The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 September 1968 — Page 7

Thursday, September 26, 1968

The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana

Page 7

Car sideswiped near Roachdale

ROACHDALE, Ind.- Damages amounting to an estimated $400 were reported yesterday as a result of a two car accident on Road 250 E, south of Roachdale. Deputies said a car driven by Oscar Lewis, 82, Roachdale sideswiped a vehicle driven by Theo-

line Bee, 64, of 415 Shadowlawn. Authorities said Lewis apparently fell asleep at the wheel. * * * Bombing from the air started fluting World War I when German Zeppelins raided the English const in 191 r».

Defense BEIRUT (UPI)—Bishara Sirhan, father of the accused assassin of Sen. Rol^trt f. Kennedy, today began the first phase of a fund-raising mission to finance his son’s defense. The elder Sirhan said he also planned to raise money in Kuwait, Egypt and other Arab countries.

DOG GONE WORLD--National Dog Week is being quietly observed this week at DePauw University. Some of the campus' better travelled dogs posed briefly for these candid portraits to mark the occasion. They are from left to right four-month old St. Bernard "Thibedaux XV" whose home is the Sigma Nu fraternity; 18-month old Bassett "Kimble" who boards at the Delta Chi house; Delta Kappa Epsilon's mixed breed "Stosh," and "Baron," a shepherd who barks softly but carries a big Delta Upsilon stick. In an

exclusive interview, some of the pups said they were chagrined at charges being hurled at today's college students. "Some humans say collegians are going to the dogs,” Kimble barked. "That's all wrong," Thibedaux whined. "Furthermore it's guilt by association." Stosh admitted he had an ambivalent feeling about college students. "Sometimes I think they must feel very much like me—all mixed up." "Ich Leibe DePauw," Baron barked.

American Legion fall conference this weekend Indiana American Legion members will gather in Indianapolis on Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 28 and 29, for their annual Fall Conference. The event will mark one of the major activities of the group in the observance of the 50th Anniversary Year of the Legion. Twenty nine committees will be meeting to formulate their plans for the year’s Legion activities. These committees will be meeting at the Essex House, Indiana War Memorial, National and State American Legion Headquarters. Members of the Legion’s “Century Club” will be honored at the Saturday night banquet at the Essex House. Century Club members are those Legionnaires who have signed up more than 100 members during the past year. Ralph V. Cushman ofVeedersburg, Department Commander of the Indiana American Legion, will preside at the various sessions during the two-day conference. A non-denominational church service will be held at 9 a.m. on Sunday in the War Memorial Auditorium with Rev. Stanley Palicki of Carthage, the Department Chaplain, giving the sermon. Lions Share Asumptous Smorgasboard dinner was enjoyed by some fifty, seven Lions and their guests for the September meeting held at Collins Country Kitchen. It was men’s night out and thoroughly enjoyed. Entertainment was furnished by Mike Blue and Bill Hikgedag, two of four young men who filmed their canoe trip in Canda. Many harrowing experiences were relieved as the group watched the films and saw the obstacles these young men overcame in their trip as they had to portage from stream to stream with full packs and canoes on their backs. This was a most interesting trip and the group enjoyed it immensely. The annual Lions Club basket ball dinner held in October will include all former basketball stars from Bainbridge high school who wish to attend. Tick, ets will be on sale by any Lions Club member to this dinner. * * • Air consists of about 78 pei cent of nitrogen by volume.

