The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 November 1968 — Page 6

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Page 6 The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana Tuesday, November 26, 1968

1 - Real Estate - 1

The P. G. Evans Co. Real Estate NEW LISTING N. Indiana. Double. Four rooms on each side. Alum, siding. Built in 1956. Excellent income property. Brings in $105 per month. Close to Kroger’s. Suitable for an older couple. Live in one side and rent the other. 113 S. Jackson OL3-6509 After hours, call OL3-6416 01.3-3406 OL 3*4 079 OL3-4343

FOR SALE OR RENT: 2 houses with large lots in Carpentersville, nice garden space and close to new North Putnam School, call Mrs. Robert Jones at OL3-6195 or Mrs. Charles Boswell at 7732946 in Noblesville.

FOR SALE: Six room house in Bainbridge, large living room, three bedrooms, full bath, oil furnace, 1 car garage on nice lot. Phone 522-3321.

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 jjne or two adults. See Custodian on

Apt. for lease, new 2 bedroom apt. Call OL 3-5015 or after 5 p.m. OL 3-6609. Parkwood Village Apts. FOR RENT: 3 rooms modern completely decorated, 1st floor apt. Stove and refrigerator, water and sewage furnished. Howard Moore. Phone OL3-5789.

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

6-For Rent-Houses-6 ^ I ■ 'I ■! ■ ll» I. ^ FOR RENT: 6 room house in Putnamville call OL 3-4721 or Margaret Mitchell.

FOR RENT: Nice 5 room dwelling, 4 blocks from Court House square and 11/2 blocks from Super Market. Call OL35663. FOR RENT: Small 2 bedroom house, on U.S. 40 East, water furnished, $50.00 per month. OL3-9156.

FOR RENT: Two bedroom country home with garage and garden, Jack Major. Bainbridge Phone 522-6731.

8-Musical Items-8

New Ludwig drum set only $279.50. Kersey Music.

FOR SALE: New Ludwig Pearl Drum Set $275. Kersey Music. 9 - Home Items - 9

1968 Singer Cabinet 36.29 Full Balance Only six months old. Good condition. Walnut finish on cabinet. Equipped to zigzag, monogram, mend and darn, applique, sew over pins, backward and forward and so on. Beautiful pastel color, machine guaranteed. Assume six payments of $6.05 per month. Call OL 3-3987

FOR SALE: Electric stove, used; bar, table type for kitchen dining. Phone OL 3-4017.

11 - Employment - Men -11

WANTED: Full time gas attendant apply in person, Sinclair Station., 36 l 43 Jet. Bainbridge, Ind. WANTED: Service Station Attendant apply at Shoemaker Standard Service. SELL IT WITH A • BANNER CLASSIFIED AD

11 -Employment-Men-11

FACTORY WORK: NEED MEN IMMEDIATELY DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT PLUS BONUS ON NIGHT SHIFT. No experience, no education necessary. Starting $140.00 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, Terre Haute, Ind. 232-6081. Ask for Mr. Fred Wilson. Hours 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Mon. Nov. 25 and Tues. Nov. 26, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ONLY.

12-Employment-12 Men-Women WANTED: Full time kitchen help, apply in person., Y Palace Restaurant, Jet. 36 & 43 Bainbridge Ind.

13 - Employment -13 Women

WANTED: Cashier , high school girl, at Voncastle Theatre.

WANTED: Waitress if you have good dining room service experience, neat, dependable, pleasing personality a must. Good wages, good tips. Age group 21 to 35. Call Mrs. Emmons at Half Way Inn Jet. of 40 and 43. OL3-5003. u 15-For Sale-15 . ■ .. .. d FOR SALE: 26 inch, 3 speed boy’s bike, racing seat fair condition. Phone OL 3-9530after 7:00 p.m.

FOR SALE: Office Equipment adding machines, desks, typewriter, office chairs, file cabinets, cash register, lamps, clock, scales, fans, etc. Metzger Lumber Co. OL3-4191.

FOR SALE: Wood working machinery. 14” DeWalt Radial Arm Saw. 26 ” Northfield B and Saw. 12” Thickness Planer. Swing Cut off Saw. Gate Cut off Saw. Two Wheel Electric Grinder. Benches & hand tools, etc. Metzger Lumber Co. OL3-4191.

THANKSGIVING SPECIAL Pompoms - $1.50 per bunch cash and carry Tuesday & Wednesday only. Also - Centerpieces already made $2.00 to 10.00. Milton’s Posey Patch.

FOR SALE: Man’s brand new Helbros Calendar wrist watch. Just won it. First $15.00 buys it. Also man’s Used gray dress suit size 44. Excellent. Only $10.00. Ill N. College Ave. After 4:00 p.m.

