The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 June 1964 — Page 3
THE DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
Sheinwold On Bridge Don’t Teil Partner Everything: You Know By ALFRED SHEIN WOLD It isn't necessary to tell your partner everything you know. If it is dangerous to tell him the facts of life, wait until he is a little older. South dealer Neither side vulnerable NORTH A 765 3 V K 6 2 0 KQJ10 Jt, 92 WEST EAST * i A 842 109 3 AQ J4 0964 08532 + A K Q 7 5 3 * 84 SOUTH * AKQ10 9 V 875 0 A 7 * J 106 South West North East 1 * 2 * 2 * Pass Pass 3 * 3 * All Pass Opening lead — * K West opens the king of clubs, and East can, if he chooses, begin with the eight of clubs.
Dr. L. J. Goldberg Registered Podiatrist Will be in his office for Treatment of Foot Ailments Wednesday June 10th After 8:30 A. M. at the COMMERCIAL HOTEL Phone Ol 3-5617 for Appointment*
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION In the Circuit Court of Putnam Coun-
ty Indiana.
NoUce is hereby given that Myron Ciodfelter was on the 3rd day of June. 1964 appointed administrator of the estate of Carl Ciodfelter, deceased. AQ persons having claims against said estate, whether or not now due. must file the same In said court within six (6) months from the date of the first publication of this notice or said claims will be forever barred. Dated at Greencastle, Indiana, this 3rd day of June. 1964. Jack P. Hinkle Clerk of the Circuit Court for Putnam County, Indiana. Probate Ouse No. 10406 James M. Houck Attorney
5-12-19-3t
This will include West to continue with the queen of clubs, on which East will play the four to show he started with only two clubs. Upon being given this information, West will surely lead a third club, permitting East to over-ruff the dummy. After tl:is brisk beginning, however, the defense grinds to a halt. East can take only one heart trick. If he fails to take it at once, East will get his one heart trick later but he can get nothing else. South will make the contract. POOR SIGNAL If the contract is made in this way East has only himself to blame. East should not begin a high-low signal in clubs when he really doesn’t w T ant a club continuation. He should suppress the information about the doubleton in clubs. East must play the four of clubs at the first trick, thus discouraging a club continuation. West will naturally shift to the ten of hearts, which produces three heart tricks for the defenders. After taking three heart tricks East can switch back to | clubs, after which West can ! still give East the club ruff. This defense defeats the contract tw r o tricks instead of letting South make it. The point is that East must signal only for what he wants, not merely to give his partner useless information. A defender must avoid playing a high card when he wants a switch rather ; than a continuation. DAILY QUESTION As dealer, you hold: S J H 10 9 3 D 9 6 4 CAKQ7 5 3. What do you say? Answer: Pass. The hand is not quite w T orth an opening bid despite the excellence of the club suit. There would be some excuse for opening the bidding if your long suit were spades or hearts. (Copyright 1964. General Features Corp.).
SAVE
ON
TIRES!
Acreage Becomes
Grazing Land
KARACHI West Pakistan UPI — West Pakistan farmers are turning 130 million acres of 11 arid wasteland into a virtual jsea of grass for cattle grazing with a simple, inexpensive technique called “water spreading.” Farmers at first doubted that their bone-dry land, pock-mark-ed by tufts of brown grass, could become green pastureland for the hungry, scrawny cattle
of Pakistan.
Their doubts were dispelled when they saw the results of water spreading conducted on a 3,000-acre area of the Rak Miran section of the Dera Ismail Khan district, about 800 miles north of here.
big increase in a land where the per capita income is about $70 a year. USAID officials term the project a "minor miracle.” They feel it is a good example of what can be accomplished when Pakistan officials, AID personnel and villagers work as a term on development projects. As one American official said, however: "The role of USAID in this project was that of a catalyst. It was the Union Council and the people of the villages who actually helped themselves.”
ters while apparently en route to attack Communist Cuba were fined $14 each and freed here today. They planned to return to Miami. One of the seized Cubans bore a strong resemblance to Manuel Ray, Exile Revolutionary, Junta chief, but he said his name was Manuel Martinez. “That’s the name he gave us,” Assistant Police Commissioner George Lovell said. "Several people who know him think he is Ray. We are still trying to find out.”
