The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 October 1968 — Page 4
Page 4
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Saturday, October 5, 1968
1 - Real Estate - 1
10-Lost & Found-10
17-Farm Equipment-17
FOR SALE: Farm Machinery for Sale: 2 John Deere tractors, one 2 row mounted corn picker, one pull type combine, 7 ft. cut, 2
If you are planning to buy property think first
LOST: Black and tan male Dachshund - Reward - Dennis Sutherlin, OL3-9329.
OT IPS P. G. Evans Real Estate Agency A leader in Putnam County Complete and Competent Real Estate Service. 113 S. Jackson OL 3-6509
LOST: Small Pomeranian, metal chain around neck - Reward, call OL3-4587.
wagon flat top, 1 roto hoe, one implement trailer, with wench, 13 disk wheat drill on rubber, side delivery rake, plows and
LOST: Charm Bracelet Medals and Awards of deceased son— Lost on Central St. by Hanna,
cultivator. D. H. Nunaley, Coatesville, R.R. #1, Coatesville, Phone 845-2434.
last Tuesday morning. Oct. 1st. Reward Call OL 3-4312 between 8 and 4.
FOR SALE: Far mall H 1951, 526-2588. after 5:00 p.m.
Distinctive Homes
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ARE SOLD BY SHETRONE REAL ESTATE AGENCY s. 302 SO INDIANA CALL OL 3-9315 GREENCASTLE
11-Employment-Men-11 19-Business Service-19
Call Collins OL 3-3286 NEW LISTING Made to order for you —Nice neighborhood with all the extras. Kanch Brick built in 1966, 3 bdrm., 1^2 ceramic baths. Large liv. rm., Dining L and Den with sliding glass door onto patio. Very nice kitchen with eating area with utility & Laundry room all carpeted in lovely bronze gold carpet, central air, garbage disposal, electronic door, built in oven & refrigerator, large yard with nice shrubs, flowers, gas light & planters. Better Call us on this. Krnest H Collins & Co.
Bob Clark The Alices OL 3-4072
386-7359 OL 3-5721
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 siding located 3 miles south of Coates, ville on St. Rd. 75 on 3 acre lot. See to appreciate. Phone-386-7482
2 - Business Opportunity - 2 FOR SALE OR LEASE: Good going Specialty Restaurant, on campus, contact Banner Box no. 105.
4-For Rent-Apts.-4 ~~ ■ ■ v APT FOR RENT: New 2 bedroom apt for rent Oct. 15, carpet, air conditioned, range refrigerator furnished, call OL35015 or after 5 p.m. OL3-6609. FOR RENT: 3 room partly furnished apartment. Howard Moore OL3-5789. FOR RENT: Upper two-bed-room apt. - stove - refrigerator, air conditioned and heat furnished. $75.00, contact Bob Jackson, OL3-6662. Cole Apartments; Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.
5 - For Rent-Rooms - 5 ROOM FOR RENT: Room for lady, kitchen privileges, OL39176.
