The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 14 November 1968 — Page 6

1 - Real Estate ' 1

The P. G. Evans Co. Real Estate You may not realize it, but homes and other property sell at any time during the entire year. Although the weather hasn’t been the best of late, we have qualified buyers looking every day. It is now November, yet we will close five deals in the next few days. Don’t hesitate to list your property now authorizing us to handle your real estate transaction as your exclusive sales representative. 113 S. Jackson St. OL3-6509

4- For Rent-Apts. -4

NOW LEASING: New Highlander Apts., corner of Elm & Maple, 2 bedroom, central air and heat, completely carpeted. Phone OL33798.

Cole Apartments; Bedroom apartment suitable for .one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.

FOR RENT: Furnished one bedroom apt. Immediate occupancy. OL3-3798.

Apt.- for lease, new 2 bedroom apt. available Nov. 1st call OL 3-5015 or after 5 p.m. OL 36609. Parkwood Village. Apts.

FOR RENT: Beautiful all electric private apartment, new refrigerator, range, disposal, Whirlpool washer and dryer. 2 spacious bedrooms, kitchen, laundry, large living room, 7 closets, garage, radiant heat. Phone OL3-4503 after 5:00 p.m.

6 - For Rent-Houses - 6

FOR RENT: 3 room house 1 mile east of Mt. Meridian, 8452283.

8-Musical Items-8

Rental Band Instruments available. Payments apply toward purchase later. Kersey Music. FOR SALE: Used Wurlitzer Spinet Organ $595.00. KERSEY MUSIC.

FOR SALE: Used Ludwig Drum Set, Blue Sparkle Pearl drum sets, Special savings. KERSEY MUSIC. FOR SALE: One Kalamazoo Bass 30 Amplifier and Bass Lyndell Guitar. OL 3-4627. FULL drum set, blue sparkle, all accessories, excellent condition. Bainbridge 522-3201 after 4:00 p.m. FOR SALE: NEW Wurlitzer Organ, $699.00. Kersey Music.

9 - Home Items - 9

1968 SINGER CABINET $39-43 FULL BALANCE Only five months old. Good condition. Walnut finish on cabinet. Equipped to zig-zag, monogram, mend and darn, applique, sew over pins, backward apd forward and £t> on. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. Assume six payments of 6.57 per month. Cali OL 3-3987.

FOR SALE: Westinghouse refrigerator, used 6 months, avocado green, Phone OL3-4072.

11 - Employment-Men -11 i ■■■ WANTED: Janitor at Voncastle. Apply in Person.

12- Employment-12 Men-Women AMBITIOUS PERSON - Full or spare time to supply Rawleigh Household Products to consumers in S. Putnam Co. or Dist. in Greencastle $125. per week. Write Rawleigh INK- 450 1124 Freeport, HI. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE DAILY BANNER

13 - Employment -13 Women

WANTED: FOR PART time - ladies to do detailed work with hands, assembly, so forth. References. Reply to Banner Box... ...87.

EMPLOYMENT WOMEN: LADY $6,000 to $10,000 per year. Aggressive lady for manager (over 25 years). Salary plus commission. Guaranteed. Paid while in training. Immediate opening. Must be free to travel during week. Home weekends: Chance for advancement. Repeat business. For personal interview in your area contact: John Hall, Olan Mills Studios, Inc., 329 Mt. Vernon Ave., Springfield, Ohio, 45501, or call collect AC 512, 323-5528. Also openings for Proof Consultants free to travel. We will train.

18 - Auction -19

AUCTION: Sat. Nov. 16th 10:30 a.m. We are selling three large lots of household goods including; nice walnut bedroom suite, two full size Hollywood beds, add chests, oak dining suite, kneehole desks, lamp tables, bookshelves, platform rocker, occassional chairs, dinette set, dinette tables, rugs, luggage, electric dryer, army footlockers, outdoor portable grill, lamps, rollaway bed, porch furniture, fireplace set, dishes, utensils, tools and many other items. CLAPPS AUCTION MAPLE & OHIO STS.