Date Set For Filing Appeal INDIANAPOLIS UPI — An attorney for condemned slayer Emmett Hashfield, Boonville, will have until Aug. 15 to file his appeal with the Indiana Supreme Court. The high court Thursday granted the extension when attorney Ferdinand Samper, Indianapolis, said he could not have the 2,000-page brief ready by June 16. the deadline set in an earlier extension. He asked for an extension until Oct. 7. Hashfield was convicted last year of the 1960 slaying of Avril Terry, 11, daughter of a Boonville pnysician.. He w r as sentenced to die in the electric chair at the Indiana State Prison, Michigan City. Hashfield w’as tried in Monroe County after his attorney claimed he could not obtain a fair trial in Warrick County where the girl was killed. Because of the interest which the case aroused it was moved more than 100 miles from Boonville to Bloomington for trial.
8 Fined; Freed NASSAU, Bahamas UPI — Five Cuban exiles and three Americans seized in British wa-
Walkout Staged At Bloomington BLOOMINGTON UPI — About 300 employes of the Radio Corporation of America television manufacturing plant walked out Tursday afternoon in a wildcat strike which some of them said was as much over dissatisfaction with their labor union as with the company. The walkout occurred just after the lunch hour. The company and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers union said it was unauthorized. Strikers said they were irked because their union contract expired May 28 and they had been working since on a daily extension basis. "We’ve worked 20 quarters without a substantial raise,” one worker said. “They keep dickering and won’t tell us anything, so we walked out.” Another charged that the union people "take our funds up there and drink the best liquor and don’t do a damned thing for us.”
Guests at the “horstel” can arrange for three to seven-day treks through the Maures-Est-erel and Verdon Mountains.
Autobahn Expands NEW YORK UPI—It will be much easier for tourists to get around in Germany this summer because of the recent opening of new sections of autobahn. One new portion links Saarbruecken, capital of the Saar, with the West German network of superhighways. A section at Dortmund and the southern bypass near Aachen were completed. Another important leg finished was the branch between Halensee a nd Siemenstadt outside West Berlin.
Midnight Swim DORADO BEACH, Puerto Rico UPI—An ocean dip at midnight on June 23-24 is a Puerto Rican tradition dating back to the days of Ponce de Leon and the early Spanish conquistadores. The swim on San Juan de Bautista Day honors the patron saint of San Juan, the capital city. Because the name San Juan once referred to the entire island, the fiesta paying tribute to St. John the Baptist is celebrated with equal enthusiasm in San Juan and throughout the island.
For Horsey Set NEW YORK UPI—A French version of the dude ranch has opened near St. Tropez, according to Pan American World Airways, which serves the French Riviera through Nice. The Augberge Relais Hippique at LeMuy Is a mixture of country inn and riding club.
Re-Entry Problem NEW YORK UPI—Visitors
to the New York World’s Fair i who want to take time out for a ball game at neighboring Shea Stadium, visit their yacht at the Fair’s Marina or go home for a shower and a change of clothes, can return to the Fair the same day without paying an
additional admission charge. The visitor tells the guard at
any of the eight gates he intends to return later. The guard i then stamps the visitor’s palm, heel of the hand, back of the hand or one side of the wrist with an invisible dye—invisible, that is, except when held under an ultraviolet light when the
This venture was sponsored jointly by the Pakistan Forest Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) mission in Pakistan. Water spreading is a simple, (inexpensive method of holding back and storing run-off flood ' water by a system of small
Co-Op passenger car and tracll dams and dykes. The stored tires are going at new low prices wa ter slowly seeps into the soil right now and throughout the and dg a rich silt which
month of June. Bargain prices also
include the new Co-op Custom Hi- nounshes starving grass roots. Level automobile tire—the finest The test area near the Sule-first-line premium tire your Co-op man Hills was typical of land has ever offered. (Only top grade in West Pakistan, most of
HOME APPLIANCES
We carry a full line of Kelvinatnr Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators and Ranges because 1. Better by reputation. 2. Better Guaranteed. 3. Longer life span. 4. Cheaper—because they build more into them. RUS-SELLS FURNITURE North, Side of Square
tires are priced below.)
