The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 September 1968 — Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Monday, September 9, 1968
Page 4
1 - Real Estate - 1 ‘
Shetrone Real Estate 302 S. Ind. St.-Ph. OL 3-9315 - Offers -- Indianapolis Road Very nice 3 bedrm. frame home, has l l / 2 baths, gas heat, immediate possess ion. 617 E. Walnut Older 114 story home. 2 bedrm., part basement enclosed back porch, gas heat. Back porch and basement heated. Cloverdale N. West St. Older frame home. Has 4 rms. and enclosed back porch. 2 bedrms. Heated by oil stove. Back lawn has partial fence. East Walnut Pretty brick ranch-type home. 3 bedrms., hardwood floors, patio, gas furnace iVz car garage with black top drive. We Have Others. After Office Hours CallC.J. Knauer-OL 3-3057 Bill Talbott-OL 3-6328
VET. SPECIAL: $200. down to vet. and $400. to non vet. 800 block Cresent Dr. Like new, 5 room, 3 bedroom, gas heat. $12,100. Cronkite Realty, 811 Lafayette Ave., Terre Haute 2326595, 234-1386 and 235-9656.
FOR SALE: 3 bedroom modern home large closets, complete built in Kitchen, Hardwood floors built-in Kitchen. Hardwood floors, furnice, storm windows, garage, on corner lot in Roachdale near town. Call 596-7571.
4-For Rent-Apts.-4 FOR RENT: 1-2 bedroom furnished apt. Roban Apts. Phone 013-3286 or OL3-4Q72. FOR RENT APT: Mod. 2 bedroom, Central Air Cond. Phone OL3-554Q. Cole' A p a r tmen.t’s. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.
6 - For Rent-Houses - 6
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom modern house, Edgelea Drive, electric heat, central air condition. Howard Moore OL3-5789.
9- Home Items - 9
1968 SINGER CONSOLE 37.16 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 $6.19 per month. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. CallOL 3-3987.
FOR SALE: Used Whirlpool washer and gas dryer used in private home regularly. Both for $50.00. Phone OL3-5532.
10-Lost & Found -10
LOST: Long haired black cat in vicinity of Jones School. Phone OL3-6235.
11 - Employment-Men -11
HELP WANTED: Boys 16 and over for fountains, dishwasher, and delivery. Apply at Campus Double 602 South Locust or phone OL3-321Q. Employment Men:Steady employ, ment for good utility and delivery man. Prefer family man. Must have good character references, and dependable. Rus-Sells.
12-Employment-12 Men-Women
Wanted At Once-Men or Woman full or part time to supply families in S. Putnam Co. or Dist. in Greencastle with Rawleigh Products. Experience unneccessary above average earnings. Write Rawleigh Dept. INH-450-390 Freeport, 111. 61032.
13 - Employment t 13 Women
WANTED: Lady for cashier clerk in local store. Apply to P.O. Box 196 giving age and qualifications.
14-Automotive-14
FOR SALE: A 1964 Triumph Bonneville, priced to sell. Call OL3-4351 after 3:00 p.m.
15-For Sale-15
PARTS for all electric shavers. Mason’s Jewelers. FOR SALE: Rabbits and cages. Phone 362-1890. Crawfordsville Indiana. FOR SALE: Green beans, tomatoes, cabbage, cucumbers, Ira Boswell, Ave. B. FOR SALE: Potatoes; #l-3£, #22$, creamers 1 l/2£, Arthur Yeargin, Rosedale, Ind. FOR SALE: Horses for sale or Trade: Call P.E. 9-2436.
FOR SALE: four 14” Keystone mag wheels, four F70 wide oval tires, 2 new, one 7.50 x 14 new tires for Pontiac or Chevrolet. Will sell reasonably for cash. Phone PE9-2823.
16-Wanted-16
WANTED: Ride to Danville, Public Service, Monday thru, Friday, 8-5. Phone OL3-5798 after 4 p.m. WANTED: Good homes for 3 kittens, 7 weeks old, plump, healthy, playful, gentle, house trained. Phone OL3-4289.
WANTED; Baby sitting day’s, phone OL 3«6121.
