The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 February 1968 — Page 4
Th« Daily Bannar, Oraaneastla, Indiana
Saturday, February 17, 1968
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT
1 Real Estate 1
SHETRONE REAL ESTATE 30? S. Ind. St. Ph: OL 3-9313 Offers New Listings 104 OLIVE ST. — Older ? story frame home. Has 4 hedrms., hardwood floors, basement, gas fired furnace. 534 & 520 X. INDIANA— Nice Double. 4 nns. & bath each, 2 bedrms. each, hardwood floors. Good income property. HENDRICKS COUNTY — 202 S. MILTON, COATESVILLE — Pretty brick veneer home. 3 bedrms., hardwood floors, part basement, enclosed front porch, oil fired furnace, fireplace, large 1 car garage. EDGE LEA DR. — Lovely stone ranch-type home. Built In ’61 has 3 bedrms., hardwood floors, back patio with sliding glass doors, oil heat, 2 car garage. CALL US FOR AN APPOINTMENT TODAY After office hours call — C. J. Knauer — OL 3-3057 BUI Talbott — OL 3-6328
THE P. G. EVANS CO. REAL ESTATE NEW LISTINGS CHARACTER PLUS CHARM. Large, stately older home. Six rms. down; five up. New acrilan gold carpet in large liv. rm. and din. rm. Lovely, spacious kitchen. Three full baths. New furnace. Walk to downtown. Gracious, modern living in a grand manorial home. E. Washington street. FRAME RANCH HOME. 1010 Hillerest. Three bdmis. lYi baths. Full finished basement. Water softener stays. Easily heated. Located on a dead end street. Very safe for small children. DISTINCTLY DIFFERENT. Seven rms. plus enclosed porch. W T /W blue acrUan carpet in liv. rm., din. rm., and on stairway. Patent leather vinyl floor tile in den. White brick vinyl floor in kitchen. 1| 2 baths. Garage. Drapes stay. Garb a g e disposal. Portable dishwasher. An achievement in luxury. Northwood Blvd. .$22,900. ONE ACRE BUILDING LOT. Saddle Club road. Owner must sell because of Ulness. Price $1,400. 113 S. Jackson St. Phone OL 3-6509 After hours, call OL 3-6416 OL 3-3406 OL 3-4079 OL 3-4343 OL 3-3642
Distinctive Homes
ARE SOLD BY SHETRONE REAL ESTATE AGENCY 302 SO INDIANA CALL OL 3-9315 GREENCASTLE
4 For Rent, Apts. 4
COLE Apartments. Bedroom apartment suitable for one or two adults. See Custodian on premises.
FOR RENT: New 1 bedroom furnished apartments and 2 bedroom unfurnished apartments. Roban Apartments, 327 Bloomington St. Phone OL 3-4072.
Home Items
CEDAR Chest, $10.; child’s I swing set, $15.; boy’s bike. $8.; dresser, $10.; 9x12 rug. $15.; metal wardrobe. $12.50; i desk and chair. $20.; TVs $25 I up; TV antenna, complete j $15.; refrigerators, stoves, radios. record players. Many i other items. 24 E. Berry St j 9:00 to 9:00 daily, 1:00 to 6:00 Sundays.
EARN 5% Interest On Certificates Of Deposit AT
FIRST-CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. Greencastle, Indiana
Member FDIC
1967 SINGER CABINET $37.10 FI LL PRICE
ASSUME six payments of $6.18
per month. Nice walnut con- J sole, good condition. This ma- j machine appliques, monograms., oR Farm Notices 28
sews forward and reverse, i mends and dams, equipped to zig-zag, pastel color. Full j price just $37.10. Call OL 3-
3987.
Moscow's smallest museum
and RUNNING
By
Tony D. Manuel General Manager
FOR SALE: Ironrite ironer. Good condition, $30. Phone OL 3-5726.
DID last year’s adverse farm season cause you some problems? If it did. and you need some financial help, start the wheels rolling this spring by financing with the Central
National Bank.
Employment, Men
WANTED: 4 full time truck mechanics, 3 men for station work, apply in person. Kenworthy Truck Stop, Clayton,
Indiana.
Religion in America By LOUIS CASSELS
Young people who find church-going a drag might dig
14 Automotive 14 the kind of worship services
held by the early Christians.
Remember East Side Motor < So says a noted Protestant Sales for expert body works, > theologian. Dr. Harvey Cox of painting, wheel alignment Harvard Divinity School.
and mechanical work. Free
estimates.