20 - Livestock - For Sale - 20 FOR SALE: 5 Hamp Chester sows to farrow soon. 6 sows and 50 pigs. Also 50 shoats ready for the corn field. Eric Boesen.

14 - Automotive - 14

FOR SALE: 1963 Chev. 2 ton truck, new 16 ft. combination bed and hoist. A-l condition. Dale St. John, 10 mi. west of Greencastle on county line road. FOR SALE: 1952 Chevy 1 1/2 Ton Truck, 12 ft. Grain Bed, good tires. Runs good $450. 1044 Ave. E., Greencastle. Phone OL3-9563.

FOR SALE: 1956 Rambler 60 motor Ray Skimmerhorn, Mt. Meridian 526-2178.

FOR SALE: 1963 Jaguar XKE 265 Hp, 4 speed coupe, excellent cond. will sacrifice, going to service. Call collect to New Market, 866-0445.

FOR SALE: 1967 Rambler Ambassador 990, 4 door, power, air, 12,600 miles, OL3-6254 after 5:00 p.m.

FOR SALE: 1967 Chev. 2 dr. H. T. Marina Blue P.S., A.T. Heater W.S.W. 283 eng. 22,900 Act. Miles Real Good Condition. $2,000. Phone 526-2170. Mt. Meridian.

FOR SALE: 1960 Falcon automatic, clean, Phone OL3-4245.

15- For Sale-15

FOR SALE: 20 x 80 and 40 x 40, masonite building , in good condition, 2 inch fiber glass insulation with steele truss roof. Phone Indianapolis, 926-9792.

Matching washer and dryer will sell separate or as a unit, call OL3-3795.

FOR SALE: 9 x 12 Early American oval rug, Call OL3- 947 8.

FOR SALE: Feeder pigs vac., Dale Warmoth, Stilesville, 8453489 after 6 p.m.

FOR SALE: Hampshire and Yorkshire boars and open gilts, Tom Denhart Frams located 6 miles north of Brownsburg, 1/2 mile west of Fayette, Phone 769-3303.

FOR SALE: Registered polled Hereford bulls. The time to breed for fall calves. I can satisfy your needs. B.H. FranklinCloverdale, Ind. Phone 795-4636.

21 - Notice - 21

NOTICE: Buick car held for storage will be sold Nov. 18. Person that owned car can have the same by paying the amount due. White Oak Farm.

Your answer to low cost housing. Twelve wides as low as $3,795. Also 20 x 52 homes only $7,460, set on your lot ready to live in. Childress Mobile Homes, 1301 South Mill, Crawfordsville, Indiana.

Euchre Party Reelsville Lions Club will hold a Euchre Party Sat. night. Nov. 16 in the Lions Building. Serving at 5:30 Games at 7:30.

NOTICE: Kappa Delta Phi will have a Castle Craft Jewelery Party at the Gas Co. office from 11:00 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday Nov. 14th.

24-For Sale-Pets-24 mm m* FOR SALE: Good rabbit dogs, beagle puppies, Irish Setter puppies. Phone Poland 986-2253.

Stewart’s Poodle Grooming, Crawfordsville, 362-4846.

FOR SALE: Hobart 300 AMP Portable welder with 110 plug in for drill, lights, etc., $350. 1954 Chevrolet 1 1/2 - 2 ton dump truck $275.00. Phone 5262263.

CARPETS a fright? Make them a beautiful sight with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1.00 Headley Hardware.

FOR SALE; 1968 Model Sears Color T.V. Good condition. Phone before 6 p.m. OL3-6574. 16 - Wanted - 16 WANTED: Aged or sick person to care for in the home. Practical nurse, Experienced, can take full care of home. Write Banner Box 223.

WANTED: 21 years or over Driver for late afternoon deliveries 2-3 hours per day--5 days a week. Reply to Box 23 Banner.

WANTED: Used pianos, write directions to Box 241 , Gaston, Indiana or call collect, 358-3697.

WANTED Light Bulldozing call OL 3-3801, after 12:00 for information.

WANTED; Baby-sitter for after, noon while children are napping. Call anytime. OL3-5979.