WANTED: Will do ironing pick up and deliver, after 4:00 p.m. OL3-4217.
Wanted. Rugs, carpet upholstery and wall cleaning. The Nation*Wide Master System available thru better stores everywhere. For service in Putnam County, Call OL 3-3562. WANTED: Cement work sidewalks, driveways, patios , etc. No job too large or small free estimates. OL3-5840. Kenneth Smith.
19-Business Service-19
Hearing aid batteries and supplies. All makes. Open 24 hours a day. Commercial Hotel. Courtesy Beltone Hearing Service. York’s Upholstery, furniture, cars, trucks, free estimates,lots of samples to choose from, pick up and delivery.
20 - Livestock - For Sale - 20 FOR SALE: Registered Yorkshire boars, Irvin Wallace, 1 mile east of Groveland on U.S. 36, Phone 845-2330. FOR SALE: One Corriedale Ram, one Columbia Ram, 672-3221, or can see at Rimer’s one mile east of Manhattan on Road 40. FOR SALE: 7 quality polledhereford bulls and 10 yearling heifers, the kind to start a registered herd. B.H. Franklin, Cloverdale, Indiana 795-4636.
21 - Notice - 21
NOTICE: BEGINNERS TAP CLASS starting for 1st grades and up on Saturday at 4:30. Contact Jonie Skaggs at the former Blue Wolf Teen Club or call 845-3415 during the week. 2 HOUR CLEANING SERVICE: Home Laundry and Cleaners, 217 E. Washington OL3-31J£.
24-For $ale-Pets-24
Lassie type, sable and white, 6 weeks, collie puppies. Lois Zeiner, Fillmore. 246-6149.
A Good Way
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CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Rocord-Holdor in Mattora’ Individual Championship Play)
North dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH 4 A 10 4 K86 4 AST 4KQ10 7 3 WEST EAST 44 4J765 4 J 10 5 2 4 Q 7 4 3 4 K 10 9 6 442 jkJ984 4652 SOUTH 4 K Q 9 8 3 2 f A9 4 Q J 5 3 4A The bidding:
North
East
South
West
1 NT
Pass
34
Pass
3 NT
Pass
44
Pass
44
Pass
4 NT
Pass
64
Pass
6*
Pass
6*
Pass
7 4
Opening lead—jack of hearts. The United States met Italy in the 25th session of the qualifying rounds, at which point the Italians were leading the field with 380 victory points, while the Americans were third (6 points behind Australia) with 354 victory points. When the session was over, the U.S. was still third, but they had clobbered the Italians in a surprising, one-sided defeat by a score of 19 victory points to 1. The huge Bridge - O - Rama audience sat thoroughly astonished and unbelieving as Robinson, Jordan, Kay and Kaplan, playing against Forquet, Garozzo, Belladonna and Avarelli, ran up a score of 46 International match points to 0 during the first 10 hands of the 20-board match. Nothing like this had ever happened before in the long and distinguished history of the Blue Team which, since 1957, has dominated the world of bridge. True, the Italians fought back as usual and scored 20 to 0 in the next ten boards, but the U.S. had a fine 46-20 victory to show for their efforts. Both teams bid seven spades
on today’s hand from that match, and both declarers (Robinson and Avarelli) went down one after winning the heart lead and cashing the A-K of spades. East was bound to win the setting trick with the jack of spades, since South could not shorten himself sufficiently in trumps to coup East’s J-7. Actually, the grand slam can be made by anticipating a 4-1 trump break and preparing early for the trump coup. Declarer wins the ace of hearts, cashes the ace of clubs and K-A of spades, and ruffs a club. He then leads the queen of diamonds. Whether West covers does not matter. Assume he does. Dummy wins with the ace and plays the K-Q-10 of clubs. East cannot afford to ruff any of them and declarer discards the 3-5-J of diamonds. He then ruffs a diamond and returns to dummy with a heart. East’s J-7 of trumps automatically succumb on the next lead from dummy.