In an interview with Colloquy, a monthly magazine published by the United Church of Christ, Dr. Cox discusses a problem that is painfully familiar to parents and pastors. And he suggests some bold solutions.
'67 CHRYSLER Newport, 4 “Young people tend to be fed door hardtop, radio, automa- up with churches in which wor-
FOR SALE: 1966 Olds. Power steering, power brakes, air. Must sell. Priced below Red Book, $1795. Call OL 3-6515.
tic transmission, 6700 miles. Priced reasonable. Phone OL
3-9017.
For Sale
FOR SALE: Hay Phone 246-
6413.
FOR SALE: "No Hunting—No Trespassing’’ signs. The Daily
Banner
FOR SALE: Mixed hay. Call
PE 9-2643.
FOR SALE: Frigidaire Emperial Flair electric range. Phone OL 3-9332, 316 Mel-
rose Ave.
ship is stifled by deadly decorum,” he says. They simply are not interested In taking part in the traditional type of cultic worship in which people gather at certain times and in particular holy places to follow an accepted order of ritual. This applies to many young adults as well as teen-agers. But these same young people, Dr. Cox observes, “have been favorably impressed when they visited Negro churches.” They were “thrilled to find among Negro Christians the joyousness and spontaneity lacking in their
own churches.”
Dr. Cox is realistic enough to know that suburban white Protestant congregations are not going to abandon their accustomed ways overnight. Nor does he think they should. Such a drastic change would be unfair to the large number of church members “for whom inherited cultic worship has enormous significance.” Instead, he argues that “it will be necessary in the next couple of decades for two different overlapping forms of church life” to co-exist. Thus, while continuing its traditional services, a church could also offer opportunities for more in
formal worship.
Experiments in recapturing the spontaneous joy and fellowship of early Christian worship are already underway in some
COME one. come all to The 1 congregations. They often take Reelsville Lions Club Euchcr the form of “Agape Feasts” Party, Saturday. February 17: agape being the Greek word at the Club House. Serving used in the New Testament to at 5:30 p.m. Eucher at 7:30 describe unselfish Christian love
p.m.
HOUSES, garages, cottages, other buildings. No down payment. Wholesale prices. Save many dollars by doing part of the work yourself. Write Otis Rupright Builders. Inc , Dept. Z, Lafayette, Indiana
47906.
20
Livestock
20
FOR
SALE: Chester
White
gilts. Phone 829-2032. William
R. Haltom, Spencer,
Indiana.
21
Notice
21
RENT
a low cost locker at
Putnam Co. Frozen
Foods.
Inc.
Rates to suit all budgets.
Call today OL 3-3912.
SELLING OR BUYING A NEW HOME? CHECK THE CLASSIFIED ADS. ! 3 Mobile Homes 3 FOR SALE: Highway 75 & 40. 12x60 3 bedroom mobile home, I $3795 used. 55x12 new 2 bedroom mobile home, rugged, $4195. Truck Campers, $195 and up. Phone $45-2383.
for others. An Agape Feast Is a fellowship meal into which is interwoven an informal celebra-
tion of holy communion. Experiments are also being
conducted—some of them in NOTICE: Square Dance lessens such august centers of tradibeing given Sunday. February tional worship as Washington 18 from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m., at Episcopal Cathedral—in the use
FOR SOFT, filtered water, call CuUigan OL 3-5910. W T e’ll be here tomorrow, to service
what we sell today.
the 4-H Fairgrounds.
MEL’S Radiator and Repair Service — Brakes, Generators, Starters. Shocks and Minor lineup. 903 N. Jackson St. SOFT WATER, PENNIES A DAY. CULLIGAN OF GREENCASTLE. OL 3-5910. We’ll be here tomorrow to service what we sell today.
of contemporary music and dancing as expressions of worship. Dr. Cox thinks it a great pity that conservative worshippers “are prone to boggle at electric guitars and trap drums In church.” “Their resistance Is unfortunate,” he says. “Folk songs, dramatic movement.
By SCOTT B. BURNS MOSCOW UPI — Moscow boasts an underground museum so far underground you have to go down a ladder into a hidden well to find it. You also must enter a wholesale fruit store, then go through a trapdoor in the floor behind the pulpit-like cash drawer. The casual visitor who enters the premises by the front door — and inadvertently rings an alarm bell in doing so — sees only a neat display of prunes raisins, walnuts, cheese and
rice.
