The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 28 September 1968 — Page 4

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1 - Real Estate -1

4 - For Rent-Apts. - 4

19-Business Service-19

Distinctive Homes

ARE SOLD BY SHETRONE REAL ESTATE AGENCY . 303 SO INDIANA CALL OL 3-9315 GREENCASTLE

SELECT AND SAVE

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Select a plan today from IBC HOMES color brochure or bring your favorite plan and obtain a free estimate. Find out how you can save many dollars by building a quality package home. All lumber & millwork included, delivered and shell erected on your foundation.

Call or See

THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE R.R. 1, FILLMORE. Very good red brick ranch home W/W Carpet in liv. rm. Three bdrms. VA loan can be assumed. l l /i acres. $15,500. W. WASHINGTON ST., GREENCASTLE. Completely remodeled older home. New kitchen, new bath. 3 bdrms. Quiet neighborhood. This home has charm. $15,900. ON THE FILLMORE-MT. MERIDIAN RD. Brick ranch on beautiful 3 plus acres. Two large bdrms. Full, liveable basement. A lovely home priced to sell! WATERWORKS HILL. Excellent building lots. 113 S. Jackson St. OL 3-6509 After hours, call OL 3-6416 OL 3-3406 OL 3-4079 OL 3-4343 OL 3-3749

FOR SALE: 3 firms, 845 acres to be sold by sealed bids, may be bought separately or together. Bids to be opened Oct. 19th, at The First Central Bank of Danville. All farms are located on State Highway 236, between Danville and North Salem. Terms available, for all information call Bill Falls, Falls Realty Company, Danville, Indiana. ' Phone 745-5426, 745-5427, 745-4420. FOR SALE; BY Owner 2 year old home with 3 bedrms. full basement, walk in from ground level, 2 baths fire place and 2 car attached garage, exterior brick and aluminum sidir: located 3 miles south of C atesville on St. Rd. 75 on acre lot. See to appreciate, f hone386.7482

FOR SALE; About 7 acres about 2 miles S. of Fillmore. Raymond Siddons, 107 N. First St. Greencastle.

RENTALS: 5 rm, apt. w-fr.l., stove, ref., heat, lights, $100. per mo., also sleeping rooms, $15 per wk. call after 5:30. Western Motel, Stilesville. FOR RENT: 3 room partly furnished apartment. Howard Moore OL3-5789.

FOR RENT; 4 room apartment, 2 bedrooms, carpeted living room Phone OL 3-6093. Qole A p a r t m e n.t's; Bedroom apartment suitable for one of two adults. See Custodian on premises.

FOR RENT: Apt. unfurnished, 4 rooms upstairs, phone OL 3-4467 after 4 o’clock.

5- For Rent-Rooms - 5

Room for employed lady, Phone OL 3-9176.

9 - Home Items - 9

1968 Singer Console 38.12 Full Balance Only six months old. Good condition. W'alnut cabinet. Equipped to zig-zag, applique, monogram, mend and darn, sew backwards and forward, over pins and so on. Assume six payments of 6.36 per month. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. Call OL 3-3987.

FOR SALE: Living room chairs, office desks, typewriters, utility cabinets, TV’s, twin beds and 3/4 size beds, chests, dinette sets, refrigerator, wringer and automatic washers, gas, electric stoves, tape recorder, add machine, oil and gas heaters, 275 gallon oil tanks, power riding mowers. Smiths 24 East Berry.

11 - Employment-Men -11

Mechanics wanted, must have hand tools. Fentress Motors.

13 - Employment13 Women

WANTED; Fulltime sales girl, call Troyer’s for appointment, OL 3-6713.

WANTED; Fulltime, cashiers, apply in person at I G A.

14-Automotive-14

FOR SALE: 1957 Buick runs good, looks good, $35.00 Roy Bcamire Phone OL 3-4225.

15-For Sale-15

FOR SALE; Ear corn in crib approx. 2000 bushels. Estle Cantonwine, R.R. 3, Greencastle, OL 3-4579.

11th Democrat Barbecue Sat. Oct. 5th. Serving 5 to 7:00 p.m.

FOR SALE: Metal close closet, record cabinet, two winter coats size 16, Phone OL3-92 98.

16-Wanted-16

WANTED: 4 speed transmission, for a 49’ to 53’ Chevy pickup, Lloyd Moore, OL 3-3370.

WANTED: Used piano and deep freeze, Phone OL3-6486.

WANTED; Ride from Greencastle to Indianapolis Hours 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Five days a week. Phone OL 3-6850.

WANTED; Woman interested in losing weight with the help of a local T.O.P.S. “take off pounds sensibly” Club for information caU OL 3-6414.

Experienced lady wants 4 to 5 hours a day general office work. Phone OL 3-9176.

