The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 26 May 1965 — Page 3

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NOTICE TO BIDDEKS Notice Is hereby given that the Board •t Works and Safety of the City of Ogeencastle. Indiana, will receive pealed bids for the purchase of an Industrial Type Tractor and Mower for the OreencasUe Street Department Trade la IWI Ford with Mower, pursuant to the plans and specifications therefore now on file in the office of the Clerk-Treasurer of the City of Greencastle. Indiana. Bids must be properly and completely executed with a non-collusion affidavit as required by law and upon forms prescribed by the State Board of Accounts. All bids must be accompanied by a bid bond or certified check in the amount equal to ten percent (lOTr) of the total bid payable to the City of Greencastle. Indiana. Blda will be received at the office of the ClertoTreasurer of the City of OreencasUe. Indiana. unUl the hour of 7:30 o'clock on Monday June 7. 1965. The Board of Works and Safety reserve the right to reject any and an bids. WITNESS my hand and the seal of The City of OreencasUe. Indiana, this 34 day of May. 19«5. Raymond S. Fisher Mayor OreencasUe, Indiana 26-June 2-21

. to any part of said estate. Jack P. rankle Clerk of the Putnam Circuit Court > Attorney for Estate i Lyon A Boyd 26-June 3-2t

STATE OF INDIANA )ss: COUNTY OF PUTNAM IN THE PUTNAM CIRCUIT COURT APRIL TERM, 1965 IN THE MATTER OF ESTATE OF IDA C. NAUMAN. DECEASED Estate No 10.392 NOTICE TO ALL PERSONS INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF IDA C. NAUMAN m the matter of the Estate of Ida C. Nauman. deceased. No. 10.392 Notice is hereby given that Ralph H. Nauman. as Executor of the above named estate, has presented and filed his final account In final settlement of said estate, and that the same will come up for the examination and acUon of said Circuit Court, on the 22nd of June. 1965, at which time all persons interested In said estate are required to apear In said court and show cause, if any there bey. why said account should not be approved. And the heirs of said decedent and all others interested are also required to appear and maka proof If their heirship or claim

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Revolt Will Be Probed By FBI WASHINGTON UPI — President Johnson has ordered the FBI to investigate the extent of Communist involvement in the Dominican revolt. It was reported, but not immediately confirmed, that an FBI team had been sent to the Dominican Republic to conduct an on-the-spot inquiry into Communist influences in the rebellion. Asked about the reports, White House Press Secretary George E. Reedy said: “The FBI and the CIA are working jointly as they customarily do on activities that are concerned with the welfare of our own country.’’ Reedy said any further information would have to come j from the FBI. He declined to ! say whether the FBI customar- ' ily is active outside the United ' States in investigatory assignments. The President is believed to have received highly conflicting ' reports from military, diplomatic and central intelligence sources on the extent of the Red I participation. There has been considerable i confusion about the role of the i Communists in the revolt. On May 2, Johnson said that the Reds had “seized’’ the revolt, but other officials have said only that the Communists were

attempting to take over control. Normally, he Central lintelligence matters outside the United States while the FBI deals with them in this country. However, the FBI operates in Puerto Rico, where some figures in the Dominican revolt have been staying.

Negroes Hold Rally In Selma By United Press International Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said Tuesday night southern politicians who have “been hollering ‘nigger, nigger,’’ are goI ing to be saying ‘do you mind voting for me ?’ ’* The civil rights leader made the prediction at a rally in Selma, Ala., after Negro delegations from two Alabama counties held conferences with their legislators at the state Capitol at Montgomery to air grievances over jobs, education, housing and voting. It was the first time that such meetings had been held in the capital, where the old Confederacy was organized, as far as anyone could remember.

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Beatniks Allowed PROVINCE TOWN, Mass. UPI — What is a “beatnik?’’ Whatever “beatniks” are, they’ll be permitted at this widely known resort this summer. A group of citizens had petitioned the selectment to keep out what they called “beatniks” this year. However, a lenghy debate failed to produce a clear meaning of the term.

Sheinwold On Bridge What You Can’t See May Still Kill You By ALFRED SHEINWOLD A certain school of philosophy teaches that what you cannot see does not exist. If you follow this principle when you play bridge you’d better not look at the scorepad. North-South vulnerable South dealer North-South vulnerable NORTH A 7642 V A 10 98 3 O 2 * 853 WEST EAST 4KQJ10 3 A A 9 5 4 2 V None O 1098 O A7 6 54 3 A K62 A J 1097 SOUTH 5 KQJ765 O KQJ A AQ4 Sooth West North East IV 1 A 4 V 4 A 5 V All Pass Opening lead — A K

Western Senators Yield Without Protest To U.S. Treasury Dept.

