Tallahassee Democrat from Tallahassee, Florida (2024)

Callahasser Democrat Monday, November 21, 1960 From Rocket Rattle Castro's Brother Raps Warship Use HAVANA (AP)-Cuban Armed Forces Minister Raul Castro says President Eisenhower's dispatch of U.S. warships to the Caribbean is criminal and "unmasks United puppets in Central Ameri- But the younger brother of Prime Minister Fidel Castro in an angry speech Sunday refrained from rattling Soviet rockets as a threat to the United States. The omission was in line with a trend noted recently in speeches by other top figures in the Castro regime. The softer tone lent weight to speculation that Moscow had nudged Castro take the Soviet Union out of the Cuban revolution's frontlines to preserve other Soviet irons in Latin America. Premier Khrushchev himself said recently his rocket offer to defend Cuba was The younger Castro told his audience of petroleum workers that Eisenhower's order of last week, made in response to requests by Guatemala and Nicaragua, represented "a warning by Yankee imperialism to all the peoples of Latin America that it is not going to permit Cuban-style revolutions." Castro said Cuba supports countries in revolt in Latin America but he denied that Cuba had given any direct military assistance to rebels in the recent uprisings in Guatemala and Nicaragua.

"Our best help to them," he said, "is to preserve the revolution here, which will be a great contribution to the final liberation of all our brothers of Latin America." Castro's speech came only hours after the shooting of a young U.S. Embassy clerk by a Cuban army captain during a scuffle outside a Havana nightclub. Wayne Henderson, 22, of Pasadena, a communications clerk in the embassy, was seriously wounded Saturday night. Henderson's condition was described as satisfactory after a operation for the removal of the bullet, which entered his body near the hip. Cuban police said the shooting by Capt.

Jorge Robreno was accidental. Transit Fare Hike Is Seen In Los Angeles LOS ANGELES (AP) The transit strike that snarled Los Angeles' traffic and jammed its freeways is over, but the commuter's worries aren't. The 400,000 persons who daily ride the Metropolitan Transit Authority's buses and streetcars may have to pick up the tab-in the form of increased fares--as a result of the settlement. For five days the commutersspread over a four-county area the size of Maryland and had no bus or streetcar transportation because of a strike by 900 MTA mechanics. Sunday both sides--the MTA, a public agency, and the Amalgamated Transportation Unionagreed to a new 15-month contracts, which provides higher improved working conditions and prospects for a pension plan.

The union voted 451 to 73 to accept the agreement. It will raise the pay of top-scale mechanics from $2.61 an hour to $3 an hour by July: 2. The union said the raises will range from 46 cents to 64 cents an hour in wages and other benefits. Quincy Personals By MRS. A.

B. BLACKBURN Mr. and Mrs. Harry Anderson had as their recent guests Mrs. Roy Kelly of Midville, Mrs.

Ola Stanley of Barnesville, S. C. The Men's Club of the Centenary Methodist Church will observe Ladies' Night Tuesday at 7:30 in Monticello News By QUIDA ANDERSON Elizabeth Ketchum McDonald and Kenneth I. Milton were married Thursday night by the Rev. D.

A. Simmons at his home. After a wedding trip to South Florida the couple will make their home in this city. The Rev. Ellis Turner gave the mission study "Across the Bridge" at the Women's Missionary Society of the Baptist Church on Friday.

The Key Club and Future Teachers Club sponsored a "Teacher Appreciation Day" on Friday. The address to the student body at assembly was made by John Ritch, lieutenant governor of the Key Club. The Rev. Ellis Turner has returned home after spending last week at the Florida Baptist Convention in St. Petersburg.

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Reid have as their guest this weekend, Mrs. B. 0.

Lewis of Perry. Diane Brittle is recuperating in Tallahassee at the home of her aunt after being a patient for three weeks at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital. Diane suffered severe burns in an accident at her home. Miss Mary Ann Brannon of Tallahassee spent the weekend with Senator and Mrs. S.

D. Clarke. Dr. and Mrs. John Ward had as their guests this weekend Dr.

Ward's mother, Mrs. Martha Ward, and grandmother, Mrs. Rowena Ward, both of Shellman, Ga. Also his niece, Vicki Ward, of Dawson, Ga. Mrs.

