The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 4 September 1968 — Page 8

Page 8

Wednesday, September 4, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana \

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1 - Real Estate - 1

1 - Real Estate - 1

10 - Lost & Found -1 0

16 - Wanted - 16

Shetrone Real Estate 302 S. Indiana St. Phone OL 3-9315 - Offers - SOUTH ON 43 Lovely 3 Ixlrm, home, Liv, rni , hall, & bdrm, are carpeted, ha.s patio in hack, 2 baths, central air conditioning, gas fired furnace, 2 car garage, on almost 1 acre, WASHINGTON TWP. 1.14 acres, in Heelsville school district, pretty 3 bdrm. home, built in '59, tile floors, crawl space, oil heat, Vi car garage, soon to have city water 806 CROWN STREET Older 2 bdrm. home. Frame with imitation brick siding, floors carpeted, part basemen:. ideal home tor small family or retired couple. A cer office hours callC. J. Knaue-r OL 3-3057 Bill Talbott OL 3-6328 Cost Of Living And Building Prices Still Go^ ing Up. Better Buy Now!

fiMHC 01.-3-9229

SELECTED VALUES Greenbrier Much better than new. 3 bedroom all electric home, large kitchen - family room, 1/-2 baths, 2 car garage Many extras. Priced to sell. Redbud Lane Attractive colonial styled 3 bedroom home, large living room with dining area, ceramic tiled bath, kitchen with eating area, utility room , Attached garage. Large Landscaped lot. Immediate possession. South Arlington St. Very neat colonial styled home. Entry ioyer, large living room, kitchen. 3 bedrooms, V/i baths. Storage wardrobes in every room Carport with large outside storage Central Air conditioning. Priced very reasonable

Crescent Drive Completely tedecorated inside and out 3 bedrooms large living room with dining L kitchen, utility $500.00 down, FHA Loan available For Appointment. Phone Ve n Abbott OL 3-6387 Hal Hickman OL 3-9225

REAL ESTATE: All days are “Labor Days” for the P.G. EVANS COMPANY. In other words we work at our job; AND WE GET RESULTS TOO! 113 South Jackson Street. Phone OL36509.

BANNER ADS PAY

The P. G. Evans Co. Real Estate RENTALS UNFURNISHED FOLK ROOM API. Utilities furnished, $85 per month. Available soon. College area, TWO ROOM HOI SI:. U.ncr furnished. Gas heat. College area, FOR SALE AVFNl L F. Comfortable 6 rm, home, IC stories. Large lot, 4 rees. Garden space, $9,500, C ASSADA DRIVE. Frame and brick ranch, 3 bdrms, l 1 ^ baths. Den or office. Fireplace- Basement, $18,700, R.R. FILLMORF. Brick ranch on 3 plus acres. Lovely setting. Full liveablebasement, See this for sure-, IMS, Jackson 01. 3-6509 After hours, call OL 3-4079 OL 3-4343 OL 3-3406 OL 3-3740

88 acres, 8 room hse. good barn 2 acre lake, stocked. In Jackson township 5 acre tracks of land. Ruth Bartly and Assc. Phone 839-4511 or 24-4876 or Sandy Hargrove 596-3876 Roachdale.

3-Mobile Homes -3 1968 CLOSE OUT 17ft. selfcontained, 4ft. refrigerator $1595.--25ft. Avalon, 1 only $2995.--18ft. Avalon, $2995.-12 x 60 3 bedroom $5195.—New' 16ft. Algo $1295. Largest display of 24 wides in the state. VANBIBBER’S. Phone PE9-2341.

4- For Rent-Apts. - 4 FOR RENT: 1-1 bedroom furnished apt. and 1-2 bedroom unfurhished apt. Roban Apts. Phone OL3-3286 or OL3-4072. Cole Apartments. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.

6- For Rent-Houses - 6

FOR RENT: 1149 Ave. B, 2 bedroom home, very nice, modern, $85.00 per month. Phone OL3-3918. FOR RENT: 4 bedroom modern home in Fillmore, call OL33233 after 4:00 p.m.

