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                    <text>SUN D AY EDITION
74th Y ear, No. 16 Sunday, S ep tem b er 13,1981—Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

E vening H e ra ld -f U S P S 481 280)—P ric e 35 C ents

Deadly Look-Alikes
Phony Drugs, Diet Aids Latest Danger In Trying To '
ByTOM GIORDANO
Herald Managing Editor
People, young and old, are finding new
ways these days to "get high". Not with
conventional illegal drugs, but with
"substitutes" anyone, any age, can buy
in any drug store or supermarket.
Without a prescription.
The "substitute" drugs work just as
effectively as the real thing in large
enough doses.
They're relatively cheap to buy.
They get the users high.
They can also kill.
They are stimulants called "lookalikes" because they resemble in shape
and color various kinds of "speed" — the
drug-w orld te rm for strong am ­
phetamines which make a user’s heart
race and his nervous system tingle.
There are two major problem areas
with "look-alike" drugs. One is the
m anufacture of counterfeit am ­
phetamines by hustlers who sell them as
genuine; the other is over-the-counter
substitutes anyone can buy which contain
the same dangerous Ingredients as the
counterfeits.
The dangerous ingredients in both are
caffeine, usually two-thirds, of a capsule,
combined with one of two anti-allergic

ag en ts:
ephedrine
su lfate
or
phenylpropanolamine. The latter two
constrict blood vessels, and if taken in
large doses can collapse them.
Both problems, say law enforcement
officials, exist in Seminole, Orange and
Volusia counties.
And, while law enforcers are virtually
pow erless to deal effectively with
counterfeit drugs at this time, they will
be able to do something about them come
O ct 1. That's when a new law goes into
effect making It a crime to manufacture,
sell or possess "look-alike" drugs of a
particular type.
Until the new law goes into effect,
however, the only thing law enforcement
agencies can do is ask the courts to order
whoever is caught manufacturing or
selling "look-alikes" to stop according to
Don North, public information officer for
Attorney General Jim Smith's office.
But even when the new law takes ef­
fect, law enforcement people may find
they'll be unable to deal with the problem
of drug users buying over-the-counter
su b stitu tes containing the sam e
ingredients as the counterfeits, because
they are properly labeled and there are
no laws prohibiting their sale. The use of
those "lo o k -alik es" pose the sam e

problem of abuse as the counterfeits and
can lead to death, pharmacists say.
Here’s the distinction between the two:
counterfeits are made to resemble true
amphetamines as "yellow Jackets,"
"black beauties," and "pink footballs,"
which doctors prescribe for losing weight
and which drug users generally buy from
drug pushers to get high.
The others are over-the-counter diet
aids for which no prescription Is needed
and •.*hlch also resemble amphetamines.
Many of those "look-alikes," according
to Sanford pharmacist C. Stapler, also
contain
the
caffeine
—
phenylpropanolam ine or ephedrine
sulfate combinations.
One example of a true amphetamine is
Dexamyl, a prescription diet capsule. An
over-the-counter capsule sold without a
prescription and containing the caffeinephenylpropanolamine, is DEX-A-DIET
II. It looks exactly like Dexamyl.
Here are some of the problems which
come from the use of either the coun­
terfeit "speed" or the over-the-counter
substitutes.
When drug users purchase the coun­
terfeits from a pusher, they generally
have to take more than their usual dose
See PHONY, Page 1IA

The two capsules in the foreground a re D e x a m y l,
a p o te n t u m p h e ta m in e p r e s c r i b e d b y d o c to r s to
p a t ie n t s w ho w a n t to lo se w e ig h t. T h e c a p s u le s in
th e w r a p p e r a b o v e th e m a r e d i r t a id s c a lle d D E X -

High'

A -D IE T I I, w h ich c a n b e p u r c h a s e d w ith o u t a
p r e s c r ip tio n . T h ey look lik e D e x a m y l a n d c o n ta in
a m ix t u r e o f c a f f e in e a n d a n a n ti- a lle r g ic a g e n t.
T a k e n im p r o p e r ly , th e y c a n c a u s e d e a th .

Public Hearing Monday
L o n g w o o d
4 5 %

FAIRY TILLS
TOOTH TALES

Eddie Tooke.4, receives "A Smile Is Forever Iladgc" from "The
Tooth F a iry " who m aterialized at the Sanford E arly Childhood
Center on E ast 25th Street recently. The Tooth F airy is really
Beverly Huffman, a dental hygienist for dentist Dr. Roger
Stewart, of Sanford. She showed a movie about tooth care and
told kids about what foods are good and bad for their teeth.

T a x

By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald SUN Writer
Longwood City Commissioners will be
(pending much of Monday evening talking
about money. The tin t public hearing on a
II .58 million budget and a final hearing on
proposed water rates are set for discussion at
the 7:30 p.m. meeting at Longwood City Hall.
Two weeks ago Longwood city com­
missioners voted to approve a tentative Ux
rate of $3.16 per 11,000 of asaesaed property
value to fund the proposed budget presented
by City A dm inistrator David Chacey.
Residents now pay a rate of 12.17 per 11,000.
The proposed budget will require a 45 per­
cent Ux Increase.
A higher Ux rate la necessary, city officials
u y . because more persons will be eligible for
the 113,000 Homestead Exemption this fiscal
year. The Uxable value of property In
tangwood for the current 198041 year was
reduced last fall by $14 million as the result of
Homestead Exemption increases approved by
sU te voters.

E y e in g
In c r e a s e

The proposed $3.16 Ux rate is expected to
generate 1428.000 in property U ses, according
to city officials.
The proposed budget will include 1559,482 for
the police department; 1237,959, fire depart­
ment; 119,197 building and zoning; $54,259,
rec reatio n ; 1373,531, stre e t d ep artm en t;
130,388, parks; $100,000, contingency; $35,084,
city commission; $22,297 for clerk; $30,289,
a d m in istra to r; $23,283, finance; $49,131,
general serv ices; $12,668, receptionist;
$12,000, legal services; $5,500, U n d Planning
Agency; $1,025, city engineer; and $400 for the
Code Enforcement Board.
Com m issioners have also tentatively
adopted a proposed water rate of $4 per 5,000
gallons of water, plus 60 cents for each ad­
ditional 1,000 gallons.
A new rate schedule was also developed
during a Friday work session. If accepted,
consumers who use between five thousand to
30 thousand gallons of water will pay 60 cents
a fte r the Initial five thousand gallon
minimum, and a flat rate of 70 cents per 1,000

Casselberry To Discuss Cable News Experiment
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
The Casselberry City Council is
slated to discuss a proposal by
O range-Sem inole Cablevlsion to
unplement a research project in
Casselberry, at Monday’s 7:30 p.m.
council meeting in the city hall.
The proposed p roject is to
determine "the receptivity of the
public to a home information service
delivered via cable telev isio n ,"

according to O range-Sem inole
Cablevlsion Regional M anager
Stephen T. McMahon.
In a letter to Mayor Owen Shep­
pard, McMahon said his company
did not feel it was necessary to
secure Council's approval ol the
project. However, City Attorney Ken
McIntosh advised Sheppard a city
ordinance requires such approval.
According to McMahon, the
research project is necessary to
determine what types of services

Fete Slated For
Community Colleges'
25 th Anniversary
Next year m arks the 25th anniversary of Florida's com­
munity colleges and Seminole Community College plans to
celebrate the occasion, according to college President Earl
Weldon.
"We are planning to participate with all kinds of eventj wuch
as an open house, theatre programs and exhibits,” Weldon
said.
'
According to Weldon, the anniversary celebration is a "year­
long endeavor" but Seminole Community College tentatively
plans to hold 1U special programs in April or May.
“ We are in the committee stage right now," Weldon said.
"However, we sill be letting the public know of our plans as
they develop because we want everyone to torn out for the
events. Everyone trill be invited to the campus."
According to the SUte Department of Education, com­
munity colleges are an "American invention” and Florida was
the first sU te to have a sUtewide community college program.
Seminole Community Collage, begun in UM, has ap­
proximately 5,000 students attending desses this fall.

and information the viewers want, associated with testing the services.
the format for presenting the In­ However, If the project is approved
formation and the type of equipment and it is determined that residents
necessary to provide the service.
want the service, it will be sold
Following
the
prelim inary throughout the system on a "per
planning stages, McMahon said 200­ channel basis like Home Box Office
300 specially adapted television sets or Cinem as," he said.
Council is also expected to hear a
will be placed in homes of "test
p an e lists" to determ in e their report Monday night from Sheppard
reactions to the actual services concerning the proposed renovation
provided if Council approves the of the current city hall facility.
project.
According to S heppard, the
McMahon said no revenues will be facility will be renovated to house

public safety personnel when live
new, municipal complex is com­
pleted.
The
m unicipal
com plex,
estimated to cost approximately $1
million, will be located adjacent to
the present l^ake Triplet Drive city
hall building on the northwest side.
The complex will house city hall and
utility department personnel, ex­
cluding fire and police departments
Sheppard said.

Cut In Incentive Pay Brings
Protests From Safety Officers
If the Casselberry City Council
approves the city’s fiscal 1981-82
budget. S ept 21, Casselberry police
officers and firefighters can expect to
be making $300 less annually than
they have for the past three years.
The cut In pay is the result of a
budget cutback of "public safety
incentive fu n d s," M ayor Owen
Sheppard said.
"The purpose of the pay in the first
place was to bring starting pay up to
parity," Sheppard said. "With the
cost of living raises the public safety
personnel have received, the in­
centive pay is no longer necessary."
Police and fire personnel aren’t
buying the m a y o r's reasoning,
though.
"I plan to attend the next meeting of

8 ••

the council to protest the drop In
hazard duty pay," Fire Engineer
Harry Klinger said. "Most of us work
part-time Jobs, too, and we can't al­
ford to have them take the $25 a month
back."
No one from the public safety
department protested the cutback at
Tuesday's hearing when the budget
for fiscal 1982 was tentatively ap­
proved by council.
"We didn't realize it had been cut,"
Klinger said. " It’s been in for about
three years and now they're taking it
away - We’re losing $300 a year."
Fire Chief Kenneth Gaines said he
learned of the pay loss through "the
" I wasn’t a t tbs council meeting
when the budget was tentatively

approved, but I learned from the men
that the hazard duty pay, or incentive
pay, as the mayor calls it, had been
cut,” Gaines said.
Gaines said he talked with Sheppard
about the cutback but did not feel the
money would be reinstated.
“ I overlooked the Item in the
budget,” Gaines said. "But, my
biggest concern now Is that it has
pulled down morale in the depart­
ment. Anytime you're talking about
money or taking away benefits,
there's friction."
Police Chief Fred McGowan said it
is a bargaining Issue for the police
union.
Tbe police department recently
voted to be represented by the Orange
County Police Benevolent Association.

gallons will be charged to water users of 30,000
gallons of water or more.
City Commissioner Steve Uskert pushed for
the proposed rate schedule lit the work session
that would allow the city to charge more
money to consumers that use more Ilian 30,000
gallons of water.
"Under llie original plan, the city would be
charging 60 cents regardless of who the user is
and how much he uses," said Uskert. "What
we are trying to do is make ends meet and
discourage use of w ater," Uskert added.
However, city commission chairman John
Hepp said at the meeting he did not want to see
business condemned with higher rates for big
users.
"Big business is not wasting water because
business is trying to keep their costs down. I
don't think we should condemn a business man
for being successful. Most of our water is used
by homeowners," Hepp said.
Chacey agreed with Hepp, saying 80 percent
of water users in the Longwood area re
residential consumers.

TODAY
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105 th Birthday In Prison
COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP!) — South Carolina corrections of­
ficials told "Uncle John" Davis years ago lie could leave
prison any time he wanted.
"They told me that, but I’m staying right here," said Duvis,
who celebrated his 105lh birthday Friday.
The frail bald man with thick horn-rimmed glasses and
several missing teeth is serving a life term for stealing $5 and a
watch in 1922. Burglary was a capital crime for a black man in
Dillon County in the 1920s and Davis was sentenced to life.
He was transferred from the main prison to Watkins Pre­
Release Center in 1963.
"Getting out of here would be like digging my own grave. I
got no living kin left, and who is going to take care of me and
pay for my medicine and my food and clothes?" Davis said.
"With my triple-A I can come and go Just like I want to and
do anything 1 w ed to do," he said. "There's some men on the
streets of Columbia who's free as running water and they can't
do half of what I can."
Davis is the state's only AAA-rated trusty.
“ If we have a vehicle going into town and Uncle John wants
to go, we just let him ride along," McCuen said. “We drop him
off and pick him up when he tells us he'll be ready to come
back.
"One time we let him out downtown and lie finished shopping
and got tired of waiting for our van, so he Just caught a cab
back to the prison."

�4

• 9

T A -trenlngH eraM , t i n t e d , FI.

Suwktv. lao t. 11 . m i

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Grenade Attack Kills
Khomeini Alda, 6 Others
ANKARA, Turkey (UP1) — An Important religious
aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini was assassinated
at a public prayer meeting In the dissident d ty of
Tabriz, dealing another blow to the embattled Islamic
regime.
Ayatollah Sayed Assadollah Madanl, who headed
Khomeini's campaign against Iran’s Turkish-speaking
dissidents in Azerbaijan province, was fatally wounded
Friday along with six other people In the blast that
ripped through a prayer crowd In Tabriz, capital of the
province.
The assassin, who approached Madanl with the
grenade strapped to his waist, also was killed, the
radio said.
Khomeini had appointed Madanl to end the dissident
movement of Ayatollah Sayed Kazem Shariatmadari,
popular leader of Iran's TurkislKapeaklng minority In
western Azerbaijan province. The assassination
followed by a day the execution of a prominent opposition leader, Amir Taher Shokrai, and a crackdown
In which 70 counter-revolutionaries were killed In the
Azerbaijan town of Oshnovieh.

Soviet Marines N ear G dansk
MOSCOW (UPI) - Five thousand Soviet marines on
military manuevcrs landed at a Soviet town on the Gulf
of Gdansk, Just a few miles from the Polish border, In a
show of strength that coincided with the Solidarity
union's first national congress.
The landing maneuvers Friday, observed by West
German and Danish vessels, came as the Soviet media
launched new attacks on Solidarity that Included two
open letters by Russian factory workers.
The marines went ashore at the Soviet town of
Baltlysk, about IS miles east of the Polish border and
60 miles from Gdansk, where Solidarity held Its
congress this week.

Chile Celebrates Anniversary
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) - Under heavy security,
Preajdent Augusto Pinochet celebrated the eighth an­
niversary of his military coup that ousted and killed
Marxist President Salvador Allende.
Despite the nationwide military and police alert, two
bomba exploded Friday at a high-tension electrical
tower Just 10 minutes before the military president
gave his "State of the Nation” speech. There were no
injuries and damage w u minor, police said.

Russians Salvage Ship
MOSCOW (UPI) - Salvage operations are under
way to recover $80 million worth of gold aboard a
British ship torpedoed by Nazi submarines in the
Barents Sea 39 years ago, a Western Diplomat said
* today.
The expedition to recover the fortune aboard the
cruiser Edinburgh lying under MO feet of water is the
deepest sea salvage operation ever undertaken, the
diplomat said.
No attem pt has ever been made to recover the SVfc
tons of gold — currently worth about $80 million — that
went down with the ship, the diplomat said. But
recently developed deep sea technology could permit
the precious metal to be brought to the surface within a
month.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: A cold front pushed thunderstorms
packing u mph winds into Uie Plains region and across the
G reat Lakes — reducing visibility to zero In southern Kansas.
Two people Injured In traffic accidents In Kansas were
reported In critical condition today.
Atlantic Coast states may have to brace for high winds from
Hurricane Gert today. The hurricane was reported about SO
miles to the southwest of Bermuda Friday and carried winds
up to M mph.
The hurricane-force winds were expected to brush past
Bermuda early today and remnants of the storm could move
toward Atlantic Coast states, forecasters said.
AREA READINGS (• a.«n.): temperature: 78; overnight
low: 73; Friday's high: 91; barometric pressure: 30.08;
relative humidity: 93 percent; winds: northeast at 7 mph.
SUNDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 1:99 a.m.,
1:33 p m .;
lows, 1:43 a.m „ 1:56 p m .;
PORT
CANAVERAL:highs, 1:01 a.m., 1:25 p.m.; lows, 1:34 a m .,
1:46 p m .; BAYPORT: highs. 2:02 a m ., 1:42 p.m.; lows, 7:57
a.m ., 1:25 p m .
MONDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 9:52 a m .,
1:19 p.m., lows, 2:25 a.m., 2:42 p.m.; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 9:44 a.m., 9:11 p.m.; lows, 2:16 a.m., 2:33 p.m.;
BAYPORT:highs, 2:29 a.m., 2:22 p.m.; lows, 9:30 a.m., 9:57
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: S t Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
99 Mika: Winds northeast around 10 knots today becoming
variable around 10 knots or leas tonight and Sunday. Seas 3 feet
or le u . Winds and aeas higher near scattered thunderstorms
mainly over south portion.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy and warm today and
Sunday with a alight chance of afternoon thundershowers.
Winds easterly 5 to 10 mph becoming light and variable
tonight. High today and Sunday near 90. Low tonight near 70.
Probability of rain 20 percent this afternoon and Sunday.

HOSPITAL NOTES
U n i — M M e m e r U I Hespttel

Oeeawakaeu

A O M IS S IO N S
Sanford:
Weller M . Ad Hr
O rville L. B e rts
Sandra Sell
Fran cis Derlend
Matthew F. H eal*. D eBery
Ann# R. M e re ct. Detlene

i

.

Vernon M . Sflfl. Dellana
M ildred O. Worley, Deltona
D IS C H A R G E S
Sanlord:
Ridley Bum gerdner
S a m a r * A. Carroll
Kitty 6- Jack ton, Oetlone
Joanne V. Hyatt. L a te M a ry
Lao la Wl'Jlem t. L a t e M e nro
jo Ellen Boland. Or ana# City

Arson Suspected In M idw ay House Fire
A vacant house at 2242 Jitway Avenue In the Midway area
burned to a “ total lo u " according to Seminole County Deputy,
John Sams. Arson Is suspected.
The owner of the house, Calvin Moore, 62, told police there
w u no electrical power on in the residence.
Firefighters from Station 35 responded to the 3:45 p m .
alarm .F ire officials say the fire w u startedgn the south east
front bedroom, but they have no clues, u yet, u to how the fire
w u started.
HARASSING COMMUNICATIONS
Dale Francis, 22, of 902 Tiffany Square, Casselberry
received a phone call Friday from a female caller u y tn g ,
“You should go outside and check on your girlfriend's car,"
according to police.
Francis and his girlfriend, Laura Rendel, 19, later found a
stereo component had been removed from Rendel’s car and
deep scratches had been made In the p ain t Also, three of the
car’s Urea had the air let out of them.
Francis told police he can Identify the female caller's voice.
In a unrelated Incident, Debra Bullock, 23, of 103F Ashwood
Condominium; Fern Park, reported she received the following
message from a female caller:
“If you don't quit interfering I'm going to kill you. You'll be
found with a knife In your back, laying face down In the gut­
ter." She reported the call w u received at 2:45 p m . Friday.
Bullock said she thinks the caller w u a woman she had had
past differences with over a boyfriend.

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Action Reports
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Flr§t
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Courts
4 Police

completely open with no signs it had been forced. Ms. Long
was asleep In the living room.
A Sears $170 stereo and $200 cash w u taken from one
bedroom and an $89 Emerson stereo w u taken from another,
according to police. There are no suspects.
SHOVING TRESPASSER
An Orlando man w u arrested in Casselberry Thursday and
charged with trespassing, battery of a law enforcement officer
and resisting arrest, Casselberry police said.
Jam es Wayne Reynolds, 27, 2339 Juno Ave., Orlando, w u
arrested for trespassing Thuredsy at 12:02 a.m., after he

THIRSTY BURGLAR
When Matrle Benson, 76, 1124 Pomegranlte, Sanford,
swered a knock at her door at approximately 9:30 p.m.,;
Thursday, she though! all the man wanted was a glass of;
water. However, upon returning with the water, Benson;
discovered the man wanted more, according to Sanford police]
The man forced his way Into Benson's home at gunpoint;
ransacked her bedroom and took 340 from her purse, police-'
said.
No arrests have been made.
A HOLE-IN-ONE
Abraham Slrri, owner of the Men’s Den clothing store, 3107
Orlando Drive, Sanford, has a new air “vent” in his store as «
result of a robbery.
Sanford police u l d unknown robbers knocked a hole In thd
south rear wall of the store and took an undetermined amount
of merchandise.
No arrests have been made.

...4 Run In Winter Springs

... Altamonte Hopeful Announces

Four candidates for two council seats
and the m ayor's office In Winter Springs
have filed qualifying documents to seek
election Nov. 3.
City Clerk Mary Norton said BUI Jacobs
and B.O. "Buck" Adkins have qualified u
candidates for city Council Seat 3 being
vacated by Wilfred "H ap" Arnold.
Arnold h u u l d he will not seek reelection. Jacobs served one term on the
council previously. Adkins is a newcomer
to d ty politics.
In addition, Maureen Boyd, Incumbent
•eat 4 coundlman, h u qualified to run for
re-election. Mayor Troy Plland h u also
qualified for re-election. Mrs. Boyd Is
completing her first term in office. Plland

h u served for the past 10 years, first u a
coundlman for four years and u mayor
for the past six years.

Another political hopeful h u announced
his Intentions to run in the Altamonte
Springs Commission seat election Nov. 3.

The candidate qualifying period will
c lo u at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Mrs. Norton u ld .'
Voter registration books will remain open
until Oct. 2, she u ld . Persons wishing to
register may do so at d ty hall or at
Seminole elections offices In the cour­
thouse in Sanford or the Interstate Mall
In Altamonte Springs Monday through
Friday.

John P a rk e r, 551 K aren Drive,
Altamonte Springs, filed his notice of
candidacy with City Clerk Phyllis Jordahl
Friday a t 3:20 p jn ., Jordahl u ld .

Mrs. Norton u l d persons may also
register at the Winter Springs City Hall
on Saturday, Sept. 19 from 9 a.m. until
noon.-B y DONNA ESTES

he Is running uncontested.
In the mayor's race, Incumbent Mayor
Hugh darling and Ray Ambrose, an
Altamonte Springs police officer currently
on leave of absence, announced their
candidacy last week.

Parker Is running for the District 3 City
Commission seat currently held by City
Commissioner Dolores Vickers, Jordahl
u ld . Vickers announced Tuesday that she
would not seek re-election to the post.

Dudley Bates of San Sebastian Is the lone
contender, to dale, for District 1 City
Commission seat, currently held by City
C om m issioner
Ja m e s
Thompson.
Thompson announced he will not seek
reelection.

According to Jordahl, Parker Is a retail
w holesaler and d ep a rtm en t union
negotiator in Altamonte Springs. To date,

Jordahl u ld Sept. 21 Is the last day for
candidate qualification. - TENI YAR­
BOROUGH

Utility Commission Chairman To Retire |
Bell Telephone Co. In the late 1970's.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Joe C re w , a self-styled
u id , making the step contingent on his having accomplished
Expansion of the commission to five members has cut down •
"dumb country boy", Is thinking of retiring at the end of his
"everything I want to do."
on some delays, enabling Crease to assign two and three-term u chairman of the state government agency that proba­
"You don’t save money working (or the state," he u id ,
member panela to some m atters rather than Involving the full;
bly touches more lives than any other.
although his PSC paycheck h u Jumped from $37,900 when he
commission In every decision.
Crease heads the powerful Florida Public Service Commis­
w u appointed In late 1971 to 153,000 now.
Change In the bureaucracy takes time and Crease la a
sion, which regulates the rates and quality of service of
A Job u a consultant would give him a paycheck plus a nice
patient man. If he isn't satisfied with the commission when
electric, gaa, water, telephone and sewer u till ties.
retirement check.
1993 rolls around, he will probably apply for another term.
With fuel coats soaring out of sight and the PSC caught
"U I had to retire now," he said, " I’d have to live off my
His "dumb country boy" approach (a a ploy to trip up highbetween a public clamor for lower rate# and the need to keep , retirement. I h ere no other Income."
powered representatives of utilities and get PSC personnel to
C resu w u the Bret member named to the regulatory body
the power companies afloat In a high Interest, hlgh-lnflatlon
do their homework In order to answer his endless questions
after it was changed from a three-member elected commission
market, his Is not a popular Job.
■bout each phase of utility regulation.
The commission, changed from an elected to an appointive
to a five-member appointive agency. One of his top goals
"Dumb Uke a fox," say those who know the sharp mind
before he steps down Is to eliminate Inconsistencies and
body le u than three years ago, recently faced a recordbreaking 3479 million rate Increase proposal from Florida
establish guidelines so regulated companies will know what ' behind he folksy facade Crease shows to the world.
Power k Light Co., the state's biggest utility.
Jhe policy is on various Issues,..
The filing Immediately generated legislation to return the
Once a m ajor change In rate making policy Is made, It may
Legal Notice
legal Notlct
PSC to elected status, where opponents claim it would be more
not be applied to all the utilities for years, he said, noting the
F IC T IT IO U S N A M B
IN T H S . C IR C U IT C O U R T O F
responsive to the public. But one of the arguments that took it
commission refused to allow some utilities to p a u on
Nolle* is hereby given that wd
T H B E lO H T E ( n t h j u d i c i a l
out of the hands of the voters In 1979 w u that elected comcharitable contributions and country club memberships to
are engaged In business at S II
C IR C U IT .
IN
AND
FO R
m luionera were too cozy with the uU lltiu on which they had to
customers but did not adopt It u a flat policy covering all
H lc k o ryw o o d A ve ., A lta m o n tf
I B M IN O L a C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A
Springs, FL.. Seminole County:
C A S R NO: S417S4-CAet-K
depend for campaign finances.
utilities.
Florida under the fictitious rtamf
R IT A M. W R O N K O W S K I and
Crease will have put In 30 years with government when his
"We handle things on a case-by-cau basis," he said.
of M G C P R O P E R T IE S , ami that
C H A R L E S J. W R O N K O W S K I. her
Months ago, the commission derided to outlaw a rate
term ends Jan. 4, 1993. He started u a low-level auditor right
we Intend la register u l d nam e
husband.
with the Clerk of the Circuit Courlj
structure developed by power companies during the y e a n
out of school and rose to the position of state budget director
Plelnlllls.
Seminole County. Florida In eel
vs.
when they were trying lo Increase sales. It gives discounts to
and assistant secretary of the chief stale budget agency.
cordence with the provision* oI thf
M A R G A R E T H. B R A T C H E R a kbusinesses that use a high volume of electricity.
A confidante of governors and powerful legislators, he w u
a
Fictitious Nam e Statutes, T o W It j
Instead of ordering all power companies to eliminate
Section U S 0 ? Florida Statutes
chief troubleshooter and the No. 2 man In government under
M A R G A R E T H B R A T C H E N , and
l?S7
SUN D A N K O F S E M IN O L E
"declining block rates," the PSC decided to wait until each
former Gov. Reubin Askew who tapped him for the PSC
Tim L. C h ase *
C O U N T Y . N.A.,
company applies for a rate Increase.
position le u than a month before he left office.
M e r y G. Chase#
Defendants
He also has been upset with the amount of time It takes to
Publish August H , X a September
Crease will be 55 years old In 1983 and ready to tackle a new
N O T IC E O F
4. I). I N I
D E L 116
FO RECLO SU RESALB
reach a decision — 11 months to order refunds and rate
challenge. Money la also a factor.
NOT IC E is haraby glvan that the
reductions made possible by excess profits earned by Southern
“ I will atari looking around to see what my options are," he
IN
T
H
E
C
IR
C
U
IT
C
O
U
R
T
IN A N I
undersigned Clark o&lt; the Circuit

A MATTER OF RECORD
D IV O R C ES
Roger T. Barker a Jeen A.
Lew i* M Hale l Roeanne.
Dene Asher a Richard A .
Booker T. Bltntord a E ssie B
Cheryl L. H arrell a Winston P.,
James B Pllelen a Donne M .
Charles R. Rainey a B H ly M ,
Charles M. Stall a Rosem ary

BU ILDIN G PERMITS
Eugene Cooper, 401 Sc oil A v e .
addition to garage, &gt;10
M u rp h y Properties. &gt;4&gt;7 Chase,
duple*. n.at
Laura Stephens, 1010 Laurel Ay.,
g j f ig t , !,|0O
Garllaid Walker. &gt;404 Cedar,
carport, 100
L. G Bennett. M I0 Orlando Dr..,
addition. 4.000
M u rp h y Pro per lies. &gt;415 Chase,
duple*, &gt; S .4 M , &gt;41) Chase, duple*.
».4&gt;e
Tony Chesne. &gt;0* Colonial w ay.
reroof. 1,400.
Her*chel W. D evi*. &gt;04 L o d i

Low Dr., lance. JOO
Rosa Burke. I C S w. 10th SI.,
repair cond. dwell., too
E arl Weldon. &gt;41? v a le Ay.,
additions. 4.000
Airport Author . Bl. 41? Airport,
slo re g? bldg , It.OOO
G ory Howard, 111 W 10th St.,
garage. 1.400
Robbie R W illiam s. &gt;401 Sen
lord A v „ enlarge porch. 7M.
Violetle w illiam *. 101 W. ?th St.,
rep lire dm g duple*, 5.000
James Oaferd. I I ) W IM h St.
reroot. 1,000

M A R R IA G E
LICENSES
Ronald O Abate. » , F P O N Y
N V . Co Iren E. Moran. » . i l l
Parkwaod Dr.,
Wayne S Seay. X . M l Longdale
A v e , LW. Rhonda A Cowher. &gt;1
Michael M Schwertt. S3. Phlla.
Pa, Judith A. Knapp. X . seme.
R a n d y S. T a ylo r, » , &gt;?S
• ro e d m o re
St..
Lk
M e ry,
Katherine A. G odd ard .» . Atlanta,
Ge

Stanley B Cothran, &gt;1, » 5
Lucerne Dr., D e Be ry Jtddy M
Noveretle. » . I I ? w Citrus Si..
AS
W illiam O Welbom. 44. &gt;1/
Cottonwood D r . WS, Arlene E.
Hopkins. 14
George W Destn, S3. 1740 N.
Cameron A v e , Sent, Parnate J.
Harm s. &gt;1
Gerald L. Hendricks, S?. 1700
M ontagu* St.. Deltona, Eve lyn L.
Bish. SS.
Edgardo Borges. &gt;1. No 0 , 1)11
Santa B arbara Or , Sent, Linda S.
Etheridge. 31. sam e
Michael M M cG oldrick Jr., II.
B * l?7 FP , M a ry C Croflord. &gt;1.
7?&gt;B W P a r Ave . Orl
Steven M
Loprestl, &gt;0. **0
Montgom ery R d No SO AS. Della
M Raym ond. I?. 11 M erlin Cl., C B
M lllord R Kelley Jr., &gt;7, Stark
villa M S. E lii. H. Vickers, }]. 770
Florida B i r d , A S
Bobby R. Foley. 41 B« X S
G anava, Jeanette B ry a n t, M .
seme.
G arland M
Z o p p y .H .N A S
M eridian M S . Judith M. Figueroa,
I?, too Benadlct Cl , CB.

Ja m e s H. R o k lc k l, }]. &gt;04
Swaetwaltr Creek o r W., LW,
Petti A
H o m m e *, &gt;0, &gt;04
Lonesome Pino Dr., LW.
R o la n d P. B o y *. 54. » I 0
Magnolia Ay*., Sant, Ruth V
Smith. X . Be M l). Sant.
Kent R. M a r dan, I?. X 4 Hidden
Pine Cr .CB. Nadine E Peters. I?,
I Hitching Post, CB.
H a ro ld
M e d in a ,
»,
t&gt;|
Aihem bre Ave.. AS. Sandra C.
Klm ek, I?. S I ) B * SS4. Sant.
Charles L Hoilm en, Jr , » . I&gt;1
Mostwood Cr., WS. Nancy Jo
Miller, n . seme.
John B. Wetssman. &gt;0. Il&gt;
Hacienda Dr., W S. Daw n M
Ferry. I?. 10? W llshlrt Dr.. C B
Gregory M. Hunter. » , 4 » 0 S
Orl O r No. IS Sant. Rhonda K.
Whitcomb, I?.
Nicholas M. C o rn e r s,» , |&gt;| Jey
Dr., AS. Deborah L. Carchlo, &gt;1.
Cecil O Ltge tlt. 33. 1 C Bunkar
IN .. Sent, Charlene L. Edentieid,
IS. 331 Broadview Ave., AS.
Kenneth E . Meeks. M , 1&gt;l)
O ra n g e A ve .. C B . L o r i A.
Oochnour, It, M l Sheridan Ave.,
LW.

Southern States Suffer Most

Violent Crime Jumps 8 Percent
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The FBI's
index of reported serious Crimea Jumped
by 9 percent In 1990 orer the previous
year, officials said today.
FBI Director WUMam H. Wabatar aaid
more than 13 million crime lodes ofwere reported by 1MM law en-

8.

The FBI aaid (he violent

4 -

-

allegedly refused to leave the ABC Ijxinge, U.S. Highway 17-9j
and State Road 439, at the lounge m anager's and polled
request, police said. Casselberry police were called aflej
Reynolds allegedly caused a disturbance at the bar.
j
According to police, Reynolds shoved the arresting office^
and fled on foot. Reynolds was apprehended near the Out)
Juana cocktail lounge, U.S. Highway 17-92, Fern Park, and
arrested.

City Elections...

*a
The Southern slates, the
x
most populous region, accounted fi
largest volume of offenaa in I M
am
percent The North Central and
the

-

Susan E. Long, 21, slept u the condominium she shares w u
robbed of two stereo systems and some cash.
Her roommate, Laura A. Lester, said d ie returned home
around 2:30 p m . Friday and found the rear glass door w u

of

murder, forcible rape, robbery and
aggravated assault Increased 11 percent
in volume during 1IM.
Considered Individually, every crime
counted In the FBI'a crime Index Increased — murder was up 7 percent;
forcible rape I percent; robbery 19
percent and aggravated aanuit 7 percent Aha burglary r a n 14 percent;
larceny-theft w u up I percent end motor
vahlda theft roes 3 percent
There were an estim ated 23,144
munfers last year — 2 percent of all the
violent crimre ceunled by the FBI la
IM . The volume of murdera Increased In

all parts of the country with firearms
used moat frequently, according to the
report
Men between the a p t of M l ware the
large* group of murder victims, according to the FBI. Forty-five percent of
the murdare ran k ed from arguments
and 19 percent occwrad aa the r a n k of
Wony acthrtlee.
The FBI aaid forcible rapes doing the
year - C M - Increased 41 percent
over 1171 and rapraanted I parcent of
thavideat crimes. An eriim M edn out of
every 199*1 womi
were reported rape victims.

Court ol Seminole County, Florida,
will on the Ith day ol October, I N I.
at 11:00 a m . at the West door ol
the Seminole County Courthouse.
Sentord, Florida, oiler lor sale and
sell el public outcry lo Ih t highest
and best bidder lor cash, the
follow ing d e scrib e d pro pe rty
situate In Se m in o le County,
Florida
Lot 47, Block A C A R R IA G E
H IL L . U N IT NO I, according lo
the Plat thereof es recorded In
Ple l Book 14. Page *7, Public
R t c o r d s o l S e m ln o lt County,
Florido
pursuant lo the Final Judgment
entered in a case pending in u i d
Court, Ike stylo of which Is In ­
dicated above
W IT N E S S m y hand and official
u a l of u l d Court Ih i* 10th day of
September, I N I
(Seal)
Arthur H. Beckwith Jr
CLERK
OF
THE
C IR C U IT
COURT
By: Eve Crabtree
Deputy Clerk
C. A N D R E W C O O M E S
O i l East Robinson Street
Orlando. Florido JTSfll

DEmW

*• 'Ml

F IC T IT IO U S N A M B
Notice I* hereby given that I am
engaged In buSM ew el &gt; M t F ranch
Ave. Sentord Sem lnoM County.
Florida under the H d ltlo u * nam e
el A U T O S O U N D C E N T E R -k n d
that I Inland to register u l d nans,
with the Clerk et the Circuit Court.
Semlnolt County, Florida In ac­
cordance with the provisions el the
Fictitious N a n s* Statute*. T d W It:
Section S4S.lt Florida Statutes

its .

tig Cindy W illiam son
Publish: August ZJ. X . September
4. I X I N I
D E I. I l l

-- —
FO R
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
F L O R ID A
C A S R NO. IIM O - C A W - N
L E O N T H O R N H IL L , at u * „
Plaintiffs
vs
P A T R IC IA M A E N E L S O N ,
Defendant
N O T IC E O P S A L B
N O T IC E IS G IV E N that pyf
su a n tto a lln a l ludgment dated the
» n d day ol Juna. I N I . In C a u No
I I 41} C A 0? K ol the Circuit C o w l
of the Eighteenth Judicial Circuit
in and lo r S e m ln o lt Count#,
Florida. In which L E O N TH OR
N H I L L and T H E L M A T H O R ­
N H IL L . hi* wlfa; a r t the Plaintiffs
and P A T R IC IA M A E N E L S O N . I*
the Defendant, I will sell to the
highest and best bidder for cash in
Sem lnolt County Cgurthouse In
Sentord. Seminole County Florida
at Ih t iron! door ol I ha West side of
the Courthouse, at 11:00 A M , on
October 1, m i . the following
described properly set forth In the
order ol final ludgment:
LO T J. B L O C K C. T O W N A N D
COUNTRY EST A T ES REPLAT,
according lo Iho Plat thereof as
recorded In P M t Book I). P a ge * ) ?
end X . Public Records of Seminole
County, Florida. L E S S : That pert
of Let ) m o re p a rt ic u la rly
described a * follows:
B E G IN N IN G at the Northwest
com er ol u l d Lot S. run South S?
degree* SS’ E A S T l|).)4 feet,
thence South 44 degrees E A S T
" 0 W feet, thence South 44 degrees
X ' S S " West M S I feet, thence
North 44 degrees West 4 ) . » lest,
thence North 44 degrees 14* X "
W E S T »4.S4 teat to the point et
B E G IN N IN G .
T O G E T H E R w ith the d is h ­
w asher, re frig e ra to r, ran ge ,
d ra p e rie s. I a ir co n d itio n e rs,
storage shed, carpeting, pum p M d
lank* ter well, end bar steel* In
kitchen situated on the above
pram Isos.

DATED this I0?h day of Saw

of labor.

I amber, m i .
(Seel)
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H .J R ..
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
COURT
R Y C arrie E. RueHner
D tpufy
G A R Y S IE G E L . ESQ .
P O. D raw er M S
I M U.S. H ighw ay 17 M
Fe rn P a rs . F L 33130
X S U 1 M
Publish: September
X.

rtPM s?

11

mi

�Block Grant Issues Considered
By Sanford Commission M onday

N ation

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer

IN BRIEF

y

Congress Dow ns Arm s Deal;

ui
*1

G O P Leaders Rebuff Reagan
WASHINGTON (UPI (—Congressional opponents
believe the fight against the Saudi Arabian arm s
package Is all but won, but President Reagan and his
advisers disagree—despite a rebuff from a key Senate
Republican.
Opposition to the controversial $8.5 billion arms
sale snowballed on Capital Hill Friday.
Reagan sought unsuccessfully to buy time until the
administration presents its caap Oct. 1, when Secretary
of State Alexander Haig is to appear before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee at a hearing devoted
entirely to the controversial Saudi sale.
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger also 's to
appear that afternoon or the following day.

The Sanford City Commission will take
up two Issues involving the federal
Community Development Bloch Grant
(CDBG) program during its 7 p.m.
meeting Monday.
The commission will consider taking
over a lease for warehouse space from
the Sanford Housing Authority at the
Sanford A irport w here the CDBG
program 's building m aterials have been
stored. The authority administered the
grant program until last April.
City Manager W.E. "P ete" Knowles

said plans are to sell the materials by
auction with approval from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD).
Cost of the lease is $192 monthly.
Knowles said the auction can be held as
soon as HUD approval is received. Funds
realized from the auction will be placed
In the CDBG fund.
The program provided federal funding
to purchase sub-standard, single family
homes, renovate them and then sell them
to low Income families. The city stopped
its sponsorship of the program earlier
this year when Knowles discovered that
more than $500,000 in federal money had

Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His
LAKE M A R Y OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE
By Appointment Only

LAKE M A R Y 3 2 1 -0 0 8 5
159 N. COU N TRY CLUB ROAD
ACROSS FRO M T H E N EW
LA K E M ARY CITY HALL

Shop Sanford and O r M o &lt;Wy 9:30-9:30 San. 12-6.

Prices Slow Sales Upswing

K meet* A O V IH T ISID
MCHCHANOISf r o l l e r
iVr ft— rerw « to
wen ftVft
*m1 ift» ** Mart awass ftftftee 9 0
•P.oAow*
we ewe Ip pea
iM M M 4
VOolM en rooean
k -a* rnm*eu* aAft" Owe a* w m «
ft Pw ftpnhft Wee i -wip ap*wm i nw
aft*
•ujrwo*&gt;tohoftsthoea* 0 ft*
aoo pie •*eno* •e»aiof wediti
fh. e(s»r* **e
to -« l tft-we
&gt;mmwdurtor ft pit

THE SALE
EVERYONE
WAITS FOR!

Shop Mt. Dora, Ctormonl daily M Sun. 12-4
Shop Leesburg, DtLand, KltilmmM dally f-f Sun 114

WASHINGTON (U PI)—Retailers keep marking up
their merchandise and selling less as Inflation and high
interest rates keep the real level of sales from rising,
latest government statistics show.
The Commerce Department reported Friday retail
sales in August were up 0.6 percent but sales in the
previous month were down 0.3 percent. The resulting
0.3 percent increase in the value of retail goods sold
over the past two months actually was less than the
rate of inflation, indicating that by volume, less
merchandise changed hands.
In Its advance report on August retail sales, the
Commerce Department's sample survey indicated a
new level of sales of $87.69 billion seasonal
ad­
justment.

Sunday, Sept. II, tf tt-J A

ROBERT L. BEVIER, M.D.

been spent, but only seven houses pur­
chased and renovated.
The commission will also consider
condemning and ordering demolition of
th ree other su b -stan d ard stru ctu re s
purchased by SHA for the program but
never renovated.
Knowles has suggested the city
commission follow the usual procedure in
condemnation proceedings.
In other business, Knowles will report
to the commissioners that during a week
in August, it tpok the Sanford post office
five days to deliver agenda material
mailed by city hall to city commissioners
and others.

_ The Saving Place*
to

livening Harsio. aantoro, H.

D Y N A M IC DOLLAR D A Y S
3-Day Sale

R im p e r s

Nuclear Protest Fizzling

*•*•113
tim n j

AVILA BEACH, CaUf. (UPI) - Would-be antinuclear demonstrators trickled slowly into a tent camp
here today, their numbers still too small to stage a long
planned demonstration they hoped would prevent the
Diablo Canyon power plant from going into operation.
About 400 to 500 protesters arrived late Friday,
responding to a summons by the organizing Abalone
Alliance Wednesday to launch a “blockade," which has
been planned for many months.
They gathered at the group's camp in a farm field
about 12 miles from the gate to the reactor site.
There were too few on hand to stage the planned
massive exercise in civil disobedience, clogging roads
and overrunning the area around the reactor, built by
Pacific Gas &amp; Electric Co. on a remote stretch of
central California coastline.

JtSSL®
fjf

_

Dole* Pineapple Selection

Our Reg. 5.96

Umlt 2

Men1* Plaid Sport Shirt

Naturally refreshing pineapple sliced, crushed
or in handy chunk form 8 oz * Great savings'

C risp p o lye ste r/ co tto n In colorful ya rn d y e d plaids. Short-sleeve co m fo rt S a ve

!!;

Birth Was Error, Lady Says
SAN MATEO. CaUf. (UPI) - A woman with two
wombs, who gave birth In one womb after having an
* abortion In the other, plans to file a “wrongful birth"
' suit against Planned Parenthood and San Mateo
County.
Terri Gromm, 26, gave birth to a 5-pound, 5-ounce
boy at Mills Hospital Thursday night, six months after
receiving an abortion from a Planned Parenthood
doctor in San Mateo County. The county helps to
finance the program.
Documents filed Friday in the San Mateo County
supervisors' office said the doctor who performed the
&gt;i abortion in one of Ms. Gromm's two functioning wombs
failed to notice a fetus growing in the other.

SSTSS?“

O ur

Watt Worries Governors

* *

v

Co,° '
Selection

O
Sale
Price

M

569
S t* rp o C o m p o n e n t S ta n d

Motal towing Chair

Walnut w ood gram look, tem ­
pered glass doors. 4 shelves

H e a v y -d u t y steel fra m e ,
c o m f o r t - c o n t o u r e d seal

■

JACKSON, Wyo. (U P I)-In terio r Secretary James
*ii
D Watt's visit to the Western Governor's Conference was
described as a "love fest" by one governor, but the
state leaders were not completely enchanted by his
controversial policies.
Making his first return to his home state since he
Joined President Reagan's Cabinet, Watt wore a
:*t cowboy hat and said nearby Grand Teton National
v&gt; Park was his "favorite place in the world."
He made points by announcing the federal govern­
ment will no longer claim water rights for federal land
Congress has not reserved. Westerners had bristled
over that issue since the Carter administration said in
1979 the government could claim non-reserved water
rights.

Eoch

W

^ ° ® ' c °n d tttone,

„ 0( "P O O

O ur Reg 5.97

L a n ttm W -B attery
Lantern with power
Cell battery. Plastic case.

M g B ook P h o to g r a p h A lbum
3-ring album with 2 0 sheets
Solid-color cover with trim

C A LE N D A R

or conditioner.

&amp;

4».•

CLI

ic«

MONDAY.8EPT.il
22V. oi.*

Central Florida Telecommunication for the Deaf
meets at 7:30 p.m., at the Municipal Justice Building,
Orlando.

rf&gt;

Qy, Reg 13.88

"The Best Weigh” weight control program, Florida
Hospital-Orlando, featuring lectures, discussions,
n a cooking demonstration and exercise. Call 897-1929.
,u
Stress Management seminar, Florida HospitalOrlando. Enrollment limited. Call 197-1(29.

Eoch

tc*

•w
»i«
r:
.t*w
•*u

K

4i

We Care Inc. orientation for volunteers, 7 p.m., 112
Pasadena Place, Orlando. Monday and Thursday
nights through O ct 15.

5-oz ‘ -size zesty. re­
freshing bath soap

M k -1

Mira* lo ft-o n

B row nla O r P a n c a k e Mix |

15- oz ’ d e o d o ra n t.
Regular or unscented

Pillsbury* f u d g e
Brownie, Hungry Jock*
Pancake m ii

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER l i
Lake Howell High School Parent-Teacher-Student
Association, 7:30 p.m., school commons. Orientation
for parents and new students to visit classrooms.
Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation course, I p.m.,
Seminole Community College. Second session Sept. 22.
Call Office of Community Service* 333-1450, ext. 304.

| lake-w lth

.lei

D g fw n S a M g lR b c k /W h llg

Sanford Lions Club, noon, Holiday Inn on Lake
Monroe.
»*:
Loagwood Sertema, noon, Quality Inn, 1-4 and State
•*&lt;
Road 434.
AhAnen, noon, Mental Health Center, Robin Road,
Altamonte Springs.
Winter Springs S eitenu, 7:30 a m ., Big Cypress.
T ••
Loagwood Rotary O ak, 7:30 a.m., Longwood Village
^R ecovery, Inc., 11:30 p m ., Sears Altamonte Mall.
Saafard Ministerial Association, II a m ., Western
Sixxlln Restaurant.
Daybreakers Toastmasters, 7:15 a m ., Sanford
House Restaurant.

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S A -iv a n in g Harold, Sanford. H .

Sonday, S sp t.» , m \

Fund-Raising Begins For
Senior Class 'Calendar*
Editor1! note:
April Morris, 17, daughter of Mr. and
Mr*. Robert M. (Soa]a) MoitU, U a
Sanford native. She b a lenlor at
Seminole High Sehoot and editor of the
By
school newspaper. Miss MorrU also b a
April
m em ber of Anchor, Fellow ship of
ChrUtlan Athletes, Tribe and U active In
her church youth group. She [dans to
major In Journalism when she attends
college, following her graduation from
The Student Government Association
high school Miss MorrU’ column will held its annual "Welcome Back to
appear regularly la the Evening Herald's School" Dance Sept. 4. About 120
Sunday edition.
studenU came out for the first event of
Nominations for "Senior Calendar" the new year. The dance was held at the
w ere subm itted recen tly . Senior school lunchroom.
Calendar U the annua) fund raiser which
senior cUss stages to help pay for
Tuesday, the Seminole volleyball team
graduation and a gift for the school. The will be traveling to Lyman High School to
top 60 nominees will collect money. The play 1U first game of the season. The
36 seniors with the most money will be game starts at 6:30 p.m.
featured in the "Senior Calendar."
There will be a Keyette meeting
Yearbook U selling M ft M's to raise Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. a t the high school to
money to help pay off the annual. They discuss activities, fund-raising projects
sell for 50 cents per bos and can be and new members.
bought from any yearbook staffer.

Around
SHS

Try-outs forth is year's talent show will
be Monday and Tuesday after school In
the auditorium. The talent show U
scheduled for Sept. 22.
W ednesday, the Sem inole Ju n io r
Varsity football team will be traveling to
Maitland to play iU first game of the
season. Game tim e U 4 p.m.
Friday at S p.m. the second game of
Seminole's Varsity football team will be
played at Lake Howell.
Saturday, the yearbook staff will be
having a beach day at New Smyrna
Beach. Class members will be taking
pictures of Senior Class officers and also
candid shots for the Sally, SHS’a year­
book.
There U a cross country meet in
DeLund S atu rd ay a t DeLand High
School. Contact the school for additional
information.

FINTStZtD
DONATION

Joy

R e c t o r d o n a t e d a pint for the blood drive held at the Seminole School
Board office Thursday. Nurse Jo-Ann Williams tested for blood Iron levels as
part of the donation team that traveled to the office in a "bloodm oblle" unit.

Super Sleuth's Job Unlike Television Counterparts
MIAMI (UPf &gt; — Richard Andrews Just may be Sam Spade
in the flesh, a supersleulh whose world is made up of snitches,
thugs and thieves.
He Is one of the world's greatest Insurance Investigators, a
kind of "Jim Rockford" who walks the fine line between police
and a seamy underworld with uncanny success.
Armed with more than his share of nerve and patience and a
photographic memory, there doesn't seem to be anything he
can't find.
Ten French impressionist paintings worth $1 million, several
million dollars worth of silver once used by Russian Czarina
Catherine Ihe Great, the famous Brasher Doubloon, once
owned by George Washington, 32 million worth of antique
silverware stolen from Miami's Vlscaya Museum, a mllliondollar ivory elephant festooned with 80 carats of diamonds —
Just a few of the goodies Andrews has returned to their owners.
"U 's not a giamous business like it's portrayed on televi­
sion," says Andrews, who fancies himself as "as close to a real
life Sam Spade as you can get.
"It's really a tough racket, dealing with snitches and
thieves. I'd much rather see my dogs run."
The dogs — 600 sleek racing greyhounds — are the real
source of income for Andrews and his attractive blonde wife,
Barbara. Andrews, 44, is the largest greyhound owner and
trainer in the world and the most successful dog racer in
Florida.
With his kennels grossing more than $100,000 a month, his

days as a super-sleuth may be nearing an end. But 20 years of
cultivating contacts with Ihe underworld have left him rich in
memories, and [or starters he tells the story of the eccentric
Canadian millionaire who hired him to find a stolen $100,000
necklace.
"We were having cocktails and he started eating the petals
on the roses," Andrews said. "Well, I thought that was kind of
strange, but then he started eating the thorns. But the real
shocker came when he chomped down into his martini glass.
Ate the whole thing. Just chewed it up and swallowed it.
"I think he wafited to impress me. He did."
Andrews eventually recovered the necklace and was paid
handsomely. But he never worked for Ihe man again.
"The guy wasn't playing with a full deck," he said. "He's
like a lot of wealthy people I deal wllh. They only have one oar
In the water. But I'll never look at a rose again and not think
about that man.”
One of his favorite cases involved an old lady karate expert
who had lost expensive paintings and Jewelry in a burglary. He
wasn’t prepared for what he saw when he went to her bouse: a
huge dummy of a guided missile In her front yard, mounted
there to scare off Cuban planes during the 1962 missile crisis.
"When 1 drove up to the woman's house and saw that missile
in the yard, I knew it was going to be a weird caae," he recalls.
"And when I started asking her about the diamond broach and
painting she had lost and she starts throwing karate punches at
me, I figured this was going to be one for my scrapbook."

Mushrooms May Be Solution To
World Hunger, Botanist Says
By DOUG ORSON
SYENEY, Australia (UPI) - Experts
say intensive mushroom production
could offer the food-hungry world both a
hedge against (amine and a possible
cancer deterrent.
British botanist Fred Hayes believes
that new studies of edible lungl —
mushrooms are one — have "enormous
potential as a nutritious food source
capable of feeding millions."
Two Japanese scientists report tumor
cells in mice receiving extracts (rein the
wild shiitake mushroom developed
slower than In mice who received no
treatment.
The evidence was offered in papers
delivered to the recent 11th International
Scientific Congress on the Cultivation of

Edible Fungi in Sydney, attended by 300
delegates from 30 nations.
Mushrooms contain up to 40 percent
protein when dried, higher than most
vegetables, and high levels of vitamins
such as thiamine, riboflavine and nladn.
Mushrooms also can produce 22 tons of
digestible protein per acre per year. Thla
at least equals beef and fish production
levels.
But scientists aay one fascinating
aspect of mushrooms and other edible
fungi, which give them a decided ad­
vantage over other food sources, Is the
fact that they grow and nourish them­
selves from waste materials.
In Australia, mushroom production
uses agricultural wastes like wheat
straw, chicken and horse manure,cotton

seed meal, cotton seed hulls, corn cobs
and gypsum.
In other countries, mushroom compost
may be made from rice straw, banana
leaves or sugarcane waste.
Scientists say every year millions of
tons of agricultural wastes are discar­
ded, burned and neglected. The very
people who discard them hunger for good
food and with moderate effort and
careful management the Third World has
within its grasp a food source to satisfy
millions of lla people: mushrooms.
A scientific discovery of significance to
vegetarians was reported to the congress
by Dr. Fred Hayes of Aston University,
Birmingham, England.

Witty Words
“Some people used to coast through
here Instead of stopping," Mrs. Parizek
esptalned. "But they're getting better,"
The gray-haired crossing guard — who
also doubles as a part-time cook In the
school cafeteria — began her fifth year of
posting the eye-catching sayings last
month.
A blue pickup truck rolled to a stop in
front of the sign posts as Mrs. Parizek
ended her morning creasing duties. The
driver craned his neck to read the day's
ditty: "Praise to a child Is as water is to a
thlrety plant."
"Some people have told me, ‘Your sign
w u too long this morning,'” Mrs.
Parizek aald with a twinkle In her eye.
"But that Just proves they're reading
them."

She said her unofficial Job began when
she posted: "Thank God It's Friday" on
the stop signs. She forgot to take her
signs down that day and when people
Jovially complained, she began putting
up different signs each day.
Mrs. Parizek'* sayings are so popular
she put together a booklet called: "From
My U ttle Corner of the World,” with
nearly 2,000 of her favorite saytigs from
the first three years of posting signs.
The booklet sells far a nominal fee — to
of (set the cost of printing — and proceeds
are given to a school scholarship fund.
The booklet starts with her favorite
saying: "By the time man h u money to
burn, the pilot light is out."

Spy’s Accent Giveaw ay To Aide

r

i

:
l

a copy ot the MX plan,” an amazed Rabb
By JON FLEMING
AUGUSTA, Maine (UPI) - Yuriy said Thursday. "He had this heavy
Petrovich lawwv might want to brush up Russian accent and ipok* poor English.''
When Rabb asked the visitor for his
on his English before he starts snooping
name, the man actually admitted he w u
in the halls of Congress again.
from the Soviet Em baav.
Leonov, Identified by the FBI u a
“I told him to forget K. I just told him to
Russian military spy, paid a visit Sept. S
to the Washington office of Rep. David F. get out of here and he left without uying
Emery looking for a copy of Emery's a word. I called the FBI immediately,"
Rabb u ld .
alternative MX missile plan.
Bat the Maine Republican's aide, John
Rabb, picked up on the thick foreign
accent, threw him out of the office and
called the FBI In a scene that would
make James Bond blanch.
"This guy came In and aald he wanted

deal with them. In my business, honesty is everything. You
have to live by your word. You can die if you turn on somebody.
"Every case is different but they all boll down to one thing —
contacts. You’ve got to know who is who and more Impor­
tantly, keep them talking with you. And you'll only do that by
never stabbing them in the back.
"I always tell my contacts that I’m going to tell the police
everything, so they don't let me know too much. And I don't
ask the wrong questions.”
Andrews carries a .38-caliber revolver tucked under his arm
but only on the most dangerous cases. He has never had to use
it. Only once has he been attacked.
"A guy tried to do a number of me with a lead pipe. I was
lucky and ducked."
Andrews also feels "somewhat blessed living In Miami. The
best thieves In the world are In Dade County."
Take the case of the stolen 56-foot cabin cruiser that
Andrews traced to a drug smuggling ring in Miami. Drug
smugglers routinely steal boats for one or two trips and then
abandon them.
"We knew they had it and 1 confronted them with It,"
Andrews said. "They admitted it all right but said, ‘Just give
us a few more weeks and we'U give it back in good shape.’"
"Sure enough, they did return it and they had even fixed the
boat’s radio.”

N O T IC E
O F BUDGET
H E A R IN G
The SEM IN O LE C O U N T Y B O A R D OF CO U NTY

Guard Makes Drivers Think While Near School
I jONE TREE, Iowa ( U PI) - Grynneth
Parizek, known fondly in the community
as "Mr*. P ," is saving children's lives by
sharing bita cf wisdom like "Oh I,ord, let
my words be sweel, for tomunawJ_may
have to eat them.”
It may seem like a strange concept, bul
it works.
Every day at 6:30 a.m., Mrs. Parizek
treks down to the stop signs in front of the
town's lone school building and slips
pieces of cardboard into glass cases on
each of the sign posts.
The cardboard signs carry different
phrases or witticisms and are changed
every day. The objective is to entice
d riv en into making a complete stop to
read the signs, rather than rolling
through the crosswalk.

It was. The woman had telephone books tacked to the walls
and each time she passed one, she pounded it with a karate
chop and screamed "a h h h h h h h h h h ... aaaaaahhhh!"
Andrews eventually found the goods and when the old
woman confronted a nightclub dancer who w u in on the theft,
"she went wild and started throwing karate chops and kicks at
the woman.”
Andrews’ career as an insurance investigator began
modestly 20 years ago after moving from his native New York
to Florida. Since then, his recoveries have made him famous.
He has represented some of the world's largest insurers, In­
cluding Lloyd's of London.
“He is the best of Ihe bunch," said one Miami-based FBI
agent. "He has the respect of everyone — on both sides of the
law. They ( thieves) know they can trust him, and ao can we.
You don’t find too many like him anymore. The guy has a
photographic memory. There's nothing he doesn't remem­
ber."
1
"Andrews is at the top of the pile," adds one grateful client.
“He is ao scrupulously honest it's Incredible. I found out In the
community he has a fantastic reputation for fair dealing — on
both sides of the street. When you're dealing with people who
make a living by stealing million-dollar paintings, you need
someone like Dick Andrews."
How does an insurance investigator operate?
" It's mostly a m atter of legwork," Andrews said. "A good
string o{ Informants, knowledge of criminals and the moxy to

the Russian agent, who w u Identified by

C O M M IS S IO N E R S has tentatively adopted
a budget for Fiscal Year 1981/82. A public
hearing to m ake a FIN AL DECISIO N on the
budget A N D T A X E S will be held on
September 15, 1981, at 7:00 p.m. or as
soon thereafter a s possible in the County
*
»
Com m ission M eeting Room, Num ber 200,
Second Floor, Sem inole County Courthouse,

Rabb.

The FBI said Leonov la an assistant
military air attache with the Soviet
Embassy In Washington and an un­
dercover agent for the GRU, the Soviet
military intelligence agney.
The incident, which occurred while
Emery w u In Maine, prompted the
congressman to writs FBI Director
William
Webster
asking
that
The man never obtained a copy of the i raigTaaaiBfn be briefed on seti vibes of
unclaarifled, alternative MX plan Emery Soviet and Eastern Bloc ^Maa. Emery
presented to administration officials wrote ha h u become "increasingly
about th ru weeks ago.
alarmed at what appears to be a
Two FBI agenla investigating the In- heightened Intelligence effort on the part
dident returned Tuesday with photos of of the Soviet Emheaay ."

Sanford, Florida.

v lij j
e

*

** • «

*

�n o t ic e o f b u d g e t m e a r in o

in coil,pi,ante with and by authority ot Chap ltr 100 and 12*. Florida
■‘Jlaiutet, the Seminola Counly Board ol County Com m issioner! hat tel
Jh* date ol September 15. tail, al 7:00 p m. or n toon thereafter at
i^ jp o ttib l*, to hold a P iA lic Haarlng to adopt Ih t following tentative
C SS w O o *1. or at tho tam a m ay be emended, lor tha final budgat tor tha
Cwrnty tor tha Ittcal yaar beginning October t, ta il and ending Sap
♦ ember X). t a n Thlt hearing will t&gt;a held In tha County Com m ittlen
1tng Room. Number 300. Second Floor. Seminole County Cour
j|h«;ia. Santoro. F loride All Counly wide m illaga it bated on a taiabie
valuation ol 47.750.3*7.511
O antratFund
(R E V E N U E :
1 017 M I L L S
t
l3.IS3.7St
Other R e ., sue
4.555.15*
as Pet. oi Sum Total
tr.4ia.i33
balance Brought Forw ard Cath
F i t 1.030
i Revenue
*53.33*
Tranttert
130.*S0

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tolal E ip e n se s
Reserve tor Contingencies
Reserve lor Cath to be
Carried Forward

5,771

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

^

Federal Revenue Sharing N*. 3
REVENUE:
0 M IL L S
Other Revenue
a$ Pet. ot Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

0
4S.00G
41,ISO

V A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
a- Total E ip e n te t
Reserve tor Conllngenciat
Raterva tor Cath to be
*
Carried Forward
Trantfar to Intergovernmental
Fund insurance
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

I

37.0*4,140
*30.747
eoo.ooo
I.$30,06*

I

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve for Contingenclet
Reterve tor Cath to be
Carried Forward

04* M IL L S
Other Revenue
RJ Pet of Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

4

TO T AL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

4

TO T AL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

1)4.770
1.740,1))
u u .a si
400.000

1.114.5*0
150.311
laa.too

4

In te re st* Sinking Fund
Courthouse and -or Jail
REVENU E
071 M IL L S
Other Revenue
liOV fS Pet. ol Sum Total
/IRt Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

4

- V
VX|

4

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

1*53*51

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

•:iT'

4

314.3)1
34.117
27*.341
7»S.*I»
574.400

7)4.410
15.000

4

REVENU E:
073 M IL L S
Other Revenue
*5 P d . ol Sum Total
B ala n ce B ro u gh iFo rw a rd C a th

•j'fl
I
' ' :' T
fljil

574.400

700,77*
].«**
1*4,151
15.07*
loa.iio

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingencies
Reterve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forward

” .li
* v i;

salt
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4

4

t

1*1,310
ig.ooo

7oa.iio

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tolal E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Conlmgenciet
Reterve tor Cath to be
Carried Forward

1

0
1.757.000
0
0

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

1,757.000
0

T O T AL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingencies
Reterve tor Cath lo be
Carried Forward
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

0
305,700
1*4.*40
45.000

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

71*.*40

1 0 T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

O
1,411.1*1
#

0
I .*11.141

t.tlS .ltl
0

S

700,400
0
It , 140

*

a iS

»

&gt;7**40

Tram partallen Fund * a
Unincarparated Area ( M IT U )
REVENU E:
701 M IL L S
Othar Ravanua
*5 Pet. ot Sum Total
Balanca Brought Forw ard Cath

I.OOS.tll
*1 *.X 7
I,5*7,*71

;u.o«4

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4 * Bated on a la ia b le valuation ot all properties lying outside municipal
a p p r o p r ia t io n s

1,435.3*7

Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Conlingenciet
Reserve lor Cath to be
Carried Forw ard
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

0
*5.000
0

15.000
100.000

100.000

0

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

I A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ape n ttt
Reserve tor Conlingenciet
Reserve lor Cash to ba
Carried Forw ard
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ipentet
Reterve Me Conlingenciet
Reserve for Cath lo M
Carried Forw ard

1.7*1,775
H.747
3I.*4S

l.SSI

REVENU E
474 24 Per Lot
Other Revenue
*5 P d ol Sum Total
Balance Brought r orward Cath

14.457
0
14,109
3.050

4

17,159

1

4

14.750

4

7.771
0
7.717
247

1

7.45*

1

1.1)0
204

Jamestown — Strati Lighting
District
REVENU E
137 Per roe!
Olher Revm ue
*5 Pel ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard C aih

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Conlingenciet
Reterve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forw ard

42S
4

7.45*

*

,

Meredith M in e r — Street Lighting
District
REVENU E
s 37 Per root
Other Revenue
e5 P d ol Sum Tolal
Balance Brought F o r w a rd C it h

0
&gt;•**)
454

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ipenses
Reserve lor Contingencies
Reserve lor Cesh lo be
Carried Forw ard

t

1.73*

4

1.034
737
474

4

3,71*

Prairie L ik e — Street Lighting
D itlric l
REVENU E
4 21 Per Foot
Olher Revenue
*5 P d . ol Sum Tolpl
Balance Brought Fo rw a rd C a sh

REVENU E
0 M IL L S
Other Revenue
t5 Pet Ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath
Transfer
Reimbursement!