New “land conservation act of 1969” proposed by Mitchell
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) — A proposed new “land conservation act of 1969” was unveiled by director John E. Mitchell of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources Thursday. Mitchell said it was “the most important legislation” to be proposed in the area of conservation. “Indiana is a small state. We have only 23 million acres, the smallest west of the Allegheny Mountains and we already are on a collision course in land use,” Mitchell said. “We are making so many mistakes in deciding how to use our land that if we don’t do something soon we will not have any land left to use properly.” Mitchell said the proposed bill will carry with it a request for a $500,000 appropriation for
the biennium. He stressed that the proposal is not a state zoning plan but a vehicle for making available to local officials the complicated information about types of soil, drainage, mineral deposits, underground water sources, geological strata, historic sites, and other information needed to make the wisest decisions. Madison County Sample He said complete information is not available now on a county basis but by the time the legislature convenes, or possibly by the pre-legislative conferences, he hopes to have a sample package ready on Madison County to show the lawmakers what the law would do. Madison County was picked because information was avail-
X
Washington window
There was an aspect of Chicago police tactics during the recent Democratic convention that went almost unnoticed until after the worst of the violence was over. The police and the Secret Service had picked up reports that Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and other prominent Democrats were targets for assassination. When this story came out after the convention ended, some dismissed it as apologist propaganda from the Daley organization. Perhaps.
By MERRIMAN SMITH What would these same people have said, however, if one of the leading Democrats had been killed by a sniper’s bullet or blinded by acid? Police Precautions Which brings to mind something that happened in New York city shortly after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The new President, Lyndon B. Johnson, was making his first trip to Manhattan as chief executive. When Johnson heard of the elaborate police precautions planned for his visit, he asked
Humphrey promises “new day” in America, if elected president
By STEVEN GERSTEL PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — GOP presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon has had the campaign pretty much to himself for the past week. ‘Now his Democratic opponent, Hubert H. Humphrey, plans to go after him at full tilt from coast to coast. Humphrey’s basic gospel embodied a “new day” in America if he is elected. If this was not criticism of his present superior, President Johnson, it was saying things would be markedly better with Humphrey in the White House. This was a long day for the vice president, stretching from Philadelphia to Denver and Los Angeles. At this stage of his travelling campaign—the begin-
—Agency
The Muncie request approved was for a total of $9,000 instead of $12,000, of which the federal share will be $6,750. Also the Fort Wayne total was reduced to $18,648 by deletion of an item of $1,391 for the Fort Wayne Police Academy. The total federal share becomes $12,638 and the local contribu-' tion would be increased to $6,010. Other totals remained the same. They were Indiana state police, $10,000; Allen County Sheriff, $9,750; Evansville $24,500; Gary, $26,700; Hammond $7,480; South Bend, $20,000, and East Chicago, $7,480. These inelude both federal and local funds. Allen said that Indiana will get about $500,000 under the act but that the rest of the applications must await executive creation by Branigin of a planning agency as required by the federal law. He explained that this agency is to recommend the “action grants” sometime after Dec. 19 and he is hopeful that the Indiana Law Enforcement Training Academy may be included among the approved projects. However, Allen said he felt that the 1969 Legislature may want to establish a permanent planning agency which would replace that Branigin now is planning to establish by executive order.
ning stage—the vice president had few confetti and ticker tape parades with giant rallies in convenient ballparks in his future. He planned to concentrate for the time being more on televised question-and-an-swer sessions, two of which he set up in Philadelphia today. Starting the laborious eightweek journey to election day, Humphrey sounded a basic campaign theme: “The choice in 1968 is this: Are we going to accept as inevitable the conflict and hatred which are becoming a part of our everyday life? Or are we going to stand up together and say: This can be done in America. We can make this country work. “That is the choice: Between one America and an America of apartheid. That is the choice: Between the America of the old era and the America of the new day.” The speech was prepared for delivery in Philadelphia’s John F. Kennedy Square, where the vice president was to address a rally after parading through the city’s downtown area. This was in addition to his two television sessions here. The vice president, who started hitting Nixon hard
—Picnic
th is Dr. Jerome C. Hixon. From the esteemed vantage point of just completing his 43d year in the English Department of the University, he will present “DePauw University-Past, Present and Future”. A section of the De Pauw Faculty Women’s Club, the Newcomers group is especially designed for women in the first two years of affliation with DePauw. The “second year newcomers” are the hostesses and officers of the group. All Newcomers are also members at the same time of the parent organization, Faculty Women’s Club. Serving as officers in Newcomers for 1968-1969 are: Mrs. William Marley, President; Mrs. Russell Miller, Program Chairman; Mrs. Donald Bossart, Membership Chairman; and Mrs. Robert Rennick, Hospitality Chair, man; with Mrs. Kenneth Wagoner as Adviser.