FOR SALE: House doors, build - ing blocks, electric stoves, clothing, housewares, moving help needed weekend of 11/30. OL3-3579.

FOR SALE: 2 ponies, harness, stage coach, wagon and trailer. Martha Hanlon, Phone 386-2837.

16 - Wanted - 16

WANTED: Place for dance classes on Saturday. Must relocate after 9 yrs. building sold. Jonie Skaggs, 845-3415 or 8452717. POSITION WANTED: Lady wants \f2 day work, general office or what have you. OL3-9176. Will do Baby Sitting in my home, located on U.S. 40, Mt. Meridian, Phone 528-2381.

17-Farm Equipment-17 !■ —I — ■ ■■.■■■» .1 I Feeders, Gates, Hog Houses, Farrowing Houses, all portable buildings. ROCK HILL CUSTOM SAW MILL Hwy. 40 & 243 at Putnamville Turn So. 1 1/2 ml. to 700 S. turn E. 1 mi. to 25 E. go So. 3/4 mi. If no answer call evenings, OL3-6413.

18-Auction-18

AUCTION: Sat. Nov. 30th. 10:00 a.m. See Wednesday’s Banner for list of items to be sold. CLAPP'S AUCTION Maple & Ohio Sts. a9=-=9n-e 20-Livestock-For Sale-20 FOR RENT: Box stables for horses at Apache Trails, State Rd. 42 west 2 1/2 miles west of Cataract Lake.

(20 - Livestock - For Sale - 20* i 1 ■ ■ ■- —- FOR SALE: 7 head of feeder calves, 4 steers, 3 heifers. Ben Jarvis, OL 3-5828. FOR SALE: 2 young charolais bulls, 3/4 and 7/8 and 4 half hereford and charolais cows, bred registered charolais bulls. Robert Fisher 528-2667. FOR SALE: 5 year old mare, black, 1 1/2 year old gelding., black accents, father a Tennessee Walker- PE9-2627.

21 - Notice - 21

“Fast two-hour dry-cleaning service available at Home Laundry & Cleaners 217 East Washington.”

Kersey Music Open Wednesdays 8:30 - 5:00 until Christmas.

22-Motorcycles-22 FOR SALE: ‘67 180 Yahama 5 gears and ‘66 90, Bridgestone, very reasonable, OL3-5264.

23 - Wanted To Buy - 23 WANTED TO BUY: Used portable sewing machine in good condition. Phone OL3-5000.

24-For Sale-Pets-24 1- - " -I " T - -j/ FOR SALE: Good rabbit dogs and coon dogs also beagle puppies. Phone Poland 986-2253. Stewart’s Poodle Grooming, Crawfordsville, 362-4846.

Market Report

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

Only about 750 residents now live in Dawson, once-thriving gold rush capital of the Yukon.

The average height of a Revolutionary War soldier was just over 5 feet, 2 inches.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice is hereby given that the Putnam County Corrmissioners will receive sealed bids on the construction of a bridge, known as the Craddick Bridge in Warren Township, Putnam County, Indiana on December 2nd. 1968 at ten o'clock, in the Commissioners room in the Courthouse. Greencastle, Indiana. Plans and specifications may be obtained from the County Auditor, the Commissioners reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Eston C. Cooper, Auditor Putnam County 1 1-19-26-2T

NOTICETO TAXPAYERS OF ADDITIONAL APPROPRIATIONS Notice is hereby given the taxpayers of Bainbridge, Putnam County, Indiana, that the proper legal officers of said municipality at their regular meeting place at 7:30 o'clock P.M., on 2nd day of December, 1968, will consider the following additional appropriations which said officers consider necessary to meet the extraordinary emergency existing at this time. STREET FUND —424 bituminous materials, amount $ 1 7,874.70. Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have a right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, which commission will hold a further hearing within F ifteen days at the County Auditor's office of Putnam County, I ndiana, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting to any such additional appropriations may inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing wi II be held. Marion Lawson. Clerk-Treasurer 11-19-26-2T NOTICE TO TAXPAYERS OF TRANSFER OF FUNDS Notice is hereby given to the taxpayers of Bainbridge, Putnam County, Indiana, that the propef" legal officers of said municipality at their regular meeting place at 7:30 o'clock P.M. on the 2nd day of December. 1968, will consider the following transfer of funds which said officers consider necessary to meet the extraordinary emergency existing at this time. The transfer of $200.00 from the General Fund under Services Personal, 117 hydrant rental, current balance $1,500.00 to General Fund, Services Contractual, number 242, publication of legal notices, and., the transfer of $130.00 from the General Fund under Services Personal, 117 hydrant rental, current balance $1,500.00 to Street Fund, 112. salary of employees, and. the transfer of $925.00 from the General Fund under Services Personal, 117 hydrant rental, current balance $1,500.00 to Motor Vehicle Highway, properties, number 722, motor equipment. Taxpayers appearing at such meeting shall have a right to be heard thereon. The additional appropriations as finally made will be automatically referred to the State Board of Tax Commissioners, which commission will hold a further hearing within Fifteen days at the County Auditor's office of Putnam County. Indiana, or at such other place as may be designated. At such hearing taxpayers objecting to any such additional appropriations may inquire of the County Auditor when and where such hearing will be held. Marion Lawson, Clerk-Treasurer 11-19-26-2T