9 - Home Items - 9
1968 Singer Console 38.12 Full Balance Onlj six months old. Good condition. Walnut cabinet. Equipped to zig-zag, applique, monogram, mend and dain, sew backwards and forward’ over pins and so on. Assume six payments of 6.36 per month. Beautiful pastel color, machine ^ guaranteed. Call
FACTORY WORK: NEED MEN IMMEDIATELY DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT PLUS BONUS ON NIGHT SHIFT. No experience, no education necessary. Starting $136.00 - vacation, insurance, automatic raises, no lay off, employee benefits, must be reliable and have good work references. “No Arrests” will also hire married couples. Factory located in Illinois in small pleasant town. Call for personal interview, Danville, 111. 443-1220. Ask for Mr. Fred Wilson. Hours 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Interviews Monday Oct. 7 and Tues. Oct. 8 ONLY Transportation arranged. WANTED; Two truck drivers, Howard Moore. Phone OL 35789. 13 - Employment - 13 Women WANTED: 2 night waitresses, ages 21 to 35, prefer dining room experience and 2 daytime waitresses at Half-Way-Inn-formerly “Mom Brown’s” Rest. Now under new management. Jet. 40 & 43. Local Plant needs registerd nurse. Write P.O. Box 523 Greencastle. An Equal Opportunity Employer. Maid wanted College Castle Motel apply in person. 14-Automotive-14 FOR SALE: 1962 Corvair Monza, 4 on the floor, needs body work, 8 Kentwood Drive. FOR SALE: 1958 Chevy, P.S. & P.B., V-8 engine, $50.00., Phone OL3-4255. FOR SALE: 1965 Chevrolet, 4 door, hardtop, power steering, power brakes, 28,000 miles. Phone OL 3-5535. FOR SALE: 1959 Pontiac Wagon, 8 cyl. S.S. good tires, Best offer, Can be seen at 1112 So. College.
15- For Sale-15 FOR SALE: Portable dishwasher, 1 yr. old. Phone OL3-6418. FOR SALE: Green Beans, Sweet potatoes, Tomatoes, egg plant, and turnips. Ira Boswell, Ave. B. FOR SALE; Deer license, hunting arrows, camouflage suits, bow quivers, archery supplies. Greencastle Sports V2 mile south on State Road 43. FOR SALE: Hardy Mums in Bloom and Bud; also a nice selection of Dutch Bulbs, Tulips etc. Indianapolis Road. Phone OL3-6932. FOR SALE: Seigler oil heater4 or 5 room size, late model, reasonable. Phone 795-4926after 5:00 p.m. or weekends.
Wanted-16 “Plunkett
HEY MAN: There is a Fish Fry Fri. and Sat. nights, Oct. 4 and 5 at Bainbridge Fire Dept. YOU ALL COME to Bainbridge Fish Fry, Oct. 4 and 5. WANTED: Babysitting with 1 or 2 children in my home. OL39362. WANTED: A lot of hungry people Oct. 4 and 5 Bainbridge Fire Dept. WANTED: Baby sitting in my home any shift. Phone OL3-3244 between 3 and 6 p.m. References. WANTED: Someone to haulaway trash, 404 W, Columbia St. Anna Sanford.
Also elected was James V.Samsel of Warren township as regular member. He has served since 1956 on the Warren township committee. Austin Kircher of Greencastle township was elected as first alternate, and Wayne Branneman of Cloverdale township was elected as 2nd alternate.
Classic Jimberbeasts' Are a Long Howl From Today's Loggers
Washington window
Fuller Brush in Bainbridge, Indiana, W.H. Thomas, 522-6859. TREE WORK - Topping and takedowns. Free estimates, C. Gor-ham--OL 3-9031 or OL 3-9125.
20 - Livestock - For Sale - 20 FOR SALE: 49 Shoats vac. also boars. 1 mile north 1/2 mile east Mt. Meridian, Ivan Clark. FOR SALE: 19-400 pound feeder calves, flat top wagon bed. Lois Clark, 1 1/2 mile north of Mt. Meridian. FOR SALE: 22 extra good Hereford feeder calves. ^ Phone Ross Allee OL3-4072 or *Marvin Clifford 795-4623.
21 - Notice - 21 NOTICE: Watch for this date on your Calendar, Friday October 18th. There will be a Ham, Beans and Corn Bread supper at the Reelsville Lion’s Club Building. Sponsored by the Reelsville W.S.C.S. of The United Methodist Church. Everyone Welcome. A free will offering. SPECIAL UPHOLSTERY LABOR: Special 10 days only, back in business sale, Recliners, labor only 14.95 and Material. We have been out of Business for the past year. We are not to be confused with any other ESTABLISHMENT. Same location 1113 So. College. JEFFRIES UPHOLSTERY SHOP 1113 So. College No Phone, Drop us a card or call in person serving Putnam Co. 10 yrs. You Don’t have to dress up to come to the Bainbridge Fire Dept. Fish Fry. Oct 4 and 5. NOTICE: Oct. 19, Delta Theta Tau Sorority smorgasbord, Roachdale School, serving from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Adults $1.25 and children under 12, 75?. Come see our selection of famous Kabar hunting knives. Guaranteed 30 years. Greencastle Sports V2 mile south on State Road 43. Come and eat, see all your friends at the Bainbridge Fire Dept. Fish Fry, Oct. 4 and 5.