during a speech to a national B’nai B’rxth convention in Washington Sunday, today again accused the Republican of seeking support from the same type of voter as wooed by George C. Wallace—“for the votes of people who want at best to slow things down when it comes to programs that offer the way out of tension and trouble in America.” —Christmas groups are cooperating with our chapter volunteers in sewing the bags. Many firms have donated different articles. When the bags are finished, organizations will join with Red Cross volunteers in packing them.” Each bag contains a holiday greeting card carrying the names of these contributors and the name of the Red Cross chapter here. Among the items the bags packed here will contain are: ballpoint pens, pensized flashlights with batteries, small pen knives, windproof-type cigarette lighters with accompanying package of lighter flints, plastic soap case, small packages of writing paper with self-seal envelopes, small address book, plastic toothbrush holder, terry cloth washcloth (dark color), nail clipper, plastic cigarette case, comb, mailing size voice tapes (reels of 3”tapes -150” length)., small tins of VACUUM PACKED nuts or candies, small plastic snapshot holders, small kitchen size and sandwich type plastic bags (not wax paper), “wipe & shine” packet shoe polish, pocket games (small enough to put in pocket or plastic bag, i.e., small decks of playing cards chess, pinochle, etc.), pocket or diary-type calendars, “wash & dries”. Do NOT include gifts in breakable containers, food in nonvacuum containers, medica ments, reading matter (staff in Vietnam advise there is an ample supply of paperbacks available), or alcoholic beverages. Work on the bags already has begun and will continue until Putnam County’s quota is fin. ished. “With October 15 as the final deadline for shipping, the Putnam County Chapter is aiming at completion of the project by October 1, Miss Nelson said. Your help with this project would be greatly appreciated.
that this show of police strength be scaled down drastically. When the Johnson party reached New York, however, the police were out in the fullest possible force. Members of the President’s staff were critical. One of New York’s high police officials listened to their complaints then replied: Sufficient Protection “Your idea of what constitutes sufficient protection is your own business. But this is my town and I am not going to have him shot in it—I’ve got one whim and that is to get him in and out of New York City unharmed. Once he leaves here, it is your business again.” There were no more complaints from the Johnson people. The attitude of this New York police executive undoubtedly will be reflected in other American cities this fall as Richard M. Nixon and Humphrey carry their election campaigns to the people. Demonstrators will be dealt with harshly . Newsmen of necessity must be close to a candidate when he is exposed to the public, and they, too, will feel the impact of police concern. The enormous press parties traveling with each candidate will come in for more police muscle than local news person, nel for the simple reason that most political travel parties are rather loose with their credentials and the police know it. Republican and Democratic campaign planners could do a lot to improve this situation by devising truly distinctive eredentials and being intelligently tight-fisted about who gets them. Rooms by the Hour NEW YORK (UPD—Travelers passing through New York may rent rooms at the New York Hilton Hotel by the hour under a new “supersonic age” plan announced by Managing Director Robert F. Quain. Rates are $12 for a minimum of three hours, and $3 for each additional hour.
Market Report Greencastle Livestock The Daily Report $20, 19.75 to 20.25.
LEGALNOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Public Service Commission of Indiana Docket No. 31887. In the matter of the petition of
Indiana Bell Telephone Company, Incorporated and General Telephone Company of Indiana, Inc. and all other telephone companies joining in this petition for approval of revised schedules setting forth rates, tolls and charges of all telephone companies in the state of Indiana relating to intrastate message toll telephone service throughout the state of
Indiana.