L. M. Mills is spending this weekend with her daughter, Mrs. A. L.

Leggett and family in Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. John D. McClellan and son, Butch, of Tallahassee spent Sunday here with Mr.

McClellan's mother, Mrs. Lucille McClellan and family, Fellowship Hall. A musical program will be presented by a group from Florida State University. Mrs. J.

E. Haslam and her mother Mrs. M. E. Wyatt of Fort Valley, arrived Sunday for a two weeks visit with Mrs.

Haslam's son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. George A. McDearmid. Miss Evelyn McDonald, Miss Mortimer Bassett and Mrs.

Betty Moseley spent Sunday with tives in Americus, Ga. Mrs. James Ellis of Fort Walton and Mrs. Carter Peters of Caryville, visited Mrs. Betty M.

Johnson during the weekend. Mrs. John Carden of Tampa is visiting her brother-in-law and sister Mr. and Mrs. John McAfee.

David Powell, Garrot Blitch, Kay Dixon and Mort Bates attended the Blountstown-Quincy football game Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. W. L.

Wood and daughters spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wood in Branford.

Mrs. Ira Price, Mrs. Flora Mitchell and Miss Evelyn McDonald spent Saturday in Tallahassee. Mr. and Mrs.

H. O. Etheridge left Monday for Ft. Myers for a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.

J. T. Etheridge. They were accompanied by Mrs. P.

W. Conrad, who will visit her daughters, Miss Mabel and Miss Erin Conrad in Pompano Beach. Mr. and Mrs. R.

B. Lester returned Friday from a 10-day visit with her sister, Miss Elizabeth Weatherly in St. Augustine. The Friday night duplicate bridge club met at the Garden Center with the following winners; first, Mrs. J.

H. Stiles and George Sampson; second, Herbert Swisher and Bill Miller; third, Mrs. Mary Lena Burton ard Mrs. Geneva Sanagree; fourth, Mrs. Florence W.

Budd and Mrs. Vivian Gaham. Third Class Petty Officer and Mrs. Jeff Taylor and son have been visiting his parents the past 10 days. He left the latter part of the week to report for at Norfolk, Va.

and Mrs. Taylor and baby stayed for a longer visit. Mrs. Florence W. Budd had as her weekend guests Mrs.

Mary Lena Burton, Mrs. Geneva Sangaree and Mrs. Vivian Gahan of Marianna. Grand Ridge News By T. BERNARD BISHOP J.

W. Jeter of Chattahoochee was here on business Saturday morning. Harold Logan, pre-dental student at State College, Troy, Ala. visited here Saturday. Mr.

and Mrs. John Hughes and baby visited Mr. and Mrs. W. R.

Tally of Bascom Saturday. Mrs. Gertrude Purcell accompanied a patient from Jackson Hospital to Pittsburgh, Friday. She will visit her sister. Mrs.

Myrtle Keim, in Philadelphia before returning home. Mrs. Mandy Dykes visited in Quincy Saturday afternoon. John Oliver of Chattahoochee visited his brothers, George and Norwood, Saturday. Deaths Sol M.

Roberts MARIANNA Last rites for Sol M. Roberts, 78, of Altha, who died last Friday in a Panama City Hospital, were conducted Sunday in the Altha Methodist church. Burial was in Mt. Olive cemetery. Mr.

Roberts, a well known trainer of bird dogs, is survived by his widow, Mrs. Mary Roberts of Altha; one son, James D. Roberts of Vidilia, one daughter, Mrs. Edna Rowell, of Panama City; one brother, Bill Roberts and two sisters, Mrs. Bell Hansford and Mrs.

Clifford Chambers of Altha. Mrs. Amanda Smith Mrs. Amanda Smith, 69, died at Tallahassee Memorial Hospital early Sunday morning after lengthy illness. She was born Nov.