22 - Motorcycles - 22 FOR SALE: 1966 Suzuki cycle. Excellent condition. $125. Phone 522-3385.
24 - For Sale - Pets - 24 FOR SALE or possible trade a Wire Haired Terrier, housebroken, for smaller dog. OL39362. FOR SALE: AKC registered' Dachshunds,Pugs, puppies, Phone OL3-9329.
By ELDON BARRETT SEKIU, Wash. (UPD—Today’s logger is a long howl from the timberbeast that trod the Pacific Northwest woods a scant three decades ago. Statistically, at least, the modern logger is a home owner, a family man, a churchgoer and a man who participates actively in community affairs. Prior to World War II, the image of the average logger was that of a hell-roaring wildcat who would rather dance the Kalispell stomp in Seattle's Skid Row than shake hands with the governor. No more. On the rolls of Crown Zellerbach Corp.’s Northwest Timber Operations, for instance, more than half its employes on tree farms have been with the firm more than five years and more than one-fourth of them have company service records exceeding 10 years. Back in the high-balling gravy train days when the philosophy of the timber barons and the lumberjacks alike was cut-and-get-out, the average logger belonged to the blanket squad, so called because he carried his bedroll from camp to camp and seldom stayed longer than the next payday. A large part of the $11.4 million paid by Crown Zellerbach to its tree farm workers last year went to buy groceries, pay taxes, buy clothes for the kiddies and cover insurance premiums.
In the old days a logger’s meagre pay went for snooze, booze and wild, wild women, if anything was left over after he paid his tab at the company store. The only insurance he had. or could get, was his caulked boots, ready fists and a quick wit. For some today, his leisure time is spent in helping with the business of the local school board, county planning commission or perhaps holding down a trick at the volunteer fire station. Many belong to the Elks’ Club br Eagles Lodge or even the Woodmen of the World. The old timberbeast, on the other hand, hit the sack as soon as he chowed down, was up with the crows and worked his head off until dinnertime. The most amazing thing of all in comparing today’s lumberjack with the old logger is the use of the term, tree farm. Trees were for cutting, not growing, in the old days and to call a lumberjack a farmer was the w r orst epithet one could hang on a logger. —Vietnam Lt. Templeman graduated from Greencastle High School and he will report to Ft. Knox, Ky. His wife, Joyce, is from Fillmore. Class are Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Kelly - Co-President, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Tirsway—Secretary—Miss Judy Reynolds; and Treasurer—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Davis.