On the 1 Lighter Side | | By DICK WEST g WASHINGTON (UPI) — Here’s the problem: you are a wheat farmer and your crops are being damaged by hessian flies. In which of the following ways would you react: ( ) dust the wheat with hessian fly powder; ( ) become an oat farmer; ( ) sell the farm and get a job as a brain surgeon. If you checked any of the above solutions, it shows a singular lack of ingenuity on your part. Which isn’t surprising. If you had any ingenuity, you probably wouldn’t be a wheat farmer in the first place. If you had any ingenuity, your name would be Dr. Robert L. Gallun and you would be working for the U.S. Department of agriculture. Heredity Factor Gallun, a USD A entomologist, is attacking the hessian fly problem in a truly ingenious manner. It is his idea to save the wheat by insect interbreeding. As he explained at the international wheat genetics symposium in Australia this fall, there are eight races of hessian flies that look alike but differ in their ability to infest various wheat varieties. The Great Plains hessian fly, for example, is unable to infest soft wheat. Okay. If you are Dr. Gallun, you produce a big bunch of Great Plains hessian flies in the laboratory and then you turn them out in a soft wheat area and let them mate with other types of hessian flies. If things work out right, the next generation of hessian flies will inherit the genetic characteristics that render Great Plains hessian flies incapable of infesting soft wheat. New Era I stand in admiration of Dr. Gallun for thinking this up and I want to be the first to predict that it will usher in an entire new era of insect control. The day when we attacked insects with flit guns, fly swatters and other crude devices may soon be gone forever. Instead, we simply cross them up genetically and let heredity do them in. If the Gallun plan works for hessian flies, it should work for other types of insects, such as ants. Among the many varieties of ants, there must be at least one variety that dislikes picnics. Large numbers could be produced in a laboratory and then released in public parks, there to ma^e with other ants. In a couple of generations, every grassy knoll would be crawling with picnic - hating ants. Then we could start breeding a strain of squeamish mosquitoes that faint at the sight of human blood. —Students co-chairman Bev Brown, Nashville, Tenn. and advisor Julie Braden. Miss Beatty said most of the food would be given to elderly persons and women who were the heads of large households. The collection consisted of everything from spaghetti to cranberry sauce. Miss Beatty also expressed appreciation for DePauw junior Robert Hill. Hill helped the office by lending his time and car to the Welfare Office to transfer a crippled child to a hospital in Indianapolis. “We hear so much about the DePauw students that is bad,” said Miss Beatty. “I thought the paper might be interested in showing some of the constructive things the students are doing.” Offers $500 reward INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - Publisher Eugene C. Pulliam of the Indianapolis Star and the Indianapolis News has offered a $500 reward for information leading to the arrest of a bandit who robbed and injured Robert P. Mooney, political writer for the Star. Mooney was robbed of about $60, his wallet and a watch Saturday night in a parking lot of a restaurant where he dined. Then the bandit hit him on the head with a rifle or shotgun. Mooney was treated at a hospital and released.

Month-long art exhibit opens

Dec. 6 in Statehouse rotunda

Hard upon the heels of the election of the first Republican Lt. Governor since its founding five years ago by former Lt. Gov. Richard O. Ristine, Indiana’s u. nique series of month-long exhibits of art in the rotunda of the state capitol here--theStatehouse Art Solon--Friday, Dec. 6, will open its 60th consecutive showing of work by Hoosier painters, sculptors, photographers and craftsmen. The December exhibit, which will run through Jan. 2, 1969, is termed, with careful hope, the Salon’s “First Annual Rotunda Paint-In,” and will feature a day-long series of painting demonstrations by the young Hoosier artists from age six to 30 whose other work will be shown in the exhibit. The exhibit could also conceivably be the Salon’s last. While incoming Lt. Gov. Richard Folz, who takes office Jan. 13, indicated plans to con-

tinue the Salon during the campaign this fall, members of the Salon’s unsalaried executive commitee have received no formal word of confirmation since Folz’s election Nov. 5. This current exercise in suspense is not the first such experience for the Salon, however. Crises major and minor have occurred from time to time thoughout the unfunded organization’s entire, sometimes precarious, existence. A “complete and total lack” of money came close to causing a permanent closing of the venture early this year, before a series of private donations and “important morale assistance” from Lt. Gov. Rock, who had continued the project started by his predecessor, came to the Salon’s rescue. Still earlier, during Indiana’s sesquicentennial celebration in 1966, the Salon attracted some-