30, 1890 in Leon County and lived here her entire lifetime making her home on the Woodville road. She was a member of the Hayden Road Assembly of God Church where funeral services will be held Tuesday at 3 p. m. The Rev. Asa Williams will officiate and burial will be Aenon Cemetery, Survivors are three sons, Henry Smith, Carl Smith and Robert Smith of Tallahassee; five daughters, Mrs.

J. W. Dean, Mrs. W. M.

Hartsfield, Mrs. G. W. Causseaux, I. Mrs.

J. C. Metcalf, Mrs. L. T.

Strickland, Tallahassee; 25 grandchildren; 11 great-grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. Minnie Sloan, Tallahassee and a brother, George Hartsfield, also of Tallahassee. J. V. L.

Peaco*ck Funeral services for J. V. L. Peaco*ck, 73, who died suddenly Saturday morning, were scheduled for today at 2 p.m., from the Lafayette Presbyterian Church of which he was a member. The Rev.

Fred Lenk was to officiate with burial in Oakland Cemetery. Born July 4, 1887 in Alabama, Mr. Peaco*ck had lived in Tallahassee for the past 30 years. He was in the automobile business. Survivors are his wife, Mrs.

Carrie Lee Peaco*ck, Tallahassee; one son, James L. Peaco*ck, Linden, N. six grandchildren; seven great grandchildren; one brother, T. J. Peaco*ck, Quincy: three sisters, Mrs.

Avery Williams, Inverness; Mrs. 0. L. Herring, Montgomery, Ala. and Mrs.

Mattie McDonald, Quincy. Active pallbearers were Bill Yon Peaco*ck; Jack Peaco*ck, Wilbert Peaco*ck, Ruel Peaco*ck, Howard Johnson and Wayne Johnson. Honorary pallbearers were W. J. Peaco*ck Grady Peaco*ck Charles Peaco*ck James Peaco*ck, Bill Robert Peaco*ck, Lonnie Peaco*ck, Benjamin Peaco*ck and Hugh Thomas Williams.

Mrs. Agnes Bremer Mrs. Agnes W. Bremer, secretary to the Florida Cabinet for 34 years under 10 governors, died suddenly last midnight at the home of her daughter, Mrs. H.

L. Poberts, 1405 Fairway Dr. She was 74. Mrs. Bremer retired in 1955.

Since that time she has lived mostly with a daughter in Palm Beach but visited here frequently. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Bremer became secretary to the Cabinet during the administration of Gov. Cary Hardee and served in succeeding administrations without interruption. She took care of most of the work concerning pardons and parole before the Parole Commission was organized in 1941.

Survivors include three daughters, Mrs. Roberts, Mrs. B. D. Cole of Palm Beach and Mrs.

Frances Pate of Tallahassee; also six grandchildren. She was a member of the First Church of Christ Scientist in Tallahassee and the Mother Church, First Church of Christ Scientist in Boston, Mass. The family has requested no flowers. Argentina Navy Chief Favors U.S. Patrolling LOS ANGELES (AP) Argentina's secretary of the navy says he approves the United States sending Navy units to Guatemala and Nicaragua from possible invasion.

aggression must be stopped in this hemisphere," Rear Adm. Gaston C. Clement told newsmen as he toured U.S. naval installations here Saturday. Clement said, "'The Argentine people are staunchly anti-Communist and anti-Castro." Macmillan Due ROME (AP) Prime Minister Harold Macmillan of Britain arrived here today to review political and economic problems with Italian leaders.

It is the first formal visit by a British prime minister to 'the Italian capital since the Neville ChamberlainBenito Mussolini meeting in 1939. From Page 1 'Confidence' Stands Alone hands as backing for part of the money supply. USE UP CUSHION It wouldn't take long to use up the cushion available for meeting foreign orders. And once Uncle Sam had to turn away customers, the dollar would no longer be as good as gold. Of course, the buying rate of recent weeks may, slacken and perhaps drop sharply.

The point is, however, that no one can foretell the future. The balding arithmetic of the present situation already has caused some international uncertainty. Witness the frenzied speculation that gripped the London gold market last month. At this point, large gold purchases over a short span of time would add to the existing -would threaten to unleash, forces that could shatter the free world's financial sysem. REDS DON'T HAVE IT The Soviet Union, fortunately, hasn't the dollars to attempt such a move.