Foreign news commentary By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst
“For a long period the country grew accustomed tobeing governed by a man of genius, but from now on it must adapt itself to being governed by men like other men.” Marcelo Caetano, Portugal’s new premier. It had indeed been a long time. But now Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, the man his successor called a genius, lay on a hospital bed in semicoma as result of a brain hemorrhage, and for Portugal an era spanning 40 years had drawn to a close. “The meloncholy of Portugal. “. . . An incredible political passivity. “An impoverished land tucked away on the Iberian Peninsula at the wrong end of a booming Europe. . .” Changing World Those are some of the words and phrases writers have used as they sought to describe Salazar’s Portugal, and each is applicable. In a changing world, Salazar remained unchanging. And Portugal was in his image. Portugal never had known democracy, and Salazar’s censorship and secret police kept it that way. But he had given the Portuguese people 40 years of calm after more than 100 years of chaos. And such was his hold upon the people it is probable that even without the secret political police in free elections they would have elected him anyway. When that hold slipped a curious silence seemed to settle over the country in which even his scattered opposition seemed too stunned to move. If within the Upper reaches of government there was a power struggle over the naming of his successor, there was no visible evidence of it. A Conservative An when, finally, after many day of hesitation, President Americo Deus Rodrigues Thomaz named Marcelo Caetano to the post, he had selected a man of Salazar’s own stripe, a man of stongly conservative views
WASHINGTON (UPI) — It seems germane to ask at this point—half way through the presidential campaign— whether Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy doesn’t really hope that Richard M. Nixon defeats Hubert Humphrey. This is not to imply that McCarthy is a spoilsport sulking over his failure to wrest the Democratic nomination from Humphrey at Chicago. It is merely to say that the senator may be viewing the election race in terms of 1972 rather than 1968.
By GRANT DILLMAN The question arises because of McCarthy’s failure thus far to endorse the vice president or take any other steps to help the national party ticket. How much this has hurt Humphrey may be a question. But hurt it has, particularly among voters critical of the Vietnam War. Risk Involved But it also is a course which involves risk for McCarthy. If the vice president loses to Nixon, as now seems likely, McCarthy would be able to say “I told you so” to the party
CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Record-Holder in Masters’ Individual Championship Play)
South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH 4 K 6 V A J 6 3 2 ♦ 8 * Q J 7 r> 2 WEST EAST ♦ J 8 4 4 Q 9 V 9 * Q 10 8 7 5 ♦ A 10 763 4J9542 X A 9 8 6 X 10 SOI Til 4 A 10 7 5 3 2 4 K 4 ♦ kq + K 4 3 The bidding:
South
West
North
East
1 ♦
Pass
2 4
Pass
24
Pass
34
Pass
4 4
Board
No.
76 started the
downfall
of the
American team.
Robinson opened the bidding with a diamond on: 4 986 4 A732 4 KQ72 4 A8 and Jordan re>ponded one notrump with: 4 73 4 Q98 4 J9 4 KJ7643
and one who had been associated with Salazar since 1928. More from what the new premier did not say than from what he did say after assuming office, opposition forces saw some hope of at least a beginning to civil liberties. The conservatives at the top of Portugal’s layered society received assurances that the war to retain Portugal’s rich African provinces would be continued and Communism at home sternly suppressed. It would be the same, and yet it could not be the same. Salazar saw Europe’s withdrawal from Africa as one of the world’s great tragedies, one in which Portugal would not participate. Yet the fight to retain the African provinces had itself brought about changes, forcing Salazar to gear up his economy and recast his colonial policies. And as Portugal completes its transition from an agricultural to an industrial society, a growing and prosperous middle class someday must find its voice.
Discovery UNITED NATIONS (UPD — An inscription which may prove to be Afghanistan’s “Rosetta Stone” was discovered recently on a mountain ridge 120 miles southwest of Kabaul, the U.N. Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO* reports. Carved in volcanic rock at a height of 13,000 feet, it comprises three long texts—one in an Indian language and others in Kushan, an Iranian language written in Greek characters still not entirely deciphered.
Horticultural Tip Weeds are usually a minor problem in well-established, wellmanaged lawns. A good lawn management program calls for proper watering, fertilizing and mowing, along with effective insect and disease control. Broadleaf weeds such as chickweed, clover, ground.ivy, henbit, knotweed and oxalis are frequent, ly weedy lawn pests. CONTROL: Fall treatment is preferred because lawn grasses will fill in the bare spots, but crabgrass is more likely to fill them in after spring treatment. Apply silvex alone or together with an equal amounty of 2, 4-D, both mixed half strength. Prepare the weed killer solutions as recommended by the manufacturer. Mixtures of Dicamba are useful for control of knotweed, groundivy and clover. Follow the con. tainer label restrictions carefully because excess Dicamba may leach into the soil and damage trees and shrubs.