CONTRACT BRIDGE

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

North dealer. East-West vulnerable. NORTH 4 A K 6 ¥9 4 Q J 10 8 3 4 A 10 9 5 WEST EAST 4 10 984 4753 9AQ10 7 4 J 8 4 2 4742 4A65 4Q8 4 J 6 2 SOUTH 4QJ2 4 K 6 5 3 4 K 9 4 K 7 4 3

The bidding:

North

East South

West

1 ♦

Pass 14

Pass

24 3 NT

Pass 2 NT

Pass

Opening lead—ten of

spades.

The defenders are often in the dark when it comes to choosing their best method of attack. They do not see each other’s cards and hence do not know the exact makeup of declarer’s hand. Their perspective is entirely different from declarer’s, since he sees the combination of dummy’s hand with his own and therefore knows precisely where he is weak or strong. This natural advantage that declarer starts with can frequently be neutralized by the defenders if they work closely together and proceed towards

the common goal of trying to defeat the contract. Take this hand where West leads a spade against three notrump. Declarer wins with the ace, plays a diamond to the king, and a diamond back to the ten. East takes the ace and is now at the crossroads of the hand. What should he return? Actually, there is only one card East can play to defeat the contract. The killing return is the jack of hearts. No other card will do the job. If East plays any other suit, South easily makes nine tricks. If East returns any heart but the jack, declarer ducks and again has nine tricks. But against the jack return, declarer is helpless. If he covers with the king, the defenders cash four hearts to produce a one-trick set. If South ducks the jack, West must play the ten to defeat the contract. East then continues with the eight and declarer's king sooner or later gets gobbled up. The basis for East’s jack play is that there is no hope of defeating the contract unless West has overwhelming heart strength. To trap any honor South may have, East must lead the jack so as to retain the lead if declarer ducks. West applies similar reasoning when he plays the ten on the jack. He must credit East with the eight to defeat the contract.

(© 1968. King Features Syndicate, Inc.)

11-26-68

—Turkey

cream unit was recently purchased. “You can just pour whatever kind of fruit you want into it.,” he said. The big meal will be proceeded early that day with a breakfast of sausage or hamburger gravy, scrambled eggs, hot farina, stewed peaches, bread and coffee. The supper afterwards will include chili con carne, buttered peas and carrots, cold tomatoes, butterscotch pudding and crackers, bread and a beverage. If by chance anyone decides to have Thanksgiving outside the grounds without a special okay by superintendent Albert Ellis, which has been occurring as of late, the inmate may possibly be eating the Thanksgiving dinner planned by Putnam County sheriff jail matron, Mrs. Robert Albright. At the State Farm, escape is a felony. An escapee is taken by law, not back to the State Farm, but to the county jail where he is arraigned and stands trial for escaping from the State Farm. If anyone decides to go walking

out of the farm on his own, chances are he will still get his turkey drumstick. Mrs. Albright fed nine prisoners last Thanksgiving. A 32 pound turkey is in the Albright freezer. Dressing, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes and pumpkin pie are on the menu for Thanksgiving Day. There may just be one hitch, however. The sheriff intends to have the jail cleared following a present jury trial and is not expected to have any prisoners come Thanksgiving. Mrs. Albright says, if there are no prisoners, a big Thanksgiving meal will not be prepared. But the sheriff and his wife can not really be sure if any of the inmates at the state farm will decide to chance missing the Tom Turkey farm dinner for one of Mrs. Albright’s pumpkin pies. * * * Various forms of the abacus have been used by many peoples, including the Egyptians, Greeks. Romans and a number of European countries. It is still used by Asiatics to some extent.