And why would friends ever do such a thing, especially since they would suffer, too, in the end? Why did millions of solid American citizens run trembling to their banks after 1929? Putting it plainly, they lost confidence in the banking system. It was to buttress confidence that Eisenhower added last week. He wanted to show the world that the United States is aware of its problem and is not afraid to do something about it; that it will defend the free world's stake in the stability of the dollar. Some believe the President's actions were too severe--that the cure will hurt more than the disase. However, the fact that such action was taken by a "lame duck" administration suggests the urgency with which the problem is viewed by Eisenhower and his secretary of the Treasury, Robert B.

Anderson. Why couldn't they have waited nine more weeks for the inauguration of President -elect John F. Kennedy? Some speculate that the actions were taken now because Eisenhower felt they would be necessary soon and feared a new administration might be reluctant to take potentially unpopular measures. This was denied by an official who took part in the meeting at which Eisenhower made his decision. This man said there was only one reason for acting now: Inauguration Day might be too late.

Tuesday: Why foreigners are buying more and more American gold. Box May Tell How Man Acts In Space LOS ANGELES How effectively man performs in space may be told by a little black box no bigger than a bedside radio. The box can be used to pick up and amplify the tiny electric signals from the brain's center of consciousness when animals man are in space. This information could then be telemetered to earth. The instrument, a transistorized brain wave machine, was developed by Dr.

Ross Adey of the University of California, Los Angeles, Medical school here. It was designed by Raymond Kado, elec. tronics engineer, under a project supported by the U. S. Air Force's Air Research and Development Command.

Weightlessness in space may basically elter the process of consciousness, Dr. Adley said. The brain is normally subjected to an unceasing barrage of impulses in muscles, tendons and arising, deep body regions. In the weightless state these impulses are reduced to a very low level. Thus man's level of awareness may be affected.

There may also be a problem of "space insomnia," Dr. Adey said. The purpose, which exists in a relatively weightless state in its watery world, does not display the sleep-wakefulness cycles common to land-living mammals. This sleepless behavior may be related to prolonged weightlessness. Characteristic patterns of alertness and sleep are signaled by impulses from the brain's center of consciousness.

Tiny electrodes planted in these centers in space animals would carry these signals to the black box and to earth via telemetry. Dr. Adey believes this might give a more reliable measure of performance capability having the animal press a lever. The animal may stop pressing a lever from boredom or just plain balkiness, he points out. The system has been tested on animals in a human centrifuge and in vibration experiments simulatng acceleration loads of rockets.

It has passed with flying colors. Seating Expected Kasavubu UN Foes Stage New Attack By WILLIAM N. OATIS UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) -Foes of Congolese President, Joseph Kasavubu mounted lastditch effort today to keep the U.

N. General Assembly from seating him and his delegation. But the prospect was that the assembly would vote to seat him anyway, late today or some time Tuesday. That would give the United States a victory over an Asian-African-Communist faction favoring Kasavubu's bitter rival, deposed Premier Patrice Lumumba. One experienced diplomat said the vote to seat Kasavubu might be as much as 60-20 with 18 abstaining.

A day-long debate is expected and a special night session may be held. The firt four countries on the speakers' list Yugoslavia, Guinea, Mali and Ceylon have come out against Kasavubu. Kasavubu, who came to New York two weeks ago to press his case, has said that until he is Life Likely Same In All The Universe PHILADELPHIA-Life is likely to be the same anywhere in the universe because all living organisms are most probably made up of the same four elements: carbon, oxygen, nitrogen and hy. drogen. Only these four elements have the suitable properties for sustaining life, Dr.

George Wald, biology professor at Harvard University, told the American Philosophical Society, He said that it is doubtful if life can arise without water or progress very far without oxygen. Nor is it likely that life can exist anywhere without radiationsuch as the radiation the earth receives from the sun that excities molecules electronically and SO activates photochemical ions. Therefore, it is possible to consider universal physical relationships, Dr. Wald said. The relationships in the periodic system of the elements may be assummed true everywhere in the universe; so also the laws of chemical combinations and dissolution; and the effects of temperature, pressure and radiation on the rates of chemical reaction.