WANTED TO BUY; Shell corn. Will pick up at your dryer. Phone OL3-9179.

17-Farm Equipment-17

For sale: Massey-Ferguson new and used Farm equipment, parts and service. Anderson Tractor Sales, Inc., Danville, Ind. State Road 39.

COMMISSIONERS C LA IMS

THE PUTNAM COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS WILL MEET IN REGULAR SESSION NOVEMBER 18. 1968 AT 9 A.M. LEGAL TIME, AT THE COURTHOUSE IN GREENCASTLE, INDIANA TO CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING CLAIMS:

HIGHWAY PAYROLL Rosemary Davis Elsie Fenwick Joseph H . Ash James C. Bol Ipr..... Robert Boiler Kenneth Broad street Thoms. W. Brothers.,

Woodson Buttery OlynCampbell Steven E. C ampbell.. Frank C oble C lemen Douglas Richard G. Gray Samuel E. Gray William H. Griffin .... Lester Hapney Paul Hassler James M. Love

JesseMcGuire Woodrow W. Poynter. John Reynolds George Talbott Thompson Allen Nob le Austi n William F. Ball Everett Cornett Jackie Lee Eyler Otis Falconbury Hassel Gooch Har old Goodman Vernie Larkin C laudeMorphew ...... Richard D. Walden..., Roy Weller Lloyd T. Major

175.00 154.50 168.00 148.05 .1 75.35 160.00 164.00 136.00 ,160.00 144.00 164.00 170.15 117.60 .....158.55 . 160.00 152.00 147.60 164.00 153.00 160.00 96.00 160,00 152.00 147.60 110.20 152.00 143.45 152.00 152.00 152.0C 152. CD 152.00 136.80 152.00 298.25

ATTEST: ESTON C. COOPER. AUDITOR

PUBUC NOTICE The Trustees of the Putnam County Hospital invite bid? for purchase of a six inch image intensifier to be furnished and installed on an existing 300MA Picker radiographic - fluoroscopic apparatus in the x-ray department of said hospital. Arrangements for inspection of the existing equipment may be made through the office of the Administrator, Putnam County Hospital, 330 Greenwood Avenue. Greencastle, Indiana 46135, Area Code 317-OL 3-5121. Bids will be received sealed and will be opened on December 4, 1968. Selection will be made on the lowest and best bid submitted for the performance of such work. Bids will be submitted on prescribed forms which may be obtained at the office of the Hospital Administrator. Frank C. Baker. Administrator Nov. 14-21-2 T

Sweepstakes game 28 dead after winter

to be in tamper proof package

storm on East Coast

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Shell Oil Co. will be marketing its “Mr. President” sweepstakes game in a new tamperproof package to make sure no one on the service station end can pick winners in advance. The announcement came Tuesday from Shell’s Washington representative after Rep. John D. Dingell, D-Mich., chairman of the House Small Business subcommittee, tried with mixed success to show how dealers could determine winners without opening the packets. The game, distributed by Shell stations, provides prizes from $1 to $5,000 to persons who collect various combinations of medals bearing likenesses of U.S. presidents. Dingell said the medals could be identified without breaking their seal by making an impression in any one of several ways, such as penciling over paper held against the packets. The congressman quoted Nicholas Del’Spena, president of the United Stations of New Jersey Association Inc., as saying the quick wholesale method was to put the medal packets through machines used to make imprints of credit cards on sales tickets. Dingell attempted a demonstration, but the tissue paper he was using to catch the impression was repeatedly torn by the machine. He said it could be done rapidly with the right kind of paper and showed newsmen samples done earlier by Del’Spena. The demonstration had been scheduled for November 1, but Dingell delayed it at Shell’s request to allow the company time to call in the old games. Shell representative J. Carter Perkings said new games being distributed would have packets with surfaces like a golf ball that would give no clue to the likeness hidden inside. A prepared statement he gave reporters said the company was

Market Report Ws. Today’s market report from the Greencastle Livestock Center, steady to .25 lower, 18. to 18.50.