9 - Home Items - 9

1968 SINGER CONSOLE 36.29 FULL BALANCE Only five months old. Good condition. Walnut cabinet. Equipped to zig-zag, applique, monogram, mend and darn, sew backwards and forward, over pins and so on. Assume six payments of 6.05 per month. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. Call OL 3-3987.

LOST: Black cat female, full grown, answers to Susie, last seen about 2 days ago. Red collar. Contact Mrs. Tharp 205 S. Arlington. OL3-6774. Lost: Brown billfold between my home and Marsh’s Store, containing papers and money. Reward. Lucille Stringer. Phone 526-2320 after 6:30 p.m.

11 - Employment-Men -11 HELP WANTED: Boys 16 and over for fountains, dishwasher, and delivery. Apply at Campus Double 602 South Locus; or phone OL3-3210. WANTED: Doorman - OperatorWill train, Voncastle Theatre. WANTED: High school boys evening work, apply at Leaning Tower Pizza, 311 South Bloomington, Phone OL3-3400.

12 - Employment -12 Men-Women HELP WANTED: Waitresses, a grill cook, a steam table operator, and dishwasher; Please apply in person. FAIRWAY RESTAURANT 1 MILE NORTH ON 43, Greencastle.

13 - Employment - 13 Women

WANTED: Woman for general Laundry, apply at Home Laundry and Cleaners in person at 217 E. Washington. WANTED: Clerk for Delicatessen part and full time. Apply in person, IGA. HELP WANTED: Day and night waitresses 5 days a week, adults preferred. Contact Bob Jackson, Double Decker Drive-In.

15- For Sale-15 PARTS for all electric shavers. Mason’s Jewelers. FOR SALE: Used kitchen cabinets, complete with double sink, faucets and formica top. Also buffet. Call OL3-3534. FOR SALE: Canning tomatoes $1.00 Bu. and you pick them. Robert Clearwaters 2 1/2 miles South of Stilesville.

FOR SALE: Boy’s 20” streamline bicycle with training wheels new red and white. 795-4225, Roy Bailey. FOR SALE: 12 feeders cattle, weigh about 500 to 600 lbs. Clifford Hillis, Phone OL3- 4048.

FOR SALE: 4 Sows and 29 pigs, 1 male hog, 1 young gilt, 7 hog houses, 2 hog feeders some feed pans. 1 crate hog rainer. Goldie Norman, R.R. #4, Greencastle, Northwest of Clinton Falls.

FOR SALE: Gas clothes dryer, perfect condition, $75.00, Phone OL3-3971 after 4:30 p.m. FOR SALE: A Bundy “B” flat clarinet with case and music stand, price $85.00, Phone OL39253.

FOR SALE: 2 portable corn cribs. 750 bu. capacity each. Call OL33859 or 526-2561. v FOR SALE: Rabbits and cages. Phone 362-1890. Crawfordsville Indiana. FOR SALE: 1 Studio Couch, makes into double bed. Phone OL3-9381. FOR SALE: Potatoes; #1-3?, #22?, creamers 1 1/2?, Arthur Year gin, RoSedale, Ind. FOR SALE: Gas space h eater5 or 6 room capacity with fire place effect. Phone OL3-4525.

16-Wanted-16

WANTED: Home for small dog. Phone OL 3-4855. WANTED TO BUY: 25 to 125 feeder pigs. Roy Smith .Phone 879-3945, Gosport.

WANTED: Good homes for free pups. Call 246-6175 after 5:00 p.m. Wanted. Rugs, carpet upholstery and wall cleaning. The NationWide Master System available thru better stores everywhere. For service in Putnam County, Call OL 3-35G2. WANTED: Cement work sidewalks, driveways, patios , etc. No job too large or small free estimates. OL3-5840. Kenneth Smith.