TREE WORK - Topping and takedowns. Free estimates, C. Gorham—OL 3-9031 or OL 3-9125.

WANTED: Custom combining. Phone, Cloverdale, 795-4293 after 4:00 p.m.

Complete lawn care, saturating, seeding, shrubbery, free estimates, work guaranteed, phone OL 3-3244.

20 - Livestock - For Sale - 20i FOR SALE: Three young serviceable Yorkshire boars, Roy Parker, Amo, 845-3302.

FOR SALE: 12 nice calves, call 246-6479 or see Edwin Jackson.

FOR SALE: 5 Bulls, 15 to 18 months old, guaranteed toplease, weigh one thousand to twelve hundred lbs. modern kind. 10 younger bulls you will like. Come see for yourself. B.H. Franklin, R.R. 2 Cloverdale 795-4636.

21 - Notice - 21

LOSE WEIGHT safely with Dex-A-Diet Tablets. ONLY 98 cents at Donelson’s Pharmacy.

NOTICE; SEE AND HEAR IN PERSON EARNEST CARTER AND THE HYMN TRIO Country Gospel Artist held concerts all over America at First Assembly of God Church 106 S. Spring St. Greencastle Ind. Sunday Sept. 29, 1968 9:30 a.m. Listen to Rev. Waltime WXTA Sun. 8:30 a.m.

11th. Democrat Barbecue Sat. Oct. 5th. Serving 5 to 7:00 p.m.

NOTICE: Annual Smorgasbord, Bazaar and Country Store, Oct. 26th, Fillmore United Methodist Church.

Floor Sander and edger for rent at Castle.Ren-Tool, 730 Main OL 3-3092.

Deer Creek Coon Hunter Euchre Sat. 14th. Serving at 5:30 p.m. Playing at 7:30 p.m.

11th. Democrat Barbecue Sat. Oct. 5th, Serving 5 to 7:00 p.m.

Headquarters for complete floor care, you can rent sanders, edgers, scrubber, polisher, carpet shampooer with wet vacuum, tile cutter, even carpet stretchers and shears at Castle-Ren-Tool, 730 Main OL 3-3092

Now is the proper time to thatch your lawn, Rent a thatcher from Castle-Ren-Tool, 730 Main. OL 3-3092.

24 - For Sale - Pets - 24

A K C Golden Retriever puppies 8 weeks, good blood line, for pets or hunting, Goldcrest Kennal, Amo. Phone 845-2240.

Firemen use masks at laundry A burned out motor on a dry cleaning machine was blamed today for a fire department run at the Highlander Laundry on 506 Maple Avenue yesterday. Firemen said, although cleaning fluid had spread over the floor and carpet, that no fire was started. Firemen used masks to escape the' odor of the fluid fumes. Damage was estimated at $500 to the machine.

2 - Business Opportunity - 2

FOR SALE OR LEASE: Good going Specialty Restaurant, on campus, contact Banner Box no. 105. 3-Mobile Homes-3

FOR SALE; ’59 Rich Craft, 50 X 10 phone OL 3-5336, 800N.Madison.

FOR SALE: ’68 Mobile Home, 2 bedroom, low down paymentphone OL 3-3954.

17-Farm Equipment-17

FOR SALE: no. 91 International self-propelled combine no. 80 pull type auger feed combine. Both in excellent condition. Phone 672-3698, Reelsville. International 706 Diesel Tractor with 450 horses. One 5 bottom plow, 12 ft. disc. 4 row cultivator. All new in 1966, call 2466231.

BANNER ADS PAY

Beauty queens answer call BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI) -Prof. John K. Tillinghast of Indiana University needs no help in conducting his play direeling class but thanks all his colleagues who offered. Tillinghast, a bachelor, called the roll for a theater course and three beauty queens were among those who answered— Kit Field, Miss Indiana and fourth runnerup in the Miss America pageant