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT Estate No. 68 - 87 Notice is hereby given that Grace Katherine Cunnlnaham was on the 28 day of October, 1968, appointed executorix of the will of Carlton Call Cunningham, deceased. All persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due, must file the same in said court within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 28 day of October, 1968. Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Roy C. Sutherlin.

Attorney

Oct. 31 -Nov. 7- 14-3T

NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT

Estate No. EST 68-87

Notice is hereby given that James E. West was on the 28 day ofQctober, 1968, appointed administrator of the estate of Joe Garrett, deceased. All persons having claims against

ter or not now due,

must file the same in said court within six months from the date nf

mii persons navi said estate whethe must file the sar

ithm six months

te first publication of this notice or aid claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this

28 day of October, 1968.

Ennis fc. Masten,

Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court

Lyon & Boyd

Attorneys

Oct. 31 - Nov. - 7 -1 4 - 3T STATE OF INDIANA, COUNTY OF PUTNAM ss: IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT 1968 TERM. IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF ELIZABETH K. DUNLAVY, DECEASED Estate No. EST 68-20 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF ELIZABETH K. DUNLAVY. In vhe matter of the Estate of Elizabeth K. Dunlavy. deceased. No. EST 68-20 Notice is hereby given that Esther D. Quick and Ruthven W. Morgan as Co-Executors of the above named estate, has presented and filed their f inal account in final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and action of said Circuit Court, on the 9th of December, 1968, at which time all persons i interested in said estate are required to appear in said court and show cause, if any there be, why said account should not be approved. 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. Esther D. Quick and Ruthven W. Morgan, Personal Repre-

sentative

Ennis E. Masten, Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court Attorney for Estate Lyon & Boyd Nov. 14-21-2 T

“confident that our dealers are honest and would not participate in such a fraudulent scheme” as picking winners beforehand. Dingell, however, said there had been instances of dealers determining the winners beforehand and giving them to their friends and family and in some cases collecting the prizes themselves. He said dealers were also cashing in winners on other service station games, including Humble Oil’s “Tigerino” and American Oil’s “Winner’s Circle.” After conducting hearings last summer on such games, Dingell’s subcommittee asked the Federal Trade Commission to outlaw them. He said if the FTC does not act, he will consider asking Congress to take action. Dingell said the subcommittee wants to see the oil companies compete on the basis of quality and service rather than having their dealers act as “croupiers” in gaming houses. -NATO threat from Soviet policy to Europe and the Mideast. Until recently NATO has been proceeding on the assumption the Soviet threat to Europe has passed. It was consequently agreed that while gearing its defense posture to a period of comparative security in Europe the alliance should embark systematically on a bridgebuilding effort in East-West relations. With the Warsaw Pact forces alerted and stronger in numbers along the borders with the West than ever since 1945, NATO priorities have shifted considerably. Diplomats say that cracks in the western alliance and gaps in the defense front must be mended. But at the same time nobody wants a return to the cold war tactics and policies. The communications channels to Moscow, therefore, are to be kept open to explore just where the Kremlin leadership stands.

—Jehovah Witness nesses, observed, “There is no doubt but that this identical program that is being featured worldwide is gearing our organization for the greatest witness yet tc be given in support of God’s Kingdom. We are all enthused and ready to do our share.”

—South Viet led to postponing the Nov. 6 scheduled opening of the expanded talks. South Vietnam said it will not go to the table unless it leads the allied delegation, unless Hanoi agrees in advance to a conference agenda and unless the Viet Cong come only as part of the North Vietnamese delegation. In Washington, Clifford Tuesday told newsmen that if Saigon continues its boycott, “I believe the President has the constitutional responsibility of proceed, ing with the talks.” He suggested talks could go on about military deescalation, leaving political questions for the time when Saigon does join.