17-Farm Equipment-17 FOR SALE: Massy Ferguson combine 300 with tab grain head and 2 row corn head. M r s. Charles Buis. Phone 246-6317. FOR SALE: Allis Chalmer 66 combine, with scour clean, Virgil Phone 246-6328.

19 - Business Service -19 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: Gentle Buckskin mare and colt, phone OL3-4856.

FOR SALE: 20 purebred angus yearling calves, Mrs. Gene Huber, Coatesville, 386-2619.

Purebred Hampshire Sale, Monday night, Sept. 9 at 7:30 p.m. 30 Boars, 50 Gilts. Certified litter boars, age at 200 lbs. Write for catalog: Baughman Bros. R.R. # 3, Mooresville, Indiana 2 1/2 miles east of Brooklyn.

FOR SALE: 4 registered spotted gilts, Deb and Ron Alcorn, 5226843.

21 - Notice - 21

Rummage Sale Fillmore Methodist Church, at the courthouse Saturday 7, 8:30 a.m.

2 HOUR CLEANING SERVICE: Home Laundry and Cleaners, 217 E. Washington OL3-3191.

NOTICE: No hunting or tresspassing, day or night. Anyone found will be prosecuted. Floyd w. Philps.

Old pictures Copied--$2.00 for the negative, $1.00 for 5x7 matte print, or $1.25 for one 8x10. Ralph Taylor Photography, OL 3-5221.

NOW is the time to get fast repair service on electric tool, small engines, mower’s, etc. Castle- Ren Toll 730 Main Phone OL3-3092.

Do you remember Jack Mendenhall? He bought Reeves Welding Shop. Let’s go see him, he can fix it. Phone OL3-3350.

Big Trade-In allowances for your living room and bedroom furniture this month on new items while re-stocking our used outlet store for fall. RUS-SELLS FURNITURE.

NOTICE: Pick up your free Penney’s catalog today.

22-Motorcycles - 22

FOR SALE: 66 Suzuki 120 cc, good condition with extra, $125., Barcus 3 blocks west of Sinclair Cloverdale.

25-Want To Rent - 25

WANTED TO RENT: Modern house, 2 or 3 bedrooms, by Sept. 7, Phone 386-2637.

WANTED TO RENT: 2 or 3 room apt., furnished, in city, Phone 795-3334.

ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE The personal property of the late Oscar Summers will be sold at public auction at the farm, 8 miles north of Brazil on State Road 59, then 1 mile east or 15 mi. west of Greencastle, on SATURDAY, SEPT. 7,1968 at 11 o’clock FARM MACHINERY — One M. F. 2-row corn planter, with all attachments; one M. F-. No. 50 tractor and cultivator, '61 model; one M. H, No, 33 tractor and cultivator; one M. F. 3bottom 14 in. mounted break plow; one M. H, 3-bottom 14 in, mounted break plow; one GMC 2-ton truck, '53, with bed, hoist and shute; one J, D. Gyro rotary mower; double cultipacker, rotary hoe; Kewanna 9 ft. wheel type disc; spike tooth harrow/ 1 Brod-Kastor fertilizer and grain seeder on rubber; 1 H. C. 13 disc grain drill on rubber; large tank; tractor grass seeder; 38 bags of fertilizer; water tanks; heater; 6 hog houses; 2 hog oilers; subsotier; 3 hog feeders; platform scales; 2 forges; roofing; 2 ladders; rubber tired wagon; field sprayer; large anvil on stand; fence stretchers; heat houser; tool boxes; 2 screw jacks; air compressor; air tank; forks; shovels; barrels buckets; tarp; saws; cans; old harness; 4 grease guns; vise grinder; pipe cutters; threaders; wrench sets; hydraulic jack, nails; paint; oil; creeper; lights; hoes; scythes; axes; wrenches; grass seeders; hoist; belts and many other articles. Lunch will be served. Not responsible for accidents HOWARD C. SUMMERS, ADM. ALTON HURST, Auctioneer. KENNETH SHANNON and ELIZABETH HURST. Clerks. ROBERT NEAL. Attorney