It may be possible to discover the widespread association of certain types of organic molecule with special functions in organisms, by studing the evolution on earth, Dr. Wald said. When widely separated groups of living organisms independently select the same type of molecule for the same function, they may as well be on different planets. There are examples to show that such independent choices have been made on earth, and they are governed, not by availability, but by suitability. These considerations are of general interest, but, in addition, they open up a new frontier of universal biochemistry, Dr.

Wald Walkie-Talkie Traces Sheep MELBOURNE Australian farmers, with more than 000 sheep scattered over their vast sheep stations, no longer have to worry where their flocks have, farmer strayed. exactly The where sheep they tell have gone. A tiny radio transmitting set, developed by the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, is strapped to the back of the sturdiest sheep in a flock and sends out a perithe farmer on his direction-finder odic "bleep" to be a picked up by set. Since sheep always follow their leader. the farmer knows where all his sheep are at that time.

Because more than 10,000,000 of the 40,000,000 lambs born in Australia each year die in the first few months of their lives, knowledge of the whereabouts of the flocks is of vital financial interest to the farmer. The same information is equally important at shearing time. Scout Ambition Is Blistered TOLEDO, Ohio, (AP)-A troop of 10 Boy Scouts collected 80 blisters on a 250-mile march from Cincinnati to Toledo. "Be fore we started we had planned several longer hikes, but I imagine our ambitions may be somewhat curtailed now," said Richard Applegate, scoutmaster of Troop 15, Portsmouth, Ohio. Gas Explodes CALTAGIRONE, Sicily (AP) A liquid gas container exploded today and wrecked three houses at the hamlet of Mineo.

Four persons were killed and 10 injured. seated, he will not state his attitude toward the U. N. conciliation commision for the Congo. Some diplomats say Kasavubu has intimated that once he gets the seat, he will welcome the 15- nation 1 Asian-African commission to carry out its assignment of seeking peace among rival politicians.

Others doubt that he will do so. Guinea and Mali have said privately that if Kasavubu is seated they will quit the commission. Some on the commission say that if some of its members drop out, none should go to the Congo. But Jaja Wachuku of Nigeria, commission a chairman, told a reporter Sunday nothing would keep it from making the trip. He said talk of a boycott was "shadow boxing." Wachuku dismissed the threat of Jose Nussbaumer, Congolese commissioner for the interior, that 5,000 soldiers would prevent the commission from landing at Leopoldville Airport.

SUN-TANNED KENNEDY HEADS FOR GOLF COURSEtioning Pres. -elect John F. Kennedy, nattily attired in sport clothes, sun glasses atop his head, waves to crowd in front of his ocean front home, as he left for a Sunday afternoon on the golf course. (AP Wirephoto) Big Government Shifts Studied By MARVIN L. PALM BEACH, (AP)-The big task of shifting government control from the Eisenhower administration to the new Democratic regime gets President-elect John F.

Kennedy's personal attention today. Kennedy arranged to confer most of the day at his Atlantic shore home with Clark Clifford, his chief liaison man with the outgoing Republicans. Clifford, who served as special counsel to President Harry S. Truman, was picked by Kennedy shortly after his nomination in July to make a study of the problems of transition from one administration to another. Clifford had the study well under way when Kennedy won the Nov.

8 election. Since then, Clifford has conferred twice with President Eisenhower's chief aide, Wilton B. Persons. There conferences and the Kennedy-Clifford talks today will be climaxed soon by a of the president -elect and Eisenhower for a top level discussion of the change-over. Sitting in with Kennedy and Clifford for at least part of the talks will be Prof.

Richard Neustadt of Columbia University. Neustadt is a specialist on the problems of government transition. From his two advisers Kennedy will get a list of some 150 top positions for which he will be choosing appointees between now and his inauguration Jan. 20, or immediately thereafter. Hundreds of lesser jobs also must filled.