].0**.147
701.515
1.114.7*1
1.04I.I7S
4,1*4,40*

1.11*. 54*
1*1.040

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tola! E i pen set
Reterve lor Contingent iet
Reterve for Cath to be
Carried Forward
T O T A L ‘ P P R O P R IA T IO N S

0

150.000
147.500
0
1,510.064
♦ *4,111
7.644.677

1.444.477
0

7.646.477

Level I — Street Lighting
District
REVENU E:
U *1 Per Lot
Other Revenue
*5 Pet ot Sum Total
Balance Brought F orward Cash
T O T AL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

1.711
0
1.47S

4

666

TO TAL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tolal Expenses
Reserve lor Conlingenciet
Reserve for Cash fo be
Carried F orward

4

7.7*1

1

1.705
190
J9A
—
3,7*1

1

TO TAL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Conllngenclei
Reserve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forward

4

t7,767
1.474

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

1

3.*44
17.15*

REVENU E
474 75 Per Lot
Other Revenue
*5 Pci. ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Fo rw o rd C ath
T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

Spring Va llty F a rm s —
Strtet Lighting District
REVENU E
0 Pei Fool
Other Revenue
*5 P d of Sum Total
Balance Drought F o r w a rd C it h

»

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S
t

44.444
0
41.50S
71,141

4

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
R tse rv t lor C onllngtncitt
Rtsurve tor Cash to bo
Carried Fo rw ard

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Conlingenciet
Reserve lor Cash lo be
Carried Forwerd

4

41.1)5
7, lit
10,4)7

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4

15,7*1

Beverly T e r ric * — Street L ig h lin *
D itlricl
REVENUE
4 41 Per Foot
Olher Revenue
*5 Pet. ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Fo rw a rd C a sh

4

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

4

161
0
755
a*

5

457
0
* '*
114

4

4

547
61

715

Brantley H ill Estates —
Street Lighting Diitrict
REVENU E
4 40 Per Fool
Other Revenue
fS Pet ol Sum Total
B a la n ce B ro u gh iF o rw a rd C a th
T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
R rta rv t lor Conlingenciet
Reterve for Cash to be
Carried Forw ard

4

5.5*7
0
$.117
*S4

1

4.77)

l

4,447
531
1.045

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4

Chulueti — Strati Lighting

3.4*)

W ln w iid — I treat L tghting
D iitrict
REVENUE
4 74 Per Fool
Other Revenue
*5 Pet o l Sum Tot»l
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Coniinoenclet
Reterve for Ceth lo be
Carried Forward

»

14.*45
0
14,717
2.407

4

16.474

*

I7 .U *
1.340

1

14.174

3.I7S

7)5

117

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4,017
4S4
**•

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tolal E ip e n te t
Reserve lor Conlingenciet
K rte rv r lor Cath lo be
Carried Forw ard

5.4*1

l

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

5

0
0
0
5,4*3

44.7*3

1,I1*,0*7

100.000

4.77)

TO TALBUDOET
(Other Than Special
im prevement Districts}
Total R e c e ip ts- A IIB u d g r lt
Total E ip e n d ilu rc t — All Budgets
Counly wide M illage
County Operation
Pori Authority

440.011.0»l
440.011.0*4
5 737 M ills
004 M ills

TO T AL
174) M ills
Complete details ol budget! are available lor public inspection at the
Office ot Management and Budget, Room 301. Seminole Counly
Courthouse. Sanlord. Florida
"P e rto n t are advised that, it they decide lo appeal any decision made
al Ihit meet log hearing, they will need a record ot the proceeding!, and,
lor lucti purpose, they m ay need toenturelhet a verbatim record ot the
proceedings it made, which record includes Ihe lettlm ony and tvidanc*
upon which the appeal It lo ba bated ’*
Board ol County
Com m ittioners
Seminole Counly, Florida
By Roger Neitw m der.
Budget Officer
ATTEST
Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Clerk lo Board ol Counly
Com m iitionert, Seminole
Counly, Florida

104

700.000
4.144.10*

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S ;
Total Eip e n te t
(reserve tor Contingencies
Reserve for Cash to be
Carried Forward
TO T AL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

4.711
174
4.1*7
5.10*
*.*74

5,*00
500

714
75
51
Hi

REVENU E
S t* I I Per Lot
Other Revenue
*4 Pci. ot Sum Total
Balance Brought Fo rw o rd C ath
TOTAL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

*,♦ 75

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total Expenses
Reserve for Contingencies
Reserve lor Cash to be
Carried Forw ard
T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T iO N S

41,111
0
44,7*0
1.017
77,7*7

too
l.tll
5,77*

17.5*0
77.7*7

141*
775
i. n a

Level ill — I trout Lighting
O tstrkt
REVENU E
S27.I7 Par Lot
Oi bar Revenue
*5 Pet of turn Total
Balanca Brought Forw ard Cash
TOTAL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

IN CREASE SALES...
N O T BY W O R K IN G
H ARD ER BUT BY

$4.1*4
t.041

t .f ll

1.1*7

DO N 'T BE FLOORED
BY COMPETITION
YOU CAN

Laval 11 — Street Lighting
O itt rk l

3.S75

Burten Lane Interest *
Sinking Fuad
[r e v e n u e
43 as)* - Linear Fr. Ft. Special Attesam enl
Othar Revwtw*
*3 Pet ol Sum Total
Ba lance Browght Forw ard Cath

*

Intergavarnm entalFund
I Insurance Safely t

T O T AL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

Pawer Reed im ereti
A Sinking Fund
[R E V E N U E :
U 5*43 Linear F r Ft. Special
Attest men!
Other Revenue
45 Pet ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Fo rw ard Cath

26.477

4

t ,It * .0*7

boundaries ol ll.414.**0.4l&gt;

[ aeated on a taaable valuation ol all propertiat lying oultide municipal
j boundaries ot 41.407.417,117
| A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve tor Contingencies
Reterve for Cath to be
Carried Forward

4,405

Level V l l l - lire tt Lighting
District

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingencies
Reterve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forw ard

1,774

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

F lrt P re fe ct* n Fund •
[ REVENUE:
d l . l t M IL L S
Other Revenue
*S Pet ot Sum Total
Belenc* Brought Forw ard Cath

l* . ll)
2.70*

I0,*7S

a p p r o p r ia t io n s

0 M IL L S
O ihtr Revenue
*5 Pet Ot Sum Tolal
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

Law E nlor cement T r a il Fund
REVENUE:
0 M IL L S
Other Revenue
*S Pet ol Sum Total
Balance Brouuht Forw ard Cath

34.477

1.757.000

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S
A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingenclet
Reterve lor Cath to be
Carried Forward

4

Level V II — Street i tghting
District

1.757.000

Return Disposal Bntargrlta
Fund
REVENUE:
« M IL L S
Other Revenue
*S Pet. ot Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

77.403
0
11.443
4,*44

4

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

14.750

4

T O T A L H E C E IP T 5 A N D B A L A N C E S

4

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ipe nte t
Reserve lor Contingencies
Reterve lor Cath to be
Carried Forward

revenu e

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T I O N *

14.7*4
------------17.454
-------------

4

TO TAL R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

T O T AL A P P R O P R IA t l O N S
Trantporlalian Fund
Capital Praia cttl 10 I

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Tolal E ip e n te t
H t lf f v * lor ConUngencies
Reserve for Cash lo be
Carried Forward

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

Transportation Fund
Capital Prefects 114 .)

TO T AL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

41.a**
*■ *41

1,000.000

4

REVENU E
0 M IL L S
Other Revenue
*5 Pci ol Sum Total
Balance Brought F o rw a rd C it h

4*.*47
0
64.446
14.70*
..... 17.(54
4

S

TO TAL R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

l.*40

TO T AL R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

4

REVENUE
15* ♦ » Per l ol
Other Revenue
*5 Pci ol Sum Total
Balance Brought F o rw a rd C ith

1.000.000

4

17 441

Level V I — Street Lighting
District

3.000.000

4

4

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

755.070

In te ra tt* Sinking Fund
Central Obligation Bendt
(Series A A t l

r, ft

0
0
3.000.000

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingenclet
Reterve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forward

(t!)

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Total E ip e n te t
iri.'lt Reterve lor Contingenclet
I ii • Reterve lor Cath lo be
Carried Forwerd

4

TO TAL R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

4.S44

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n se s
Reterve tor Conlingenciet
Reserve lor Cash lo bo
Carried Forw ard

13.437
0

11.110

TO TAL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

O ra n U n -A id F v n d
REVENU E
0 M IL L S
Olher Revenue
*S Pci ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Fo rw a rd C a sh

24.1ST
3.U0

T O T AL R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

7.437.445

4

4

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

REVENU E
444 7a Per Lot
Other Revenue
*5 Pci ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

3.437,*45
0

REVENU E
4 73 Per Foot
Other Revenue
*5 Pci ot Sum Total
B alanceBroughl Fo rw a rd C a sh

17.441

4

Level V — Street Lighting
District

0

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

i.fu .a s i

4

S

37.156
0
31.71)
4.471

T O T AL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

1,417,ats

TOTAL R E C t IP I S A N D B A L A N C E S

Trantporlalian Fund (County-widal

.Jill

0
1,470.460
1.445.4*0
*77,4*5

1S.I73.I4I

reven u e

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total E ip e n te t
Reterve tor Conlingenciet
Reterve lor Cath lo be
Ilf
Carried Forw ard
r.U &gt; Transfer lo General Fund

S

Suttddy, fgpt. II, 1M1-S*

District

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
Total Eip e n te t
Reterve tor Conlingenciet
Reserve lor Cath to be
Carried Forward

144.714

7S.t71.t4l

S

1)1.577

4

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

0
371.433

Federal Revenue Sharing Na. 3
REVENU E
0 M IL L S
Other Revenue
as Pet, Ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

4

REVENU E
435 «» Per Lot
Other Revenue
»S Pel ol Sum Total
Balance Brought Forw ard Cath

34,103
0

T O T A L A P P R O P R IA T IO N S
T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N D B A L A N C E S

77.75)

Level IV - Street Lighting
District

344,71*

A P P R O P R IA T IO N S :
Tola) E ip e n te t
Reterve lor Contingencies
Reserve tor Cath lo be
Carried Forward
T rantl er lo Traniportatlon Fund

Evtfilm Htfild. Sanford, FI.

*r.ua
io,*]i

TO TAL A P P R O P R IA T IO N S

lOl.tl*

T O T A L R E C E IP T S A N O B A L A N C E S

4

111.71*
0

W O R K IN G SM ARTER!

Plan today to placa YOUR ad in tha

E v e n in g H e r a ld

107,54*
14.011
1)1,577

Coll 122-2*11 • O U R S A l i S STAFF WILL I I H A PPY TO ASSIST Y O U
OVER J0,M0 CIRCULATION IN SEMINOLE AND SOUTHWEST VOLUSIA COUNTIES

�4.

ik —Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

The Academy of Television
Arts and Sciences presents its
33rd annual Em m y Awards to
the program s, perform ers,
w riters, directors and other
creative artists involved in
television at cerem onies to be
broadcast live from the Pasa*
dena (Calif,) Auditorium Sun*
day on CHS.

P e rso n n a

D o u b le E d g e

PERSO N N A

DOUBLEEDGE

M A R ’S
^
S N A C K S IZ E

BLADES

CANDY

C l ^
J
Priced . w / M A W
S ta in le s s s te e l b la d e s
Limit t
S a le

The Nominees Are
Kmmy nominees (or outstanding lead actress in a dramatic
scries include: IJnda Gray, Dallas; Veronica Hamel, Hill
Street Blues; Michael learned, Nurse; Barbara Babcock, Hill
Street Blues; Stefanie Powers, Hart To Hart; Barbara Bel
Gcddes, Dallas. For lead actor in a dramatic series: U uis
Gossett Jr., Palinerstown; Ed Asner, lx&gt;u Grant; in rry
Harman, Dallas; Daniel J. Travanti, Hill Street Blues; Pernell Roberts, Trapper John, M.D.; Jim Davis, Dallas. For lead
actress in a comedy series: Lynn Redgrave, House Calls;
Eileen Brennan, Taiil; Cathryn Damon, Soap; Katherine
Helmond, Soap; Isabel Sanford, The Jeffersons. For lead actor
In a comedy series; Hal linden, Barney Miller; Judd Hirsch,
Taxi; Richard Mulligan, Soap; John Ritter, Three’s Company;
Alan Alda, M-A-S-H.

1 D -O Z .

M

l V

BAGS

T

^

R e g . 1 . 5 9 ...............

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B A R S ..B A R S

I

S n ic k e r s . M ilky W ay . T h re e
M u s k e te e r s o r S ta r b u r s t.

TUMS
A N T A C ID

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ICE CH EST

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L im it 1 p a c k

D rain p lu g . S w in g -u p
h a n d lo s F o o d tray .

V ID A L 3 A 8 8 0 0 N
EX TRA G E N T L E SH A M PO O

V ’xSO ’

■•OUNCE

No. 501

H 49

Sal* Priced........... I
E x tr a g o n tle , F o r s e n s itiv e
h a ir. L im it 1

(IA M B I

P A L M O L IV E
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Regular 3.99
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Sale Priced...........
2 1 " x 2 7 ". p o ly e s te r filled
w ith a s s o r t e d tic k in g .

LEARNED

Reg. 17.99
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g r id s &amp; d ra fts .

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No.V-190
A A |
Reg. 31.99
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SANFORD

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C le a n s g la s s , k itc h e n
a p p lia n c e s &amp; m o re.
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s o f te r h a n d s . L im it 1

D ual h e a ts , r e a d y
d o t S sw iv el c o r d

Ybu'vw G oing to Uto Ecksfd's
Pharmacy Ssivtci.

H IR S C H

MULLIGAN

RITTER

E c k e rd P h a r m a c i s t s a r e h ig h ly - tr a in e d p r o f e s s io n a ls ,
w h o a r e g o in g to m a k e s u r e y o u a r e c o m p le te ly s a t i s ­
fie d T h e y ta k e c o n tin u in g e d u c a t io n c o u r s e s to m a in ­
ta in a n u p - t o - d a t e k n o w le d g e of
d e v e lo p m e n ts in d r u g s T h e y a lw a y s
try to s a v e y o u m o n e y by o ffe rin g
S e n io r C itiz e n d is c o u n ts a n d g e n e r ic
d r u g s w h e n e v e r p o s s ib le . T h ey will
a l s o s a v e y o u tim e by c o n s ta n tly
V fy T ik a Q g
c h e c k in g s to c k s to k e e p th e d r u g s
you n e e d on hand!

A

H ea v y d u ty . F o r
s m o k a a la r m s , c a l
c u l a to r s &amp; m o r e .

O PEN DA ILY 9 to 9,
8 U N D A Y 8 10 to 7
Sal# Pricot good thru
Wod. Sopt. 16th
W e reserve the right to limit quantities.

«

�/

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Her Goal: Bring Back Hollywood's Glamour

PEOPLE

Barbara Carrera Not Girl Next Door

IN BRIEF

HOI J.YWOOD t NEAI — She may not be able to bring
back glamour single-handedly, but who's talking about
lands, anyhow?
Her name is Barbara Carrera and she is a Nicaraguanborn beauty, a New York-trained model, a Hollywoodexperienced actress and a worldwide jelsetter and trafpser,
And she feels cheated because she has come along in an era
in which glamour and excitement are goodies of Ihe past.
She wants to do something about that: She wants to
restore Hollywood glamour and bring back the excitement
of the stars
“ Maybe it’s time for a new cycle," she says. "Maybe it's
time for a new breed of glamorous star to come back. Who
wants to pay to see the girl next door?
" I ’d love to be the one to start the comeback of glamour to
Hollywood.”
Site could do it. Years ago Hollywood would have grabbed
her and started some stories, laid down a cloak of mystery.
And Barbara Carrera would have swept to stardom on that
path.
"All l hear," she says, "is the way it used lobe here. 1 feel
like I’ve been cheated. Why must everything be so dull
today? There is the clone attitude here — they want
every body to be the same."
There is nothing about her that is the same. You don't
hear the band strike up "Send in the Clones" when she
walks by.
"I'm not doing anything to show the world that I’m dif­
ferent," she says. "Because I am different! Thai’s my big

She Just Wanted A
Little Peace And Quiet
l* a Marshall said she just wanted a quiet little
celebration lor her 50th birthday. Her husband John
gave It to her.
On Tuesday Mrs. Marshall opened her morning
paper and found a two-column notice with a black
border In The Omaha World-Herald's obituary section.
It said "Ijea Marshall Is 50. In deference to her age her
husband John's mouth will remain closed today,
Tuesday, Sept. 8, 1981."
Four years ago when her husband celebrated his 50th
birthday, he wanted a big party, Mrs. Marshall said.
But she wanted to celebrate her 50lh in a moi • subdued
fashion.

Snoopy in The Hospital?
"Peanuts" comic strip creator Charles SchuU has
been released from the hospital last week after un­
dergoing open heart surgery.
Before departing, Shultz, 58, penned a memento of
his stay on the wall of the cardiac recovery room of
Santa Rosa Memorial Hospital.
The cartoon showed Snoopy trying to operate a
triblow, a device used by post-operative patients to
strengthen their lung capacity. The triblow is three
glass tubes with a small black ball inside each. The
patient tries to raise the balls in the tubes through lung
power.

QU0TE/UNQU0TE

Father O f The Quarterback

What people are saying...

Rep. JBCk Kemp, R-N.Y., had a national reputation
first as a pro football quarterback, then as a leader of
the supply-side school of economics. Now he has a new
identity.
Waiting for Kemp on his return to his Capitol Hill
office Tuesday was a metal plaque on the front door
inscribed: "Home of the father of Jeff Kemp Ids
Angeles Rams."
The congressman's son recently made the Rams'
rosier as third-string quarterback.

conservative lobby founded
by the Rev. Jtn-y Falwell
was try ing to stifle opposing
viewpoints.
"That way, they could be
in the presence of God and
have the Prince of Darkness
nearby"
—Charles Tanford, a Duke
psychology profrssor, Joking
about thr benefit to lourlsls
of housing a Richard Nison
presidential library near the
university's rh ap rt. lie
opposes the proposed library
lor Nixon, a graduate of thr
university's law school.
"The killer is back!"
- Jerry l&lt;re Idw Is, rock
singer, on leaving a Mem­
phis, Trnn., hospital after a
Sl-day slay for stom aeh
treatm ent Dressed In silk
pajamas, he clenched an
unlit cigar between his leelh.
"The story was false in
every way."
— Cary Grant, 77, actor,
explaining why he filed a 110
million auii against the
National E nquirer for
suggesting he was reluctant
to m arry his fifth and
present wife, Barbara Norris
G rant 10.

“Even my Cabinet - even
Khomeini's Cabinet."
— Aholhassan Rant-Sadr,
exllrd former president of
Iran, saying It is possible
L'.S. and British agents have
Infiltrated many segments of
A y ato llah
K h o m ein i's
regime. lARC-TVl
"My biggest problem so
far was Minnie Minnsn's
uniform shirt."
— I’rtcr Clark, curator of
thr basrbal] Hall ol Fame In

Pageant Politics
TV actress Linda Kelsey wants Miss America
Pageant contestants to disassociate themselves from
the Nestle Corp., a contest sponsor, because of the
company’s sale of baby formula in Third World
nations. Ms. Kelsey, who plays a reporter on "Lou
Grant," said In an open letter to all contestants the
endorsement of Nestle by the new Miss America would
be "a terrible Injustice.”
Critics have accused Nestle and other formula
manufacturers of contributing to the deaths of a
million children in less developed nations by using
sophisticated m arketing techniques to convince
mothers to use a bottle formula. Because of the high
cost and a lack of Information about the formula,
critics say, many mothers dilute the liquid, and their
children sometimes die of malnutrition.

H A M -S A im
Cooperstown, N.Y., who
decides where to plarr ar­
tifacts in rhronologiral
displays. Minoso played at
various tim et In thr 1940s,
1150s, 1990s. 1970s and 1910s.
"We’ve spoken out at least
a thousand times in favor of
pluralism. We're in favor of
pluralism because we'd like
our organization to be i,car(i
because we're the new boyon tlie block, so to speak."
— Ronald S. Godwin,
spokesman
for
Moral
Majority, denying that the

Brown O n Power
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., pointing to
the Israeli bombing of an Iraqi nuclear power plant,
says further development of nuclear energy will lead,
inevitably, to global conflicts. Brown, addressing a
United Nations' energy conference in I ds Angeles,
urged the developm ent of altern ate energytechnologies such as wind, geothermal and biomass.
He said Iraq had been using the plant to produce
plutonium for nuclear weapons, and Israel had to
destroy it for its survival. But he added: "This incident
points up the estrem e danger of the spread of nuclear
technology and the spread of nuclear weapons
throughout the world."

N am es In The News
Actor ta rry Ragman, the J.R. Ewing of TV's
"Dallas,” has been immortalized with a star cemented
in concrete on the Walk of Fame on Hollywood
Boulevard. His bronze star is next to the one dedicated
years ago to his mother, singer-actress Mary' M artin...
Jack Ford, son of former President Gerald Ford, says
he may campaign for the Republican nomination for
California stile controller ... Faye Dunaway startled
other diners Tuesday night when she wore her Joan
Crawford makeup and shoulder-padded costume from
the film "Mommy Dearest" to Gian Marino's
Restaurant with husband Terry O'Neill.

plus."
I d ! u s investigate the difference. She is beautiful, but so
are lota of other women. And yet, even here she is different
—her beauty lias overtones of mystery, her dark eyes seem
tn hide a myriad of secrets, her lips have a hint of a smile
There is a whisper of accent in her speech — Just enough
to be intriguing.
There are the mysterious rumors about her private life,
which once you see her, you can believe.
As for her professional credits, they are few but im­
pressive. Since she turned actress after becoming a top
New York model, she has done interesting things, tier best
work has been on TV. in "Centennial" and "Masada."
Currently, she is on view in Disney's "Condorman," and
she has Just shot Ihe remake of the Mickey Spillane story
"I, the Jury."
"I'm still very new as an actress," she says. "I still have
to earn my dues. But since "Masada" 1 can now be selec­
tive."
She says the best scripts seem tn be those for TV today,
and she likes working on television. She says that actresses
today —even the ones who put the emphasis on glamour have to be known to Ihe TV audiences — "if the TV
audiences know you, then they will come out to see you in
the movie theaters."
There is one aspect of her career that she especially likes
Most of the things she has done have been shot on location,
enabling her to travel and that is something she adores. The
baggage terminal of airports is her milieu.

Hurhura Carrera wants to hrinj&lt; glamour back to
Hollywood. Who wants to pay to see the girl
next d o o r?" she says. I'd love lo be the one to
start Ihe comeback of glamour to Hollywood."

an Imprint found on the
burial shroud — which some
rlaim bears the likeness of
Jesus - definitely is from a
rare Palestinian coin issued
during the reign nl Pontius
Pilate.
"T he worsl thing that
humanity has produced."
— Jose Lopez Portillo,
president
of
Mexico,
providing his assessment of
the neutron bomb.

"Tins discovery proves the
authenticity, the place of
origin and Ihe approximate
slating oi the Shroud of Turin
beyond reasonable doubl."
- The Rev. Franrls Filas,
a
Loyola
University
| Chicago | theologian, saying

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�Evening Herald
(U S P S 411 3*01

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FU \. 32771
Area Code 30M22-261I or 831-9993
Sunday, S ep tem b er 13, 1981—BA
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
John Toen|es, Advertising Director
Home Delivery; Week, tl.00; Month, $4.25; 6 Months, $24.00;
Year, $45,00. By Mail: Week, 11.25; Month, $5.25; 6 Months,
130.00; Year. CS7.00.

A Job Cut

By DORIS DIETRICH

Out For Him
President Reagan concentrated during his first
six months in office on selling supply-side
economics to Congress. His victories on taxes and
the budget were bought at the price of putting
other business off until tomorrow.
Tomorrow is here. Mr. Reagan is back in
Washington from a respite at the ranch, and
Congress returns from its own vacation Wed­
nesday. Mr. Reagan m ay find his hard fought
battle to get his budget and tax program adopted
was only a warm-up for the political challenges
posed by issues now demanding full attention.
TTie broad public support that helped carry the
day for his tax and fiscal policies m ay not be as
easy to rally on the President's side with the kind
of decisions now to be m ade. Tlic chance to lower
taxes and reduce inflation through Reaganomics
had an appeal th at cut across party lines and
unified interest groups that arc otherwise at odds.
Some of the questions now coming up will be far
more divisive.
Reaganomics is showing hairline cracks in its
fresh plaster. The slum p in stock and bond
m arkets suggests the President has not addressed
problem s of m onetary policy that could stall the
economic turnaround he expects, The likelihood
of a federal deficit higher than anticipated in the
next fiscal year is putting pressure on the a d ­
m inistration’s plan for increased defense spen­
ding.
Defense and foreign policy questions that were
put on hold earlier this y ear m ust now be an ­
swered, While Mr. R eagan’s tougher line toward
the Soviet Union is generally applauded, he has
avoided specifics about how our defense posture is
going to change. The Defense D epartm ent is yet
to m ake crucial choices about weapons system s
designed to offset the Soviet m ilitary build-up und
set the stage for a resum ption of arm s control
talks.
The proposed sale of the AWACS recon­
naissance system to Saudi Arabia over Israeli
objections will put Mr. R eagan's Middle Hast
policy to a congressional test. The political lines
being draw n on this issue m ay be h ard er to crack
than the resistance which the White House
overcam e with its budget and tax proposals.
Mr. R eagan's participation in the Cancun
conference in October will require that he spell
out specifics about his approach to the problem s
of the Third World. The site of the conference in
Mexico also will draw attention to disagreem ent
within the hem isphere over how best to deal with
Soviet and Cuban support of guerrilla m ovements
in Latin America and the Caribbean.
While foreign policy deserves increased a t­
tention by the President, his domestic agenda is
equally demanding. He must choose soon among
options for reform ing Social Security. He must
flesh out his concept of a new federalism " with
proposals to change long-standing relationships
between the federal govenment and the states.
With num erous urban program s from the Johnson
era m arked for cutbacks or elimination, he must
lay down a new urban policy to quiet fears that his
adm inistration is deserting inner cities and their
population of hard-core unemployed.
The P resident's com m itm ent to deregulation
confronts him with such controversial issues ns
am ending the Clean Air Act and reform ing labor
laws. Energy policy dem ands that he come to
grips with decontrol of natural gas prices. He
faces resistance in Congress to his plan to cut
dairy price supports und other farm subsidies.
The troubled housing m arket may require further
reform of hanking and lending laws. A
congressional battle m ay be shaping up over
tuition tax credits for parents who send their
children to private schools.
T here's as big a pile of wood waiting to be
chopped in Washington as Mr. Reagan found
when he arrived at his ranch last month. The
variety of difficult foreign and dom estic issues
before him will require a careful selection of
priorities in what he seeks from Capitol Hill this
Tall. It will take as much effort as he put into his
tax budget battles to produce a respectable stack
of firewood by Christm as.

Move over, J.R.
Make room (or Mary Kay.
Some sources speculate that it would come as
no surprise if "M ary Kay," the biography of
Mary Kay Ash, is serialised as the TV successor
to "Dallas."
And who is Mary Kay Ash?
For openers, she is the Umid housewife who
em erged as A m erica's m ost dynam ic
businesswoman.
The striking blond Texas tycoon (or, Is it
tycooness?) has made It way over the top with
her line of cosmetics. The beautiful make-up of
Mary Kay is featured in this month’s Saturday
Evening Post. The story tells about her passion
to help others help themselves and how she has
brightened the lives of thousands to become one
of the most influential and respected per­
sonalities In philanthropic and business circles.
Mary Kay's thriving cosmetics empire, housed
in a plush gold Rians tower in Dallas employs

‘M * *

• * w — «• t- - - -

^

Ptrez, they would be in the red — and not in the
pink and white marble world of Mary Kay.
Dr. Perez is likely to grab the olive oil from the
kitchen cupboard to swab over her lovely
wrinkle-free olive complexion.
On the other hand, another Sanford woman
into cosmetics, Nora Gordon, is a great­
grandmother Just like Mary Kay. Nora’s
brunette beauty is on the same par with the
famous Mary Kay.
Most women have their own brand of beauty
(cosmetics and otherwise) and are reluctant to
deviate from their whims. There is obviously
nothing but a rosy future for the leading
cosmetics firms.
I don’t know about anybody else, but I am
tickled pink that Mary Kay has helped so many
women toward a better and happier life — both
her employees and her customers.

RUSTY BR O W N

JU LIAN B O N D

Giving
Math O ne
M ore Try

Thaw
Toward
S. Africa
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (NEA) The United States scuttled an international
initiative to pressure the South African
government to case Its policy toward black
squatter settlements in Cape Town.
Apparently fearful of angering the white
minority government here, Howard Walker,
the U.S. charge d ’affaires, refused to support
a French protest concerning the arrests of
1,100 squatters and the demolition of hun­
dreds of plastic shanties, which left many
families homeless In the Cape Town winter.
Without U S. support, the West German and
British governments would not Join In Issuing
a note of protest over the evictions, which
have caused widespread controversy here.
Japan, Canada, Austria and Italy also
conditioned their support of the complaint on
U.S. participation. Argentina, Paraguay,
Portugal, Greece, Spain and Uruguay had
refused from the start to Join in an appeal to
South A frica's "h u m an itarian
con­
siderations."
American silence on the squatter evictions
is on extension ofrihe Reagan policy of ac­
commodation with apartheid, South Africa's
system of "separate development" for its
white minority and black majority.
Black South Africans have no citizenship
rights. They cannot vote, own land or remain
in any urban or suburban area outside a r­
tificially created "homelands" for more than
72 hours unless they "qualify" to be there.
Blacks may qualify to live outside a
homeland by having lived In one area since
birth, by having worked In the area for 10
years, by being a dependent of a lb-year
worker or by receiving permission from the
local labor bureau to become a contract
worker. Under this formula, only 10 percent
of South Africa's black population is qualified
for urban residency.
U.S. reluctance to criticize the deportation
of the Cape Town blacks to the Transkei
homeland is part of the new "cooperative
relationship" between the United States and
South Africa pledged In secret documents
released In earlier this year by TransAfrica,
the Washington-based black lobby for Africa.
The documents — written by Assistant
Secretary of Slate Chester Crocker in
preparation for a meeting between South
African Foreign Minister Pik Botha and
Secretary of State Alexander Haig — call for
"a more positive and reciprocal relationship"
between the two countries "based on shared
strategic concerns."
The "strategic concerns" could mean a
military alliance with the minority govern­
ment here. The "positive relationship” could
refer toU.S. willingness to a s ls t South Africa
in delaying Indepawdeuce for Namibia, the
territory that South Africa has illegally oc­
cupied for more than 15 years.
Under the C urler adm in istration , a
"contact group" of five Western nations —
the United States, West Germany, Britain,
Canada and France — had sought a set­
tlement agreeable both to South Africa and to
the South West Africa People's Organization,
the popular political and guerrilla movement
in Namibia.
Hie Reagan administration has avoided
public opposition to South Afrida's Internal
politics (as in the squatter controversy) and
vetoed a U.N. resolution condemning South
African raids into neighboring Angola in
pursuit of SWAPO guerrillas.

JEFFREY HART

W ho After Reagan?
WASHINGTON — A year ago everyone in
this town knew that Ronald Reagan was lazy,
too old, and simplistic, but today as he looksforward to the politics of the fall, Reagan's
political dominance is complete.
The Democratic opposition has no ideas and
no leadership. Even if the Democrats retain
control of the House in 1982, the chances are
good th a t Southern conservative "boll
weevils" would Join to ensure Tip O'NeiU's
defeat as Speaker.
And Reagan's domination has been so great
that among Republicans no one has been able
to emerge as the likely future leader of the
Republican Party.
Reagan stands alone, politically astride the
nation's capital.
Alexander Haig clearly sees himself as
presidential material. He briefly considered
running in 1980, but pulled back, and he began
maneuvering from the start of the Reagan
administration to make himself the pre­
eminent Cabinet member.
Haig attempted to expand his Jurisdiction to
the horizon and beyond, and he appeared on
tl» cover of Time magazine with the globe at
his feet as the "vicar” of foreign policy.
After some turbulence, Haig was leashed
by Reagan’s tough senior aides Jim Baker
and Ed Meese.
Haig may see him self a s another
Eisenhower, but in modem politics, Cabinet
members do not become president. The last
one to make it was Herbert Hoover; he was
W arren H arding's and Cal Coolidge's
secretary of commerce.
It is likely enough that Cap Weinberger at
the Pentagon has higher ambitions, and that
these have added to his Jurisdictional tension
with Haig.
But the Cabinet member precedent applies
to him as well. The modem route to the Oval
Office goes through electoral office, gover­
nor, senator, vice president.
To take the last first, George Bush is
positioned as well as anyone, but, again,

Reagan has so dominated the administration
that Bush has seemed to be playing bit parts
and has not established much In the way of an
individual political Identity.
Unlike Haig, Bush has been a smooth team
player. He no longer talks about Reagan's
"voodoo economics."
Bush has political problems with the
Sunbelt, New Right, and fundamentalist
components of Reagan's coalition, but he has
not had the chance to try to solve them. like
everyone else, he remains In Reagan’s
shadow.
Of all the subordinate cast, David Stockman Is probably the star. But this whiz kid out
of Harvard and the Congress has about 20
years to wait before even thinking of moving
to the top.
Howard Baker is a political animal of great
talent and Intelligence. However, he seems to
be completely a man of the Senate, a natural
majority leader, a man who performs
brilliantly out of the public gaze, In the
countless negotiations and legislative deals
that a majority leader engages in.
As you look over the political landscape,
perhaps Rep. Jack Kemp of New York, In the
shadow of Reagan like the others, never­
theless has the best position. He is outside the
White House, has a chance to establish
himself Independently In the public mind. He
came across very positively as a speaker at
the Detroit convention and he is known as Mr.
Tax Cuts.
As chairman of the Republican Conference,
Kemp Is the number three Republican In the
House. He does need to develop other issues
beside the economic ones.
Kemp will probably run either for the
governorship in New York or for the Senate
■eat held by Daniel Patrick Moynlhan,
probably the latter.
When he does that, Kemp will emerge
further a t a national figure in his own right.
But now, after seven months in the
presidency, Reagan is very dominant.

Looking back, Kathryn Brooks, 42, realizes
she would have liked to have followed In her
father's footsteps and become a geologist.
"But It was already out of the question
when I got to college. I didn’t have enough
high school math courses to major In
science," she says. "Besides, mathematics
scared me. So I majored in Latin American
studies instead."
Her experience is typical of millions of
women who dodge scientific careers. Now, as
director of the University of New Mexico
women’s center, she is determined to reverse
that defeatist attitude with a course called
“Overcoming Math Anxiety."
Prof. Brooks helps her students reach back j
Into thfclr memories to relive their first bad
math experience, “ when a door banged shut
for most of us."
It might have been the day we got our first
and only " F " on an exam and It was in
algebra. It might have been the day the male
math teacher gave us that "herMhe-comeswith-another-dumtH)uestion’’ look.
Or, it might have been the night our mathsm art father became exasperated trying to
help us with our geometry homework. So, we
got through the course by memorizing all the
theorems In the book and vowed to never,
ever enter another math class again!
Our mothers, perhaps, consoled us. Alter
all, they reminded us, we were so much better
In English and music and social studies. “ You
probably won't ever need math anyhow,"
(hey might have said.
I ask you, if it had been a son flunking
English, would they have said: "Oh, it won't
make any difference. You won't need to know
how to write a sentence or spell"? Of course
not.
No one Insisted that we, s i females, work
through that first failure. Few teachers at­
tempted to convince us that math was not
beyond us. Boys were encouraged to try again
—and were rewarded for learning. Girls were
rewarded for good behavior and allowed to
give up.
So, according to Prof. Brooks, the mathavoidance syndrome set In. When most
colleges reduced the admission requirement
of four years of math to two years, campus;
bound women everywhere sighed In relief.
But what that really meant was that 9&lt;
p ercent of freshm en fem ales hac
automatically shut themselves off fron
nearly half the fields of study: engineering
architecture, medicine and all the rest of th&lt;
sciences. Those became male domains.
Now, at last, colleges around the country
have been instituting couraes to help womei
get back in the running. I read about the*
"m ath anxiety” courses, but thought the;
merely dealt with nervousness and fears ovei
doing math work. They are that — and fai
more.
In Prof. Brooks' course, after women s h ir
their turn-off experiences, they take a test t
determine at what level they stopped leamin,
— usually 8th grade. They go back to tha
point and, with women math tutors, g ras &gt;
what they m ined. They alao work with
computers and calculators and learn how 1i
study for and take math teats — calmly.
"We bring them up to the level of b a i l :
college algebra,” she says. "Then they’n
back in the game and have the full range o
college couraes open to them.”

JAC K A N D E R SO N

Fortune M ade On Labor Department
WASHINGTON — As an employee of the
federal government, President Reagan was
entitled to medical care under the Federal
Employees Compensation Act after the at­
tempt of his Ufe last March 30. The wound that
nearly killed him cost an estimated $24,500 for
treatment as an on-the-job injury.
Compare that relatively modest medical
bill to one submitted by Dr. Richard Kones for
the treatment of anotlier government worker
under the same law; The good doctor billed
the Department of Labor $123,000 for treating
the federal employee for two on-the-job In­
juries between 1975 and 197$.
Kones la currently being sued by the feds
for recovery of $500,000 In workers' com­
pensation payments. He is alao under In­
dictment in Houston, Texas., and Westchester
County, N.Y., (or Insurance fraud. He was
convicted of Medicare fraud In .New York in
1974 and Medicaid fraud In Connecticut In
1910.
Yet, incredibly, no one at the Labor
Department raised any question! when Kones
(ubnutted 12 separate bills for the same sum

*# m •

150,000 independent co n su ltan ts and 3,000
directors. Gross sales in 1980 were $167 million.
Now, that's a lot of goo for women to sm ear on
their faces, which only proves that many women
will pay through the nose in the name of beauty.
Mary Kay’s success story and her generosity
with her employees brings to mind an area
Kosmellcs King who didn’t fly so high. Maybe it
was greed that caused him so much despair.
The old saying goes that "beauty is only skin
deep." But who would deny that ail that green
touching the skin of Mary Kay’s palm is not truly
beauty in its most tangible form — M -O —N—
E -Y ?
Wonder If Mary Kay, reported to be a great­
grandmother, uses her own products or resorts
to a surgeon's skillful scalpel for her flawless
peaches and cream complexion.
Who cares? She’s gorgeous.
On the Sanford Scene, if the cosmetics Industry
depended on the likes of dermatologist Dr. Maria

— $832 — over the course of several months.
How could a doctor with a criminal record
get away with such ripoffs of the govern­
ment?
My associate Tony Capaccto has looked into
the situation, and the answer seems to be that
the Labor Department, which Is auppoaari to
supervise the HOOmillion-a-year medical
compensation program, has set up precious
few procedures to keep Uncle Sam from being
overcharged.
Many of Kones' outrageous bills, for
example, were routinely OKed by GS-2 clerks
— some of the lowest-paid and inexperienced
employee* on the federal payroll — Instead of
being scru tin ised by com petent claim s
examiners.
Another horrible example is Dr. Allen
Joeeph. From 197S to 1180, be got $$0JW) from
the government for workmen's compensation
medical bills. One mind-boggling case in­
volved a mailman who supposedly made SM
visits to Joseph's office between June 10,197$,
and Feb. I , 1988 — far treatment of a
lacerated leg. The bill came to 944MJ7.

* 1W • ( W

Presumably, nearly four y e a n of visits
were required to stitch and restitch the
mailman's knee. Yet the man was back on his
rounds seven months after his injury.
There was another problem with Joeeph
during this same period: in 1977 he waa
p erm anently b a rre d from receiving
Medicaid payments in New York. He had
been tried on fraud charges, but was
acquitted when he agreed to repay Suffolk
County, N.Y., $1,000. Under Labor Depart­
ment rules, however, Dr. Joeeph was allowed
to get FECA payments because his medical
license was (till Intact.
Even after Joeeph was Indicted, pleaded
guilty and was sentenced to a year and a day
In federal prison earlier this year for mall
fraud, sleuths (or Sen. William Roth, R-Del,
discovered that he continued billing the Labor
Department until four days before he went to
JalL
HALL OF HEROES; Courage can consist of
unspectacular things like conscience and
compassion. I'm nominating for this column's
Hall of Heroes three persons who demon­

strated these qualities.
— Jam es Branum, city m anager of Yukoc,
Okie., went to the FBI to report that he ha
been offered bribes by representatives of
New York City chemical company. As i
result, four Individuals were indicted o i
bribery charges involving six O klahom .
towns and 15 states. Recently, Branum ha i
received telephone threats against him**
and his family. Despite the threats, he 1
determined to tastily at the n upects’ uj &gt;
coming triaL
- Betty Lawrenx and Irene Pearbnan o
Washington, D.C., learned that a 62-year-ok
Capitol Hill neighbor, Bruce Bladen, mm
terminally ill with cancer and w an tw
desperately to spend his lest days at horn
with an ll-year-old brother. The two womet
«li* to d 25 volunteers to care for Slade
duriog the day, while a practical nurse tool
over a t n ig h t TWi enabled Sladen to leave the
hospital and live a t home until his death las
April 2.

�O PINIO N
Evening Herald, Sanford, Ft.

Sunday. S*pt. 11,1M1—*A

O UR READERS WRITE

Is Reagan To Blame?
The Air Traffic Controllers’ Union
(PATCO ) is being falsely blamed for
all the layoffs In the airline industry—
and the chaos. The media repeating this
; lie know it is a lie. President Reagan is
: the one to blame He ordered all the
PATCO strikers fired, regardless of the
public welfare. He Insists there is no
strike any more. If so, how can any
strikers be blamed? Besides, he and
Lewis, his man—hatchet m an -h a v e
ordered the airlines to cut back to SO
percent flights.
Dictator Reagan is solely to blame
for the m ass layoffs in the private
airline industry, subsidized by Big
Brother, of course.
And, since he refuses to order the
Federal Reserve Banks’ Big Boss
Volcker to cut interest rates to save the
nation's economy, Reagan is fully
responsible for the Inflation-depressionbankruptcy-unemployment despair we
are all suffering—yes, even the rich.
For naturally, crim e against property
and person is booming.
Since the President has passed the
buck to Volcker and claims now
Volcker is ‘independent" of Govern­
ment control, that makes Paul Volcker,
Chairman of the Fed, our Big Boss,
Reagan’s Big Boss, the open-faced
Emperor of the United States and allies

PLEASE WRITE
L etters to Ike ed ito r ere
welcomed for publication. AH letters
most be signed, with a mailing
address and, If possible, a telephone
number so the Identity ol the writer
may be verified. The Evening
Herald wtD respect the wishes of
writers who do not want their names
la print The Evening Herald also
reserves the right to edit letters to
eliminate libel or to conform to
requirements.

in the money world. This fact, admitted
by Reagan, explains the horrible
budget cuts against the poor and the
gorgeous tax cu ts, loopholes and
shelters for the rich. The bankers don’t
make profits off the poor, who cannot
save for the banks. But the bankers do
skim the cream of the profits off the
rich m an's savings and investments.
They all go through the banks!
This fact makes President Reagan
only the "Celluloid Cowboy’’ front man,
Volcker’s errand boy and hatchet man.
Both should be impeached.
Ray Knight
Altamonte Springs

Climate Of
Despair
1 wish to take this means to thank and
to congratulate all citizens who at­
tended the public hearing on the
proposed Seminole County Budget for
1981-A2 at the county courthouse on
Tuesday, Sept. 1, 1981. Please be
reminded of the second such hearing on
Tuesday, Sept. 15, 1901, 7 p.m.
1 am encouraged by those citizens
supporting Seminole Communlty
Aclion, os well as those supporting
other much needed human services in
Seminole County. Increased citizen
participation in the affairs of local
government is an ingredient of good
government which is grossly undersold
and absolutely indispensable if
government is to be accountable and
responsive to the people.
In the wake of controversy arising as
human service agencies seek financial
assistance through the Seminole Board
of County Commissioners, a climate of
despair and challenge seems to have
emerged.
(Rev.) Amos C. Jones
SCA Executive Director and
Pastor, St. Paul Baptist Church

A Brickbat
• Coplay N ew t S«r*loa

1

K

&gt;* S

«

A Very Distressing Situation
If you attended the Seminole County
Commissioner's budget hearing on
Sept. 1st, you probably would have
noticed a very distressing situation.
The Com m issioners proceeded to
dism antle needed hum an service
agencies and starve other ureas such ns
public transit. At the same lime they
gave a whopping Increase to the Sheriff
(who would like even more),
Tremendous public pressure on the
Commissioners from people interested
in funding Seminole Community Action
and public transit bad no immediate
effect as the Commissioners proceeded
to cut both below their previous service
levels.
It seem s the Com m issioners
priorities arc just like those of the
Administration in Washington: take
from tliose most in need and give it to
the m ilitary and-or Sheriff. The
analogy is appropriate because the
Sheriff has characterized himself as the

local arm of the military. These
priorities are totally wrong.
While some level id spending for the
Sheriff is necessary, his current budget
is far more titan lie needs. The Sheriff
has to investigate methods of stopping
crime other than throwing money at it.
One such program is the type ’Neigh­
borhood Watch’ program which is
employed in Detroit. There crime lias
declined substantially.
Monies which the Sheriff requested
as an Increase should go to Hie human
service a re a s and agencies who
currently are so strapped for cash they
must figtit each other for the crumbs.
These areas have been cut below even
last year's tight funding levels.
Come show the Commissioners that
you believe their budget priorities are
not m accord with yours or the public at
large. The next budget bearing is Sept.
15th, 7 p.m., at the Commissioner's
chambers in the Courthouse, N. Park

Avc., Sanford.
Carolyn Rzonca
tangwood

'Bad Taste?'
D arlene Je n n in g ’s "Around The
Clock" column in the September 3,
1081 "s Evening Herald regarding live
county contract to sell cat carcasses
was in poor taste. It is sad enough
animals are born, become unwanted
and that our solution to overpopulation
is to kill them. Her attempt to show the
w itticisms of the county commissioners
by trading feline jokes with them did
not umusc the many nnimal lovers who
read the Herald.
I personally would welcome more
articles on the responsibilities of pet
ownership and (lie availability o( low
cost spaylng-ncuterlng programs.
Trecna A. Knye
Sanford

A brickbat to Darlene Jennings for
her non-coverage of tlie Seminole
County Commission budget hearing on
September 1st. We trust the Herald will
be more on its toes at the next public
hearing.
D espite the C om m issioners of
Seminole County being presented with
a petition signed by over 700 of their
residents favoring expanded ixiblic
transit; in spite of the Commissioner's
own poll slowing the public favors
paying more taxes for expanded public
transit by nearly a 2 to 1 margin;
despite alm ost everyone In the
chambers showing support for ex­
panded public transit and for our
organization's proposals; and despite
numerous speakers addressing the
Commissioners on the need for a
g reatly expanded public tran sit
system, the Commission voic'd not only
to not expand public transit but also to
cut what little service we have now.
In turning down the budget request
from the Orange-Seminole-Osceoln
T ran sp o rtatio n Authority i OSOTA)
which is always too conservative, the
C om m issioners have ensured that
service either will be cut and-or
discontinued som etim e during the
coming year if cost and revenue
projections come true.
It is becoming patently obvious to
anyone who chooses to see that not only
is fu rth er g rassro o ts organizing
necessary on public trnnsll but also
organizing aim ed at effecting
leadership changes in Seminole County.
As a first slop to achieving these
goals, we invite the public to come to
the next budget hearing on September
15th at 7 p.m. in the County Courthouse
chambers, N. Park Ave., Sanford nrwl
let the Conunissioners know how you
feel about their actions. We an? more
determined than ever to continue the
flKht.

Willie Carr
People's Transit Organization

Donna Wilhelm-Hudson Joins City Officials’ Ranks
Seminole County’s cities gained one new
woman in elected office and tost another
this past week.
Donna Wilhelm-Hudson, a practicing
attorney, was elected by a margin of 2-1
to the Oviedo city council at about the
sam e tim e Tuesday as A ltam onte
Springs City Com m issioner Dolores
Vickers was announcing that she would
not seek-re-election.
Mrs. Hudson is the first woman elected
to a city council seat in Oviedo's 102-year
history. Mrs. Vickers, completing her

second two-year term in office, was the
third woman in recent years to be elected
to the Altamonte City Commission.
Mrs. Vickers said she had ac­
complished those goals she set during her
first campaign four years ago this lime.
The other two woman city officials —
Winter Springs Councilman Maureen
Boyd and Longwood City Commissioner
June U rm an n — arc both up for election
in their respective cities this year.
Sanford has never had a female on the
city commission. It's been a few years

since 1-ike Mary and Casselberry tiave
had women in elective office either.
County wide, however, there are two
women on the school board — Pal Telson
and Nancy Warren — and two women on
the county commission — Sandra Glenn
and Barbara Christensen. In addition,
Seminole County also had Elections
Supervisor Camilla Bruce.
Mrs. Vickers will leave her mark on
Altamonte Springs. While she was in
office the type of government changed in
the city trnm a full-time maynr-

twn attorneys on the city council. The
only other city with an attorney on its
governing body Is Casselberry where
Jim laiVfgno is serving.
In years past, attorney Harry Jacobs,
was a city commissioner in Allamonte
Springs, and even longer ago Gene
Stephenson was on Ho? governing Ixxly
there.

Partles &amp;
Politics
Donna Estes *O
l

administrator to a city manager type.
Willi Mrs. Hudson and Hansford Pyle
both elected, the city ol Oviedo will liavo

Can Judge O'Connor Meet The Standard?
By J. DAVID ALEXANDER
Special To The Herald
The appointment of Judge Sandra D.
O'Connor to the United Slates Supreme
Court is a poignant reminder of what
was at stake In last year’s Republican
P a rty p latform . T hat docum ent
committed the President to appoint
Judges who shared the pro-life and proiamUy views which have characterized
the "New Right." The appointment of
Judge O'Connor is under attack as
inconsistent with the platform
promises. For his part, lire President
asks his followers to be patient. He
exp resses confidence th a t Mrs.
O’Connor will meet the standards
established by the platform.
Perhaps, however, this is a good time
to reconsider the platform claims. For
liberal critics of that platform then,
when ft was adopted, as now, when
Judge O'Connor's appointment is under
attack, contend that it is utterly
Inappropriate to select Judges on the

would be so even if the Republican
platform had m ade no prom ises
whatever. It may distress a liberal
when the people take a conservative
turn, but when they do their govern­
mental institutions will necessarily
reflect that trend.
It does not follow, however, that the
Court is merely an appendage of party.
Whatever partisan principles they may
hold, Justices will have other, more
personal motives for safeguarding the
Court's place in American life. They
will be partial to the Court itself.

and Interests of the members of society.
Secondly, il must protect the rights and
interests of society ns a whole. It will
succeed at these tasks, however, only
through the agency of a just majority —
the sta rtin g point of all selfgovernment. Such a majority rules not
by means of its numerical strength, but
by reason of (airly determining its own
and otliers' rights.
The constitutional arrangement ol a
separation ol powers makes it (xtssible
for the Supreme Court to contribute to
this end. It does so by exercising and

VIEWPOINT
baits of party allegiance. They argue
that It would compromise the Im­
partiality of the federal court system,
the Supreme Court above all.
What do they mean by "Judicial
im partiality?" It cannot be that they
expect Judges not to be committed to a
c e rta in
ideology.
The
m oil
au th o rita tiv e m odern ach o larih ip ,
largely the work of liberals, holds that
all Justices follow their own biases, and
cannot do otherwise. The GOP's critics
have not challenged this claim. They
know that Supreme Court Justices pay
court to the sam e party differences
which exist in the nation as a whole.
It is a (air conclusion that the liberal
c ritic s, defending a non-partisan
selection process, in reality aeek to
blunt the thrust of the Republican
platform's promise of conservative
rather than liberal biases in judges.
S uprem e C ourt ju stic e s are
nominated by the President and con­
firmed by the Senate. Their views are a
reflection of the prevailing political and
electoral treads in the society. This

Although the platform 's critics are
right— the selection process is partisan
— they are wrong to fear a toss of
Judicial impartiality.
The Supreme Court's function Is
defined not by party affiliations but by
the Constitution and the nature of free
governm ent. The purpose of the
American system of government is to
establish and defend the rule of law,
and the rule of law presupposes the
moral integrity of a self-governing
people.
W hat, though, does governm ent
contribute to the moral Integrity of the
people? F irst, it m ust secure the rights

defending its ultimate power of judicial
review. This makes the Court the last
institutional resort from unjust jwlitical
undertakings. At tin? same time, it lies
the personal motives nt the justices to
the constitutional rights of their office.
In defending Its own powers, the
Court also s e n e s as the strongest
constitutional instrument for checking
the inunoral designs ol officials and
individuals. The impartial exercise of
its powers makes liie Supreme Court
the most unassailable branch of the
federal government b&gt; preserving in
citizens the hope of a just resolution ol
their conflicts. Tims, the Court defends

f t ■* ■*» -m # _» « « f*

* *

its prerogatives against the other
branches by conscientiously preserving
the people's sense of laimess.
It we now reconsider the erilics of the
Republican Party plntlonn, we can see
at vsluil cost they would reshape the
Court. A court shaped to their tastes
would oppose' the views of even just
majorities. Worse still, even sitting
justices stiare this misunderstanding of
the Court's role in a free government.
Ju stice Lewis Powell lust y ear
delated judicial statesmanship as (he
Court's willingness to legislate when in
its own judgment Congress and the
|icople refuse to do so.
In the nineteenth century Tocqueville
noted, what is still true, that the
Americans are the most litigious people
on earth. But, lie added, no people is
more obedient and submissive to the
authority of its courts. While (his seems
to suggest that Americans are a nation
Ol wranglers, it is much more imporlant to notice that they are willing to
settle their differences at the bar of
justice. Tiie apparent contradiction is
not a contradiction, for all it shows is
the people's sense Dial their rightful
claims will be upheld in judicial
decisions. Americans love justice and
abide by live decisions of justice.
We can now sec tliat Hie key to the
Court's |ieculiar place in American
government is lluil the impartial
exercise of its great powers is nothing
less than the ullirmation of the right of
a lair majority to govern itself and
others.
Justices arc utile to recognize Hint
lair majority partly on Hie basis of
constitutional principles but also, and
largely, for having themselves been
brought forth on Hie shoulders of, and
selected by means of, the very partisan
process which gave voice to Hie ruling
majority. And il is the essence of Hie
rule o| law Hut when a majority is fair
its will must rule.
t Mr. Alexander, a PhD candidate In
government nnd constitutional history
at Claremont Graduate School, is
currently studying law al Washington
L nivrnity. Hr rerenlly completed his
tenure as a Fellow In Publle Research
Syndicate's Publius Frllowi Program.I

* 4P&gt; •

•

•

m 9 n

U.S. Hep. Bill Chappell, D-Ocala,
whose district includes a portion of
Seminole County, lias been named to the
executive committee of the "Sunbelt
Council," a newly formed legislative
group.
Die council, a bi-partisan hxly com­
posed of 120 congressmen from Hi
Southern, Southw estern ami border
states, will focus attention on Hie needs of
their region. Its elected chairman In Rep.
Charles Wilson, D-Texas, and vice
chairman is Rep. Floyd Spence, H-S.C.
Executive director is former Alabama
Hep. John Buchanan Jr.
States included in the coalition ore:
Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado,
Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, hmisiana,

M ississippi, New M exico, North
Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina,
Tennessee, Texas anti Virginiu.
Chappell said the new organization is a
•‘counter-force, not so much to serve
regional Interests of the Sunbelt, but to
protect the rest of Hie country from the
highly effective efforts of Hie NortheastMidwest Coalition ol behalf of their
region, usually al Hie expense of the rest
of the country."
Chappell said Hie Northeast-Midwest
colleagues are trying In sell the Idea that
Hie Sunbelt states are wallowing in
prosperity while people in their regions
are suffering economic hardship.
"This is simply not true," Chappell
said, adding Hie South is home to only 30
percent ol the nation's children, but 40
percent ol ail poor children are soutliern
and 45 percent of the nation's very pHir
children live in Hie South.
"Even more disheartening is the fad
Hiat 72 percent of Hie country’s high
infant mortality areas are in the South
and the South has recently become home
to over 190,000 refugees from Haiti, Cuba
and Southeast Asia.

'A N ational Scandal'
Elder abuse was Hie topic of a recent
liearing before the Select Committee on
Aging of tlx? House of Representative.
The re|xirt that came out of lhat hearing
is titled "Elder Abuse: An Examination
ol a Hidden Problem."
Die problem is hidden no more. Die
committee, which is chaired by Rep.
Claude Pepper, D-Fla., Iiad initialed a
year-long investigation of the subject.
The committee looked into physical
mat financial abuse of the elderly by their
lamilies and other caretakers. Die
lindings were presented at the liearing by
Hep. John L. Burton, D-Calif., and Rep.
Mary Rose Dakar, IFOhio.
Burton called abuse of Hie aging "a
national tragedy." He noted (hat us
many as 1 million older Americans are
being victimized every year.
"The abuse is often associated with
nursing homes and with Institutions," he
said. "But there may be much more
abuse of Hie elderly taking place al the
tiands of relatives in private homes."
Only about one case of abuse In six is
ever reported. Only 26 stales have passed
protective-services laws liiat iielp the
abused elderly.
Furthermore, only 6.6 percent of
protective-services budgets are spent on
the elderly. (Child abuse gets the bulk of
Rial money. I
Then Miss Dakar presented her data.
She called elder abuse "a serious
national scandal."
She Introduced testimony from elderly
victims of financial and physical abuse.
And she brought to the hearing several
counselors who helped these victims
dirough what th e called their "iwcrervdous" ordeals.
MissOaker stressed ihe importance of

G row ing
Older
Lou Collin

congressional action, Both she and
Burton called for passage ol the Elder
Abuse Prevention and Treatment Ad
(H.R. 769).
D us legislation would provide federal
lunds to the states irom a National
Center on Elder Abuses. To qualify for
Hits money, states would liave to enact an
"elder abuse, neglect and exploitation
law."
D ie state laws would liave to provide
for mandatory reporting of elder ubusc
and immunity from prosecution for
people who reveal suspected cases. Die
states also would be required to set up
special services for victimized older
Aniericaav D ie aging committee found tliat only 16
states had laws that required reporting ol
elder abuse and that nearly two-thirds ol
the stale lacked appropriate statutory
authority in this area. Ollier barriera to
state action are insufficient skilled stall,
community resources and funding.
D ie elder-abuse bill is aimed at
overcoming all of these barriers. We
don’t think lhat many legislators will
vote "no" on H R. 769. Hut just to make
sure, we ask seniors to organize letterw riting cam p aig n s aim ed at th eir
representatives and senators.
Elder abuse disgraces our country.
I n ’s end it.

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F L O R ID A
IN BRIEF

M o fh trs Exemption Ruled
Illegal For Jury Picks
TALLAHASSEE (UPI) — An appeal court has
(truck down a i unconstitutional a law that exempted
non-working mothers with young children from Jury
duty but not fathers with child-rearing responsibilities.
TTw 1st District Court of Appeal agreed Friday with a
Gainesville widower with a 3-year-old son that giving
the automatic wavters exclusively to mothers and not
to fathers was unconstitutionally sexist.
The three-judge panel, however, left standing a
provision of the law that grants waiver to women who
are pregnant.

•

•

Phony Drugs, Diet Aids, Dangerous

(Continued From Page 1A)
of genuine "speed" to get the same " b u » ” or “high." This
leads them to believe their bodies have built up an immunity to
their usual dose, and, when they finally buy the real stuff
again, they take as many capsules as they did of the coun­
terfeits, often leading to an overdose, say law enforcement
officers.
In the case of either the counterfeits, or the pver-the-counter
substitutes, too many of them taken at one lime can cause
severe physical injury and sometimes death.
Each capsule of an over-the-counter substitute or counterfeit
amphetamine contains the equivalent of two or three cups of
coffee, plus one of the other anti-allergic agents which affect
the blood vessels.
Pharmacists estimate it takes only 10 grams, about 30 such
capsules, to kill an adult male or female. And, since people of

different age and weight react differently to the dosage, it may
take fewer to cause death in some cases. Fifty such capsules
would be equivalent to )00 to 150cups of coffee, depending upon
which brand is used.
And there's no warning, generally, on the labels of these
products about possible overdose, or harmful side-effects, just
a caution against their use without a physician's direction if
the would-be user has high blood pressure or a heart problem,
according to Stapler.
"A young person who lakes too many of these over-thecounter diet aids can be overstimulated, go into respiratory
paralysis and could die," Stapler points out.
Three young men, aged 15 to 20. died during last year in a
Southwest stale after taking "look-alikes." While the victims
had been drinking when they took the capsules, law en­
forcement officers attributed their deaths to brain

TAMPA (UPI) — A 36-year-old Cuban refugee was In
Hillsborough County Jail charged with shooting into an
apartment and wounding three people Thursday night.
Jesus Sanchez Gonzalez was arrested Friday af­
ternoon and charged with one count of attempted
murder, two counts of aggravated battery and one
count of carrying a concealed firearm.
Police said he was carrying a .22-caliber handgun
when arrested and said it may have been the weapon
uaed In wounding Jose Valle, 87, his wife Esther, 60,
and his daughter Barbara, 17.

who fakes foo m any o f these

M an Thwarted By Lovelace

can be overstimulated,

'A young person

over*the&lt;ounfer diet aldt

MIAMI (UPI) — Linda Lovelace, star of the movie
"Deep Throat," is being sued for libel by the attorney
who helped the actress win immunity on federal
pornography charges.
Miami attorney Philip Mandlna alleges in a suit filed
in Dade Circuit Court Thursday that Ms. Lovelace, now
a rem arried Long Island, N.V., housewife, libeled him
in her book "Ordeal," damaging his good name, credit
and reputation.
In the book, published hardcover in 1979, Ms.
Lovelace blames her former husband and manager
Charles Traynor for making her perform in porn
movies.

go Into respiratory paralysis
§

and could die.’

m

Southern Water Ban Lifted

m
Haratd M a le

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla, (U P I)-T h e South
Florida Water Management District has lifted all
restrictions on fresh water use in the area but decided
to continue cloud seeding over ta k e Okeechobee.
Residents of the southeast coast have been restricted
to 90 percent of their normal water demands and
agriculture interests in the district have been under a
mandatory 23 percent cutback in water use.
There had been speculation that the cloud seeding
would be cut off, because of the absence of significant
results. But the district decided instead to continue
with the project until the end of September.
Stanley Winn, the district's director of technical
services who was in charge of the cloud seeding
program gave a lengthy review of the project, showing
board members inflight motion pictures of the cloud
seeding and rad ar tapes showing cloud growth after
seeding.

C. Stapler, a Sanford pharm acist, points to shelf
containing wide variety or diet aids m ade up of
caffeine and unit-allergic agents which some

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M RS.
CORA
B I L L ! — Funeral services tor
M r s Core B ell* D rigetrt. If. ol
t i l E Second St., Sanford, who
died Frida y night at Labeview
N ursing Center, will be at 1 p m ,
S u n d e y at B rit t o n F u n e re l
Horn* with Dr. Freddie Smith
officiating Burial will be In
Gorton. S C . B rttw n Funeral
■ &gt;*«"• - F a in char#.

121

ll over the state, businessmen
running companies of
every sire arc discovering that
they have special advantages when
they arc with Atlantic Bank.
Why? Because Atlantic Bank u
Florida’s only consolidated
statewide bank.
The advantages o f
consolidation are numerous. N ow
Atlantic Hank ran serve Honda as
it has never been served before.

A

•7 .9 9

JOHN T. VAN ORDEN
John Timothy Van Orden,
32, of 227 Waverly Drive, Fern
Park, died Friday at his
residence. Born March 15,
1949, at Rochester, N.Y., he
came to Fern Park from
Rochester in 1975. He was an
outside salesm an (or the
Goodyear Tire Company and
Methodist. He was a coach in
the Semoran Pony League,
tre a s u re r of the Indian
Princesses of the YMCA and
an Athletic Booster for I-ake
Howell High School.
Survivors include his wife,
MRS.
CORA
BELLE
Barbara;
three daughters,
3RIGGERS
Mrs. Cora Belle Driggers, Tanya, Debra, and Heather,
I. of 119 E. Second St., all of Fern Park and one
sister, Mary Dawn Columbo,
ianford, died Friday night at
&lt;akeview N ursing Center Margate.
Baldwin-Fair chi id Funeral
liter a long Illness. Born In
lobtnson County S.C. she Home A ltam onte Springs
am e to Sanford 90 yew s ago, Chaps) is in ch a rg e ol
he was a member of the arrangements.
Central Baptist Church and
gras a re tire d reg istered Funeral Notices
•u rn .

:.c

Finally,
has a bank
that's
rinauy,Florida
rionaanas
DanKtnats
consokdatea statewide, andwe don't have to
go out ofstate for what we need.'

7.W
For um on tawrtt,
•ard en t 4 shrubs
Coven 1,000 *q- *1.

AREA DEATHS

IS
c

people now use to get high." No prescription is
needed to buy them , and, according to Stapler,
im proper use can cause injury or death.

SALE 1

MIAMI (UPI) — One of the largest problems facing
newly arrived Cuban and tlaltian refugees is
discrimination from their own kind, a recently com­
pleted Dade County study shows.
The study compares the problems and needs of the
two immigrant groups, and was funded by a (30,000
federal grant, said county refugee coordinator Sylvia
Unxueta.
While the conclusions of the study are not new, it
does offer some insight into problems faced by the
immigrants, she said.
Thirty-seven percent of the Mariel refugees In the
study said they felt discriminated Bgalnst most
frequently by Cuban-Americans, while 21 percent of
the H aitians said they experienced their
discrimination most often by American whites and 23
percent said more often from blacks.

MR8. OGARETTA BAR­
TLETT
Mrs. Ogaretta L. Bartlett,
j l l , of 106 Fox Valley
(Court, Longwood,
died
'Thursday at Winter Park
;Memorlal Hospital. Bom in
Iron ton, Ohio, Dec. 26, 1892,
Ishe moved to Longwood from
Mobile, Ala., in 1973. She was
{a housewife and a member of
’the Church of the Annun­
ciation.
Survivors Include a son,
H.O., B irm ingham , Ala.;
sister, Cora Hagler, Hunt­
sville, Ala.; one grandchild;
ifive great-grandchildren; one
great-great-grandchild.
Baldwio-Fatrchlld Funeral
Home, Aloma Chapel is in
charge of arrangements.

Tam Vincent

next session of the state legislature.
"As long as the problem exists with those products, even In
drug stores or supermarkets, we need to let those who sell
them know of their danger and we need to get some kind of
public Information program underway to inform the public,"
said Hattaway.
Some stales have already passed legislation making it
illegal to manufacture, selt or possess counterfeit speed. But
there seems to be little or nothing that can be done about the
over-the-counter diet aids which resemble certain am­
phetamines.

1RUCKUMD 1

Refugees Shunned By O w n

iSL

manufacture of phony speed. North said the attorney general'^
consumer fraud division is conducting the probe and it inf
eludes the Central Florida area.
He pointed out, however, the division is able to only brinij
into court violators who manufacture or sell counterfeit speed
because that's a violation of the state's civil laws protecting
consumers from fraud. There are no criminal penalties iq
existence now.
However, after the new law goes into effect Oct, 1, various
local taw enforcement agencies will be able to work with local
state attorneys to arrest and prosecute anyone manufacturing,
selling or possessing "look-alikes." The penalty will be the
same on conviction as though the "look-alikes" in fact were
speed.
Still, there apparently will be nothing anyone can do about
the "look-alikes" sold over-the-counter so long as they are
properly labeled, according to North.
Stale Rep. Robert Hattaway, D-Altamonle Springs, says
he's concerned about that and will bring the m atter up at the

Refugee Held In Shooting

iS

hemorrhaging, a symptom of ephedrine sulfate aid
phenylpropanolamine.
For the past two months, according to North, there has been
an intensive statewide investigation In Florida into thq

* * rn

% • ***'

fye— *

t7

sV

* a a f &lt; it- * * m f— ** &lt;**•■"* ■*' ‘

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SPO R T S
•

________________________________ Evening HoraW, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, S«pt. 13,1*1 1 - 1 B

Eagles' M ontgom ery
M ow s Down Sanford

H tra M PhaW t by Tam Vlntant

Donnie Whiting turns the corner with Seminole's Anthony Wilson in hot pursuit.

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
There is no truth to Ihe rumor that
Wilbert Montgomery passed through
Sanford Friday night. The Philadelphia
Eagles’ powerful running back was
probably more worried about Sunday’s
game with New England than Jerry'
Posey's Fighting Scminoles.
A Montgomery was in town Friday,
though,—Titusville Astronaut’s Oscar —
and the 6-foot-l, 205-pound senior pul on
Just as devasting a show as Ids
professional namesake.
Montgomery bulled for three touch­
downs — all from two yards or less — to
lift the War Eagles past Sanford, 19-0, in
the season opener for both football teams
at the Seminole High School Stadium.
"Montgomery is about 205 l pounds)
and a 4.7 (40-yard dash)," revealed
Astronaut Coach Jay Donnelly. "He
wants it. We know he wants it. And we're
going to give it to him when we get Inside
the 10."
Which Is precisely what Titusville did
on all three scoring drives. The first one
was a gift from Seminole. The Tribe took
the kickoff and ran off nine plays, bul
could get no further than its 42-yard line
due lo three penalties during the drive.
" I t w as d em o ralizin g ," adm itted
Posey after tlie game. "Every’ time ve'd
get going.. .penalties would kill us." The
biggest was a clipping call which wiped
out a Jeff Litton-to-Lenny Sutton pass at
midfield.
Bul if the penalties were demoralizing,
the eventual punt attempt by titton
probably had Posey climbing Die walls.
Litton bent over lo grab a low snap
from center by Antonio Davis and
brushed tlie ground with his right knee on
his own 15 yard line, which subsequently
downed him on tlie spot.
"1 saw it. I was happy that he (the
referee) saw it,” said a relieved Donnelly
about the botched attem pt which gave

Tribe signal collar Jeff Litton hoods up fiold after getting a great block from wide receiver Joe Calloway.

