The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 6 September 1965 — Page 3
Monday, faptambar 6,196ft
Tha Daily Bannar, Graancastla, Indiana
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY AND CLASSIFIED ADS
Real Estate
SHETRONE REAL ESTATE 802 S. Indiana St. Ph. OL 8-9815 3-3057 - FOR SALE - DOGWOOD LANE—A fine 5 bed mi. mod. Home—Ige. liv. rm. (fireplace). Dishwasher, bath & half. Garage. NORTH LOCTST—3 bedrm. Home, carpeted thruout, eating: area. French Provincial eahinets, full basement, large lot. 2 MILES WEST—Dick Andis Horae & 1 acre. 3 Ige. bedrm*., Family rm.. full basement, immed. poss. FILLMORE ROAD — Small down payment & take over loan — 3 bedrms., bulit-in kitchen, nice size lot. SHERWOOD SUBDIV. — The Brooks Home, 6 rms. 6 bath & half, beautiful floors. Gas fired furnace, F'amily room, immed. possession. PARADISE LANE — A beautiful Home, nothing to do hut move in. This is a nice quiet street. Owner leaving town, move in now. And others — Please call us.
Notice
For Rent
Bumper Corn & Bean Crop
see us For Financing Storage Bins CENTRAL NATIONAL BANK
FOR RENT: Efficiency. See custodian at Cole Apartments, July 20-tf
Notice
NOTICE: SILLERY’S Barber Shop Open full time. 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Drive a half mile. Save a half dollar. 31-10p
Firemen’s Chicken Barbecue - Fillmore, Friday & Saturday, Sept. 17 & 18th. Antique car show Saturday afternoon, sponsored by Fillmore Fire Department. 30-1-3-6-8-10-13-15-17-91
Business Service WE make keys. Jake Hirt’s Sport Shop — N. Side Square. Mon.-tf Hearing aid batteries and supplies. All makes. Open 24 hours a day. Commercial HoteL Courtesy Beltone Hearing Service. M-W-F-tf
A called meeting of the Blakesburg Cemetery Assn, is scheduled for Friday. Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. at Fincastle Community House. Everyone who has relatives intered there, or is interested, is urged to attend. 3-6t.
PILE is soft and lofty . • . . colors retain brillance In carpets cleaned with Blue Lustre $1.98 or Lustre Foam $1.79. Rent electric shampooer $1.00, Headley Hardware. 6-lt.
SEWERS cleaned with electric root cutter. Plumbing repairs and replacements. James Green. 606 So. Jackson St.
Prepare now for a long cold winter. Good used and new Heating Stoves in OIL. Gas or coal. Rus-sells Used Out-
let Store.
Mon.-Thurs.-tf
For Sale
FOR SALE: TV servicing equipment — signal generators, Tube checkers, CRT checker, VTVM, multimeters, new Mallory DC power supply, R-C Bridge, schematics, tubes and caddies, tools and parts. Call 569-3673. TF
BE gentle, be kind, to that expensive carpet, clean it with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Todd s Ace Hardware. 6-lt.
M-W.F-tf FOR SALE: Set of bar bells, | 170 lbs. Phone OL 3-5935.
4-2p
FOR SALE: Dog house. West of United gas station. 113 Ritley Road. 4-3p
Call us for your free estimate on Bryant Heating and Central Air Conditioning. Financing available. Joe Ellis Heating and Air Conditioning, Inc. (formerly Currie’s Furnace Company). Phone OL 36712. Mon-Wed-Fri-tf
A miss is as good as her smile. Once she uses Wipe Lustre rug cleaner, she'll keep it all the while. Herriott's Paint & Wallpaper. 6-lt.
Livestock
FOR SALE: 4 Hereford Heifers, past yearlings. Louis Williams. Phone PE 9-2631. 4-2p FOR SALE: Holstein baby calves, a few heifer calves, suitable for herd replacements. John Cash. Call 2466497. 4-3p
Pet*
FOR SALE: Mum plants, 50 cents. Clouser's Mum Garden, Browns Valley. Phone 435-2449. 6-5p.