Notice is hereby given that the Public Service Commission of Indiana will conduct a public
hearing in this cause in PSCI Room 907, State Office Building, Indianapolis. Indiana, at 9:30 a.m.. EST. on Thursday, September 26,
1968.
Public participation is requested. Public Service Commission Of Indiana. By Richard P. Stein, Chairman. Indianapolis. Indiana, September 3. 1968. Sept. 9- IT
able from the Soil Conservation Service and the Indiana University Division of Geology. Still needed for the sample package is information at the ground level, or landscaping level. The proposed law would create a new Division of Soils in the Department of Natural Resources and would continue and speed up the cooperation existing now among the various state and federal services in land use. It would put added responsibility on the existing boards of the County Soil and Water Conservation Districts which now function in 90 counties on very limited funds. Mitchell said the proposed law would channel state funds to the counties. Only Marion and Tipton counties now lack such county boards. “There are three categories of land-use decision makers in Indiana,” Mitchell said. “The foremost is the individual land owner. Next is the local planning board and zoning authority. The third is the eminent domain authority whose powers may override the first two.” Highways Over Bogs He said highways sometimes are built over bog areas at greater expense and continuous maintenance, and that expensive buildings are put over valuable mineral deposits because there is no coordinated land use plan. “We need to make the same effort in respect to our land as we are making with our water resources,” he said. Mitchell said that at the present rate of progress of the Soil Conservation Service “it will be
20 years” before the survey for Indiana is done “and we need to put in some state money” to get the information while it still will help local planning. To be incorporated into the local “packages of information” for local land use planning would be the results of a historical site survey now being made by Dr. George Blake, Franklin College. Mitchell said that beginning Sunday, he will make seven appearances at area meetings of the local Soil and Water Conservation Districts to explain the proposed law. These are to be Sept. 8 at Hanna, Sept. 12, Columbus, Sept. 18, Muncie; Sept. 25, Indianapolis; Sept. 27, Paoli; Sept. 28, Fort Wayne, and Sept. 30, Vincennes.
—Native
ize in professional textbooks for the education of teachers. Jones has over 20 years of experience as a publisher in the field of teacher training. Said R. P. Ettinger Jr. Chairman of the Board of Wadsworth on the new Jones division, “Although mergers and consolidations are the fashion in our industry, we are bucking the trend by developing autonomous publishing units located strategically throughout the United States.” In addition to its own operation, Wadsworth has two other companies located in CaliforniaBrooks/Cole Publishing Co. and Dickenson Publishing Co. Jones is a former employe of the Daily Banner and also worked while in college on the lePauw, the campus newspaper.
Timetable calls for Soviet withdrawal
By JAMES O. JACKSON PRAGUE (UPI)-The secret Kremlin timetable calls for withdrawal of all occupying forces from Czechoslovakia by Oct. 27 if “normalization is favorable.” This was disclosed today in a Czechoslovak document, one of several of its kind, described by sources as an account of the Moscow talks. There was no lOfficial confirmation. News of the document and its withdrawal schedule came as the Czechoslovak press, hindered but not cowed by political censorship, carried news reports describing rowdyism and health hazards created by “foreign troops on our soil.” The sources distributing the three-page, roughly typed document said it was an account of the post-occupation negotiations between Soviet and Czechoslovak leaders by a top-ranking Czechoslovak official who attended. Troop Withdrawal Date It said the total withdrawal of troops was to be completed by Oct. 27 “at the latest if the development toward normalization t of Czechoslovakia is favorable.” The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda
last week defined “normalization” as complete suppression of all counter-revolutionaries. The document also said the Soviet Union had checked with unnamed American officials before the invasion to see if, in the U.S. view, the spheres of influence set up by the World War II Yalta and Potsdam agreements were still valid. It said the U.S. officials agreed they were and had “no interests. . behind the (CzechoSlovak) border.” It said the “only reason (for the invasion) was the security of the border (with West Germany) according to the Yalta-Potsdam accord.”
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JOB OPENINGS Now Available On 1st, 2nd, 3rd shifts Previous experience not necessary. To learn about our company, our job openings and complete program benefits visit our Personal Dept. Hours 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Malory Capacitor Company An equal opportunity employer. Greencastle, Indiana.