Semlnoleu
ihe War Eagles perfect field position.
Tailback Scoll McConico ripped off
eight yards to the seven yard line.
Quarterback Donnie Whiting rolled for
four more on tlie right side and was
nailed while out of bounds to set up
Astronaut first and goal at the two.
It took Montgomery just one lunge over
right tackle to give the War Eagles a M)
edge. Ethan Waldon tacked on the extra
point for a 7-0 lend with fi:23 left In the
first quarter.
The two teams exchanged punts until
the 8:13 mark in the second quarter when
senior linebacker Greg Register picked
off a tipped aerial by Whiting for a
Seminole first down at the Astronaut 31.
Sutton powered for three, scatbock
Johnnie Littles darted for five and Sutton
for five more and a first down on the 23.
Victor Williams got his faecmask Jerked
on Ihe next carry lo move Sanford to the
nine yard line.
With a first and goal at Die nine,
though, Sutton coughed up Die ball and
Keith Fields hopped on it for Astronaut.
"I don’t know what happened on the
exchange. Jeff might have been a little
close to Lenny," surmised Posey.
The first hall ended 7-0. Seminole's
attack was gouged by penalties, eight
times for 56 yards. Astronaut was
assessed three for 35 yards.
Whiting was a bust in the first half. He
threw seven times and completed just
one for nine yards, "They had good
pressure the first half," was how Don­
nelly explained Whiting's misfires.
Sutton and U ttles rushed for a total of
112 yards in the first half. Sutton had 67 of
the sum. Sanford edged Astronaut in first
downs, 4-3.
The War Eagles took the second-half
kickoff and march to the Tribe 29 before
three superb defense plays stalled the

drive. Senior tackle John Rowsey belted
Montgomery fur a three-yard loss.
C ornerback D yral M anley then
smacked wide receiver Mike McCartney
just as he touched Ihe ball to break up a
sure first down. On fourth down, Sutton
broke through the line and decked
Whiting to stop tlie drive.
Thus Inspired, Sanford turned in its
best drive of the night. V. Williams bolted
for seven, Sutton rambled for 15 and
Littles for 16 behind the trap blocking of
Donald Croslyn mid Doug Sanders.
With tlie ball on the Astronaut 36,
Sutton broke loose for four and Uttles
slithered up the middle for a first down
and possibly more, but slipped down on
live 21 yard line.
After Sutton grabbed five and V.
Williams lost five, Littles bolted around
left end all the way to the five-yard line.
Sanders Ihrow tlie key block to spring
him.
The live, nevertheless, was the end.
Sutton lost two yards, sprained an ankle
and never returned lo action. V. Williams
dropped three more and a delay-of-game
penalty moved the ball back to the 15
yard line.
After UUon threw incomplete on third
down, a 32-yard field goal attempt by
Paul Griffin was way short and the Tribe
would never threaten again.
Whiting wanned up thereafter and
looked like a quarterback who had
passed for 1600 yards the preceding year
and 11 touchdowns. He feathered three
losses over the surprised Seminole
secondary (or gainsol 31,32 and 33 yards.
“ We fell their outside people were
leaving a little quick," said Donnelly.
"We decided to go up top and It paid off
for us.
Hie War Eagles first payoif started
late in the third quarter when Whiling
found Mark l i d ford for 33 yards and then
See Page 4B

Johnnie Uttles rumbles for part of his 88 yards.

G reat Scott!
Jones' 90-Yard Return Severs Lyman Losing Streak

Ia

m u

q u a r te r b a c k J e r r y A lle y re p la c e d s t a r te r D w a y n e J o h n s o n

l a t h e s e c o n d h a l l a n d g u i d e d t h e G r e y h o u n d s t o a 1 4 -s v i c t o r y o v e r
B o o n e F r id a y to s n a p a 1 2 -g a m e lo s in g s tr e a k .

By JE FFK E R R
Herald Sporti Writer
Theo Jones' 90 yard kick-off return
ignited the l.yman Greyhounds 14-10
victory over the Boone Braves at Boone
High School Friday night to snap a 12game losing streak for Bill Scott’s
Greyhounds going back to the last two
games of the 1979 season and 0-10 in 1980.
Greyhound linebacker Mike Hill who
was a thorn in the Braves' back all night
as he pulled down one of two In­
terceptions by Lyman with 26 seconds to
go to hold off a last minute drive by the
Braves.
"Mike is a good kid and a super athlete,
he really played a good ball game
tonight" said a happy BID Scott after the
game.
in the first quarter the Greyhounds
held the Braves on the first series of the
game and forced them to punt. Lyman
started its opening drive of the season
with a 15-yard clipping penalty putting
them on their own 24 yard line with a first
and 25. On the next play Lyman fullback
Jim Farley carried the ball seven yards
before fumbling It over to the Braves at
their own 31 yard line.
Boone struck quickly with the hard
noaed running of fullback Forrest Hardin
and the help of a Lyman passinterference penalty putting them on the

Hounds 16-yard-line. A lough defense
though by the Greyhounds forced Boone
to settle for a 25-yard field goal by kicker
Ray Mosley with 6:21 to go in the first
After exchanging set of downs the
quarter.
Greyhounds went to the air with Axley
On the ensuing kick-off Junior running hitting on his tin t two passes of the night
back Jones bolted untouched 90 yards to to tight end Willie Perkins for 12 yards
put the Greyhounds ahead 6-3 with 6:13 and 9 yard to move the Hounds to their
remaining in the first quarter. The extra own 46. Tailback Vince Presley who led
point attem pt was no good.
Lyman with 67 yards rushing and Jones
Boone started its next drive at its own helped l.yman move all the way down to
■30 and moved all the way to the Hounds the Braves 31 and then the Perklna-Axley
26-yard line before Boone kicker Mosley connection hit again all the way to the 17
missed a 42-yard field goal attem pt to of Boone. On the next play an Axley pitch
end the first quarter with Lyman leading out to Jonea was fumbled and yet another
6-3.
Lyman scoring drive was halted. Boone
The second quarter was more of ■ then took advantage of another Lyman
chance (or both punters to show off their . penally and excellent running »f Hardin
kicking legs, although Lyman had one of moved the ball to the 33 of Lyman where
its drives halted by a Farley fumble at the third quarter ended at a 6-3 l.yman
the Braves 21 yard line. After that lead.
neither team was able to move the ball
The opening play of the fourth quarter
much as the first half ended with the aaw a Kayes to David Wood 33 yard
Greyhounds leading 6-3.
touchdown pas* to put the Braves ahead
The second half saw the Greyhounds 1W, the extra point being good. Boone
■tart out with the Junior quarterback then tried an onside kick and recovered
Je rry Axley at the helm. "We had the ball a t Lyman's 44. A tough defense
planned on using both of the quar­ though, forced the Braves to punt.
terbacks tonight (Johnson and Axley), I Lyman then started their game winning
felt that D J . was close to the g o d a drive at their own 19.
couple of times and couldn't get us on the
With a third and three at their own 26
board" said Coach Scott of his Junior Lxxuo Collier, on his Brat carry of the
quarterback.
night, whirled the ball around left end for

O f y h o v iw h

IS yards lo keep the drive going.
Faced with another third and short
situation, Jones carried the ball around
Die leftend for 19 yards putting the ball on
the Braves' 33. Lyman moved the ball all
the way to the 3 yard line before Preslay
marched in fur Ihe game-winning touch­
down with 5:37 left in the game to make
the score 12-10 Lyman. The Greyhounds
elected to go (or the two-point conversion
and Presley did it again by bolting in
from the two to make the score 14-10
Lyman.
Boone had two more chances but both
w ere stopped by in tercep tio n s to
preserve the victory for the Greyhounds.
Lyman’s next game will be Thursday
in Daytona against the Mainland Buc­
caneers at Memorial stadium al 8 p.m.
Lym «n
Boon*

4 0 0 0 14

i o o no

Boon*
Lym an
F ir il Down!
20 I)
HuWiirtg Y s r d l
21 12* U 147
P i llin g Y *r m
1)4
M
R tlu rn V « r n
tO 1)0
Piu m
II 22 2 &gt;110
F u m tiln Lo ti
10
12
P t n t K Ic t Y i r d l
o n 440
Pont*
*2 4
4»
Individual I r s d t n
R u in in g L ym sn . P r t ilt y 1147, Jonot 1 X U
Boon*, H ardin 21 SO, R od gart 4 24
P a u in g Lym an, jonm o n 0 2 0. A lle y J » M
Boont. H a v e l I I 22 1)4
R tttlv in o Lym an, P e rk in i 2 20 Bagnt. W oods
la s
J

f

�# •

2W-Evewiin Herald, h n lo r t, n ,

famtey, Sept. 1), t u t

Saturday 'Knights' Com e Alive

UCF Football: Tailgates, Drinking, Making Merry
It happen* every year about this
time.
Twenty-two large and healthy young
men slip plastic globes on their heads
and tie yokes around their necks.
Then, divided into two teams, they
(ace each other and look mean.
They all crouch down (or a few
seconds and with all the force they can
muster, crash into one another and dive
into a massive pile on the ground.
Then they get up and do It all over
again.
While the young men roll around in
the grass, thousands of other people are
Jumping up and down in the grand­
stand, spilling beverages and popcorn
all over themselves and screaming so
loud you'd think they Just sat down on a
hot stove.
Eleven of the 23 young men rolling
around on the ground are frequently

University of Central Florida Knights.
The thousands piled Into the Tangerine
Bow) are UCF alumni, students, fans,
and supporters.
And it will begin again Saturday a t 7
p.m. as the Knights open their 1961
hom e football season
ag ain st
Presbyterian College.
It lias been said by wise observers
that UCF football fans are equally as
rabid as their Florida, Florida State, or
Georgia contemporaries. Some might
even kill (or their team. Fist fights have
been waged and friendships dissolved
because of a discouraging word uttered
about the Knights. They mean business.
But this is only the Knights' third
year on the gridiron so they have yet to
build their program Into a powerhouse.
While their play is n e ttin g , their
record Isn't championship caliber — 106 over the past two years. But If they

win this year, as some forecasters have
predicted, the team 's victory party will
resemble the air traffic controllers
union celebrtting a new contract with
the government.
Although the game of football is
serious business — any time 1) large
and healthy young men Jump on a
person, it's serious — there is a fun side
to the game, both inside and outside.
The outside fun takes the form of
partying. Some do it before the game on
the tailgates of their station wagons
where they put out quantities of food
and drink and make themselves merry.
Others do it after the game when they
go home or to taverns and dispose of
equally Immoderate amounts of food
and drink. Either way, after a while
nobody really cares, or can remember,
who won the game.
Grizxled observers note, however,

that UCF fans tag somewhat behind
th e ir F lo rid a, FSU, and Georgiy
counterparts In this department.
The outside fun happens inside the
stadium.
Sociologists have studied why a
normally placid and noo-violent person
often changes Into a maniac screaming
(or someone's blood. They've concluded
that football provides a socially ac­
ceptable outlet for penUip aggression.
It also allows Individuals to form strong
bonds of friendship and identify with a

The Killer...
Tfcg kitten owiiu M *u taut.

Hi ta to tail
lacs i i t a t tfca

ml

Hi ink a

autiud

e o tttw .

Awl irffftti1 m tau t (ka fcatt.’

- Tki 6wT By Hint Meuiiw
Linebacker Scott Reddltt's steel blue
eyes are the first orbs that grab you.
They go right through your head and
come out the back.
You nervously start looking around
for a violin case or some other casing
that hlds a sinister weapon. When he
speaks, however, you realize he doesn't
need one.
And after further surveying his 6foot-1, 230-pound frame, It’s pretty
apparent that the University of Central
Florida football player could do all his
dirty deeds with his bare hands.
The voice, though, is the real killer. It
Is a cool, calculated monotone of a man
who seems In charge of his destiny after
sticking hts neck out a little too far In
Tallahassee.

group, thereby allowing the individual
to became part of the whole and to
com plem ent his stren g th s and
weaknesses with those of an established
social group.
T h a t's why everyone thinks
sociologists are silly. Nobody can un­
derstand what they mean and besides,
everyone knows that people attend
football games because they’re fun.
It's fun to alt around watching people
chase one another and then Jump on
them and roll around like The Blob. It's
fun to watch a slippery halfback snake
his way through the opposing squad for
a 79-yard touchdown run and then do
the Funky Chicken In the end zone. It's
fun to hold your breath and feel your
heart pound when your team has a
fourth down on the opponent's 16-yard
line with three seconds to go and a field
goal could win the game. It's fun to eat

and drink and be with your friends, to
hug each other in good times and weep
together In the bad, to feel the pride of
winning even If you don’t know your
team 's members personally.
It’s really all quite simple, which is
probably why most sociologists don't
like football.
You might want to head to the
Tangerine Bowl this Saturday and see
for yourself.
If you don’t want to drive all that
way, there will be plenty of Seminole
County high school gridiron action
Friday night. Big deal that you never
went to school locally, or don't have
kids who attend. Pick a school, any
school — maybe it has a cute mascot, or
you like the color of the players’
uniforms—and go out there and par­
ticipate In a fall tradition.
Rah! Rah!

Redditt Dead Hits Scare Foes

Redditt, nevertheless, la a killer. No,
not the kind that you see brandishing
guns or behind bars. The former Lake
Brantley sm asher is a killing on the
football field — and a d ean and legal
one to boot.
When he awakes before dawn, he puts
his helmet on. And he doesn’t take any
faces from ancient galleries, but he
picks them from opposing backfkkts,
at least that'a what he'll do Saturday
night at 6 in the Tangerine Bowl when
the Knights open their season against
Presbyterian College.
Heddltt doesn't walk down a lot of
halls either, but he would like to walk
Into the Presbyterian backfleld and
over the top of a couple of opposing
running backs.
Up until Saturday, though, the exPatriot didn't have any of the op­
position to crunch, so he concentrated
on a few Knight teammates.
"He already put one guy in the
hospital,” informed Co-coach Sam
Weir. "He knocked out our fullback
(Nate Butler) cold.
"It was a good clean hit too. Reddltt's
mean. He's our hardest hitter," con­
tinued the UCF boss.”
Co-coach Don Jonas was also im­

out, said he had a good program
starting up ... so, here I am .”
After high school graduation, Redditt
trekked to T allah assee w here he
walked on to the Florida State program
and was close to a starting position
according to Jonas before he got Into a
pinch.
pressed with "11* Killer." "Yeah,
Redditt hit him right in the head,"
remembered Jonas. "H e’s a very tough
football player. He's going to be a great
one for us."
Jonas discovered Redditt in the
weight room last year. " I walk around
the campus looking for big guys," said
Jonas. "And one day I see this big hulk
In the weight room. I knew I hadn't seen
him on our football field.
“ I asked him to come out and one day
he showed up. He’s one of our biggest
su rp rises. With R ed d itt, (B illy)
Glovanetti and Eddie James, our
Unebackiog is very tough,” pointed out
Jonas.
But,how did Redditt get to UCF?
“Well, I live around here and I've
been going to school here for two
y e a rs ,’* said the 1671 Brantley
graduate. "Jonas wanted m e to come

"Yeah, I went to Florida State and
played up there, but hurt my neck and
decided to give It a rest," said "The
Killer.” "Ju st hitting all those big guys
you know, Like (UCF center) Dan
Burke.
"I pinched a nerve, stretched some
ligaments," Reddit said matter-offactly. "But I'm all right now."
The time off gave the bruising
linebacker some time to put his life in
order and get in a little better shape
along with healing up the neck muscles
which he protects with a pad.
And Just what will the Redditt role be
for the Knights this year?
“I'll be playing linebacker,” Redditt
deadpanned. "My Job is to stop the ball
carrier."
Send the flow ers in c a re of
P re sb y teria n College about 9:30
Saturday night.

Austin Pounds Potter To M ove Into Finals

World-Beater Navratilova Topples Evert
NEW YORK (UP1) - M artina
Navratilova will have trouble topping
herself today.
She and Chris Evert Lloyd put on a
w orld-beating show F rid a y In the
semifinals of the U.S. Open, exchanging
crisp ground-strokes and impossible lobs
(or two hours and 12 minutes before the
former Czech citizen prevailed, 7-9,4-6,64 over Evert, the tournament's lop seed.
It left 18,966 fans breathless, but there
was unfinished business (or the fourthseeded Navratilova — the final today
against No. 3 seed Tracy Austin.
"I have to win the tournament for it to
be really satisfying," Navratilova aald.
"1 can’t rest on my laurels now, not
coming into the final."
Earlier, Austin disposed of llth-eeeded

Barbara Potter, 6-1, 6-3, who certainly
wasn’t the same opposition as Evert,
fivetime winner of this tournament.
Austin won the title in 1979, the only time
since 1979 Evert didn't do It.
"I'm going to be up for the match
tomorrow,” Austin said. "Physically,
I'm the same as I was two years ago. Two
years ago I had never been in the finals,
so mentally I'll know a little more what
It’s like."
It will be the first time for Navratilova,
who owns a 19-10 lifetime edge over
Austin.
Evert made the first break of the final
let, in the third game, and It seemed she
would be able to run out the match. But
Navratilova broke back at love In the
eighth game, then won the match with

another break In the 10th.
Most unusual for Evert, she double
faulted at deuce In that last game, then
sent a forehand lob long.
"I feel disappointed because I played
well all tournament," said Evert, who
had won 26 of 41 previous matches with
N avratilova. "M aybe It’s M artin a's
Ume. On crucial points I played a little
sloppy."
Before the women's final today, John
McEnroe, the defending men's cham­
pion, meets Vitas Gerulaltls and af­
terwards Bjorn Borg opposes Jimmy
Connors in the men's semifinals.
McEnroe and Peter Fleming won the
men's doubles championship far the
second time In three years when the
aecondaeeded team of Heinz Gunthardt

and Pater McNamara defaulted. Gun­
thardt was suffering Intestinal flu with a
high fever.

McEnroe, the top singles seed, was
expected to have little trouble with fellow
New Yorker and 19th-seed Gerulaltls,
who Is experiencing a rebirth of sorts.
"1 (eel better now than I have In a long
Ume,” GerulalUs says. “ My mind wasn't

on tennis then, but it la now and I fee
great.”
Gerulaltls, In marching to the semis foi
the third time, eliminated third-seedec
Ivan Lend) en route.

Authorities Jail Fans For Heckling Chris, Martina.
NEW YORK (U P I ) - T w o i
in Jail today, arrested for heckling
tennis players Chris Evert Lloyd and
Martina Navratilova at the UB. Open
championships.

“They’re not likely to make today's
match," said a spokesman for Queans
District Attorney John Santucd.
Authorities aald the two — identified

as William Hanley, 28, of Manhattan,
and Philip Greenwood, 26, London,
England — were In Section 306 of the
■old-out Louis Armstrong Stadium at 9
p.m. Friday as Mias Evert and Miss
Navratilova engaged In a memorable
women’s singles duel.
They began yelling, "Come on,
Chris," or "Come on, Martina," when

one was about to serve or during a tense
volley.
Gradually, the 16,808 fans became
aware of them. So did the players.
"Shut up," Miss Navratilova shouted.
Play had to be stopped for about 10
m inutes while a dozen unarm ed
security guards, guided by pointing
fans, took the two from the stadium.

ft

Secret'Sugar Solves Hearns' Weak Points

TYRE RETREADERS, INC. A s m
___ 20,000 MILE
3 S RETREADS H ,

For WBC Welterweight Title Wednesday
by Alan Mover

H A N D TO M OUTH

"ACTM9 SPEAK
L O O M A THAN
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W O R D *.

SAYS Vie
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R E S P E C T !K E L T ,
B EFO R E H E A N P

Leonard refused to allow news media or fans
to watch hla workout session on Friday.
"1 stressed the weak points of Tommy
Hearns," Leonard said after sparring with
Odell Hadley, a rangy Junior middleweight
whoee style la m m artably sim ilar to Hearns'.
"1 worked on the factors to nullify his height
and reach advantage and I worked on
techniques to prevent him from getting
leverage on his punches."

"I wish the fight w u tomorrow,” said
Leonard. "I'm tired of training - it's getting
old. I'm ready to get It on. I think I’m totally
prepend to defeat Tommy Hearns."
Leonard said he expected a fast-paced fight
right from the opening hell.

THOMAS HEARNS
M A K E 7H EW 0 R LP
S A FE FO R O N L Y O N E
W E L te R W E IG H T
C H A M f&gt; /N LA 5 Y E 6 A $ ,S E f&gt; T . t6 .
IJMirtWtwl

Leonard, the World Boxing Council
welterweight champion, faces Hearns, the
WBA titiehblder, nexW ednesday night (or the
world title In what will be the richest fight In
boxing history.

Hearns, who is Moot-1, will have a 34nch
height and 4-lnch reach advantage over
Leonard when they meet Wednesday night In a
specially contracted 29,000 seat arena at
C aeaan Palace.

&amp; HF AW
&amp;
Y
&lt;U O N A FP
8

I-AS VEGAS, Ncv. (UPI) - Sugar Ray
Leonard worked In secrecy for an hour Friday
then confidently proclaimed he had solved
Thomas Hearns,

M m I M i«r*•

"I must start early — t routi start fast," he
aald. "I don't think Hearns can keep up a fast
. I can go 19 strong rounds. 1 den t know If
a . in any event,! must preaure him tram
the s ta rt I can't let him build confidence.

K

(GUARANTEED IN WRITINO)
"1 won’t run. I’ll be there — not directly In
front of him but I will be there."
Angelo Dundee, Leonard's chief trainer, w u
oozing confidence after the workout.
"We to rt of coordinated our thoughts about
what we w e n thinking," Dundee said. "The
result was sensational. Ray will have an an­
swer for everything he (Hearns) does.
Hearns scoffed at Leonard's secret workout
and said it would have no effect on Ns
preparation.
“ If he wants to train in private, that'a Ms
business," aald Hearns. " I have no feeling
about if one way or the other. I'm Just getting
ready to fight. I know what I have to do. If hie
needs to throw everybody out so he can train, I
guess he’s got things on his mind."

Emanuel Steward, H u m s' trainer, also w u
not Impressed by Leonard’s bravado.
"I'm not really Interested in what Leonard
does," Steward said. "I haven’t aaan him but
twice since we got to Las V egu two weeks ago
and that w u Just in pasting. I haven’t aeon
him train and I'm not Interested In seeing Mm
train."
"All Pm concerned about la getting Thom u
reedy to fight. Ray is a good fighter. He's
capable of doing a lot of things-1 want Thom u
phytically
to be able to go II
tough rounds, b e a n ie that's what tt might
lake. Right now, He's Just right phytically.
We’re going to ease up for a day or tiro, then
get revved up again for Wednesday night"

" * •• *
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�Evening Herald,Sanford, FI.______ Sunday, S.pt. 11, 1UI—IB

Caron's OT Toss Knocks O ut Lake Brantley
By JOE DcSANTIS
Herald Sports Writer
F or 48-rninutes of season-opening
football action F rid a y night, Lake
Brantley and Colonial High slugged it
out in a defense dominated (VO deadlock.
Bob W illiam s’ M etro Conference
Grenadiers came off the ropes in a
second overtime period, however, to
deliver a 6-0 knockout punch in the form
of quarterback Gerard Caron’s 10-yard
scoring strike to senior halfback Tom
Trent.

With the help of a Grenadier pass in­
te rferen ce p enalty, Lake B rantley
moved to the Colonial 12-yard line but
The senior duo led a junior-dominated failed to cash in when Grenadier Joe
lineup in limiting the Patriots to Just G Brantley recovered a hobbled snap.
The second half was a replay of the
yards on the ground and another 66 in the
air.
first. All defense as a full house got set
While the Grenadiers never came close for more than their money's worth.
Ijike Brantley won the first overtime
to a regulation score ihc entire night, the
Patriots failed to cash in on several solid coin loss and elected to stay on defense.
Colonial picked up five-yards on running
field position opportunities.
"We just couldn't seem to find any play plays before Fernando Ortiz sent a 15that would set anything up for us,” said yard field goal attem pt short and to the
Dave Tullis after the loss. "I think left.
everybody gave a good effort, we Just
1-ake Brantley faired little belter,
didn’t execute right."
hobbling two snaps from ccnler before
Muc Lintrip recovered a Colonial Clintt's missed field goal try.
fumble at the Grenadier 13-yard line to
The second overtime period coin toss
set up Ijike Brantley's first scoring
went to Colonial, likewise choosing to go
opportunily. But three running plays
on defense first.
netted a slim three yards and the drive
Like Brantley again had trouble with
died when quarterback A1 Hollison threw
incomplete under a heavy rush on fourth the q u artcrb ack -cen ler exchange,
hobbling on first down and eventually
down.
The next Patriot opporlunity came losing possession on its third crack from
with 3:37 left in the half, Linebacker Kyle the 16-yard line when Brantley recovered
Davis sacked Grenadier signal caller his second fumble of the night, killing
Gerard Caron al the Colonial two-yard Patriot scoring hopes.
Following a two-yard pickup on the
line, forcing a punt which gave the
Patriot's possession al the Colonial 28. ground and a procedure penalty against

P o frle tf

IJkc a stunning left hook, that one playclosed another chapter in a book of bit­
terly fought lidllfters between the annual
season-opening rivals.
“ It’s always scrappy," said a pleased
Williams following the marathon. "1 told
them If we made It into overtime, we'd
win, and we did. We Just turned it loose at
the end.”
Between the Patriot and Grenadier
defensive units, nobody turned much of
anything loose all night long.
Colonial managed to cross the 60-yard
line Just once the entire evening; that
venture aided by a late-hit penalty
against Dave Tullis’ Big Blue defense.

H tre M r M t * by Bill M urphy

I^ike Brantley linebacker Otis Cllatt grounds Colonial’s Gerald
Caron Friday night in season-opening football play at Lake B ran­
tley. The G renadiers went two overtim es to drop Brantley, 0-0.

l&gt;cd by linemen Mac l .antrip and Bob
Kalich, along with linebackers Kyle
Davis, Otis Cliat and comerback Fred
Baber, I,ake Brantley field Colonial's
running game to a minus 10-yard net
total and jusl three first downs.
Colonial brought a few door closers of
its own in the likes of G-foot-3 225-pound
middle linebacker Grady Martin and
teammate defensive tackle Joe Brantley.

By United Press International
A month ago, when the New York Yankees'
playing was not quite up to par, a fan coined
the line that they were Just “ Righetti and
meatballs,” — a reference to rookie Dave
Righetti who was doing exceptionally well.
Now the Yankees are playing well as a team,
and Righetti Is making meatballs out of the
rest of the American League.

DAVE RIGHETTI
...whiffs II Kosox

A t B a se b a ll

blanked San Francisco, 6-0, and St. lznils
defeated New York, 4-2.
The talented southpaw struck out 11 and Tigers 6, IndtausS
allowed only two hUa In aeven Innings Friday
At Detroit, I^ncc Parrish drove In two runs
night In pitching the Yankees to a 4-1 triumph
with a pair of singles and Dan Schatzeder
over the Boston Red Sox. It was the Yankees'
pitched 6 1-3 innings of one-hit relief lo pace
fourth victory In five games under Manager
the Tigers to victory.
Bob Lemon and their 11th In the last 14 games.
Orioles I, Brewer* 1
It was the first meeting of the season bet­
Al Milwaukee, Dennis Martinez fired a
ween the two AL East rivals, but the Red Sox seven-hitter for his 12th victory and Eddie
were never In the game, because they simply Murray hit his 17th homer to spark the Orioles'
win.
couldn't handle Righetti.
“ He w as a little erratic,” Boston Manager Twins 4, White Sox 3
At Bloomington, Minn., Dave Engtc slugged
Ralph Houk said about Righetti, "but he has
a two-run homer with two out in liic seventh
outstanding stuff."
Righetti, lowering his ERA to 1.59, had some -inning to lift the Twins.
control problems, but only allowed two hits — Mariners 1, Blue Jays I
At Toronto, Jeff Burroughs belled a Ihreeboth singles.
“ I don't throw a real heavy ball," said run homer and Jerry Narron added a solo shot
Righetti, "but it felt real lively tonight. It was lo power the Mariners. Glenn Abbott, 3-6, won
for the first time since Aug. 15.
really taking off."
A's 6, Royals 1
Elsewhere in the AL, Detroit topped
At Oakland, Calif., Mickey Klutts hit a threeGeveland, 6-3, Baltimore edged Milwaukee, I ■
run homer and Matt Keough pitched a three1, Minnesota downed Chicago, 4-3, Seattle
hitter in leading the A's to their triumph,
whipped Toronto, 6-1, Oakland trimmed
which put them in first place in the American
Kansas City, 6-1, and Texas outslugged
League West.
California, 11-6.
Rangers 11, Angels 6
At Anaheim, Calif., Pal Putnam had {pur
In National League games, Chicago edged
Montreal, 6-5, Philadelphia blanked Pitts­ hlts, including a pair of homers, and knocked
burgh, 60, Atlanta topped San Diego, 4-1, in four runs in helping the Rangers hand the
Cincinnati edged Los Angeles. 3-3, Houston Angels their seventh straight loss.

4

\

S ta n d in g s
M alar League Standing,
B y Unitrd P r e u Inlarnallanal
(Second H alil
National League

East
St Louis
Chicago
New York
Montreal
Phila
Pittsbrgh

AtO rlando Seminole
Friday nigh! retullt
F in t game
I Durango Cilonll 70 00 a 60 a 10
3 L econo Atano
7 00 4 10
6 Nrgui Arana
ICO
0 IJ I I »l 00. T I I I 41 i l l 00
Second geme
• Olea Farah
75 10 &gt; 40 6 60
I L rla r Juan
6 00 0 00
lO q u iia Vega,
6 60
Q I M ) 77 00; P I S I I 776 00, T I I
1 71
6S6 00. D D K I I IS* *0
Third game
• Pila
16 70 5 60 110
6 Leque
6 00 5 00
JO q u 'ia
6 70
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7 Nrgui I arah
7 00 6 60 J 60
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5 70 6 70
I Lerona Juan
7 60
0 ( 7 61 75 70, P &lt;161 61 70, T &lt;7
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6 G aray
15 60 I I 00 5 70
5 Zale
0 70 710
4 Sim on
5 00
0 ( 5 41 61 40. P 16 51 1)1 40, T (6
SO)
05! 00
Eighth game
7 M arti Zubi
19 10 I N
4 60
1 U ru ar Y ia
3 00 4 70
4Letube Echeva
4 70
O 11 71 41 00, P (7 11 90 40; T (7
1*1
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Ninth game
O R lc a Y j a
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6 Olea Goiri
9 00 4 40
4 Ajuria Atano
6 40
O t 4 * ) l 4 4 0 ; P ( l 4 ) 740 It; T I I
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47170

tmiwt. u m

n u i is at au

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IY R T U T

"Tonight it feels great just to be back in
there," Cedeno said. "By being allowed to
play, it made m e feci good."
In other gamea, Chicago nipped Montreal, 65, P hiladelphia downed P ittsb u rg h , 0 4 ,
Atlanta beat San Diego, 4-1, Cincinnati nipped
Los Angeles, 0-2, In 10 Innings, and St. Louis
beat New York, 4-2.
In the AL, it was New York 4, Boston I;
D etroit I , C leveland 3; B altim ore 2.

JWfcTTT'
S9f\A.,{

ftS i

; riy fU L fv

ML lo t o b a f f
Milwaukee 1; Seattle 8, Toronto 1; Minnesota
4, Chicago 3; Texas 11, California 6; and
Oakland 6, Kansas City I.
Cubs 4, Expos 5
At Chicago, Ken Reitz drove in two runs with
a home run and sacrifice fly and Bill Buckner
continued his torrid hitting with a single and
triple lo lead Giicago.
Tim Raines belted his 51h homer for Mon­
treal.
Phillies I, Pirates «
At Pittsburgh, Keith Moreland and Manny
Trillo combined to drive in five runs and Steve
Carlton and Jerry Reed teamed up on a sevenhitter to pace the Phillies.
Braves 4, Padres 1
At Atlanta, Dale Murphy drove in three runs
with a pair of home runs to help Gaylord Perry
to his 296th career triumph.
Reds 3, Dodgers 2
At Cincinnati, Ron Oester hit a one-out
homer in the 10th, giving the Reds a victory.
Cards 4, Met* 0
At SL Louis, Ken Oberkfell’s sacrifice fly
capped a three-run first that enabled the
Cardinals to snap a five-game losing streak.

• r '

‘

90* KY. Bril.

C u tty S o rb

S c o tc h

Am erican League
Seattle
a ll 001 100 1 14 0
Toronio
OOOOIOOOO 1 6 0
Abbott,
Glealon
(9)
and
Narron.
Berrnguer. Mirabella
( II,
Todd
16), G arvin
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M urra y 191 and Martinet. W —
Abboll 11*1, L - Berenguer (7
91.
H R * — Sealll*.
Burroughs
(101.
N arron
(1).
Toronio.
M arlin e! (4)
Boston
000 000 0 1 0 - 1
N Y
701 001 00* 4
Efkersley, Campbell (7)
Allenton, Righelll, Gossage

1 0 1 V

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(141,
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KlultS 1)1

— CALL —

TO N Y

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IN S U R A N C I

3 2 2 -0 2 9 S

HOME OW NERS INSURANCE

MUFFLERS
$ 1 0 95

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NEW WIOE TREAD

52.47
54,43
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Rivers ( II. Putnam 7 (71, Jonts

D O N 'T O A M B L I
w ith your In su rn n c .l

100 000 OOO 1110
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REPACK BBA M N Q B
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700 000 0 1 0 - 7 B 0
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Burns, Farm er (*l, Hickey
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IN D IV ID U A L L E A D E D !
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Colonial. Stocked 8 (3, C allow 4
6 Brantley, Brown I 24, Reetaw 10 26
Pasting
Colonial, Caron 12 33 0 120
Brantley. R ollilon 1 18 3 66
R e c e iv in g
Colonial, L a s iile r 135,
Le«qhton 7 20 Brantley , Salem I li, Smith 1 31

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Monday (61 Cincinnati, Dealer

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2 1 M 9 .T 1
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£ 1 7 * 4 9 7 1
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0 0 0 0 0 0- 0
Colonial
Caron 12 ,&lt;i p a « 10 Trent

Mura. Boone 17) and Ken
nedy
Perry. Cam p I I I and
Benedict W Perry (7 61 L —
M ura (S17)
H R — Atlanta,
Murphy 7 110)

Lfnoscoros

H I-W A Y 1 7 - 9 2 S O U T H C IT Y L IM IT S

O n Punchless Braves, 6-0

Gary Woods knocked in two run* and Don
Sutton toned a five-hitter. Sutton, 04, struck
out aix in besting Vida Blue, 04, and posting
his second shutout of the year.

GB

—

* SANFO RD

Drops Heavy Attack

Earlier in the day, he wax fined 15,000 and let
off without a suspension by NL President Chub
Feeney (or entering the atanda at the Atlanta
Stadium and grabbing a heckling fan.

—

Am erican League
Eatt
W L Pet
Detroit
70 11 445
Halt
li 11 511
New York
I I IJ 511
Milwauke
I I IS 545
Notion
I I 14 5)3
Cleveind
17 16 515
Toronto
14 19 467
W rtl
Oakland
15 14 517
ikan C itf
16 IS 514
Teaas
1) 16 440
Mm n
14 18 411
Chicago
13 IB 419
Sealtle
13 19 404
Calif
11 18 179

HAPPY H O U I

Cesar Cedeno managed to find some good in
irhat could have been another ugly mark.
"F or once, people realized I wasn’t a kid and
I applaud the fans and the media very much,"
Cedeno laid Friday night after tingling and
•coring twice in the Houston Astroi’M victory
over the San Francisco Giants. " I ’m very
happy the way this was handled."

L Pet
OB
12 S/l —
IS S16 1V|
19 484 7’y
IS 483 J 'l
17 41) 4
71 364 6* 1

Houston
11 64 *
Los Ang
1) S8I
7
San Fran
\J 11 S6? 7' 1
\7 13 S6 r J1;
Atlanta
One*
16 14 S33 J’ l
San Diego
I 73 781 11' 1
F n d a y 't R n u lt i
Chicago 6. Montreal 5
Philadelphia a, Pittsburgh 0
Atlanta 4, San D-rgo 1
Cincinnati 1, Los Angeles 7
$1 Louis 4. New York 7
Houston 6. San Francisco 0
Today's Probable Pilchers
(All Times E O T I
Montreal (Lee 7 4 or B ahnsm
7 11 at Chicago (K ra.e c 141,
7 70 p m
Los Angeles (Valenzuela 1141
al Cincinnati ISeaver I I II, 7
pm
Philadelphia I Nates O i l at
Pittsburgh 1Solomon * 4 ) , 7 05
pm
San Diego (W elsh 5 6) at
Atlanta (M ahler 5 5). 7:15 p m
New York (Scott 4 11 al St
Louis (Sorenson 7 41. 1:05 p m
San Francisco (Whitson S7)
al Houston IN ie kro 7 7), I 75
pm
Sunday's G am es
Philadelphia al Pittsburgh
Montreal al Chicago
New York at St Louis
San Diego al Atlanta
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
San Francisco at Houston

153 A B C S ruSio*

$5,000-Lighter Cedeno

By United P m i International

w
16
16
IS
14
1]
12
West
20
II

F r id a y 's Results
Seattle 6 Toronto I
New York 4. Boston I
Detroit 6, Cleveland ]
Baltimore 7, Milwaukee
Minnesota 4, Chicago 1
Te ias It. California 6
Oakland 4. Kansas City I
Today’s Probable Pilchers
(All Times E D T I
Boston lOieda 4 71 al New
York IR euschrl 7 1), 7 p m
Cleveland
(Barker
7 61 at
Detroll (M o rris 17 4). 7 05 p m
Seattle
(Beallie
111
at
Toronio (Stieb BIO). 7 70 p m
Kansas City I Jones 4 11 al
Oakland
(N orris
10 6).
4 10
pm
Baltimore
(Palm er 4 71 al
Milwaukee (Lerch
4 6). B 70
pm
Chicago
(Dotson
6 61
at
Minnesota (R r d lrr n 4 11, B I S
pm
Tr«as
(Honeycull
9 4)
al
Calilornia (Z#nn 9 1). 10 p m
Sunday's Games
Kansas City al Oakland
Tesas al Calilornia
Chicago al Minnesota
Baltimore al Milwaukee
Cleveland al Detroit
Boston al New Yo rk

D A Y LIQ U O R SALE
r v ti not nm

Tullis had nothing bul praise for his
squad's defensive effort.
"1 thought our defensive players
played ns well as they can play," said the
second-year Patriot roach. "We couldn't
have asked anymore of them."

M a jo r-L e a g u e R oundup

Jal Alai

Righetti
Spaghettis
Red Sox

Colonial. Caron rolled left and found Tain
Trent in the left side of the endzone with
Colonial's winning strike.
"When we went to overtime I told the
kids to Just avoid the mistakes and we'd
win," said Williams.

/ * r,

. • .

�f B -E v n I n g Htritd, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, t»pt. U , t ill

LAURA GRACE

LISA NELSON

DEE HOGAN

CINDY PENDARVIS

CATHY HALL

LISA MORSE

Seminole Volleyball Success:
A ll In A Knights' D ay
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Conference cham pionships have
become common place with Seminole
High volleyball coach Donalyn Knight.
The personable former Stetson stan­
dout won a conference championship in
her initial year will) Sanford In 1976. "We
tiad {Mostly seniors on that team, we took
pretty much what we had and won the
conference," remembers Knight.

SARA VON HERBULIS

Following die conference crown, the
Seminoles finished fifth in a 19-team
district. "That was pretty good," pointed
out Knight. "There were powerhouses
like Winter Park and Kdgewoter In the
district."
With d ep artin g seniors went the
trophies the next year, but Knight didn’t
mind too much because, “ it gave us a
chance to build a program from the
ground up the way I wanted It."
After the 6-12 building year In *77, the
Tribe rebounded with a 14-8 season in ’78
which included the county championship.
In ’79, Knight's girls ran off on im­
pressive 20-7 mark, hut finished second in
the conference uiwl the district.
lu s t year, same old story, conference
championship, hut district runnerup
when a Mary Colson-led la k e Howell
team surprised the ludy Seminoles In the
post-season clash.

Seminole
Volleyball
Schedule
Sept IS
Lym an. Lake Brantley
Sept 11 Oviedo ( Jv B. V a n I
Sept 77
Seabrerte. Apopka
Sept 7) Lake Brantley (J V o n ly l
Sept 71 L a k e M a r y (J V o n ly l
Sept TV Lake Howell. OeLand
Sepl JO New Sm yrna (JV i V a rs I
Oct
7,3 The C o la n e l'l In v ita tio n a l
O d 17 Lake M a ry I JV only I
Ocl 4 Mainland. Spruce Creek
Oct 7 Lake Brantley (JV o n ly)
Ocl 13 Lake Brantley.Lym an
Ocl 74 Oviedo I JV t v a rs 1
Oct 70 Apopka. Seabreeie
Oct IS
Spruce Creek. Mainland
Oct 77
Lake Howell, Or Land
Oct 71 New Sm yrna I JV i Vary I
Nov i,S,4 District*
Nov to Reglonais
Nov. 1) Stcllonlonalt
Nov 70 State Tournament

way to live state."
Helping Knight realize that slatebound dream is a senior-laden team
The conference trophy and the district headed by Hogan and Hardy. "Tills is the
trophy and possibly a few more down the most depth and the most versatility
line will secure a spot behind Sanford's we’ve had," continued Knight. "We have
sliding glass doors In the high school a lot of people that can play a lot of
foyer.
positions."
One of the most talented is Hogan, who
"Tliis Is tile best team I’ve had,"
assessed Knight. "We’re not going to be Knight calls "a great setter und a very
satisfied with Just a conference cham­ strong server." Hogan is also solid
pionship this year. "We want to go all the on defense aa is teammate Jackie link,

TERI HARDY

Double Blanks
Umatilla Stuns Oviedo;
Hornets Sting Hawks
Oviedo High School and l-ake Howell
High School used to sliare the same
school, while the Silver Hawks structure
was being built. It's been a long time,
however, since (lie two schools have had
anything In common.
Friday night, though, found them
(baring a common cause. Zeros. Blanks.
Goose eggs. Whatever you want to call
Uiem, both achools were shut uut in their
season openers Friday.
Joe Montgomery’s Lions were spanked
at Umatilla, 14-0 as Cecil McKenzie
scored on i 29-yard run In the second
period and Chris Comer bolted 44 yards
in the third quarter to seal the victory.
'At Lake Howell, the Bishop Moore

Hornets spoiled Coach Mike BiscegUa's
Silver Hawks debut by clobbering
Howell, 260.
The Hornets were coming off 3-7
season, but stunned the Hawks in the first
quarter with a 50-yard scoring pass from
senior Chuck Baumann to wide receiver
Todd Schelffelin.
In the second quarter, hard-running
senior David Disney leaped over from
one yard out and Vince Benneditti added
(lie extra point far a 134 bulge.
The llum ets tacked on a final score in
the final 16 seconds when Disney scored
on another one-yard run and BennedltU
duplicated his earlier kick for the 264
final.

Seminole depth in the setting area
comes from I.isa Morse, U sa Nelson and
Sara Von Herbulis.

Place
Lym an
Oviedo
Seminole
Lake Brantley
Seminole
Lake Howell
New Sm yrna
Tourn

Plantation
L a k e M a ry
Mainland
Seminole
Seminole
Seminole
Apopka
Spruce Creek
Seminole
Seminole

) XI
1 30
6 00
6 00
6 00
4 00
3 30
6 00
6 4S

Herald Photos By Tom Vincent

Tills year, however, Knight and tier
two standout ployers-Tony Hardy and
Dec Hogan-m aintain it will be different.

T R IC H E L TA A C K

{mother gixxl Jumper.
Hardy possesses one of the fiercest
spikes in Central Florida and is a quality
blocker at the net too. Juniors Tracy
Gregory and Trichel Taack add depth to
(he front line along with senior Dawn
Brown.

DAWN BROWN

another seasoned senior.
Senior Cindy Pendarvis, who came up
from the Junior varsity last year und
gained valuable experience in the
district, Is another setter and defender.
Junior Teri Hardy will complement the
prior three on defense and with the
setups.
Up front, the Seminoles are strong with
Hardy, a S-foot-9 leaper, and 5-fool-10
liiu ra Grace. Both seniors are Joined by
Cathy Hall, who Knight Judges as

While Knight was disappointed with
last year's district championship set­
back, the loss was especially dishear­
tening to seniors Hogan and Hardy, who
have been part of a very talented and
successful cluss since their freshmen
years when each played a varsity sport,
"I felt terrible. I felt like crying. I did
ury," remembered Hardy about the
setback.

DONALYN KNIGHT

Hogan remembers the match as highly
competitive and very painful. “ It was c
very good match and it really hurt when
we lost," said Hogan. "After the match
everybody just let go of liielr emotions
and cried. It was such a defeat that it Just
hit us emotionally."
Although the loss was hard to take,
Hogan feels It is forgotten now. "This is a
totally different year," continued Hogan.
“ We don't talk about last year. We put
the past in the past."
And Hardy points out that live future Is
now. “Tliis is the best team since I’ve
been here," said Hardy. “On this team,
everybody can do everything.
"I think Coach Knight is right. We have
better setters and splkers than we’ve
ever had. This team can go all the way to
state," concluded Hardy.
The first step on that state-bound
Journey begins Tuesday when llie 1udy
Seminoles m eet Lyman and l-ake
Brantley at Lyman In the Five Star
Conference opener at 6 p.m.

TRACY GREGORY

JACKIE LINK

TONY HARDY

... Montgomery Mauls Seminole
Continued from IB
nine more for a first down at the Tribe 19.
Halfback Cameron Harris dashed for
12 more and a first down at the four. Then
it was time for Montgomery's power
show. The bullish senior plunged three
times, finally hitting paydirt from the
one. The kick was wide left, but
Astronaut led, 134.
"We had the kids pinching inside on our
goal line defense, but we Just couldn't
stop him," said defensive coordinator
Dave M aiurt. "They popped a few plays
in the second half and that was the total
of tlieir offense.”
The biggest pop came with leas than
seven minutes to play when senior
Robert Whitney blasted up the middle for
03 yards and a first down on the four yard
line.
Seminole sprinter Vince Edwards ran
Whitney down from 10 yards back to save

the score. Montgomery, however, took
care o( the rest with three more blasts for
the TD. The PAT again was wide with
3:13 to play.
Sutton finished with 89 yards in IS
carries before departing in with over a
quarter to go. Iittles, who ran the inside
trap brilliantly, raced for 88 yards on Just
nine totes. Litton went all the way at QB
and was 5-(or-10 (or a measly 27 yards.
He was intercepted once. Davis' five
tackles paced Sanford.
Whiting finished with five completions
In 13 attem pts (or 113 yards and one In­
terception. Whitney, thanks to the big
pop, had 92 yards on five carries. Mon­
tgomery was just 10 carries for 21 yards,
but four of those yards produced 18
points.
Seminole travels to latke Howell next
Friday for an I p.m. game to open the
Five Star Conference race.

Asironaul
Sanford

7 0 0 17 —
0 0 0 —

fum bles lost
q
Penalties yards
j
s
Individual L e a d e n
A*1 r - Montgomery 7 fun I Waldron kick)
Ruitiino — A stro naut, M c C o n ic o 1
A il r— Montgomery | run (kick tailed I
Montgomery 10 71. Whltino 7 0. H arris 10
A str— Montgomery I run (kick faded)
M arshall 7 S, Santord. Littles f U . Sutton IS
Astronaut Santord
V W illiam s } 7, Calloway, I m inus ].Littor
First downs
tl
f m inus 70
R u ih rt yards
110
ISJ
Passing — Astronaut, Whiting i t ) I I
Passing yard!
tlj
77 Santoro, Litton S 10 I 77. V W illiams. 0 U
P a tm
J 17 I S I I I
Receiving — Aslronaut. Ledford 7 -I $,
Punt*
1114
1141 lord. Rowe 7 17

0

If

0

FlarM a H iifi School Fastball
• y United P n s s Intirnational
Pompano Beach 71 Coconut Creak 0
P in e c rn t 14 Belle Glade 4
South Brow ard 70 Hallartdala 0
Coral Springs 77 MacArlhw r 7
Northeast 1) Cardinal Gibbons 7
Northwestern 17 Carol City 7
M a ry Im m aculatt 17 Loyola 0
Coral Gables S4 M ia m i 7
Brandon 17 Tampa Hlllsborugn 7
Tampa Planle 71 Tam pa Jetlerson 7
Lakeland Kalhlean 77 Planl City 7T
Tampa Robinson U Tam pa Bay Tech 0
Tampa Jesuit 77 Claarwatar Catholic 14
Dade City Pasco IS Tam pa Catholic 7

Tampa Berkeley Prep I I Heritage 14
North Florida Christian W Tampa Tempi.
Heights I
Brooksyllle Mernendo 74 Citrus 17
Gainesville Buchholl 44 Crystal R iver 0
Dunellon 7 W lllislon 0
Cieerweter 41 New Port Richey Gull 0
Clearweier Countryside 30 Hudson 0
Land O ' Lake s f Sprtngstead 0
Wildwood 77 Eust.s 0
Terpon Springs JS Zephyr hills |
Osceote 7 Haines City 3
Wauchula H arore 40 Palmetto 14
Ouned.n 70 Lake Gibson 0
Clew.si on 71 Sebnng I
Lakeland Santa Fa 10 Groveland 7

l

�Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

AREA BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT
Magazine

Career Moves...

Nam es Editor

Hutton Lists Promotions

Jeff Dunlap, an awardwinning Florida newsman,
has been named associate
editor of New Florida
m agazine, according to
C hester O sheyack. co­
founder
and
chief
executive officer of the
statewide general interest
publication.
Dunlap, 29. has been
colum nist and feature
w riter for the Tam pa
Tribune for the past two
and one-half years. He lias
also done freelance writing
and in 197(1 received a
National Endowment of the
Arts
grant
in
the
playw ilin g field.
W ide at the Tribune,
Dunlap received two
William Randolph Hears!
awards for writing. He also
received an Amusement
B u s in e s s
m a g a z in e
national award for a 15part series he wrote on the
history of Tam pa’s Zaccliini family, of Human
Cannonball circus fame.

Glenn A. Hepple, fifth ranking financial planner with the
stock brokerage firm of E.E. Hutton &amp; Co., announced the
promotion of one employee and the appointment of another.
Renee Cooley, an employee since February, has been
appointed the position of marketing director. Ms. Cooley’s
responsibilities will encompass design nnd maintenance of
Repple's seminars and lectures, which deal with all facets
of financial planning. In addition. Ms. Cooley will organize
the flow of client communication and create the interface
material between Mr. Repple and his excess of 1500 clients.
Ms. Cooley received her Batchelor of Arts Degree from
the University of Central Florida in literature and creative
writing. Ms. Cooley is looking forward to becoming a
licensed stock broker by the end of 1981.
Ms. Cooley is the daughter of Mrs. Julia C. (Mack D.l
Cooley of Sable Point, 1/mgwood, Florida.
U a Fraser was appointed as financial sendees con­
sultant. Ms. Fraser, a licensed stock broker, has been part
of the stock exchange industry since 1979. She gained her
knowledge and experience having advanced through
various stock brokerage firms in central Florida.
According to Repple, "Because of the growth of the
financial planning industry and live broad diversification
that we encompass, I liave been on the lookout for a liaison
between our clients and myself. I feel with Idea's knowledge
and background, the client will be better served."
"I feel my Job with Glenn places me in the same position
as a pharmacist to a doctor. Glenn looks at the big picture
and prescribes the right course of action. As an equal
professional, I can deliver what he prescribes" 1m-a states.
Ms. Fraser is Die daughter of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Richard Keny on
of Vale Retreat, Eustis, Florida.

M ayberry Nam ed To Direct

Burt Joins Duda &amp; Sons

State Development Division
TALLAHASSEE - Gov. Bob Graham and
Secretary of Commerce Sidney I-evin today
announced the appointment of Stephen I..
Mayberry as Director of the Department of
Commerce Division of Economic Develop­
ment.
Mayberry, 35, was Assistant Economic
Development Director from September 1979
until Aug. 1 of this year, when tie was asked to
s e n e as Acting Director.
Mayberry was one of several candidates
interviewed by a search committee made up
of members of the Governor’s Advisory
Council on Economic IX-velopmcnt. He was
highly recommended by Secretary levin and
the Governor.
Citing the new director's experience und
record of achievements as important factors,
levin said the appointment followed the plans
set forth by Gov. Graham to provide top
leadership for an aggressive marketing anil
sales program for the Division of Economic
IK'velopment.

BUSINESS
IN BRIEF
Credit Unions Savings Up
21.75 Percent, Report Says
TAU-AHASSEE - Savings in Florida's credit
unions rose by 21.75 percent in 1980, surpassing the
deposit increase recorded by Hie nation's top 300
banks
According to "Afluerican Banker", the top 300 banks
in Hie country increased deposits by 8.4 percent in 1980
Shares isavings) in Florida's credit unions rose to
$2.7 billion, and assets were more than $2.9 billion,
according to statistics collected for Hie Florida Credit
Union league's Annual Report which was released this
month.
Membership in credit unions increased by 10 percent
to nearly 2 million Floridians.
One of the fastest growing new services offered by
credit unions was Share Draft Accounts, which are
similar to interest-paying checking accounts. Inst
year share draft volume increased more Hum 131
percent over the previous year.

Two free seminars on "What Investors Should Know
About the 1981 Tax Act" will be sponsored by Hie
Orlando branch ol Bache Halsey Stuart Shields
Incorporated on Tuesday, Sept. 15th and Thursday,
Sept. 17th. Both seminars will begin at 7:30 at Hie
Winter Park telephone building, 850 East Altamonte
Drive, 3rd floor conference room
The seminars will assist individuals to understand
the uspects of Hie tax bill that are of particular benefit
to investors. Among the topics covered will be: capital
gains, estates and gifts, retirement accounts, and
qualified reinvestment dividends.
Die speakers at Hie seminars will be Bache in­
vestment specialists. A question and answer period
will follow Hie presentations.
Reservations are required as seating is limited. To
reserve a seat, call Bache at 305-339-6000.

Fruit Fly Lure Developed
1.AKEI.AND—Exacting research by a team of
Florida scientists is moving closer to Hie producHon of
a synthetic lure that could be used to attract and trap
female Caribbean fruit flies.
In reporting to Hie Florida Citrus Research Advisory
Council Sept. 8, Dr. Jam es L Nation of Hie
University of Florida's Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences said that three of lour com­
pounds produced and released by male Caribflies as an
attractant for females have been identified and
chemically synthesized.
"We now are working on Hie remaining compound,
which appears to be Hie most effective in attracting
flies," he said. "Hopefully, this work will be completed
by Hie end of Hie month and laboratory tests will be
made immediately."
If the tests are successful, then additional quantiUes
ol Hie compounds will be produced for field testing in
Florida and in Mexico where Hie attractants will be
examined as possible lures for Hie Mexican fruit fly,
Dr. Nation declared.

.m
.••»*
— ••

Computer Firm Closer To
Opening Sanford Plant
SANFORD — Renovation of an abandoned
shopping center is expected to start within
weeks by Daxkoof America. Inc., an Orlandobased electronics firm planning expansion to
its operation, said Ogale A. "Randy" Ray, the
company's president and founder.
Die 40,000 square foot complex, located at
the corner of 25th Street and Park Avenue
should start operation about 90 days after the
renovation is completed, Ray said. A majority
of the center will be used by Daxko with
several small, connecting shops being rented
out.
"It was a good deal on the property," Ray
said. "We needed more space," he continued
when explaining the company's rapid growth
since its inception six years ago.
Daxko deals with software ami hardware
design for criminal justice agencies, Ray said
With Daxko systems operating throughout the
U.S. as well as Europe, Central America nnd
South America, Ray said the new Daxko
plant will also headquarter a training center
for customers, he said.
Training Daxko customers on updates of
already-operating systems will also be cen­
tered in Sanford

.

Daxko systems are used in computerizing
jury selection, traffic, criminal and civil
records for the courts as well as other legal
matters, Ray said. Seminole, Orange and
Hillsborough counties are a few of the local
entities using Daxko sy stems. Ray said Over
the next five-year period, Daxko will be
connecting all of Missouri’s law enforcement
agencies into one network, he continued
Several other sy stems are also in the bidding
stage, Ray said.
With construction exists hovering the $2'i
million mark in south Seminole County
locations, Ray said conversion of the shopping
center was a more comfortable move at SI
million.
"Sanford still has small town charac­
teristics," Ray said. This, coupled with other
attributes like a low cost of living, attractions
and economical housing, it will be easier to
recruit qualified employ ees, he said.
Ray estimated 40 people will be employed at
the outset then increase to between 75 and 10(1
in 1982
Ray worked for four major electronics
corporations before starting Daxko

Orlando Area Building
Shows Signs Of Increase
Tlie sagging U.S housing industry improved
slightly in July with housing starts rising 13.3
pet.) for the first time in three months and no
where was this mild increase illustrated better
Hum in the Greater Orlando marketplace.
Starts and closings in the tri-county area
continued to be steady and reinforced Greater
Orlando's claim as one of the nation's best
residential markets
Single-family nnd multi-family permits
issued for Hie three counties totaled more Hum
$24.1 million in volume. Orange County
dominated activity on both fronts with 398 total
permits issued worth $11.8 million, $7.7 million
for single-family development alone. Seminole
County registered $6.4 million in total volume
and Osceola County $3.2 million, primarily on
the strength of 119 starts i $1.9 million) issued
to Dawn IKvelopcrs iBuenaventura).
IKspito record-level mortgage interest rates
which are plaguing the industry, recorded
closings lor all three counties totaled more
than $44 million, nearly $5 million more than
the previous month. Orange County again led
the way with $24.4 million in transactions.

Daw n Developers was by far the most active
builder in the three-county marketplace for
the month. International Community Corp. led
Orange County builders with 41 permits for
$1.05 million, while Olm American was the
leader in Seminote County with 12 permits for
$450,312.
Multi-family development continues to be a
growing force in the area shelter scene with
Harper Construction. Dix Development and
F i l l Builders nccxmnting for much of the
activity in Orange County The three firms
were issued a total of 78 permits for units
worth $2 8 million. l’SM Development led
Seminole County with 00 permits worth
$705,730
In tern atio n al Com munity Corp. «$2.9
million) nnd Tompkins Development Corp.
i $2.7 million l led all builders in the tri-county
area in single-family transactions, while
Equity Realty, a leader in condominium
conversions, reg istered 71 m ulti-fam ily
closings at its various Greater Orlando
properties worth $2.4 million.

Financial Decision-Making
Are Economic Indicators Reliable, A Gamble, O r Both ?
FIRST IN A SERIES
OF FIVE ARTICLES
How reliable arc the economic indicators commonly used to
describe economic trends? Can the Consumer Price Index, Hie
Dow Jones Industrial Average, or other well-known indicators,
be trusted to help you reach important personal financial
decisions? CPAs have this to say: Use the indicators, but
understand Uieir limitations.
According to the Florida Institute of Certified l*ublic
Accountants, certain indicators are vital in helping people
understand the directions the economy is taking. But these
indicators should not be regarded us barometers, measuring
with scientific precision all the key elements, llien predicting
wlial's to come. Here are the chief indicators with advice from
Hie CPAs on how toafiply them to personul financial questions.
The Consumer Price Index i CPI ( is Hie most commonly used
measure for Hie exist of living. Salaries and pension plans are
frequently scaled by this index, which traces Hie increase or
decrease in the exist of food, housing, clothing, medical care
and transportation. Calculated monthly, Hie index tracks the
direction and rule of living exists. In st year, according to Hie
CPI, Uie exist of living increased more than 12 percent. Die CPI
has decreased slightly this year with an increase of 10 percent
from April of 1980 to April 1981.
Tlte first thing to do is compare the CPI with your income. If

your income did not increase at least 12 percent last year, your
living standard is in jeopardy . To improve it, you must in­
crease your income faster Hum prices are rising.
If the CPI had increased steadily over the past six mnnllis,
this might be a good time to start looking for a higher salary to
meet increased living costs. A steady rise in prices usually
indicates business growth.
Dow Jones Industrial Average. Almost every TV newscast
seems to close with Hie latest position of this indicator, which
measures tlie action of 30 stocks selected because of tlieir high
quality, total murket value and broad base of public owner­
ship. Diese stocks reflect overall market action, and Uraverage is readjasted daily to reflect any fluctuations in these
.30 stocks.
Die stock murket tends to attract investment when the in­
flation rate begins to decline —or speculators decide it is about
to decline. Diis may lead you to invest in stock or mutual
funds. The stock murket is usuully one of Hie earliest in­
dicators of changes in Hie economy. It declines before a
business recession appears. It also will turn upward before U r end of a recession, so watch this one closely. Die Dow Jones
tends to move in the opposite direction from interest rates —
but Uiere have been occasional exceptions.
Treasury Notes. When tlie interest rate rises on short term

Florida Becoming Pioneer In

Free Tax Seminars Set

’ » I 1% ♦ * * * •*

Dr. Evert O. Burt lias joined the Sod Division of A. Duda
&amp; Sons, Inc., in Oviedo.
Formerly associated with the Agricultural Research
Center at the University of Florida's Institute for Food and
Agricultural Sciences, he will be responsible for technical
service und customer relations with major sod customers.
"Dr. Burt will provide technical advice to customers,
lielp to develop sales to new customers nnd help monitor
and upgrade production processes at Dudn's sod farm
locations throughout Florida." said Walter Duda, sod
division general manager.
Dr. Burt received a doctorate of agronomy from Ohio
State University, and he earned both a bachelor's and
m aster's degree in agronomy at Ohio University.
In addition to research work at the University of Florida,
lie tuts taught university level courses in turfgrass
management, soils and fertilizers, weed identification and
control ami field crop production. He tuts also worked as an
agronomist in the Research Division of O.M. Scott it Sons,
Inc.
A member of a dozen scientific societies, Dr. Burt has
authored more than 100 publications. Among his honors, he
has been named to Who's Who in America and to Men of
Science.

After four years of marketing and site
location work in the oil industry , May berry
joined the Division of Economic Development
staff in 1972. He has field increasingly
responsible positions within the Division nnd
was instrumental in locating some of the
largest industrial employers in the state
during those years.
As A ssistant Econom ic Development
Director. Mayberry was responsible for a
number of staff training programs He was
the principal author of the Division's
Industrial Development R ep resen tativ e’s
Sales Manual, a blueprint for successful sales
efforts, nnd he put together the first Annual
Florida Industrial Development Workshop.
Other duties included managing (lie division's
advertising programs.
1-evin pointed out that May berry play ed an
integral part in the development of the
comprehensive marketing plan that details
tfie division's programs for the next two
years.

Sunday. Sept. 11.1911—SB

Furniture Building, Design
If you own furniture manufactured in
Florida, you can rightfully say that your
furniture is the "model" used by
manufacturers throughout the United
States.
For the past ten to twenty years, Hr?
relatively young furniture industry' in the
Sunshine State lias developed into one of
the nation's largest.
Harold Beck, president of Hie Florida
Association of Furniture Manufacturers,
thinks the explanation is simple.
"Because furniture in Florida is made
for the tropical climate, it lias to be
designed and constructed to resist
warping, rusting and mildew. Glues,
paints and materials are specially for­
mulated to resist the tropical sun and
high humidity. As a result, Florida
furniture is among the most durable and
best in the world and lias become the
model for excellence for Hie entire in­
dustry."
Florida Furniture Manufacturers are
generally proud that their manufac­
turing methods and designs are being
copied elsewhere.
"Certainly, in this case, imitation is a
form of flattery," Beck u id .
According to Hie U.S. Department of
Com m erce, fu rn itu re and fixture
production in Hie state now accounts for
some 5 percent of the total manufac­
turing in Florida, and has become a
multi-million dollar industry. The in­

•

d u stry 's stren g th is reflected in
estimates by the Florida Department of
Commerce that sliows for every one
dollar invested in furniture, it produces
$1.41 in income for the state's economy.
Up until soiiH- 20 years Bgo, cotton was
tlie king in bedding manufacturing.
Initially, Florida manufacturers — like
most furniture manufacturers in the
nation — used cotton almost exclusively
in mattresses. But Florida manufac­
turers, realizing that cotton usually built
up dam pness, sta rted chem ically
trea tin g th eir cotton to kill all
possibilities of mildew. D ie mildew
retardants went a long way in fighting
the tropic's natural elements.
’ Today, how ever, ureth an e foam
pioneered by Florida manufacturer, is
the popular product for m attresses as
well as for use In other furniture. Welltreated urethane products are virtually
mildew-free.
In Hie use of plasUc laminates, a
number of Florida firms have been
responsible fur pioneering new ap­
plications for furniture.
"Florida had several problems Hut had
to be c o rre c te d ," explains FAFM
Director Max Friedman of Miami.
"Because Florida has no nearby forests
to supply wood; because of its proximity
to ocean and salt air which causes
warping; and because of Hie extensive
temperature controls needed due to Hie

\ I • % 8 •

/

*

use of air conditioning, new mulenuLs
were found to literally beat Hr- tropics."
As a result, plastic laminates first wenused in Florida furniture manufacturing,
and now is being copied throughout Hie
country.
High pressure laminates, coupled wiHi
tucking on cabinet goods to avoid the
penetration ol moisture, has in many
ways d u n g ed Hie styles and designs ol
lumlture production.
Also during the past 20 years, special
heat spraying equipment lius been used
in Hie gluing process to assure perfect
bonding—a protection ag ain st both
mildew and warping.
"Moisture resistance ts one of U r major goals of every good manufac­
turer," Freidman said. "D iis ( a c tcoupled wiHi unique d esig n s-lu s in­
creased tlie popularity of Florida-nude
furniture."
Even metal lu s n u d e gieat strides in
recent years. While chrome is a familiar
and often used metal for contemporary
tables, wall units and other furniture,
nunulacturers have n u d e great strides
in eliminating tarnishing, pitting und
rusing due to oxidation. In addition to
pioneering new lacquer-coats to protect
the finishes, Florida rrunufacturers were
among the first in the nation to design
works with aluminum, which is not af­
fected by s ilty ocean-influenced at-

Biosphere.

borrowing by the government, it means inflation is continuing.
When rates drop, it means inflation may be slowing down.
Diese rates reflect the investment judgement of the thousands
of professional bond traders, which makes this index one to
watch most closely .
Prime Rate. This measures increase or decrease in the exist
of credit or borrowing, but only for the relatively few most
creditworthy business customers. Nevertheless, this rate
influences other Interest rates. If the prime rate goes up,
anticipate that interest rales on money market funds will also
increase and you may expect higher yields on investments.
D m- Housing Starts index measures Um- number ol new
housing units on which construction lias begun. Diis index has
been depressed since tlie mortgage interest rate begun its
upward surge in recent years. Although increased slightly in
Um- spring, it plummeted iigutn in May Increased housing
starts usually indicutes a better market (or home buyers,
however, this index is based on all housing starts, so a block of
luxury high rise- condominiums in a resort urea could increase
the index even though in ac tuality this would not reflect the
market for single family homes.
Economic indicators cannot advise on sfiecific investment
opportunities, but if properly upplied, they can offer useful
clues to economic trends.

Florida Strikes Drop
From Previous Year
Strike idleness in Florida during 1980 was lower Uian that
reported for Hr- preceding year, according to Donald M.
Cruse, regional commissioner for the Bureau of Inbor
Statistics, U S Department of lab o r, in Atlanta.
Approximately 201,300 days of idleness resulted from
strikes in effect in 1980 - less than lialf that of 1979. Days
lost as a percent of tlie estimated working tinu- of
nonagricultural workers i excluding private household
workers) were also less than half Hiat of 1979-0 02 percent
in 1980 compared with 0.05 |&gt;crccnt in Hr- previous year. D rnumber of workers involved in stoppages dropped to 15,200
from 20,600 in 1979. TIm- number ol new strikes beginning in
1980, however, was up — from 42 in 1979 to 53 in 1980.
In 1980, Fort Inuderdale-Hollywood had 8 new strikes,
Jacksonville 6, Miami 15, Orlando 6, and Tumpa-St
Petersburg 6.
Of those strikes, 26,400 work days were idlest by 3,600 totul
workers in Hr- Fort Inuderdale-llollywixxl urea. In
Jacksonville, 1,000 workers lost 29,300 days o( work.
Miumi's 15 strikes lost 19,200 work days und involved 2,100
workers. Orlando lost 9,500 work days through 400 striking
workers. And Tumpa-St. Petersburg urea lost 3,600 work
days by 500 idled workers.
In Florida, most work stoppages took place in nonmanufacturing industries. Twelve out of a total 36 strikes in
Hr* nonmanufacturing sector uccurred in contract con­
struction. Diese s to r a g e s accounted for about 76 percent
of total nonmanufacturing workers involved in strikes and
79 percent of nonmunufacturing days idle. Eight strikes
occurred in Hie transportation, communication, electric,
gas and sanitary services industry with 1,100 workers in­
volved and 7,600 days idle.
Nationally, all nwasures of strike activity in I960 were
below the levels for Hr- previous year. Days lost in 1980
umounted to 0.14 percent of the estimated working tune of
non-agricullural workers, compared to 0.15 percent in 1979
The number of workers involved in 1980 strikes dropped to
1,366.300 from 1.727.100 the previous year.

�' *

t • •

« B - E v o n l n g H t f i M , io n t o r d , F I.