AUTOMOBILE TIRES CO-OP CUSTOM HI-LEVEL TUBED NYLON
1
SALE
Pit ICC
\ SLACK
WHITC
SOT PIV
J WALL
TAX
WALL TAX
€70x15
4
$17.85
*186
Jl*25 $1.85
710 X1S
4
19.75
1.98
20.95
1.9*
760x15
4
19.95
2J6
24.95
216
CO OP CUSTOM Hl-LEVTL TUBELESS NYLON
SM: 590/600x13
4
J15.95
*1.58
*1735
51.58
640.650x13
4
16.75
192
1825
1.82
700x13
4
17.85
1.97
1925
197
650x14
4
2895
195
19 95
195
700x14
4
19.75
2.11
20 85
211
750x14
4
1995
221
2195
221
800x14
5
21.95
2.37
23.25
237
850x14
28.55
299
2495
259
SCO 950x14
4
25 32
3.06
26.75
3.06
600x15
4
18.39
191
39.77
191
€50x15
4
19.45
2.07
19 95
297
670x15
4
1950
220
20.9*
220
•
710x15 760x15
4
2L24
225
2225
235
*
4
22.95
2.55
24 25
2.55
800'820x15
4
24.75
235
25.95
295
CO-OP CUSTOM SAFETY TUBELESS NYLON
650; 640x13
4
*13.45
*182
*14.95
*192
750x14
4
16.90
221
18.00
221
800x14
4
17.75
237
18.85
237
*•
850x14
4
18.95
259
19.95
259
*
£50.640x15
4
15.65
207
16.75
207
*
€70x15 710x15
4
15.95
220
16.85
220
9
4
17.49
235
18.45
235
760X15
4
18.85
255
1995
255
TRUCK TIRES CO-OP HEAVY DUTY H.S. NYLON
SIZE
eir
SALE PS ICC
TAX
€70x15
6
*1995
*2.46
600x16
6
1893
242
650x16
6
19.95
26*
700x15
e
22.95
294
700x16
6
23 75
3.09
700x17
6
26.95
3 4*
700x18
8
■J1 4C_
4.11
750x16
8
30.G«p
380
750x17
8
33 95
440
700x20
10
44 95
4.95
750 x 29
13
47.65
5.57
825 x 20
10
5695
€35
CREENCASTLE
which is a flat alluvial plain where flood waters pass in welldefined channels. The project in Rakh Miran was started last spring by Norman H. French, range management advisor for USAID from Rock Creek, Ohio, and Aijaz Hussain, range management program director of the provincial West Pakistan government. ■When the initial survey was completed, French and range officer Muhammad Akran Kurdi discussed the technique with Union Council Chairman Ghulam Hasul. The council agreed to provide the necessary labor at nominal wages. They quickly built more than 200 small dams and dikes designed to store flood water and spread it over adjoining land. Construction costs were only about $4,000. The surrounding 900 acres soon became rich pastureland when the waters of a medium flood were channeled, spreading rich silt which fed the listless grass roots. The native grass of the area —sporobulus helvolus—grew 30 inches high. The grass, which makes an especially fine hay, is relished by livestock, which eat both stalks and leaves. Last fall the villagers harvested an extra one million pounds of hay because of the water spreading technique. The cash value of that extra foilage was valued at about $10,000, a
LEANING TOWER PIZZA Summer Hours FRIDAY, SATURDAY SUNDAY 5:00 p.m. to 12:00 p.m. PHONE OL 3-3400
CROSS-OUT Is COMING MONDAY! $500,000 TRAVEL GAME OVER 25,000 PRIZES!! Get Details In This Newspaper Monday!
Full-sized Baler d s compaci John Deere 24-T Twine-Tie Baler
The John Deere 24-T Baler carries an amazingly low price tag—yet you get big baler benefits. Benefits like big capacity . . . accurate tying . . . neat, 14 x 18-inch bales ... high-quality construction • and many safety devices.
The 24-T is a light-running baler—requires only a 2-plow tractor for most field conditions. Come in today — check the price. Ask about ouf economical customerized Credit Plan. It can help put a 24-T on your farm now!
Farmer's Supply Inc. 103 EAST FRANKLIN ST. GREENCASTLE, INDIANA Choose from The Long Green Line of customerized John Deere Equipment
visitor re-enters. The dye is harmless to the skin and clothing and wears off in about 12
hours.
Fire Insurance Warning On NEW YORK (UPI)—Homeowner, beware the “friendly fire.” It may bite the hand that kindles it. This is the warning of the Insurance Information Institute which points out there are some blazes which can do damage not covered by ordinary fire insur-
ance.