Politics hard to understand? Just look at Ohio’s situation

By RICHARD E. LIGHTNER COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)— The theory that politics makes strange bedfellows may not need go further than Ohio on election day to prove its validity. If present trends hold, Ohio could cast its 26 presidential electoral votes for Republican Richard M. Nixon and elect Democrat John J. Gilligan to the U.S. Senate. Top Republican leaders prediet Nixon will carry the state in a landslide over Hubert H. Humphrey. Democrats concede Humphrey trails now by 6 to 8 per cent but State Chairman Eugene (Pete) O’Grady sees Humphrey coming on strong in October for a narrow victory. Close Race Gilligan is running a neck-and-neck race with Republican William B. Saxbe, the state attorney general, for the seat now held by Democrat Frank J. Lausche. Experts feel their fight won’t be settled until the campaign’s final stages. O’Grady predicts Humphrey will carry Ohio “in much the same manner as John F. Kennedy carried the United States” by a razor thin margin over Nixon in 1960. The state chairman says Humphrey’s “campaign and his education program— which he must do—will begin to come across by mid-October.” He feels Nixon’s image as a “new man” will begin to crack as the campaign moves into its final weeks. There is wide disagreement on the impact George C. Wallace’s third party campaign will have, although both major parties feel his support will wane as the campaign heats up. O'Grady estimates Wallace’s support, now about 28 per cent of the electorate, will drop to 10 per cent on Nov. 5 with Wallace drawing the bulk of the votes away from Nixon. Hurt Humphrey But Republicans and labor leaders say Wallace will draw heavily from blue collar workers, which will hurt Humphrey in a big labor state such as Ohio. A spokesman for the AFL-CIO says 25 per cent of the organization’s 650,000 members in Ohio favor Wallace. Leaders of both parties contend Wallace voters will move back to their party’s nominee in the Senate congres-

FALL

CLEARANCE

ON NEW 6 H.P. ^ MODELS

with Mowers

$529 00

. . . Ride and decide

HUMPHREY’S WHEEL HORSE

106 W. Jacob

OL 3=3019

sional races. The labor leader said they would be “single shooters,” voting only for president. The battle for Senate attracted national attention when Gilligan upset Lausche’s third term ambitions. Saxbe, counting largely on the coattails of Nixon, has relied heavily on the powerful state GOP organization. Kennedy Fan Gilligan, a fan of the Kennedy clan, has run his own campaign from the start, refusing to endorse the vice president until he was the nominee of the Chicago convention.

Saxbe’s money has been fact a lot of Ohio money has channeled through state head- been siphoned off for Nixon, quarters. His staff said their since party leaders consider financial woes came from the Saxbe an easy winner. NOOSE DANCE Sot. Sept. 28th Music By Morlan's Merrie Makers 9:30 p.m.— 1:30 a.m. MEMBERS ONLY —AIR CONDITIONED—

WHOLESALE PRICES ON QOALITY USED CARS A 1R0CRS These cars have been reduced several hundred dollars We have them priced to sell. You’ll find these are rockbottom prices. If you are In need of something like these, we are sure It will be to your advantage to inquire about them.

971A

2q48A

2034A

2064A

109LA

302 8A

1965 Ford 1 Ton Truck V-S, 4 speed cab & chassis. If you need a truck you can’t afford to pass this one up.

$895

1963 Chevrolet 3/4 Ton Truck $795

4 Speed, 8 foot bed. Heavy duty truck

tires and springs.

1965 GMC 1/2 Ton Pickup $995

A real good truck.

1965 Buick LeSabre 2 Door Hardtop, auto transmission, power steering, power brakes. 1964 Malibu Wagon 4-Door, luggage carrier, 8 cylinder, automatic transmission. 1967 T-Bird 4-Door Power steering, power brakes - full power, air conditioning, vinyl top. Here is one you shouldn’t pass up.

$1195 $895 $3495

Jim Harris Chevrolet-Buick

Indianapolis Rd

Greencastle

OL 3-5178

GOULD'S FOOD MARKET 704 Soith Jackson Street

PAIRY OELI6HTS

GOING TO q^VWV

* ^ON

HOLLAND

2% MILK

2

HALF GALLONS

79t

COTTAGE CHEESE 2 US. 494 0LE0 ^ us. $100 CHIP DIP & S0URCREAM

EACH

29c

mk

G Weekend

FRYERS BACON SAUSAGE PORK STEAK GROUND BEEF CHUCK ROAST

LB. 391 LB. 59* 2 lb. 981 LB. 69 * 2 LBS.S1 19 LB. 591

POTATOES LETTUCE CRANBERRIES CELERY APPLES DELICIOUS

20 lbs. 89* HEAD 25* PKG. 35 c

STALK 19*

LB.

BAG.

69*

SWEET POTATOES 2 lbs. 25*

BRACK’S PIX-A-MIX CANDY

LB.

REGAL

NAPKINS

200 COUNT

296

TAYSTEE BREAD

Morton

FROZEN DINNERS

• Beef • Turkey • Chicken • Meat Loaf • Salisbury Steak Each

39

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