S u n d ay. So ft, I I . I N )

ia—Help W anted

legol Notice
C IT Y O T A L T A M O N T E
S P R I N O S, F L O R ID A
N O T IC E O F P U E L IC H E A R IN O
TO A L L I N T E R E S T E D P E R ..
SON S
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D that th# City Com.
m ission ot th* City o l A lla m o n l*
S p rin g s, F lo r id * , p u rsu a n t to
Chapter 1TO. F lo rid * Statutes, h it,
by r tt o lu llo n , a u th o rlie d th *
improvement ot I he Construction
ot g rid in g , drainage, sidewalk,
curb and paving on N rw bury port
Avenue from th* North right of
way line of Baywood Street to the
ce nterline ot B ra n c h S tr a it
vacated, a d is t a n t * of *p .
proilm ately t o il feet
and p ro v id in g lor a t to ttm a n t
against lots and lands admitting
and contiguous or bounding and
abutting upon such Im provem ents
TH AT A P U B L IC H E A R IN O
W IL L be held on Tuesday, October
II. Iflt, al T OO P M , or at soon
thereafter at possible, at th * City
Halt or th* City « l Altamonte
Springs. Florid*. T il Newburyporl
A venue, A ltam o n te
S p rin g s,
F lor Ida, whereby t he owners ot I ha
properly to be assessed or any
other Interested persons therein
m a y a p p e a r before t h * C ity
C o m m is s io n a t a n e q u a lisin g
board and be heard as to Ih *
p ro p rie ty and a d v is a b ilit y ot
m aking such Improvements, as lo
Ih * cost thereof, at to th* manner
ot payment therefor, and as lo th*
amount to be assessed against
each properly so Improved.
That an assessm ent roll has
been prepared by th* city clerk
and tiled with the City Comm ission
ot Ih * City ol Altamonte Springs,
Florida, th ow ln gth * lots and lands
to be assessed, Ih * amount of Ih *
ben*tit lo and th* assessment
against each lot or parcel of land
and th* manner of payment,
That th * description ot each
property to be assessed and th*
amount to be assessed to each
piece or parcel ot property m a y b *
ascertained al th* otllceot th* City
Clerk of th* City of Altam ont*
Springs, Florida All Interested
pe rso n s
m ay
Inspect
Ih *
assessment roll now on til* with
the said City Clerk during normal
business hours ot said offlc*.
Dated this 4th day of September,

AD ten
Phyllis Jordahl, C M C
City Clerk ot th*
City ot Altamonte
Springs. Florid*
Publish September IS, let)
D E M 4S
T A M

A

I l U H

'O *

.ORANCEJUICE
B

R

f A K

Legal Notice
IN T H R C IR C U IT C O U R T O F
T H E E I O H T I B N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
AND
FO R
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A .
C A S E NO. I I - I S I I C A -M -P
J E M O R Y D O L A N and
M A R Y 0. D O L A N , his wlfa,
Plaintiffs,
vs.
L E S L I E L. P IE R C E .
Deftndan!
N O T IC E O P S A L E
Notice is hereby given pursuant
to a Final Decree of Foreclosure
deled Ih * eth day ol Sapttmbar,
A D , I N I , and enttred In Casa No.
I I IS IS C A Ot P of t h * C ircuit
Court ot th* Elghtaanth Judicial
C irc u it, In and tor S a m ln o l*
County, F lo rid a , w herein J.
E M O R Y D O L A N and M A R Y D.
D O LA N , his wife, a r * Plaintiffs,
and L E S L I E L. P IE R C E Is th*
Defendant, I will sell to th* highest
and best bidder for cash at th*
W n t Front Door of th* Seminole
County Courthouse in Sanford,
Florid*, at 11:00 o'clock In th*
A M., on Ih * Sth day of October,
A D., I N I . th * following described
property as set forth In th* Final
JuOgmerit, to wit:
Lott I, S and S, Block C.,
S L O V A K V I L L A O E according to
th* Plat thereof as recorded in
Piet Book I, P e g * IS ot the Public
R e co rd s ol S e m ino le County,
Florida
D A T E D Ihlt 10th day ol Sep
lember, A D , l» ll.
(Seal I
A R T H U R H, B E C K W IT H , JR
C L E R K O F T H E C IR C U IT
C OU RT
B Y: Cynthia Proctor
Deputy Clerk
P A U L A. M I L L E R , E S Q U IR E
tltr East Robinson Street
Orlando. Florid * 37*01
(SOS) 1*4 2345
A T T O R N E Y F O R P L A IN T IF F S
Publish: Seplamber IS. 30, 1*11
O E M S3
N O T IC E U N D E R
F IC T IT IO U S K A M I S T A T U T E
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
Notlc* Is h trtb y given that Ih#
u n d e rslg n td p ursuant lo th#
‘'F ic t it io u s
Nam *
S t a l u lt " ,
Chapter a u .t*, Florida Statul#*,
will raglttar with th* Clerk ot Ih *
Circuit Court, In and tor Samlnola
County, Florida upon receipt of
proof ol Ih * publication ol this
nolle*. Ih * fictitious Name, lo wit:
PALM TREE
S T A M P S under
which K erri L e vin * Intends lo do
business al I I I ) Sonoma Court,
Longwoed, F I S27SO. That th* said
person Interested In said business
enterprise is as follows:
K arri Le vin*
sole proprietress
Oated a l Sam ln o l# County
Florid*, August 3*. IN I.
Publish: August 30. Saptamber A
IS, JO. I N I
D E L ISO

L E G A L N O T IC E
B U D O E T H E A R I N O O N O E N C R A L R E V E N U E S H A R IN O
Th* County ol Seminole will hold a Public Hearing at 7:00 p m. on
Tuesday. September IS. IN I, In Room 300 of the Seminole County
Courthouse. North P a rk Avenua, Sanford, Florida. Tha purpose of the
leering Is to receive written and oral comment Irom the public con
earning the P or posed Annual Budget lor fiscal year I N I IT and I he use
ot Revenue Sharing lunds as contained In that proposed budget, sum
mar lied below. Final adoption ot th* budget Is expected to occur
following public hearing.
General Revenue Sharing (O H S ! Is ■ program of general fiscal
support from ih * federal government lo stale and locel governments
with only limited federal requirements about how lha money should be
spent Decisions on Ih * useof thee* fund* » r * m ade at Ih * local Jtval, by
the oovrrnm enl and people c Io m s I lo local problems. T h * revenue
sharing regulations require a hearing on I he u s * of these funds in
relation to ih * overall budget.
All Interested dtliens, groups, senior cllltens. and organliallons a r*
encouraged lo altand and lo submit comments.
S U M M A R Y O F P R O P O S E D It S I-tt B U O O B T
County wide A Special Taem g D istrict!
B o a rd *! County Comm 1st lowers
Seminole County, F ie ri# *
REVENU ES
FU ND
AMOUNT
General F und
$33.113,lit
Transportation Fund (County wide)
l.fSl.45*
Federal Revenue Sharing No 3 Fund
344.734
Federal Revenue Sharing N o 3 Fund
3,437 ,*43
Grant In Aid Fund
1 .000.000
interest A Sinking — Courthouse Jell Fund
S34,*00
Interest A Sinking — General Obligation Bondi
S e r ie s * A B F u n d
lOf.SIO
Fire ProleclIon Fund
4.1**.401
Street Lighting D istricts
SOS,11*
Road Improvement Districts (31
13,303
Transportation — Capital Protects 110 percent)
1,757,000
Tran sport el Ion — Capital Protects (70 per ten I I
33*,*40
Transportation — Unincorporated A re * (M S T U I
l,ll*,M 7
Infer governm enlal Fund I Insurance Safety)
7.4*4.477
la w Enforcement Trust Fund
100.000
Enterprise Funds 111
3.007.IS(
M !,*M .1 M
E X P E N D IT U R E S
Activity

R *y *n u *
R *v*n w *
Other
Sharing H*. 1 Sharing Na. 1 Funds

Sem inole

Tala l

General Government
{including central
accounts)
t 10.744 S
0 S 3,353,131 t 3.143.173
Central Services
(including Support
Services. Insurance
and Salelyl
!.* 00.ft*
7,t 00,***
Public Services
A Development
1including Facilities.
Parks • Recreation and
Libraries)
0
0
4,(43,341
44*3441
Public Solely
(including F ir *
Prolrctionl
0
0
4,147,*74
A147474
Public W orks
(including Roads,
Vehicle Maintenance. A
Environm ental Servlets)
0
1.7*7,07)
7.4)1,157
*431,1*4
tteellh A Hum an Services
•
(including Health A
Welfare
0
0
1.404,355
1.404,553
Judiciary
440.044
0
0
*404*4
Law Enforcement
0
4,504.174
4.504.7)4
a
Olher Constitutional
Officer*
0
3447,3)1
0
7.(47,51*
Reserves
14.05*
*50,*0*
3401,143
3. *44.111
transfer*
377.4)7
1.410.71*
0
1,*73,14*
G ram Adm inistration
•
0
3400.000
3.000,000
0
0
7)4,1M
Interest A Sinking
734.7M
Road Improvement
0
Districts
0
15,30)
11.30)
Street Lighting
District*
0
0
30A M *
304,11*
Transportation Capllal
Outlay - 10 percent
(Howell Branch)
0
1,737,000
0
1.757.000
site .))* *3,417,M l S41.I31.)*) tar.*** i n
TOTAL
a copy ot (his information, th* entlr* propot ad budge), and other
background m aterials n r* available lor public Inspection from I 34
a m l o 5 00 p m , weekdays al the Olfice 01 Management A Budget.
Room 301. in Ih * Seminole County Courthouse.
"P e rso n s a r * advised that, If they dec Id * to appeal any decision made
at this meeting hearing, they will need a record ot th* proceedings, and.
lor such purpose, iney m ay need to ensure that a verbatim racord of the
proceedings is made, which record Includes Ihe testimony and evidence
upon which th r appeal IS to be bated "
Board ol County Com m issioners
Seminole County, F lor We
By Roger Neitw sndar, Budget Officer

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES

H f H I P 'i

, , l m t ......................... Wc b IIiw
1 consecutive times. JOcalln#
1:00 A.M. — 5 30 P.M.
1consecutive tlmos ....... die
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 10 consecutive Ilm e si7 ce line
SATURDAY * . Noon
13.00 Minimum

»t*

I L in e s M in im u m

L ik e M a ry Clean Furn Apt.
R e lla b ie d M a n only. N o
children, pels M l 3*30

S u n d a y -N o o n Friday

4—Personals

______

• . A B O R T IO N

L P N 71 part time, 117 pari
lim e Apply Lakrvie w Nursing
C e n te r,» I*E . 2nd St.. Sanford

*

1st trim ester abortion 7 13 w k t,
11*0— M e d ic a id t 110 i . l l I I
wkt, t 1 *5 -M *d lc * t d l l l S i Oyn
Clinic 0 3 . Pregnancy feel;
m ale
tte rllte tlo n .
free
counseling. Professional care'
s U p p o r t lv * - e t m o s p h a r * .
cant Manila!.
C E N T R A L F L O R ID A
W O M A N 'S H E A L T H
O R G A N IZ A T IO N
toe Colonial Dr., Orlando
*tt o e )i
toll Free 1 100 111 1541

S A N F O R D , no children, no pets.
I B r , air, carpet, all electric
appliances STOP mo 731101*

W HY B E L O N E L Y * W rit* "O e t
A M a t * ’’ Dating Service. All
ages. P.O. Bos 1071, Clear,
water, FI. 31SII.

i

W IL L Babysit Inyeur
home or mine Day
o rn lgh l 31) 1413
A L L or Pert ol tho Day.
School Pick up
available 111 1145
W IL L babysit children In m y
home In DeBary. Have *■
parlance. Constant su p e r
v isio n, q u a lity c a r*, good
meals and raasonabta rales
Call *4 * 5**l alter S p m.

Tanms~lnt~lruc1 M n - ^ T i T K Y X .
Carl it lad. C roup or Prlvala
lesson s Children ■ specialty.

n-SpKtel Notion

★

★

★

★

★

B E A U T Y S H O P , com plete,
everything you need lo open a
shop For details call 777 3501.

F U L L tlm #or part
f lme custodial evenings
141 t i l l

L A R G E A iry Furnished rooms
M aid service 477 Palmetto
Ave 777 1441
S A N F O R D - Reas wkly A
monthly rales Ulll Inc K g
500 Oak Adults 141 7M7

xT A pirtm int*
UnfumishBd
Bn|*y cavalry living? 3 td rm
Apts. O ly m p ic ti. Peal.
Shenendeah Village. Oeen 1-1.
133-1*11.

C O M M E R C IA L
Refrigeration
M an M o ll Be Experienced
W rit* United Food Processor
P O Boa 7500 Sanlord, Fla

R idge w o o d A r m s 7 B d rm
Apis Irom 1775 3 Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis court 371
4470

A I M IC H . , honesl. bendable,
sober, fam ily m an Exp. In
im ports, do m e stic tune upl.
brake s, a ir cond , carb,
capable m ging shop Auto
Elec exp helpful, salary A
bonus lo right m an Need help
to eel shop in operation in So.
Sanlord 14* 50It Geneva

1

-» *• *■

Sanlord I bdrm 4 den.
ce ram ic
bain,
fu rn itu re
available, adults, 5775 mo. I

1413113

Beautiful large 7 Bdrm in city,
q u irl area
3745 mo
+
Security. I *44 4*71
M a rine r’* villa gfO n L a l a A d a T
bdrm Irom S7S0, 7 bdrm from
1710 Located 17*7 lust South
ol Airport Blvd in Sanlord. All
Adults 173 1470
M e llo n ville
Trace
A p ti.
Spacious, modern. 7 Bdrm, 1
Bath apt
C a rp attd . k il
equipped.
CHAA.
N e ar
hospital A lake Adults, no
_p *tl S770 771 *757

New home In Deltona
S325 Monthly
jo

,

S A N F O R D — Lake M a ry 1 bdr. 7
bth cen H A. new paint. 11*0
mo Plus dp 773 1014
D E L IO N A nearly new 1 bdr.
Microw ave sell d e a n ovens.
Discount to qualified parly.
M S 14* 44*7
3 B D R M . 1 Bath 1300 mo. 1)00
Security Deposit References
required No pels cell 337
1477

S A N F O R D -D U P LE X
7 bdr. kids, pels 1300 mo
Lake M a ry ) bdr. ktdv 1300
C a n rtb e rrv 7 bdr. kids. 1350
IA N F O R O U N F U R N . H O U S E S
1 bdr. lam rm S17S
Lake M a ry J bdr, 1)50 Kids
Deltona 4 bdr, kids. 5400

K W A R T M E H **
A d u lts it c t W n
Bar ms. M a R g r 't
373 7*go Open &lt;n

1 bdrm
Private yard. Near
Yankee Lake, W. Ot 14 on 44.
SIR) mo includes elect A w 4
tar: Adults 373 7*77 eve
B A M B O O C O V E 7 bedroom
apts Available M anager an
premises. 3 1 1MO
Furnished apartments lor Senior
C ltlitnt )|| Palmetto Ave., J
Cowan. N o phone cent

* ‘ • 0 m- 0

B O B B I I ’f
R IA L T Y
REALTO R, M LS
3)11 S. French
Suit* «
Sente rd

24 HOUR IB 322-9283

O F F IC E Spacecarpeted and air
conditioned. Ideal lor lawyers,
doctors and realtors Sm all or
large U p lo 1.000 sq II.
C entrally
located
near
Sambos. 171 7750 or *1*550*

9S k

T H E C E N T U R Y 11 S Y S T E M
H E L P S more people buy and sell
more r ia l estat* than anyone
else In Am erica. Call today
and let 11 w ork for you. Call
37) 3050
H ayes Real E sta t*
Services. Inc.
113 W 35th St.
Sanford
Each oltlce 11 Independently
owned and operated.

It's easy to place a Classified Ad
W e'll even help you word
It. Call 377 )411.

38—Wanted to Rent
C O U P L E , no chlldrtn, need 3
Bdrm house by Nov. 1st. Good
location In Sanford. 3451753.
R E S P O N S IB L E Gentlemen
wan! apartment or house lor
the month of Feb References
available 31) 0*3* all 5 p m

k jsil
i; i

b xd

\ 1

I M

\ l

I

40—Condominiums
C o n d o fo r r e n t 7 b d r , I 1y b a t h
in S a n lo r d .

M L*

3 3 1 -0 0 4 1

Appointed * Br,
I B m I t Acres. F P L , poet,
fenced, weeded. Si45.es*.

b e a u t if u l l y

Call 177 0415
N E W L Y turn I Bdrm. Full
equip Kil, Pool. Ill, loti *150
Security 1 yr lease 574 1753

LO C H A R B O R 1 Br, 1 B If. Fam
Rm, wet bar, F P L , privacy
tenet- S4».J*0.

U N F U R N IS H E D Park A ve 7
Bdrm. 1’ y Bath E xtras Adulls
no pels U S S m o Call Judy 177
3443 Days. 14* 4040 Eves

C H A R M IN O 3 Br, I B . ) Itery,
pool, g a m * rm. N Ic * a r t *
extra 1*1. SI*,ft*.
REALTO R
32 1 -0 0 41
AHer hr*.
Iff. I727-4*53 and 333-71*4

41—Houses

O P E N H O U S E SOT
Osceola A E l Portal 1 br, 3 b*.
cent-air heat, ta t In kit,
34*,300 Owner will carry mlg.
with S10.000 down at 1) S interes! lor 13 mo. or FH A , VA.
Michael R. Capko
Lie R ra l E stat* Broker
14* 1714,171 7155

ALLFLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
Excellent Business opportunity
in good location. Complete
slock included In this priced
reduced lo 11100
1544 1. French 71113)1
Alter Hours: 34* *004. I l l * » *

L O O K IN G FO R A C R E A G E We
have II. From I to 3 Acres.
Easy Term*. Priced Irom
St ,000

FO R S A L E By Buildrr. 7 Bdrm, 1
Bath Home Call evenings 5 7
___________ 331 0507___________

A T T E N T IO N IN V E S T O R S 7
Story Block Building Zoned
G C7
U p s t a ir * Is Rented
apartment
Downstairs has
enclosed ] car garage stall.
Owner will asilsl, 1)0.000

When you piece a Classified Ad
In The Evening Hereld, slay
close to your phone because
something wonderful is about
lo happen

M O B IL E H O M E with Ouesl
cottage 1 Bdrm 7 Beth Fur.
nisned M obile Home with I
Bdrm I Bath Furnished cot
tag*. Localed on S lots. Ex
cel lent location. H U M

(T E M P E R A G EN C Y
A T T E N T IO N G O L F E R S ! If you
want lo live close to the
Beautiful
M a y la l r
C o ll
Court*, this 3 Bdrm. 7 Bath
Spacious home is th* location
lor you L arge fenced yard.
Fam ily Rm . Cent. H A a r *
some ot Ihe (ealures. Add th*
assu m a b le m o rtgag e and
Idyllwilde Elem entary for the
children and yo u 'vt got a
Super buy al 1)3.700. H A A
buyers warranty.
O S T E E N Small 3 Bdrm horn*.
Newly remodeled, new ap
pllancet Fenced lot 77x15* 5
514.500 37* 111), 14*5451

— A LTOR Ml-***) DpvOCHlghl

R eal
^

E ita * e

S u p erM ark et

1 3 IN S A N O R A . Lrg. FR, C A 6
CH, W W Carpet. Assum able
L o w In t e r e s t
M o rtg a g e ,
C o m m u n it y
P o o l- T t n n ii
Courts. 341.000.
110.000 DO W N. Zoned G C 14 15*
with C A A C E , W W Carpet.
Can be seen Irom U.S. 17 *1.
545.000
11 IN C O U N T R Y Club Manor.
D R , Padd le F a n s, u tility
Building, Screened Porch L
more All Igr 534,000 F H A
Accepted.

323-9141

T a x a i w a i n a m a d A l­
ta r
an
In d ia n
w o rd
m o a n in g
' ‘f r i a n d t . * ’

MONEY...MONEY
EVERYWHERE!

SAV-ON-RENTALS

Seminole
31* 7744
SA V O N R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

33—Houses Furnished
C l e a n and Neat as a Pm.
Furnished 7 Bdrm Houle
Adulls No pell Walk lo City
Hall and Post Oflice In Lake
M a ry S150 mo Isl and Iasi and
security 773 i l l *

36—Resort P ro p erty
N e w S m y r n a B e a c h L u x u r io u s 1
B d r m 3 B a t h T o w n h o u s e , P o o l,
T e n n is , S u n d e c k , C o lo r T V .
L o w o i l s e a s o n r a l e s . 7* t 304a

37—Business Property
For rani or la as* — 10.3)0 sq ft.
industrial or warehouse. *11
W I I I SI . Sanlord 17)1100

IANFORO
l B O R M Wall lo wall carpet,
Cent
HA
Convenient lo
downtown 31*5 mo 731 7747 or
121 144)

r» 4 #

707 E . lS t n S I
CUSTO M
built
h o m tl.
rem o d eling
A additions.
Johnny W alker Const. L T D
' 373 *457.
____

SENlO t CITIZENS

R IV E R F R O N T F U R N . H O U SE
W rkiva 3 bdr. air 1300

S E C R E T A R IA L
C L E R IC A L A
R E C O R D K E E P IN G
S K IL L S
For growing llrm &gt;n Sanlord
Must be able lo type 55 words
per minute Write Box 111 C O
Evening Herald P O Boa 1457
Sanlord. F l l 31771.

S .T 7 X U R T
F a m ily A
Pootsld* 1
Cove Apis.
w **k*no&gt;

Eve*. 111?41*

S A N F O R D -F U R . APT.
1 bdr, ull, 140 on (ISO mo
1 bdr. ull. 140 dn 140 wk

19—Rooms

W AN T A D S A R E B L A C K A
W H IT E A N D P E A O A L L
O V E R ._____________________

M ovTng Ip a naw ar horn#,
apartm ent* tall "d o n 't i
teat M B s a want ad.

3 B D R M Fenced in yard. 1350 mo
♦ Security 1350 No pets
Children are line Day 113 0430
All. 7 37) 4441

574-6616

Open your own retail apparel
shop O iler the latest in leans,
denims A sports wear. I l l , *50
includes inventory, lixlurrs.
etc Complete Store! Open in
as little as 7 weeks anywhere
in U S A
(Also infants A
children's shopl. Call TO N Y
Colled I *04 751 4570

W ORO
p r o c e s s in g * It c h
secretary starting salary i l l )
* wk High school grad I yrs
exp in s e c re ta ria l c le ric a l
work, including some exp
with word processing umls
Ability to type *5 w per min.
taka shorthand 100 w per min
A pp ly
Sem ino le
County
Personnel, Court House, N
Park Ave . Sanlord by Sepl It,
1* 1 1 , ap p lica tio n s accepted
M on thru F r l I 30 a m lo
nooh
FO EM EH V

★

f - i f F.t

TEUPHONE SOLICITORS
Evening Hours
Hourty Wag* plus Bonus

3 UR, In Ground Pool. Country
Club Manor. Sanlord. Fenced.
1150 mo 1st, 1*51 and 5100
Deposit. 447 MOO

m um

T el. (305) 748-3647

T E M P o flit* g irl typing, an
s w t r ln g phones A filin g
Contact J u n gle L a b o ra to ry
Corporation 501 Silver Lake
Or , Santord_

*

OAK H A V E N R EST
HOME DELAND
Small home Ilk * A C L F facility
situated very pleasant location
short dislanca from city. 14
hour
s u p e rv is io n
m eals,
laundry, assistance with bath
4 personal groom ing Large
fenced In y a rd , a ir con
ditloning. Private A semi
private rooms. Call 7)44431
★

Call or w rite
Richard Miller. Vice President
Bagel Break Ol America. Inc
J101 N University Dr , Sou r 301
Sunrise. Fla 73171

IN F O R M A T IO N On A L A S K A N
and O V E R S E A S employment
Excellent Income polenllel
Call (111) 741 *710 Ext 4104
Open 7 days

. Ddug mbncmmSC u iiV r i

★

F R A N C H IS E S now available lo
qualified individuals Prim e
locations available in many
areai M in im u m cash Invest
m in i 130.000 1 ) 0.000.

A p p ly in person Sanlord
Nursing Convalescent Center,
*50 Mellonville Ave

11—Instructions

*

B R E A K F A ST A LUNCH A R E
A L W A Y S S P E C IA L B A G E L
BREAK
RESTAURANTS
spcclallre In modestly priced
meals lealurlng Irrshly baked
bagels and emphaslre quick
service with a lull menu

4 17 end l i t Shill. Full time

LER O Y FA RM S
S R 44
W a t s o n 's O l d F a r m

*

R E ST A U R A N T

N E E D several individualslo call
and Invite people lo loin a new
Dinner Club. No experience
necessary Day or Evening
hours Salary ♦ Com m ission
Also I person lor special
delivery work Apply to M r s
Adkins Monday and Tuesday
at the D ays Inn 44 A 14

RN O R L PN

D E B A R Y 3 Bdrm , 7 Bath CHA.
Clone to 14, 17*3 oil Dirkten
Or S IM mo 1st, lest, SIOO
Security. 114 *774

S A N F O R D — Idyllw ildr School
— Newly painted in A out 3
BR. I B, lam rm, C H A A , Ig
fenced yd. no pels 5175 mo 4
sec 13) 1333 or 173 344*

( S IN C E 1*74)

COO K Fulltim e, with knowledge
ot sp e cia l diet A p p ly at
Lakeview Nursing Center tit
E 3nd St

W b T a k t F o o d S ta m p s

*

BA G EL BREAK

N E E D L iv e In C om p anion
Housekeeper lo r O iab e iic
Lady in Sanlord M u si have
car and be able lo give insulin
shots Salary * room are!
board Please call 17} )t *7

Bananas
1LB S 1100
Cukes
10 FO R 100
Peooers
10 FO R 100
f t * Cold Watermelons
7 00
Western Lopes
EACH
7*
Green Onions
7 F O R J*
Regular Tomatoes 4 L B S
1.00
Jumbo Beet Stake
Tomatoes
.4* LB.
Peaches
.41 l B
Jonathan Apples
1 L B S I 00
R edO ellclousApplet 4 L B S. 100
Golden 0*1 Applet
3 LBS. 100
M u tlu A p p irs
1L6S. 100
50LB. Box Ga. Swt Potatoes 4 50
100
Swl Potatoes
4LBS
Blue R ld g * Apples. 31 L B Box
'A l l Kinds
E A C H IS O

1111774

For rent — nle# retirement home
w ith enclosed g a ra g e In
de lightful D e B a ry . A ls o 3
bdrm, 7 B mobile- home In
Meadowlea B y the River. Four
Townes Realty Inc Broker.
44* 4730

24-Business

Evening Herald

J BR. I B w Cen H A, turn or
wnturn, ter 1411 me. 4- Dep.

RtALTV.INC.

Opportunities

C IR C U L A T IO N D E P T .

1 BR. |S'I a w Cen H A ter *37*
mo. 4 Dtp.

REALTO R

Two questions
W ill you be
I mane tally Independent In 7 lo
5 years? A re you paid what
you are worth? II not call 377
4434

Cal 322-2611

9—Good Things to Eat

O il Ice Spec*
For L e a st
130 777)

I nc.
3 2 3 -7 1 3 ?

H A R O L D H A L L R E A L T Y . IN C .

B A B Y S IT T IN G M y home
D a y s by experienced
mother 377 3471

A V O N R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
Th* Part T im * Career
444 107* - Collect *55170*

F U L L llm * Babysitter needed in
m y Lake M e r y home lor 7 mo.
OKI. Call 373 3343

*

3 BR, I B. na air, far I1 M m i. +
Sec Pep.

I will do housework, cooking and
driving lor the disabled 771
0105

R IG H T now we need a tew good
sales people who have the
ambition and dedication lo
succeed II that's you. then
w e're prepared to oiler you
real rewards and the methods
lo gel them For inlervirw,
please call Century 21. Hayes
Really Services. Inc , Sanlord
173 1050

** SPUR OF TH R M O M EN T
B A B Y S IT T IN G
331*144

*

3 b d rm .3 B .w llh
double ca rg ira g e , In
Deltona Call 574 M32

2)—Situations W anted

371 517*

Day lim e Babysitting In
m y home. No Weekends.
Have refer tnces 111 4411

SANFO RD
7000 sq. It. It. Industrial or
Commercial Building on 17 *7.
1,100 ft. In oftlea spec*. Call
37) 5510 Of 0 4 4143.

1

H A IR S T Y L IS T wanted
with following. Im m rd
C illP e lf lT t S lU im

M 0 000 150,000 per year National
Com pany
lo o king
tor
D ist rib u t o rs In 14 F lo rid a
Counties Part Time ol Full
Time Call Bob McNeill. 1 100

fr-ChiM Care

7 bdrm, 7 B 7541 Ridqawood
Ave . Sanlord. Kit. (urn , 373 5
mo 4 dap No pels. 3f! 173)
eves
7(3 0073 days. C all
Collect.

EM PLO YEHM F

323- 5174

L O S T 11000 D ia m o n d R in g
Seminole /Armorlel Hospital
X R a y room 1711407

S A N F O R D new 3 bdrm,
3bth
Lake Ave M * 1174

e o u a l o p p o r t u n it y

1917 F re n c h A ve.

5 -L o bt A F o u n d

W H Y S A V E IT . . . S E L L IT
Q U IC K L Y with a Fast Acting,
Low Cost Classified Ad

B - H o m e s U n fu m is h B d

JU STAFEW O FM AN Y

L o rk ly r Write "B rid g in g People
Tooefher D e ling S e rv lc e l" All
ages A Senior Cllltens. P.O.
MAI.Winlee-Heven, Fla. UNO.

S A N F O R D new 3 bdr. I blh, all
kit appl. I mo rent, sac. dap
3)11547

D E L T O N A unlur 3 bdr. I bth,
rrtrig A stove 5)00 mo 441
4554

A. DUDA &amp;
SONS INC.
ZELLW O O D , FLA.

Ollice clerk
1400
Accl R rc Clerk
5750
Recrptionil
3750
Account Clerk
5750
Rental Clerk
IM S
Dental Assisteni
5410
Delivery Driver
1*40
Cebinet Work
u ss
General Laborrr ........
154*
Switchboard
... ...
Open
Auto P a ris
Sale ........ ... Sal r Comm

I W IL L NO T B E R E 5 P O N
S IB L E F O R A N Y D E B T S BY
ANYO NE OTHER
THAN
M Y S E L F A S OF *10 1 1
Slg Dolores L. M ecy

*

These positions average 50 hour
work weeks and provide lull
Irln g e benefits Fo r m ore
in fo rm a tio n call w e e kd ays
(f04&gt; 317*111 ask lor Bill
P a rso n ol John Jacubcin
Evenings or weekends call
(3051 145 4070

AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
323-5174
T H E B E ST FOR
LESS
W E A R E PRO U D
O F OUR S E R V IC E
O V ER 20,000 P E O P L E
PLA CEDTHROUGH
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
L IK E YOU
WHY NOT Y O U ??
B E S T JO B S IN
TOWN.
CALL MONDAY
323-5174

I W IL L NO T B E R E S P O N S I
B L E F O R A N Y D E B T S IN
CURRED
BY
ANYONE
O T H E R THAN M Y S E L F AS
O F SE P T . 13, IN I.
Signed Tlm o Plkkerainen

37-B— R e n ta l O ffic e s

FARM MECHAHIC
A Duda A Sons Inc .a major agri
business has several openings
al its Zeilwood farm, for ex
perienced mechanics These
p o sitio n s involve, w ork on
gasoline and diesel engines
Experience in transm issions
and or welding nelpful. but not
essential

HAL COUERT REALTY

O R A N G E C IT Y — 17 *1. 1000 tq
II b u sin e ss condo. New,
beautiful. In W hispering Pines.
Ideal lor professional oil Ices
or restaurant. (M S I 7*3 1*14

31 A—Duplexes

Noon The Day Before Publication

**
+

J O B IN F O R M A T IO N
A la sk a n and O v e rse a s em
p lo ym en l
G re at
Incom e
potential C all 407 *41 1014
Dept
*400
P h one
Call
Refundable

1 B D R M Furn Apl. Adults only,
no pets 1715 mo Includes
water 1IOO dep 773 7541

DEADLINES

ATTEST
Arthur H. Beckwith, Jr.
C irrk lo B oard ol County
Comm issioners, Seminole
County, Florida
Publish. September 13. I N I
D E M 11

- 0

SIR) Per Week P a ri Tim # al
Hom e W ebster, A m t r l c a 'l
foremost dictionary company
needs home workers to update
local m ailing lists All ages,
experience unnecessary Call
1 714 *47 4000 E xt 5070

Orlando-W inter Park

LO ST gray poodle, 3rd erea
Deltona, needs m edication
Call N 4 7 i* 4*51 or 71* 3745

le g o l N otice"

TO TAL

C L A S S IF IE D A D S

41—Houses

37—Business Property

3 1 - A p * r tm a n ts F u r n i s h e d

7.000 sq. II it. Industrial or
Comm ercial Building an 17 * 3.
1.000 ft. In offlc* spec*. Call
377 ) 510 or 114 414}

CONVENIENCE
STOti

0 0 0 0 0
lo r y o u r p o w e r m o w er.

KldKIlV 00000
fo r y o u r musical in stalm en t.

K M X E Y ,OOOOO
for y o u r c o lo r television.

KKDKIFu7,

O O O O O

fo r y o u r d in e tte le t.

K M a iV o o o o o
It's easy (0 c o m

by w h en you u ie

TUI iYBNNG H B U U ) « NBUUO
A D V E R T IS E R
C L A S S I F IE D S E C T IQ U

Good salary, hospilalitalion, I
weak paid vacation every 1
m onths.
E x p e rie n c e
nol
n e c e ssa ry
F o r In ttrv ia w
phone th* m anager at:
Airport Blvd.
Cassotborry
Cater* A * * .
Lah aM ary

0 0* +• ** *

33)4)31
33* 1733
&gt;71-4113
2714141

SEMI NOLI

9 2 2 -2 6 11

ORLANDO-WINTIR PARK

C a ll to d a y l

IS lJfff)

■ V **-• »

b • s-F A v f.x iS

*

�l i f t

41— Houses

•11— Houses
la r g e Iram e home in Lake M a ry
on beautiful wooded acre )
bdrm, F la rm or 4lh bdrm, I ' t
B. C M A . ca rp e l, drapes,
oarage, carport $19 too 1)1
1)74

Alger and Pond Really Inc
19* W Lake V a r y Blvd
Associates Wanted
)7J 1*4)

Harold Hall

A S S "M A B L E
N o Qualifying
U •• ;n&lt;j mtg can br held by
o»nef 145 000 7 br. 1 ba. eat in
* • fam ily room K reading
room
Michael w Capbo
Rrokpr Owner
869 W U o r 377 7155
N E E D A S E R V IC E M A N ? You'll
lin d h lm listed in our Business
Directory
SS000 DO W N dvplea. &gt; t. I I .
double lot toned more units,
office. remodeled Will trade

•duii, Ui.soo total ))9 0)4»
O W N E R W IL L F IN A N C E
Large Country Home Floe older
J Story. 4 B R J Balh Hom e In
oorul condition Has several
citrus trees and garden space
This is ,our place Only
*42 M0

Cal IBart

REALTY, INC.
REALTOR
;

323-S774

R E A L tE S T A T E
R E A L T O R 377 7 m

house your fa m ily
priced r e d u ce o tl.too —
Now priced below appraisal,
thli ) bdrm home w beamed
ceiling! A lovely, shaded lot is
Sanlord's best bu, at only
t ll.M O II

C O M P L E T E L Y rem odeled 7
unit apt house w large rooms,
paddle Ians, smoke alarm s -f
V positive cash Howl tlt.tOOll

7 BR
Pool iU4 Country Club
Drive VA. F H A C o n v 131000
N r * Roof 647 MOO Broker
Owner
COUNTRY C LU B M AN O R 3
bdr I 17 btr. 1 state R d 477 3
bdr. 1 bth 13500 dn . will carry
2nd for 17% 373 4077

CLEAN ,
CLEAN,
CLEAN
d e scrib e s this easy liv in g
home and Its neighborhood!
Panelled Fam Rm. eat in kit
„
w Rge + Rel. big bdrm i. 1
utility bldgs t N 1 111 land
*
scaped lol lor tit.M O l I
N E E D P R IM E E X P O S U R E f
We have two separate parcels
w ith
excellent
Irontage.
R M O I toned ) bdrm on 110 ■
&gt;44 parcel w possible owner
linancing al 140.040 and a R C I
toned ) toned ) bdrm w 10 a
l i t lot lor Sta.tOOII

CALL 323-5774
L A B O R D A Y S P E C IA L S
I Acre 7 G C ) Sewer and water
Priced lor quick sale Terms
»77.S0O
J t Acres 7 A ) } Br Home. 7 Br
Mobile Root cellar Fish lank.
JOO FI Waterlront Terms
Stl.tOO

/

Like New 4 J C A H. Carpeted,
scree n
porch.
E n clo se d
g a ra g e
O w ner lin a n cin g
Good Terms A sking SSI.SOO

B A T E M A N 'R E A L T Y

l

Lie Real Estate Broker
1440 Sanlord Ave

^21-0759

322-7441

ST EN ST R O M
REALTY - REALTORS
S a n fo rd 's S a le s L e a d e r
W E L IIT AND SEL L
M O R I H O M II THAN
A N V O N IIN T H I
SAN FO RD A R IA
JU ST F O R V O U I 1 bdr. f t bth
home, on large landscaped let.
completely lencedi Nice eat in
kit, dining rm. large patte.
utility rm and morel tlM O C I
LO T S OF C H A R M I Spacious )
bdr. ) bth. ) story heme on 1
lo ll near dow ntow n a re a l
Remodeled, equip bit., lormal
dining, sun porch up stairs.
Fla
rm. patios A e itras
galore I S44.140

H U N t F F S S P F f l A I raw ly M r
tins season e&gt;4S $1500 You
deliver ) 7 ) 0 l l l
New 14 a 10 Royal O aks } bdrm.
7 B. SI4.V9S. or U a 44 7 bdrm.
I ' i B. SU.99S delivered A set
up within I X miles We have
V A linancing. no money down
or conventional 10 *. down
E a sy financing only al Uncle
R o y 's M obile Home Sales U S
441 Leesburg (9041 717 07)4.
open w e e kn igh ts 'I I I 7 30
Sundays 17 4 p m

Cape Cod 4 Bdrm. 7 Balh. M in i
C ondition
Large
M a ile r
Bedrm W alk To Store! And
Fine Rettauranti Good Buy
SSt.tOO
Country Home, ) Bedroom!. }
B alh! 1 10 Acre. I Y rs Old.
Large
F a m ily
Room ,
Fireplace. A M u ll To See
*49.000

SALES ASSOCIATES
NEEDED
5 openings 1st*.
Call F ra n k
323 tw o

loob.ng For a New Hom e’
( i&gt;ecb f he Want A d * for hou*e%
.4 every * iie and price

62— Lawn Garden

TMiS IS NO M IS P R IN T
New )4 a e0 Royal O aks ) bdrm. 7
B lireplace. cathedral celling,
great room , g a rd e n tub.
A m any m ore ralras. only
177.ISO delivered A set up
w lh m ISO miles V A no money
down conventional ! 0 \ down
Shop U n c le R o y 's M o b ile
Home Sales m Leesburg, on
441 South 19041 711 0)74 Open
weeknights 'III 7 X . Sundays
17 * p m
See our beaulilul new B R O A D
M O R E . Iron! A rear B R s
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E H O M E S
M 0) Orlando Dr
777 S700
V A A F H A Financing
MAKE
R O O M *TO S T O R E
YOUR
W IN T E R
IT E M
S
S E L L " D O N 'T N E E D S "
F A ST W IT H A W A N T AD.
Phone 777 7411 or 1)1 f f f ] and
a
o Iriendly
iriendly Ad Visor will
wll help'
you.
YOU__________________

62-A—Farm Equip
I Q U I P M I N T A U C T IO N Sat
Sept If 10 a m )S farm
tractor* Case 1130 Komatsu
tratb shove l 4 N I hoc bet*
Michigan D a v d Brown in
ternahonai. Ferguson
John
Deere. Loading shovel*, fo rd
Fe rguson,
C ase
digge r
loader* sb*d loader* A C forb
hit Galhon traffic roller K
qradef. Wayne 6*6 mobile
crane. Forf 77ff bucket trueb.
(*MC t&gt;oa van Dum p truths
Ret) garbage trueb. mob-le
sweeper, school bus lowiKiy
tra&lt;ler Cttevy 77 t* roll b 4(b
More 4»»riv ng daily Various
length* I beam rhannrt &lt;ron
etc 6 mch water p-pr 3 in
water pump Bush hoq a»Ki
many m ore mi*c item*
D A Y T O N A A U T O AUC T ION
H W Y 8? Dayfon«t
904 255 8)11

4 P IE C E Antique Dmmq Rm
Suite, antique Oak high back
otticecha.r Wood chairs and a
lew other items )7? 44S)
44 B S A W IT H 69 motor neefls
10 be pul together * I SO Utility
trailer SI1S 1 Haque water
conditioners complete 7 yrs
S5J0 R id ng lawn mowet. S H P
I! ) 177 45M no Suns

51—Household Goods
7 E T A G E R E 'S . desk A chair
solid oak. X gal aquarium
vacuum cleaner A m uch,
much more 17) 4S0)

52-A ppliances
L I K E n e w G E Refrigerator 14
cu II I »r old *700 G E G as
Dryer also 1 ,r old S IM Call
77) 74*1

5 )—TV Radio-Stereo
Good Used I V s . *7) A up
M IL L E R S
7419Orlando Fr
Ph 777 01)7

Air Conditioning
Chris will tervica A C ’s, refng.
Iretrert. water coolers, mite
Call )7) 9727

A iten tlo n s

L A R G E g a ra g e sa le aulos.
antiques lots, lots more Sat
A Sun 10 ? IS4 W Crystal Lk
Aye , Lake M a ry
B A C K yard sale Sal A Sun .
come m ake your choice 790!
S Park Aye 4 4

JULY TOP
SALES ASSOCIATE

by Lois 77)
I Mm*hr)r,
Or
Sunland
Estates. Sunlord. Call 172 ) I4 I

a l t e r a t io n s

Beauty Care
TO W ER S BE AU T Y SA L O N
F O R M E R L Y H arn e tt's Beauly
Nook *19 E 1st SI . T77 *147

Boarding A Grooming
Anim al Haven Boarding and
G ro o m in g K e n n e ls Shady,
insulated, screened. Ily prool
inside, outside runs Fans
Also AC cages We cater lo
your pe ls
S ta rlin g slu d
registry Ph 172 S1S7
Snow Hill Kennel oilers Cal fc
Dog Flea Baths t) up 74
Hour. Full Service laSSM T

Building Contractor

$

Complete Ceram ic Tile Strv.
walls, tloors. countertops, re
model, repair F r est 77* 0711
M L IN t / l R T ILE
N e w u rrrp a -r Irak y ihnwy»s ov,
specialty. 2* yrs E . p 149 0 4 7

Clock R epair

VICKY BASILA

STENSTROM STENSTROM

W'ir*
.T
T V * K . Y r_* d»a»Ai

2 8 6 6 P A R K D R IV E -

j • d m. a# * * • • ' • • • ' * •••«

e^gmaaafa.ma,

••

* e

a

1877 T O Y O T A Corona Delyae 4
Speed
T r a n *m .**io n
AC
Stereo R a d io
f» c
Cond
It473 37) 3686

I7IS • » en( t iA v r
More Info 373 7)40

ilA Y TON A A U T O A U C T IO N
Mw , 97 I mill- w rs! ol Sewed
m i O a,Iona Beach w ll hold
.1 public A U T O A U C T IO N
ever, W rd ne id a, al 4 p m U s
the only one «n F lor ida You vet
the reversed pr»ce Call 804
73*6)11 for further cleta-l*

titttti

75— Recreational Vehicles
I VN) ("Ml VY Step V»n 7)3 6 Cyl
i vp to 000 lb* C.vw 1730
17 14*76

66— Horses
A l&lt;pa Ioo *4 regi*tered *tud blatb
with white bianbet Aiso 17
month old filly, sam e color
)7) 6716 after 6

76— Auto Parts
Used Car Part* all mabe* and
model* 37? 7687 We buy Used
Car* and Truck*

•I yOU a fen I u*ing yOUt IKK)l
♦ able fabe a cue. and veil »t
with a Herald classified ad
Can J77 761 •

7) t B IR D lo a d e d N*m ▼ re*
••l ie With White Ten nr 74
(u tia ** Supreme No money
down |73 mo J)9 8t(Yi 6)4 4605
Dealer
19’ 7 A M C S t D A N 6 ( yI
auto Tran* very clean
57130 377 1387

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
3)8 6866

W E L S H PO NY
H u ck skm lX O
Call 17) S064

P73 C A D U l AC Coupe D e V ilIf
• u»l p ower. A C. low mileage
A M F M leather inferior
37) 0876

77—Junk C ars Rem oved

71 V O L V O 1474 Sp
doth seat* Good
Cond 6800 37) 67)7

BUY JU N K C AR S A TRU CKS
From S tO lo SM or more
Call 322 14’ «. 377 4 440

67— Livestock-Poultry
COW S A N D H O G S
f OR S A L E

7| M a v E R I C k 6cvl «-nq
A C rad o excellent
t ondd.on 1630 37) 710)

Top Dollar Pa&gt;d tor Junb A Used
car* truths A heavy equip
ment )?? 5880

68—Wanted to Buy

78-Motorcvciw

Anliqurs Diam onds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
B n d g rs Antiques
)717M1

76 730 H O N D A cacellenf con
difion garaqe hept Custom
pamt lot* of chrome, also
Honda part* 51800 377 7766

Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass, silver, gold Weekdays
» 4 10 Sal 9 1 k o K o M o Tool
r o «1* W 1st SI 777 1100

XL 75 Honda
5775
37) 6*16after 6
| — _
750 H O N D A 75 eicellent con
d-tion Wmdtammer SS many
t’lfra * 51300 37) 1369

71-Antiques
Depression Glass
Sl«ow A Sale
Sanford C «vic Center
Sat Sept 19th 10 til 6
Sun Sept 70 10 til 3
A d m issio n l! 50

H O N D A XL 750 76 In good
condition 5300 t .ill all 6 p m
8 )0 7415
IX )N f stO W E It sf l l IT w th
a low cost Classified Ad

7) F O R D Grand Torino sport* 2
dr full pow er A C. qnnd
(ondilton |7S0 firm 373 1504
7)

P O N T IA C
C a ta lin a full
ivw er A I mechanical, needs
lK»dy work 5)30 37) 1304

nave a room lo rent* le t a
ila ssifird itd find a tenant lor
you*

★ B&amp;H AutoSales ★
Tk 339 7989 *y
f) Vulb\ sljtion wgn
619000
♦4 Audi i d
67100
f6 Bu i b 775 (oupr
6)100
77 Thundr-f b-fd
6)100
77 Sunbird
67900
Bank financing available
5 ! N Mwy 17 97
Casselberry

Cone r* f t Work

or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

P ressure Cleaning

Mini-U-Lock

I M A N Q U A L IT Y O P E R A T IO N
* yrs e .p Patios. Driveways.
i4c Wayne Beal )7I 1)71

Somebody i* looking lof your
bargain Oiler It today in the
Classilied Ads

REALTO RS
6 A N F O R D , F L O R ID A 1 2 7 7 1

w-d I
». •d a d g *. «d

/

v * • V
k »• * • &gt;

•
dw « mt.

Vaceifion tim e i* here get what
you need lor a h app y I •me with

a Classified Ad

Electrical

Remodeling

Nursing Center

Ceram ic Tile

S A N F O R D . F L O R ID A 3 2 7 7 1

» OWU
G a la t le
307
A u'oniafir Tran*m -***on AC
Cl9*an
f scelleht Cond t*on
T re* like new 88 000 M 'le *
17) )M 6

iv m

H A N F O R D A U C T IO N •

io yrs e .p a h
types ol dectrlal work at lair
prices 77) 47)4

e l e c t r ic ia n

Quality electrical work 77 yrs
experience Minor repairs lo
complete wiring 177 0716

OUR R A T E S A R E LO W ER
Lakeview Nursing Center
919 E Second SI . Sanlord
272 410!

g w altn ey

jew eler

X 4 S P a rk A y *
727 4 X 9

Paddle Ians installed,
residential electrical work,
call 772 474)

H andym an
Painting, carpentry, all types ol
home repairs Call lor tree
estimate 377 I97S

H a u lin g A
Y a r d W o rk
L.tllr want ads br.nq b-g t»-g
results Just try one ])7 7611
or 111 999)___________________

Home Improvement
C E N T R A L F L O R IO A H O M E
IM P R O V E M E N T *
Painting Roof mg Carpentry
I it Bonded 6 Guaranteed
Free Estim ates 11 ) 7*49
J A B Home Improvement —
Carpentry work al any type
Root repair*, gutter work,
painting (interior or e.terlor),
plumbing, tpacialitf in mobile
home repair* A root coating,
and wood patio deck* Free
estimate 17)40)6

B. E . Link C onst.

322-7028

ClAVSifird Ads s t r the smallest
b&gt;g nrw s items \o u will find
at .y where
It

you are h aving difficulty
finding a place to bye. car to
drive, a iob. or some service
you have need ol. read all our
want ads every day

Financing Available

R e st H om es
• Oak Haven k«»l Hom e a
• D e l &lt;irxl*
Small home like A C L F facility
Situated very pleasant location
short distance from city &gt;4
hour su p e rvisio n , m eals,
laundry, assistance with l*ath
4 personal groom ing Large
fenced in ya rd
a ir con
d itio n m g P riv a te 4 setni
private room s Call 7)6 6136

Painting

Roofing

Hallm an Painting A Repairs
Oualily work Free E st. Dike
lo Seniors *&gt;* **90 Refer.

R O O F *, leaks repaired. Replace
ralten eaves and shingle werk.
Ilctn ie 'd . insured , banded
M ike 111 4)12.

T E R R V S IN 7 E R IO R *
W allp a p e rin g , p a in tin g Leer
price! Guar work 7))0«)a

Christian Rooting tl yrs e.p
149 )!M . tree est Rerootmg
speciallie in repair work A
new rooting

Painting A or
P ressure Cieening

S O U T H E R N R O O F IN G
e.p . re rooting, leak
ist
D e pendable A
price Day or night

No iob loo large or sm all
Quality a must Call 772 0011
Relerences F r Est

O'O Tabby have a little ol kit
le n s ' Sell them with a last
action Classilied Ad Call )77
7411 or 1)1 *99)

S A N D B L A S T IN G
D A V II W IL D IN G
37 2 4Tt». S A N T O R O

F re d d ie R o b in so n P lu m b in g
R e p a ir * .' t e u c tt l. W
C
Sprinkler* 771 1)10. 37)6104
P O N t E C A P L U M B IN G
Can
tfrwclwn. Repair*. Em ergen
cy Lie . Bonded. In * 72) 407*

Landscaping

t* yrs
special
honest
777 174)

Sandblasting

P k m tfn g

T ra a S trv ic s

HARPER'S T R IE SERVICE
Trim m ing, rem oving A Land
scaping Frea E tt 7 1 )0 X 1

EAROe T i l l INSTALLS!
Old

Placed ia))xi

Concrete Work, looter*, floor* A
pool* L a n d s c a p in g A sod
work F re e est 177110)

We handle the
Whole Ball ol Wa.

Home Repairs

Landscaping.

to n crere vwttk

R em o d elin g S p e c ia list

N E E D A S E R V I C E M A N 'Y o u 'l l
lino him listed in our Business
Dirrctory

Odd Jobs
TWO F A M IL Y sale.
I ) Saturday
704 Laurel Or . Sanlord

■M

2 S 6 5 P A R K D R IV E -

• 0 -A u to s

35 ( A S H V IS A M C . A M t X
PR C SS66

D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1

54— G arage Sales

R E A LT Y -

M

A N D LET AN E X P E R T D O T H E JO B

B ill C orso. S ta le C ertltled
B u ild in g
C o n tra cto r
Residential or Commercial.
New or Remodeled 7)7 0494

R E A LT Y - R E A L T O R S

4 N N M

i

A U C T IO N *

LIN D A M O R G A N

M

BUSINESS SERVICE USTING

N IC E Tw in D bl recondition
bedding *|0 Set Sa n lo rd
Auction 171) A French ) 7)
1)40

We pay cosh lor I I I A 7nd
mortgages R a y Legg. Lie
Mortgage Broker 7)9 7749

AUGUST TOP
SALES ASSOCIATE

M

T o L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s -

Kffim or» parts, service. us «m
washers M O O N E Y A P P L I
A N C fci J77 0691

* AT. * S E P T . 14 • I I A M .
I
7 11 Acre Tracts. •
• lin e d R C I i •
• • PA V E O ROADS p
Directions Highw ay 441 North
Irom Apopka lo Plymouth
Sorre nto R d
Tu rn righ.
A p p ro x im a te ly
S
M ile s
Term s M N Down D O S Day
ol Salel Balance at la \ lor *
Years
LOUHAUBNER
R E A L T Y IN C
1*41010

M

• P U B L IC A U C T IO N •
•MON., SE P T . 14.7 P.M.*
Anything you’d imagine
in a used
furniture store.

C» A l*f MSI A N S Adult
f rm.»ie* White. Riacb
5130 3750 373 3313

The "G o o d Ole D a y t” h iv e
never left the Classified Ad
s
The Buys are still The
Best l

47A -M ortg^H
Bought A Sold

*

M

K ing t lj * bad &lt;n o frtm a l l*«
Good Condition
) ) ) 7*14.

47—Reel E state Wanted

4 9 -C o u n try P r o p e r t y

• M

! * '* V O T O B f C A N f Hop of »he
Itfiri S0CC Recently rrbu l»
4trq(ne Very good cond. tn
ifkHtr* Saddle
Asb rvj
V400 Aft B |« m 1? I 4SS?

CO NSU LT O UR

W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
316 U S E F IR S T ST
377 6677

E V E R Y O A V I* B A R G A IN
D A Y IN T H E W A N T A D S 777
M U or I I I Pet)

We buy e q u ity In Houses,
ujartmentt. vaconl land and
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V E S T
M E N T S . P O Bo. 7M0. San
lord. Fla 77771 777 4141

A N IM A L Miivfff K n t n f ll board
*nq 4 qroom m q. Needed
P e k in g e se 4 sm a ll silv e r
poodle for stud Male Owner*
tall 377 3&gt;37

349 3756

PO O l t a b l e lor sale 9) . »
inches
S in g le Slate lop
Quarter type S)J0 )?)0909

S IA -Fum ituri

Don’t Despair O r Pull Your Hair
Use A Want Ad 172 M i l or
1)1 099)

liiw n Mowi-r Sales and Service
We Sell the Be*t and Service
the Re*t Bob Ball Wevtern
Auto )0I W 1st St

Sleeping Bags Sale
*19 t9 ea
A R M Y NAVY SURPLUS
)I0 Sanlord Ave
)17 S19I

46— C o m m e r c ia l P r o p e r t y

322-2420

F IL L D IR T A T O P S O IL
YELLO W SAND
Call Clark A HirtST) 1M0

M E N *. L A D IE S ' A N D C H IL
O R E N 'S ) « * . ol! all B lur
D rm m Jeans. Liberty Bibb
Overalls and Boots E a rly b ird
gels selection ol suet
W IL C O S A L E * H W Y 44 W 4
M l W OF 14 S A N F O R D i l l
4*11.

S E lO L E R R E A L T Y B R O K E R
77I-4440

C A S H F O R E Q U IT Y
We can d o se In a* h r i
CailBart Real Estate 777 1499
_
W A N T E D to buy. 7 Bdrm Houle
Sanlord Area 777 1497 A ll 4
p m

' f"*-

30 »ru**r*.
30 long
37) 1716 A fW 6

) A C R E S W O O D E D JA C K SO N
BAY
AREA,
O STEEN
*14. M 0
S E L L E R F IN A N
C IN G

O V IE D O Ice Cream Sandwich
Shop Fully equip SI7.S0O U )
1444 or M S 7171

*

P C A V ID E O Recorder tor your
trlevi*9on Com e* with ( lit 6
Tap*** and Storage ca*e
377 4ttl

H IO E A B E D
good condition
call )71 3114

M A Y F A IR V I L L A S I 1 A S
Bdrm.. I B a lh Condo Villas,
n o il to M e y lt lr Country Club.
Select yevr let, I leer p u n A
interior decort Ovelity cen
itm cted by Sheomekor ter
441.140 A up I

li Mi Yep ^[TcZ ess

6t— Building Atatonals

S A N F O R D Prim e 14 54 Acres w
options lor toning (I7.SO0 w
Terms W Melicjow skl )77
191). E ve s 777 ) M !

R I D O E W O O D A C R E S ! Dvplea
loll Zoned, all vtllltlet. paved
reed s.
N e ar
SNSt
W ill
subordinate lor builders. Buy
newl Build new or letert Just
ll lent From II4 . IIS I

j

78A M opeds

For Estate. C o m m e rc ia l or
Residential Auctions A Ap
praisais Call Dell s Auction
17) S470
---------------------------- ---

yVaUh zing 3700 379

#»r« you a full time driver w*th a
»Mrt time c a r ’ Our cla**tfifd*
are loaded with good buy for
vOu

H&gt;—Miscellaneous for Sale

) A C R E S C L E A R E D L A N D IN
P A O L A *7)000

42—Mobile Horms

E ie cu live Home In Beaulilul
Idyllwilde ) Bdrm t. I Balh. w
Cent H A Screened Solar
S Heated Pool A Paho Lovely
Tree Shaded Lot ttt.SOO

&amp;

m ortgage

7 ') A C R E S W O O O EO R O A D
F R O N T A G E IN O S T E E N
*17.M0

, k1f

Sunday, Sopt. II, 1*11— tb

72— Auction
Germ an Shepherd M ale 3 Vr*
Super with c h ild re n etc

AkC H l G Toy Poodle pup* I
wb* female 7 bib I erm 6175
A S77S 668 48)6

?•. . A C R E S . T A L L P I N E S
G E N E V A *1).M 0 LOW IN
TEH EST
a s s u m a b l e

4♦ A C R E S W O O D E D L IK E A
P A R K . ON TO P OF A H IL L IN
G E N E V A t40.000. T E R M S
A V A IL A B L E

I

'J

y ^ i r

S A C R E S . T A L L P IN E S . S O M E
P A ST U R E . RO A D FRONT
A G E R IV E R A C C E SS. G E N
E v a 17) ooo

4 H O M E S IT E S IN O R A N G E
G R O V E AT U M A T IL L A *1)00
EACH. C R A Z Y T E R M S

TO
EAT

Evtning Herald, Sanlord, FI.

m

i I 1

•TOO ON I l f ) . N E A R N E W
W IN N D I X I E C E N T E R C O M
IN G AT L A K E M A R Y B L V D
ZONED
C O M M E R C IA L .
SI7I.00

TOC
5 IC H

THAT
IT W AS
H ALF
60N E
BEFORE
HE 6CTT
THE

=r=r.L

6S— Pets Supplies

W tlcoSale* N U T R E N A Feed*
Hwy 44 W - 377 4170
Moq f trvsher Pellet*
|5 63
Layer f
65 90
Cattle F aMener Pellet*
15 70
IW f K w ik
54 93

43—Lots- A creage

X A C R E S W O O D E D R O L L IN G
H IL L S IN G E N E V A A R E A
UT00 P E R A C R E . S E L L E R
F IN A N C IN G M A Y D IV ID E

I*

HE ATE ^

60 FAST

TA ST E

E X T R A S O A L O R E ) Br. I Balh
Home E a l in K i t , Dining Rm.,
Cent Air. New Carpel Large
screened perch w o sh -D ry .
Fenced and M a ro l 1)9,444

I? Olllces Throughout
Central Florida
U M N O
t it W Lake M a r, Bird
J N D R IF T W O O D V IL L A G E

SABO TAG ED

rooa
bu t t er

THE SC A LE S'

S U P E R 1 ) bdr, I bln home in
qreal condition! Large eat m
kit. porch, utility rm B morel
S4I.OOO

C A L L A N Y T IM E

LAKE MARY

‘
|

with Major Hoople

E 6 A p T c A i^ T ^ T v iT 3 f T \0
IMAGINE WHAT &lt; P0UNP* .SINCE
HAPPENED: TVE \l SPOOHEV
RECHECKEP MYJ WUR DESSERT.'
DATA! WAVBE \ WH0 5AYP
THE EXERCISE &lt;7 IT DIDN'T
MACHINE INDUSTRy K VW RK?

99.114 R IG H T &lt;n the Middle ol
Lake
M a r,
W alk
to
everything Close lo Crystal
Lake *17.000 777 4(49 Realtor
Associate

SS4I
Pork

ASSOCIATES. IN C. REALTORS**

A T L A S 10a44
I Bdrm 17500
)49 S7S4

) C L E A R E D O U P L E X L O T S IN
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t b —Ivanlng Herald, Sanford, FI.

L e ga l N o tice

it

1
s

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o lle * It hereby given that i am
m g e g e d In b u tln e tt at 3140
O rle in t W ay*. Apopka, FI*. 1170)
Seminole County, F lo rid * under
the I k tit lout nam e ot A R C T IC A tR
•nd that | intend lo register tald
nam e w llh the Clerk ol the Circuit
Court, Seminole Count y, F lor Id * In
accordance with the provtUorw ot
the Flctltlout N am e Statutes, To
W II:
Section I t s Of F lo r id *
Statutes 11S7.
S&gt;g Robert W Kemper
publish: September 4. n , to, 17,
t f ll
D E M 71
_________
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice it hereby given that we
a rt engaged In butlnett at 100
Oaford Road, Fe rn Park, Seminole
County, Florid * under the ticlitio u t n am e ol H A M B O N E 'S
R E S T A U R A N T , and lhat w t In
lend to register tald nam e with the
C le rk ol the C irc u it Court,
Seminole County, Florida In *c
cordanct with the provisions ol the
Fictitious N a m * Statutes, To wit:
Section It s Of Florida statutes
If 57.
Slg Jam es R. Hamilton
Karen J. Hamilton
Publish: A ugutl JO. September 4.
ij.-io, lest
D E L 115
R E S O L U T IO N NO. M l
A R E S O L U T IO N OF T H E C IT Y
O F A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S ,
F L O R ID A , F IX IN G A T IM E A N D
P L A C E IN W H IC H T H E O W N E R S
OF
PROPERTY
TO
BE
ASSESSED
FO R
CON
S T R U C T IO N O F
G R A O IN G ,
D R A IN A G E , S ID E W A L K , C U R B
A N D P A V IN G ON N E W B U R Y PORT A V E N U E F R O M TH E
N O R T H R IG H T O F W A Y L IN E
O F B A Y W O O D S T R E E T TO T H E
C E N T E R L IN E
OF
BRANCH
STREET
VACATED,
A
D IS T A N C E
OF
APPROX
IM A T E L Y
1015
FEET
IN
T H E C IT Y O F A L T A M O N T E
S P R IN G S , F L O R ID A , O R A N Y
OTHER
PERSO N S
IN ­
T E R E S T E D T H E R E IN M A Y
A P P E A R A N D B E H E A R O A S TO
T H E P R O P R IE T Y A N D A D V IS
A B IL IT Y O F M A K IN G SU C H
IM P R O V E M E N T S . A S TO T H E
COST T H E R E O F , T H E M A N N E R
OF
PAYM ENT
AND
THE
A M O U N T A S S E S S E D A G A IN S T
EACH
PROPERTY
A S IM
PROVED
W H E R E A S , the C ity Com
mlttlon ot the City of Altamonte
Springs, Florida.did by Resolution
No aal deem it advisable to
construct g ra d in g , d rain a ge ,
sidewalk, curb and paving on
Newburyport Avenue from the
north right ot w ay line ol Baywood
Street to the centerline ot Branch
Street vacated, a distance ot ip proalmately 1015 feet, pursuant to
the authority of Chapter 170,
Florida Statutes, In the manner at
set lorlh in Resolution No. 441; and
W H E R E A S , by la id Resolution
No. ail, the City Clerk w at in
slructed to prepare an Attestm ent
R oll In a c co rd a n ce w ith the
method ot assessm ent provided In
said Resolution N o M l ; and
W H E R E A S , the City Clerk ol Ihe
City ol A ltam o n te S p rin g s,
Florida, pursuant lo the direction
ol the C ity C o m m is s io n h as
pre p a re d and co m ple ie d an
A sse ssm e n t n * u w h ich w a s
yreeented to the CUV Commie*tan
ot the City ot Allam onla Springs.
Florid*, on September I, tfll, and
which tald Assasim ant Roll w as
accepted and ordered tiled In the
records ol the City; and
W H E R E A S , under Chapter 170.
Florida Statutes, public hearing It
mandatory whereby the owners of
the property to be assessed or any
Other persons interested therein
m a y a p p aa r before Ih e C ity
Comm ittion and be heard as lo the
p ro p rltty and a d v is a b ility ot
m aking such improvements and as
lo Ihe cost thereof and as to the
amount l her sol lo be assessed
against each properly to 1m
proved
NOW, T H E R E F O R E , B E IT
RESO LVED
B Y T H E C IT Y
C O M M IS S IO N O F T H E C IT Y OF
ALTAM O NTE
S P R IN O S
F L O R ID A . A S FO L LO W S:
I That a public haarlng will be
held bn O d o b tr 11, If l l, al 7:00
PM
or a t soon iheraatler at
possible, at which lim a Ih * owners
Dt the property lo be assessed for
Ihe co n stru ctio n ol g ro d ln g
drain a ge , side w alk, cu rb and
paving on Newburyport Avenue
Irorn Ihe north right ot way lint ol
Baywood Street lolhe centerline ol
Branch Street vacated, a distance
ot approximately to il feet, in
accordance with Resolution No
M l. and any other persons In
lerested therein m ay appea
belora tht City Cam m lstlon and be
heard as lo lha propriety and
advisability ol m aking such Im
provements and as to the coat
thereof lo be assessed against each
properly so Im proved according lo
the Assessm ent Roll prepared by
the City Clerk ot the City ot
Altamonte Springs, Florid *
1 That Ih * City Clerk ol Ih * City
ol Altamonte Springs. Florida
shall give ten (101 days nolle* in
writing to tht properly owners as
set lorth in ih * Assessm ent Roll as
to the time and place ol the public
hearing designated herein; said
Not let shall deserved by m ailing a
copy ol sam e to tach el lha said
properly owners at his or her last
known address as obtained Irem
the records otlhe City Clerk ot the
C ity of A ltam o n te S p rin g *.
F lo r id *, or H orn su ch other
sources as the City Clerk deem*
rellabl* and tht said City Clerk
sh all a sta b lish proof ol said
mailing by allldayll which shall be
tiled with Ih * City Clerk
] That notice ot the time and
plact of lha public hearing as
author Ired herein shall be given by
two ( I I publication* a week apart
In th t E v e n in g H e ra ld , *
newspaper el general circulation,
published in Seminole County,
Florida, provided that the last
publication shall be alleast on* (I)
week prior to the d a l* ot the
hearIng. Said notica shall describe
ih * streets or other areas to b*
improved and ad vis* all persons
in le re ste d therein that tht
descriptions ol each property to be
assessed and the amount lo be
assessed lo each piece or parcel ot
properly m ay be ascertained al
in t e lllc a ot the City Clerk ol the
C ity Ot A lla m o n la Sp rin gs,
Florida
4. That this resolution shall
becom e t l l e c l l v * Im m e d ia te ly
upon Its passap* and adoption
P A S S E D A N D A D O P T E D this
im day ol Saptombor. A O I N I
MAYOR
ATTEST:
C IT Y C L E R K
Publish: September 11 SB. IN I
O E M 41

lo n d a y .tf f .ll, m i

L e gal N otice

le g o l N o tice

Legol N o tice
F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
Notice it hereby given that l am
engaged in business at 71l&gt; j
French A v * Sanford, F I* 17771
Seminole County, Florida under
Ihe
f let If lout
nam e
of
P R O F E S S IO N A L P O L IS H IN G 1
W IN D O W T IN T OF S A N F O R D ,
and that I intend to register tald
nam e with the Clerk ol me circuit
Court, SeminoleCounty, Florid * in
accordance w llh the provisions ot
the Flctltlout N a m * Slatutet, To
W it
Section It S O t F lo rid a
Statutes 1fS7
S&gt;g L a rry G Jackson
Publish
September I], 10. 17,
October a, t f ll
O E M at
N O T IC E
U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
N A M E STATUTE
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
Notice Is hereby given lhat lie
unde rsigne d, p u rsu a n t to the
"F i c t it io u s
Nam a
S la t u fa "
Chapter M S Of, Florida Statule,
will register with Ih * Clerk ol the
Circuit Courl in and lor Sem lnslt
County, Florida, upon receipt of
proof ot the publication ol this
notice, the liefitlou* nam e to wit:
M O N E Y M A R K E T IN G S Y S T E M S
OF F L O R ID A under which I am
engaged In b u sin e ss al 100
Sweetwater Square in the City ol
Long wood, Florida
That ih * party interested in
said business enterprise is as
follow s: P A R K E R , S M IT H A
H A M M O N D , INC.
Dated at Long wood. Seminole
County. Florida, this fth day of
September I N I
Publish. September II. 10. 17,
October 4. t f ll
D E M 4S
C IT Y
OF
CASSELBERRY,
F L O R ID A N O T IC E O F P U B L IC
H E A R IN O
TO
C O N S ID E R
A D O P T IO N
OP
PRO PO SED
O R D IN A N C E
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N :
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by I h * C ity of C a sse lb e rry,
Florida, lhal Ih * C lly Council will
hold a public hearing to consider
enactment ol Ordinance MO en­
titled:
A N O R D IN A N C E O F I H E C IT Y
O F C A S S E L B E R R Y , F L O R ID A .
A D O P T IN G A B U D G E T F O R
T H E C IT Y O F C A S S E L B E R R Y ,
F L O R ID A . F O R T H E F IS C A L
Y E A R B E G IN N IN G O C T O B E R I,
If ll, and E N D IN G S E P T E M B E R
X). If ll. and A P P R O P R IA T IN G
A N D A L L O C A T IN G R E V E N U E
OF T H E C IT Y TO T H E U T IL IT Y
F U N D O P E R A T IO N S B U D G E T
FO R
THE
F IS C A L
YEAR;
P R O V ID IN G
C O N F L IC T S ;
S E V E R A B IL IT Y ;
and
EFF E C T IV E D A T E .
This nolle* I* given pursuant to
tho provisions ol Chapter 144.
Florida Statutes, and Ih * Charier
and Ordinances ol the Clly ol
Casselberry, Florida, as amended
and supplemented
Said Ordlnanca will be con
sldered on lirsl reading on Menday. September 14, If l l, and Ih *
Clly Council will consider sam e lor
final passage,' In accordance wllh
Chapter IM , and adoption a lltr tho
public hearing which will be held
In tb* City Hall ot Cassalberry,
Florida, on Monday, September
IS, a* ! : M) P.M
P.M.. or
at peasfcia
meeting Interested parties m ay
appear and be heard wllh respect
to tho proposed ordlnanca. This
(waring m ay be continued Irom
time to time until tmal action is
taken by Ih * City Council.
Copies of the proposed ordinance
are available at tlw City Hall with
I he Clerk ot the City and same m ay
be Inspected by Ih * public.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : If a
per ton dec Ides lo o p peal a decision
made wllh respect lo any matter
considered *1 Ih * above hearing,
he will need a verbatim record ot
all p ro caa d ingt, In c lu d in g Ih *
testimony and evidence, which
record Is nol provided by the Clly
ol Casselberry. (Chapter 10 ISO.
Law s ol Florida. It M l
Dated this fth day ol September,
If l l
M A R Y W HAW THORNE
Clly Clerk
Publish: September II. If l l
D E M 40
C IT Y
OP
C ASSELBERRY
F L O R ID A N O T IC E OF P U B L IC
H E A E IN O
TO
C O N S ID E R
A D O P T IO N
OP
PRO PO SED
O R D IN A N C E
TO W H O M IT M A Y C O N C E R N
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
by I h * C ily ol C e sse lb e rry
Florid*, lhal Ih * City Council will
hold a public hearing lo consider
enactment ot Ordinance 4]t tn
tilled
A N O R D IN A N C E O F T H E C IT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . F L O R ID A
A D O P T IN G A B U D G E T F O R
TH E C IT Y OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
F L O R ID A . F O R TH E F IS C A L
Y E A R B E G IN N IN G O C T O B E R I,
If ll, and E N D IN G S E P T E M B E R
» . If ll, and A P P R O P R IA T IN G
A N D A L L O C A T IN G R E V E N U E
OF
THE
C IT Y
TO
THE
G E N E R A L F U N O O P E R A T IO N S
B U D G E T F O R T H E F IS C A L
YEAR.
P R O V ID IN G
CON
F L IC T S . S E V E R A B IL IT Y ; and
E F F E C T IV E O A T E ,
This nolle* Is given pursuant to
the provisions ot Chapter IM.
Florid * Statutes, and Ih * Charier
and Ordinance* ot the City ol
Casselberry, Florida, as amended
and supplemented
Said Ordinance will be con
sldered on lirst reading on Mon
day, September 14. If ll, and Ihe
City Council will consider u r n * lor
final passage. In accordance with
Chapter IM , and adopt wn attar Ih *
public hearing which will be held
in lha C lly Hall of Cassalbarry,
Florida, on Monday, Srpltm ber
II, al 7 JO p m
or as soon
thereafter as possible. At tht
meeting Interested parties m ay
appear and ha heard with respect
to the proposed ordinance. This
heering m ay be continued Irom
time to time until lin tl action Is
lik e n by Ih * C lly Council
Copies ol the proposed ordinance
are availabla *1 tht C ily H all with
Ih * Clerk ot tht Clly and same m ay
be inspected by the public.
A D V IC E TO T H E P U B L IC : It •
person decides 10 appeal a decision
made with raspacl to any matter
considered #1 the above hearing,
h* will need a verbatim record ot
all p r o c t t d in g i, in clu d in g tha
testimony and avldanc*. which
record If oof provided by the c ily
ol Casselberry. (Chapter H ISO.
Lew s of Florid *. iffO)
D eled this fth day ot September.

