The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 10 March 1937 — Page 3
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ADDITIONAL (LANSIKIED ADS
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KNOW THE EXTRA
SATISFACTION OF A
A perfect fit assured! Choose the model and fabric you want from sport, drape or conservative styles in a wealth of fine fabrics! Your suit—made for you and for no one else, will be tailored to your individual liking! Don’t envy the man who wears a taiiormadc suit . . . wear a GENTRY! It costs no more than ordinary clothes!
OSUEZE
1029 Pontiac coupe. New paint, ! trooa tiies, motor, etc. Plenty of cheap transportation in this one. Kins Morrison Foster Co. it
Attention Fanners — Save your wheat and alfalfa by top dressing it with Nitrate of Soda. For sale by ! Hillis Feed Store. 10-12-2t
FOR SALE: Attractive Country House on State Road. Perfect location 1 for tourist camp. Electric current, 50 1 acres of good land, good buildings, and an unusual opportunity for the | right person. See S. C. Sayers at I Central Insurance Agency, 10-;it
OPENING DAY On John Deere Farm Equipment and Tractors, Saturday, March 13th, Greencastle. Free talking and moving picture show. Piizes of $35.00 to be given away at 12 a. m. and 3:30 p. m. instead of lunch. Be sure and come, learn why you should purchase John Deere tools. Walter S. Campbell, 101 E. Franklin St., Greencastle, Indiana. 10-2t
FOR SALE Old fashioned poplar wardrobe, $6.75. Furniture Exchange, east side square. Phone 170-L. ip
Rural telephone repairs; experienced; no guess work; all work guaranteed; batteries for telephones. Acme Repair Shop, 24 South Jackson street io-2t
tYILDMA\ IN W’<;ri! \TLI»
1929 Chevrolt sedan. Good tiros, motor, upholstery, etc. Original paint in very good condition. King Morrison Foster Co. it
1929 Chevrolet pick-up truck. New paint, good tires, runs fine in every way and priced to sell quickly. King Morrison Foster Co. it
<f'oittltiii«‘tl From !*nac One) religion. Any other training is likely to he a disastrous short-cut. To provide such a foundation is the distinct service which DePauw has rendered and can render to higher education. Putting in foundations is not spectacular work. Most of it is below the surface, but the higher- we are able to go with the superstructure of professional training and achievement the deeper- we need to go with the foundation.
WANTED: To buy a farm east ori south of Greencastle, within three niles of town. Address. Li land Brown Greencastle, R. 2. No agent. 10-12-2p
WANTED Someone to give clarinet lessons. Phone 791. 10-2p
Sqitare Dance at Recreation Hall, Thursday, March 11, 1937, at 8 p. m. 1C-P.
MAN to hand out samples and circulars house-to-house. Puck up orders. Earnings up to $45 in a week. Write Albert Mills. 991 Monmouth. Cincinnati, O. 10-lp
LOST Long haired black cat, white spot on neck. Reword. Phono 458-X. It
FOR SALE: Good used trucks and cat s 1935 and ’36 Chev. and Plymouth cars. Model V-8 Ford Trucks. Walter S. Campbell, Greencastle, Indiana. 10-2t
FOR SALE Fifty-five acres, fourroom house; cellar and cellar house, bain and poultry house; land mostly rollings with springs and well. See me for bargain and quick sale. O. T. Ellis. 10-12-2p
Tune in on WIRE or WLW at 9:30 o’clock tonight and hear Gladys Swarthout. it
Xton’t forget music tonight at Coxie’s. it
BEGIN NEGOTIATIONS CHICAGO, March 10, (UP) Strikers, company officials and union leaders today opened negotiations to end the nation’s only underground railway sit-down strike and bring 450 men up from tunmds and freight depots 35 feet below Chicago’s loop. Tunnel and warehouse workers tied up the entire 62 miles of the $30.OOu.OOO underground system in a surprise strike yesterday and halted movement of thousands of dollars of perishable goods to loop restaurants and stores.