But just over 60 years ago a daring band of four men and two women put out an illegal revolutionary newspaper here — on a single flatbed press and in a room hollowed out of the clay beneath number 55 Lesnaya Ulitsa (Forest Street). They courted arrest and possible death daily in their un derground printing shop only two doors from one of Czarist Russia’s most feared political prisons. Across the street stood an army garrison. But they were never caught. Today the underground printshop is known as a “branch of the State Revolutionary Museum of the USSR, underground printing shop of the Central Committee of the Russian Social Democratic Workers Party 1905-1906.” Faded copies of the tiny, two-column party organ, “Rabochi ’’(Worker), hang in frames in cramped rear room where the manager of the wholesale fruit “front” once lived with his wife and family. The result is one of the most realistic museums in the Soviet Union — recreated as its original operators remembered it in 1923 and not as latter day Communists might have thought it ought to have
looked.
Outside the ashgrey, threestory stucco house in a shoplined street of Moscow’s former Georgian quarter the store is marked much like any other of Czarist times, “Wholesale Trader, Caucasian Fruits, Kalan-
dadze.”
Inside one is immediately struck by the simplicity of things — and reminded forcefully how little the shop differs from some out-of-the-way retail stores in the Soviet Union
today.
Two glass bell jars shelter the cheeses, one of them the “brinza” which Georgians make out of goats’ milk. Most of the nuts and fruits are placed in neat square boxes in front of the counter. A bag of rice squats on the floor. But the real business was run
downstairs.
The rebels who manned the printing press persuaded their landlard to dig a well in the cellar storeroom to drain of excess water in winter. Six feet down the well they dug a horizontal shaft. And another six feet within that shaft they constructed a tiny room, about five feet square. There they placed their flat bed press made in Augsburg. Germany. It was capable of turning out 500 copies of their newspaper “Rabochi” per hour. For one year the revolutionaries manned the press. Sometimes they soaked their legs in the well water to get to their work. They shut down the press when the bell signalled someone — possibly a police or soldier neighbor — had entered the
shop overhead.
Other secret printing plants in Moscow were raided but this one, operating literally beneath
heavy chunk of decomposed ink, warped typefaces, and the hidden room. They moved the original press back to its former
The
T • 1 i P* • 1 ^ vciicmi manager ZDS' Ta
Lighter bide
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON UPI —Judg-'
hiding place and placed an old in * from the number of people
box for movable type in a hol-
who are being arrested fol-
low “bookshelf” cut in the wall. & r °wing the stuff, marijuana There the press stands today, P ro d uc ti°n in this country is on a copy of “Rabochi” in handset the u P swi ng. type locked in its mechanical Concurrently, hippie leaders maw ready to print out the an( * spokesmen for certain other words of the revolution: “Old cultural groups are advocating Russia is dying. New Russia is that pot smoking be legalized.
being bom.”
Foreign News Commentary By PHIL NEWSOM
I am inclined to side with the pro-pot forces on this issue. But j not, I hasten to add, because I ! am pro-pot. To the contrary. I am convinced that legalizing J ! marijuana would be the most effective way to suppress it. For if growing marijuana were lawful, it would then pass; , from the hands of the Narcotics' Bureau into the arms of the Theo Agriculture Department. In other words, marijuana
There is, declared
Lefevre, the then-Belgian pre-
mier. in 1961 onlv “one economy, I would be treated like an y other one society, one Belgian nation.” I farm cro P- Ri ^ ht awa >' > ou can i
But for three weeks in the medieval Catholic university town of Louvain during late January and early this month rioting students revived an issue that has divided Belgians ever since they achieved independence from the Netherlands in:
1831.
This was the linguistic barrier
between
people of the north and the French-speaking Walloons to
the south.
On Feb. 7, the Belgian government, split among itself on the issue, fell. It is agreed that the pieces will be difficult to put together
again.
Those who fear for the future of the country recall with foreboding the bloody demonstrations of the 1950’s which nearly ripped Belgium apart over the issue of King Leopold’s return from political exile. That issue also accentuated the differences between the Flemish and the Walloons and led to demands for an “autonomous Wallonia” in protest against the restoration of Leopold. Leopold's abdication and the elevation of his son Baudouin to the throne brought temporary peace. But the language
barrier remained. A new attempt
issue in 1962. setting up formal linguistic frontiers, only led to more riots and new demands for
separatism.
And this was the issue at
Louvain.