IMI
M A R Y W. H A W T H O R N E
C lly Clark
Publish September II. I t il
D E M If

N O T IC E U N D E R F IC T IT IO U S
N A M E LA W
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
lhat ih * undersigned, desiring to
engage In business at P.O. Boa
1707 In the C lly ot Altamonto
Springs, County ol Seminole and
th# Stata ol Florida, under Ih *
nam e
ol
"U N IL E A S E ,
A
D IV IS IO N OF U N IT E D L E A S IN G
C O M P A N Y O F IL L IN O IS '', in
lends to register th* said nama
with th* Clerk ol Circuit Court of
Seminole County, Florid*.
B Y ; s Jam es S. Barry.
President
Publish: August 1), 30, September
4. II. If l l
D E L IIS

L E O A L A D V E R T IS E M E N T
•OARDOFCOUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y
Sealed bids lor Group L it* A
H ealth In su ra n c e lor County
employees and dependents. FC-lt,
will be received in th* Oftic* ol
P u rc h a sin g . Sem ino le County
.Cev^ces Fund ing, ln d Flnnr, 1st
Street and P a rk Avenue. Senford.
Ftonda 11771 until 1:00 p m , local
lime, Wednesday, October II.
I f l l ; *1 which time and place, bids
will be publicly opened and read
aloud Bids submitted alter the
1 OOp m. deadline will be returned
unopened
Only bids Irom firm * which have
received written notification ot
positive prequallficalton will be
accepted Preouallllcalion criteria
has been previously advertised
and vendors ol record so notified
Bid specification* have been
forw arde d to a ll pre o uallflad
bidders. Copies of speclticalions
are available lor review only In th*
Of lice ol Purchasing.
Upon award, successful bidder
will be not If led In w riting. Contract
lo b e e lla c tlve a sso o n a s practical,
with anllclpaied start data on or
before January I, If * !
Th* County reserves th* right to
relect any or all bids. wljh or
without
ca use,
lo
w aive
technicalities, or to accept Ih * bid
which In its lodgement best serve*
the inleresl ol Ih * County. Cost ol
submittal ol this bKI Is considered
an operational cost ot Ih * bidder
and shall not be passed on to or
borne by the County.
Persons are advised tint, It they
decide lo appeal any decision
made at this meeting haarlng,
they will need a record ol I he
proceedings, and. lor such pur
pose, they m ay need to ensure lhat
a v e rb atim
rec o rd ol Ih *
proceedings is made, which record
includes the testim on y and
evidence upon which Ihe appeal is
lo be based
Publish September II. 17, I f l l
D E M 14

R E S O L U T IO N N O . M I
A R E S O L U T IO N O F T H E C IT Y
OF A LTA M O N T E
S P R IN G S ,
F L O R ID A P R O V ID IN G
FOR
THE
C O N S T R U C T IO N
OF
G R A O IN G , D R A IN A G E . S IO E W A L K . C U R B A N D P A V IN G O N
NEW BURYPORT
AVENUE
F R O M T H E N O R T H R IG H T O F
W AY L IN E
OF
BAYW OOD
S T R E E T TO T H E C E N T E R L IN E
OF BRANCH STR EET VACAT­
E D . A D IS T A N C E O F A P P R O X I­
M A T E L Y 1015 F E E T A N D P R O ­
V ID IN G FO R T H E A S S E S S M E N T
O F A P O R T IO N O F T H E COSTS
TH EREO F
A G A IN S T
THE
A B U T T IN G P R O P E R T Y O W N
E R S S P E C I A L L Y B E N E F IT IN G
B Y SU C H IM P R O V E M E N T S .
W H E R E A S , the C lly Com
mission ot Ih * City ot Allam ont*
Springs, Florida, deem i It ad­
v isa b le to co nstruct gra d in g,
d rain a ge , sid e w alk , c u rb and
paving In that pon Ion ot Newbury,
port Avenue Irom the north right
ol way line of Baywood Street to
th* ctnterlln* of Branch Street v *
cited, a distance ol approximately
1015 feet.
. W H E R E A S , all improvements
shall be don* in compliance with
the plans, sp e cificatio n s and
estimate* on lit* with the Clly
Clerk ol th* City ot Altamonte
Springs, Florida.w hichsa&lt;d plans,
spec 11leal ions and tslim a lts con
st jlute ih * plans, spec meat ions
and estimates tor all said im
provements
NOW. T H E R E F O R E , B E IT
R E S O L V E D B Y T H E C IT Y C O M
M IS S IO N OF T H E C IT Y O F A L
T A M O N T E S P R IN G S . F L O R IO A .
A S F O L LO W S
That th* City Com m ission ot th*
C ity o l A ltam o nte S p rin g s,
Florida, deems It advisable es a
necessary public Improvement to
construct g ra d in g , d ra in a ge ,
sidewalk, curb and paving In lhal
portion ol Newburyport Avenue
Irom th* north right t4 way lln# ol
Baywood Street to the centerline ol
Branch Street vacated, a distinct
of approximately 1033 feet
That all M id Improvements
shall be don* in strict compllanca
with th* plans and speclticalions
and estimates ot th* cost ot said
improvement* now on III* In Ih *
oft Ice of th* C lly Clerk ol th* City
ot Altamonte Springs. Florida,
which said plans, speclticalions
end estimate* are hereby approved by th* C lly Commission
and coitstitutes th* plans, specifi­
cation* and estimates ot cost for
said proposed Improvements, and
lha City Com m ission of th* City ol
A llam ont* Springs, Florida, doe*
hereby declare th* necessity for
the improvement.
B E IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D :
That th* total cost ot said Improvemenls, including cost ot all
labor and m aterial* is estimated lo
be S ff.f4110 and Ih * sum ot
N IN E T Y
N IN E
TH O USAND

R E C IP E

Contest
for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual
Special Edition of the

H e r it a g e C O O K B O O K
★

NINTH WEEK’S CO NTEST ★
Recipes for...

m iC R O W fiV E

n in e h u n o r e o f o h t y e ig h t

IN T H E C IN C U IT C O U R T O F
T H E E IG H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R ID A .
C A S E NO. I t H l S - C A - I l K
C O M B A N K W IN T E R
PARK,
T R U S T E E , I k a C O M M E R C IA L
B A N K AT W IN T E R P A R K , a
Florida Banking Corporation, and
P A N A M E R IC A N B A N K O F O R
L A N O O , N.A.. A S T R U S T E E
U N D E R T R U S T NO. 4 S 4 m x &gt; d . 0
National Banking Corporation,
Plaint Ids,

v*.
B E T T Y JO H N SO N L A W SO N . It
alive, and It dead, her unknown
spouse, heirs, devisees, grantees,
assign e e s, lie n o rs, trustees,
creditors and all other parties
claim ing by, through, under or
aglnst her; tn* unknown spouse,
h e ir*.
de vise es,
grantees,
assignees, lienors, trustees, and
c re d ito rs of S, B L A W S O N ,
deceased, end ell other parlies
claim ing by. through, under or
against him; lha unknown spousa,
heirs,
de vise es,
grantees,
assignees, lienors, I rust***, and
creditors ol F R A N K LA W SO N ,
deceased and all other parties
claiming by. through, under or
against him; th* unknown spouse,
h e ir*.
d e vise e*.
grantees,
assignees, lienors, trustees, and
creditors ol E M M A A D A M S LA W
SON S P IC E R , deceased, and all
olher p a rtie s c la im in g
by.
through, under or against her; Ih *
unknown spouse, heirs, devisees,
grantees, a ssig n e e s, lienors,
Iruslees, end creditors ot H. F.
LA W SO N , deceased and all ofhtr
p a rtie s c la im in g by, through,
under or against him and all
unknown natural persons It alive,
and it dead or not known to be dead
or a llv t, t h tlr se ve ra l and
respe ctIva unknow n spouse*,
he irs,
d e vise e *.
grantees,
assignees, lienors, trustees, and
creditors, or other parties
claim ing by. through, or under
ihos* unknown natural person*;
and all claimants, person* or
parlies, natural or corporate, or
w hose eeacl le gal sta tu s Is
unknown, claim ing under any of
Ihe above named or described
defendant* or parlies claim ing to
have any right, llll* or Interest in
and lo ih * lands h e ra a lltr
described,
Defendants.
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
TO: B E T T Y JO H N SO N LA W SO N ,
It alive and all parlies claim ing
interests by. through, under or
against,
BETTY
JO H N SO N
LAW SO N, it deceased; S. B.
L A W S O N , deceased; F R A N K
L A W S O N , deceased;
EM M A
ADAMS
LAW SO N
S P IC E R ,
deceased; and H. F. LA W SO N ,
deceased, and all parties having or
claiming to hava any right, till* or
interest in Ih * property herein
described
YO U A R E H E R E B Y notified
that an action to quiet th* title to
th * follow ing d e scrib e d real
p ro p e rly In S em ino le County,
Florida
SW &lt;e ot tha SW U ol tha N E U ol
Section n , Township I I South,
H ang* Jl k a il.
has been (lied against you In Ih *
abovt slylad causa and you are
requirad lo s trv a a copy oI your
written defense, It any, lo It on
Curry, Taylor &amp; C a rd . Suita 1110.
104 East Robinson Straet, Orlando,
Florida 17101. and III* th* original
with th* Clerk ol the above slylad
court on or bet ora Oct, 14, 1 H I;
otharwls* a lodgment m ay be
entered against you lor rallaf
demanded in the complaint or
petition.
W IT N E S S m y hand and Ih * sael
oI said Court on September ism ,
If l l
tSE A L I
Arthur H Beckwith Jr.
Clerk of the Circuit Court
C arrie E. Bueftner
Deputy Clerk
Publish September II, K . I N I
D E M $4

■* w
ft. I t

DOLLARS AN D TW ENTY CEN T*
ol which (14,454 44) S IX THOUS A N D S IX H U N D R E D F IF T Y
D O L L A R S A N D S IX T Y F O U R
C E N T S S H A L L B E P A IO F R O M
THE W A T ER SEW E R
AND
D R A IN A G E T R U S T F U N O O F
T H E C IT Y A N D N IN E T Y T H R E E
T H O U SA N D TW O H U N D R E D
N IN E T Y S E V E N D O L L A R S A N D
F IF T Y S IX C E N T S [ttl.lf7.S4i
shall be assessed against all ol tha
tots and lands tdlolnlng and conligout * r bounding and abutting
upon su ch im p ro ve m e nts or
specially benefited thereby end
further dtifgnaled by Ih * assessmenl plat now on III* In Ih * olflc*
ot th* City C lerkot Ih * City of Alla
m onlt Springs, Florida, which
said assessment plat I* hereby
approved by th* C lly Comm ission
ot th* City ot A llam ont* Springs,
Florida.
B E IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D .
That It Is th* determination of
Ih * City Com m ission lhat *11 lot*
and land* ad|ol(Vng and con
tlguout, or bounding and abutting
upon th* said Improvements will
be especially benefited by tha said
improvements provided lor In this
Resolution, and that th* special
assessm ent* lo be m ad * end en
tired against all tot* and land*
located on Newburyport Avenue
Irom th* north right ot way line of
Baywood Street tolhacenterllnaot
Branch Street vacated, a distance
ot approximately i n s feet as
described a tores* id shall be m ad*
on a weighted front toolag* bails,
that I* lo say, lhat m th*
p re pa ratio n ol I h *
sp e cia l
a s s a sim e n l ro ll c o v e rin g Ihe
contemplated Improvements, such
special benefits shall b t deter
mined and prorated according to
th* weighted foot frontage ol th*
respective properties adlolnlng
and contiguous or bounding and
abutting upon such Improvements
especially benefited by said Im
provements
That the City Clerk ol Ih * Cily ot
Altamonte Springs, Florida, In
accordance with the provisions of
law, shall proceed to m ake and
prepare a special assessment roll,
esses ling I he special benefits to be
received as Ih * ratult ot said
Improvement* against Ih * lots and
lands, adiotning and contiguous or
bounding and abutting said im
provements. basing said special
assessment against the respective
properties lo be e sp e cia lly
assessed upon N IN E T Y N IN E
T H O U SA N O N IN E H U N D R E D
forty

e ig h t

do llars

and

T W E N T Y C E N T S IS ff.fa ilO ) ol
th* cost ot such Improvements a t
determined by this Resolution and
Ih * amount determined by this
Resolution to be assessed against
th* said property.
« E IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E O :
That tha special assessm ents
provided lor by this Resolution
shall be payable at the option of
Ih * properly owners es follows:
In cash, within thirl y ( K ) days
ol th* confirmation ol ih * satf
special assasim enl rod or in o n *
annuel Installment, said deter rad
payment to bear Inlerasl al the
rat* el eight percent ( I percent)
per ennum, Ih * detected payment,
plus interest to be due and payable
on* ( I I year from th* d a l* of
confirmation ol said assessment
rod.
B E IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D :
That this Resolution shall bt
published one* a week tor a parted
ot two (1) weeks In the Evening
Herald, a newspaper of general
circulation In Seminole County,
Florid*.
B E IT F U R T H E R R E S O L V E D :
That this Resolution shall be and
be ce m * in a c t iv e im m e d ia te ly
Irom and attar H i passage end
•tfopl Ion.
• P A S S E D A N D A D O P T E D this
• h day ol September. A D 1M I.
MAYOR
ATTEST;
C IT Y C L E R K
PubUsh: Sept, t), ft. I N I
D E M 41

lost Week...JCait Clawed
Don’t Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

1st - 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
W eekly w inners ore e lig ib le for the G R A N D PRIZE
N O LIMIT TO NUM BER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YO U M A Y ENTER A S M A N Y WEEKS A S YO U LIKE

So send in that special recipe your family and
friends like so well...it could be a winner!
RULES:
No lim it to num b«r of recipes su b m llttd but each
reelpo m ust Include your nsm g, address and
♦eiaphona.
TYPE or PRINT your raclpa giving full in­
struction! for praparatlon, cooking ttm a and
tam paratura. (A pproxlm ata num bar of sarvings
alto halptul.)
Anyone can en ter except Evening Herald em ­
ployees and their Im m ediate fam ily.
M ill

E ntries to: E V E N I N O N E R A L D
c-e C O O K B O O K

A panel of thraa ax part |udgas will review all
• d r i e s and w lnnart will ba notifiad a t tha and of
tha coot as t in Saptam bar for a te sta o f f ' to
s a la d tha G rand P rize winner. Decision of tha
judges Is final.
All recipes received will ba published In October
for tha Evening H erald’s first annual cookbook
contest.
O r D r a g O H A t O u r O f f ic e :
M IN . FR E N C H A V E.

P .O . B O X 1M 7

(By lha l a k a f r a n t i n d o w n to w n S a n f o r d )

SA N FO RD , FLA . S im

M O N .-F R I. I i N - I i M -

DEADLINE FOR
MICROW AVE...

TV.

First, Second and Third prizes will b aaw ard ed In
each of lha nlna food categories. You m ay in te r
a t many ot tha waakly catagorlat a s you Ilka.

-*» m »a '* * ^
*tk

SA T. lilM M O N

E n t r i e s m u s t b a p o st m a r k e d b y m id n i g h t

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 13

-• V *

�f

OURSELVES
IvvW nf Herald, lenterd. FL

Sunday, Sept- tl, I N I - IC

William A. Leffler Sr.
danced and frolicked
and made a living on the side'

Mr. and Mrs.

Unde Billy And Renie

William A.
LaMar Sr.
•Ufa Is

They Are Full O f The Love O f Life

wonderful.'

A nd Live With Happy Mem ories

H *r« M

By MERLA MANOR
Herald Feature Writer
Where are the great men and women
who have lived their Uvea so weU that
they aerve as examples to the young
and untried?
One couple who may well fit the
pattern live in their large, rather
elegant home on H ibiscus Court,
Sanford, which they moved Into 43
years ago.
In this day of the non-hero, Renie and
W illiam L effler S r. seem like
anachronisms. They are full of the love
of life and live with happy memories.

"Life Is wonderful, if you know how to
use it," William said repeatedly. "Life
has been good to me. I danced and
frolicked and made a living on the
side."
Mr. Leffler worked for Chase and Co.
for W y ea n . At one time he was
president of the company, and he also
served as president of the Rotary Club.
He ia a former Sanford mayor.
"1 didn't go to college. 1 finished the
ninth grade here in Sanford, but I took
correspondence courses in everything
that interacted me. The beet course of
■U was from the Dickson School of

Memory. But 1 took courses In "She waa a very good teacher, firm but
astronomy, accounting, extension of fair. She was also the prettiest teacher
conadoumeaa and Bernarr McFad- In town."
Rente
and
W illiam
becam e
den’s course in physical education," he
acquainted through social activities In
•aid.
Bubbling with the sam e enthusiasm Sanford and m arried in 1919 in a UtUe
as her grandparents, pretty MoUle white church across the river. They had
four children, one of whom a son,
Bud) says she ia overwhelmed with her
grandfather’s energy. "He goes to the William Leffler Jr. died five years ago.
Another son, Kcnnelh Leffler Is now a
beach or stock m arket in Winter Park
Seminole County Circuit Court Judge.
everyday," she lays.
Renie Leffler graduated from the O ther children a re M rs. William
(Bethy) Bush Jr., Sanford, and Lila
then Florida State College For Women,
Tallahassee, and taught In the local Walling, Leesburg.
With encouragement, Leffler travels
acboola. A former student of h e n said,

back In time to tell it like it waa. "We
used to pay more attention to women,”
he said. "We had more respect (or
them. We had larger houses then,too. In
(act, we had two houses — one (or the
family and one for guests. There are no
more great men (or (he young people to
model themselves after. My father
gave me great advice. He said, ‘Sit up
straight and don’t go anyplace where
you wouldn’t want to be found dead.' "
Mr. Leffler drifts back to the time
when lie was a young man and played
the trombone in a combo at the
lakefront bandshell. He recalls owning

l r M a rla M a aar

a river boat, "Osceola," which operated
between Sanford and Jacksonville. The
"big freeze," which froze everything
edible in sight except fish, is still vivid
in his mind.
[.rid er's mother, who died when he
was S years old, came from Ireland and
he made a trip back there about'23
years ago to see what her home had
been like. Then he went on to London,
where he became lost. "I used my
knowledge of astronomy. I looked (or
the north star and found my way back

■

’

See UNCLE BILLY, Page SC

Librarian Honored
She Recalls Changes Like A Historian
By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
Acting more like a used ca r dealer than a librarian, Bernice
Hughe* loves to promote her library. "We have large print
hooka, and records for learning languages. We have a book*
mobile and we have 16 mlilmeter films," Mrs. Hughes says
with as much happiness in her words ns in her eyes.
She was recently recognized by resolution by the Seminole
County Commissioners and the county's lib ra ry Services
Division for 23 years of "faithful" service devoted to the
Sanford library system.
"This commendation is one of the nicest things that has ever
happened to me — and it was so unexpected," Mrs. Hughes
aayx modestly. Then she laughs, "And I still show it to
everybody!"
Mrs. Hughes began working as a library assistant on May 1,
UM aha says. "There Just happened to be a part-time opening
a id I started working (or the library. I've loved every year
rtnea then."
Working 23 years for the Sanford Library system, the
aaaiatant Librarian says she has seen the Sanford Public
Library go through a lot of changes. She recalls the changes
Uka a historian.
"In IMS, myself and the other two librarians moved from the
City of Sanford Library located on 3th A Oak to our present d ty
building. At that time, we belonged to the d ty library system,
and I w u able to watch this library, the former Sanford Post
Office, come Into being. Our circulation then w u only 200
books a day," she says.
"Whan we moved bare, we added a ‘page1, to shelve books
and straighten shelves. Then In 1973 we became part of the
Orlando Library System and acquired a second page. You aee,
only the pages have changed.... like the pages of time,” Mrs.
Hughes U ughi quietly.
Continuing her recount of the library's history, Mrs. Hughes
says, “ In October 1171, we became part of the Seminole County
system and today we have four full-time librarians and two
parM lm a pages," ib e u y a proudly u she Ups her finger on a
table for emphasis.
Mrs. Hughes u y s that " it's almost a m iracle," but the three

original librarians worked together (or 2D years, until Mrs.
Orian Walker and Sara Harrison, head librarian for 27 y e a n ,
both retired in 1971.
“ We still get together for birthdays and celebrate Christmas
together. We're Just as close new u ever," rfw says.
Speaking about birthdays, the Sanford native, bom on a
celery farm, will be celebrating her 83rd birthday on Sept. 17.
" I ’m still telling my age," the lady with pretty blue eyes u y s .
"I have sons In their 40s so it's hard not to."
But, Bernice ia not ready to close the book on her work a t the
library Just yet. "I want to work until I’m 63, and then 1 might
possibly retire," Hughes said.
“ You might find this hard to believe," she chuckles, "but one
of my favorite hobbies is..xeading. I love American historical
novels and novels about English royalty, but I also Uka good
biographies. However, 1 do read a lot of fiction. Right now, I ’m
reading Clan of the Cave Bear. 1 am not a TV watcher,"
A sa mother of two sons and a grandmother of two boys, Mrs.
Hughes u y s ahe encourages bar sons to read and u y s her
grandsons are avid readers.
"Eddie, my oldest son started coming to the library before 1
even started working for the library. He couldn't even took
over the counter, but he'd always ask far something far
mommy, too," she recalls.
"And my 10-year-old grandson, Charles, h u read all of
Kipling and my 13-year-old grandson, Eddie J r., h u read the
Tolken trilogy," she brags u grandmas do.
But, Mrs. Hughes h u some good words about ottwr children
who use the library. "The kids of today a re so much more
appreciative of the library and how to u u the card catalog.
They are not as b e t f u l now-e-da ya and they know to u k for
help. This Is wonderful bacauee they know they can get help,"
she u y s .
"So many young people come back from collage to any thank
you for the help I gave them when they were children. I levs
that," u y s Mrs. Hughes.
The library to moat people, uuaQ y ia not the sort of plaot
that one thinks of u a really enjoyable place, but Mrs. H ugbu
u y s she &gt; s loved every day working In the library. " I love tia
Bee LIBRARIAN, P age 1C

�* * \

*

•

f

*

In And Around Loke M ary

INBRIEF
Seminole Artists Selected
To Display In Festival
Seventy-fire outstanding artists and craftspeople
have been selected to participate In the Eighth Annual
Winter Park Autumn Art Festival, to be held Oct. 10-11,
on the campus of Rollins College. The artists selected
were from among a field of 197 entries screened by a
panel of (our art experts.
The Winter Park Autumn Art Festival Is a com­
munity-oriented show for Florida artists of the highest
caliber. This year artists will come from all over the
state — from Miami to Tallahassee — as well as many
from the Central Florida are a. They will compete for a
total of |g,000 In prise money.
Artists from Seminole County selected to display
their work a re Jam es Cornell and John Margerum,
Oviedo; Bob Eglnton, Winter Springs; Jane Plante,
Virginia Jones, Vicky Ulavols and Peter Llndberg,
Altamonte Springs; Henry Sinn, Fern Park; and Jane
Prescott-Edlson, Sanford.

Singing Auditions Called
Auditions are now being conducted for membership
In The Singing Boys and The Singing Girls of Orlando.
There are a few openings In the Coneery Choir for alto
tenor, tenor and bass voices. Present ages In this group
are 10 through 16. To qualify, one must have had
considerable training and experience In choral work.
Solo opportunity is available for those who can qualify.
The group meets on Mondays and Thursday evenings
at 7:15.
The Choral Cadet group meets on Tuesday evenings,
and Is open to talented boys and girls In grades 4,5, and
6 (Seminole and Orange Counties).
The Jr. Choral Cadet group meets on Wednesday
afternoons at 4:15, and Is open to qualified boys and
girls in grade 3.
For Information, or an audition appointment, phone
Mrs. Elaine Lewis 299-8202, or Byron Swanson, 8716657.

Flea Market, Pizza D ay
Com ing To Benefit C IA
The
Community
Im provem ent
Association (CIA) would like to remind
everyone of the Giant Flea Market to be
held Sept. 19, starting at 8 a.m.
It will be sponsored by (he Modem
Woodmen F ra te rn a l In su ran ce Co.
Representative Vem Fedderson says
there Is still time to call him, at 322-2872,
for donations of useable items. Proceeds
from the flea market will benefit the
Lake Mary CIA.
On that same day, there will also be
P iu a Day at Cafe Sorrento. It should be a
day of fun and enjoyment so let’s all get
out and support our Community
Improvement Association.
A family dinner was prepared by Ida
May SJobiom to celebrate her husband
Otis' birthday. Their children, Barbara
Iam b and Otie, were also there to help
him enjoy his day.
Otis Is employed by the Sanford Fire
Department arid is a lifetime resident of
Lake Mary.
Mr. and Mrs. Jam es ( D elares) la sh
celebrated their wedding anniversary
S ept 6. They received a gift of yellow tea

Bonnie
Olvera

Police Chief Harry Benson will be
celeb ratin g his b irthday Sept. 15.
O riginally D irector of the Police
Department in West Orange, N.J., Chief
Benson has been with Lake Mary since
April, 1975.
Members of the Department would like
to wish him the best year ever.

Lake Mary
Correspondent
223-7166

roses from their children and then went
to dinner.
The la k e Mary Elementary School
PTO is on a membership drive for new
members. Dues for the year are (1.
Parents of elementary students are
asked to contact the school for In­
formation.
Shelda Orioles celebrated her birthday
Sept. 6. She Is employed at Pantry Pride
in Sanford and Is the wife of Fire Chief
Jim Orioles. She says she spent the day
at home with llie family.
The
la k e
Mary
Community
Improvement Association (CIA) meet
Sept. 28 at 7:30 p.m. at d ty hall. The
public la welcome.

Jan Behrens and Karen Walts have
been accepted as members of the
volunteer fire department. Jan and
Karen work full time as communication
technicians for the police department.
It seems though the Coastal Waters in
New Smyrna was the place to enjoy the
holiday weekend for some of our Lake
Mary dtliens.
Linda and Dick Fess with their
children Brad and Lisa, Kristy and Ken
King and children David and Craig, were
there to relax and take In the sun.
They were surprised to find Barbara
Gorman of d ty hall and her children
Don, Jaaon and Rhonda, also staying at
the Coastal Waters.

CONSTITUTION
WEEK
M rs. B u rch C o rn eliu s,
c h a irm a n ,
C on­
s t i t u t i o n W e e k , fo r
S a llie
H a rris o n
C h a p te r, D a u g h te rs of
th e A m e ric a n R ev o lu ­
tio n , a c c e p ts p ro c la ­
m a tio n fro m S an fo rd
M ay o r L ee M oore p ro ­
c la im in g th e w eek of
S e p t. 17-24 ax C o n stitu ­
tio n W eek. S ep t. 17 is
th e 194th a n n iv e rs a ry
of th e ad o p tio n of th e
C o n s titu tio n of th e
U n ited S ta te s of A m e r­
i c a . M rs . C o r n e liu s
s a id , T h e D a u g h te rs
of th e A m e ric a n R ev o ­
lution r e m i n d o u r c iti­
zen s th a t w e m u st be
v ig ila n t to p ro te c t o u r
fre e d o m s . L ost rig h ts
m a y n e v e r be re g a in ­
e d . L e t taa c e le b r a te
th is C o n stitu tio n W eek
by re so lv in g to be b et­
t e r In fo rm e d , m o re
a l e r t c it i z e n s . R e a d
y o u r C o n s titu tio n ."

Bromellad Society Show
The Bromellad Society of Central Florida presents
Its annual show, "BROMEUAFEST," at the Winter
Park Mall, Winter Park, Sept. 15-27.
The event Is a Judged show and features a spec­
tacular display of colorful, blooming bromeliads.
There are also individual exhibits and commercial
sales booth where the public may buy bromellad
plants. There Is an added attraction: an arts and crafts
show of "Bromellad Art." Admission Is free. Hours are
10 o.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, and 12:30 to 5
p.m. Sunday.
The Bromellad Society of Central Florida meets the
fourth Monday of each month a t 7:30 p.m. at the First
Federal Savings and ftoan at Michigan and Orange
Avenues in Orlando. Visitors are welcome. For in­
formation, call Ann Mann, 876-2625.

'Divorce Crisis' Class
The Office of Community Services of Seminole
Community College will offer a daaa "Dealing with the
Crisis of Divorce and Separation” .
This class Is designed to help those who are ; con­
templating divorce, moving through the divorce
process, and are divorced. A group setting will be
established whereby Individuals may realistically
view options and alternatives. The general goals of the
Rroup are to provide: support, Identity, information,
and tools (or positive self-growth and self-trust.
This class will begin Sept. 23 and will continue for
eight Wednesday evenings from 7 to 10 in room S-207. It
Is open to men and women and the fee Is (10.00.
For Information, call the Office of Community
Services at Seminole Community College, 323-1450, ext.

Oh, what a day for beautiful
Uttle 5-year old Monica L
Thomas, granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs, Robert D.
Thom as J r . of Academy
Manor, when she celebrated
her birthday.

IT’S LATER THAN
YOU TH INK...

When you were 20, you
could dance all night; after
40 you put stones la your
shoes and sit the whole eve­
ning out.

SO THINK ABOUT YOUR WINTER COATI

After ecataries of try lag,
the best the glee ladastry
has beta able lo do ts to
develop a stickaa that blade
your Hagers together.

LAY-ONE
AWAY
AT
RO-JAY!

Donald Davis.

fM a r v o

Hawkins
121-5416

The afternoon of fun, games

Phil Pastoret

M

Debra Yates,
M. Dobson
Repeat Vows
Debra Lee Y ates and
M ichael .D obson
were
married in a double ring
cerem ony by the Rev.
Freddie Smith at the Central
Baptist Church, Santo d.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Worth Yates S r.,
2323 Revona Court, Sanford.
The bridegroom is the son of
M rs. G irlie Dean Short,
Emmalena, Ky.
Given In m arriage by her
mother and father, U* bride
chose for her vows a formal
gown fashioned along the
E m pire silhouette with a
fitted bodice, lace-trimmed Vneckline and long tapered
lace sleeves. Wide lace edged
the skirt which terminated in
a flowing chapel train.
A halo of silk flowers held
her veil of Imported illusion.
She carried a cascade of
orchids, slephanotts, c a r ­
nations and ivy.
Hope Beverly attended the

Basic,
Specialty
Sewing

JY SC Needs Volunteers
The John Young Science Center is looking tor
dependable volunteers to help with school classes. Last
year Dm Science Center served over 20,000 students on
school field Dtps. Volunteers are needed to keep this
worthwhile program operating.
No m atter where your interests lie, there are op­
portunities available. People are needed for lectures (a
script Is provided), tours, and help (or Die gift shop and
new food service. In the past, volunteers have found it
very challenging and rewarding In helping to stimulate
young minds. Even If you can donate only one or two
hours per week, your help Is needed.
For information, contact the John Young Science
Center, 696-7151.

M R. AND M R S. M IC H A E L DOBSON

and special treats was a t­
tended by Sltanell Baker,
K aren W illiam s, Cherlta
B ennett, D ana Thom as,
V ashaun W illiams, Ryan
Burgess, Bruce McCray and
Ktsha and Sholunda Johnson.
Also Jeffery and Michael
Sims, Taru Lynn and Melvin
Hall Jr., Terrell and Derrell
Jackson, Willie, U te ru s and

M onica's g reat g ran d ­
parents helped her share this
birthday. They are Mr. and
Mrs. Arty Holloway.
Also attending were Dr.
Evelyn W. Sharp, Mra. Eula
Dozier, John Dix and Schcley
Dix.
Helping Mrs. Thomas were
D arryl Thom as, Wayne
Kilgore, Mrs. Inez Baker,
Mrs. E lm ira Hall, Mra.
Beverly
Thom as,
M rs.
F ran cln e Jack so n , Sheryl
Jones and Sharon and Alice
Bush.

following Vlrgos and Libras
Dils monDi; Carrie Pickens,
Natherinc Bentley, CaUierine
Hawkins, Betty Black SmiDi,
Holland H. Tillman, Rev.
Thelm a S. Young, G rant
Young, N annie B. Sm ith,
A nita H aw kins, D elores
W right, M allaaa R oberts,
Shirlay W ilton, D orothy
Adams and John Hicks.

Happy b irthday to the
the

A variety of sewing clasaes
is scheduled to begin at
Seminole Community College.
The classes will meet In Die
fully
equipped
sewing
laboratories at Ute college.
Cost Is 111.00.
Two basic sewing clasaes
designed for Dm beginning
seam stress are scheduled.
The 14-week Monday night
class will begin S ept 14. The
13-week Thursday class will
begin Sept 10.
A 14-week specialty sewing
class will meet on Tuesday
nights and will begin S ep t 15.
R egister a t the a d ­
missions office on campus.
For Information call 323-1450
(643-7001 from Orlando), ext.
423 or 227.

bride os mold of honor. She
wore a yellow gown and
carried n nosegay of mixed
flowers. Bridesmaid Janice
Turner was gowned Iden­
tically to the honor attendant.
John Drazdik served the
bridegroom as best man.
U sh e r-g ro o m s m e n w ere
Worth Y ates J r ., Donny
Beverly and Randall Dobson.
The reception was held in
the church fellowship hall.
The newlyweds arc making
their home In Lexington, Ky.,
where the bridegroom is a
student and teacher assistant
at the University of Kentucky.
The bride is secretary for
Professional Administrators
lim ited In taxlngton.

H’ AttTkflt
AitonliMng In 111 mpgnitutf* n ttw
M W w n i*cn at O— i Pttting v m
at t i M H f i Sarn In Longwsod li t
M i ll, tin b k h I mat w t'vt Man,
•nd m ' i i btan 9rsw.n0 mam lor at
Matt I I atari
tu t ltogftorn. or piatrcarium at II
i&gt; known M tanically, 1, a
tawinatina plant wim lit big ctr
cvlar thattb ant groerful antiart. H
nat a motl tnaoc oppooronct. yat
wo'yo btan told that it It or* ot If*
mott primltlrt
Wb*n grown 110m taod. wtiicfi art
actually powdaa lint tpertt. ma
Hag born pattat mrougtt a motd Hat
H alt barora becoming a plant The

l

Pbooe calls are now spM
by space age technology,
which la only slightly slower
than tha technique by which
Ma Bell bills you for all that
chatter.

T R tA T M B H T

You can register is
minutes before das* wear
tights with stirrup fact nr
no feet end e leotard, or
loosely fitting clothes.
Bring e met fo do floor
routines on.

Bttwm's

�Sunday, Sept. II, I N I — 1C

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

In And Around Sanford

Roses From John Schneider 'Thrill O f A Lifetime'
taurine Messenger is known on the
Sanford scene as "celebrity aunt." Her
famous nephew is John Schneider, better
known as Bo Duke on TV’s "Dukes of
H az ard ."
• John's performance in "Love My
Country" over the Labor Day weekend at
Wall Disney World attracted an en­
tourage of Sanford fans as weU as a host
of relatives.
But the celebrity aunt was in New
Orleans with Mary George on a Labor
Day Jaunt that had been planned for
months.
To say that handsome John made a hit
was putting It mildly. His mother, Shirley
Conklin, flew down from Atlanta, and
another aunt, Miss Theo Vickery of Key
West cut a North Carolina trip short to
head back toward the Magic Kingdom.
On Sunday, John sent a limousine from
Disney World to Sanford for his family
Including his great-grandmother, Mrs.
Lillian Vickery, and his grandmother,
M rs. Lillian Dugan, who becam e
celebrities on their own at the show at
Cinderella’s castle.
John made a big "to do" over his
family during the performance when he
introduced them to the vast audience. He
presented Mrs. Vickery with a large
bouquet of red roses. "He Just hugged
mama to death," explained taurine
about her 96-year-old mother, Mrs.
Vickery. "It was the thrill of a lifetime
for her."
Linda and Bill Reck, who have recently
moved back to Sanford from North
Carolina, observed John in action at
Disney World, taurine said John was
sprouting a beard, and Linda was not too
impressed with the new growth.
Martha and Jim Lyle and their
children were among the Sanfordites who
caught John's appearance at Disney.
taurine Messenger seemed excited
talking about her trip to New Orleans
with Mary George. The two women drove

Masters, Nov. 13-15 at Walt Disney
Village, ta k e Buena Vista.
Cecil Herring of Geneva, and Vicky
Ulavuls of Altamonte Springs, will be
am ong ihe outstanding a rtis ts and
craftsmen exhibiting in the prestigious
festival.

Doris
Dietrich
OURSELVES
Editor
to the historic old city, taurine said, “We
saw a lot there, ate a lot of good food and
spent a lot of time in the French Quar­
ter."
Previously this summer taurine spent
a month with her family in Texas and
before that, she vacationed in Georgia
and North Carolina.
Mildred M. Caskey, curator of the
General Henry S. Sanford MuseumIJbrary, is on the mend after eye
surgery. Mildred doesn't seem to think
her implant is a "big deal."x
Just out of the hospital, Mildred talks
excitedly about the museum and for­
thcoming happenings there.
An exhibit on antique sports equipment
will be featured at the museum in con­
junction with the Golden Age Games in
November. Mildred says "old sports
equipm ent" is badly needed. She
suggests residents search their premises
(or items the museum can borrow for this
exhibit.
Call Mildred at the museum, 322-7788,
Wednesday, Friday and Sunday, between
2 and 5 p.m.
Mildred mentioned that when Ballet
Guild of Sanford-Seminole performed at
the museum at the opening of the current
"F anfare," an exhibit of colorful fans,
well-wishers attending the open house
were thrilled with this added attraction.
And now Mildred is hopeful that plans for
a Sunday Afternoon Concert every fourth
quarter will materialize.
Two area artists have been invited to
display their works in the Festival of the

Stella and Joe Oritt are more con­
cerned than ever about getting the clock
back downtown in Sanford that Stella'a
grandfather donated to the city many
years ago.
There’s been a lot of talk about having
the clock restored and brought back to
the intersection at Park Avenue and
First Street where it stood for many
years.
But Joe says, "People are talking. How
do we go about getting some action? " he
asked.
Any ideas?

The Board of Advisors for the Out­
standing Young Men of America Awards
Program has announced that the men
named below have been selected for
inclusion in the 1981 edition of "Out­
standing Young Men of America."
These men w ere selected from
nominations received from Senators,
Congressmen, Governors, Mayors, State
L egislators, U niversity and College
Presidents and Deans as well as various
civic groups, Including the United States
Jaycees which also endorses the Out­
standing Young Men of Am erica
program . These men, along_ with
fellow O utstanding Young Men
throughout North America, will be
featured in this prestigious annual
awards publication.
They are: Jam es Robert Stewart,
Daryl Gene M ctain, Thomas Edward
Lyon, Daryl tav an te Starke, Harold
John Von, Alexander Coster Wynn III,
and Richard Carl Smith, III.

'FISHIN'
G eo rg e C u rrie , left,
p re s id e n t
of
th e
S an fo rd -S em in o le J a y ­
cees, and E d R yan,
c h a irm a n
of
th e
J a y c e e F is h in g R odeo,
in s tr u c t K eith A dkins,
7, a n d h is s is te r , K im l,
S, on a few p o le b a itin g
te c h n iq u e s th a t Ju st
m ig h t la n d th e m a
p riz e c a tc h In th e fre e
ro d e o , S a tu r d a y , S ep t.
19, fro m 9-11 a .m . T he
ro d eo w ill be h eld a t
L ak e C a ro lla , e a s t of.
th e
S a n fo rd
C iv ic
C e n te r.
P a r tic ip a n ts
m u st fu rn ish p o les, b u t
th e
Jay cees
w ill
p ro v id e th e b a it a n d
p riz e s . Age g ro u p s a r e
3-6, 7-10 a n d 11-13.
P re s id e n t C u rrie in ­
v ite s e v e r y b o d y in
th e s e a g e g ro u p s to
" c o m e a n d b rin g a
frie n d ."

DEAR ABBY: 1 am a 28year-old professional woman
who recently m arried b 39year-old professional man
with four children from a
previous marriage. Although
Rob claims not to care for h it
•x-w ife, they still hava
frequent contact, allegedly
over the children. When she
asks him for money "for the
children," he gives it to her.
When I ask for something,
he’ll "think about It.”
I've worked hard for four
years and want to stay home
and raise a family. Rob says
no to both. He says he has
knqugh children, but I believe
thafM '^e really loved me, he
would wapt us to have a child.
My quedkon: Is there a way
to convince nqb (hat since he
loves his four children so
much, he would also love and
enjoy any children we might
have together? 1 also believe
that a child would "bond" us
and bring us closer together.
HATES WORK

H t f l M PfesW fey T .m Vlncsal

Librarian
Cfectlnucd From Page 1C

people that come here."
One of her favorite stories is about a little girl who came into
the library several years ago to apply for a library card. "She
was about 9 years old. On the application is a place to put the
father's occupation and this little girl's father was a minister.
There was also a place to put father's employer, and this little
girl wrote, "God."
"There was once a man that came in here everyday and he
wore a purple poncho," Mrs. Hughes continues story-telling,
"and he never checked out a library card and he never
checked out a book. He Just came in here every day in that

purple poncho, und we called him "Purple Poncho." He came
in here (or six months and then we didn't see him anymore.”
it seems this petite lady with sandy brown hair never loses
her enlhusaism when she's talking about 'he library, even
when she speaks about the fact that the library really needs
some work.
"I was so iiappy to hear the library is going to be renovated.
We need it. You should see it when it rains. The roof leaks and
we liave tp put plastic over the shelves. It looks Uke we have
waterfalls in here!" she laughs good-naturedly.
But the books are the treasures of (lie lady who orders them,
circulates them and shelves them. "I still get excited when the
new books arrive. I can't wait to open the boxes to see them."

...Uncle Billy
Ceatiaaed From Page 1C
to my hotel."
Life has been full of wonderful people
for Mr. Lsffler but he found Ireland,

England, Paris and the boats he traveled
on filled with people even more won­
derful.
Whatever greet men were in Mr.
Leffler's life, they served him well. Many
a ile d him Unde Billy. According to a
former employee, he was known as an
hooeet man who never lied to anyone. He
put in Mfcwafts to children would
have a *nooth surface to play on and was
M rw naotal la fatting a awimmlng pool
donated to Sanford from Chaa* A Co.

Instead, he sent a limousine for his grandm other,
great grandm other and aunt to attend " ta v e My
Country."

Wife Can't Convince Mate
A Child Will Be Bonding

G O IN

•t t

John Schnieder didn’t send the "G eneral Lee” to
Sanford for his relatives when he perform ed at
Walt Disney World over the Labor Day Weekend.

"He worked with many a person who
was down on his luck, or Just needed help
of some kind and no one ever knew about
it," the friend said. "He was a tough, fair
boss, but reasonable. He decided on
something and that was U."
In spite of the fact that he Is nearly 95
y e a n old, doesn't hear well and Is con­
fined to a wheelchair, William Leffler
still enjoys life to the fullest.
The first thing he does when he
awakens in the morning, he says, is to
thank God for a good night's sleep. He
practices daep breathing on the south
porch every day and he and Renie go to
their beach house several times weekly

to clear their minds and get fresh
thoughts.
"As a man thinketh, so Is he,” he
quoted. "1 have had it all. 1 attained what
I set out to do. I have had Joy and glad­
ness in my life arid I have known won­
derful people."
When asked if he had any advice (or the
younger generations he replied, "None.
PeopL have their own ideas and they
have to go their own way. But they might
watch ttae squirrels. Even squirrels save.
And the butterflies, lif e is better when
you are more conscious, more aware of
the beauty around you. Life is wcoderful."

. ■%

(

*g -w .g,-* , •&lt; s

careers, busts reputations,
Is it lair?
m u te s h ea rtac h es, night­
Is It necessary?
mares, indigestion, spawns
It not, shut up!
suspicion, gen erates grief,
Getting married? Whether
dispatches innocent people to you want a format chnreh
cry In their pillows. Even its wedding or a simple, “ dayour- ottothing" ceremony,
name hisses.
It’s embed gossip. Otttee get Abby'* new booklet. Bead
gossip. Shop gossip. Party ft plus a long, self-addressed,
do you have? A husband who gossip. It makes headlines ■tamped (35 cents) envelope
cheats on Ms wife. Some sad headaches. Before you to: Abby’s Wedding Booklet.
120M Hawthorne Blvd., SuMr
repeat a story, ask yourself:
bargain!
WOO, Hawthorne, Calif. 902H.
b It true?
DEAR ABBY: I hope you
think the enclosure is worth
i i i 'p i *
■ * ■ . i . i|
passing on to your readers. I
•
‘- ■
found it in (he Wall Street
For Hie LITTLE ADS
Journal. It's a message by
United Technologies Corp.,
that MEASURE UP...
Hartford, Conn.
m
Saks and Profits,
FAITHFUL READER
uvt ths
DEAR READER: It is. aod
I thank you.
THE SNAKE THAT POISONS
Don't dotoy. start your td
EVERYBODY
In ths ns1 1 Ittuo....
It topples governm ents,
[mF I I T T f ■ 1
I I'
w recks m arria g es, ruins

Dear
Abby

BUSINESS REVIEW!

Coll: 322-2611

C lo se your eyes, and picture
yourself 5 to l(^ ye ars younger.

DEAR HATES WORK: U 1
knew of a way to “ coavtoce"
Rob to let you quit work and
have a child, 1 wouldn’t
recommend it, because Rob
has already said he has
enongh
children.
F u r­
thermore, If you were able to
convince him to have a child
la an effort U “ bond" you
together, It wonld he a
mistake.
Be honest. You are hoping
to compete with Rob's es-wtfe
by giving him a second
fam ily, which he doesn't
really want. You can’t win.
The “ e s " Is holding (our aces.
DEAR ABBY: P lease,
please put something in your
column about the futility of
sneaking around to date
m arried men! My beautiful
24-year-old daughter is having
an affair with a married man,
and nothing 1 say c. n stop
her. He's twice her age and
gives no hope of leaving his
wife. He works in our small
town and goes home to his
wife on his days off, but my
daughter aees him when she
can.

N ow , open your eyes
to th e n e w e s t
te c h n o lo g ic a l b re a k ­
th r o u g h in n o n - a u r g ic a l
f a c e lifts .

"Our
painless,
non-surglcal
program of muscle-toning hat boon
shown to ho effective In preventing
end reducing faciei wrinkles."

For a Free C onsultation
C ALL 323-5763
S A N F O R D P A IN C O N T R O L
C LIN IC
2017 S. French Ave.
(Across From Pliia Hut)
Dr. Themes Yandell
Chiropractic Physician

©i

I am afraid the whole town
(including his wife) will find
out about it, and I don't want
to see my daughter dragged
through a divorce court, but
she won't listen to me. Maybe
■he will listen to you.

NO TOWN. PLEASE
DEAR NO TOWN: ta r e is
M t only MM, M's deaf as
wefL ik e best case agatast
gfetaf with a aarrlcd a a a is
M l the M illly M M — It's

e^-s.-e .wdi « A os •&gt; 4 %A

SEMINOLE HEIGHTS
BAPTIST CHURCH
C ordM y Invites You To Attend
Ths Service O f Constitution
On SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 13 , I N I
A T 3 O'CLOCK IN THE AFTEKNOON
NEW U K E M ARY HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
Reception Immediately Following
O r . J a y T . C a s m a to , P a s t a r

.

R e v . O w r f e K . Oh m S r ., S p e a k e r

.

R e v . L a r r y I . S h e rw o o d , P a t t e r S p o n s o r in g C h u r c h
______________________ P i n t B a p ti s t C h u r c h , O e n e v a

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P A L M IttO A V C H U I
B A P t llf CHUNCH
1414 PlImttlA Art
B i t 44Tm A ll Crm lYf
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IAPAAANPANI M.1HAN4Y v

Religion gal Involved early In the problem of our aenlor cftlppop
Our churchei hove made u i auare of the uorth of the individual. And
thli emphaii* on every one of u* at equally Important before God
intpired modern tociety to look keriouily al the concern! and the
potential of the aging.

fatter
• t ie m
II H e m
* Ham

Recently a youth remarked dial hit Church It the one Inititutlon
In the community In which young and old command equal respect.
“It'i where everyone appreciate! you If you do whatever you can!"

tH a m

Strengthen your place nl worship at It serves God and our
community by doing all you can!

Congregational

•BMI440LB H flO M T t
B A P T IIT CHUNCH
Or. H r T. Om n i a h
P aaAay
*
——■#*—— W T4 *H|_I*AM
^
MNMBf
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Coprigni l M l XaiiiAY A0v«rti«ng Service
P 0 Boi 8024 Ciii'lofleiviBe. Vrprxa 2290B

CONOR 1 0 ATIONAL *
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
m i l f irS At#

S ir o u r t w w t«i t&gt;r V ia NmiYicin Bern SooMy

m tin

BM H M a Py "'A * *€*"*4 A * * T n T j n .
ManNIp
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liM p.NI.

Res Free Naai
Ras Rinland i He bar

faster
A tse faster

Swndav Ithee l
Fmesritiif
Mermrf Wert hi*

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it M II a #
II M a r

N ay A .P , fiAYiHt
I an Pay CNaycN 4&lt;4a*i
A4AYN.N* WAYI4YA
TAMN OYAAP
M ap CAix PyacI iia

According lo the want-ndk. experience Ii Invaluable. Yet on thli
park bench 280 yeart of experience add up to bortdom.

CN U iC M O * 0 0 0
H I * d m street
■ i f 0 K Oeftter
leader Icheel
M*rn»r»f HeciHia
K iM H lt U K lerv
f M U lf 8*r»cbme*t

naym yy

tm b in n s m i n t u n h i d
p n n in y t in ia n ch ur c h
W i IAay A ya . Life! M u y

Church O f G o d

BA VBH H A PABH
B A P t l lf CHUNCH
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P lN IT P N I t l Y T t N I J N CHURCH
OAkNvt N I y a II
N i y V iy b i l N ' yah I. Paiiay
N ay Oaniai Ca n iia , 1 i u &lt; Y u m
P4ANA11I IU I
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Mayh&lt;h( WAYUHA
IIM im

M ethodist

tiN p .m .

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Presbyterian

I T L U K B ‘1 L U T H fB A N CHUNCH
IN i l l A N an ■ » « i i
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N ay ja Nh j N m Naym
Pa i H y
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C H B ItTIA N I C I I N C I 1 0 C I I T Y
( 4 lY H tY A N t A4APA4NY
M l LANA Pi AhIIAy OYlYA
I yn Ai t I ayy Ica

nafarrSMaMaSr^1**

TkA PtY LAYAf D fA fir
H llf CimHIAHIAN
H U y CimiHYMAN
CIHMII llliAAl
H U y Cahhhyniah

O rthodox

C O U N TN V tID I t A A T I I T CHUNCH
Cyyh I i t ciYk *M 4 L a m m a ty
A yAYY M LAM
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MAMATY Pltv.144

PYAYAT ktrvttt

H O L T C N O II
M l PllA A yA

A LL SO UL! CATHOLIC CNUNCH
H I Oak A ya . ktNttrP
Fr.4»nu*m ln * lt
Niitar
lAl. Vtpll MAIt
1:M A HI.
IA HI , I I : M A I 1 haah
4 I I L I A HI

Sunday
// Tfiessolonlans
3 15

Monday
/ Timothy
317

Tuesday
I Timothy
6 6 12

IVednesday
Ja rnw

5 7 11

Thursday
Revelation
1920

Friday
Reivlation
2111

U P tA LA P N I H T T P Nl AH CHURCH
Cay Caaniy y CIaN A U a m ia N A
DAYH.NfNAI
PlllAY
I anPay I y Naai
f m am
M ayi 4«p I ayyica
IIM im
N aym yy Pyay MaA

CNBlST U N ITB O
M IT H 0 0 I IT CHURCH
T ix I vy Dyiya . l » m i n l l i i M n
BIV BlBArtNr MUWY
PillAY
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N aY M U IT 4NAVNMP PYAYAY OYAAp

t i l Part A ya .
LaaB.BMa
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YOU CAN I I A T U a l
&lt;roua CHUtCH
in t h i i ip a c p ro a
i i i t P i a a ifiK
CALL III III.

fM»

t iM B t i p j a .
M lB J A .
ItM p JB .

Saturday
Matthew
1821-35

M.ninit
i IIA m
II N A M
IM p m
I M pm

TiMp-Rli
t ill a m

iThe Following Sponsors M a k e This Church Notice A n d Directory Page Possible
C E L E R Y CITY
P R I N T I N G CO., INC.

A TLA N TIC NATIO NAL BANK
S a n fo rd , F la.

T H E M c KI B BI N A GE NC Y

L. 0 . P L A N T E , INC.

In su ra n c e

O v ied o . F lo r id a

ST E N ST R O M R E AL TY
H a r b S te n stro m a n d Staff

H o w a rd H. H o d g es a n d S ta ff
M E L 'S

GULF SERVICE
M el D e k le a n d E m p lo y e e s

GREGORY LUMBER
T R U E V A L UE H A R D W A RE
500 M aple A ve. Sa n fo r d

O SB O R N 'S BOOK
a n d B I BL E ST O R E
2599 S a n f o r d A v a .

PANT RY P R I D E
DISCOUNT FOODS

HARRELLABEVERLY
TRANMI SSI ON

D A IR Y Q U E E N
M a rk a n d E s th e r P a rry
2523 P a r k D r iv e

WILSON E I C H E L B E R G E R
MO RT UA RY
E u n ic e Wilson a n d Staff

PU B L I X M A R K E T S

a n d E m p lo y e e s

a n d E m p lo y e e s

WILSON M A I E R F U R N I T U R E CO.
Mr. a n d M rs, F re d Wilson

D a v id B e v e rly a n d S taff

F L A G S H I P BANK
O F S E M I N O L E a n d S ta ll

S E N K A R I K GLASS
A PA I NT CO., INC.

K NI GH T' S SHOE STORE

J e r r y &amp; E d . S e n k a r lk
a n d E m p lo y e e s

JC P a n n a y

O o w n to w n S a n fo rd
D on K n ig h t &amp; S taff

300 W . F i r s t Sf.
3000 S. O r la n d o D r.

E d H e m a n n a n d staff

WI NN- DI XI E ST OR E S
a n d E mp l o y ee s

SE M IN O LE C O U N T Y A R E A CH URCH DIRECTORY
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R ELJG jO N
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Sunday, Sept. 13, M il— SC

______________ .,

Briefly

Disability Doesn't Stop Him From Serving

The Single Life Is Probed

By JANE CASSELBERRY
Religion Editor
1981 was proclaimed the Inter­
national Year of the Disabled, but
for Glen From of Fern Park, being
disabled Is something he has to live
wilh everyday of every year.
At least that's the wav It’s been (or

In Series At Oviedo Baptist
A new learning experience will begin at the First Baptist
Church of Oviedo, this Sunday. It is a 13 week probe Into
faith, intimacy, and risk entitled “The Single Life". To be
conducted during Church Training at 6 p.m., it Is for all
unmarried adults ( divorced or never married).
"This probe is not another Bible study," according to Dr.
William R. Marc, Pastor. "It is not a sit-and-be-told-lecture
by an answer authority. It is not a breath-taking revelation
of some heretofore little known secret, esoteric solution to
the dilemmas of ‘The Single life .' It is not an exaltation of
singleness as the way of ‘the best and the brightest.’"
A series of cassette tapes by Keith Miller and Andrea
Wells will provide input each week. Other printed materials
will be available. The purpose of the series Is, first,
discovery of persons, friends. Second, recognition of singles
and their talents, interests, abilities, and needs in a new
way.

the past 6‘x years since From made
the tragic mistake of diving Into a
swimming pool In only three feet of
water. As a result his neck was
broken and his life was changed.
living in New Jersey at the time,
the father of six children found
himself lying flat on his back for six

Former Priest To Speak
Dr. Alberto Rtvera, a converted Catholic Jesuit priest,
will be speaking at the First Baptist Church of Winter
Springs this Sunday at 10 and 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. and
Monday at 7:15 p.m. The church Is located at 290 E.
Bahama Road.
Dr. Rivera's story was published in comic book form in a
Chick Publications booklet. Much controversy surrounds
these publications, according to the Rev. Robert Clark,
church pastor.

Schuller Leadership Institute
The Schuller Institute for Successful Church Leadership,
which has been attended by thousands of clergymen and
laymen, will be held at Rolling Hills Community Church In
Zellwood Sept. 15-18. The Zellwood Church is the daughter
congregation of Dr. Robert Schuller’s church in Garden
Grove, Calif., where he delivers the five lectures three
times a year in the famous Crystal Cathedral.
These have been video-taped and made available to the
Rolling Hills church. The series will be presented free of
charge at 7:30 p.m. at the church on Highway 441.
The motivational messages will also be beneficial for
persons in sales, real estate and insurance, according to
Pastor Harold P. DcRoo.

Tape Series For Singles
Hie monthly sharing meeting for the Single Again-Single
Parents G ass of Ravenna Park Baptist Church will be held
Saturday, Sept. 19, at 7 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Willis at 200 Mirror Drive, Sanford.
The tape series "Faith, Risk and Intimacy" will be used
for discussion. All area divorced, separated, widowed, and
single parents are Invited to participate In this sharing
time. Baby sitting and transportation are free by calling
323-2791 a few days in advance.

Appreciation Banquet
Pinecrest Baptist Church of Sanford held its first annual
Sunday School Appreciation Banquet, Sept. 12 at 7 p.m. at
the Sanford Civic Center. Dr. Keener Pharr was guest
speaker.

'Jubilee For Jesus'
The liord of life American I-utheran Church at 395
Tuscawilla Road, Winter Springs, will have a "Jubilee for
Jesus" this Sunday. Activities begin with a "Flapjacks
Breakfast" 7-9 a m. followed by a Rally Day program for
all ages at 9:15 a.m. including puppet ministry, special
music and a living parable. The worship service is at 10:30
a.m. with a children’s sermon and nursery provided.
Franklin E. ledvinka is pastor of the church

G len F ro m p a rtic ip a te s in s e rv ic e s a s c h u rc h lay le a d e r.

Baptist Mission
Emphasis Slated

weeks, his arm s and legs paralyzed.
"I couldn't even get my hand to
my mouth,” said From. He then
spent three months and 20 days in a
rehabilitation center. ’T v e been
improving some ever since," he
added.
From still has no use of his legs
and only limited use of his hands, but
he doesn't let that stand in the way of
serving in his church, being a
husband and father and earning a
living.
Before the accident, From led an
active life traveling all over the
world In field engineering for un­
derseas cable projects.
"I did all the remodeling around
the house and all my own work on
the car, 1 never took It to the
garage," recalled From. "I went
from doing everything to having
everything done for m e."
Fortunately From did not have the
mental hangups related to his
disability that many others with a
sim ilar type injury have ex ­
perienced.
While In rehabilitation he learned
to drive with hand controls and has
been driving a car for more than six
years. His specially equipped van.
which he has had for five years, has
a steering wheel adapter wilh hand
controls for brakes and accelerator,
and a lift (or getting In and out in his
wheelchair.
The motorized wheelchair and the
specially equipped vehicle plus a lot
of spirit have been From’s ticket to
Independence allowing him to drive
himself to work, to church and
home.
"My family has been very sup­
portive," said From, "It bothered
the children that I would never walk
again, but they were behind me 100
percent and were never ashamed to
be seen with me In a wheelchair. If 1

needed something done my wife or
children were more than willing to
help."
Glen and his wife, Darla, have two
daughters, Angela McKnight of
Dunedin, recently married, and Ann
who Is attending Kean College in
New Jersey. Their son Pat is a
student at I^ake Howell High School
and Tim is a student at Altamonte
C hristian School. The youngest
members of the family are the
twins, Jeff and Jam es, who attend
English Estates Elementary' School.
The family resides at 2538 Win­
nebago Court.
An electrical engineer, he now, of
necessity, holds dow-n an office Job
as staff manager of the legal
department of American Telephone
and Telegraph Co., Orlando.
At the time of his accident, From
said, “ I didn’t know the Lord, 1 knew
of him, but was a doubter. I went to
church because I thought it was the
thing to do. My wife wanted me to go
and I thought we should be taking
the children, but I was still very
skeptical in my own mind."
"Then God started dealing with
me and one Sunday when the
minister of the church gave an altar
call I felt led to go down, but the
Ixird really entered my life one day
when 1 was going down the highway
in my car and from (hat time on it's
been great."
Two and a half years ago —
shortly after moving here from New
Jersey, the Froms began looking for
a new church home. Mrs. From
checked out Community United
Methodist Giurch in Casselberry for
wheelchair accessibility and found
that it was all right so they have
been attending there ever since.
From is currently church lay
leader at Community and teaches a
Sunday School class for 11th and 12th

First Baptist Church of
Sanford will have a state
missions emphasis during the
10 B.m. worship service this
Sunday with the Rev. George
Dunn, director of missions (or
the
Sem inole
B aptist
Association, as guest speaker.
The service will launch the
season of prayer and special
state mission offering taking
place Sept. 13-19. The state
goal is to raise $555,000 and
the local church goal Is $1,100.
The F lorida B aptist Con- '
vention theme is "Building
Florida's Tomorrow." The
TH E REV.
majority of the goal will go
G
E
O
R G E DUN N
toward helping provide sites
The Women's Missionary
for new churches. Other funds
Union will bring a special
will go to United Christian
presentation during the
Action, Palm Beach Atlantic
prayer meeting hour, Wed­
College and Baptist Home for
nesday at 6:30 p.m.
Children.

You must admit I never lecture you about drinking.
That may be because many of my friends are drinkers, and I
sense a humanity about them that is missing in the selfrighteous abstainers I know. Or it may be because 1 myself
have been known to open up a canned vodka martini (the kind
you buy in the supermarket) and relax in the backyard at the
end of a summ er's day.
On balance, though, I would have to say 1 am against
drinking. lik e you, I have seen too many families destroyed by
drink. And worst of all, drinking Is responsible for that most
deadly of all the scourges of our society — the drunken driver.
Having said this, I must in all honesty admit that the saloon
(or cocktail lounge) has always held a peculiar fascination for
me.
You can go see the minister, but you need an appointment.
Also, there is something about going to see the minister which
is like going to see the doctor. You are “seeking professional
help." With that being the case, you cannot be as comfortable
or as much yourself as you would be If the two of you met
casually as friends at the bar.
The minister may move out from behind his desk, adjust his
garter and offer you a cup of coffee — all sincere but studied
attempts to put you at your ease. But there is still that
professional distance between the two of you.

Meetings For Divorced
An evening reflection and prayer for the Divorced and
Separated will continue on Sunday evenings at San Pedro
Center. The service will be held on one Sunday a month
through May, 5 to 7:30 p.m. starting Sept. 20. Baby-sitting
services are available at the Center. Father Benevento
Mldila, T.O.R. will present this program. For more In­
formation call or write, San Pedro Center, R.D. 1, Box I,
Maitland, Fla. 32751, 671-6322.

St. Ann's Plans Bazaar
St. Ann’s Annual Bazaar will be held Oct. 10 and 11 on the
St. Ann’s Giurch grounds on Dogwood Trail, DeBary. A
roast beef dinner will be served 34 p.m. Saturday and a
chicken dinner, 3-6 p.m., Sunday. Church organist will play
special requests during the activities.
Ed Cycler is chairman of the event and Ed Holmes, cochairman. The women of St. Ann’s Guild have been working
all summer to make toys and other articles to sell at the
bazaar. There will be games for children and adults.

