was more than 150 votes short of the magic number and predicted that his total would
Market Report Monday’s hog m a r k e t, as quoted by the Greencastle Livestock Center, was $.25 to .50 lower, $20 to 21.50. I 1 Kill informer VIENNA (UPI)—A r thur Butler, superintendent of detectives at Scotland Yard, met secretly Thursday with a man believed to have information on the murder of John Buggy, who reportedly had found out who was holding a $220,000 share of loot from the Great Train Robbery. Details were not disclosed. Uuadruplets die RINTELN, Germany (UPI)— Quadruplets born prematurely Wednesday have all died. Rinteln Hospital officials said the babies were all girls, but refused to disclose more details.
shrink as the balloting continued. Nixon’s plan to concentrate on pivotal states was a significant reversal of his 1960 campaign against Kennedy, which was notable for fulfilling his promise to campaign in all 50 states. Nixon has since indicated this was a mistake because it left him exhausted and prevented him from concentrating on large, closely congested states. Viet Cong destroy planes SAIGON (UPI)—Viet Cong guerrillas raced down the flight line at the American fighter base at Tuy Hoa today, hurling satchels of explosives that destroyed two four-engine C130 cargo planes and damaged jet aircraft. U.S. military police chased the Communists and killed nine of them. One American trooper was wounded in the battle of the flight line. The Viet Cong darted onto the base, 240 miles northeast of Saigon, during a barrage by their mortar and rocket crews. The flash of exploding aviation gasoline and dynamite lit up the predawn coastal sky. In the light of the blasts, the military potice spotted the running bomb throwers and opened fire. Besides the two big C130 Hercules transports, at least one F100 Supersabre was reported damaged. Other, unidentified craft also were hit, military spokesmen said. The attack was similar in style to that made against the Udon base Friday, the first guerrilla strike against an American base in Thailand. In another action South Vietnamese troops killed at least 64 Communists and captured 12 in an eight-hour fight Sunday south of Da Nang, 360 miles north of Saigon. The Communists have been reported building up in the area for another assault against Da Nang, the nation’s second largest city.
Money for Sale! THE LOAN DEPARTMENT OF THE FRIENDLY FIRST-CITIZENS BANK IS AT YOUR SERVICE (Member FDIC)