Women for Bayh director named Mabel Kiger has been appointed Putnam County director of women’s activities in Senator Birch E. Bayh’s campaign for election to his second term in the Senate, according to state director Luella Cotton. Chief duties of the county directors will be the formation of telephone committees, coordination of parties at which the Indiana Democrat’s record in the Senate will be presented and women asked to solicit their friends to vote for him in November, and the recruitment of assistants to the corps of block chairmen, Mrs. Cotton said. Aiding Mabel in the county will be: Carrie Miller, telephone chairman; Laura Jean Wilson, parties chairman; Miss Jeannine Frederich, block assistant; Mrs. Marian Murphy, election day; Mrs. Carrie Miller, headquarters; Mrs. Jean Scobee, greeting. —Dirksen the first cloture vote failed to end debate, he would file for a second. But Friday, following Dirksen’s defection, he said his course of action had not been “finalized,” indicating he might not try a second time. “I do not intend to keep the Senate in session all year,” Mansfield told reporters. He also ruled that there would not be a Saturday senate session as he had announced earlier. Dirksen’s unexpected switch— he had been one of the most influential supporters of Fortas — was a major blow to President Johnson, an old Senate colleague who has often depended on Dirksen’s help in sticky legislative battles. The White House, however, declined to criticize Dirksen’s switch. Press Secretary George Christian said Dirksen “was consulted about the nomination earlier, before it was submitted. I don’t want to infer or project any criticism at all.” As the talk droned on, another Fortas opponent. Sen. Clifford P. Hansen, R-Wyo., suggested in Senate speech that Fortas himself should end the controversy once and for all by simply resigning from the Supreme Court. “I call upon the President to withdraw the nomination of Abe Fortas and I call upon Mr. Fortas to resign his seat on the Supreme Court immediately,” said Hansen. Hansen joined in criticizing Fortas for participating in White House councils while a Supreme Court justice. —Congress majority—of members is present. A more immediate possible byproduct of the inquiry, in the view of some sources following the matter closely, was the failure of the House Monday to obtain a quorum for the first time in almost two years. When only 188 of the needed 217 members (a majority of the current membership of 432) answered their names, the House was forced to adjourn. Some sources speculated that prior to the cleanup enough “ghosts” might have been recorded to make a quorum. Process In Question Nobody suggested that members had been answering for absent colleagues since any such practice would be too easily noted. Obviously the discrepancies were involved in the mechanics of taking and recording the votes in question. Record votes in the House are supposed to be sacred. And it appeared certain that no major votes on controversial bills have been counted erroneously. For one thing, all important votes are recorded independently by the press as the roll is called, and any discrepancy would tend to be noted. But most House roll calls are routine. Discrepancies began coming to light on some of these after a newsman sought to call a member who had just been recorded as being present and voting. It turned out the member was out of town. * * * A male sheep is called a ram, the female a ewe and the baby a lamb.

Nixon challengs poverty theory

By MERRIMAN SMITH INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)— Richard M. Nixon today challenged the theory of the Johnson administration and Hubert H. Humphrey that poverty is the primary cause of crime.

Nixon in a special statement said Humphrey was “tragically native” about the nature of what the Republican presidential aspirant called “the crime crisis that grips America” “Just like the administration of which he is a part,” Nixon

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Record-Holder in Masters' Individual Championship Play)

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64

Opening lead two of spades After twelve successive days of play in the qualifying rounds of the World Bridge Olympiad staged in Deauville, France, last June, each c o u n t r y having played a 20-deal match against each of the other 32 countries, the top four teams proved to be Italy. United States, Holland

and Canada, in that order.

The next step was an 80board semifinal match between Italy and Canada (won by the Italians 171 international match points to 120), and a similar match between the US. and Holland (won by the Ameri-

cans 174 imps to 142).

Americans when they lost 14 imps on the veiy first board. At one table, Kokkes and van Heusden, North-South for Holland, bid their hands skillfully to six hearts, and made the slam ;ifter a spade lead to the ace and a spade return. Declarer won with the king, crossed to the king of hearts, ruffed a low diamond, and had twelve tricks when both the diamonds and trumps proved to be divided normally. It was contended at the time that East could have defeated the slam by playing the jack of spades at trick one, but this analysis was incorrect. South wins with the king and returns the ten of spades, and, depending upon what East plays after taking the ace, declarer makes the slam by either a crossruff or by r establishing dummy's diamonds. At the second table, the American North - South pair. Robinson and Jordan, bid the

said, “Mr. Humphrey has exaggerated and over-empha-sized poverty in this country as a cause of crime. Certainly, conditions of poverty are the traditional breeding ground of criminals and we should not diminish our efforts to eliminate those conditions. “But contrary to what this administration believes and preaches , the war on poverty is not a war on crime and it is no substitute for a war on crime.” Outlines Argument Nixon offered these points to support his argument against the administration and Humphrey, the Democratic presidential candidate: — Poverty does not account for the “dangerously accelerating use of drugs among the teen-agers of affluent America.” — In the last eight years when the gross national product and personal incomes have risen to record highs, “major crimes have almost doubled” while millions of Americans, because of economic growth, crossed poverty lines into the affluent society. “There are thousands of hardened criminals . . . who steal and rob, not because they are living in conditions of

hand as

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poverty but because they can

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cessful career out of crime,”

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“I say doubling the conviction

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rate . . . would do far more to cure crime in America than

East < Slavenburg, playing with Kreyns) led the ace of spades and declarer had to go down one when the trumps broke 4-2. Eventually, the U.S. team overcame this poor start,