Sunday School Seminar

Christian Women
Organize Fellowship
The
women
of
the
lighthouse Christian Center
of Sanford are in the process
of
organizing
an
interdemoninatlonal Christian
Women's Fellowship In the
local community.
The prim ary goal for the
fellowship is to provide
spiritual growth and meet the
spiritual needs of all those
involved.
The C hristian Women's
Fellowship is sponsoring a
women's banquet dinner on
Saturday, Sept. 19, at 8 p.m. at
the Holiday Inn on the Marina
in Sanford. Guest speaker will
be Mrs. Beverly Sipp of
Houston, Texas. Mrs. Sipp
ministers through teaching
the Word of God, having
received her ordination from

,
•'

*
*

"They built a ram p right away.
They didn't want to keep anybody
away because they couldn't get In,"
he added. "But many of the older
and smaller churches are not accessible." From thinks the laws
requiring public places and factlltes to be accessible to the disabled are
"G reat as far as they go."
“ When it comes to old buildings,
we need to m ake allow ances,
som etim es the cost to m ake
req u ired
ohanges
Is
Just
prohibitive," said From. "Many
beautiful old landmarks would be
marred by the additions. He said all
new buildings should be designed
with the handicapped In mind,
however.
From enjoys taking his family
camping, swimming and to the
movies and he "teaches them to do
the things he used to be able to do.

•
;
:

;

the In tern atio n al Bible
Institute and Seminary in
Orlando. She is active in
Women's Aglow.
Those who can't attend the
dinner, but wish to hear the
speaker may come at 7:30
p.m.
For additional Information
and dinner reserv atio n s
contact Gwen George at 3230555 or Josie McCrae at 3239648.
Anyone interested In taking
an active p a rt in the
fellowship may attend the
business meetings on the first
Saturday of each month at
homes of the members. The
fellowship and w orship
meetings will be held the third
Saturday of each month at
various location.

Saints A nd
Sinners
G «org« Plagenz
Maybe whaj we need are more clergymen who double as
bartenders. They could do their counseling in a less structured,
more natural set of surroundings.
There was a lA it h c ra n minister a few years ago who was
night bartender at a restaurant on Manhattan's East Side. His '
synod authorized him to conduct a "pub ministry." He felt the .
"pub may parallel the wells of Palestine where Jesus
frequently met people during his ministry."
■!
"The bar has been a confessional for centuries," he was
quoted as saying. "The bartender hears what men won't tell
their wives or their close friends."
He also said that bars are often "a company of the con­
cerned" which provide a kind of group therapy in an authentic r
real-people, non-role-playing setting.
The point Is not that "a minister In every b ar" could heal all
our hurts but that ministers must find a way to deal m o re '
personally and effectively with human problems. A pub
ministry offers some clues.
Nothing can take the place of a relaxed social visit or a
personal, handwritten letter.

S«minoU Heights Constituted

QUAtniT ro SING
The m a l e q u a r t e t f r o m Bob J o n e s Uni ver si t y,
G re e n v ille . 8.C ., will p re s e n t a p r o g r a m of s a c re d
m u s i c at V ictory B a p tist C h u rc h on C ount y R oad
427, Sa nf or d, this S u n d ay a t 9:45 a n d 11 a . m .

This Sunday at 3 p.m. in the auditorium of the new Lake
Mary High School the congregation of Seminole Heights
Baptist Giurch will become duly constituted as a Southern
Baptist church. A mission sponsored by First Baptist
Giurch of Geneva the group first met officially Sept. 10,
1980. They called Dr. Jay Ted Cosmato as pastor, with the
goal of establishing a church in the area of la k e Mary
Boulevard and Markham Woods Road. The first members
were received at services the following Sunday at the
Sanford G vlc Center.
The congregation, which now consists of 246 m em ben,
has been meeting at Seminole High School on Sundays and
Covenant Presbyterian Church for midweek services.
Plans call for building in the near future on the 8.2 acre plot
on Markham Woods Road purchased by the congfegation.
There are 352 enrolled In Bible Study. Thw'constituted
church will petition for membership in the Seminole Baptist
Association affiliated with Florida Baptist Convqplion.
The service and reception to follow are open to the public.

.-

Heritage Baptist Church

A Sunday School Teachers and Bua Workers seminar will
be held at First Baptist Church of Deltona on Sept. 14 and 15
at 7:30 p.m. the Rev. Steve Morphia, who has had extensive
training and success in this area, will be the director. The
seminar is open to the public. A baby nursery will be
available during the sessions.

Schedules First Service
The H eritage B aptist
Church will hold Its first
Sunday services this Sunday
at the Forest Lake Seventhday
A dventist
Church
facilities on Stale Road 436 in
Forest City.

Promotion Day
This Sunday will be promotion day for the First
Presbyterian Church of Sanford Sunday School from
nursery through senior high classes. The newly promoted
third grade wilh receive recognition during the 11 a.m.
service with the presentation of Good News Bibles.
Teachers will be commissioned and installed at the 11 a m .
service on Sept. 20.
The Senior High Fellowship will hold an organizing
meeting this Sunday at 6 p.m. in fellowship hall. An outing
to Playalinda Beach is planned far 2 p m ., S ept S .

Fine Arts Program
Westminster United Presbyterian Church, 2641 Red Bug
Road, Casselberry, will present Michael Reed in c o n ce rt on
this Sunday at 4 p.m. Reed is currently the artist p ia n ist a t
the Americana Hotel in Fort Worth, Texas. He has a
M aster's Degree in piano from Texas Christian University.

From says that many churches do
not realize how inaccessible their
facilities are to the handicapped
until one of their members is con­
fined to a wheelchair. This was the
case, he said, with the church he
attended In New Jersey, which was
the second oldest in the northeast.

From Behind Pulpit To Behind Bar

Sunday School Round Up
Tliis Sunday will be Round-Up Sunday in the Sunday
School at First Baptist Church of Deltona. There will be
prizes (or the best western outfit, contests and dinner on the
grounds, according to the Rev. Vemle Peck, Sunday School
director. G asses for all ages begin at 9:45 a.m.

graders. He has served on the"
Administrative Board and coaches
the church girls' softball team.
A special wooden ram p was built &lt;•
for the church chancel so that From [
could navigate his wheelchair down
the aisle and up on the platform
whenever he participates In the
service as lay leader. He has worked .
with two different senior ministers
this year as lay leader. He has
worked with two different senior
ministers this year as lay leader.
“Arthur (Padgett) and Wight
(Kirtley) have both been a pleasure
to work with," From said of Com­
munity's past and present pastors.

RON CREW S
...C h u r c h P a s t o r

F e stu re d will be Craig
Blair, formerly soloist for
Jack Wyrtxen and Word of
Life in Schroon Lake, N.Y.;
Ann Marie Weis, a ven­
triloquist and "Jackie."
Sunday School will begin ct
6:45 a.m. with classes for all
ages. Special music will be
provided at the 11 a.m. ser­
vice and a Children's Church
program. The pastor, the
Rev. Ron Crews will speak. A

I

practical training lime for
Christians will be given at 6
p.m. The evening service will
be at 7 p jn .
Crew s,
a
native
of
Jacksonville, recently moved
to Altamonte Springs with his
wife, Linda, and their two
children, Stephanie, 6 and
David 5.
Ron and Linda are both
g rad u a tes of Tennessee
Temple University in Chat­
tanooga. Since graduating he
has served in churches in
N orth C arolina, F lo rid a,
Indiana, and Illinois.
Most recently, he started
and pestered the Heritage
Baptist Church of Bartlett, 111.

N e w o f f i c e r s o f ( b e S a n f o r d M i n i s t e r i a l A s s o c i a t i o n I n c l u d e ( f r o m l e f t ) L e r o y .'
D . S o p e r J r „ o f llo ly C ro s s E p is c o p a l C h u rc h , s e c r e t a r y ; P e t e r C o u iia s ,
S a n f o r d A llia n c e C h u r c h , v ic e p r e s i d e n t ; G a r y D e B u s k , o f R a v e n n a P a r k

-

B a p tis t C h u rc h , tr e a s u r e r ; a n d th e R e v . P h ilip W a is a n e n , o f F i r s t A s s e m b ly ,
p r e s i d e n t . T h e n e a t m e e t in g o f t h e a s s o c ia tio n w ill b e T u e s d a y a t W e s te r n /
S i z z l i n S t e a k H o u s e a t 11 a . m .

"■

�i^

■feLONDIE

4C— CvMlngHarald, laniard, FI.

Sunday, Upt. 1), IN I

by Chic Young

across
1 Quipped
6 Who it (coot)

10 S tream
12 Msgic
14 Showy
covtring

15 Tre|tn htro
16 Conipti!

by Mor t W a l k e r

B E E T L E BAI LEY
I HAVE T O
LO SE SO M E
W E IG H T

TOU SM O U L P
E X ER C ISE M ORE

X D O H 'T B E L IE V E
E X E R C IS E H E L P S

by Art S a n s o m

T H E BORN LOSER

I Rrvar in
Germany
9 Fly high
I I Oittgrtaabla
person
12 Valet
13 CIA
forerunnar
IS Noun auffii
20 Stinging
inaecta
21 Stable worker
22 Marooned
23 Setups
24 Croat
inscription
25 Radar screen
image
27 Imitated
29 Marry t
woman
29 Malicious look

A niw ar to Previous P u u lt

□ L J U lU U U U lH n C J U
□ □ n ln n n o

HOROSCOPE

□□ODD

By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

□

H D U nnO D

□ □ □ □ □ no
n n « u n
□□□ n n n n
□□□□
a n n o
n n n n
n a n
a n o n n
n n n n n n n
« ■ □ □ □
nnnaH B
B G tD O n n O Q Q U U Q
□ a n a ■ n n n n ■□□□
□ □ □ c la n n o Ia n a
n rjn n ln n n n in n n

YOUR BIRTHDAY
September 13,1911
New associates who could
be pals as well as people to
learn from will enter your life
38 Become
46 Motion
in the year following your
mellow
picture
birthday. T hey’ll replace
40 Buy off
47 Again
those with whom you no
41 Slanted
46 Cincinnati ball
longer see eye-to-eye.
club (ebbr)
42 Basketball
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt. 22)
league (ebbr) 50 Short sleep
52 Wettem hemi You could experience more ill
3 t Injection
43 Drones
•phert organi effects than usual today in
vehicle
44 Phraaa of un­
derstanding (2
ration (ebbr)
33 Hawaiian
Im p o rta n t
o n e - to - o n e
53 Coda dot
goddtii
wdi |
relationships if you are overly
Insistent upon having your
1 1 ) 4 s
• 1 1 •
own way. Romance, travel,
It
11
11
to
luck, reso u rces, possible
14
!»
pitfalls and career for the
coming m onths a re all
II
IT
■
"
discussed in your Astro10
Graph that begins with your
* J
11 J
11 14 It
11 It
birthday. Mail $1 for each to
■
■ 1
Astro-Graph, Box 469, Radio
&gt;0
City Station, N.Y. 10019. Be
II ”
14
DOWN
sure to specify birth date.
1
)•
LIBRA (Sept. 230cL 23)
n
1 Swing music
■ ”
11 ■
Responsibilities you neglect
2 Irritates
,0
to attend to today could cause
3 Skeleton pen
11
4J 4) 44
&lt;1
41 41 41
4 Compete
you even greater grief at a
■
point
future date. Do what's ex­
41
to
t t ti »
5 Perish
pected of you.
6 Heavy
44
41
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
affliction
SO
V
7 Put keen edge
Avoid competing in social
on
situations today. Relax.
|«MRtF4PtMlir| 9 Pfttl AM * I
Enjoy yourself without
worrying about who's in the
spotlight or who is No. 1.

17 Troublt
19 It human
20 Snow vahiclt
23 Ttuntt (vtr)
26 Cowboy's
mcknsms
27 Cobbtef's tool
30 Btyt
32 Radical
34 Awful
35 Girmtnt pioca
36 Mouthful
37 Panod
39 Church
official
40 Army unit
42 Vrbrata
45 Fithorman't
inart
46 Station wagon
49 Matt
tranaportation
S1 Somatimt tali
ingroditnt
64 Microboa
55 Ctutod agony
55 Oota
57 Simmert

WIN AT BRIDGE

Postponement" that baa Just
been published.
We consider this to be an
outstanding book for every­
one from beginner to expert.
Karpin starts by llstins the
five cases where declarer
should postpone the drawing
of trumps, th
ey iare:
They
1. Where it Is imperative
to uie hts or dummy's
•umps to
2. Where It Is ImperaUve
for declarer to establish a
winner or winners for the
discard of one or more
losers
3. Where a trump entry Is
required in dummy In order
to cash some of dummy's
high cards.
4. Where it is vital that
dummy's and declarer's
trump* be used u lines of
communication in order to
assure the cashing of cards
In one of dummy's suits that
must be established first.
5. Where "more pressing
bUBlMM” MCUftiUllI U lt
the drawing of tn m p s be
deferred.
Today's hand illustrates
No. 1. A trump lead would
beat the slam out a club ts
opened South must ruff,
pity ace and another heart,
ruff a second club and his
last heart and then lead
trump*.

by Bob M o n t a n a

A RC HI E

M ill

NORTH

WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE
BETWEEN 4 . M AND

♦ Q 101

K M .,r n o r j- ^
♦ J 74
AIIIISU
WEST
EAST
♦A4
♦J
V J I 72
VKQI0IS

♦ 1142

♦ 1012
♦ J47

♦ AKQ4

SOUTH
4 U IIIII
VAI4
♦ AKQ

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

E E K A MEEK

by Howie Sc hn e id e r
M O T BE A
GOURM ET!

A*

Wm i

Nwlk

Put

:♦

Put

Put

East

Put

ME
Opening lead: 4K

/

PR I SC I L L A' S P O P
I CAM H A R PL V
WAIT.' AW VACATION
BEG IN S NEXT W EEK /

b y E d S u lliv a n

' — WHICH S TA R TS

I THOU GHT S C U HAD
V O U R VACATION
IN A U G U S T .'
v

WHEN AAR. GRUAABLS*
GOES ON H/S VACATION
FOR TWO W EEKS '

By Oswald Jacoby
aad AlaaSaatag
Fred Karpin of WashingDime
too, D C., has been a prolifu
bridge writer for a long
Ume. In addlUon, be has
been compiling hands from
tournament and rubber play
for 50 years. Back In 1971,
1972
be wrote a book called "The
Drawing of Trump* and its

INSWAPS* rNTtXPKUt ASM)

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N 'C A R LY LE ’

CAMie,

5U FP0&amp;

READY!
W A rt'l CAN'T

itm m i

i

FIND a r t IF o m e /
T H fcT tM MAKES IT
Ite T ltA E .

BUGS BUNNY

For Sunday, Soptombor 13, 1981

by Stoffel A He l md a hi

r~

—

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) If things don't go as
smoothly as you'd hoped they
would today, owing to the
interference of another, don't
take your wrath out on In­
nocent byatanders.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Today, instead of doing
what you feel serves your best
in terest, you m ay buckle

For Monday, Soptombor 14, 1981
YOUR BIRTHDAY
September 14,19*1
Many unusual and exciting
opportunities m ight be
coming your way In the year
following your birth d ay .
However, not all of them are
what they seem to be. Check
each one thoroughly and
separate the good from the
bad.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
An associate might present
his or her most advantageous
qualities today in order to
screen from your view what
tills person is really up to. Be
watchful. Find out more of
what lies ahead for you in the
year following your birthday
by sending for your copy of
AstroOraph. Mail 51 for each
to Astro-G raph, Box 489,
Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LIBRA (Sept. 230ct. 23)
You might hear things today
which present a rosy and
exciting picture, and which
urge you to Join some group or
movement. Sleep on it. The
view will be different
tomorrow.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Someone with a dishonest
bent could have an eye on
your possessions today. Take
extra care to insure your
belongings are well-guarded.
8AGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Although you may be
in the mood to make some
changes today, it might be
wise to hesitate. Once on the
other side of the fence, you
might discover the grass was
not greener.

by Bob T h av e s

IT &gt;

ARIES (March 21-Apri) 19)
It won't do any good to Bet
angry a t someone who
promised to do a favor for
you, but forgot. By remaining
calm you'll think of ways to
readjust the situation.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Because you don't think twice
about asaisting others you feel
everyone is like you. They’re
not, so be on guard today for a
manipulator who might try to
take advantage of you.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
A member of your household
has some selfish motive for
his or her actions today. Don't
let this person do anything at
the expense of another family
member.
CANCER (June 21J u ly 22)
Today, some type of condition
work or involving your career
ts not all it appears to be.
Don’t be so quick to accept
everything at face value.

by Laonartf Starr

L - I DON’T I THEYU BE COMING
SEE TVT WHALER! AROUMP AGAIN /
NON, MARK- ( COME ABOUT, CAP*N

Tt«e*S STILL] I CAM 5€£ THE SHaS
c/teic

tfPs see if
He CAM SUP AWAY/

jack i-

C A tL ftp

"6 8 fF *

who feed off kind individuals
like yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) You might have to be
extra careful today, or get
caught up in a n o th e r's
complicated
money
problems. This person would
Just love to unload them on
someone else.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Select com panions wisely
today. There are those who
would think nothing of
tearing you holding the bag If
they get Into a Jam.

LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Before committing yourself
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. today, get out the pad and
19) When talking to strangers pencil and figure to the penny
today, take with a grain of aalt what the cost might be. The
tales of woe you might hear. hidden factors will surprise
You may encounter persons* you.

ANNI E
FR A NK AND E R N E S T

under In order to appease a
dom ineering asso ciate. Be
your own person.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20- Feb.
19) Sometimes you’re quite
good at rooting out bargains,
bu* today there’s a chance you
could pay far more for things
than they are truly worth.
PISCES (F th . 20-March 20)
Be flexible today rather than
take rigid positions. You
might find yourself In a spot
where your pride won’t let you
back off, even tf you're wrong.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
This is not a good lime to take
on more responsibilities than
you can handle. Though your
intentions will be admirable
you may cause additional
comDllcations.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Friends who are usually easy
to get along with could be a bit
tem p eram en tal today and
create some uncomfortable
situations. Don't let things get
out of hand.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Your actions will be closely
scruUnited by your peers
today. Don't do anything to
tarnish your Image, or give
one who isn't too fond of you
fodder for gossip.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
There's a possibility you could
cross swords with someone
today who holds strong views
d ia m etrically opposed to
yours. Don't let the debate get
too heated.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be
extra-careful in business or
investment situations today.
This is not a time to im­
pulsively Jump in without first
probing for more facts.

s

---* OF
re- Tue
IA ra m /*
THE ICEBERGS
THOUGH-I’LL HAVE TO
WRECT CAP’M JACK FROM
THE BOH-

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F lft« D F ° R IT.
X*A**I 1-11

by T. K. R y a n

TUM BLEW EEDS

F L E T C H E R 'S L A N D I N G

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Sunday, S o * . U , 1W I-7C

TO N IG H T'S TV
aurvtv* m the Kanta t ol th* tl70t
M
SOL10 OOLD

1:30
0 0 WIDE WORLD OF 8PORT8
15-round WBA World LtgMwoght
Championahlp bout t« i» .* n
• Cloud* Hoal *nd Rodolfo "Oato"
Oontiiei (try* trom Atlantic Oty). *
, look at th* upcoming weKaraeight
bout baheaan Sugar Ray Leonard
and Thomai Haarn*
,.# ( 1 0 ) FAMILY PORTRAIT

2:00
■ 0 BASEBALL: AN INSIDE
LOOK
# ( 1 0 ) UVtNO ENVIRONMENT

2:05
IX (17) BASEBALL San D*go
PadrM at Atlanla B '.v .l

2:15
0 0 BASEBALL Boilon Rad Soi
at Haw York Yank***

2:30
0 ( 1 0 ) LIVING ENVIRONMENT

3:00
0 0 NCAA FOOTBALL Stanford
at Purdu*
31(35) MOVIE "Tartor It A Man"
(B/W)|tM0|Francfa Ladarar. Orata
Thyttan A Nupwrack aurytvor
ancountara an maan* acnnittl ky
mg on an ialand rattaal. wnar* n* it
conducting bir.rrt aiparlmanta
Ifial tranalorm arumail mto human
belnga
(10)) PRE8ENTC the annual
■
110
affihatt convention ol tha National
Convention of La Raya

,

4:00

11 0 ( 1 0 ) JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSt TEM

4:30
■ (10) VIC BRADEN’S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE "Playing Dou­
blet" VIC Braden dtmonttratt* the
key pomta ot alratagy and move­
ment that make doublet a real
adventure (R|g

240-ROBERT Tha paot ol a
helicopter tuffera a heart attack
and crathaa mto a hidden canyon
|Rl
© (35) MOVIE "Tha Man Who
Had Power Over Woman” |C|
(l»70) Rod Taylor. Carol White A
Praia agent caught m the madden­
ing orbit ol London'! temgtng
entertainment world auddenty findi
the giamourout Me and lit reward!
are not worth hta iota ot ten-

reaped

■
(10) EVENINQ AT POPS
Compotar / arranger Leroy
Andereon (otm Arthur Fiedler and
lhe Boilon Popa Orcheatra (R)

5:00

0 EMERGENCY
(35) ORIZZLY ADAMS
( 10)) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
MANY “UEFA Cup Final" Altmaar

I

CD lfu)COLLEGE SCOREBOARD

5:05
© (1 7 ) UNTOUCHABLES
EVENING

6:00

..NEWS
I5I BIONIC WOMAN
: 10) ALL CREATURES GREAT
ANO SMALL II
© (17) COL LEOE SCOREBOARO

8:05
© (1 7 ) WRESTLING

6:30
■ 0 NBC NEWS
0 0 7(NEWS

7:00
) PORTRAIT OF A LEGEND
HEEHAW
J LAWRENCE WELK
(35) WILO, WILD WEST
(10) UNOCRSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU
© ( 17) COLLEGE SCOREBOARO

7.-05
© ( 17) WRESTLING (COHT-0)

7:30

F

I ■'
.

l ’
I

■ 0
FLORIDA’S WATCHMQ
"Cuban Eihxbft At Daytona Beach
Mueeum" Hoal John E. Evan*

6.-00

■ 0 MOVW "Th* Lima Houaa
On Th* PraMa" (C) (1*74) Michael
Landon. Makata Okbarl An Amartcan wntdernata family attempt a to

11:30
Q FACE THE NATION
■ DON JONAS
_ (35) MOVIE -'Btondta’a Anmvaraary" (B/W) (1»4«| Penny Skigteton, Arthur Lak* Blond* i amivaraary gift from Oagwood cautaa
nothing but troubta
# ( 1 0 ) VnUNGSI "Hera King Har­
old la Kitad ’ in tOM AO. a hare*
three-way atruggt* tor England
marked th* and ol th* Viking Ag*

12.00
■ 0 NEWS
12:30
# 0 SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
Hoal Mary Kay Plec* Guaat: Wi­
ll* Nation. |R)

(R )Q

6:05
© (17) NASHVILLE AUVE TV
and radio pet tonality Ralph Emery
hoi!I a counlry-watlern hour Ot kva
muK (torn Naahvtoe a Oprytand
Hotel, lealurmg aome ot the hot teal
atari ol the Grand Ote Opry. with
co-hoat Jacky Ward

0:00
CD O MOVIE "High Midnight"
(IB7»| Mika Conner! David Bimey
When hit wite end child are killed In
a nuataken drug raid, a coot truenon worker aeeka (uatice by taking
on the tawloei narcotic! aquad (R)
0 O LOVE BOAT Captain StubIng gala napped m a love triengle,
and a model pretenda to be married
to lhal men will leave her atone |R|
(10) MYSTERY "Safgaant
Cnbb Swing. Swing Together”
While liking a midnight dip In th*
Thamat, Harriet Shaw ol Ehrtda
College witnaataa a murder and la
arhltkad oil by Sergeant Cnbb to
)OMi in the pot tort ol three men in a
boat (Rig

AFTERNOON

12^0
5:30
© (1 7 ) SUNDAY MASS

5:55
0 # DAILY WORO

0.-00

# THE LAWANO YOU
■ AGRICULTURE U S A
(17) BETWEEN THE UNES

10:05
© (1 7 ) NEWS

10:30
© (3 5 ) THE BAXTERS

11.-00
35BCNNYHILL
(10) KENTUCKY PACMO DER­
BY Th* fourth ennuel Kentucky
Pacing Derby - the third )*w*t In
the 2-year-old pacara' Trtpt* Crown
- la lalacait toy* trom LoutavtXa
Downa. Louravrka, Kentucky
11:09
© (1 7 ) MOVIE ”Th* Phantom Ol
Tha Opera" (1M2) Herbert Lorn.
Heather Sean A mad. diatlgured
mutrclan who haunta th* Part*
Opera Houaa kldnwa a beautiful
young aoprano and taka* her to hi*
aubtarranaan lair.

11^0

0 # MOVC "Th* Deadly Trap"
|C| (1*72) Frank LanoaR*. Fay*
Dunaway. A man Itndt hi* pern Ufa
and that of Ma larnify andangarad
whan h* tnaa to break fraa ol m*
eaaociation with a apy organitatlon.
0 # MOVIE "Twahrw Angry

i
12:30
# 0 NFL-It
0 0 I NFL TODAY
TOO
0 1 COLLE
COLLEGE FOOTBALL S t
Waekly tughtoghli of kay NCAA
contaati ara praaantad

6:30
SPECTRUM
VWWPOINT ON NUTRITION

■

6:50

1:00

0 DAILY DEVOTIONAL

7:00

7:30
0

MONTAGE: THE BLACK

»

TOOArS BLACK WOMAN

J5}Lj. oanwlb

f

17) IT IS WRITTEN

1:30

6.-00

0 Q WRESTLING
■ (10) WALL STREET WEEK
"Stalking Th* Wall Street Barg u n 1Gueat: Harm L. Kempner Jr ,
cMat mveil man I officer ot the U 8.
National Bank ol Gafvaaton (R)

VOICE OF VICTORY
REXHUMSARO
— SHOW MY PEOPLE
(35) JONNY OUC8T
_ ( 1 0 j SESAME STREET (R)g
© (171 THREE BTOOOtS ANO
A

2:00

FRIENDS

0 B BASEBALL Boilon Rad Soi
al New York Yankee*
■ (10) NEW CINEMA FROM
MOU "The Whole Sky" (IMS) The
Dory ol an arranged marriage and
kla i t experienced by I typical tow­
er middie-ctilt family ot non barn
India la told
© (17) BASEBALL San Dwgo
Padrea at Atlanta Bravea

6:30
1 0 SUNDAY MASS
5 0 DAY OF DISCOVERY
) ■ ORAL ROBERTS
6 (35) JOBIE AND THE PUSSY­
CATS

9:00
# 0 J-J.’S(CLUBHOUSE
(
) SUNDAY
JitteuN
ot MORNING
KIDS ARE PEOPLE TOO
0 o Kioe
Ouwfta Deborah Harry. David
Branner. Or. Hint Hotter. Rachel
Sweet (R|
© (35) BUGS BUNNY / ROAD

8

• 0 REAL ESTATE ACTION LINE

8:30
# 0 MOVIE "Lady From Loutalana" (B/W| (1*41) John Wayn*.
On* Munion A Lomtian* lawyer1!
romance with th* daughter of a
wa*-known gamblwr coma* to a halt
over tha queation of gambling
“ ’35) THE JETSON8
10)hWORLD OF THE SEA

m

l)H O M "Abbott And Coelaoo Meat Th* InvtWbl* Man" (B/W)
|1M1) Nancy Guild. Wllkem Flawlay. Tha tnvtwbte Man hwe* tha
acattmbralnad duo aa del act bet
■ (10) NOVA "Llnu* Pautong
Cruaadmg Sclent*!" Tha Ma and
work ot the controveralal Nobat
Prue-wmntng actantial ara traced.

camera! and imaging davtca*
uncover rmcroecopic Ma In mMuta
detail, panairala gala***, fraata
movement and unravel myttartea
about anctanl Egyptian mummia*
(Rl

7:30

6.-00
# 0 CHIPS Ponch dtacovera mat
a boyhood friend la running • Fagln-Mta burglary operation (R)
0 0 EMMY AWARDS Th* 33rd
edition ot that* award* honoring
excellence in leleviaton wta be (ttecait Hva from the Ctnc Canter In
Paaadena
0 ■ MOVW Fore* 10 From
Nlvarona" (IS7S) Robert Shaw,
Barbara Bach Five Abed totdwra
and on* wornan plot to blow up a
dam and daatroy a alratagic bridge
m lb* middle of Nan-occupied tent-

4:30

to n

11:30
■ 0 MOVW "24 Hour* Ol Th*
Rabat’ ( 1978) Richard Thomai.
Sutan Tyre# Th* affect ol ■ teen
idol a death on a group ol cottage
itudenti in a amall Southern town
lidramatited (R)
0 Q THE NOHT STALKER
Soma people working for in
underground archive are found
dead and Kolchak kuapacti that a
creature la reaponalb* lor thak
death* (R)
~ D MONTE CARLO SHOW
35) rr s YOUR BUSINESS
17) OPEN UP

12:30

0 O MOVIE T t* Outiida Man "
(C) (19721 Ann-Margret. Jean Trtn(igrv*nl
© ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "Th* Man From
Tha Onara1 Club" ( 190)1 Danny
Kay*. Cara Wilkama

12:40
0 O MOVIE "Taat* Th* Blood
Of Dracuta" ( 1970) Chnatophar La*.
Gaoltray Keen

1:30
■ 0 DAILY DEVOTIONAL

2:20
© ( 1 7 ) MOVIE "China Ventura"
( 1953) Edmond O'Brian, Barry Sumvan

8:00

10:00
( 10) TO THE MANOR BORN

S 17
(

) NEWS

0 ■ MARCUS WELBY, M O.
(TUE-THJ)
© (17) MISSION: IMPOBSIBLE
(WEO.THU)

5:15

KUWAIT

0 0 GOOO MORNMO AMERICA
©{351 TOM ANO JERRY
0 ( 1 0 VILLAALEORCIR)
© ( 17) FUNTIME

7:30

FEELING FREE (TUE)
_ ( 10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
UOHT (R) (WEO)
0 ( 10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

© (35 ) WOODY WOODPECKER
■ ( 10) SESAME STREET (R) Q

10) OUC PASAT (FRI)
( 17) funttme

8:00

CAPTAIN KANGAROO

35j CASPER

I DREAM OF JCANME
6:30
D(35 ) GREAT SPACE COASTER
10) MWTER ROGERS (R)
( ( 17) MY THREE SONS

M0

1 0 HOUR MAGAZINE
) ■ DONAHUE
■ movw
5(35 ) QOMER PYLE
10 SESAME STREET(R)g
) ( 17fHAZEL

3'30

D(35 ) SCOOflY DOO
5 10} ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
6 ( 17) THE FUNT8 TONES

4.-00

) 0 UTTLE HOUSE ON THE
LAME
) 0 JOHN DAWSON
) ■ MERV GRIFFIN
6(35 ) WOOOY WOOOPECKER
1( 10) SESAME STREET (R) g
3( 17) THE MUNSTER8

4:30

) (35 ) TOM ANO JERRY
3( 17) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER

8:30

) (35 ) AHOY ORIFFITH
)j 17) OREEN ACRES
1000
0 T1CTAC DOUGH
ORICHARO SIMMONS
(35 ) I LOVE LUCY
10 MATH PATROL
( 17) MOVW

10:30

3.-00

■ QUDMO LIGHT
■ general HOSPITAL
(35 ) BUGS BUNNY ANO
NOB
10) FROM JUMPSTRETT (R)

6:00

0 OtLLIGAN'S WLANO
O HOGAN S HEROES
(35 ) WONOER WOMAN
10 MWTER ROGERS (R)
( 17) THE BRADY BUNCH

5:30

10 LAVERNE A SHIRLEY
J 0 M*A*S*H

ill

(TO) POSTSCRIPTS

) BEVERLY HILLB1UJEB
(17)1

1 BLOCKBUSTERS
J ALICE (R)
-95) 0 ICKVAN0 YKE
( 10 ) ELECTRK COMPANY (R)

O

1 0 WHEEL OPPORTUNE
3 ■ THE PRICE W RIGHT
3 0 LOVE BOAT(R)
6 (35 ) BUD BREWER

» 101
( io ) thmkabout
11:16

0 ( 10)

MATHEMATICAL RELA­
TIONSHIPS

11:30

■ 0 PASSWORD PLUS
© (35 ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
AFTERNOON

5:25
© ( 17| r a tpa t r o l (tuci

12.00

5:30

CARO SHARKS

0 O SUMMER SEMESTER

5:45
© ( 17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON,
FRO
) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
) DAILY WORO
7 ) WORLD AT URGE (TUE)

6:00
THE UW ANO YOU (MON)

0 ■ ONE DAY AT A TIME Th*
uni* ol Schnaidar i boat friend
decide! that three'! a crowd whan
Scbnetder l around (R)

0 TEXA8

J

7:00

© ( 17) RAT PATROL (FPU)

I TODAY W FLORKIA

10:30

2:30

0 0 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW

11.-00

5:65

© ( 35 ) JIMMY BWAOOAAT

0 0 ANOTHER WORLD
0 f i ONE LIFE TO UVE

0 0 TOOAY
0 0 MORNtNQ WITH CHARLES

I ( 10) MATH PATROL

2:30

5:00

8:30

0 ( 10) A.M. WEATHER

10:15

0 O NEWS

S

© (3 5 ) JERRY PALWELL

6:30
0 # BEWITCHED
6 :45

11:00
JB 0B N EW S
7) CARIBBEAN fM H Tt
Hoata Judy Gordon. Cartoi
Conda Guaat! Governor of Puerto
Rico Cartoi Romero Barcelo and
h* write: ptamtt Jeaua Sanroma.
•mgera Nydla Caro and Tno Loa

DAY OF DISCOVERY
MORHINO
) EVENMQ AT POPS Th*
great |a n plantil Oacar Patareon
perform! with th* Boalon Pop*
4:55
0 O CELEBRITY REVUE (FRp
conducted by John WMiami (R)

%

2:00

SUNRISE

35 ) JIM BARKER
17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT

SPECTRUM (TUD

BLACK AWARENESS (WEO)
THIRTY MdfUTE* (THU)
HEALTH FWLDIPRn

, JSTthe world o f people
[17) FREEMAN REPORTS

il MOVIHAkiP 111
H«y i n n

12:30

m in i

NDAY

B
IT THE YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS

fill

TO

Ti«l
OMLY

0 0 .RYAN'S HOPE
© ( 35 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

IM
• S )DDAYS OP OUR LIVES
0 0 )1ALL
A MYCHILDREN

in p i)
5) © ( 17) MOVW
1:30

CLASH::. TITANS
»•

NRHTW M Q

0 0 AS THE WORLD TURNS

Wrre
Meeting The New Season

008PORTBBEAT
© (1 7 ) LAST OF THE WILO

© ?17) HAZEL

5.00

10:30

W

•
0 OWNEY-S WONDERFUL
WORLD "Th* Barefoot Executive"
Network aiecutivaa bacom*
involved m a wild acrambM to k**p
th* public from finding out about a
cbimpanra* who plcka hit ahowt
(Part 21(RIO
0 0 0 MINUTES
■ TRUE LIFE STORKS Th*
llorlet ot a protpador who atrlkaa
It rich than loeaa it as and an
alcoholic'a aaarch lor her natural
motbar ar* dramatttad. Dick Van
Dyk* and Manon Rot* alar
© (35) WILD KINGDOM
■ (10) BOUNOBTAGE Three of
tha graalaat American guitar playera - Georg* Benton Chet Atkina
and Earl Klugh - perform an hour
ot |an. country and rock |R)g
© ( 1 7 ) MOVW The B ru t BolIta" |1M4| Tony Randan. Burl hr**
A man buy* a brail both* lor hta
nance* ■ lather, but trouble begin*
when a gen* appear*

8:30

■ 0 NFL FOOTBALL New Eng­
land Patriot! at Philadelphia Eaglet
0 ■ U S. OPEN TENNIS Live
coverage ot the men1* hnata (trom
Ftuthmg Meadow*. N Y I
■ (10) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "Tha tnvtwMa World1

10:00

7.-00

3"30

4:00

0 O BARNEY MILLER A local
community group atartt a tui act*
not m tha t 2lh pracmct in prptatl of
poor poke* protection (R) Q
- 35 ) JIM BARKER
10) THE OOOO HOGHBORS

6:30
00A B C N C W B
■ (10) FLORKIA HOME GROWN
Hoat Tom MacCubbm
© (17) fact PEOPLE Hoat Mary
Ann* loughhn

© (35) MOVIE -Nightmare"
(B/W| (19WI Edward G Robmaon.
Kavm McCarthy A young muaician
gala caught up m a web ot murder
m New Orteam
# ( 10) KENTUCKY PACINO DER­
BY Tha loutth annual Kentucky
Pacing Darby - tha third fewer In
the 2-year-old pacara1Trtpt* Crown
- la larecatl from Louuvta* Downa.
LouitvU*. Kentucky

8:15

351 BIONIC WOMAN
(10) MAQJC METHOO OF OIL
PAP4T1NQ

■ 0 MOVW "High lea" fl»S0 )
Dind Janitan, Tony Mutanla Two
couplet on a weekend mountain
ckmb in if* Pacific Notibwen ara
himanavalanct* (Rig
caught
10) UASTERPWCE THEATRE
• (110
FESTIVAL OF FAVORITES
"Suntal Song Seed Tima" On
New Year'! Eva. Chne mamet
Ewan Tevanda*. a foreman at *
nearby term (Pari 4||R|
© ( 17) ATLANTIC CITY AUVE
Hoal Bob Eubanka

3:00

( 101MIBTER ROGERS (R)
(17) LOST IN SPACE

6:00

© (35) ITS YOUR BUSINESS

■ 0 NFL FOOTBALL Moulton
Oiark at Cleveland Browni
0 B NFL FOOTBALL TampaBay
Buccaneer! at Kanaaa City Chiaft
0 Q MORAL ISSUES
© ( 3 5 ) MOVIE "Tha Hard Way"
(B/W) 11943] Ida lupmo. Dannie
Morgan ■Who* puahmg her younger
Niter to atardom. a girl wrack a her
own toft
■ (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW(R)
© (17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE

0 OPPORTUNITY UNE
■ ROBERT SCHULLER
■ PICTURE Of HEALTH
(35) CHANGED LIVES
(17) JAMES ROBSON

10:00

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0 ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL

© (17) FOOTBALL SATURDAY
Holt Bob Neal Paul Hornung.
Alei HtwkMt. Norm Van Brockton
are featured
■ 0 MISS AMERICA PAGEANT
Fifty young women compete tor a
lift* and a crown In IN* annual
pageant, la be i alec at I live trom
Atlantic City. N J ; Ron Ely hoata
0
FANTASY ISLAND A tatevllion alar re-craaiea the fight ot a
long-nvaimg avtalita. and a pollman becomet a renowned Jan
musician (R)n
© (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
■ (10) FLAMBAROS "What Ar*
Servanla For?" Th* new tamity at
Flambat da cmebralei harvaal lima,
Dick and Chriatina rekindle their
eerlier romance (Part 11)|R)g

IBOBBY BOWDEN
IJOHN MCKAY
IISSUES ANO ANSWERS
10) THE PRR4E OF MtBS
JEAN BRODIE "Dorothy And
Jukat" Impreaaad by Dorothy AS•opp a natural grac*. Mita Brod*
batravei that her itudent may have
a graat tutur* aa a dancer (R)

500

8:05

4:35
0 ( 1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

0 Q THIRTY MINUTES
■ (10) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE ’ Playing Dou­
bt**" Vic Braden damonttratea th*
kay pomi* ol atratagy and me**manl that maka double! a real
adventure (R)g

Man" (BAN) (195ft Henry Fonda,
la* J. Cobb A man hold* out
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dacida an accuaad murdarar't gutti
betora he la provan innocent .
© ( 3 5 ) MOVIE ' Nigtlt And Day"
1C) (IMS) Cary Grant; Eva Arden
Th* tot* ol Cof* Porter provide!
*Om* ol th* graalatl mutlc In
American hlalory

MONTI CARLO SHOW
ilORttZLV ADAME
J) FWUNQ UNE "A Strategy
be 1Quail Anthony Navarro,
author ol "TOCAYO: A Cuban
Realalanna Leader a True Story "
© (1 7 ) RAT PATROL

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AWARENESS
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"Nona But The
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Ethel Barrymore Accompanied by
hta undemanding mother, a wand­
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6:30

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©(17)WRCSTUNO

11.-00
■
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School Menus
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MONDAY, SEPT. U
ALLSCHOOLS
Beef En tret
Whipped PoUtoei
Garden Turnip*
Baked Apple Slice*
School-Made Bread
Milk
EXPRESS-Middle and
Settlor High Only
Beef Sandwich
Potato Round*
Fresh Fruit
Milk
TUESDAY, SEPT, tt
ALL SCHOOLS
!
Franks'a Betas
Cole Slow
Strawberry Shortcake
Milk
EXPRESS-Middle and
Senior High Owly
Submarine Sandwich
Potato Rounds
Fresh Fndt
Milk

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 16
ALLSCHOOLS
BedEntree
Ove* Baked New
BroccaU with Leman
Butter Since
Mixed Fruit
Schaot-Made Brend

E X P R E S S -M id d le and
Senior High Only
Tuna Dandy
Sandwich
Potato Rounds
Fresh Frail
Milk
t h u r s d a y . s e p t . it
ALLSCHOOLS
Pork Entree
Potato Rounds
Garden Green Beam
Fruit Juice
Froten Bar
School-Made Bread
Milk
EXPRESS -H id to e and
Scalar High Only
Potato Rounds
Fresh Fruit
Milk
FRIDAY, SEPT. 16
ALLSCHOOLS
Crispy Fish
K m a i Cibbnge

With Butter
Fresh Fruit
Scheet-Made Bread
EXPRESS-M iddk and
Senior High Only
Potato I
Freak Frail
Milk

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W e brought you complete coverage throughout the baseball
se ason.Jocal and national, w e kept you posted.
N ow that football's here, w e ll bring you the sam e in-depth
coverage you've come to expect. The players, team standings
— w e ll have it ail.
W t'ft uniting riie mw s— sow HEAD ONI

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C A U 3 2 2-24 11 o r I S M I t S
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                    <text>74th Year, No. 39—Tuesday, October 6,1981—Santord, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(U SPS 481 280)—Price 20 Cents

Soldiers Assassinate Egypt's Sadat
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - Rebel soldiers
assassinated President Anwar Sadat today
in a grenade and machine gun attack as he
reviewed a military parade in a Cairo
suburb, hospital sources said.
The 83-year-old Egyptian leader was
rushed by helicopter from Nasr City, an
eastern Cairo suburb where the attack
occurred, to the Maadi armed forces
hospital, in southern Cairo, where he
underwent emergency surgery.
The president later died of his wounds,
hospital sources said.
The cabinet was summ oned into
emergency session and a special an­
nouncement was expected later today.
Parliament will meet at 11 a.m. &lt;5 a m.

EDT Wednesday.)
Also wounded in the asassination attack
were Egyptian Vice President Housni
Mobarak, Defense Minister Gen. Abdel
Halim Abu G hazala, some foreign
diplomats and three American military
observers at the parade.
There were no reports of troop activity
or any indications of a move against the
government.
Witnesses said at least 20 other persons,
among them some foreign diplomats, were
wounded.
The shooting occurred at about 6:40 a.m.
EDT nearly two hours after the parade,
which commemorates the October 1973
war, had started.

A military vehicle broke away from the
march, stopped and four or five soldiers
ran toward the reviewing stand where
Sadat, flanked by Vice President Mobarak
and Abu Ghazala, was sitting.
The soldiers exploded two hand
grenades and then opened machine gun
fire. Everybody hit the ground, but Sadat's
guards fired back, witnesses said.
Witnesses said the assailants took ad­
vantage of a diverson caused by a flight of
acrobatic Jet fighters over the reviewing
stand, with d ig n itaries looking skyward
as the attackers fired into their ranks
Sadat,
the
onetim e
firebrand
revolutionary who rose to Egypt's
presidency after the death of Gamal Abdel

Nasser, had brought Arabs and Israelis
closer to peace than ever before and
forged a close though informal alliance
with the United States
Hospital sources, asked about reports
that Sadat had died, confirmed the news
about 5 p m 111 a.m. EDTi.
"Yes, it is finished," one source said.
Asked to be more specific, the source
replied "He is dead."
At the time of the attack Sadat was
reviewing a parade of the latest military’
equipment Egypt had received from the
United States, demonstrating to Moscow's
Middle East allies that it remains the most
powerful Arab nation.
The parade is staged annually on Oct. 6

A NEW HAT
" I'm a real junior fire mar­
sh al,” says five-year-old
Itrrnria .Milam, I'inecresl
Klementary School kin­
dergartener. Hut what,
exactly, does a junior fire
m arshal do, she ponders.
Waiting for a fire to fight can
sometimes
he
horing,
bringing on a yawn during the
Sanford Fire Department's
visit to the school Monday for
a Fire Prevention Week
dem onstration of its new
aerial ladder truck.

AFDC Cutbacks Will Hit Sem inole
can work only 24 hours a week at the
minimum wage. If the family works over
that amount, then it will not be eligible
for AFDC checks with the new
regulations."
"In a way, this cutback acts as a
disincentive' for people with children to
work a full week and remain eligible for
AFDC." she added.
Also, the 10,272 persons on the foodstamp program in the county cannot earn
over the poverty base standard of $345
per month for a family of four. If the
AFDC family earns more than that, it
will no longer be eligible to receive food
stamps
In addition to the federal cuts in the
AFDC program for the state, federal aid
has been slashed for other programs for
the poor, including such social services
as day care and foster care.
The state expects to lose $300,000 in
federal day care funding, according to
Ms. Sucher.

"Single-parent households, where the
mother is Hie head of the house, are
expected to be hit hardest," said Ms
Sucher, "because most of these mothers
are in the low-income category and any
change will affect them the most."
According to Ms. Sucher. the following
changes can be expected in the AFDC
system as a result of the cuts and new
regulations:
— About 3,900 households in the county
will lose all assistance from AFDC
because of sharp reductions in the
amount AFDC families are allowed to
receive from work or from other sources,
such as Social Security.
— An undeterm ined num ber of
families are expected to be dropped from
AFDC because of a new rule that
requires the state to consider the Income
of a stepparent in determining whether
dependent children should receive
assistance. Previously, only the income
of Die natural parent was considered Ms.
Sucher said the inclusion of the

stepparent ruling may "turn out to be a
disincentive for marriage."
— A limit of $1,000 has been placed on
the value of property that an AFDC
family is allowed to have. This figure
excludes the value of the home, but an
AFDC family’s car is considered in the
package. The car, in Florida, may not be
worth more than $1,500 according to the
Blue Book.
— Under the new program, pregnant
motliers now will receive assistance only
during the last three months of a
pregnancy, rather than for the entire
nine-month term. Ms. Sucher said she
sees problems with this because Die first
three months of the term are "important
for the health of the unborn, and if the
mother can't afford to eat right, the
liealth of the baby and the mother could
be adversely affected,”
She also said the county will not know
the full extent of the cutbacks until after
they start taking effect.
- DARLENE JENNINGS.

C a sse lb e rry Chief, Firefighters Q u it

Resignations 'Alarm' Residents
ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
In the wake of the resignation of three
Casselberry firefighters and the city fire
chief, citizens voiced their concern over
the loss of department personnel at
Monday night's city council meeting.
"Iam alarmed by the mass resignation
of the chief and firefighters," Frank
U cadam o, 1002 Wolf Trail. Casselberry,
said. "I feel much of the blame rests on
the shoulders of this council."
I-ucadamo added he feels council has
"turned a deaf ea r" to the needs of the
fire department as requested by Fire
Chief Kenneth Gaines. He said the low
morale among fire personnel is a result
of council's refusal to provide the fire
chief with the personnel and equipment
needed to run a fire department.
"I feel Chief Gaines is a good chief and
he should know what he needs to operate
the department," Lucadamo said.

KKNNKTU GAINES

The m assive p arad e of m ilitary
equipment from the United States was
designed to demonstrate to the Soviet
Union's Middle East allies that Egypt
remains the most powerful Arab nation
A group called the "Independent
Organization for the Liberation of Egypt"
claimed responsibility for the attack on
Sadat.

\w \ \n s u m

Lease OK'd
For County
Humane Unit

WEARING

About 7,000 households in Seminole
County, most of them made up of un­
married mothers with children, will be
cut off or see their benefits cut when
federal cutbacks and new federal welfare
regulations affecting the Aid to Families
with Dependent Children (AFDC)
program become effective.
Technically, the cutbacks were ef­
fective Oct. 1, but it will take the state
several weeks to reprogram its com­
puters to implement the changes, ac­
cording to state officials.
The reductions, mandated by the
Reagan administration, mean that a
family of four receiving a ISO percent
"standard of need" — 1345 a month in
assistance — may not earn more than f 1
over 1345 and continue to receive AFDC
assistance.
"Under the new guidelines," said
Cynthia S ucher, public-inform ation
specialist for the Department of Health
and Rehabilitative Services for four
counties, including Seminole, "a family

to commemorate the Egyptian "victory"
in the 1973 Arab-Israeli war Rut this year
the parade appeared to serve also as a
warning to I jbya, one of the Soviet Union's
major Middle East allies and a major
Egyptian foe.

Councilman Frank Schutte said the
council had no control over these

decisions of firefighters to resign He
added in past years the council has done
many things, including pay raises, In­
centive pay and added benefits to help
improve morale.

tiead with Casselberry. He said there is
also plenty of opportunity to advance
within Die ranks of the Orange County
lire department and as he advances, the
salary will increase eventually to where
lie is as fire chief and then upward.

Gaines, who has served as fire chief for
the city for 19 months said he is resigning
to Join Orange County's fire department
because of the "better chances of ad­
vancement with Orange County." The 30year-old chief is currently making $19,800
annually with Casselberry. When lie joins
Orange County on Oct. 16 he will make
$12,600 annually, a loss of $7,200 annually.

According to Mayor Owen Sheppard,
the fire chief and other personnel have
had substantial salary increases during
their short time with the city.
Sheppard said G aines has been
elevated from an annual salary of $15,769
in Oct. 1,1980 to his current annual salary
of $19,800, or a raise of $4,031 in the past
year.

G aines said he concurs with
statements made earlier by resigning
firefighters Bill Adkins. Carey llpbbs and
David Hollenbach, the city council has
not supported improvements and ex­
pansion of the department and its per­
sonnel.

T ie city's fire department salary
range for firefighters is $11,730 to $14,105
annually and the Orange County fire
department pay scale for firefighters
ranges from $12,600 to $16,889.

Gaines said the cut in salary is not the
most important factor to be considered.
He said he is looking forward to being
relieved of the constant demands upon
his time as required of a department

As chief administrator for the city,
Sheppard will head the department until
an interim fire chief can be named or a
replacement found for Gaines. Sheppard
said he is considering but has not decided
who he will appoint as acting chief

■H i*
V4 •

* 1 I '

The county com m issioners had
By DARLENEJENNINGS
scheduled final signing of the Humane
Herald Staff Writer
The Seminole County Commission Society's lease agreement with the
voted 3-2 today to sign an amended lease county at today's public hearing at 9 30
agreement with the Humane Society of a.m
T ie county agreed Aug 25 to lease a
Seminole County during its public
three-acre site on die east side of U S 17
hearing.
The society was in danger of losing its 92 at County Home Road to tin* society for
lease agreement with the county when a 30 years for $1 per year T ie land is
primary donor withdrew a $200,000 valued at $100,IKK), according to Com­
pledge According to the terms of the missioner Feather
But the original lease agreement
original contract, the society was to have
adequate funds in hand to build the between the society and the county was
approved by the board based on Van
facility.
Commissioners Sandra Glenn, Bar­ Zandt's promise to donate $200,000 to the
bara Christensen and Chairman Bob society. Now that the offer has been
Sturm voted to amend that portion of the retracted, it is possible the society could
contract. Sturm said It is not the county's face losing its lease agreement.
Van Zandt contends that signing the
business to tell the society how it must
society's lease should have taken die
raise the money for the new shelter.
Commissioners Bill Kirchhoff and county no more than an hour and n half,
Robert G. "Bud" Feather voted against anytime after the agreement was struck
the signing of the new lease. Both have — that signing is a simple procedure. He
been opposed since the beginning of the also said he offered the county the use of
negotiations to determine the site on his lawyers to speed up die process, but
the county commissioners declined his
which the facility will be built.
Feather also was concerned that the offer.
Van Zandt said Monday he still Intends
society might not be able to come up with
the necessary funds to complete the to donate money to die shelter, but at a
shelter within the next two years, as later (Lite and not in the same amount as
promised before He said I k - has made
required by Die contract
The lease becomes effective today. The other investments with part of the
Humane Society's public relations $ 200,000
"The next time I offer to donate money
director, Pauline McDonald, said the
society does have a building fundiiet up to the society, 1 will make it a flat gift to
and is receiving donations daily for die the society," Van Zandt said "The
society does a fantastic job, but what
new facility.
The shelter came dangerously close to they need is support from the public "
losing the lease with the county when
Both Com missioner F eath er and
Thomas Van Zandt withdrew his Chairman Bob Sturm said Monday they
donation because, he said, the County- were "sorry to hear the society didn't get
Commission "had dragged its feet on the $200,000 da'y had been promised,"
but Feather added the society lias been
accepting the money."
Van Zandt, a retired M aitland pledged money from other sources.
Two of the society's advisory board
engineer, said he specified in June, when
he first offered to donate die money, that members, Art Gnndle and John Whit­
the county use the money by or before tington Jr., told the commissioners
Oct. 1, 1980 for Van Zandt's "tax pur­ several months ago they would each
pledge $25,000 if the Van Zandt deal
poses."
Van Zandt said Monday that Joanne should fall through
During the public hearing in August on
P rag er, president of the Humane
Society, was alsc aware, and had agreed, the then proposed lease, both Com­
missioners Feather and Bill Kirchhoff
to this stipulation of the donation.
were op|iosed to leasing the county" I 'm convinced Seminole County
doesn't want a Humane Society shelter," owned land to tlie society because of the
said Van Zandt. "The commission has value of the land and Kirchhoff’s view
been very uncooperative in getting the that growth in the area might present
problems for the society in the future
lease ready," he added.

Willis Pleads Guilty
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
Ralph I&gt;ee Willis, director of Seminole
County Animal Control, pleaded guilty in
Circuit Court in Sanford on Monday to
two felony charges stemming from a
July 28 shooting spree in which one man
was shot in the neck.
Willis, 59, of 99 Exeter Court, Sanford,
pleaded to aggravated assault and
battery' ahd was freed on $1,000 bond
Judge Joseph Davis Jr. deferred sen­
tencing pending completion of an in­
vestigation into Willis' background. He
could receive up to 20 years in prison.

He was accused of shooting Roger I.
McDonnough, 19. of 170 Windsor Court,
Sanford, once in the neck with a 22caliber pistol while McDonnough was
swimming in the pool at Sanford's
Carriage Cove trailer purk on State Road
427. Police say Willis also fired shots at
two other men — Jeff McDonnough,
Roger's brother, and Lloyd Strine following a poolside argument.
According to court records, the
shooting resulted from a dispute over an
automobile Willis had bought for 17-yearold Pamela Cleveland, who said she lived
with Willis about three months

No decision had been made this
m orning on W illis' continued em ­
ployment with the county, but county
Personnel Director U ls Martin said, "If
policy is followed, he will be dismissed Bridge
immediately. Conviction of or pleading Comlrs
guilty to a major offense is grounds for Crossword
immediate dismissal."
Dear Abby
Willis originally was charged with two Dr. I .atnb
counts of attempted first-degree murder Horoscope
and aggravated battery. He could have Ourselves
been sent to prison for up to 75 years if Sports
convicted on those charges.
Television

TODAY

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�IK— Evening H rltd , Sanford, FI._______TotUay, Oct,4, m i

5 Busted For Pot-Related Offenses

NATION
IN BRIEF
A d d Rain Threatens
15 Eastern States
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Only one eactern state
seems to run UtUe risk of environmental and economic
damage from a d d rain while 15 others are rated
"extremely vulnerable/' says a study by the largest
D.S. conservation group.
Of the 26 states east of the Mississippi River,
National Wildlife Federation researchers found in the
most affected category: Connecticut, Kentucky,
Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, West Virginia
and Wisconsin.
Ten other slates — Alabama, Georgia, Delaware,
Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Ohio, Ten­
nessee and Virginia — were placed In the "moderately
vulnerable" category by the study released Monday.
One state, Florida, was rated only "slightly
vulnerable" by the researchers who studied each
state's rainfall addity, geology, soils and water
chemistry for clues to potential ad d rain damage to
fish, crops, soil and strudures.

Bx-OHlelah

Bac

WASHINGTON ( U P I )- W ith a U parU un r a t e r of
former U.S. foreign policy makers backing him
President Reagan now is trying to persuade current
lawmakers to accept his proposed Saudi arm s deal.
Thirteen men who helped stupe U.S. foreign policy
since 1950 threw their weight Monday behind Reagan's
proposed sale, which Secretary of State Alexander
Haig seemed to present to the Senate on a take-lt-orleave-it basis.
Former presidents Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon
are among those already backing the plan, and Reagan
hopes to add Jimmy Carter’s name to the list when he
meets with Carter next week.

Court Opens New Term
WASHINGTON (U PI| - The Supreme Court's 198162 term, already distinguished by the first woman
justice, will dedde disputes between the White House
and Congress, environmentalists and the military, and
a woman and a television network.
Those Issues topped a list of about 25 cases granted
review Monday by Sandra Day O'Connor and the sight
other Justices on the first day of their new term.

Voting Act Still Alive
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The enforcement provision
of the 1965 Voting Rights Act, hailed as one of the most
successful dvll rights measures of all time, is over one
hurdle but still must clear two others to be extended
indefinitely.
The House late Monday, following a stormy debate
during which a bipartisan coalition crushed an effort
by conservatives to weaken the provision, approved a
bill to extend the measure. The vote was SW-M.
r**
f**

By DIANE PETRYK
Herald Staff Writer
Saturday was an unlucky day for at least five persons
allegedly possessing or dealing in marijuana. Seminole County
sheriffs deputies arrested three persons in the early morning
hours and a husband and wife that afternoon in separate in­
cidents Involving possession, delivery, manufacture and
cultivation of the illicit drug.
Greg Alan Myer, 34, and Penelope Jane Myer, 39, of P.O.
Box M3, Geneva, were arrested shortly after noon Saturday
and transported to the Seminole County JalL They were later
released on 16,000 bond each.
After deputies executed a search warrant at the couple's
home, they were charged with cultivation and possession of a
controlled substance, and possession of drug paraphernalia.
"A large quantity of marijuana plants were harvested on the
property and an undetermined amount of cured marijuana,
drug paraphernalia and suspected cocaine were found Inside
the residence,” deputies reported.
In another incident, David Steven Cockran, 19, of 2461
Falmouth Road, Maitland, was arrested for reckless driving
and possession of marijuana.
Seminole County sheriffs deputies reported Cockran was
clocked driving 95 miles-per-hour on State Road 46 and was
stopped in Geneva.
He was staggering when he exited his car, deputies said.
They reported a green leafy substance was found as Cockran
tried to hide it in his pants.
He was released from the Seminole County Jail on 1500 bond.
At 2 a.m., an undercover deputy arrested John Michael
Brsddy at the Leisure Time Bar on State Road 46 in Geneva.
According to the deputy’s report, he met Braddy, 18, of Box
241 Eustis, F la., at the bar. The deputy said Braddy asked him
If he wanted to gel stoned, then "pulled a bag of marijuana
from his pants and rolled a joint."
The deputy reported he then asked Braddy if he would sell
the bag and Braddy agreed to sell it for (35.
Upon delivery, Braddy was arrested, and transported to the
Seminole County Jail, the deputy said. He was charged with
possession and delivery of a controlled substance and later
released on 65,000 bond.
Deputies also arrested Lupe "Wally" Aguilar, 35, of Forest
City Saturday.
Aguilar was spotted about 5:30 a.m. by deputies who
reported seeing him weaving through traffic. He wax arrested
in the Meat World parking lot at the comer of County Roads 419
and 426.
He was charged with driving under the influence and an
unlawful blood alcohol level in addition to possesalon and
manufacture of a controlled substance and transported to the
Seminole County Jail. Bond was set at $5,000, but it was later
waived by a Judge and Aguilar was released.
MOTORCYCLE MISHAP
A Seminole County Fire Department battalion chief and his
wife are listed in fair condition today at Florida HospltalAltamonte following a motorcycle accident.
Howard D. Poole and his wife, Evelyn, of Orlando were

A ction Reports
★ Fires
*

Courts

it Police
riding on State Road 434 west of Interstate 4 near Longwood
late Saturday when Poole ran over some dirt and gravel and
lost control of his motorcycle. According to a Florida Highway
Patrol report, the motorcycle Jumped a concrete median
before coming to a rest. No charges were filed.
Seminole County Public Safety Director and Fire Chief Gary
Kaiser said Poole, 45, suffered a broken clavicle, three broken
ribs, lacerations of the head and knee and a bruised hip. His
wife suffered minor abrasions and an injury to her left heel
requiring 27 stitches.
Kaiser said Poole had Just returned from his annual vacation
and had worked one duty day before the accident occurred. He
said Poole has been with the Seminole County Fire Depart­
ment since 1974. He was off duty at the time of the accident and
does not use a motorcycle in the course of his duties with the
department, Kaiser said.
THEY GOT HIS GOAT
Alfred G. De Lattfbeaudlere, 8074 Sanford Ave., Sanford,
reported to police that around noon Sunday three males beat
his goat to death with large sticks, then carted off the carcass,
he said.
The animal had been kept in a fenced-in field, D elatllbeaudiere said.
GIRLS FOUND
Four Tuskawills Middle School students, who were reported
missing Wednesday and possibly enroute to a rock concert in
Tampa, have been found.
The girls, ages 11,12 and two age 13, were reported absent
from school Wednesday. An investigation led deputies to
believe the girls had pooled money for a trip to the Tampa
concert.
But the girls were found about 5:30 p.m. Thursday by their
parents, deputies said. All four were returned to their families.
AGGRAVATED ASSAULT
Pointing a gun at several patrons in the Deluxe Bar on
Southwest Road outside Sanford, netted Tyrone Wheeler, 35, a
trip to the Seminole County Jail Just before 7 p.m. Saturday.
Wheeler, alias "Pops," of 1906 W. 15th St., Sanford, was
charged with aggravated assault and released on $500 bond,
according to the sheriffs records department.
STOLEN PROPERTY BAD DEAL
Roger Chris Pope, 70, of 1225 E. Tulane, Altamonte Springs,
was Jailed at about 3:15 p.m. Friday on a charge of trafficking
in stolen property. Bond was set at 15,000.
According to a sheriff’s report, Pope Is accused of selling a
silver tray for f i x at a mall stamp and coin shop on Aug. 19.
The loot is suspected of being taken during a recent burglary
In Orlando.

Israel, Saudi Arabia Join
In Naval Rescue Effort...
TEX AVIV, Israel (UPI) - Israel, using the United
S ties as a go-between to gain Saudi cooperation,
rescued a grounded Israeli missile ship and Its crew
from a sandbar off the barren Saudi Arabian coast.
Israel military sources confirmed the unusual deal
between the two enemies, who do not have diplomatic
relations, ajter the story leaked out of the Defense
Department In Washington on Monday.
The Israeli sources said the ship made It back to the
southern Israeli port of Eilat about two weeks ago, but
details of the operation in the Gulf of Aquaba had been
blacked out by military censors.

...Then Condemn Each Other

MOSCOW (UPI) — The exhumation of Lee Harvey
Oswald’s body burst "like a soap bubble" the theories
of conspiracy fanatics who see Soviet spies under
every bed, the official Soviet news agency Tasa
reported.
“The newsmen who had gathered in anticipation of a
big sensation had their hopes dashed when medical
experts stated beyond doubt that It was Oswald himself
that had been buried in his grave," Tasa said Monday.
Oswald’s grave was opened Sunday in Dallas and his
remains identified, disproving a theory that Oswald's
Identity was assumed by s Soviet agent before the
assassination of President John F. Kennedy in IMS.

ACCUSED THIEF CAUGHT NAPPING
A man, found sleeping in a parked vehicle behind
McDonald's, at State Road 436 and Wymore Road, Altamonte
Springs, was arrested Thursday for grand theft and resisting
police officers.
John R usk U Terry. 55, was arrested after police found him
sleeping in a car, reportedly stolen from Belle Glade, Fla. The
car was parked at the McDonald's restaurant with Its lights on.
Police said Terry was unable to provide proper Identification
or verification of the vehicle's ownership. The last known
address for Terry Is 6616th St., Perry, Fla. Police said Terry is
a transient, traveling across the country.
According to police, when they attempted to inform Terry of
his legal rights, Terry became argumentative and un­
cooperative. Police said he appeared to be intoxicated.
Terry was being held in the Seminole County correctional
facility today under $5,000 bond.
CIRCUIT COURT SENTENCINGS
Three persons were sentenced in Circuit Court In Sanford on
Monday for crimes to which they had earlier pleaded guilty or
been convicted. They are:
—Tammy N. Johnson, 22, of Orlando, forgery and uttering a
forgery; and Nelson N. Norris, 24, of 494 Pressview Ave.,
Longwood, five years' probation. Johnson and Norris were
accused of using a stolen credit card to buy 656 worth of
merchandise from the Lemer Shop in the Altamonte Mall on
Feb. 20.
— Becky Jo Lott, 23, Maitland, uttering a forgery, three
y e a n ' probation. The charge against her stemmed from an
April 23,1980, incident at Burdines in the Altamonte Mall in
which she used a stolen credit card to make a $48.86 purchase.
Also Monday, Robert D. Bullard, 29, of Orlando pleaded
guilty to attempting to acquire a controlled substance by
fraud. Sentencing was deferred pending completion of an
investigation into his background. On Aug. 5, Bullard tried to
obtain Percodan at the Medco drugstore, 2701 S. Orlando
Drive, Sanford, using a forged prescription.

Building-Use Fee Scale
Up For Discussion

IN BRIEF

M oscow: 'We Told You So'

POSSIBLE ARSON
Someone entered a Chuluota woman’s apartment Friday
and set fire to her kitchen wastebasket during her absence.
Seminole County sheriffs deputies said.
Vicky M. Creekmore, 20, of Apt. 1, Fifth Street, told deputies
someone entered her apartment Friday between 2:45 and 3:55
p.m. while she was visiting her mother, and set fire to her
kitchen wastebasket.
She said her neighbor, George W, Jubert, 36, of Apt. 6.
Fourth Street, said he smelled smoke and broke into Miss
Creekmore's apartment through a window and put the fire oul.
The fire melted the plastic wastebasket, burning the floor and
scorching the wall, deputies said.
Miss Creekmore added that on a previous occasion, while
she was out of the apartment, someone had turned on her gas
stove, filling the apartment with gas.
The possibility of arson has not been ruled out by fire per­
sonnel, deputies said.

By A ltam ont* Springs Commission

WORLD

UNITED NATIONS (UPI) - The Israeli and Saudi
foreign ministers traded condemnations in nearly
simultaneous speeches to separate audiences, bran­
ding each other's nation a main threat to peace in the
Middle East.
While Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal
was telling the United Nations Monday that Israel Is an
aggressor, Israeli Foreign Minister Yitxhak Shamir
was telling the Foreign Policy Association that Saudi
Arabia is "one of the major obstacles" to peace.
"Israel is a heavy burden on the international
'community," Saud told the General Assembly, calling
for an end to "unlimited American support" for the
Jewish state.

BURGURY ARREST
Timothy Tyron Handford, 23, of 515 Peachtree Lane,
Altamonte Springs, was Jailed Just after 3 p.m. Sunday and
charged with burglary, grand theft, loitering and prowling. He
was being held in lieu of 65,000 bond on the burglary charge and
$5,000 bond on the grand theft charge.

HAPPY
COWGIRL

H«f»is Wtat* ky T.m
F o r K e llie F o s te r , h a p p in e s s Is r id in g a p o n y . T h e
2 'x -y e a r -o ld d a u g h t e r of M r. a n d M rs . R o y F o s te r
of C a s s e lb e r r y , K e llie w a s p h o to g r a p h e d
d e m o n s tr a ti n g h e r e q u e s tr ia n s k ills a t th e C e n tr a l
F lo r id a Zoo n e a r S a n fo rd .

W EATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Heavy thunderstorms tore across
the middla Mississippi Valley, downing power lines, damaging
roofs and uprooting treea with winds gulling up to 95 mph In
some areas. Storms raced through central and southern
Illinois and portions of Missouri Monday afternoon and
evening, hitting St. Louia with 95 mph winds.
AREA READINGS (I a m ) ; temperature: 73; overnight
low: 63; Monday’s high: M; barometric pressure: 30.11;
relative humidity: 71 percent; winds: North at 6 mph.
WEDNESDAY TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 3:02
a4n., 3:41 p m .; lows, 6:67 a.m., 9:57 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL; highs, 3:54 a.m „ 3:33 p.m.; lows, 8:41 a m .
•:49p.m .; BAYPORT: highs, 7:56a.m., 11:07 p.m.; lows, 3:45
a m , 3:59 p m
B04JTNG FORECAST: BL Augustine to Jip tter Islet, Oat
W Miles: Wind easterly 10 knots or leas today becoming
variable 10 knots tonight and southwest to weft Wednesday,
Seas 3 feet or leas. Mostly fair.
AREA FORECAST: Generally fair today and tonight and
portly cloudy Wednesday. Highs from the mid 60s to near 90.
Lows tonight from the mid Me to around 79. Wind mortly east
or southeast 10 mph or l e a today becoming light and vnriabie
l/m l|hl
EXTENDED FORECAST: Florida except northwest Mostly fair. Cool nights in the north with Iowa in the 50s. Lows
in tbs 60s central and 70s south. Mild days with highs in the 60s.

ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
Fees for use of the auditorium and meeting
rooms of the Eastmonte and Westmonte
recreational facilities in Altamonte Springs
will be dlacuaMd at today’s City- Commission
meeting at 7 p.m, In City HaD, 225
Newburyport Ave.
At the Sept, 21 commission meeting, the
commissioners deferred establishing fees far
the facilities' use until the proposal could be
reviewed thoroughly.
The proposed rate schedule la based on a
two-hour minimum usage, with per-diem rates
based on any eight-hour period, according to
the resolution establishing the fees.
The proposed auditorium usage rates are: 65
per hour for sanctioned groups, which Includes
self-governed groups of 20 or more persons
who further the city’s recreation program; 610
per hour, or $75 per day, tor civic groups,
which Includes community-service clubs and
politically oriented groups; $30 per hour, or
$200 per day, for non-profit groups, which
Includes organizations recognised as non­
profit organizations by regulation; $45 per
hour, or 6250 per day, for private groups,
which includes com m ercial groups,
organizations and individuals.
Proposed meeting-room usage rates are:
6150 per hour, or $11 per day, for sanctioned
groups; 64 per hour, or 625 per day, tar dvic
groups; M per hour, or $25 per day, for non­
profit groups, and, $6 per hour or 650 per day
for private groups.
Usage of d ty recreational facilities by
groups directly sponsored and governed by the
city Recreation and Civic Services Depart­

A R EA DEATHS
RAYMOND E. BAMBERG
Raymond E. Bamberg, 66,
of 364 W. Highland S t.,
A ltam onte S prings, died
Sunday at Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Born In Buffalo,
N.Y., Dec. 31,1914, he moved
lo Altamonte Springs from
Lawrence, Kan., In 1979. He
was a coating-manufacturing
supervisor and a member of
the Grace Brethren Church of
Maitland. He was a World
War II veteran and a member
of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars.
Survivors Include his wife,
Bernice, two sons, Raymond,
O m aha,
N eb.,
David,
Longwood; two sisters, Mrs.
Ruth
L engytland
M rs.
F lorence A bbott, both of
Buffalo; a brother, Richard,
Buffalo; and five g rand­
children.
Semoran Funeral Home,

A ltam onte Springs, Is in
chsrge of arrangements.
MRS. MAUDE D. BALLARD
Mrs. Maude D. Ballard, 71,
of 208 Cherry Hill Circle,
Longwood, died Friday. Born
In Arkansas April 4,1910, she
moved to Longwood from
Manila, Ark., in 1975. She was
a florist and a member of the
Sanlando United Methodist
Church, Eastern Star Chapter
493, the Rolling Hills Country
Club and the Brantley Harbor
Garden Club.
Survivors Include h sr
husband, Perry; a son, Dr.
Terry Ballard, Winter Park;
three staters, Mrs. Thelma
M cM tutars, M rs. G race
Bridges and Mrs. Baatrics
P erk in s; and two grandchildren.
Semoran Funeral Homs,
A ltam onte S prings, Is in
charge of arrangements.

ment and dty-approved outside governmental
agendes will not be charged.
The commission also Is slated to discuss a
request by a non-profit d v ic organization,
Beta Sigma Phi, to waive fee requirements for
use of the Westmonte Civic Center for a
Valentine's Day ball on Feb. 6 or Feb. 13.
According to Donna Frank, Beta Sigma Phi
representative, the waiver is being requested
because the annual ball Is held for charitable
purposes. This year, Ms. Frank said, the
organization has chosen the Ronald McDonald
house as the recipient ol money received from
the charily ball.
In a letter to City Manager Jeff Etchberger,
Recreation Director William Jam es said Beta
Sigma Phi could come under one of three of
categories, including non-profit, private
groups, or dvic, if the commission grants it
such status.
Jam es wanted that waiving the fee payment
could be "precedent setting,” and although he
noted the worthiness of the cause, he said the
city has charged similar groups In the past for
facility usage.
Jam es said the organization has not In­
dicated the amount of the contribution to the
charity noc the method of payment.
In other action, the cominlaslon Is slated to
diacuas a request from developers of Seminole
Industrial Park to extend water service to a
portion of the Industrial park west of the
Sanford Flea Market, off UJ&gt;. Highway 17-92.
The request Is being made U&gt;extend existing
water tinea to an additional section of the
development not currently served by the dty,
developers said.

W einberger; A m erica
M ust Buy Tim e W hile
Rebuilding A rse n a l
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Defense Secretary Caspar
Weinberger today began selling the president's nuclear
strategy to Congress and the p u b lic -say in g America must
“buy all ths time we can" while rebuilding its arsenal.
Prior to sdMduled appearances before Senate and House
committee*, Weinberger defended President Reagan's MX
missile and B-l bomber decision during interviews on three
television networks this morning.
The defense secretary said the nubile MX nuclear
miarils syriem proposed by the Cartar administration — in
which miarile* would have been riaittled among shelters In
the Southwest - would not have done enough soon enough.
With the Reagan administration proposal to put the
miaMtas in existing Blot, Weinberger said on NBC'a
"Today" show, "we will be able to get the MX aa it c o m a
&lt;« « &gt; production lint and put it Immediately into much
Mreflgw ailce that will sunrtre" for three to four yean.
W M rta rtv acknowledged the dadaioo to harden existing
allot and put the mlarilee there while working out other
haMog methods is "Just a m atter of buying tim e," but
added, "It Is far better than nothing... Our margin for being
wrong is exceedingly small."

�Tuetday.Ocl.S, 1M1-2A

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Paramedic Issue Delayed At Least One Week
ByTENlYARBOROUGH
Herald SUH Writer
Petitioners for a citywide advanced-llfesupport (paramedic) program will have to
wait at least one more week before the
Casselberry City Council will place their
program request on the council meeting
agenda.

During a work session Monday night, the
council voted unanimously to delay acting
on the petition until City Attorney Ken
McIntosh can study the committee's
proposed resolution for a paramedic
program.
Questions were raised concerning the
validity of the 704 signatures on the

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
'Smokey The Bear'
Cracking Down On Speed
TAI.LAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - The State Highway
Patrol Is cracking down on highway speed demons.
The patrol said Monday nearly twice as many
drivers were arrested for driving between 66 and 79
miles per hour than for pushing the speedometer from
56 to 65 miles per hour In the first six months of this
year. It said nearly 10,000 were arrested for exceeding
79 miles per hour.
The patrol said 96,464 motorists were arrested for
going from eleven to fifteen miles per hour over the
speed limit of 55 miles per hour. That compares to
51,423 arrests for speeding from one to 10 miles over
the limit. The patrol said 4,591 of the speeding arrests
were truckers.

Graham Pledges Jobs
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (U PI) - Gov. Bob Graham
Monday night announced a step-up affirmative action
program of jobs for disabled citixens.
Among those actions are requests for state agencies
to identify employment opportunities available for
disabled citizens and a review by the Department of
Administration on the effectiveness of existing af­
firmative action plans for employing the disabled.
Graham also had called for b Department' of
Administration review on Job requirements “ to
Identify those which artificially hamper the em­
ployment of disabled citizens," and a review and
report by state agencies of thetr contracts with
businesses owned by disabled citizens.

Mo Bell Can't G et More $
TAU-AHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Southern Bell
Telephone Co. can't dedde In the middle of rate in­
crease proceedings if It wsnts sn extra $328 million
Instead of $288 million, a Public Service Commission
lawyer says.
"The commission is bound by the petition as
originally filed because we have given public notice of
the $288 million legally," Doc Horton of the PSC's
communications department said Monday.
The PSC begins final hearings on the Southern Bell
rate case Wednesday and has set aside up to two weeks
for the proceedings. It will make a final decision later
this year. It is unlikely the PSC will approve even $288
million.
Southern Bell has filed for a basic rate increase of
$288 million a year In revenues, but a supplemental
filing submitted in June would raise Its revenues to
$328 million a year.

Survlvallst To G et 10
MIAMI (UPI) — Robert Lisenby, a Vietnam veteran
and "survival” instructor has agreed to plead guilty to
bringing weapons and explosives Into Miami.
Lisenby, 31, of Troy, N.C. agreed to enter the plea in
Dade Circuit Court and will be sentenced to 10 years in
prison, to be served concurrently with any federal
prison term imposed.
Lisenby was arrested in March leading a group of 11
survtvalists on a training mission in the woods and
swamps near the Crystal River nuclear power plant in
Citrus County.

M easles Emergency In Lee
FORT MYERS, Fla. (UPI) - Lee County health
officials have declared a "measles emergency" and
have ordered mandatory Inoculation for all school-age
children.
In the wake of an outbreak of red measles, or
rubeola, county officials Monday ordered all public
and private school students to present proof of im­
munization or face possible suspension.
The order was originally confined to high schools,
but was Implemented In all public and private schools.

Juniors To Try Again
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) — Juniors In Florida's
public schools, apparently the first students who must
pass the functional literacy test to earn diplomas, get a
second crack at the exam this week.
The literacy test will be given to 24,00011th graders
who were unable to pass the exam b u t April.
The state will begin enforcing the diploma
requirement on graduates of the 1912-0 academic
year, this year’s Uth graders, if it can meet the
remaining objections of the federal courts.
Also taking the test are Uth and 12th graders new to
the Florida system and 19,000 seniors who were tested
before, but didn't

Antitrust Suit Settled
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Attorney General
Jim Smith has announced settlement of the state's
antitrust suit against Conoco Inc. In return for a
$100,000 payment, most of which likely will be eaten up
by state legal costs.
Smith said Conoco — formerly Continental Oil Co. —
did not admit to any of the allegations or liability for
prlce-flzing. It settled to avoid the cost of lengthy
litigation, he said.
Conoco was charged with conspiring to fix wholesale
and retell gasoline prices and to raise prices by con­
triving a shortage of gas, diesel fuel and home heating
oil from 1989 to the present The suit was brought in
1973.

petition, although they have been
validated by the supervisor of elections. It
was d eterm ined at Monday n ig h t's
meeting that the name of one petitioner
had been dropped and another added after
signatures already had been placed on the
petition supporting the program.
Councilm an F ran k Schutte asked

McIntosh to research the m atter to
determine whether the names of those who
signed prior to the name change of the
petitioners are acceptable.
Frank Slone, a city firefighter and
spokesman for the committee to institute a
paramedic program, said the change was
made at the request of a petitioner who

Auto Dealer Gets Relief
From Fines ... For Now
A Casselberry businessman was granted
partial relief Monday night from ap­
proximately $14,000 In fines due to building
codes violations by the Casselberry City
Council provided he corrects all violations
prior to 5 p.m. on Oct. 28.
Council voted 4-1 Monday night to grant
Grady Cobb, operator of 436 Auto Sales, 870
Semoran Blvd., relief of $100 from the
maximum $300 per day fine Imposed since
Aug. 10 for failure to correct building code
violations as stipulated by the Codes Enfor­
cement Board. Council further said If the
corrections are not made, In full, prior to 5
p.m., O ct 26, the full penalty of $300 per day
will be resumed until compliance with the
codes Is made and the previous $15,000 fine
held in abeyance since last week’s meeting
will be included. The total fine, should Cobb
fall to comply with the codes by Oct. 28 will be
$21,300 and subject to Increase at a rate of $300
per day following until corrections are made,
council said.
Councilman Jim Lavigne, the lone dissenter

in the council action providing relief, said he
did not feel Cobb is worthy of any relief,
l-avtgne said Cobb received notification he
was In violation of codes as early as May, 1980
and has had plenty of time to correct the
situation.
Councllmen F rank Schutte and Tom
Embree said while they agree with lavigne
that Cobb does not deserve relief from the
penalty, they feel because of the confusion
surrounding violations and conflicting
testimony given concerning which violations
were to be corrected Cobb should be given
partial, yet minimal, relief.
City Building Official Frank Broyles said
existing code violations include improper
w iring, stored inflam m able m aterials,
blocked Ingress and egress to the structure,
and other fire code violations which must be
corrected for compliance with the Codes
Enforcement Board.
Cobb told council he will have all violations
corrected within the 15 day limit, from Oct. 5
to Oct. 26.

said she supported the program but could
not support the tax hike to pay for the
program.
The proposed program will cost $150,000
annually, funded by a tax of $1.25 per
$1,000 of yssessed property valuation. If
the program is approved, the tax rate
will Increase to $3.20 per $1,000.

His Honor
Will Be
Honored
Judge George C. Young,
chief U.S. district judge of
the Middle D istrict of
Florida, will be honored by
the Orange County Bar
Association at 3 p.m. Oct.
23 in the federal building on
Hughey Avenue In Orlando.
Young, who has served 20
years on the federal bench
— longer than any other
U.S. d istric t Judge in
Florida during this century
— is retiring Oct. 19.

SPECIAL!

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F&amp;R Land Offer Rejected
An offer by F&amp;R Builders, developers of the Villas of
Casselberry, to donate two parcels of land to the d ty for
recreational purposes in compliance with d ty ordinance was
unanimously refused Monday night by the City Coundl.
Ray Anderson, representative of the firm, told the coundl
his company was willing to donate a 34-acre parcel of land
which surrounds a 20-by-20-foot well site and a 1.74-acre land
site to fulfill the d ty ’s required land donation.
The ordinance was Imposed previously by the coundl to
offset developmental Impact In the area, according to d ty
officials. It required a 2.106-acre donation or the 2.108 acres'
fair market value. In the case of Villas of Casselberry, the fair
market value of the property is listed at $46,376. The firm has
elected to donate land instead of cash.

NEWI

BUSINESS LUNCH

Although
Young Is
retiring as chief judge, he
will remain on the bench
working in the capacity of
senior Judge. He will retain
his office and staff, but will
not handle a full caseload.

the firm to prepare a legal document for property ownership
transfer between the two entitles, fill the land site with fill dirt
approved by city officials and Jam m al &amp; Associates (the
company that took recent soil samples of the land), provide a
temporary access road with a six-inch curb to the land site by
March 21,1982, prepay the required stabilization fee, and give
ownership of sewer and water lines in the development to the
city.
Anderson, along with his lawyer, said there would be no
problems with compliance of the stipulations outlined by the
council provided the land is available excluding the countyrequired easement. If the land Is not available, a new proposal
will need to be drafted, council members said.

KIIAN'K STONK

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Councilman Bill Grier told Anderson the d ty would benefit
more from one parcel of land than two In which one of the two
has a well site situated In the middle, rendering the property
virtually worthless for recreational purposes.
Anderson told the council he did not have any problems with
donating the one parcel of land, providing the 2.106 acres Is
available In one parcel. He said Seminole County recently
advised the firm a 30-foot easement must be Installed along the
eastern side of the property, near the East brook Canal, which
is parallel to the property included In the proposed donation to
the d ty .
Council members said thev would be wtllina to accent the
land donation If it Is determined the total 2.108 acres can be
donated excluding the easement.
Coundlman Frank Schutte said he does not feel the d ty
should have to accept the easement in the donation. He added
the city should not be made to compromise Its ordinance.
Council members further said that if the donated property 1s
available at the site proposed by the builders excluding the
easement, they will accept the donation pending agreement by

“Losing Hair?
Try This At No Risk”
HOUSTON. T exas- baldness and cannot
If you d o n 't suffer be helped.
from m ale p a tte rn Hut, if you are not already
baldness, you can now slick bald, how can you be
stop your hair I o b b ... cs au ur es inwg h ya ot uisr haacirt uloa lssl y?
ana grow more hair.
Even if naldness m ay seem
to "run in the fam ily," it ia
certainly not proof of the
cause of YOUR h air loss.
H air loss caused by sebum
can also run in your family,
and m any other conditions
can cause h air loss. If you
w ait until you are slick bald
a n d y o u r h a i r ro o ts a re
dead, you are beyond help.
So, if you still have an y h air
on top of your head, and
would like to stop your h air
loss and grow more hair...
n o w is t h e t i m e to d o
som ething about it before
it's too late.
Loeseh la b o ra to ry Con­
su ltan ts. Inc., will supply
you with treatm ent for 32
days
d a y s—a t their risk—if they
belie
lieve the treatm ent will
help you. Ju st send them the
inform ation listed below.
All inquiries are answered
c o n f id e n tia lly , by m a il.
Adv.

F o r y e a r s " th e y s a id it
couldn’t be done”. Hut now a
firm of laboratory consult­
an ts has has developed a
treatm en t for both men and
w o m en , t h a t ia n o t o n ly
stopping h air loss...but is
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They don't even ask you to
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invite vou to try the tre a t­
m ent for 32 days, at their
risk, and see for y o u rself
N aturally, they would not
o ffe r th is o p p o rtu n ity
unless the treatm ent work­
ed. However, it is impossible
to help everyone.

The great majority of
cases of excessive hair
fall and baldness are
the b eg in n in g and
more fully developed
stages of male pattern

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How soon after w a s h in g ? ___________________________
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�Evening Herald
(uses wi moi
300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 30W22-261 lo r 831-9993
T uesday, O ctober 6, 1981—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publisher
Thome* Giordano, Managing Editor
! Robert Lovenbury, Advertlilng and Circulation Director
I
Home Delivery: Week, (1.00; Month, 14.8; 8 Month*, 134 00;
Year, |4 S .» . By Mail: Week, l l . t t ; M onth,8 . 8 ; 8 Month*,
830.00; Year. 87.00.

Ireland's Four
Green Fields

By DIANE PETRYK

"Four green fields, each of them a jewel, till
strangers came, and tried to take them from me."
So goes an Irish ballad lamenting the loss of
Ireland's northern province, Ulster, to British
rule. Partition of Ireland came in 1921, at the
same time that the Irish Free State, now the
Republic of Ireland, won independence from
England. Six decades of violence, polarization,
military occupation and, most recently, hunger
strikes have been the tragic legacy of dividing the
emerald isle.
Tlie British Labor party recently called for
reunification of Ireland. TTiis represents the first
time that a major British party has backed the
joining of the majority Protestant Ulster to the
predominantly Catholic Republic of Ireland.
Americans must not interfere in Irish and
British affairs. But as a nation with a large Irish
and English immigrant population, we can only
hope that the decades-long quest for Irish
reunification be resolved peacefully, to the benefit
of both Catholics and Protestants. Both groups
have learned to live together in America, and
peaceful co-existence is possible In a reunified
Ireland. But reunification must be based on
respect for the political, religious, social and
economic rights of all parties.
Protestants outnumber Catholics 2 to 1 in
Northern Ireland. But Catholics outnumber
Protestants about 20 to 1 in the Irish Republic. The
fears of Ulster Protestants, descendants of
English Protestants sent by King James I to
colonize Northern Ireland in 1603, are that they
would lose their autonomy and their culture by
becoming a minority in the republic.
Their concerns are not trivial. But Ireland has
no state religion, and forbids government aid to
the Roman Catholic church. Sectarian education
is supported by the government, and there are no
public elementary schools, but both Catholic and
Protestant schools receive funding. Freedom of
religion Is guaranteed to all persons In the Irish
republic, including the 4 percent who arq
Protestants and tiny minority of Jews who live
; there.
On the other hand, Ireland's sweeping social
legislation, such as the total ban against divorce is
repugnant to Protestants. Divorce should be
legalized for people whose religions do not bar it.
Birth control legislation should be reconsidered.
Wic Irish government has shown willingness to
include this issue in negotiations for reunification.
Equally important, regional political autonomy
must be extended to allow provinces a greater say
in local affairs. Political representation is crucial
for Protestants in any future government.
What is essential is a spirit of mutual respect
and confidence, of tolerance, of conciliation, of
compromise. The continued violence on both sides
in Northern Ireland kills that spirit.
Hie British Labor party's resolution would
carry more weight if I-abor were in power. But it
is a step in the rigid direction for a peaceful,
negotiated settlement.
As the resolution says, the key is the "consent"
of the one million Protestants of Northern Ireland.
TTiat consent will only come if both sides reach out
to each other across the boundary of hatred,
ignorance and misunderstanding that centuries of
violence have erected between them. Ireland's
four green fields — Leinster, Munster, Connacht
and Ulster — should become one unified and
peaceful republic.

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mailing address and, If possible, a
telephone number so the Identity of the
writer may be verified. The Evening Herald
will respect the wishes of writers who do not
Want tbeir names In print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate Ubd or to conform to space
requirements.

T“?.W

BERRYS WORLD

i

It's got to be the moat aitnlne ad campaign In a
decade.
More than 8 million adult Americans have
kicked the cigarette habit and millions more are
trying. Among adults, only one Is three still
smokes. In the population as a whole, It's one In
four. 'Even counting cigar and pipe smokers,
nonsmokers are a clear majority according to
the American Lung Association.
That must be why the tobacco Industry is
running scared.
So scared they would Institute an advertising
campaign encouraging nonsmokers to smoke
and smokers to keep lighting up just to make
so'.ieone else rich.
The ad campaign, launched In the southeast,
stresses the economic hazards of abstention
from smoking.
“Tobacco means 48,000 jobs in Tennessee,"
part of the campaign designed for that state said.
"Tobacco helps pave Tennessee roads, build
Tennessee parks and support Tennessee social

programs. In fact, tobacco contributes more
than 813 million to Tennessee's economy."
The mesaage is being repeated, slightly
altered, for Florida, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, Virginia and Kentucky.
Well, tobacco may create a few Jobs for the
little guy, but you can bet most of the 813 million
Isn't lining his pockets.
The ad campaign comes from the Tobacco
Institute, a Washington-based industry trade
association that denies charges by health ex­
perts that smoking can be dangerous to health.
The lung association, on the contrary, quoting
from a study by the U-S. Surgeon General,
reports the direct cost of treating smokingrelated Illnesses In this country is between 8
billion and 8 billion a year. Another 812 billion to
818 billion Is reportedly the cost of lost wages and
productivity among smokers.
Those billions of dollars match the Tobacco
Institute's economic hazards of abstention
anyaay.

In January 1974, the National Interagency
Council on Smoking and Health adopted a
Nonsmokers' BUI of Rights. The council is
composed of 34 organizations, Including the
American Lung Association, concerned about
the effects of tobacco smoking. The bill declared
three basic rights:
— The right to breathe clean air, free from
harmful and in Hating tobacco smoke. This tight
supercedes the right to smoke when the two
conflict.
—The right to speak out on the discomfort and
adverse reactions caused by tobacco smoke.
— The right to take action through legislative
channels social pressures or any other
legitimate means to prevent or discourage
smokers from polluting the atmosphere and to
seek the restriction of smoking In public places.
In the face of pro-smoking propaganda such a*
the Tobacco Institute's, non-smokers should be
more determined than ever to exercise these
lights.

ROBERT WALTERS

ROBERT W AGMAN

Labors
Harassed
Probers

A Race
Worth
Watching
WASHINGTON (NEA) - There will soon
be another entrant In the much-watched race
for the U.S. Senate seat of California
Republican S.E . H ayakaw a. U ltraconservative Rep. Robert Doman Is about to
announce that he will join the Held of can­
didates for the GOP nomination that already
Includes the Incumbent, Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr., Rep. Paul McCloakey, San Diego
Mayor Pete Wilson and possibly first
daughter Maureen Reagan.
The experts say that Doman's entry Into
the race complicates an already complicated
situation. For months the congressman could
not decide whether to run for the Senate or for
re-election to the House. It appeared for a
while that he would wait until 198 to run for
the Senate seat of Democrat Alan Cranston,
but the redistricting plan just puched through
the Democra tic-con trolled state legislature
apparently settled the m atter or him.
Doman represents persons living along a
narrow strip of land that extends along the
Pacific Coast from north of Loa Angeles to
Just south of the city. Traditionally the
district has been described as culturally
liberal and economically conservative. Party
registration last year was 47 percent
For someone who speaks around the
republican and 41 percent democratic with country, as I have been doing, before student
the rest listed as "Independent”
and other audiences, "What is American
In his past two campaigns. Daman has
co n serv atism ?" is an often repeated
narrowly defeated Carey Peck, son of actor
question.
Gregory Peck. In IWB, Doman's margin of
It is also highly pertinent to the debates now
victory was only 3,000 votes. Last year,
going on within the Reagan administration
although the d istric t contained Ronald
between old and new right, between economic
Reagan’s home and went heavily for its
free marketers of the monetarist end supplyfavorite son, Doman managed to win by 9,000
aide persuasion, between UbaTatarian In­
votes.
dividualists and the new religious rig h t
Now the stete legislature has Increased the
When I am asked to define conservatism, I
democratic registration in the district to at
begin by Insisting that my definition concern*
least 98 percent. Most of the experts agreed
American conaervatiam — meaning that
that Doman could not win re-election in such
British, French, Spanish and other con­
a district.
serv atism s would have Im portant dif­
The greatest strength (hat Doman brings to
ference*. All of the Western conservatisms
the Senate race is his ability to raise money.
are related, members of the family, but they
The former television broadcaster Is one of
have different histories and emphases.
the darlings of the conservstlve movement.
My definition of American conaervatiam
He raised and spent |1.9 million for his 1980 cornea In three parts.
race against Peck; that Is believed to be the
First, it Includes representative govern­
most that any House candidate has ever spent
ment and the constitutional process. The
on a tingle campaign. Most of the money
process of deliberation by representatives
came In the form of small contributions waa present from the beginning, tram the
solicited by direct mall from conservatives signing of the Mayflower Compact before the
across the country.
settlers had even landed. It evolved through
Doman reportedly has vowed to raise and
the colonial legislatures and, after the War of
spend at least 8 million In the upcoming
Independence, Issued In the Philadelphia
primary race. That could very Ukely buy him
Constitution.
the nomination.
I u y "the constitutional process" because
Republicans say that Doman's entry Into the Constitution is not only a document but a
the race and another redistricting problem set of rules. They involve debate and
could cause Goldwater to pull out of the deliberation and usually compromise. They
senatorial primary. Goldwater had hoped to demand restraint and dvlllty. The Federalist
be “ the conservative" In the race but now Papers really represent a book of con­
would have to share the conservative vote stitutional etiquette. All of this is one part of
with Doman.
American conservatism.
The House district of first-term Republican
The second part is cultural and religious.
Bobbi Fiedler has also been radically
America Is part of Western culture, "from
redesigned. Mrs. Fiedler won a narrow 1980 Homer through the present," as T 5 . Eliot put
victory — fewer than 800 votes out of 190,000 it — though he hlmaeif also knew that Its roots
— on her record as the leader of the anti­ go much further beck than Homer. The great
busing forces on the Los Angeles school books, works of art, and music represent an
board. Bui the state legislature has made her extended dialogue on Western man, a
district much more liberal and Democratic;
dialogue that moves forward in time; and
it has also put her Into the same district with though It change*, It always retains its
Goldwater.
distinctive Western character. The West as
California republican leaders seem to think we know It emerged from the furion of Athens
that Goldwater could win re-election In the and Jerusalem, reason and faith, and that
new district whereas Mrs. Fiedler could not. fusion Is part of Western distinctiveness.

JEFFREY HART

What Is Conservatism?
As part of this second cultural-religious
point, I am willing to assert that the West la
Christian. This always causes a stir, but even
a cursory glance at Its history Indicates the
fact. The West without Christianity Is
unimaginable. Our holidays are "holy days"
in their origin, many of them, and the texture
of our language la suffused with Christian
assumptions.
Finally, third point, 1 aay that an American
conaervatiam Is predisposed toward the free
market economy. Not only does Ha spirit
accord bast with republican political
assumptions, but it seems to be the moat
effective system for the production of goods
and services. You can trace the emergence of
the tree market over the course of several
centuries—and emergence that has a certain
historical naturalness. Socialism, In contrast,
would be a throwback to earlier modes of the
directed and controlled economy.
There’! the definition. Question period.
Hands fly up Into the air.
"Can an atheist be a conservative?"
"Yes. I can d te illustrious examples.
George Santayana, for example, and David
Hume. But It seems to me that because they
lacked the Christian component there Is
something incomplete about them. They are a
bit like the Venus de Milo — what you see la
very good, but where is the rest?”
"Can a Jew be a conservative?"
“Again the answer Is yes. We have had
many Important conservative thinkers who
were Jews. I think of Will Herbcrg, of Frank
Meyer. I could name doaena. And much of
Judaism la Intimately related to Christianity.
They share the Old Testament, far example.
But, historically, Judaism affected Western
culture through Christianity, through the
fusion I mention with Athenian thought and
Greco-Rom an unlveraallam . Of course,
Christians can learn a great deal from other
religions, which alwayi have a p la n in the
republican polity.
TO* definition of American conservatism
•earns to me useful and, In fact, correct It
permit* one to identify distortions and
ex ag g erated em phases within the con­
servative camp at the present time. And, I
have found, my audiencee almost alwayi
leave dlscuretng It and arguing about It

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The F ir i t
Amendment to the Constitution presumably
guarantees freedom of speech to all
Americans, but one government bureaucrat
decided earlier this year that It didn't
necessarily apply to his subordinates.
Frank A. Yeager, the Labor Department’s
acting deputy Inspector general, issued an
Inter-offire memo that said "employees are
not to discuss substantive agency matters
with unauthorised Individuals during or after
office hours without prior approval" from
senior department officials.
Yeager has since been replaced and the
memo has been withdrawn, but the episode
waa only the most recent example of per­
sistent attem pts to harass and humiliate
employees In an especially Important agency
of the federal government.
The Labor Department Is charged with
investigating violations of federal laws by
corrupt labor organisations, union officials
and recipients of departmental funds, but It
historically has evaded those oversight
responsibilities.
F or esam p le, the Senate P erm anent
Investigations Sub-com m ittee recently
concluded that the department’s highly
publicised Investigation of a Teamsters Union
pension fund "was a failure, the victim of
poor m anagem ent, incom petence and
bureaucratic Infighting."
The Inspector general's office Is supposed
to act as a watchdog for the entire agency,
Insuring that sensitive Investigations are not
accidentally or purposely mishandled by
Inept or corrupt officials.
But the G overnm ent A ccountability
Project, an exceptionally determined pubiioLntenet organisation, has complied con­
siderable evidence to document its claims
that the Inspector general's office has been "a
corrupt and mismanaged agency."
Those are serious charges, but the ex­
perience of William R. Gamble III, Nicholas
J. Mangier! Jr. and other veteran criminal
Investigators who have worked In the in­
spector g e n e ra l's office suggests the
allegations may be valid.
Gamble, an oft-commended veteran of 10
years In the department, was working in the
Miami office when he began Investigating a
"miliion-doUar pyramid scheme" that in­
volved possible criminal wrongdoing on the
part of 19 to II people, some of them
politically influential
In late 1979, only one day after he had
briefed a senior department official on the
probe, he was summoned to Wellington,
summarily removed from the case and
Inexplicably transferred to the department's
Los Angeles office.
Gamble fought beck, publicly charging
Labor Department officials were misusing
federal funds earmarked for criminal probes.
Although the department claimed to employ
1 8 criminal Investigators, Gamble offered
evidence that fewer than 19 were actually at
work.
Gamble then became the subject of a
vendetta-like criminal Investigation. After
m onitoring his telephone conversation!,
opening his mall and pladng him under the
surveillance-of a squad of FBI agents, the
department finally found causa to ftre
Gamble: He had mailed personal material In
postage-free government envelopes, thus
saving 8118.84 worth of stamps.

JACK ANDERSON

How Conservative Lobby M anipulates
WASHINGTON - The N ational Conaervative Political Action Committee (NCPAC) is widely regarded as an organisation of
hot-eyed Ideological fanatics determined to
save the work! from liberals. In fact, it la a
slick, cynical group of professional
manipulators who believe the voters can be
gulled by espensive negative campaigns.
The depth of NCPAC’i cynicism Is revealed
in its battle plan for next year’s state and
congressional elections in Texas. Polls have
convinced NCPAC's chairman, Terry Dolan,
that T axis and Florida are conservatism's
land of oppqrtunlty In 18L
My associate Vicki Warren obtained a copy
of NCPAC's invarion plan far Texas, authored
by Dolan btmaalf. Tbs cover page la Labeled
"PRIVATE AND CONFIDENTIAL," and on
top of that, the aevan Inside pages are
stamped "TOP SECRET."
It Is a revealing document. Dolan suggeats
a t one point that NCPAC'i 118 campaigns
demonstrated that voters are fools who can’t
or won’t look baoaath the surface. Amha puts

It, "the reality is that people decide on Image
rather than substance.”
Dolan also reveal* the basically "anti”
approach that NCPAC uses: “Creating a
negative impression Is ta tie r than a positive
Impression.”
The legislative redistricting that has come
out of the 180 census give* NCPAC'i
operatives a golden opportunity, Dolan
write*. Liberal incumbents "will be picking
up perhaps hundreds of thousands of new
voters who have no clear Image of the In­
cumbent," he explains, adding: "Therefore,
we will not have to change Imprearione, we
will be able to create them.”
No p a c ific targets have been picked
definitely yet, according to Dolan's battle
plan. But ha writs* that “1 am currently
conaicUrlng" five Democratic tacumbatte as
targets worthy of s NCPAC blits: Majority
Lander Jim Wright and Rapa, Jim Mattox,
Martin Frost, J.J. Pickle and Henry Gonxaks
(whose name he m lapella).

It won't be cheap, Dolan warns. NCPAC is
budgeting 8 1 8 ,0 8 for Its Texas campaigns,
be writes. In addition, apparently, he en­
visages an equal amount for "my Indepen­
dent Expenditure Program to dsatabfilaa at
least three of the Incumbents d ta d above" —
an unfortunate u m of the CIA’s old
euphemism for fomenting revolution against
targeted governments.
Dolan is not above pirating techniques from
the Chinees Communists. At o m point,
discussing the acooociic advantages of
"piggybacking” campaign commercial! that
attack incumbents in three cmgraarional
districts In the same madia market, ha
writes:
"We might even consider uring a term
‘Gang of S' and advertising in all throa
districts uttng an t i n s nam es."
Instead of ricking an Ideologically "pure"
candidate to n o in a targeted district, Dolan
would first establish what kind of con­
stituency was out tlwre by district-wide

polling. "One* we have the correct political
profile on a district, we can immediately look
for the corre ct candidate and go ahead with
that candidate," ha explains.
DoUn'a battle plan for Texas has a car­
petbagger aroma to It. Though NCPAC "Is
willing to establish a Texas Department
which will serve the needs of all the can­
didates," ha makas it d e a r that hi* out-ofstate people will be running thli^s. He refers,
(or example, to “the detailed information we
will need to Identify a candidate. . . to define
the l a n e s . . . and to direct the debate which
NCPAC will also provide wheeling for
candidates, campaign m anagers and finance
chairmen. AD the Texas conservatives wDl
h are to do ia sit back and let NCPAC taka
over.
Footnote: NCPAC refused to talk with me
or my staff because I previously referred to
the organisation as “uhraccnaarvatire."
Maybe Dolan would prater “utoacynlcaL"

�SPORTS
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tuesdav.Oct. I, l» li—JA

Forecast Failures Reach Ledge;
Beathard, Vierling,
Win Big

H frtld Photo by Tom Vincent

Lake lira lit ley's Otis {'Halt ^ues hl^h in the air to
make a spectacular catch against Lake Howell
defender Charles Hodges Friday night. The
Patriots blanked Howell, I Ml, in a key Five Star
Conference meeting. Lyman and Oviedo also won

as Seminole County enjoyed a successful
weekend. Coach Jerry Posey's Fighting
Seminoles had the weekend off. They play at
Apopka Friday.

If you are wondering why this column
did not appear Monday, it was because
it took the Winter Springs Fire
Department all of yesterday to coax me
from the lop of my condominium ledge.
It didn't seem that long ago that I was
sailing along with a fine 14-6 record,
never seriously challenged by any of
the other panel members who pick our
football games each week.
Then came the weekend of Sept. 26.
My wins and losses decided to change
sides. I correctly forecast Just three of
10 games. Well, anyone can have a bad
day. Even our NFL expert, Cliff
Nelson, bombed out that weekend.
So. with renewed vigor, I went about
predicting last week's games. I laughed
a little (very little as it turned out)
laugh when my panelists continued to
pick Seminole County teams to win.
But the laugh was on me. Oviedo used
a six-second field goal in the last
quarter to whip Osceola, 17-16. 0-for-l.
Lyman blasted D etand, 2M. 0-for-2.
And ta k e Brantley took apart la k e
Howell, 14-0. The Silver Hawks were the
one country team I did pick. O-for-3, So
much for Friday night.
Saturday, I showed signs of Im­
provem ent. T rinity P rep trounced
Heritage Prep, 20-0. Central Florida
tipped Miles, 6-0. 2-of-5. Closing in on
.600 and respectability.
But then Florida State knocked off
Ohio Stale, 36-27. and the Gators
manhandled Louisiana State, 2M0.
Miami, though, annihilated Vanderbilt,
46-16, to move me to 3-for-5.
Only Sunday's pro games remained,
where two wins there would bive me a
salvogable 5-for-10. I got a first hand
account of the "Doug Williams Air
Show."
Everything was going fine. The Bucs
were winning, 14-10, but big Doug had

try after a not so spectacular 4-of-6 the
first time around, was also tied for first
place with seven correct ones. Linda Is
the wife of ta k e Mary coach, Roger
Beathard.

Sam

Cook
Sports F.ditnr

just taken a bigger Doug English
helmet under the chin and looked for all
the stadium that he might flop himself
into unconsciousness.
I figured without Williams, the Bucs
are deader than usual. Wrong. Williams
came back like a champion. He fired
two more TDs and the Buccaneers won
going away.
1 could handle that all right, but when
t returned home to find that the
Dolphins had tied the Jets, that was loo
much — 1 scaled the four-atory con­
dominium like Splderman.
Sometime Monday, I don't remember
when, a nice man in a red helmet
coaxed me from the building into the
house where he fed me some broth and
told me about three bears and some
blond-haired chick.
I told him I wouldn’t try the "Golden
Gate Bridge Act" again. And he ap­
peased my apprehesions by telling me
the phone number of a mysterious lady
who would help me with my picks. He
guaranteed success. I’ve got a surprise
for you Friday.
But... enough talk about losers, let's
sec who knew what they were talking
about this past weekend.
Once again, our lady guests did verywell. Rookie Joyce Vierling hit 7-of-t0.
Joyce is the wife of Trinity Prep coach,
Hon Vielring. The Preppers also ta d a
good weekend with a 2CW) pasting of
arch-rival Heritage Prep.
1jnda Beathard, back for lier second

Joyce had six in a row before drop­
ping Florida State, the Bucs and the
Dolphins. IJnda ta d six straight too
before missing the same three as
Joyce.
Sportswriter Billy Stripp also picked
seven right, but took a little different
approach. After dropping 2-of-3 prep
games, Stripp hit seven In a row. He
correctly diagnosed the FSU upset of
Ohio State and the Bucs victory.
Joe DeSantis will get the "Comeback
Picker of the Week" award. After a
disast rous first three weeks where he
went 3-of-7 each week, Joe rebounded
with a 6-4 ledger.
Sandra "Back to .500" Glenn was
obviously shaken by the alleged
"Brown Paper Bag Incident" and fell to
5-5. The Seminole County commissioner
does, however, still lead the regulars
with a 23-17 mark. Stripp is on her tall
with a 22-16, while I'm even, 26-20.
DeSantis is Improved at 15-25.
Next week will feature the return of
M artha Posey and Mary Mon­
tgomery—along with a very mysterious
lady. Who will she be?
CLIFFHANGERS - ta k e Mary’s
Cliff Nelson went against his formula
twice and got nailed both times. "1 had
Houston and New England to win, but
then changed it," muttered Cliff.
Cliff did salvage something from the
week, though. He picked the
Philadelphia victory over A tlanta
exactly. A field goal beat the Falcons,
16-13. Cliff finished 66 for the weekend.

Eagles Rid Monkey From Back, Nip Falcons
PHILADELPHIA (U P I) The Eagles were coasting with a 13-0 lead in
monkey finally is off the backs of the the third quarter before Atlanta spurted
Philadelphia Eagles although, (or a for 10 points In 12 seconds on Mick
moment, it looked as U It wsnted to Luckhurst’s 55-yard FG and a 20-yard
establish permanent residency.
return of a Wally Henry fumhle by Kenny
The unbeaten Eagles used three field Johnson on the ensuing kickoff.
goals by red-hot Tony Franklin Monday
“I thought, here we are ptaylng great
night and a defense that yielded Just six
football In the first ta lf and leading and
points on four Atlanta trips inside its 20 to
those things happen," said QB Ron
take control of first place In the NFC
Jaworski, who threw a 30-yard pass to
East with a 16-13 victory over the
Charlie Smith for the Eagles’ only TD
Falcons.
with 1:31 left In the first half.
The victory gave tlie Eagles a 5-0 start
Franklin, who booted FGs of 36 and 34
for the first time In their history and
yards in the first quarter following in­
marked their first triumph over the
Falcons in four tries dating back to the terceptions by linebackers Al Chesley
and Reggie Wilkes, capitalized on a
1978 NFC wildcard playoff game.
fumble recovery by defensive end Greg
For a while, however, it looked as If the Brown and kicked a 43-yarder early in
Falcons were prepared to perform their the fourth quarter.
custom ary last-m inute heroics. The
But here's where Lady Luck finally

Pro Football
made up four years of frustration to the
Eagles. Steve Bartkowskl, who com­
pleted 23-of-46 for 232 yards, hit Alfred
Jenkins with an 16-yard pass for an
apparent Atlanta touchdown but holding
was detected ag ain st the Falcons,
tackhurst later hit a 43-yard field goal
with 6:45 to play.
The Eagles held the ball the rest of the
way thanks to a roughlng-ttie-kicker
penalty and a 39-yard run by rookie
fullback Ruble Oliver.
The Falcons, who fell Into a three-way
lie for first place in the NFC West with
the loss, held the advantage in total yards
(339-268) and offensive plays (76-52)
while keeping the ball for nearly 34

minutes. But once they traveled deep Into
enem y te rrito ry , the stingy E agle
defense turned them back.
C h eiley 's interception h alted the
Falcons' first drive at the 16. Atlanta
later moved to the Philadelphia 2 but a
bad snap caused Luckhurst’s attempted
19-yard field goal to clang off the left
upright.
The Eagles continued to have their
problems with the Falcons’ defense.
They gained 63 of their 107 rushing yards
on their final ball-control drive. Mon­
tgomery strained to pick up 44 yards In 12
carries, bringing his four-game total
against Atlanta to 149 in 60 attempta.
So Philadelphia turned to Franklin for
most of Its scoring. Next-to-last In field
goal percentage among NFL kickers last

N FL

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Nttloiul

Ed it
Mlamt
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Battl
New
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Central
PilHbafgh
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Waif
San
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Oakland
Seattle

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400
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year, the barefoot kicker improved his
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"I felt relaxed and I was hilling the Dull

Minn
Tampa
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Gram
Chicago

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Z 0
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and taking it easy. Atlanta has i i great
rush and I wanted to make sure didn't
rush It."

Ex-Sooner Held To 75 Yards

Bucs' Defense Stymies Sims

Detroit's Billy Sims found himself in this position often Sunday against the Bucs.

}y|

r * '

--------J--* 7

I f o y a w . - ' .J

•

. v .

*

By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
TAMPA - T am pa B ay's Doug
Williams received a lot of credit for
engineering Ihe B uccaneers' 26-10
demolition of the Detroit lions Sunday,
but the real reason the Bucs won Sunday
was a 1979 commodity — defense.
Playing without its leader and one of
the National Football League's best
defensive ends — l^ e Roy Selmon — the
Tampa gang was In super running back
Billy Sims' shadow all afternoon long.
And when you stop Billy Stms, you stop
the lions. Especially when the Pontiac,
Mich, crew is without starting quar­
terback Gary Danielson as It was Sun­
day.
Sims, a Heisman Trophy winner from
Oklahoma, exploded into the NFL scene
two years ago. At an even six feet and 211
pounds, the well-muscled Lion Is strong
and very fast. It Is his speed that ranks
him ahead of Ottli Anderson and Walter
Payton In the opinion of some NFL ex­
perts.
The Bucs defense, though, wasn't awed
Sunday. Led by nose guard David Logan
(13 tackles, one sack), linebacker Cedi
Johnson (10 tackles, two interceptions)
and rookie linebacker Hugh Green (nine
tackles), Tampa shut off Sims and
Company.
Going into the game Sims was chur­
ning out 100 yards per Sunday. He had 404
yards on 92 totes for a 4.4 average.
The ex-Soaier speedster did run for 79
yards, but It took him 24 carries. Sims did
have a 14-yard gain, but he was thrown
far losses of one yard on three dlHerent
occasions. Twice he was held to no gain.
The Bucs 3-4 defense saw to that. “ As
long as I’m coach here,” said John
McKay on his weekly talk show, “We're
going to run the 3-4 defense. It's the best
defense for pro football."
And for one Sunday, Sims agreed.
"I'v e run Into the 3-4 before," mused

*T " V -T r j .*

Sims. "But Tampa Bay plays II a lot
tougher than anybody else.
"We didn't capitalize on a lot of things
today. No question we missed Gary
(Danielson), but you have to play with
Hie people you got," pointed out Sims.
Sims seemed to be getting his act
together on the last four plays of Die third
quarter. Detroit trailed, 14-10, when Eric
Hippie replaced starter Jeff Komlo at
quarterback.
Hippie called Sims' number four
straight times and Billy replied with
gains of five, four, three and eight yards
for two first downs, moving Die hall to
midfield.
While Sims was taking a short
breather, however, Hippie mishandled a
snap and defensive tackle Bill Kollar,
another standout Sunday, pounced on the

bull to end the Detroit threat.
Three plays later, Williams found
Jam es Wilder behind everybody for a 37yard scoring strike, and It was curtains
for the IJons.
Seven plays later, Johnson picked off a
Hippie pass with 7:53 to play and
Williams moved to Bucs into range
before finding light end Jim Obradovlch
wide open in the left comer of the end
zone for a six-yard flnlshlng-touch TD.
While Sims wasn't real pleased with hia
showing, he promised better production
when the Buccaneers come to Pontiac.
"Up one week, down the nest" Sims
observed. “That's the good thing about
football, you gel another chance. We're
going to gel them In the Silver Dome."

Sfms goal low, but can't ovoid David Logan (loft).

%►

.. —

- 3 - -----

�♦4-Evtnlna H»r«td, Sanford, FI.

Tutiday. Oel. t, 1911

Dream

NOLAN RYAN
. . . NL's best ERA
By United P re n International
The Houston Astrodome m ay be
climate-controlled but the heat should be
unbearable when the Astros host the I» s
Angeles Dodgers in the opening game of
the National league West playoffs
tonight.
Houston’s Nolan Hyan, he of no-hit
fame, and Los Angeles rookie Fernando
Valenzuela, the young Mexican
sccewballer, are both capable of making
the most feared hitters look like littleleaguers and each boasts one the best
fastballs in the game.
"As far os I can tell, nothing bolliers
that young m an," Ryan said of Valentuela.

Ryan 'Heat' Meets Valenzuela Screwball Tonight
“ Nolan is a great pitcher," responded the rotation. Vlrdon said Monday he will
Valenzuela. “ He has a great fastball and pitch Joe Nlekro Wednesday, Bob KnepI understand he's improved his cur- per Friday and Vem Ruhle Saturday.
veball."
Vlrdon had contemplated pitching
Valenzuela, 13-7 this season despite a Ryan Saturday with three days of rest.
poor finish, and Ryan, 11-5 and the author
“The only way I would consider a
of a record-breaking fifth no-hltter this change (to Ryan) would be if we’re down
year, are strong Cy Young Award can­ two games to one," Vlrdon said, "and I
didates.
might not change then. I feel as confident
Ryan pitched complete-game victories with Ruhle keeping us In a game as
in his last three starts, including the no- anybody else."
In the NL East, Cy Young candidate
hltler against the Dodgers on Sept. 26,
and led the league with a 1.71 ERA. Steve Carlton {13-4, 2.42 ERA) will work
Valenzuela lost his last three starts, the series opener for Philadelphia
including a 4-1 defeat at the Astrodome Wednesday and Dick Ruthven, a 12-game
on Sept. 27, but led the league in shutouts, winner who has battled back miseries for
strikeouts, complete games and innings the last few weeks, will start Game 2
pitched.
Thursday.
Montreal will counter with Steve
The game Is the first of a best-of-five
series pitting the Dodgers, winners of the Rogers, 12-0, in the first post-season
first half of the season, against the game of any kind for the Expos in their 13
Astros, winners of the poststrike season. year history. He will be followed by Bill
The first two games will be played in the
Astrodome. The third is set for Dodger
Stadium and the fourth and fifth, if
necessary, also will be In l&gt;os Angeles.
Houston hitters say patience at the
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (U P I) plate is the only way to solve the craf­
O utfielders Tony A rm as, Dwayne
ty, young lefthander.
"A lot of times you get too anxious at Murphy and Rickey Henderson of the
the plate against Valenzuela," said Oakland A’s are great players. Without
Astros' first baseman Cesar Cedeno. them, Oakland certainly would not have
"Get too anxious and you got yourself a posted the best overall record in the
American lieague this season at 64-45.
long, long night."
But they aren’t the guys who are going
Bill Virdon's managerial skills may
come into play later in the series as he to beat you. At least that’s the philosophy
tries to fill Injured Don Sutton's place in the Kansas City Royals will carry Into

Final Standings
N ational League
East
W L P et. GB
30 23 .566 __
y-Montrel
29 23 .558
St. Louis
25 27 .481 4 4
x-Phlla
24 26 .462 5 4
New York
23 26 .451 6
Chicago
21 33 .389 9 4
P lttsb rg h
West
33 20 .423 —
y-Houstn
31 21 .596 14
Cincl
29 23 .558 3 4
San F ra n
27 28 .509 6
x-Los Ang
25 27 .481 7 4
A tlanta
18 36 .333 154
San Diego
x-Flrst-half division winner
y-Second-half division winder

VALENZUELA
.. .right shutouts
Gulllckson, 7-9, Ray Burris, 9-7, and Scott
Sanderson, 9-7.

A m erican League
ta n
W L P et.
31 22 .585
y-Mllwak
29 23 .558
D etroit
29 23 .558
Boston
28 23 .549
Baltt
26 27 .491
Clevelnd
25 26 .490
x-New
Yrk
21 27 .438
Toronlo
West
30 23 .586
y-Kan City
27 22 .551
x-Oaklnd
24 26 .480
T exas
24 29 .453
Minn
23 29 .442
Seattle
23 30 .434
Chicago
20 30 .400
Call!

GB
—
14
14
2
5
5
74
—
1
44
6
64

7
84

Watch F o r 'No-Name’ As, Warns Quisenberry
their best-of-five AL West divisional
series with the A’s beginning here today.
“The logical strategy is to keep Hen­
derson off the bases and make sure no
one is on when Armas comes up," said
Kansas City relief ace Dan Quisenberry.
"But Oakland — unlike the Yankees,
Boston or Texas — has a lot of no-names
in the lineup. There’s a tendency to
concentrate less on those guys. McKay,

Klutts, Picdolo... those are the guys
you've got to watch out for. It seems like
they're the guys bunching all the hits
together when Oakland has a big inning.”
Dave McKay, Mickey Klutts and Rob
Picclolo all platoon In the infield for the
A's along with Fred Stanley, Keith
Drumright, Wayne Gross and Shooty
Babitt. McKay hit .263, Picciolo .268 and
Klutts .370 (in 15 games) this season but

against Kansas City, McKay checked In
at .350, Klutts at .357 and Picciolo at .545.
"Those are the guys you've got to bear
down against," said Dennis Leonard,
Kansas City's opening game starter.
"There’s a tendency to let up on them,
and when that happens, they'll get a
cheap hit or a walk and you've got
problems. Then Armas comes up and hits
a two-run homer."

Final Major League Leaders

BILLMADLOCK
. . . NL’s best hitter

Final Mj|Of Leigu t L ra d rri
S r Untied Press International
Batting
(bated an 1 I appaarm cai i
each team'i i * m n playedl
National League
g * b r pci.
a? i n n in
Madlock. Pit
id; j i i n 3)5
H air. Phi
ioi mo Jft 3)0
Baker, LA
107 3H ;a lift
Schmidt, Phi
llucknar Chi
ton 47i 45 111
101 &gt;96 45 111
G fillry. Cm
47 lift 70 110
May, SF
Brooks. NY
n isa 14 307
Concpcn. Cn
loa c:i 5) 106
ioi irt 45 304
Hernndf. ill

Amor ican
Lanttd, Bos
Paciorek, Sa
Cooper, Mil
Mendrsn, Ok
Morgrov. Civ
O Brail. KC
Z'tk, Saa
Oliver. Ten
Wemy. Bot
Mmphry, NY

League
0 ab
107 399
104 405
104 416
10« 47)
99 377
19 347
94 35)
107 471
61 35S
M 319

r pel.
61 3)6
50 376
69 770
19 319
44 317
47 314
47 311
5) 309
55 307
44 307

Horn* Bunt
National League
Schmidt.
Phi 31, Oawvon. Mil 74. F enter,
Cm and
Kingman.
NY
77.

Hendrick. SI1 la
American League — Armas.
Oak. Evans. Boy. Grich. Cal.
and Murray, Bal 11. Lu llm k l,
Chi and Thomas. Mil 71
Rum Ballad In
National League — Schmidt.
Phi
*91,
Foster,
Cln
90.
Buckner. Chi 75 Carter, Mil
M, Concepcion. Cln and Mai
Ihews, Phi 67
American League — Murray.
Bal 71; A rm av Oak 76. Ogllvie.
Mil
77
Evany.
Boy
71.
Winlield. NY I I

Slalan Skyey

National League Barnet,
Mil 71; Moreno. Pit 39. Scott,
Mil 30. Collim , Cin, Dawson.
MU and North. SF 76
American League — Hender
yon. Oak 54
C ru l. Sea 4),
LeFlore, Chi 36. Wilson. KC 34.
O'lone, cie 79
Pitching
Victor icy
NaLonal League — Seaver,
Cm 14 7. Carlton. Phi 13 4 .
Vaieniuela. LA 17 7, Ruthven,
Phi 12 7. Rogerv Mil
17 8
Soto. Cin 17 9
American League
Vuck
ovith. Mil 14 4
0
Martinei,

Bal
14 J;
M orrlt,
0*1
and
McCatly. Oak 14 7; McGregor.
Bal 1 )5 ; Leonard, KC 13 51.
Earned Bun Average
I bated on I inning par each
team't garnet played)
National
League — Ryan.
Mou I 69 Knepper, Hou 7 II.
Hooton, LA 2 71. R eu il. LA
7 79, Carlton. Phi 2 42
American League — McCat
ly. Oak 7 37. Slewart. Bal 7 3).
Lamp. Chi 2 41. John. NY 2 50
and Burnt. Chi 2 64
National

Slnkaoutt
League —

Valen

luela. LA 1». Carlton. Phi 17f;
Solo, Cin 151. Ryan, Hou 140;
Gulllckton. Mil 115
American League — Barker,
Cle
377;
Burnt.
Chi
IOI;
Blyleven. Cle and Leonard, KC
107. Guidry. NY 104
Sevat
National League — Suiter.
SIL 75; Minton. 5F 71. Allan.
NY II. Camp. All 17. Hume.
Cln and Lucat. SO I]
American League — Fingert,
Mil
75.
Gottage,
NY
70.
Quisenberry, KC I I . Corbell.
Mm 17. Saucier, Del I)

E D D IE M URRAY
lead er

. . . AL’s R B I

Jo l A lai
Al Orlando Seminole
Monday night reyullt
F irtlg a m t
7 0 g u ira/arrag a 11 60 7 00 4 60
I Riac Arana
7 00 5 10
6 Simon Juan
3 00
O t i l l 54 40; T 17 14) M0 60
Second game
t Leqge Goiri
11 10 1 40 5 10
* Rica Oyarl
1140 1510
lO lra Z a rra g a
310
014 II M 00; P ( • 40 111 10; Tbl
(7 4 11 440 60

Lyman offensive linemen David ( ‘add (left) and
Jay Ma/aleskl have been in some dose hall
games (his year, hut it didn't have anything to do
with the close shave on top. ('add, a Itid-pouml
junior, is a guard for the (ireyhuunds, while
Ma/aleskl, the more Imliau-looklng of the two, is a

center. The offensive line gave quarterback Jerry
Axlcy hours to throw Friday and the junior
quarterback tore up Del.ami with 2-10 yards
passing in the 'Hounds 2(MJ victory. Lyman hosts
Colonial Friday.

Savonth gam*
lir a
10 4 00
4 Ricardo
4 00
1 Simon
0 (7 41 )4 40; P (141 IOI 00;
4 II 311 00

7 00
3 00
5 40
T 17

Eighth gamt
7 Garay Echova 73 40 5 00
5 Sam Zubi
11 40
IZ a la Y t a
0 (1 II 10 10; P i l l) 151.70;
I I I 401 60

) 40
4 40
4 40
T (1

4 00
7 00
7 00
T 15

Third gome
kLecona Alano
30 00 16 00
IL e io iJ u a m
4 00
I Durango Kid Ola
0 &lt; 1 4 I1 I1 0 ;P (4 1 ) 105 JO;
111 104 10

3 00
3 40
3 40
T (4

Ninth goma
5 Nequi Ajcoitie
I 60 7 60
1 Rica Farah
0 40
7 Bilbao Goiri
0 ( M ) 41 00/P IS II 111 10;
1 I I 355 40

Fourth gama
7 Legue/arrag a 11 00 4 00
airaC iio m r
4 00
5 Ricardo Oyarl
O i l 01 33 60; P t l 41 144 00.
0 I) 1070 00

3 00
7 10
too
T 17

10th gamo
7 Bilbao
17 10 4 00 3 00
5l i n t
4 00
3 Sa d
3 40
0 (7 SI 4) 40; P t l SI 160 00; T 175 31 349 60

Filth gamo
4 6 'baoZubi
14 40 4 60
1Gastl Goicoaches
5 70
I Untar la rre
&lt;111 41 J ) 30. P&lt;4 II 141 60;
I 01 10) 60

4 00
4 70
5 70
T &lt;4

S n ip game
7 Negul Ola
0 Aiurio E lo ria
5/ale Alano

17 00 4 40 7 00
6 00 4 00
4 00

a i l 01 45 40; P I J 01 111 B U T 17
0 II 411 60

llth gomt
3 Said Goicoechoo 13 40 4 00
7 Ricardo/ubi
100
a lr a / a r r e
Q&lt;3 II It 00. P ( I I I J i l t ;

4 00
104
4 40
T IS-

101 111 10
17th gomt
1Uritar Zut&gt;i
1700 0 00 7 10
4 Gayli Mend&gt;
4 40 3 60
SLecube Tegul
110
a II 41 U 60; P (14) 101 00; T b l
&lt;1 4 I I 410 to

A -

1,750; H ondlt 1110.017

USC Holds Firm Grip On No. 1

SPORTS
IN BRIEF
Crowder Talks Drugs Tonight
At Lake Mary High School
Tampa Bay Buccaneer Defensive linem an Randy
Crowder will be at ihe U k e Mary High School
Auditorium to speak with students and parents on the
dangers of drugs tonight at 7:30.
Crowder was convicted of sale and possession of
narcotics while playing (or the Miami Dolphins in 1976.
He spent one year in jail before Joining the Bucs in 1978.
Crowder Is currently sidelined with a knee injury but
hopes to return to action this year.
The Seminole County Drug Awareness Task Force is
sponsoring the talk. The public Is Invited.

Bike Challenge Set Oct . 18
The Second Annual Centennial Bike Challenge, a 100
mile race, lor the benefit of the Kidney Foundation of
Central Florida will be held al Seminole Community
College, Sunday, Oct. 18. The Rotary Club ol Altamonte
Springs-Fnrest City will again sponsor the event.
The field will be limited to 50 five-man teams, plus
individual cydlsts who may wish to compete. There
will be four Men's Classes, one Open Class for Women
and one Open Mixed Class. Starting time will be 10:00
a.m.
Registration forms may be obtained at all area bike
shops or by contacting the Kidney Foundation at 194781. Jim Martin will serve as Race Marshal and
HoUrian Jim Budday is General Chairman.

NEW YORK &lt;UI*I&gt; - For the third
straight week, Southern California held a
firm grip on its No. I rating as the
nation's five top-ranked teams remained
unchanged today in balloting by U ITs
Board of Coaches.
The Trojans, who clobbered Oregon
State 56-22 in their Pacific-10 Conference
opener behind a 233-yard, three touch­
down performance by tailback Marcus
Allen, received (0 firstplace voles from
the (2 coaches who comprise U Pl's
coaching board.
Southern Cal totaled 626 points for the
second consecutive week with No. 2 Penn
State accumulating 574 points (nine more
than last week) and the two remaining
first-place votes.
Texas, Idle last week but preparing for
its annual showdown with Oklidioma on
Colltot Football Statistics
By Umled Pr**v Inter national
NCAA Division 16
(Compiled by NCAA)
Minion. Kan . Oct. «. M il
Individual Leaden
R willing
all ydt a»g Id ypg
13a 9)5 a i 11 I I I )
Allen. SoCal
91 465 7 1 4 161 )
McIntosh. NCS*
67 677 7 1 $ 159 0
Warner, PennSI
180 771 1 6 6 155 6
w ar*. Or all*
i n 6 IS a s 3 1511
W aller. Georgia
Pa Ming
it lc m p ln l ydt Id rig
Marina, Pill
1(3) tO ) IN 1) IM 1
1(36 63 4 915 1 1S4 0
stamp. TCU
165 93 1 1159 II 15)5
MvMhn. BYU
17 t l ) 66) 5 341 »
Green. EM Ich
67 S ) I I I 1 146 5
Elkins. NorCar
1Baling
formula;
1*4 paints
tgualt
avorage
perlarmanta
tor
all
m ai*r
collage g it vert Iram 194) through I57SI
Total Often«
a t ly d t a y g ypg
179 1175 6 9 )96 5
McMahon. BVU
17) 105) 4 1 36) 1
Shon. Ohio
111 769 4 9 )56 )
Marino. PtH
Schllchter, OhioSt
154 10)) t J 7SS 7

Coltogt Booth all
Saturday, was rated third, followed by
No. 4 Pittsburgh and No. 5 North
Carolina.
Michigan, a 38-17 winner over Indiana
last week, Jumped two positions to No. 6,
followed by No. 7 Alabama, also up two
notches, No. 8 Brigham Young, No. 9
Georgia and No. 10 Clemson.
Mississippi State, surprised 14-3 losers
to Missouri, took the biggest tumble,
falling 11 spots to No. 20. Ohio State,
rated seventh last week, dropped 10
places to No. 17 alter being upset 37-26 by
Florida Stale.
The second 10 consists of No. 11
Missouri, which Joined the Top 20 last
1)7 915 7 7 746 7
N ELa
All purpott Hunnarl
rush rev hr ypg
9)5 17 0 35) 0
Allen, SoCal
7)5 99 79 200 0
Allen. Hawaii
605 69 101 115 0
Diana. Yale
771 1)0 0 1514
w art. Drake
690 li t 70 17) 7
Robmvon, most
Rocolving
C» yds id cipg
76 450 5 4 5
Washington. TCU
36 )66 i a 5
Buggv. Vndrblt
25 470 7 4 3
Williams. OhioSl
34 256 2 4 0
Jordan. Vndrbll
17 3)1 7 57
Dawkins. Pill
17 70) 0 5 7
Guinrle. Princeton
leering
Id ip l« pfs PM
Bryant, NoCar
15 0 0 90 73 5
MAI Ion, SoCal
11 0 0 66 14 5
Clawkins. Pill
7 0 0 42 14 0
Dicker kon. SMU
9 0 0 54 O S
Crutchfield, IwSI
S 0 0 40 DO
Robmaon, most
1 0 0 40 1)0
FAllen, VMI
a 0 0 M 17 0
Inter cepIMni
■ na yds IPS
Shaffer, Temple
4 5 7) 1 7)
Van Den Boom. Wis
4 5 1) 1 35
Holman.

week in the No. 17 position, No. 12
Oklahoma, down six spots after a 7-7 tie
against Iowa State, No. 13 Miami (Fla.),
No. 14 Iowa State, making Its first ap­
pearance in the ratings, and No. 15 lows.
Also, UCLA Is rated 16th, followed bv
No. 17 Ohio State, No. 18 Nebraaka, No. 19
Florida State and No. 20 Mississippi
Stale.
Washington, rated 13th last week, lost
to Arizona State 26-7 and dropped out of
the ratings as did Arkansas, which w u
upset 28-24 by T exts Chriitisn.

It's Part of
the Servleel

Florida State rejoins the Top 20 after a
two-week absence.
With Missouri, Oklahoma, Iowa State
and Nebraska In the Top 20, the Big Eight
has the moat representatives of any
conference.
(4 lied al 1 001
Punting
na
15
24
77
14
14

avg
M i
44 )
47 4
47.1
47.1

na
9
4
7
4
9

ySs
194
in
1U
104
1)0

•vs
114
14.1
19.1
17.7
147

na
6
I
6
1
1

»Sa
709
701
179
714
10)

•vs
MS
7)7
791
791
7S.7

Roby. Iowa
Buford. TeiasTech
Vernoy. FllrtnSI
Hayes. NoCar
Haichtr. Clemson
Punt Returns
Young.
Clash,
Pruitt,
Brown.
Caver.

MiSSlI
Wyoming
Army
9
Iowa
Missouri
Kicked Raturns

Gunn, Indian*
Smith. Purdua
Dollarer. sianlord
Monroe, Utth
McClendon. McNeestSI
Field Q m Is
Franco. PennSI
Roach. Ok la 5i
McDonald. ArkSI
Zcnoajas. AruSI
Miller. M lam ilFal

f»a f| PCI
1 7 1000
10 7 .700
II 9 I I I
1 11.000
1) 1 .467

IfM
3)7
311
71)
100
7.00

It you'ro not gmttlng It,
ta ll 322-2611

Evening Herald
CIRCU LA TIO N D IFT .

�OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Tueiday.Oct. 4,1741-19

Cure For Stinginess t o n i g h t s
Won t Come Cheap ■
ifu is o w L
EVENING

e.-oo

DEAR ABBY; All my life I have been very
cheap, and the older I get, the cheaper I get,
but I can't seem to help it. 1 am now 41, and 1
know that my friends and co-workers must
talk about me behind my back. It's beginning
to bother me.
I have enough money, so that's not the
reason I'm cheap, but I go out of my way to
avoid picking up a check, and sometimes I
even lie and say I don't have any money with
me.
What makes me act this way” And how can
I get over it?
CHEAP IN TRENTON. N.J.
DEAR CHEAP; There Is undoubtedly a
deep-rooted psychological reason why you
and your money are seldom parted. However,
if you are sufficiently motivated to get over
your cheapness, you ran do It, hut It won't be
cheap. Through psychotherapy (here we go
again!), you ran be conditioned to loosen up.