Clifford, who arrived Sunday afternoon, had still another Kennedy assignment. He represented the president -elect at a conference with a delegation sent here by the Louisiana Legislature. The group was under instruc. tions to find out Kennedy's views on a federal court order enjointhe legislature from interfering with school integration in New Orleans. The delegation outlined its mission to Clifford, who simply listened and promised to report to Kennedy.

State Lawmakers To Attend Caucus BOCA RATON (AP) -Scores of Florida lawmakers are expected to gather in this resort city this weekend for a caucus and to have ailook at the proposed site for a new state university. Rep. William V. Chappell Jr. of Ocala, speaker of the 1961 house, called a caucus for Saturday morning.

Several committees and subcommittees have scheduled meetings Friday and Saturday. Among those attending will be Gov. elect Farris Bryant. 97,700 Fireflies Caught In Virginia RADFORD, Va. (AP)-Radford lost but the per capita score was good.

A local group caught 97,700 fire flies in a contest sponsored by a firm which uses them for research. Ray Boyd, 13 caught 13,750 "lightning bugs" by himself. Baltimore, with close to a million people, won the contest with 205,000. Long Distance Bridge Contest NORMAN, Okla. (AP)- Three avid bridge, players at the University of Oklahoma had difficulty keeping a fourth.

They finally dealt the cards, carried hands to a secretary on another floor and played by telephone until she had to quit work at 5 p. m. Pope On TV? LONDON (AP) The British Broadcasting Corp. said, today it was negotiating with Vatican ficials for Pope John XXIII to appear on its television screens on 1: nounced Kennedy the headquarters delegation coltan meet with Clifford today but declined to specify where or when. Over the weekend Kennedy divided his time between recreation and conferences dealing with reorganization of the Defense Department and discussion of the tense situation in the Caribbean area.

His house guests were two Democratic senators, Stuart Symington of Missouri and George Smathers of Florida. Symington, secretary of the Air Force in the Truman administra. tion, is head of a Kennedy study committee on Pentagon reorganization. Mentioned frequently as a Kennedy choice for secretary of defense, Symington said he had told the president elect he he can be of more help to the new administration by staying in the Senate. Symington, whose report to Kennedy is scheduled for completion by the end of the month, has talked of saving between five and 10 billion dollars a year through greater administrative efficiency in the Defense department.

With Smathers, the presidentelect talked over the menace of communist penetration in Cuba and other Latin American countries. Sunday morning the presidentelect got behind the wheel of a cream-colored convertible and, with the top down in brilliant sunshine, drove five miles from his ocean front home to Mass at St. Ann's church in West Palm Beach. New Inquiry On Teamsters WASHINGTON (AP) A new series of hearings involving the Teamsters Union has been called by Sen. John L.

McClellan, D- Ark. McClellan said over the weekend the hearings would start Dec. 13 and would concentrate on New York City Teamsters operations. He said he expected to call union president James R. Hoffa "to explain the continuance of racket control of teamsters locals under his A Florida grand jury also has resumed its investigation of Hoffa's alleged misuse of $400,000 in Teamsters funds in a Florida real estate project.

K. Welcomes Finn Group MOSCOW (AP)-Finland's President Urho Kekkonen led a delegation to Moscow today to work out an agreement with the Soviet Union enabling his country to do business with the European Free Trade Association's "Outer Seven." Wrapped in a heavy overcoat and wearing a black astrakhan hat, Soviet Premier Khrushchev turned out in below-zero weather to greet the Finns at the railway station. "Soviet-Finnish relations are a good example of the practical implementation of the principles of peaceful coexistence of states with different social systems," aid the Soviet leader. Gypsy Queen Dies LONDON CAP) -Britain's gypsies converged today in the little hamlet of Haselbury Plucknett for the funeral of Queen Eliza Woods, their ruler for 40 years. Nobody knows for sure exactly how old Queen Eliza was.

Members of her family say she was in her 90s when she died Saturday. High Winds Blow MADRAS, India (AP)-Ninetymile-an-hour winds swept Madras City Sunday. Several persons are reported dead. Plane were canceled and road and rail transport suspended. Congo Crowd Attacks Yanks With Knives LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP)-A crowd of knife-wielding Congolese Sunday fell upon three American men and a woman whose car accidentally killed a Negro cyclist.