By DONALD P. MYERS NEW YORK (UPI)—A windstorm laced with rain, snow and sleet and icy gusts up to 100 miles an hour today belted 500 miles of the East Coast 38 days before the start of winter. At least 28 persons died in eight states. But the U.S. Weather Bureau said the worst was over. Thousands fled their homes Tuesday in New Jersey and along the Atlantic seaboard. At Port Monmouth, N.J., 3,000 persons were evacuated in rowboats in water waist deep. The storm smashed Atlantic seawalls with waves 30 feet high. It whipped broken trees across power lines, blacking out chilled residents from Tennessee to Maine. The toll was highest in New York State, where 10 persons died—a family of seven killed in a fire at Bloomingburg, two storm-related traffic fatals and one person who suffered a heart attack while shoveling snow. Storm Causes Deaths The storm killed nine in Pennsylvania— six from heart attacks and three on rain-slick roads. Two fishermen drowned in North Carolina, two hunters froze to death in Tennessee, an elderly man died of exposure in South Carolina and traffic accidents killed two in Maine and one each in Rhode Island and New Jersey. New Zealand was expected to get the storm’s last punch today. Mrs. Lyndon F. Pratt of Danforth, Maine., who has 10 children, said she was without —Federal Other indictments included: Fred Junior Booser, Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indianapolis, emliezzlement of mail; Jeffrey Phillip Dunn, Franklin, crime on a government reservation, involving theft of a television monitor from Crane Naval Ammunition Depot; Edward J. Koob, Evansville, embezzlement of union funds; Albert Stephens Jr., New Albany, and Leroy H. Lone, Indiana State Farm, forgery; Israel Halpern and Herman Edward Moss, both of Cincinnati, possession of narcotics. Robert K. Greer, Roarie Jean Colder, and Michael DeLon Hughe, all of Kokomo, transporting stolen property; William Blades, Jr., Indianapolis, mail theft; Marilyn D. Kimbrough, DeWitt Banks, Jr., Steven Mackey, Harry Bolotin, all of Indianapolis; George M. Devney and George D. Angel, both of Evansville, and Estel T. Williams Jr., Boonville, all indieted on charges of possession of stolen mail. Gregory Preston Dunn, Indianapolis; Emmett Lenoir HI, St. Louis, John Francis MeAuliff Jr., Washington, Steven Ansel Garvin, Indianapolis, John Darrell Bagley, Fairmount, and William Frederick Wendt Jr., Terre Haute, all indicted for failure to report for induction. * * • When you stop to think about it, it seems strange that television didn’t tap the Boy Scouts of America years ago. Anyway, Warner Bros.-Seven Arts finally has arranged to develop a half-hour, primetime dramatic series revolving around Scout activities. In cooperation, of course, with the official organization. The series will be a candidate for next season; network not specified.

Local women not seriously injured when hit by car

Shortly after 10 a.m. yesterday morning, Miss Mary Person 224 Iowa Street, Greencastle, was struck by a car owned by James Cundiff, Cloverdale, at the intersection of Washington and Vine. Miss Person was taken to Putnam County Hospital where she was given emergency treatment and examination. According to reports, the mishap occurred when Miss Person dropped her keys at the inter.

section and bent over to pick them up. Cundiff, 48, was driving a Dodge station wagon heading south and was preparing to make a left hand turn to go east on Washing, ton and did not see Miss Person, according to reports. The Greencastle resident, employed at the General Telephone Office, complained of her head hurting before being taken to the local hospital.

electricity today for the sixth straight day. “It’s still snowing and windy. They say there’s another foot (of snow) coming,” she said. “We set up a wood jtove and the whole family came over.” At Manasquan, N.J., Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stires were washed out of their seaside home. ‘‘I know I was never so scared in all my life,” Mrs. Stires said of the 75.mile.an.hour winds and heavy seas which swatted their port town. Abel seeks another term PITTSBURGH (UPI)—I. W. Abel, president of the United Steelworkers Union, announced Tuesday he would be a candidate for re-election. Abel’s ticket includes incumbents secretary.treasurer Walter J. Burke and vice president Joseph P. Molony. The three were elected in 1965 over a slate headed by David J. McDonald, who headed the 1.2-million member union for three terms. Joseph Germane and James Griffin will serve as co-chair-men of the committee to reelect Abel and his fellow officers. Germane is director of USW District 31 in the ChicagoCalumet and Gary area. Griffin is director of District 26 in Youngstown, Ohio, and headed the McDonald campaign committee in 1965. Each candidate for international office must be nominated by at least 125 of the union’s 3,600 locals. Nominations close Dec. 9. Abel’s chief opposition in this election—to be held Feb. 11—is expected to come from Emil Narick, former assistant general counsel for the union.