Beats The Heat YORK. Pa. 1 UPD — For many Americans the coolest spot this summer is the family automobile. Industry estimates indicate 1968 sales of automotive air conditioning units may easily pass the 4.5 million mark, up nearly 30 per cent from 1967, according to T. J. Ammel, manager of mobile sales of Borg-Warner’s York division, a major producer of automotive air conditioner compressors. In the past five years auto air conditioner sales have increased almost 400 per cent, he added.
FAST
FAST
FAST
DHIA Report
Cow
% Milk
Milk
Test
Fat
Marion Ferrand
62
81
35.9
3.5
1.3
Ed Brookshire
51
77
27.7
3.7
1.0
W & G Robertson
44
72
24.7
3.6
.9
Leon Tippin
91
62
24.9
3.7
.9
V & L Zeiner
69
81
20.9
4.1
.9
Lamporter & McMurtry
70
61
17.1
3.5
.6
DELIVERY SERVICE Starting Oct. 6th Tues. thru Sunday
AFTER 5:00 P.M.
SATELLITE DRIVE IN
Phone OL 3-3341 Closed Mondays
Everyone passed and Jordan lost four spade tricks, a heart, a diamond and a club to go down one for minus 100 points. When Forquet and Garozzo held the same cards, Forquet opened with a heart and was raised to two hearts by Garozzo. Forquet made eight tricks on the nose and Italy gained 210 points on the deal for a pickup of 6 international match points. This boosted the Italian lead to 17 imps with just four boards remaining in the 80 - board match. The Americans still had an outside chance to win, but whatever hopes they had were promptly squashed on the very next deal, where Robinson-Jor-dan arrived at four spades on the sequence shown. The audience, seeing all four hands on Bridge-O-Rama, realized that the contract could be defeated if West led the ace and another club, but they thought that West was far more likely to lead his singleton heart. But West (Pabis Ticcil found the killing lead of the ace and another club to defeat the contract two tricks, and the Italians gained 13 more imps to put them 30 in front. At the other table, Forquet and Garozzo had made four spades when the American West chose the singleton heart as his opening lead. Matters went from bad to worse on the next hand when Robinson-Jordan, in an effort to recover the 13 imps they had just lost, bid seven notrump which depended on a club finesse (Q-J-x facing A-10-x-x-x). The finesse lost, costing another 14 imps, and about all that the Americans could then say was: "W'ait till next year.”
regulars, union leaders and others who helped Humphrey win the nomination. A Humphrey defeat also would leave McCarthy free to try (the key word is try) to pick up the pieces and reshape the Democratic party so as to give a bigger voice to the ordinary party supporter. McCarthy calls this “participatory politics.” But if Humphrey should pull off an upset and defeat Nixon next month, it would have to be viewed as a victory for the “establishment” which the Minnesota senator and his followers tried so desperately to overturn at Chicago. That would be very bad news indeed for McCarthy. It would take a bold Democratic leader indeed to quarrel with Humphrey if, as president, he chose to exile McCarthy from party councils, at whatever level. Kennedy A Contender Nor does McCarthy’s dilemma stop there. Even if Humphrey were defeated, there is no guarantee McCarthy would be able to reshape the party to fit his own ideas. Logic indicates the man to do the job might instead be Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. If McCarthy continues in his silence on the presidential race, he will be accused by some of costing Humphrey votes. If he finally does endorse the vice president, he will alienate the more militant of his followers. Either way he is weakened. Add to this the magic of the Kennedy name. McCarthy himself acknowledged that at Chicago when, in a last-minute bid to stop Humphrey, he offered to withdraw and throw his support to the Massachusetts senator. Kennedy rejected the ploy, deciding 19G8 was not his year.
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CALL TODAY AND SUBSCRIBE TO THE DAILY BANNER
PHONE OL3-5152