The U.S.-Netherlands match j but for a while the battle was

started ominously for the all uphill. rm iocs Kinr Features Syndicate. Inc.) 9-28-68

School lunch menu

School Lunch Menu Sept. 30 - Oct. 4, 1968. Monday Barbeque on bun French Fries Buttered Corn Sliced Peaches lyiilk Tuesday f Ham Loaf Mashed Potatoes Buttered Carrots Biscuits & Butter Fruit Milk Wednesday Chili & Crackers Peanut Butter Sandwich Cole Slaw Apple Crisp Milk Thursday Hamburger on bun Potato Chips Orange Juice Relishes Fruit Cobbler Milk Friday Fish Stick Buttered Cabbage Green Beans Bread & Butter Brownies Milk School Lunch Menu Oct. 7 - 11, 1968. Monday Beef & Noodles Mashed Potatoes Cornbread & Butter Applesauce Milk Tuesday Hamburger on bun Potato Salad Buttered Peas Peanut Butter Cake Milk

—Petition

A man who said he was from New York walked eight blocks from his hotel to sign. Copies of the petition were distributed in Allen’s hometown by the Lebanon Reporter newspaper, and among the signers was Mrs. H. J. Fisher, whose son David was killed in Vietnam. She said she signed in his memory. Mrs. Hoff said several Industrial and bu-r' iess firms asked for copies of the petition to circulate among their employes.

Wednesday Pizza Burger Carrot Cole Slaw Buttered Corn Cookies Milk Thursday Submarine Sandwich Green Beans Buttered Rice Fruit Jello Milk Friday Grilled Cheese Tomato Soup Tossed Salad Peach Half Milk New directors to be elected The Putnam County Summer Playhouse has just completed its seventh summer season of providing drama and musical productions for community enjoyment. All persons who contributed to its success are invited to hear the committee reports and vote on four new directors at the Annual Meeting of the Corporation Meeting of the Corporation Sun. day Sept. 29 at 2:00 p.m. in the Saving and Loan Assoc. Community rooms. The New Board will meet immediately following to elect officers and appoint committee chairman.

STATE OF INDIANA. COUNTY OF PUTNAM ss IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT 1968 TERM IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF WALTER E. MOLER. DECEASED Estate No. EST 68-13 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF WALTER E. MOLER In the matter of the Estate of WALTER E. MOLER, deceased. No. EST 68-13 Notice is hereby given that Myrtle Barker as Administratrix of the above named estate, has presented and filed her final account in final settlement of said estate, and that the same wi'l come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 16th of October, 196 B , at which time all persons interested in said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not beapproved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and make proof of their heirship or claim to any part of said estate. Myrtle Baker PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE Ennis E. Masten Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estate. Lyon & Boyd

quadrupling the funds for Mr. Humphrey’s war on poverty,” the Republican nominee added. Humphrey’s Analysis Humphrey in a speech before the American Legion Convention in New Orleans this week said, “In the long run we can only cut crime by getting at its causes: slums, unemployment, rundown schools and houses. This is where crime begins and that is where it must end.” The Nixon campaign momenturn slowed this morning to allow the candidate time for staff conferences before continuing on to Cleveland, Ohio, for a statewide telecast tonight. Meanwhile, Nixon sought to discourage speculation that if he

is elected, such Republican senators as Strom Thurmond of South Carolina might be considered for his Cabinet. “ ... as far as Senator Thurmond or any other senator is concerned, with the number of senators we have on the Republican side in the Senate, I don’t believe that any senator really should go to the Cabinet. We need them there in the Senate.” “The rate of anxiety has probably gone up faster than the crime rate,” Katzenbach said. But he said he believed the wrong people are anxious. Poor Hit Harder Suburban dwellers tend to be most concerned about crime while the crime commission report showed “It is not the well-to-do who most often fall victim to crime, it is the poor and the slum dweller.” Figures showed persons earning under $6,000 are considerably more likely to become victims of rape, robbery or burglary. Katzenbach said the fears of middle-income earners and the affluent may stem in part from the publicity given to attacks on prosperous members of a community, particularly if the crime has racial or sexual overtones. On the subject of civil disorder, Katzenbach said small numbers of agitators are infiltrating massive peaceful demonstrations seeking to turn policemen into “instruments of violence and repression.” He said; “We have seen and will see more efforts of small groups of agitators mixed in a large and peaceful demonstration to so enrage the police that they strike out at innocent and guilty alike.” The police would be foolish to accommodate them, Katzenbach added.

TAILOR-MADE LOANS at the friendly First-Citizens Bank See Mr. Edwards Soon ! (Member FDIC)

CALL TODAY AND SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY BANNER

PHONE OL3-5152