Automotive
Remember East Side Motors Sales for expert body work, painting, wheel alignment and mechanical work. Over 30 years experience. Free estimates. 27-tf
FOR SALE: 1964 Dodge 4-door, $1,900. Good condition. Call OL 3-5982 between 12 noon and 2 p.m. or between 9:3010:30 p. m. 6-5p
Marine Items
WANTED: Homes OL 3-5933.
for kittens. 4-2p
FOR SALE: 20 ft. Mahogany boat with 145 HP Chrysler inboard, real nice, sacrifice. Ph. Coatesville B-lll.. l-5p.
FOR SALE: 17 foot Fiberglass run-about. 75 Johnson, TeeNee trailer & equipment. Sacrifice. Phone OL 3-9573 or OR 2-3189, 4-3p
Men Wanted
FOR RENT: East Seminary Street. On« bedroom upper appartment, stove furnished. Call OL 3-3519 or OL 3-6822, 3-4t
FOR RENT: 3 room unfurnished apartment. Stove, refrigerator and heat furnished. 439 Anerson. 3-3t
FOR RENT: 5 room modern house 7 miles north of Greencastle. Donald South, BainBridge. 4-2p
FOR RENT: Nicely furnished apartment, good location near square, good automatic heat and utilities furnished. Phone OL 3-3065. 4-2t
FOR RENT: Attractive 4 room upper apartment. Stove, refrigerator, carpeting, drapes, heat and water furnished. OL 3-6901. 4-3p
FOR RENT: Partly furnished 3 room house. 105 E. Seminary, close to campus and downtown. Adults only. Ph. OL 3-5409. 6-3t
Farm Items
FOR SALE: Massey - Ferguson new and used farm equipment, parts and service. Anderson Tractor Sales. Inc. Danville, Ind. State Road 39 north. Mon-tf
FOR SALE: Good I.H.C. Wheat Drill. 13 Home Double Disc, on rubber. Phone: 845-3360. 2-6-2p
Home Items
FOR SALE: Practically new, BARWICK, 9 x 12 Acrilan rug; Oyster white, high-pile. Original price $170. Offered for $80.00. OL 3-4263 after 3 p. m. or any time Sat.-9un. 2-6 p
1964 SINGER $36.16 FULL BALANCE Assume seven payments of $5.17 monthly. Beautiful walnut cabinet. Just seven months old. Makes monograms, appliques, mends, darns, sews over pins, sews backward and forward, and so on. Complete with warranty. Complete price only $36.16. Cali OL 33987. Sept. 1-tf
SINGER ZIG-ZAG $38.29 FULL PRICE Make six payments of $6.38 monthly. Nice walnut cabinet included. No attachments needed to make fancy designs, sew on buttons, make buttonholes, monogram, darn, blind hem, satin stitch, all built into the machine. Call OL 3-3987. Sept. 1-tf
FOR SALE: 23” Zeneth TV ’63 model, good condition. Phone 795-4350. 4-3p.
FOR SALE: Double Bed. Box springs and mattress. Excellent condition. Phone OL * 3-6424. 4-3p
FOR SALE: 36 inch chest of drawers, unfinished $15.00. Beige fur trimmed coat size 16 $10.00. Phone OL 3-4004. 4-2p
Wanted — Women
WANTED: One combination paint and metal man; one experienced Ford mechanic, sober and reliable, good set hand tools necessary. Apply King Morrison Foster, Greencastle. Phone OL 3-4171 after 6:30. Call OL 3-5777. .. 16-tf
WANTED: Kugs, carpet upholstery and wall cleaning. The Nation Wide Service Master System available thru better stores everywhere. For service in Putnam County call OL 3-3562. M-W-F tf
Help Wanted
WANTED: Experienced Cook. Apply at 104 North Jackson or call after 5 at OL 3-3015. 2-tf
WANTED: Second cook. Apply in person. Alpha Chi Omega, 403 East Seminary. 6-3t.
Wanted
WANTED: High School senior cords to paint. Janet Oliver. Phone LY 6-3066 l-10p.