WASHINGTON UPI — West- j of the country where they have ern senators bowed without pro-1 been traditionally used — the

test to a Treasury decision to j West, abandon plans to mint 45 mil- j lion new silver dollars, but they

West led the king of spades, and East played the encouraging nine. East could see no threat and therefore acted as though no threat existed. West continued with the queen of spades, and South ruffed. Declarer drew trumps and led the king of diamonds to force out the ace. East shifted to the jack of clubs, but it was too late. South took the ace of clubs and discarded two clubs from dummy on his high diamonds. The rest was easy, and South score game and rubber. NO NEED TO PEEK It wasn't necesary to peek at the South hand to know that it contained some good cards. Surely South had not bid five hearts simply to hear the sound of his voice. If South had good diamonds he could discard dummy’s clubs by setting up his diamonds. If South had good clubs, he could not discard dummy’s diamond on a club. Hence It was both safe and necessary for East to attack clubs at the first opportunity. East should overtake the king of spades with the ace to return the jack of clubs at once. When East gets in with the ace of diamonds he can continue with the jack of clubs to make sure of two club tricks. (If South takes a club finesse, losing to the king, West returns a club.) South goes down two Instead of making five hearts, and this makes a difference of about a thousand points. If you can’t see a thousand points, try persuading your partner that they don’t exist. DAILY QUESTION Partner opens with one spade, and the next player passes. You hold: Spade 7 6 4 2 Heart A 10 9 8 3 Diamond 2 Club 8 5 S. What do you say? Answer: Bid two spades. You can count 3 points for the singleton when you have 4-card support for partner’s suit. The total of 7 points is enough for a raise.

promised to work to keep cartwheels in circulation. Senate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., an outspoken advocate for silver dollars, said in a statement he agreed with the Treasury that speculators would keep the new coins from reaching his and other western states. Mansfield said he would “continue to work for the retention of the cartwheel,” to be minted later with a “drastically reduced silver content.” But for now, he said, the “only honest course is to sustain the action of the Treasury Department.” “Mansfield said that he and Sens. Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., and Howard W. Cannon, D-Nev., had informed Treasury officials Monday that they would support the decision. Mansfield said he was convinced that coin collectors and speculators would grab up all or most of the proposed new silver dollars before they could get in circulation. The Treasury said Monday that, with White House approval. it had decided not to go ahead “at this time” with plans to make fhe first new cartwheels since 1935. President Johnson announced 10 days ago that he had directed the Treasury to mint the 45 million dollars. He said they May Vote Today WASHINGTON UPI — The j Senate went into session early j today to rush final action on legislation to guarantee Negro voting rights. A vote was considered possible by early afternoon. The morning session was called by Senate leaders to clean up a few odds and ends still to be considered following Tuesday’s vote to limit debate on the bipartisan measure, would be distributed in areas

Pictures Remain BRADLEY BEACH, N.J. UPI Fireman from Co. 3 are free today to look at the 15 nude girlie pictures in their clubroom in

peace.

After the firemen complained, the borough reversed an order by public property Commissioner Peter J. G. Flood to police to remove the pictures because they were lewd. The pictures, some 3 feet high and some posted on the wall for as long as 30 years, were found by the fire company’s women’s auxiliary to be unobjectionable. “None of the firemen’s wives ever objected to them.” said Mrs. Clara Gellington, auxiliary president.

The Daily Banner, Graancastla. Indiana Wednesday, May 26, 1965

Close Call

SAN ANDREAS, Calif. UPI Calaveras County Deputy Sheriff Fred Kern was patroling a local reservoir with a companion in a boat this week when they noticed a rattlesnake swimming toward them. Kern tried to bat the reptile

away with his oar. But the snake wrapped himself around the oar and began working his way toward the deputy’s lap. Just as the two men were about to jump overboard, the rattler unwrapped himself from the oar and slid gently back into the water.

Judge Doubts Ruby Execution DALLAS UPI — Judge Joe B. Brown, who presided at the murder trial of Jack Ruby, said Tuesday he believs the public does not favor the execution of Ruby and that he dougts the slayer of Lee Harvey Oswald will die in the Texas electric chair. “After all,” said Brown, "we are talking about a man who killed the man who assassinated President Kennedy.” Brown's statement came during a day of relative inactivity in the defense’s attempts to have a date set for Ruby’s sanity hearing. Visiting Judge Louis Holland of Montague, Tex., ruled Monday that Ruby would have a sanity trial, and it was thought he might have set a date Tuesday. But the defense asked for a delay to prepare further legal moves and Holland granted the request. The judge said he would reconvene court today to see if the defense was ready.

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President Asks Scenic Highways WASHINGTON UPI — President Johnson asked Congress today for legislation to erase auto junk yards and billboards from the nation's highways and make travel more scenic for American motorists. In a letter to the House Speaker and Senate president, Johnson said he was transmitting a package of four bills designed to beautify the 250,000 miles of interstate and primary highways. Two of the bills would strengthen controls on outdoor advertising and junkyards within view of motorists. The President proposed that states — as a condition to receiving federal highway grants after Jan. 1, 1968 — control outdoor advertising along sections of highways not zoned or used predominantly for commercial or industrial purposes. In general, such controls would require that no new advertising signs be erected in areas within 1,000 feet of the pavement and visible to passing motorists. Present billboards would have to be removed by July 1, 1970. While paying tribute to advertising as having “an important and valuable” role in American life, Johnson said: “It is neither in the interests of the advertising industry or the nation, to permit a further decrease of our dwindling natural beauty.”

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