Go anywhere by Greyhound at loweat cost in history .... return for even LESS It pays to bvy a round trip ticket for
HERE’S PR00F: 3 r.: ,v
extra 20% reduction on the return pocti STEVENS DREG STORE
26 E. Washington St. Phone 191
GREYHOUND J S
Dallas Texas 18.30 Kansas City Mo. “.80 Los Angeles Cal 28.15 Miami, Fla. 17.45 New Y ork N. V. 13.25 Washington D C ll.2 >
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R.Uio ' $10.55
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24.40
I 1.00
10.60
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BOY!
LOOK AT THESE FORD DEALERS'
USED CAR BARGAINS!
New Ford sales are making Uteri Cur bnrptiins! ^ our I’ord Dealer has a wide assortment of line ears taken in trade. He d rather sell them now—of the year's lowest prices—than store them. All makes, all models, all prices •«-and they’re all bargains! Now, when prices are low, see your Ford Dealer while you have more to trade and less to pnv. Remember—your Ford Dealer s reputation stands behind every used cr.r he sells. Only Ford Dealers offer Renewed & (»uaranteed used cars—you get complete satisfaction or your money bark. See your Ford Dealer. He has the car you want—at a price that will please you. Easy payment terms as low as 915 monthly. Right now is the time to buy a used car—and your Ford Deal -r s is the place! authorezed ford dealers
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SEE SrfrvY DEALERS’ SPECIALS IN CLASSIFIED SECTIONS
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Related To Life The education of the future must be more closely related to life. A far-reaching question for a curriculum committee might well ho: What will these students have to face in aetual life that our curriculum does not help them to face intelligently? Another serious oversight in current education is our failure to educate the emotional life. If education in to stay close to life, somewhere in the learning process the emotions should be educated. It is perfectly possible for a Ph. D. to lose his temper and a Master of Arts to have a tantrum. The emotional life needs to be understood, appreciated, educated, developed, brought under the sway of intelligence and of a loftier emotion.
Foundation Needed A broadening and deepening pro- J •:oss should take place In college. This ; takes time. An always the procens is ' '•First the blade, then the ear, then i the full corn in the ear.” Such a hunger ami thirst after intelligence, moral discrimination, social sensitiveness, and spiritual power should be awakened and sustained in college as will make its graduates able to use any leisure time which society may grant to the post-college years ' in a way which will bring individual j enrichment and social helpfulness. I The education of the future, par- | ticularly of the system of education fostered by church-related colleges ' such as DePauw. .will be concerned with the stimulation and development | of the moral nature of man. Any I system of education which leaves this ; out of consideration is hopelessly superficial and may be positively perilous . . . Develop Moral Power Any college education which is at , all significant or worthy of survival 1 must relate the college course to life ; and it must help the student to di.s- j rover his place in life. To do this it ! must be increasingly personal and ! individual. The only place where an i administrator has a right to be in- ' flexible is in his adherence to the principle of flexibility in dealing with ' individual students. Some needs of | students are universal; others are I definitely individual. At DePauw we | shall purpose to personalize, humanize. and individualize the educational process. Through all of the student’s contacts with curriculum and faculty; through all of his associations with his fellow students and all other life relationships there does need to be developed as a part of his college life what we should call without apology Christian character . . . Wo have enough knowledge to save society if we had the moral power to use our scientific techniques for just and loving ends. No one can say what will he the ultimate organization of our economic order. But no matter what the form is, it will not successfully operate apart from character in those who operate it. However these moral values are achieved (and I have less confidence in the formal than in the informal processes of character development), the college of the future that is worthy of survival must pay attention to the atmosphere, spirit, and attilude of the college which silently make charaeter or break it . . . The college should produce men of vision men who are realistic enough to see things as they are and idealistic enough to see things as they ought to be. Together with this should go the courage to change things as they are into things as they ought to be . . . Increasingly, we need men who do not so much raise the question, "Is it expedient ?” but rather men who ask, “Is it right?" Christianity is at present definitely a minority group but Christianity has always been strongest when this was the case. We want men who have right goals and will use moral, intelligent means to arrive at the goal. W® need men who will speak to their fellows not to flatter them hut to give them counsel . . . There is a last step which schools of our type can take which is not so easy for a tax-supported school. We can set as one of our objectives the nurture of the religious nature of man. A vast shadow has fallen upon much of contemporary life. Dark-
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MONUMENTS We have a large dinplay of MaiisolentiM, Family and Individual menorlaU. Your inspection Invited. F. C. YEAGER 17 E. Walnut
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