WANTED: Septic tank pumping. Earnest Williams. 906 South Illinois Street, Phone OL 3-3274. 2-8p
WANTED: Someone to wash and iron for DePauw sophomore. Pick up and deliver weekly. Write Tip Scott, 415 Anderson St. 6-2p.
WANTED: To rent garage in vicinity of Alpha Chi house. Phone OL 3-3669. 6-3t.
WANTED: Riders to Indianapolis from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Phone OL 3-4488 after 6:30 p.m. 6-8-10-13-15-17-6p
WANTED: Reliable baby sitter, by the week. Paid vacation and holidays. Car furnished. Box O, Banner, 3-3p.
Foreign News Commentary By WELLINGTON LONG BONN UPI — Germany’s socalled intellectual writers have assigned themselves to help West Berlin Mayor W’illy Brandt oust Chancellor Ludwig Erhard. Only the Sept. 19 election will show whether they helped or harmed his cause. A dozen well-known authors are volunteering Brandt their services as speech and gag writers or campaign rally speakers. They have added spice to the campaign, but they also have presented broad targets to Erhard and his friends. Stars of the Brandt intellectuals are “Tin Drum’’ and “Do Years” author Guenter Grass, “Marat” writer Peter Weiss and “The Deputy” playwright Rolf
Hockhuth.
books that even married people don’t say to one another.” Brandt defended the story, and Luebke’s remark was published. Luebke now is angry with Brandt for passing on the remark. The bright, brittle young people seem to think the contretempst is hugely funny. But the under-25a in this country generally do not bother to vote, and the reaction of the over-25s is not in yet. Hockhuth and Grass were prominent in a list of writers who prepared a book, “Plea For a New Government,” extolling Brandt and other Social Democratic leaders. Hockhuth’s demand in this volume for a return to class warfare sparked sharp reactions from Erhard. But Ernest Cramer, editor of the national daily “Die Welt,” said the Social Democrats themselves should have complained, in view of Brandt’s successful champion to lead the party away from Marxism. Former Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss, a favorite target of Brandt’s writer fans who consider him a modern fascist, also has gotten into the act. He gives as good as he takes. Although Hochhuth claims the poor get poorer and rich richer in West Germany, says Strauss, the author himself has elected to become a resident of Switzerland for tax purposes because high income groups get off easier there than in Germany. “Hochhuth and Grass are successful writers, that is, they make a lot of money at their trade.” Strauss tells his election rallies. “As citizens and, in Grass's case, as taxpayers, they have every right to voice any opinion they wish. I personally give their opinions on social conditions in our state as much weight as I would give Miss Germany's expressed views on the control of nuclear
weapons.”
On The
Farm Front By Gaylord P. Godwii
WASHINGTON UPI — Mois-ture-hungry pastures and rising prices for cattle are sparking a decline in milk cow numbers and a consequent drop in 1965 milk production, according to the Agriculture Department. In a review of the dairy situation, the department revised downward its estimate of milk production for 1965 to a total of 126.6 billion pounds, unchanged from the 1964 output. Previous-
Spiral Stairway Is A Legend SANTA FE. N. M. UPI —The legend of the spiral staircase in the century-old Chapel of Our Lady of Light still attracts the faithful and the curious to Santa Fe each year. They go away shaking their heads in
wonder.
The staircase — called the Stairs of Loretto—is in the chapel of the Loretto School for Girls. Its story and intriging mystery were the result of a mistake, the answer to a prayer and a legend that has grown
over the years.
Mexican builders put up the chapel following the Civil War struggle in New Mexico. Larger than most mission chapels in New Mexico, it was to be 25
feet from the floor.
The mistake in the workmanship was discovered almost too late. Somehow the Mexican workers had neglected to connect the choir loft with the chapel floor. There was no stairway and no room left to put in a conventional staircase. Carpenters called in by the
JIM'S SHOE REPAIR Come see us, JOHN end JIM 204 SO. COUEGE
Hollywood By Vernon Seott HOLLYWOOD UPI — Hawaii may be an island paradise to tourists but to a group of movie makers it’s a nightmare. The movie is "Hawaii,” the screen version of James Michener’s novel for which the Mirisch company paid $600,000. Back In 1959 it was turned over to director Fred Zinneman and writer Daniel Taradash with expectations of making a two-part film with patrons seeing the first segment one night and the conclusion the following evening. The idea was discarded and Zinneman, who had replaced Taradash with Dalton Trumbo. abandoned the project. George Roy Hill became the new director.