Two of the Americans were wounded. Chief Warrant Officer Clyde St. Lawrence of New Bedford, a member of the military attache's staff at the U.S. Embassy, was stabbed three times as he ran from the car he had been driving. Frank Carlucci of Wilkes-Barre, political officer at the embassy, stayed at the scene so the others could get away.

He was stabbed in the back and beaten before he jumped aboard a passing bus. U.S. military attache Lt. Col. Edward Dannemiller and his wife pushed through the crowd unhurt while it went after St.

Lawrence. The latter was picked up by a U.S. vice consul, Alison Palmer of Amityville, Long Island, N.Y., who happened to be passing in her car St. Lawrence was taken to Lovanium Hospital and given blood transfusion. His condition was described as not serious.

Carlucci's wound required three stitches. The four Americans were en route to Leopoldville's airport to see off Deputy Undersecretary of State Loy W. Henderson, leaving after a two-day visit. Carlucci said the cyclist crossed the road in front of them, then turned back as they swerved to miss him, putting himself directly in the path of the car. Mrs.

Whiddon Ill Mrs. Maybelle Whiddon, mother of County Commission chairman Jack Whiddon, is seriously ill in Tallahassee Memorial Hospital. She was stricken at her home Thursday. Coulter Speaks State Forester C. H.

Coulter, addressed the 60th anniversary meeting of the Society of American Foresters in Washington, D. C. last week. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SECOND JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR LEON COUNTY. IN CHANCERY SHARON K.

SCHIESS, Plaintiff, vs. EDWARD T. SCHIESS, Defendant. NOTICE OF PUBLICATION STATE OF FLORIDA: TO: EDWARD T. SCHIESS.

whose last known Jim Walter Corporation, 2555 Bankhead Highway, Atlanta, Georgia, YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that a suit for divorce has been brought against you in the Circuit in Court of Leon County, Florida, Chancery, are by Sharon K. Schiess, and and you hereby ordered required to file with the Clerk of this Court and serve upon Rufus O. Jefferson, Attorney for the Plaintiff, Suite 104 Midyette-Moor Building. Tallahassee, Florida, your written answer or other defenses, if any, to the bill of complaint in said suit on or before the 9th day of December, A. D.

1960, or judgment will be entered against you by default. The Tallahassee Democrat 19 per in which this order will be hereby designated as the published once a week for four consecutive weeks. WITNESS the Honorable W. May Walker, Judge of the said court and the SEAL thereof at Tallahassee, Leon County, Florida, this day of November, A. D.

1960. GEO. G. CRAWFORD (SEAL) Clerk of the Circuit Court By David Lang. D.

C. RUFUS O. JEFFERSON 104 Midyette-Moor Bldg. Tallahassee, Florida Attorney for Plaintiff Nov. 6.

13. 21, 27-8976 Mrs. Virginia Hamilton of Marianna visited her mother, Mrs. Mary Burns, Saturday. The Rev.

and Mrs. William J. Floyd and children of Blountstown visited Mr. and Mrs. J.

M. Wester Saturday. Mrs. Mary Parker has returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs.

Leonard Mathis in Marianna. Mr. and Mrs. Grady B. Parker and daughter visited Mrs.

Riley Parker Friday night. Raymond L. Pitts has returned from a visit to South Florida including the Keys. Mrs. Mattie Logan of Marianna visited here Saturday morning.

L. C. Coleman of Tallahassee was here on business Saturday. INVITATION TO BIDDERS BY FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY Sealed bids will be received on the 30th day of November, 1960 as follows: 10:00 AM-A CCP Stirrer, tronic Lab. Mixer, Sarnia Fractionator Lab.

Supplies. 11:00 AM A Low Background Sample Changer, Gas flow meters, Regulator. Prices to be quoted delivered to Florida State University Receiving Department, corner of Woodward and Call Streets. Bids blanks and specifications may be obtained at Florida State University Purchasing Department, 106, Westcott Hall. Florida State University reserves the right to acept or reject any or all bids.

R. K. SHAW Business Manager Florida State University Nov. 13, 21-8995 3.

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