Curtailment of foreign travel by U.S. citizens, as recently recommended by the President, may have a short range, salutary effect on our international balance of payments. In the short range, it may strengthen the position of the dollar in the international world of finance, and unquestionably, if called upon to do so, a majority of people in our country will go along with such restrictions. But, at the same time, the move should be recognized as a long step backwards in the cause of international peace and goodwill between nations. For many years, increasing commerce and travel of peoples between the nations have been hopeful indicators that a day was coming when national boundaries would no longer be protective barriers for the nourishment of prejudice and misunderstanding. In recent years, the advent of the jet airplane has opened a new vista of peaceful mingling of peoples of all nations. This vast people-to-people program has been mainly the result of the aggressive travel promotion of major U.S. international airlines, and it has not been a one-way street. Our largest overseas airline. Pan American, has been active in promoting travel from other countries to the United States. It has spent more money abroad promoting this reverse flow of tourism than the government itself has spent. As a self-supporting, taxpaying, private enterprise, travel promotion has been a major activity of this airline as it has of other international air carriers. Much of the development of international air travel has been inspired by the vision of the airplane as an instrument of goodwill and friendship between nations. This has been in no small part responsible for the steady downward trend in air fares and for the introduction of a means to visit the most remote corners of the earth. Mass production of the auto revolutionized life in the United States. Mass air travel by jet holds high promise of revolutionizing customs and living standards throughout the world. It would be nothing less than catastrophic to the aspirations of mankind if freedom to travel is curbed by government fiat.
* * *
At least 500 persons met death on Indiana's streets and highways during 1967 because they didn't take the time to fasten their safety belts — an action which takes less than five seconds. According to the Indiana Traffic Safety Council, too many motorists underestimate the value of using their safety belts because they think the short trip to school to pick up the children or the quick drive to the neighborhood store involves little risk. Actually, the Council noted, three out of four traffic deaths occur within 25 miles of home, and over half of all those accidents resulting in injury and death occur at speeds of less than 40 m.p.h. So, in the long run, the
home stretch is the danger zone.
In addition, national research now indicates that safety belts could save as many as 14,000 lives per year. This is nearly three times more than previous
estimates.
The State Safety Council also reported that fastening a safety belt may save a motorist money. Recent court rulings in several states have reduced or denied personal injury awards to persons who failed to buckle up. Liability claims and medical payments for automobile passengers would be significantly reduced if safety belts were regularly worn. Fewer claims for costly bodily injuries would relieve the need for higher insurance rates and ultimately save money for insurers and their policy holders. With the new year beginning, you're a wise motorist if you make yourself a new rule: Take the five
. , . . . , J . u , —- seconds to fasten your safety belt and increase your 18 >u en . * ^ are e Meanwhile, Congress, all of chances of living through an accident by five times. Walloons were using their pres- .. . , . t , . ’ ence at the university as a .. ,, f •• and ^ ac ' : ^ Te & r0 wa s as-, doesn’t appear to be his bag. spearhead for bringing French W ° U enac nianj la sistant to the police chief was “As long as I’m on TV or in
culture to Flanders, and they demanded removal of the entire
se how that would have a depressing effect on the mari-
juana market.
It would become a part of the agriculture paradox we are wit-
nessing in this country.
Those who grow it would find themselves, like other types of farmers, unable to make ends meet because prices are too:
low. Those who buy it would the Flemish-speaking , , ..
_ find themselves, like other
types of consumers, unable to afford it because prices are too
high.
Within a few weeks after , marijuana became legal, it is a sure bet there would be marijuana surplus. At this point, the Agriculture Department would | step In with a system of acre-
age controls.
The next move would be a system of price supports. After j j which much of the marijuana! i that had been going into the! j market would wind up in gov-
| ernment warehouses.
But marijuana is different I from other crops. Any attempt to dispose of the surplus through the school lunch program likely would encounter ob- j
jections from the PTA.
The Agriculture Department undoubtedly would undertake a; research program to find new uses for marijuana, such as using the leaves for salad
A new attempt to settle the n t - . -««« _ ^ , 1 greens. But the benefits of such
ventures usually are marginal. As the surplus increased, the retail price of marijuana would rise 67.3 per cent, adding 4.7 points to the cost-of-living : n-
dex.
Meanwhile, Congress, all of
an important story point. When movies, or recognized as an
taxes.
I„..»,» a . ^ u. c enure lf . T daresay % '’ lth,n ^ the film was released instead as entertainer, I feel I’m doing a
F™,eh -cion from the un.ver- ^.hThe'^n,. {£ ° 0 [
ment to make It Illegal again.