A “friendly fire” in the language of the insurance business, in a fire kindled for a "friendly” purpose which stays within its intended confines—in the fireplace or backyard barbecue pit, the furnace or the trash incinerator. As long as such a blaze stays where it belongs, it isn’t considered a fire for insurance purposes. Obviously, the wood you burn in your fireplace can’t be covered by insurance. And anything else that gets tossed or dropped in along with the logs isn’t covered by fire insurance either. Another friendly fire loss which might not be covered, the Institute says is the boiler that runs out of water, becomes overheated from the fire in the furnace and is damaged, without the fire getting outside the furnace. Smoke damage from friendly
FRIDAY, JUNE 5,1964 Pag* 3 ten Pennyworth Says: Cramped Closet Creases Pants But Seldom In The Right Places
The man who put the 50-50 clause in the marriage contract certainly didn’t realize what a problem this would create for couples who must share the same clothes closet. The place we have to hang our clothes between wearings looks like an afterthought on the part of the carpenter. He had a little space left which didn’t seem to fit into the overall building pattern, so he boxed it in, put a rod down the middle and said, “Folks, this is it.” I’ll bet he laughed all the way home. There is a mythical dividing line in the center of the closet, but the few rags I own crowded down toward one end. Because of this I am the only man in our neighborhood who has accordion pleats in his pants and shirts that look like they were ironed on a washboard. Mrs. Pennyworth has a different version of the closet congestion. She says I am the one
who hogs the room and suggests that if I would donate some of my garments to the rag man or the scare crow, we would both have more room for our wearing apparel. If ever we go into a fullscale building program again, I plan to make the first unit a clothes closet large enough to move into while we finish the rest of the house. Maybe we would have the only garment storage with plumbing, but our duds would hang loose and free. The more immediate solution to our problem will be a home improvement loan from the Full Service Central National Bank. With established credit, I’m not worried about getting the money, but finding room for an adequate clothes closet without having to knock out a wall is a problem which will keep me awake. (Copyright By David Barr, 1964.) Paid Adv.
furnace fires isn’t covered by fire insurance policies either, but the Institute says most such damage is covered by the ex- > tended coverage usually written with fire policies. Extended coverage does not cover smoke damage from fireplaces. But here again, most homeowners’ “package” policies cover damage from smoky fireplaces.
An all-risk policy, the Institute says, covers all accidental damage from friendly fires. It suggests you check your insurance to see how you stand. Should the friendly fir* escape its confines—if a burning log rolls out of the fireplace onto the floor, for example — the blaze becomes “hostile” and fire insurance covers the damage.
They’ll Do
It Every Time
I 1 » 1
By Jimmy Hatlo
Sr/
=Y^AND 7HE^\ / WINNER OF THE 1 1 TWO-WEEK CRUISE IS OUR OLD FRIEND
(some guys GOT^ ^LLTHELUCK/HE k LWOULD WIN/ I J TI NEVER WON NOTHIN'] IN AW WHOLE
/he’s loaded. 1 aho he’s seen : EVERYWHERE INCUON6 FOUR1 LEAF CLOVERSVIU-E—THE i- ^ LUCKY STIFF'/j—-1^
, Zyp, ,yNO 0 TO A WORTHY c s^ p dol ;^ GOODJOE.-
■r?
) j
3 {
HE BOUGHT Y LISTEN TO THE FORTY TICKETS/ I AAOTHWALLE7S— WHAT CHANCE A THE FIRST TIME DID WE -STTUEV EVER BOUGHTi HAVE? T\ A CHANCE ON /
A CHANCE ON Anythin©—
$P!
‘IKS.
Tuning in on the SOREHEADS WHO RESENT IT WHEN OLD FAITHFUL FINALLY WINS— —^
(D Kang Fei
• 1964b WciH rights
This big beautiful Chrysler is priced less than $7 a month more than you’d pay for a Ford or Chevrolet*
We’re comparing prices on a Chrysler Newport, Ford Galaxie 500, and Chevy Impala. All 4-door sedans. All comparably equipped. The difference is less than $7 a month! We’re talking about a beautiful big, 18-foot, 2-ton Chrysler. With a 361-cubic-inch V-8 engine. Power steering. Power brakes. Automatic transmission. Radio. Heater. The works! Come in. We’ll quote you a price you’ll go for. And subtract a big bundle for your car to boot. •Payment* based on manufacturer's suggested retail prices. Vi down. 36 monthly payments. Excluding destination charges, state and local taxes, interest and insurance. SEE TOUR CHRYSLER DEALER-THE BEST OF THE BIG CAR MEN “““ ^ £ffiK L J13 PUTNAM MOTOR SALES 118 North Indiana St. GREENCASTLE, IND
y