BRYANT P0FF INC. NEEDS FACTORY HELP, FULL OR PART TIME NORTH ON RD. 75 COATESVILLE, IND. J—

Britannia first ST. LOUIS <UPP—When the British Consulate-General here announced that new quarters were found after 25 years in the same building, a spokesman said: ‘Tit this move as in so many other things, the British claim to be pioneers, since they will be the first occupants of the handsome new office building on the city’s revitalized riverfront.” Great Britain has been represented in St. Louis since the time of the Civil War. The office covers Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, Arkansas, southern Illinois and western extremes of Tennessee and Kentucky.

Nixon will speak Sept, at Indianapolis rallies

12

INDIANAPOLIS ( U P I ) - Republican state chairman Buena Chaney said Monday that GOP presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon will speak at two rallies Sept. 12 in Indianapolis, and that he hopes to have a date for vice presidential nominee Spiro Agnew later this week.

This will be the fifth appearance for Nixon in Indiana this year but his first since his nomination at the Republican national convention. Nixon will fly to Indianapolis from New Orleans, for a scheduled 3 p.m. rally at Indianapolis Weir Cook Airport, followed by

Two state depts. seek personnel

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Operating budgets for 1969-71 filed by the Labor and Alcoholic Beverage departments both warn that these agencies cannot fulfill their legal duties without an increase in personnel. Labor commissioner George Dieterle asked for an increase from the present 44 employes to 77 and a budget increase from the present biennium of $G44,09G to $1,624,002 for 1969-71. “The additional personnel is sorely needed to enable Indiana to meet its moral and legal responsibilities to the working people of the State of Indiana,” Dieterle wrote. “Only one state (Mississippi) spends less per

worker on job safety. The Indiana Division of Labor has not kept pace with the growth of industry in our state.” The Labor division also said that more out-of-state travel funds are needed because of “a rise in unionization among publie employes which generates a new need for our participation in the regional and national conferences called to discuss these and similar subjects.” ABC chairman Joe Harris asked for an additional 25 exelse officers and pointed out that currently there are $1,026,057 in dedicated funds for use only by the ABC which have not been utilized and which

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker

could go for excise police. He said the 25 additional officers and their transportation and cars would cost $195,887 for the two-year period. Harris said that there are now over 8,201 liquor permits and the current staff is unable to make even an annual inspection. He asked for an increase in total personnel from the present 112 to 137 and a budget for the next biennium of $2,956,679 compared to the present biennium’s budget of $2,117,458. The Law Enforcement Training Board also asked for an increase in its staff of one employe—director Herman Freed— to a staff of 9 by 1971. Freed said the added personnel would be needed as plans for mandatory training of police officers and construction of a police officers and construction of a police academy progress.

a Monument Circle rally from 4:30 to 5 p.m. Then he will meet with the National Citizens Committee for Nixon and Agnew that night. Members of the committee will come from throughout the nation to attend the session. Chaney said he and GOP national committeeman L. Keith Bulen will attend a meeting in New York City Thursday with the Nixon staff and they hope to return with dates for Agnew to speak in several Indiana cities. Chaney and Bulen, who shared the news conference, expressed confidence the Republicans would win in Indiana and the Democrats would suftei most from inroads by former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace and Sen. Eugene McCarthy. These two men are named as presidential candidates on two of the minority party tickets which have filed for a place on the Nov. 5 ballot. ‘‘In my judgment, Wallace has peaked and I don’t think he can rebuild,” Chaney said. “I wish the election were Sept. 5 instead of Nov. 5.” Chaney said he was aware that some politicos think the vote Nov. 5 will be light but that he disagrees. “Early registration figures indicate the reverse,” he said of the reports on light voting.