WANTED TO RENT One bedroom furnished apartment, on month to month basis or will consider sub-leasing. Write Box 100 THE DAILY BANNER

what embarassing but unavoidable nation-wide attention when an out-of-state professional art judge failed to recognize the painting he selected as winner of the Salon’s statewide “President’s Award Art Competition” as a copy of a work by the English master, John Constable. That furor -- termed by some as the “greatest art flap in Hoosier history” - died down peaceably, however, when a new, allHoosier jury of three art judges selected a new winner, executed by Fort Wayne artist ShurleLee, for a $500 first prize and presentation to President Lyndon B. Johnson. Other high spots in the Salon’s five-year exhibiting career have been a widely-acclaimed showing of paintings by late committee member Ruth C. George of Lebanon, Ind. .. an exhibit of “start, lingly orginal” work by members of the Camp Atterbury Job Corps training center.-and a special exhibit of sculpture by the Kokomo Sculptors’ Guild, in which the headline exhibit was a bas-relief of assasinated President John F. Kennedy, executed by Mildred Helmuth, Kokomo, and chosen for permanent exhibit in the Kennedy Memorial Library now under con. struction in Cambridge, Mass. Also this year, through Salon committee efforts, Governor Roger D. Branigin, acting in accordance with a suggestion first advanced by columnist Corbin Patrick of The Indianapolis Star, issued an official gubernatorial proclamation last April, declaring 1968 to be the “Year of the Artist in Indiana.” Committee chairman Judson N. Boykin, Indianapolis, said here today that the ultimate purpose of the proclamation, like all acts and exhibits by the Salon, was to help “foster and encourage” development of the fine arts in the state. Boykin refers to such encouragement as not only desirable from the artist’s point of view, but also as an “absolute economic necessity” for the state as a whole. He points out that the “cultural climate” of a state is now a major factor in the relocation decisions of American industry. “This is, of course, precisely the sort of thing for which our Indiana Fine Arts Commission was originally created and fi. nanced by the state. Its record for more-or-less complete inaction during its years of existence has forced our unpaid and non-funded Salon group to act to fill the resulting vacuum.” Perhaps in response to similar widespread criticism of the Commission’s lack of measurable effort, the 1967 Indiana General Assembly failed to approve its

scheduled $25,000 budget last session, voting it only $4.00 in operating and salary funds for the current biennium. Art clubs and groups which have exhibited in the Statehouse Salon since January, 1964, inelude the Hoosier Hills Art Guild, Ellettsville, Ind.; Owen County Art Guild; Our Heritage Artist, Vernon; Brown County Art Gallery Association; Brown County Art Guild; The 20, Indianapolis; Gary Artists League, Inc. and Haveohn Art, Versailles. Also The Marion County Art League; Wabash Art Guild; Art Center Guild, Indianapolis; Randolph County Art Association, White Lick Art League, Mooresville; Whitewater Valley Art Association, Inc.; Women’s Department Art Club, Terre Haute; Indiana Artists Club, Inc.; Art Association of Richmond; Fort-ville-Oaklandon Art Guild and Wayne Realistic Art Club, Richmond. Indianapolis Art League Foundation; Kokomo Art Association Artists; Hamilton County Artists Association; Boone County Art League; Monticello Artists Association; Logansport Art Assoelation; Creative Art Association of Rush County; Huntington County Art Guild; Madison Art Guild; Community Artists, Inc. Greensburg; Grant County Art Association; Plainfield Art League; Kokomo Sculptors’ Guild and Madison Art Club. Also Artists of South Bend; Greater Southside Art League, Indianapolis; Russiaville Palettes; Johnson County Artists; Miami Arts Guild, Peru; Marion County Art League; Arts Studio Guild, Brownsburg; Tipton Art Association; Art Center Artists Guild, Indianapolis, Hendricks County Art League; Parke County Art Association; Future Artists of Shelby County. Paint-in demonstrations of the December, 1968, exhibit will start at 9:30 in the morning of Friday, Dec. 6, and continue through the day until 3:30 P.M. Admission to all exhibits at the Statehouse Art Salon is always free. The Statehouse is open daily and Sundays from 8:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.

DREAMING of a new liomei tk: FOLKS AT IH£ friendly First-Citizens Bank CAN HASTEN THE DAYI (Member FDIC)

Coming to the ^Httiana UnHerAitii Auditctiutn Bloomington

^ WORLD'S MOST ACCLAIMED MUSICAL!

l HAROLD PRINCE.

fe i jiJMcHer t£ Roof ^ v 8as«d on Sholom-Aleichem'* stories

JOSEPH STEIN

iiSfcj# JERKY BOCK SHEIDON1MNICK

* By Spt'ui ftraiissfM »f Arnold Per/

IitllrlY'odicti'oO JEROME ROBBINS

INDIANA UNIVERSITY AUDITORIUM Bloomington THURSDAY, FRIDAY, and SATURDAY JANUARY 9, 10, and 11, 8 p.m. Reserved seats: $5, $4.30, $3.50, $2.30, $1.50