The Weather Bureau said of the storm which hit Wallops Island off the Virginia coast with wind gusts of 100 miles an hour: “I think we can safely call it the worst storm of the year.” The official start of winter is Dec. 21. In New York City, subways and commuter trains were snarled. At least 100 flights were grounded at Kennedy International Airport because of slick runways, poor visibility and high winds. The Bronx-Whitestone bridge over the city’s East River swayed in the wind Tuesday, forcing officials to close it to commuters, some of whom abandoned cars in the middle of the 2,300-foot bridge and fled. “Let’s get out of here,” said one motorist. “This thing may be going down.” But a traffic engineer said there was no danger. Ferry Passengers Stranded About 500 persons were stranded offshore for more than three hours Tuesday aboard a Staten Island ferry, unable to put into port because of wind and waves. Capt. Ralph Hale said “only a couple” passengers became seasick. Scores of posh pleasure boats were smashed and sunk off New York’s City Island. The sands of Rehoboth Beach, one of Delaware’s most popular resorts, were blackened by oil spreading along the coast from a 240-foot barge which ran aground in high seas with one million gallons of oil aboard. Giles County, Va., reported 23 inches of snow in the mountain lake region. Schools in Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Maine and Connecticut were closed by wind, flood and snow. Snowfalls of 18 inches were reported in western Maryland. Upper New York was covered by a foot.

CONTRACT BRIDGE By B. Jay Becker (Top Rocord-Holdor in Matters' Individual Championship Play)

South dealer. Neither side vulnerable. NORTH ♦ Q 10 V K93 4 A65 +J9874 WEST EAST 4K653 ♦ J 8 7 4 »A10 72 VQJ854 ♦ J 9 8 2 ♦ 10 3 45 462 SOUTH 4 A92 ¥6 ♦ KQ74 4 A K Q 10 3 The bidding: South West North East 14 Pass 3 4 Pass 4 NT Pass 5 4 Pass 64 Opening lead—ace of hearts. How - would you go about trying to make six clubs, assuming that you and partner had bid this optimistic slam? West begins with the ace and another heart. Obviously, the contract is cold if the adverse diamonds are divided 3-3; in that case one of dummy's spades could be discarded on your fourth diamond. However, this is not a healthy prospect to rely on, since a 3-3 division occurs only 36% of the time, and it would seem advisable to look for some way of supplementing your chances. One distinct possibility is that the player with the greater diamond length (assuming the suit is not divided 3-3) also has the king of spades among his possessions. In that case, the slam can be made by applying some pressure on him. Since there are no other pos-

sibilities to pursue, you proceed on the basis that the diamonds are either divided 3-3 or that the defender with most of them also has the king of spades. You therefore ruff the nine of hearts, cash the A-K-Q of trumps and ace of spades, and cross to dummy with a trump. When you now cash the king of hearts and discard a spade on it, this becomes the position: North

♦ Q

4 A 6 5

4^

East Immaterial

West ♦ K

4 J 9 8 2

South ♦ 9 4KQ74 You then cash the last trump in dummy, discarding your nine of spades, and West has a kingsize headache on his hands. Regardless of what he discards you are bound to win the rest of the tricks, and the outcome is that you make the slam as a result of your early preparations for a possible squeeze.

Money for Sale! THE LOAN DEPARTMENT OF THE FRIENDLY FIRST-CITIZENS BANK IS AT YOUR SERVICE (Member FDIC)

FEEDER PIG SALE 800 QUALITY FEEDER PIGS FRIDAY, NOV. 15, 1968 1:00 P.M. C.D.T. Putnam Feeder Auction Assoc. Putnam County Fair Grounds Greencastle, Indiana