FARMING FOR PROFIT? The friendly First-Citisen* Bank can help you do so. (Member FDIC)
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ROCKWELL Imurone* Agency Byron V. Snyder, Agent Cloverdale 795-4514
The Mirisch brothers anticl-
Sisters of Loretto to see what P ate( * * four or five month could be done shrugged off the i shooting schedule with a bud-
All are postwar writers
whose works are controversial j ^ th€ department had anticion grounds of taste. They share! P ated milk P roduction th * y ear a dislike of Erhard and his | of more than 127 billion pounds. prosperity program which they j The department said parched
pastures in much of the import-
central
bourgeous
consider petit undemocratic.
Erhard has reacted angrily, referring to writers who criticized him as “Philistines” and "narrow - minded fellows.” He describes their books as “debased art,” a phrase invented by the Nazi book burners but rarely heard in the last 20
years.
An indiscretion by Willy Brandt contributed to the row. President Heinrich Luebke told Social Democratic chief Brandt he was shocked he should accept help from Grass because “Frau Luebke tells me there are things in Grass’s
BLONDIE
. r p* I vjt
pAGWOOP. WOULD! 'tOU LIKE ME TO
LOOK LIKE ON£ OF THESE > FA9HI ° N
MODELS?!
By Chick Young
JOHNNY HAZARD
By Frank Robbins
ant north central and north Atlantic dairy regions had hampered milk production despite
increased grain feeding. The rising pricee for beef
cattle have caused prices of dairy cows to go higher than relative milk prices, the department said. This has caused a decline in milk cow numbers,
the source of supply.
There were an estimated 15.6 million head of milk cows on farms in June, 3 per cent below a year earlier, the department said. This means that if total milk output is equal to that of 1964, the production per cow in 1965 will be around 8,110 pounds, 230 pounds over the per-cow output last year. The department said pronounced shifts from dairying have been occurring for a number of years in the Midwest. The agency said that in the com belt and regions of the northern Plains in the Midwest, conditions are favorable to grain and livestock production. Therefore, dairy farmers in those areas shift to grain and livestock production when milk prices become low relative to those of other products. The department noted there are few attractive farm alternatives to dairying in the Northeast. This has tended to limit declines in milk cow num-
bers in that area.
job as pointless. They said the choir loft would have to be remodeled or else the sisters could use a ladder. The Prayer That was when the prayer was said in a novena to St. Joseph, the patron saint of the chapel. The story told today is that the next day a gray-haired man rode up to the chapel, took a small tool chest off the back of his donkey and told the sisters he had the solution to the stairway problem. The story says the man had only an ancient T-square, a hammer and a saw. He worked on the staircase for eight months, the story goes and when it was finished, he disappeared. When the mother superior of the school went to a local lumber yard to pay for the wood, the owner said it hadn't been purchased there. The records of the school show the bill for the work and wood on the staircase are stil 1 unpaid. But the staircase itself is the present wonder for most visi tors to the chapel. It is spiral in design, but it has no center support even though it makes two complete 360 degree turns before it reaches the choir loft. The staircase is completely selfsupporting. Architects who have viewed the staircase say it should have crashed to the floor before it was completed, but it is strong enough to support an adult on 'ach step without a quivep. Also there are no nails in the stairs. The bracing under the wooden treads and between the stringers is a lime plaster mixed with horsehair for strength. Bannisters later were added. How the intricate work was done by one man in this out-of-the-way chapel with only primitive tools has yet to be explained. Also there is the question of the wood on the staircase, which has been identified as a hard fir variety—non-existent in New Mexico. Many of the sisters at the Loretto School know the story of the stairs, but few are willing to offer an explanation. But some will tell you that the old man was the answer to the sisters’ prayer to St. Joseph. They say teh aid man was St. Joseph himself, a carpenter.
get of $10 million.