(Top Record-Holder in Masters’ Individual Championship Play)

North dealer. North-South vulnerable. NORTH 4 A 10 8 7 ♦ A K 9 •=» ♦ 74 4 A 7 3 WEST EAST 4KJr> 4Q6432 *J6 4Q832 4 10 6 5 4 X Q 10 9 6 2 +KJ85 SOUTH ♦ 9 4 10 7 4 4AKQJ9832 + 4

ing a vulnerable grand slam on i the accompanying deal. West led a club and declarer wound up a trick short when he | scored only the obvious twelve tricks. However, Zananiri could have made the contract had he played the hand exactly right and executed a trump squeeze. Declarer wins the club lead with the ace, cashes the ace of spades, and ruffs a spade. He then plays six rounds of trumps to produce the following position, East not yet having played to the last trick:

North

The bidding:

North

East

South

West

i 4

Pass,

34

Pass

3 4

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5 + 7 ♦

Pass

5 NT

Pass

Opening lead—six of clubs. In a tournament the size of the Third World Bridge Olympiad (17.280 deals were played), it is certainly normal to expect many opportunities for brilliant play to be missed by the various contestants, and that a certain amount of gnashing of teeth would ensue whenever such an

occasion arose.

Here is one such hand that occurred in the match between Canada and Egypt. The Canadians won by 67 international match points to 44 (18 victory points to 2), but the Egyptians could have emerged victorious had Zananiri (playing with Omar Sharif l succeeded in mak-

4 10 8 4 A K

West

East

4*

4 Q 6

4 J 6

4 Q 8 3

+ Q

South V 10 7 4 ♦ 3

; East cannot discard successfully at this point. If he parts with a spade, declarer enters dummy with a heart and ruffs a spade to establish dummy’s

ten.

If East discards a heart instead, declarer cashes the A-K of hearts and ruffs a spade to score his thirteenth trick with the ten of hearts. It is not easy to visualize the end position at the start of the hand, but if declarer knows how the adverse cards are divided, he cannot be stopped from taking all the tricks.

(© 1968, King Features Syndicate, Inc.) 9-4-68

m NEW Se/'/one BfiAUo

AII-in-the-Ear hearing aid “with MORE POWER! The Next Service Center Will Be Held On Friday, September 6 COMMERCIAL HOTEL MR. O. L CAMP*HI CnrtifUd Hearing AM Audiologist, will bo boro to eorvo you. ntEE HEARING TESTS, REPAIRS, BATTERIES ond CORDS ARi AVAILABLE AT All TIMES AT THE COMMERCIAL HOTEL STOP IN AT THE FRONT DESK. OR CALL PHONE 0L 3-5617

Young drivers CINCINNATI (UPI) - Billy Higgins and Harold Wilson, both of Dayton, Ohio, were headed for Kentucky when police stopped them for driving without a license. Billy is 11 years old and Harold is 8, according to police. They had driven 22 miles. Special investigation WASHINGTON (UPI) — The 28th International Congress on Alcohol and Alcoholism meets in Washington Sept. 16 beginning with a press luncheon at the Shoreham Hotel. Cocktails will be served at noon, the announcement said.

When I uition Goes l T p Savings A-Ccounts Must! Start that college fund at l!ie friendly 3firai-(CtiiHrns Hank Sc (True! (Member FulC)

Liscrimination CHESHUNT, England (UPI) —Sidney Layzell, 90, lias had to give up driving. Despite 70 years with a perfect road record, no company will insure him because of his age. i 1

we pay ! you to save... ‘ami the pay />• finnfi''

SAVINGS & LOAN

CAREER OPENING FOR AN EXPERIENCED APPLIANCE TECHNICIAN To Service Frigidaire and Speed Queen Major Appliances • SALARY OPEN • COP.TANY - PAIL INSURANCE • PAIL VACATIONS • SICK-LEAVE PLAN • EXPERIENCED DEALER ORGANIZATION • FACTORY TRAINING SCHOOLS • COMPLETE SHOP FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT Please Contact Mr. Vullard Sunkel Phone OL3-6517 HORACE LINK & CO. 24 S. Indiana St. Greencastle