Belgian bishops governing the ,
world’s largest Roman Catholic
News of
servicemen
university, also split on the question and tossed it to the government which fell after eight Flemish ministers refused
to compromise.
In Belgium, language differ-
ences provide the spark. Actual- the headquarters and nerve cenly the troubles go deeper. ter of the Strategic Air ComFlemish, an offshoot of Dutch, mand to firing a variety of airis the official language of Flan- craft in support of the nation's ders. and French the language nuclear deterrent force. The of Wallonia. Brussels.as the cap- wing logged 41.449 hours of ital. was to be bilingual. fl .ving time more than recorded But, in truth, the differences b >’ any major component of the were temperamental and eco- command-as a singular accomnomic as well. The Walloons Ptohment during the period, looked to Paris. ’The Flemish. Sergeant Fletcher is a graduproud of their own heritage. ate of Greencastle High School looked to no one but themselves. R ' s wi ^’ atn ^ ia ' r The Flemish outnumbered the | _ ^ ,. _ .. ^ ,
Walloons by more than one million and they had a majority in parliament. But they charged the top jobs in the armed forces and diplomatic services still
went to the Walloons.
Finally, the Walloons, for years economically dominant over the Flemish, saw their own
in the role
Sanger. I said.
Don Mitchell is the kind of “I’ve seen it in the eyes of man who makes any color bar-1 complete strangers. And I’ve
Lowe of 1937 Indian Trail Drive.
West Lafayette. Indiana.
Hollywood
News
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD UPI —Inesca-
fortunes decline because their pably there is that black face
the noses of the police, con- coal mines were closing and hovering over Raymond Burr's tinued to function. their heavy industries losing out shoulder every week, pushing Conditions. however, were to the more modern factories of his wheelchair in the “Ironside” hazardous for health as well Holland and Germany. television series, learning to
Unless agreement can be become a cop.
found, only the extremists stand The dark face and little body to gain from Belgium's present belong to Don Mitchell, an
as for proximity to the police. One of the men came down with tuberculosis. The rebels decided not to press their luck and the printshop was moved,
press and all.
In 1923 the rebel survivors persuaded the now-rictorious Bolsheviks to re-constitute the shop as it had formerly stood. The re-builders found wadded lumps of printmg paper, a
difficulties.
BANNER ADS PAY
articulate black man who believes he is doing as much as he possibly can for his race simply by being so risible on the
NBC-TV show.
A Caucasian could just as easily play the part, but “Ironside” originally was shot as a two-hour mo via for television
rier seem absurd. He is at once likable, dignified, warm and intelligent. Moreover, he’s getting a message across the tube. “Kids of all colors Identify with the character I play, and thus with me,” Mitchell said at Universal where the show is filmed. “Sanger is just a kid who is part of the younger generation. His color is of no importance at all. I know that from the mail I
get.
“It’s interesting that almost all the white people who write to me say they are Caucasians, and go on to say they like my work in the show. “Even when Pm walking down the street children of all races come up to shake my hand.” Whatever his deepest feeling about racial matters, Mitchell keeps them pretty much to himself, as does his friend Bill Cosby whom he knew when they were both hungry in New York City. But Mitchell doesn’t use the term whitey or honky. Violence
felt it in the handshakes white men as well as black.
UNCLAIMED New Zig-Zag Sewing Machines With 5 year guarantee. Nationally advertised brands to be sold for storage and freight. Total of $37.00 can be paid at $5.00 per month. These machines to go to first people who call. Can be deliivered to your home for you to sew as to make sure you are satisfied. Call collect — Indianapolis — 244-8453, or write General Sewing Supply, 6529 West 12th St. 46224.
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Putnam Circuit Court. Estate No. EST 68-17 Notice is hereby given that Raiph K Parent was on the 15th day ol February. 1968. appointed Executor ol the will of Ronald L. Parent, 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 15 day of February, 1968. Ennis E. Masten. Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court. Attorney Roy C. SutherUn Feb. 17-21-March 2-3t
MALLORY CAPACITOR CO. Needs Production Workers, Assemblers Experience Not Necessary To learn about our Company and Job openings and complete program of Employment benefits. Visit our Personnel Dept., 8:30 A M. to 4:30 P.M. Next Saturday 12:00 to 4:00 P.M. Job Openings Days and Nights An Equal Opportunity Employment Company MALLORY CAPACITOR CO. Greencastle, Ind.