Then came disaster on the sunny beaches of the 50th state. Rainstorms and an amateur cast of natives slowed the shooting while costs siared. The crew, meanwhile, lived it up at a plush hotel with comfortable living allowances.
FOR RENT ONE ROOM IDEAL FOR OFFICE For a barber shop, beauty (hop, er (mall businesi. (Formerly occupied by Merle Nerman Cosmetics on west side ef Hie square). Next fa Sutherlin TV See ROSS ALLEE Phene Ol 3-4072
players and extras. As the saying goes, the squeeze was on. Hill was reinstated and Hiller returned to the mainland without shooting a frame of film. , Meanwhile, the stars, Juli«
Irritated by delays and rising Andrews and Max Von sydow,
costs, the producers fired director Hill, replacing him with Ar-
thur Hiller.
But they figured without the - restless natives. Two leading supporting players quit, one of them a 300-pound Tahitian woman named Jocelyn Lar- 1 garde. Half her scenes had been
could look forward to compounded pay envelopes as their contracts specify a certain time limit for their talents. Understandably, there's a subtle tension in the relationship between Hill and his bosses. No one could remember when a director had been fired
and rehired during tthe course of a film.
shot, and 300-pound Tahitian gals are not that easily re-
P' aced- But Hill s problems are manThen some 1«5 extras, all (fold. One of his actors is aa Hawaiians, circulated a petition ex-football player with no pre-
fer the reinstatement of director Hill. He was their boy. For the first time in memory cinema scientists were confronted by an uprising of featured
vious acting experience. Another is apert airline ticket seller. A third is a 12-year-old girl from Denver who has never acted before.
CROSSWORD PUZZLE saturd.y. P u„..
ACROSS 1-Secret agent 4-Alternating current (abbr.) 6-Satiates 11-Choose 13.Buccaneer 16-Thrce-toed
tloth
18- Learned 18- Avenue (abbr.) 19- Samt (abbr.) 21 River in Germany 22-Greup of
three
24-Additional 26-Wife of Geraint 28- Writing
fluid
29- Move about furtively 31-Cease 33-Compaas
point t-lreli
4- Danish island 5- Not refined 6- Liquors 7- River island 8- Allowance for waste 9- Babylonian deity 10-Blemishes 12-Symbol for iron 14-Summon forth 17- Lairs 20-Woody plant 23- A state (abbr.) 24- Manuscript (abbr.) 25- Organs of hearing 27-Plaything 30-Slay 32-Baker’s product* 35- Sewing implement* S7-T ropical fruit
38- Hurry 39- Join 41 - Lament 43-Pertaining to old age ♦4- Latin conjunction 46-Preposition 48-Insect* 61-Snare
53-Mother of Castor and Pollux 57- Devoured 58- Spanith fop “yee” 80-A etato (abbr.) 62-Symbol fOP tantalum 64- Exist
34-lreland 36-Skidden 38-Pronoun
40-Killed 42-Rent
45- Emmet 47-Page of
book
49- Let it stand 50- Narrow opening 52- European
herb
54- Printer’* measure 55- Note of
tcale
58- Revives 59- Cyprinoid
fleh
61-Landed property 83-Esculent 65- Bind* 66- A continent (abbr.) 67- Lamprey DOWN 1- R*sort 2- Jail 3- Old pronoun
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DUtr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
They’ll Do It Every Time
if »8N>W U. t. Nton* Ofitaa
By Jimmy Hatlo
Now You Know The caramic til« tubs in the ancient Roman public baths often exceeded 1,000 square feet and could accommodate well over 1,000 persons, according to the Trade Association of the Domestic Caramie TUt Manufacturers.
1h£ gaspavnes ARE VERY HARP TO PLEASE WHEN they eat out
^(S CHATEAUBRIAND IS /TAKE MINE AWAY, TOO, OVAH-PONE/ TAKE IT BACK/Ji GASPARP-REALLY, IM I’LL HAVE LOBSTER iMSTEAt^Tfe PlSAPPOlMlEP/ ARE YOU
AW MY SUTTER KNIFE IS
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AND A HAT 7/P 7o WALTER gfflEHL, *79-09 65™ PR., MIP7L6 village,. ^ (C