MHS. WILLIAM THOMAS COIISO

Miss Hoffman,
W.T. Corso
Repeat Vows
Katharine Mary Hodman became the bride of William
Thomas Corso on Sept. 19 at All Souls Catholic Church,
Sanford. Father William Ennis officiated at the doublerim? ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of I.t. Cmdr. George A. Hoff­
man. Sr. USN del., of Fern Park, and Phyllis M. Hoff­
man, 111 Parkview Drive. Sanford. The bridegroom is the
son of Mrs. Audry Corso, 127 Garrison Drive, Sanford, and
the late John Charles Corso, Sr.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride chose for her
vows a formal gown of white Venise lace with a Queen
Anne neckline. The gown was accentuated by tapered
sleeves adorned with deep satin insets, a full A-line skirt
willi a deep border of satin and Venise lace cascading into
a sweeping chapel train. Wearing a floor-length matching
veil trimmed with Venise lace appliques, the bride
carried a cascade arrangement of cattaleya orchids
accented with stephanotla and caladlum leaves.

DEAR ABBY: In a recent column in the
Delaware State News, a faithful girl Friday,
signing herself "I-akewood, Calif.,'' said that
her boss would give her $200 if she could guess
within $200 the price of an elegant sofa shown
in a magazine.
"Ijikewood" said she guessed $2800 The
boss said the price was $.1000 and refused to
give her the $200, saying that her guess was
just $1 low.
You concurred with her calculation that
$2800 is within $200 of the $1000, but I think she
missed it by a whisker — Abe Lincoln's
whisker on a penny, that is.
To be within $200 of $1000, her guess would
have had to be at least $2800 01 The (kiss was
wrong too. Her guess was 1 cent low instead of
$ 1.
PICAYUNE PENNY IN DOVER. DEI.
DEAR PICAYUNE: Picky, picky, picky.
Others t but not many) wrote to nail me on the
erro r. A* a "Prom uCer of P recise
Phraseology" In San Francisco pointed out,
the secretary’s error was not in math, it was
In ambiguous language.
DEAR ABBY: In a recent letter offering
some informative tips on how to treat people
who are blind, you listed many things the
blind can do for themselves. However, you
failed to mention one sport enjoyed by the

„ J O ® O NEWS
) (35fSANf ORD AND SON
( 1 0 ) UNDERSTANDING
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
3 J ( 17) ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
) ® NSC NEWS

) Ocas news

blind that most people find truly amazing:
downhill skiing!
Here in Aspen, Colo., there is a program
called HOLD ( Blind Outdoor Leisure
Development i, with about 125 trained local
guides who guide sightless people wherever
they want to ski on the mountain. We provide
them with skiing lessons free, as well as
rental equipment at no cost to them if they
wish. We even take them out for evenings of
"apres-ski." We help about 50 blind skiers a
winter.
ROBERT E. LYON. SNOWMASS, COM).
DEAR ROBERT: Kudos to you and those
with the BOLD program.
DEAR ABBY My problem is that the child
we adopted when he was 5 weeks old is now 30
and has leukemia. He is doing fairly well on
chemotherapy pills, but his doctor says he
may liave to have a bone marrow transplant
from a compatible person — meaning a blood
relative.
Of course, since he is adopted I will need to
know how to reach his birth mother if he is to
have a transplant. Whom should I contact In
the city of his birth in order to trace his birth
mother” I'm sure there must be lawyers or
agencies that do this.
NEEDSHELP
DEAR NEEDS: Gel in tourh with the
adoption agency that plarrd the child with
you. In some (but not In all I states, It will
cooperate. Also write to ALMA, P.D. Bo* 154,
Washington Bridge Station, New York, N.Y.
10031, and list your name. This organization
doe* an rsrrllen t job of "matching” adoptees
with their natural parents when all parties
ennermrd are racer to be reunited.
Problems? You'll feel better if you get them
idf your chest. Write to Abby: 1Z0M
Haw (h o m e R U d ., Suite 5000, Hawthorne,
Calif. 90250. For a personal reply, please
enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope.

Q ABC NEWS
) (35) CARTER COUNTRY
( 1 0 ) UNDERSTANDING
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
I I 1 17) GOMEA PYLE

7.00
0 ® THE MUPPETS
®
O
PM . MAGAZINE An
emneiiac who must atari her Me
over It the tg« ol 49. an internee
with Jim Gregory, who wsa the fwIt
white ituoent to p*ey lootbe* el
Grimb*mg College. Chet Tea preperet pommel cJucheeee. Vie* I
le n tly ducovert under ■ do*«r"
r rtemi
I JOKER S WILD
35) THE JEFFERSONS
(10) MACNC1L / LEHRCR
REPORT
HI (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO

tv

® 0 AUCE Akce take! * urging
)ob i t ■ rough nightclub and wvxji
up bung arretted and charged with
tokening (R)
® 0 FANTASY ISLAND A naive
private eye te n out to to tn her
hril ca*e. end « T e rn makonure
romance* 1 Ikmoul dancer (R)

12:35
®
O
MCCLOUD A wealthy
aatroioger a wile it abducltd and
held in eichange tor i targe turn ol
money |R|

1*0

0 ® TOMORROW Gueet. Jane
Curtin, the rock group Journey

1:10

® o

MOVIE
The la s t Angry
Men" (B/WI (list) Paul Mure.
Daw) Wayne

0
®
BASEBALL N stlo n il
league ptiyott gime
® O THE DUKES OF HAZZARO
Uncle Je tie gelt irretted when he
ittem ptt to help ■ fugitive eecipe
horn B on Hogg'i ctutchee
(D O
HAPPY DAYS (Seeion
premiere) Joeme’l home movtee
lecao the Dimmer ol 1962
IT (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
0 (10) COSMOS One Voice m
The Coimic Fugue' Or Cert Begin
eipkvei the origin, evolution end
diveiaityoflite on Earth (R|Q
12 (17) MOVIE
Moment To
Moment ( ISM lJeenSeberg. Hon­
or [Hackman Through ■ chance
meeting in unhippy women begmi
in eucit ifiirf. but ecctdentiPy
•hoot! her pirimour

0:00
t l ) 0 MOVIE Return 0&lt; The Bev­
erly HMbukei" iPrimreri) Buddy
Ebien. Nincy Kulp Jin e Hlthewey.
now working tor the National Ener­
gy Commiiiion. n IlMgnld 10
obtim ■ iemp&lt;e ot Granny Clempetl i moon thine for poeeiMi ute
11 in energy tource
® o THREE'S COMPANY
(Seeion Premiere) A brainy nuree
becom u Jack and Janet ! new
roommate g
O t (35) THE ROCKFORD FUSS
0 ( 1 0 ) ODYSSEY "On The Cow­
boy Tied” New terming techrSquee
end ttrtp mining threaten the timehonored uedmone ol re '
end the tend it ten g

4*5
WEDNESDAY,

Kristi l&gt;eigh Richards, the bride's niece, was the flower
girl.

0 ® NEWS
J ) O THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
l RYAN'S HOPE

f5) MAUOE

I ® DAYS OF OUR UVES (MON.
"T H U . FRO
' BASEBALL (WEO)
I ALL MY CHILDREN
35) OX (1.) MOW

1:30

4:55

® O AS THE WORLD TURNS

5*0

® ANOTHER WORLD (MON.
nj^THU. FRO

(17)

2:00

(WED)
® 0
MARCUS WELSY. M D.
(TUE-FRf)

6:15
0 ( 17) RAT PATROL (TUE)

6:30
® 0 SUMBBE SEMESTER

6:40
O (17) WORU) AT LAROC (MON)

5:45
O (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE.
FRfl

6:65
O (17) CABLE NETWORK NEWS

6:00
) TODAY IN FLORKM
THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
| SPECTRUM (TUE)
| BLACK AWARENESS (WED)
I THBTTY MS4UTES (THU)
HEALTH FWLD(FR0
5) JM BARKER

ONE UFE TO LIVE

2:30

nv

J SEARCH FOR T044ORAOW
(35) YESTERDAY'S NEWS­
REELS
Re e ls (TIME APPROXIMATE)
(MON,, WED1
Y
35) COME CLEAN (TIME
45 (35
APPROXIMATE) (TUE)
d 5 ( 3 5 ) HOQWILD (TIME
APPROXIMATE) (FRO

3:00
0 ® TEXAS (MON. TUE. THU.
FRO
(I) Q G U IO IN a LIGHT
® O GENERAL HOSPITAL (MON.
WED. FRI)
® O BASEBALL (TUE. THU)
(ft) (35) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRKND3
0 (10) FROM JUMPSTREET (R)
(MON)
I (10) i am . i c a n . i Will (TUE)

8
ills
If

I (10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
LIGHT IRHWEDI
I (10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC

6:30
®0BBW1TCHED

OUEPABAKFRO

0:46

FUNTIME

0 ( 10)A.M. WEATHER

7*0
l(l)TOOAY
0 W A K I UP
) 0 OOOO MORMNQ AMERICA
b (35) TOM ANO JERRY
i 10 VSXA ALEGRE (R)
|( 1 7 ) AJNTMfl

7*0

I WITH CHARLES

3'30

35) BCOOBY DOO
10 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)
17) THE FLINTBTONE8

3'50

(D 0 BASEBALL (WED)

4 *0

i y o p iu m s house
■ (MON-THU)

II
§i

on t h i

B I— 4 L L M
MERV QRWFV4 (MON, WED.

35) WOOOV WOODPECKER
' SESAME STREET Q
THE MUNBTVRS

1*0
T SPACE COASTER

(R)

4:30

HAPPY OATS AOAM
35) TOM ANO JERRY
17) LEAVE (T TO BEAVER

6 *0

I ® QILUOAN-S ISLAND (MON) MOW
I PYLE
I STREET g

9.90

I HOGAN'S HEROES
) THE INCREDtSLE HULK
10 MttTER ROOERS (R)
(17) THE SHADY BUNCH

G5 (35) ANDY ORWF1TH

5:30

1 0 *0

a u (35) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

11*0

12:00

CARO SHARKS
_I NEWS

1:00

0 ( 1 7 ) RAT PATROL

S 2 (1 7 ) new s

BENNY HILL

AFTERNOON

12:30

® 0 MOW
lightning Strike!
Twice" (B/W) (1951) Ruth Roman.
Richard Todd

10:16
10:30

11:30
JI PASSWORD PLUS
35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

5TRHOOA

3:25

I (10) THE DUCHESS OP OUK1
STREET Winter U m e n l" In
reeponie to e deepen!! plea bom
Chat He. Lomu leavee the Bentnc*
to n u t hit country e ttite In
YorklNre (Part4|(R )g

John Corso, Jr., brother of the groom, served as best
man. Groomsmen were Jam es and George Hoffman,
brothers of the groom; Eliot Chick, the groom’s brotherin-law; and Steven Kichards, brother-in-law of the bride.

(10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING
J I (17) MOVIE

2:55

® 0 HART TO HART |S
Premiere) Jennrter become! ■ tar­
get lor murder when m e enters •
preengioui roee con leal g
05 (35) MOCPCNOCNT NETWORK

Attending as bridesmaids were Gail Donjione, and Judy
Hoffman, sisters of the bride; and Jean Chick and
Patricia Corso, sisters of the groom. Their gowns were
similar to that worn by the matron of honor In the colors of
mint green, baby blue, peach, and lavender.

11:00
) WHEEL Of FORTUNE
I THE PRICE IS RIGHT
I LOVE BOAT (R)
) (35) BUO BREWER

® 0 NEWS

10*0

Susan Richards, sister of the bride, attended her as
matron of honor. She wore an underdrew of white coupe
de vllle with an overdress of pink chiffon, and carried a
single white rose tied with pink ribbon and accented with
baby’s breath.

5) DICK VAN OYKE
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

OX (17) MOVIE On The Beech
11959) Gregory Peck. Avi Gardner

7:30

8.-00

I

1:40

FRIENDS
0 (4) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
T o YOU ASKED FOR IT
7 0 FAMILY FEUO
TT (35) BARNEY MILLER
0 (10) DICK CAVETT Gueet
composer Ned Rorem (Perl 3 ot 2)
(R)
OX (17) 8ANFORO ANO SON

10:30
I BLOCKBUSTERS
I AUCE (R)

) ® TIC TAC DOUGH
WSLOOME BACK. KOTTIR
EDUCATIONAL PRO-

11:16

0 ® LAVERNE S SHIRLEY S
COMPANY (MON-THU)

_ t “ '* 'S 'H

■ NEWS (MON. WEO. FRI)
TO) POSTSCRIPTS
[17)
m
l BEVERLY HILLBILLIES

IQ (17) ALL IN THE FAMILY

Following a reception in the Police Benevolent
Association building, the couple honeymooned In the
Grand Cayman Islands. The Corsos now make their home
in New Smyrna Beach.

11:30
® NEWS
Q u 'c t 'H
0 ABC NEWS MGHTUNE
(35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­

CISCO

Tlte bride Is employed as a secretary In the felony
division of the State Attorney's office in Sanford. The
groom is a self-employed building contractor.

Debbie Shannon, left, Public Affairs Chairman of the Junior Woman’s (lub
of Sanford, introduces guest speaker (irrtclirn Molatcli. center, to Nancy
Crawford, dub president.

Welcome

Guardian Ad Litem
Needs Volunteers &amp;

11:46

ax

(17) MOVIE "The Hinged
Men" (1S44) Robert CMp. Edmond
O Bren

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

12*0

0
® TONIGHT Hoel Johnny
Carton Oueett Dionne Warwic*.
[hot Oouid

NEWCOMER!
“Florida's own grwting
service" — dedicated to
welcoming new resident!

Gretchen Molalch, Circuit Coordinator,
Stale of Florida Guardian Ad Litem
Program, made a presentation dealing with
the Guardian Ad Litem Program to the Junior
Women's Club of Sanford at the Club's Sep­
tember general meeting.
•Guardian Ad Utem is a citizen who
volunteers to become part of a court program
to represent the best interests of a child who
becomes Involved In the Judicial system due
to abuse and neglect.
The Guardian Ad U tem represtnts the best
interest of the child In five basic ways, which

Florida Owned
Florida Managed
A call Irom you will bring a
prompt visit Irom our re­
presentative. She has bro­
chures, civic Inlormatlon;
and to help with your shop­
ping needs, cards ol In­
troduction from local mer­
chants

a re : Investigator, m onitor, protector,
spokesperson and reporter.
A Guardian Ad U tem volunteer can be any
person who has common sense, good
Judgment and llte ability to care, Mrs.
Molatch said.
Seminole County has been a pilot county for
the Guardian Ad Utem Program and due to
the efforts of volunteers, the program has
produced great results, the speaker said.
For information regarding this program,
contact Gretchen Molalch at the Seminole
County Courthouse.

©

U n ite d W tau

Sanford
Lola Winn —11M7S1

Attending FAU
On Scholarship

South Sominolo
Laura Oehe — W -1W
Co-ordinator

Q t a l o t g Q a u ic e $ « : .

HomeOlfice
904-734 -0031

Steven L Weldon of Sanford, is attending Florida
Atlantic University this fall under FAU's scholarship
program which provides two-year scholarships through
Phi Theta Kappa chapters at two-year colleges
throughout the state.
A graduate of Seminole Community College and
Seminole High School, Weldon will major in business
administration and computer science.
He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Earl Weldon, 122 Krider
Road, Sanford.

TU ESD A Y CARLOAD
N IT I
R tr Car

n n n a n fM
“ i n HONKY D IP PIO "

09IN II:M|JL - 14p.m. Iscsgt Fri. 9 1st. Osskif Mill
MBSFrsacfcAva.
41N.Hwy.170
(Hwy.170)
S T E V E N L . W ELD O N

CifssOsrry

144 KAFFY SIBTHDAV T S M E ■

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IB—Evtnlng Hsrald, Sanford, FI.
O C T O B ER

Tutsday, Oct.*, m i

S P E C IA L

Air CIi m
Oil, Ntw
Ribbon. Minor
Ad|uUm«n)i

Child Cara — Pry-School — Kindorgarton
’’Qualify Service For The Concerned Parent!”

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

NOW A CCEPTIN G APPLICATIO NS
FOR EN R O LLM EN T

*15”
Rag. no.oo

A G ES IY E A R S A UP
A Modern Stale Licensed Facility
Cerlltied Teachers

B U S IN E S S
E Q U IP M E N T
SALES A SERVICE
TYPEWRITERS ■CALCULATORS ■ADDING MACHINES
lOSW.lndSt. P H . 3 2 3 * 7 0 2 2 DoymNwnSanford

VOLTOLINE

RESIDENTIAL

Business
iReviewl

THE GINGERBREAD HOUSE

P O R T A B LE
T Y P E W R IT E R

I DON’T BE SORRY LATER
'
CALL OATORI

Even ing Herald
Herald Advertiser

PH . 322*8347
2514 ELM A V E.

SANFORD

Colt

322-2611

• PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE MOVE •
A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

ilml

VOLKSHOP

COMMERCIAL

Specializing In Sarvica A Parts For
V.W.'s, Toyota and Datsun

Cq

(Corner 2nd A Palmafto)
214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SA N FO RD
PHONE

321-0120
SANFORD. FLORIDA

MM212

SA U N SKI

COMPLETE LINE

Art Supplies
OILS • ACRYLICS - W. COLORS
Everything for th«
amateur or professional

CUSTOM FRAMING
OVER ISO MOLDINGS
GLASS A PAINT
COMPANY^INC
SANFORO

710MAGNOLIA

PH. Ml 4411

WN
t

L a r g e Selection

MEN S CLOTHING

; KV

sin s

aii

SHI RT S
PANTS
JACKETS
) A ) P I E C E SUITS
V i ’. I I P ( M i l f l . l

'

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, I ’. A

Twice
9» Hice
k
Nl WA USEOC ONSIGNME N TSHOT
OPEN MON THRU SAT 10 t
PH 171 00SC
70re Or la ndo D&gt; (in F air * . v P lata) San lord

ill B B

I /,.*
Holt Sullnski, owner of Gator Fence Co., guarantees his work for a year.

For Fences That Last
Call G ator Fence Fast

RESTONIC
SIN G LE ....................................... * tl.00 let
F U L L ............................................. * M-00
Q U E E N ..........................................1141.00 let
KING .............................................*»*••« i*'
in n e r s p r in g a f o u n d a t io n

G o t l a n d ^ " ’S K IT

M1

ItOl LAKEVIEW in FERN PARK
I Behind Barnett’s Used A ppllont.sl
MON. F B I. IM , SAT, 1M , SUN. 11

Bob Salinski, owner of Gator Fence Company,
Sanford, offers free estimates on business und
commercial fence projects. All his work is
guaranteed for one year.
With 15 years experience in the fence business
in the state of Delaware he moved to the Sanford
area in June and started Gator Fence Company
here. His wife, Margaret, is employed at Harcnr
Aluminum as a purchasing administrator.
Whether you need chain link fence to secure
your business or residential property; wooden
stockade fence to provide privacy; or post and
rail fence to add a practical and rustic decorative
note to your yard or acreage, Gator Fence Co. can
meet your needs.
T o get the best in fencing for reasonable prices
call Galor at 668-4212. Bob says," Don’t be sorry
later, call Gator."

iJ t i. tim e fo x y o u i near [oo&amp; fo x

eta. |

f a d - \to fi in a n d ie e u s - one o f oux
exfiex le n a ed ity C iitx

&amp;un (leifi y o u

B A T T IR IIt
NUTRITIONAL
PRODUCTS
For Sattar
H oof^

PRODUCTS

iflE 322&gt;0257

CA LL

In Harmony
With Nature

Biodagradabla
Non-Pol luting

★ GOLF CARTS
★ LAWN MOWERS
★ INDUSTRIAL

★ AUTOS
★ TRUCK
★ MARINE

PERSONAL
CARE

HOUSEHOLD

■ R M A N EN T
S O L U T IO N

LO U ISE 322.7002

FREE
N U T R IT IO N A L - S L IM M IN O C L A S S E S
M TH E SALVATION ARM Y OYM
NOW HTH ST. SANFORD
t;M P M Entry
Sponsor.d by
Thutsd.y Evtnm *
Louitr A E ltin t

youA, ( p w l f i j h a l t G aA 8C&amp; K fet

B A T T IR IIt
201 N. PARK A V E.

PH. 123-11B4

SANFORD

{m
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B
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rter
■
*
“3
•
Air Conditioning { F o r B u s if iG S S G S

For Women
A Mtn

Good Thru Oct. 17

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M M s ST
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CUT-SHAMPOO

f-m ~ W

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Th# Flnast lor Florida Soil
„ „A
PATENTED........................ *8J O
N0N p a t e n t e d ................ 7.00
Group of Plants And
&lt;wi«/ . u
HANGING BASKETS ■W 7* OH
GERANIUMS.......................... 2.25
ANNUALS.................................. ft*

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Kfifowt FEm u La

^ W &amp; rS k A

PH . 323-6468

*

Heating &amp; Refrigeration

12° °

K

RESIDENTIAL A C O M M B C U l

mniiGmnoN t a/c &lt;»*■ Ty»&gt;

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P h. 322*7684

^

Sirvici Call • 1 8 .9 5

•29as

flttDH B MM CHARMS EXTRA

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STYLING SALON m

JEAN NORRIS

8 5 5 E. 2 5 t h S T. S A N F O R D

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lair Extra)

1V11 Frynch Ava.

FERNS A EXOTIC PLANTS
Satdoimno In F.rnt. Honfibf Batkoti, African Vtouii
OPEN MON THRU SAT. ta.m.-lp.m.
Ml Calary Awa.
Ph. 121-1974__________ SaMord

PACE AUTO ELECTRIC

t,

171*$?J

Open Dally e 1
Mon A Thursf I

DRIFTWOOD VI LLAGE
Lake Mary Boulevard

Santoro

*2 0 YEARS EXPERIENCE*
HELPINGPEOPLE SAVE AIR CONDITIONINGCOLLARS'

d

305/ 322-0793

Toll Free:
660-8335 or 327-1677

Call N.B.C. Air
Today!

“Some stains hod been on our
carpet all winter long. I didn’t
think theyU come out but they
-If J

H M M M ttlM I

CUmummnmp etijJ!

I
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*
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$
$
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NEW YORK (UP!) - A
dentist offers to trade expenslve work on teen-agers' teeth
for a Caribbean vacation for
hli family.
Pepsico, the huge beverage
and food combine, swaps soft
drink syrups to the Russians
for vodka.
A manufacturer stuck with
too many bicycles trades
them for travel services, hotel
space and advertising space
I and time.
These are examples of how
the electronic computer, high
I interest rates and the com­
» plexities of foreign currency
♦ translation ru les in ac­
6 counting are giving added
lifts to the booming business
of barter.

i

QIQeee QIK1 e f O i l I v y J i B v I l l v i W O fit

IMPORTANT NOTICE!

COMPLETE AUTO REPAIRS
AT OUR NEW LOCATION

B A V I M O N IY O N

\
%

COMI’l t I E
STOCK Of
S ! AH IE NS
A lTlW N A TO H S
HE GUI ATOMS
N f W ANO HE II Ll 11 1

A U T O M O T IV E R E P A I R S

339-4969
• TRUCK MOUNTRD UNIT
• WB HIAT THB WATBi
•wa do not uia your
RLITTRICITY
• NO RfATBR Mail IN
YOU! NOMI
• wa oo not usa shampoo

S P E C IA LS
TO Ol IUHI kr IS».i
ELECT HONIC TUNf Uf'S
AIM CONDI T ION f R H f PAlHS

OFF
'I
l

Al l

L A S H Jl ( A H W i

Ilk

•

; i f i A H s f * i’ I
t 1 f C T H I(

h

•

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OCTOBER SPECIAL
CHAROC A IR CONDITIONER M Qm
(Includes 2 cans ol fraon)
s le T 3
|F R » I COOtIMO SYSTEM CHECK INCLUDED

Living Room
Otrnng Ana
A Had

U N l 15 G U A W A N I f l U

•
•

You Don't Hovo To Buy A Cor
From Jim Loth To Cot Quality
Worltmonthlp And Fair Prkot At
Jim Lath's Bluo Book Sorvlco Coi.-tor

Wt Work Saturday* Too

JIM LASH'S BUM BOOK

l NS T A i l I U

11 n i f

s

au

To

Tbg ca rftf
4114 Highway 17-ft. Between »ao«wd A Langwaad
Man.-Frl. I;M a.m. le l;M pm ., tot. 9tMa.ni. to i pm .
U1-9741

r f A H S I N St M I N O l f t O
A N O St E U S 1

* .W W » »

* *"

STOP IM

The manufacturer wanted
not only to get rid of the
surplus bikes but to save
enough cash to pay off the
inventory loans on them and
end the high interest charges.
The services he got in return
reduced his outgoing cash
flow so he could pay off the
loans.
Pepsico and other multina­
tional com panies probably
are responsible for the largest
single share of an estimated
120 billion in all kinds of
barter engaged in each year
in (he United States, says
Mike Cummings, New York
franchisee
for
B a rter
Systems, Inc., of Oklahoma
City.
"These companies avoid a
lot of currency exchange
headaches," Cummings said.
He said barter companies
usually agree to dispose of
any surplus they accept in
trad e
In noncom peting
m arked.
Barter has been growing in
the United States for 20 years,
said Larry Inks, one of the
founders of Barter Systems
His firm did about (100 million
In barter brokerage last year
and has about 65 franchised
offices.
Rota Dlgby of Exchange
Enterprises, Inc., of Salt Lake
City, agrees. He and his
brother, Gaylln, started in the
business 11 years ago. Larry
Inks and his partner, Dean
Andrus, worked for the
Digbya before starting Barter
Systems.
The Digbys did 1112 million
inn barter trade last year.
They have 51 franchised of­
fices.

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-BusinessReview
Cate 322-2611 Mouif
• PUT r o w BUSINESS ON THE M OVE •

ADVERTISING

REGISTER FOR FREE DRAWING
A GENUINE MINK STOLE
TO THE LUCKY WINNER
Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

- r - is - S
fj S S '
\ \ \
^&gt; 0 ' I i | I )

FREE SPINAL EXAMINATION
Dingtr Slgnili it Plnchid Hirvtt:
T HtldKTW
? Neck Pj.n
J Should" P i"

• Colostomy Supplies

• Breathing Machines
• Hospital
• Mastectomy Supplies • Oiygen
• Crutches

r

(ocroti Irura P IIIA NUT)

“s r 323-5763

D» TKamil Yanaall. CMragractlC Pky.KlaA
Em I im taa. M K M I tap m IraaMaW

E varylhlng for horn* patltnt car*
"W E D E L IV E R "
Phon* (MS) 322-MSS

SOSE. First ItTMt

UK* lb

"Phw m I Tuck"
SPECIALIZING IN
CUSTOM PKRMINO
PHONE

322-W9I

GUYS &amp;
HAIR STYLIN O STUDIO
RICK OOCTTSCH, Own*r-Ogar*tar
M il I . PARK DRIVE
U N FO RD

n iin iiii.

PH. 322-5044

&gt;kWM

WEDDING GOWNS
W EDDING EQ U IPM EN T

3

Gaymlle's Antiques ,

•, i

tm a Sanlord Avt„ Sanlord

nrm nnnrr

DEEP

CARPET CLEANERS

&gt;25'

Special =
•10.00 Each Additional Room

21 H our S e rv ic e 331*0051
INSTALLATION -

LOTS

PROM

R E P A IR

72*

P ER MO

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT
M O BILE HOME M OOELSON D ISPLA Y
COMPARE T H ES E F E A T U R E S

•
•
•
•

LARGE POOL • ADULT CLUB HOUSE
TEEN CENTER • LAUNDRY FA CILITIES
CITY WATER AND SEW ER INCLUDED
ADULT ONLY AND FAMILY SECTIONS
SR 437 SANFORD, 2 Ml. E. OF 17*2
MON.-SAT. f a.m.-S p.m. 121-AIM

[ F iv e P o in t *

Antiques

K C o l l e c t u h lc M

C O LLECTA B LE

CUPS 4 SAUCERS
U BOTTLES
$ PRIM ITIVES
Hwy II W A *1*

Clotad Wed

N a itle Handy Aay

pv&gt;

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u .e T .u n A*k
0ur * ENI° * CITIZEN DISCOUNT
S ^ S u S ist u su iu ix
FINANCING AVAILABLE
AIR CONOITIONINO
p j f , DOWN
REFRIOERATION
As Long As M Mo. To Poy

Wit* Approved Credit

Save MoneyI
Save Energy!
CARRIER
AIR CONDITIONING

SOUTHERN AIR OF SANFORD
Estahiitnod o il
IN North Maple Avanua
Ph. (MS) 2224211

Senior Cltlian Day
Every Wednesday
II Pci. OH
Eidudlng Specials

SAVE MS
R EG . SIS

PERM *20

WALLACE W. HARDY

'IVi)|essi(nmJ
IVtxhiets

Long H air E x tra

I iBjwry And

425-6134

(Z 7 / z £

^ S P a m fie .re .c l f.o o (i
HOURS
TU tt SAT f |
C m B v A#tt

/ AyHf PlA/A

&lt;Af«ro*o

• IM M ED IA TE TAO
INSURANCE
• S P E C IA L PACKAOE R A TE
FOR P E O P L E O V ER SO

F R E E D E L IV E R Y .. WE S IL L M EO IC A R E OR D IR EC T
Owned end Operated by Senierd Senier Cllliene"

v

s

SALES A N D RENTALS
d W H E E L CHAIRS O W A LKER S
• C R U T C H E S 1•H O SP ITA L BED S

'•4|
□ H

R S

• COMMODE CHAIRS
• P R E S S U R E B E D PADS

Serving Sanford for IS Y u r t

" * ^ IB A T H

E Q U IP M E N T r y —

• MISC. SICKROOM S U P P L IE S

1 2)77 1 0 t r 323*3166

LOWEST PRICES
C0MPARI OUR PRICES

ISIS A OAK A V E.

SANFORD
(Center e l S. Park Ave. • Oeel

323*7530

FLORIDA PATIENT AIDS

PHONI

m v l BLAia

T H U R S D A Y OCT. 8
Sanlando Springs Extension Homemakers Hub 10th
Anniversary celebration, 9:30 a.m. to noon, Sanlando
Springs Baptist Church, Palm Springs Road and State
Road 434, I/mgwood. Former members Invited.
Refreshments and display of things members have
made.

Weight Watrhcre. 7 p.m., llood Sliepherd l-utheran
Church. 2917 Highway 17-92; 7 p.m.. Quality Inn, 1-4
and State Road 434.
Altamonte Friendship Club, 10 a.m. meeting
followed by a covered dish luncheon, Eastnionte Civic
Center, Altamonte Springs. Dance, 1:30 p.m,

••Heart Attack: Counter Attack" Florida Hospital
series, 7:30 lo 9 p.m., Imeh Haven An Cenler
Auditorium, Hollins, Mills Street, Orlando. Speakers
Dr. Harischandra Bandhuln Knrunaratne and Dr. Zeb
Burton. Call 897-1929 for registration information.
Open house and early book sale for members of the
Friends of the U brary of Seminole County only, 5:307:30 p.m., Casselberry Branch Ubrary, Seminole
Plaza. New members will be accepted.
FRIDAY. OCT 9
Sail It- Harrison Chapter DAH, 2:30 p.m., Florida
Power &amp; Light Sunshine Itoom, 301 N. Myrtle Ave.,
Sanford. Hostesses, Mrs. W.S. Hrumley Sr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Kelly. Program: Story of Yorktown by Mrs
T.K. Wiley.
Book Sale by Friends of the U brary of Seminole
County, 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Casselberry Branch
Ubrary, Seminole Plaza.
SATURDAY, OCT. 10
West Volusia County Republican fund-raising picnic
and rally, noon, Valentine Park. Orange City.
A Garden Festival presented by Sweetwater Oaks
Garden Club, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Springs Plaza on
Wcklva Springs Road. Plants, baked good, crafts,
entertainmen! and a topiary demonstration.

REALTY TRANSFERS

O p a n l l a m 4:11

• NO RECOVERY. NO FEE

PHONE

Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m.. Penguin Building.
Menial Health Center. Crane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.

LA R O E S E L E C T IO N

• GLASS
• FURNITURE

MENTION THIS AD

WnRjfnl Death.
II? N. f*to Dr.
OrtBRtfo, FI. UNI

Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, Slate Road 436 at Hermits Trail.
Closed.

AARP-NART covered dish luncheon, and business
meeting, noon, Sanford Civic Center. Guest speaker.
Open to all senior citizens.

Steam

C A R P ET SA LES -

Born to Win AA group, 8 p.m.. Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2743 Country Club Road, Sanford. Closed.

O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Community
United Methodist Church, Highway 17-92, Casselberry.
Sanford AA, 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St., Sanford.

f // J

FOR RENT

e FREE CONFERENCE

S F IC IA L IS T S IN
AUTO M O BILE INSURANCE
SR 33'l F IL E D

.

n iim

D» tfdi Hove A CfoiM?

BLAIR AGENCY

Hail SigCiet

iH im

ACCIDENT o r INJURY

Sanford, F it . S771

PuiC M iM ot

iiiim

j ^ tfacn U e ,J|

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

M E D IC A R E A P P R O V ED

4 0UI,cult BltlPxng
S lo*»' Back Pun
Hip Pun
Pjm Down legs

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL
CLINIC
MIT». Prune* AvU . U HN

j* . . . m

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7
Sanford AA B rglnnm , 8:30 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
O vereaten Anonymous. 7:30 p m.. Altamonte Mali,
Sears.
Starlight Prom enaden, 8 p.m.. DeBary Community
Cenler, Shell Road.

«'•*»•a-............
•|i." » Ml . if %
SANIOKU

ADVERTISING

ohn'i Sew N'•Vac

• Wheelchairs

mage

C O N S IG N M E N T C L O T H IN G
O P E N t U E S T H R U SAT 10 t

if / A.. '■-

To express their
appreciation to their
current customers and
introduce others to
Second Image’s fine
selection of con­
signment clothing,
owners Aubrey and
Margie Combs are
giving away absolutely
free a beautiful mink
stole.
No purchase is
necessary, just come
in and sign up for the
stole. To be eligible
persons registering for
the free drawing must
be 18 or older.
The drawing will be
held at 3 p.m. Oct. 31,
at Second Image
located at 3104 South
Sanford Ave. (at the
Airport
Boulevard
intersection in the
Cumberland
Farms
Plaza), Sanford.
S eco n d
Image
specializes in women’s
and children’s wear
and since Margie and
Aubrey opened the
shop six months ago
the stock has in­
Margie Combs, co-owner of Second Image in Sanford, models mink stole lo
creased to fold.
he
given away on Ocl. 31.
For the brides-to-be,
Second Image has find accssorics such as designed to take
new condition.
added a large selection handbags, scarves, s u r p l u s
f a mi l y
Second Image is
of 30 wedding gowns jewelry and shoes.
clothing accessories in
open from 10 a.m. to 6
and accessories that
from
p.m., Monday through
You can also find the consignment
are offered for sale or unusual at Second local individuals and
Saturday and until 8
p.m. on Friday.
rental at a tremendous Image, such as riding retailers. They are
savings. They have boots and jodphurs, 40s looking for designer
Remember “ you are
new and used gowns in and 50s clothes, square styles in recent or
always first at Second
Image."
sizes up through 18.
dance dresses, World current fashions in like
M ta a a a a a a a o a m
TTiere is also a good War II sailor uniforms
selection of gowns for and a ” Phyllis Diller"
'
r
i
bridesmaids and the dress if you are looking
O m r , OHy A d ju s t Y o u r S a w in g
$ C 0 0
mother of the bride. for a costume for that
1
M k M m O r V n cn vn i d t a i t r
9
Second Image has Halloween party.
8 F l i E l 1 F A I R O F S C IS S O R S S H A R P E N E D F R E E !
women’s clothing from
You'll always find
size 3 to 56, children's sale item$ at Second
A * 1 9 .5 0
A *2 1 .5 0
sizes from infant to 20 Image. Consignment
V o c a v m C W onar
S a w in g M o d iin a
for boys and 16 for items on the racks
V a k ia
Vdna
girls.
W o m e n ’s after 30 days are
Clown. 0«l. Mivtt Afttatar
'
1 AdlMt Tmw&gt; (Tee eta BeHewl
fashions range from reduced up to 25
Claan. 0(1. AA|vtl WtnaU
1 JUlett Maker ben
1
lateect
M
aker
winae
Ciaan.
0(1.
Adlvtt
M
affM
Cnntraf
fi
long and short formats percent and after 60
CkiHata OUM« Ol Mecklaa
CAacfe toft
to sportsw ear in­ days may be reduced
CAncfe tag Howling
Cieea Weak aoe Faae AitamMv
CKm i Mwtar tod trwiAai
1 Check wi. ik* Ta Caetratt
cluding
d e sig n e r up to 50 percent.
| Chack Macklaa Timing
jeans, sweaters,
Items not sold in 90
111 8. MAONOLIA A V EN U E — SANFOKD — 222-7792
»
blazers, pant suits, days may Ik? picked up
141W NEW YO RK A V EN U E — DgLand — 724 0900
M
dress slacks, coats, bv the consignee or
E G U A R A N T f lD O N S A L E S , S E R V IC E t S U P P L / E s S
jackets, skirts, suits, become property of
T R A D ES A C C E P T E D - F IN A N C IN G A V A ILA B LE
blouses, and lingerie, Second Image, except
HOURS: Monday Frldgy»-5:M -Saturday*3:00
many with famous for wedding gowns and
B jO ygars EKparlanca — 1 Day Sarvlca— F re t Esllm alas
name brand labels.
furs, which have no
To round out your time limit.
Second Image is
fall outfit, you will also

• Respiratory Therapy
Equipment

I

econd

Second Image To Give
Free Mink Stole Away

Med-Care Surgical
and
Respiratory Clinic
RENTALS &amp; SALES

CALENDAR

c

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

ADVERTISING

Tuesday, Oct. t .lM l- 3 B

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

323-1570

h

114 SANFORD AVE., UNFORD

Gallimore Hornet Inc to Lee T
Daugh'-idge Jr a wt Nell T , Lt
Forest Itark E » H . Sec },
SI2S.0U0
Acre Bldg Corp to Theodore A
Baker 1 wt June S . Lot 41.
Cypress Landing at Sabal Point.
S*» M0
Lalpt P Monger Jr 1 art
Brenda *o Wrl«». Alley. Hopkins 1
C'tphem I , ' I. Lot II. Blk C.
F -rn Park I .It . tea.TOO
W&lt; ne L -tollowey a *1 Janet
I lo I Jwarn J Hughes a wt Jean
( . l . t 111, 'ess A V Van Arsdale
Brokerage Co 7nd Addn Black
Hammock l i t 000
Dav-il A Dinges* to John R
Simp- &lt;" Jr a a t W &lt;Jy S . 'v Int
Un
JIB Springyyood V illag e.
Come . IJ0.S00
PooertG Goldman a at Sally to
Ma reen F Dotty s g l. Lot*. Blk f.
Sh idow Hill. tSt.000
(OCOI Keith B LemteuK to
Keith B Lem ieui a at Catherine
A . Lot It. Polling Lane. 1100
tOCD) Carmelo Cassette a at
Donna B to Carmelo Cassette. E
4I‘ of Lo! I a A )4 ot I. Blk H.
longaood Park. SIOO
Irene B Clark, aid to Thomas
B Van Brunt a at Mary V a
Joseph M Verlander a at Con
stanceM . Lot IS. Blk C. River Run
Sec One. taa 000
George H Tlmpe a a l Dorothy
to Richard T Corrado a at Gail
R . Lot ). less N E'ly S It , a all ol
Lot 4. Blk A. Sanlando Tr -14.
114.000
CeroM Prosser, sgl lo N y n a K
Hoyt, s g l, Lot 77. Replat ol
Ayndham Aoods, Ph
One.
tattoo
Robert G Maddern a at Joan to
Hoaard E Caldaell a at Dianne
F . Lot J0, Jennifer Estates.
1104.000
Paul E Careilt a a t Opal M to
Stanley M Mann a at Peggy. Lot
10. Blk J, North Orlando Hanchek
Sec s. tat 000
Jullua Mallintky a a l Lillian to'
Thomat R Stahl a a l Melinda T ,
Lot It . River Run Sec J. $72,700
George O Aillm er to Dorothy D
Littleton a C B . Lot J. Blk 14.
T o an tlte ol North Chuluota.

tsooo
Jem e tE Patterson a at Sheron
to Leo C Porlman a at Grace E ,
Lot 44. Blk 1. Sabal Point Amended
Plat, tm.ooo
Gunn A Seaaell to Creative
Investments. Lot 1 less A l l \ a all
ol Lot I. Blk J«. Sanlando The
Suburb Beautiful Sanlord S e c .
144.OX
A. I Oev , Inc to Graham L
Brooker, Lot S. Alexander P I ,
$41 OX
Jack E Addington a a l nuth lo
A Scott Croig a a l Victoria L ,
Lot U . Rambieaood. 144 000
(OCDI Archie F Lail to Donna
v Hutton, n ao- ot e i» - oi a. a S
10' ot E ISO' ol Lo! t. Bradleys
Homestead. 17.&gt;00
(OCDI G. R . Churchill lo John L.
Mangum 1 Michael Cropmskl,
Lots * 17, Blk U . North Chuluota.
11400
North Cove Inv Co lo Sol Torra
Homes. Inc, Lot }. North Covg,
SUOOO

FI Hesid Comm, lo Mildred L
Ahdeside. sg l, Lt J7. Tiberon
Cove, t t e .t x
IR C . Inc to J Todd Fcrline.
s g l. Un C. HI 7. Aekiva F a lra a y
Toanhomes. S74.000
F R C . Inc to Donald A Doebler
a at Virginia M . Un B. Bl 7.
A e k iv a F a ir a a y Toanhom es.
S74.IX
The Babcock Co lo Monavar T
Assadi Kermani (m arr ), Lot 41.
Montgomery Square. SS7.SX
Equity Realty Inr to Alltlam H
Keller a a t Ruth U a Mary
f ahneslock. s g l. Un. S IE , Oestiny
Springs, SM.TOO
Sandra G Sanders to Jackie L
Ailson a a l Doris. Lot 14.
Brook holloa. SIO.OX
James C Diehl a at Lydia to
David O Bogue a a l Linda S . Lot
♦7. Arenaood H ts, 171.100
Billie P Aebb a hb John B to
James C Diehl a at Lydia, Lot II
a A 70 It ' ol 11. Blk S4, Sanlando
the Suburb Beaut . Palm Springs
Sec . Sta.SOO
Theodore A Glassmire a at
Carol to 0&gt;ane E Moore, s g l, L I 1
(less A J'l Blk A, Oviedo Heights.
1)0 OX
Dave Bogue a at Linda to Paul
C Kuhner a at Lois V , Lt Jtl
Aoodcrest Un Five. S7I.X0
Jam es O
F lan ig an a a l
Margaret to Herbert Friedman a
at Elaine Friedman, Lot 101.
Highland Pines Un 4. SSt.tX
Harold K A ta v tr a at Shirley
to Andrew G Davis a a t Susan E .
Lts 74 a 141-1. Longaood. IIJ.OOO
Ailham J. Ault a at Bidd.t H to
Don C McNeill a a l Chert,
Thomas OK, Lot 17), Trailaood
Ests . Sec One. $41.500
Clement Alcnovili a a l E ll* to
Randall J Rice a a l Susan. Lot It
A. Aest Beverly Terr , $0,000
C d aard S Jenest a a t E ly tra lo
Abbott Labortoritt. Lot It, Blk E ,
The Meadoas Aest, $7!.0X
Fairw ay Oaks Oev lo Arthur
Muns Jr a at Keren S , Lot 21,
F a ira a y Oaks. Un One. $11.$00
(OCOI Lester w Realm s to
Action Beil Bonds Inc , L it )l a 21.
Blk If, Sanlando The Suburb
Beeutilul. $4,000
(O CD ) Bobby R . Burch to
Shirley O Burch. Lot 72. Sen
Lenta. Third Sec . I I X
Clare O Beech dorm Browder)
to C a ro ls Jones. Beg M ic h A a
Ttchot NE cor ol Sec ) 20 )0 etc .
S IX
(OCDI Richerd H Kretier to
Robert E
K r e t ie r . Le ve rn e
Harrison a Richard H Kretier, Jt
Ten. S' I ol N E U ol S A L . ol $EU&gt;,
Sec 14 20 )2, SIM
(OCOI Eileen K
Fender |g
George $ Fender, div . Lot J. Blk
B. Sanlando Country Club E s t s ,
S IX
Equity Realty Inc to George
Scribeno a G race a George
Scribe no. s g l. Un II7C Destiny
Springs. $21,100
Arnold C Keulmen a wt Abigail
C lo Laura F in a l, s g l, Un. 1C
Destiny Springs, S20.1M
Shubert Constr lo George H.
Nelson Jr. A wt Geraldine E „ N
14 S' ol Lot 2SS. ell ol 2)4 a )S) a t
S S' Ol 2S7 Booker town. S20.QM

•J

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4fc-Ev*nlng Hqrtld, Sgwfgrd. FI.

Tugiday, Oct. t , 1*11

f P&amp;L Tolls County

Like It O r Else
By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald SUlf Writer
- The Seminole County Commission was told Monday that it
could either accept having two 500-kUovoll transmission lines
laid through the county or meet with Florida Power &amp; Light
Co. representatives in Tallahassee to talk about it.
June Small, FPL project manager, and Carlos Alvaret, a
lawyer for the company, explained to the board that under the
1980 Transmission Line Act, a state hearing officer can grant a
non-procedural variance in case a county objects to placing
transmission lines in a certain zoned area — for Instance, a
residential district.
. The representatives said the company is not looking to put
the lines In an area zoned as residential, however.
Alvarez said the state hearing officer can approve the zoning
the company needs to lay Ihe transmission lutes from one end
of Seminole County to the other, running west of the old
Osceola Airfield and between U k e Harney and Geneva.
Commission Chairman Bob Sturm observed that the new act
“ lakes away local powers," but Alvarez replied that the state
has determined this method to be the best way for setting up
transmission lines.
The new act la patterned after the 1974 Power Plant Siting
^ cl. The I960 act was Bdopled by the legislature when the
state found problems with Ihe old act.
Ms. Small told Ihe board the transmission line will run
through six counties, including Seminole, and that the
preferred corridor for the two lines is one mile wide and 175
miles long from Duval County's (Jacksonville's) substation to
Poinsett Substation in Orange County — on the west side of the
St. Johns River —, and also pass through Rice Substation in
Putnam County and Rlma Substation in Volusia County, Ms.
Small aald.
However, she said the mile-wide corridor will never actually
exist as a marked area because it is only part of Ihe "big
picture.”
, What the company actually is looking for is a 330-foot rightof-way within and along the m ilewide corridor, she added.
' After Ihe stale Department of Environmental Regulation
grants the company a transmission-line license — expected in
1982 —F P It I. will be free to start looking for the 330-foot rightof-way and then the milewide corridor "vanishes," according
to Ms. Small.
•_ "By having the wide corridor for transmission lines," she
paid, "it gives the utility more flexibility for looking for a
•writable right-of-way."
• It is possible for the hearing officer to recommend moving
the corridor or ask the utility not to use certain portions of it,
-she said.
The new law, which permits superseding counties In zoning
variances for transmission lines, was passed by the
legislature when the state saw problems with the act as it
existed In 1974.
"It used to be that once the county decided about the utility
laying lines, the developer could move along. But power
Companies have to go to all the county boards involved,”
Alvarez said.
"Different lines in different counties did not always meet at
the county line, so the legislature saw a way to alleviate Uie
problem by passing the act," he added.
The lawyer said Ihe new act is "cosi-saving" because il
expedites setting up the tines without realignment for lines
that don’t meet at county borders.

IO SPITAL N O TES
Semin* I* MemorMl4*4t»H*h
ADMISSIONS
SANrORD
Lulu P Burgess
Collins
Jos hurt ft Hollowly
Albttla P Lowery
Loreitrt ft Mrtrvm
Kirtui M Petcri
Patricia
(Spring*

A

Shell.

Altamonte

Cecil F aider. Denary
Gustav E K i n n l . Deltona
I Intentr W Humph. Deltona
BIRTHS

Michael A Dorothy O Stlev. *
-baby lioy, Santord
D ISCH A R G ES
SANI ORD
Ih’i M M Parsons

Legal Nofice
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Notice i* hereby given that we
are engaged in business *1 ISO W
Highland SI , Altamonte Spring*.
I I , liTO I, Sem inole County.
1 lorida under the tictitiou* name
‘ ot
A l t S EA SO N S
LAW N
SCAPING, and that we intend lo
regi*ter vaid name with the Clerk
the Circuit Courl. Srmmole
County, Florida in accordance
With the provision* ol the Fit
llliou* Name Statulrt. To Wit
Section 4*1 Of H onda Statute*
I1S7
Siq Mike Richard* A
Jon Bordwell
Publish September JJ. 71. A Oc
tober *. 11. IVII
O EM int
-

j!

it

H

C IT Y OF C A S S E L B E R R Y
BO A R O O F ADJUSTM EN T
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that the City ol Casselberry Board
&amp; Adjustment will hold a Public
•Tteanog Mr Grrald E
Gun
nrrso n. Owner Applicant, is
requesting Ihe Board ol Ad
rjustmenl consider Ihe feasibility of
"(Jranting a variance Irom Section
Jt JJ Area and Width ol Lott
City ol C a sse lb e rry Code ol
O rdinances which requires a
Omni mum tot width ot seventy live
teel i n t k IA (Single Fam ily
Residential) Zoning District The
•gubiect parcel is titty ISO) teel
'.**»'&lt;)« and is legally described a*
... The west Idly I Ml feel of Lot
inteen I U I , Bloch A Sportsman's
Paradise as recorded in Plat Booh
I, Page IJ. Public Hrcord* ol
^em inole County, Florida
■^-.Public Hearing will be held on
Ihursday, October JT. If l l . at 7 JO
P M , m Ihe Casselberry City Mall,
Lake
Triplet
D rive,
Casselberry, Florida, or as soon
thereafter as possible
Linda Thomas.
Acting Cdy Clerk
— Dated this Jnd day ol October,
vY*'
AD V ICE TO TH E P U B LIC II a
person dec ides lo appeal a dec rs ion
^ a u c wdh res pec I lo any mailer
;* * n t* }rre d * t Ihe above meeting or
■waring, he will need a verbatim
record ot all proceedings, in
pluding the teslim uny
and
evidence, which record is not
provided
by
Ihe
City * o l
C a sse lb e rry
(Chapter 10 ISO.
l^aws
aws ol Florida. IMOl
Publish October A I t l l
.P C N II

t tolfmr 8 Piatt
Sheryl G Grover A baby boy

Legal Notice
N OTICE OF
S H E R IF F 'S SA LE
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that by virtue ol that certain Wrll
ol Execution issued out ot and
under Ihe sral ot Ihe COUNTY
court ol Volusia Countv. Florida,
ufion a linal ludurmerd rendered
&gt;n Ihe alorrsaid court on Ihe JJnd
day ol May. A D If f !. in that
certain case entitled. Thomas R.
Larrivee d b a Tom’S Electronics
P la in tiff, ys Henry M arlin ,
Delrndant, wtnch aforesaid Writ
ol Ciecution was delivered to me
as Sheriff ot Seminote County,
F lor ida. and I have levied upon Ihe
lollowing described properly
owned by Henry Martin, said
property being located in Seminole
County. F lo rid a , more par
licularly described as follows
One I»t0 Ford 4 door Automobile
10 No ONS)F17lttS being stored
at Seminole Paint A Body, San
lord
and the undersigned as Sheriff ol
Seminole County, Florida, will at
11 00 A M on the tin day ot Oc
tober, A D tell, otter lor sale and
sell to Ihe highest bidder, tor cash,
suture I to any and all rusting
Inns, at It*-Front [West I Door of
the Seminole County Courthouse in
Santord
F lo rid a , the above
described personal property
That *4 'd sale is being made to
satisfy Ihe terms ot said Writ ol
Execution
John E Polk. Slier HI
Seminole County. Florida
Publish September IJ .JJ. J f,
October *. with the sale on October

1 7 ItHM
OEM *a
U N IT E D S T A T E S D IS T R IC T
COURT M IO O LE D ISTR ICT OF
F LO R ID A ORLANDO DIVISION
COURT NO: I f t l t O R L CIV Y —
U N ITED STA T ES Or A M ERICA .
Plaint i l l .
vs
G EO RGE
W
S T E V E N S O N , el u«. el al.
D rlendanl Is )
N O T IC E OF
S A L E — Notice is hereby given
that pursuant lo a F mat Decree ol
Foreclosure entered on August 10
I f ll by Ihe abuve entitled Court in
the above cauie, Ihe undersigned
United Stales Marshal, or one ol
ins duly aulhorited deputies, will
sell Ihe property situate In
Seminole
County.
F lo rid a ,
described as
Lot IJ. Orange
Csiates. according lo ihe plat
Ihereol as recorded m Plal Book
I*, page S4. ol Ihe Public Records
ol Seminole County, F lo rid *,
subiect. however, lo t a i n . II any
due. tor Ihe year I f l l at pubh&lt;
outcry to the highest and best
bidder lor cash al IJ o'clock noon
on Tuesday. October 17. I f l l al the
Well door ol Ihe Seminole County
Courthouse. Santord Florida
Dated September JJ. 'Oil
G E O R G E R GRO SSE
U N ITED S TA T ES
A4ARSMA1
M ID D LE D IS TR IC T OF
FLO R ID A
C.AHY l BETZ
U N ITED S T A T ES A T TO R N EY
M ID D L E
D IS T R IC T
OF
FLO R ID A
Publish September IJ. Jf. Oc
lobcr *. IJ. If l l
OEM f»

Legal Notice
F IC T IT IO U S NAMfc
Notice is hereby given the! I am
■nqaged in business *t 7f North
Hwy IT i 17 Casselberry Seminole
Cwjnly, Florida under the lie
iillo u s
name ol
FA SH IO N
WA B E HO U S E, end that I intend to
register said ntm c with the Clerk
ot Ihe Circuit Courl, Seminole
County. Florlde in accordance
wdh the provisions ot Ihe Fietiiious Name Statutes, ToW II:
Section It s Ot Florida Statutes
ifS7
S o Roy Marlowe
Publish September 77, 7t, Oc
•ober t. IJ. m i
O f M 10*
F LO R ID A S TA T U TES 117.144
N OTICE OF A PPLICATIO N
FOR TA X D E E D
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN ,
that C O A E S T H E R V W ILD ER
the holder ol Ihe lollowing cer
•ificates has Bled said certificates
tor a ta ■deed to be issued thereon
The certificate numbers and years
ol issuance, the description ot
property, and Ihe names In which
it was assessed are as follow*
Ceetillcate No 1)04 Year ol
Issuance 1177
Description ot Property LOT IJ
BLK A G R O V E T E R R A C E PB 7
PG 4J
Name In which assessed
HOSKINS RUTH S E T AL
All ol said property being in the
County ot SEM IN O LE. State of
Florida
Unless such certificate or cer
lificatrs shall be redeemed ac
cording to taw the properly
described in such certificate or
certificate* will be sold to Ihe
highest bidder at the court house
door on the fth day ol NOVEM
B E R . I f l l . AT II 00 A M
Dated this Jfth day of S E P
T EM B ER . If ll
Arthur M Beckwith Jf
Clerk ol C ircu it Court ol
Seminole County, Florid*
Br Theresa Macek.
D EPU TY C LER K
(Seal)
Publish October *. t). JO. IJ. If t l
DEN I I
C IT Y
OF
C A fS E L R R R R Y ,
FLO R ID A N OTICE OF P U B LIC
H E A R IN G
to
C O N S IO E R
A D O PTIO N O F
PRO PO SED
ORDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CO N CERN :
N OTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by the City ol C asse lb e rry,
Florida, that Ihe City Council will
told a public hearing to consider
m adm en! ol Ordinance 441 en
titled
A N O R D IN A N C EO F TH E C IT Y
OF C A S S E L B E R R Y . FLO R ID A .
R E P E A L IN G SECTIO N IV. ORD
IN A N CE NO
J*J. S P E C I F I
CA LLY ITEM S NOS OHS AND
14IS
PROVID IN G FOR CON
F L IC T S
AND
E F F E C T IV E
DATE
This notice is given pursuant lo
Ihe provisions ol Chapter I**.
Florida Statute*, and Ihe Charier
and Ordinances ol the City of
Casselberry. Florida, a i amended
arid supplemented
Said Ordinance will he con
sidered on llrsl reading on Mon
day. October l l , I f l l . and Ihe City
Council will consider same tor
linal passage, in accordance with
Chapter I**, and adoption alter the
Public beannq which will be held
in Ihe City Hall ot Casselberry,
F lor ida, on Monday. October If, al
7 10 P M or as soon thereafter as
possible At the meeting Interested
parlies may appear and be heard
with respect lo Ihe proposed or
rllnance This hearing may be
continued Irom time lo time until
linal action is lakrn by the City
Council
Copies ol Ihe proposed ordinance
are available at the City Hall with
Ihe Clerk ol Ihe City and same may
lie inspected by the public
Dated this Toth day ol September
A D . If l l
MARY W HAW THORNE,
Cily Clerk
AO VICE TO THE P U B L IC : It a
person dec ides lo appeal a decision
made with respect to any mailer
lonsiderrd al Ihe above hearing,
lie will need a verbatim record ol
all proceedings, Including Ihe
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by Ihe CIIy
ol Casselberry (Chapter 10 ISO.
Laws ol Florida. 11101
Publish October 4. I f ll
DLN 17
C IT Y
OF
CA SSELBERRY,
FLO R IO A N OTICE OF P U B LIC
H E A R IN O
TO
C O N S ID E R
A D O PTIO N O F
PRO PO SED
O RDINANCE
TO WHOM IT MAY CO NCERN:
NOT IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
by Ihe City ot C asse lb e rry ,
t lorida, that the City Council will
liold a public hearing lo consider
m adm en! ol Ordinance 44) en
titled
A N O R D IN A N C EO F THE C IT Y
Of C A S S E L B E R R Y . FLO R ID A .
A M EN D IN G S EC T IO N I S l t l
a p p l ic a t io n f o r a p p r o v a l
th e
c it y
of
ca ssei
ber r y
cooe
of
or

or

o in a n c e s

s p e c if ic a l l y

ADDING A PORTION OF TH E
S IT E
pla n
r e v ie w
or
D IN A N C E d e l e t e d
upon
t h e p a s s a g e OF o r d i n a n c e
No
)4&gt;
P R O V ID IN G
FO R
C O N FLIC TS. S E V E R A B IL IT Y i
AND E F F E C T I V E DATE
This notice is given pursuant lo
the provisions ol Chapter It*.
Florida Statutes, and the Charter
and Ordinances ot the City of
Casselberry. Florida, as amended
and supplemented
Said Ordinance will be con
sidered on llrsl reading on Mon
day. October I), IN I, and the City
Council will consider same lor
linal passage, in accordance with
Chapter It* and adoption alter Ihe
public hearing which will be held
in the City Hall ot Casselberry,
Florida.on Monday. October It,a t
7 )0 P M or as soon I her caller as
possible Al Ihe meeting interested
parlies may appear and be heard
with respect lo Ihe proposed or
dinance This hearing may be
continued Irom time lo lime until
linal action is taken by Ihe City
Council
Copies ol ihe proposed ordinance
are available al the Cily Hall with
lh# Clerk ol the City and sam t may
be inspected by the public.
Oated this JOth day ol September
A D . IVII
MARY W HAW THORNE,
Cily Clrrk
A O V ICE TO TH E P U B L IC : II •
per son dec ides lo appeal* dec is Ion
made with respect to any m allrr
considered al Ihe above hearing he
will need a verbal im rtccrd ot all
proceedings.
Including
the
testimony and evidence, which
record is not provided by Ihe City
&lt;F Casselberry. (Chapter H IM .
Laws ol Florida. IfMI
Publish October A IN I
D EN 24

r

18—Help Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

R E G IS T E R E D nurse position
available with home health
agency As pari lim e nurse
excellent salary, days only for
appointment call ) l l 0100 or
D4 17Q7__________________________

Oftando-W inter Park

322-2611

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
H
I
M
.,
t
v
................
Wc b IIw
HOURS
1 cons*cvfive tlrrvas S0&lt;4 line
■:M A.M. — S:JO P.M.
7 uflMCutfva tin ts .......... Me
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 11conMQittvttiirwi l i e s IlM
SATURDAY f • Noon
M.00 Minimum
) Unas Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

E L D E R L Y lady to care
to r) small children in
my home. I l l 0(71

!4—Bcrsiness Opportunities
P LU M B IN G D IY H ard w are
and E le c tr ic a l re ta il and
repair Business W WO Real
Estate Best Terms. S ID .000
Wm Malictowski R EA LTO R
) H 7 f D Eves )7J 1)17

Sunday - Noon Friday

18—Help Wanted

1—C a rd of T hanks
T I­
THE family of the late Allred
Blair wishes to (hank (heir
friend* lor all a d s of kindness
shown
during
their
bereavement

♦—f t r s o n a h
WriY B E L O N E L Y ! Write "Get
A Male" Dating Stevie# All
agts P .0 Boa 1071, Claar
water, FI, M W _________________
LO N ELY
W rite "B rin g in g
Peoplr
Together
Dating
Servlet!” All ages A Senior
Cihiens P O. Boa IASI. Winter
Haven. Fla 1MH

H ER A LD P A P ER R O U TE
FOR S A LE
h i ID )

AVON R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
The Part Time Career
A44 M 7 t - Collect l i t Slot
TRUCK Mechanic — All around
M echanic E x ce lle n t Pay
Good Benefits
Apply in
Person only Smith's Union 7*.
7)00 S Orange Blossom Trail,
Orlando. IS1 1)40
WOMAN Rigger In a Wood
working Shop
Some en
per pence preferred Seaworthy
Wood Products. Inc 17)1 Stale
SI feeing Santord P la l*
behind Robson Marine
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

6—Child C ara
FOR the Ultimate in
Child C a rt A Child's
World TJ) 14)4

CONVENIENCE

TWO questions Will vou be
financially Independent m 1 lo
S years) Are you paid what
you are worth? tt not can ) 1)
4*04

29—Rooms
SANFORD — R eal wkly. S
monthly ratal Util Inc. Kit
LOO Oak Adults 141 rat)
L A R G E sleeping rooms
apply evenlngi 1)41
Celery Ave Reasonable
spacious turn, wkly
maid service, wkly reles. 4)2
Palmetto Ave n )l* 4 1 .

EV EN IN G care S p m l o l i m
Casselberry area
Call evenings *71 7S44
SPUR OF THE MOMENT
B A BYSITTIN G
27)1)44
I'L L BABY SIT
A N Y TIM E
) I ) 4*17

Air pan Blvd 4*
Casselberry at
Celery Ave. M
Lake Mary M

C A S S E L B E R R Y N icely Fu r
ntthed House privileges.
Senior C itlie n s Welcome.
Close to churches, shopping
Transport el ion II necessary.'
))1 0SJ1

))M ))I
1)11711
I1I-4IM
HUMS

a M M * M * ll* * * * * * * * t

M A TU R E, responslbl* woman
will car* lor your child in my
home )I1 07*4.

9—Good Things to Eat
) lbs I 00
Bananas
S lor 1 00
Cukes
Large Prppers
Slor 1 00
eech 7fc
W Lopes
Green Onions
2 lor 7tc
Salad Tomatoes
4 lbs 1 00
Ex Lg Tomatoes
lb 88C
Pumpkins
7fc uo
Red Del Apples
4 lbs 1 00
Rome Apples
lib s 1 00
Gold Del Apples
lib s 100
Mutiu Apples
lib s 1 00
fresh Apple
Cider
11 gal I f f
Fresh Maple Syrup
1 ft
SOLbs Potatoes
4 10
S Only SO Lb White
Jumbo Onions
410
a bunch tie
Greens
SLbs Potatoes
Itc
Tim Buc Toe Corn it in
and Jack O' Lantern
Pumpkins ere in

Wa T a k a Food Stam ps
L E R O Y FA R M S

SR 48

LA YO U T. Filter. Welder. Sheer
A Brake Operators. First and
Second Shifts, Top Pay, Good
Benafilt. Call Florida Iron
Works Inc 117 0700
P A R T ■F U L L T IM E
RN ■LPN - A ID ES
Quality Professionals Needed to
meet help needs of Seminole
County Hospitals Nursing
Homes
H IG H EST PA Y IM M ED IA TE PAY
On Call Madical Services
Call 41) )447

★

★

★

11—Instructions
Tennis Instruction — U S P T.A.
Certified Group or Private
lessons Children a specially.
Da ug Malic towikl
llt t N I.
— 1i - ■- j f ~ m p t m iw i
W A R EH O U S EM A N
factory
experience a mull
Hatvy
lilting required Full benetllt.
apply In persqn, United
Solvents M07 Airport Blvd
MAID*— tor small condo. I day
per week, flexible hours IT)
010a alter 1 p m
A G G R ES S IV E IN DIVIDUAL
PART TIM E
SA LA R Y A BONUS
P E R F E C T FOR
C O L L E G E STUDENT
Circulation Oept
Evening Herald
)711*11 or D IO N S

★

★

★

★

A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
P E O P L E H E L P IN G
PEO PLE
W E HAVE A
N EW C O U N SELO R
K A T H Y IS
P U T T IN G P E O P L E
JU S T L IK E YOU
TO W O RK. W HY
NOTYOU?
CA LL EA R LY

W atson's Old F a rm
B LU B CRABS L IV E
OR D R ES S R D
7 DAYS f t- StAISJI.

★

4740
WOO
117.000
Open
Open

nss

Open
Open
Open
WOO
IM 0
1740
S tll
f *40
Open

If IF French
¥

*

¥

H I 4174
¥

¥

¥

*

*

• • '• • • • • • • • • • • • a * * *

COOK
FA ST FOO O O PBRATIO N
Good salary, hospltalitallon, I
week peid vacation tv try 4
months
E ip t r lt n c e
not
n ecessary Phona Manager
Lake Mary *4 - ))) IMS

IM PORTANT
We need m echanics. On*
automatic transmission man
Two line m echanics. Ex
perienced only ) U IU I Ext
))* ask lor Bob Good

P R O FESSIO N A L man A I yr
old daughter desire a long
term live In housekeeper
R eferences. Le ke Brantley
area 11)41)0 Eal (JOT)

H O U SEK EEPER
Lake Mary
Home 140, ) Hrs. ) Day Wk
Own Transportation ) ! ) 7Sff
Evenings

MAID t day a weak mutt have
references A tram Call eve A
all day weekends | ) l 7174

M E C H A N IC
eacellen l
op
porturuty immediate opening
Mutt
have
eaperlence
rebuilding carburetors, knows
A C A electrical, need good
diagnostic man. Top wages,
paid
vacation,
eacellenl
working conditions
Only
eaperience need" apply
S7* S)f*

~ R N 0 R L P N “’
a I) and U S Shift. Full lime
Apply in parson Santord
Nursing Convalescent Centfr,
fSO Mfllonvllle Ave
R IG H T now we need a tew good
sales people who have the
ambilion and dedication to
succeed II t h a n you. than
we’re prepared lo olttr you
real rewards and the methods
to get them For Interview,
please call Century I I , Hayes
Realty Services, Inc., Santord
IJJIOSO
M E T A L w orkers A general
h tlp a rt. Apply In person
Starline E n tti p rise s In c..
Bldg It s , Santord. Airport.
Moderniimg your Home? Sail no
longer needed but useful Hems
with a Classified Ad

» -Apartments Unfurnished
L U X U R Y ' AFARTMEMdb*
F a m i l y A Adults se c tio n ,
Poottlde * B drm t. M a d tr's
Cove Apts, m r t o o Ope* on
weekenot
I

Bdrm I ' i bath. Fireplace,
Formal Dining R , Modern
Kitchen. Cent HA, Quiet and
wooded ))) S tll all S

WE
HAVE
A p arlm en ls,
Duplexes and Houses lor Rent
June Portig Realty 11) 4471
BAMBOO COVE I bedroom
apts Available Manager on
premises. )1) 1)40
Ridgewood Arm * I Bdrm .
Apts tromS74S ) Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis cocxl )J)
4410.
EN JO Y ceunlry living? 1 Bdrm
Apts. O lym pic s i. P it ) .
Shtnpndoph Village. Open »•».
))) Tf)l.

O E L IV E R Y janitor al least )
years tiperlance in main
tcnanca Ability lo folk** in
tlrucfiont. ability lo rtad and
w rit*
C h a u lla u rs llce n t*
required Selary range IS 140
1424) Apply at Semmol* Com
m unlly Action, H aadstart
office. 1101 Pine Ave . Santord
Closing data Oct I. I f l l EO E
AT laatl I years aaperlanc*
quantity cooking Ability 10
read and w rllt, salary rang*
D IM lo 1411) Apply al Sami
nola
Com m unity
Action
P r o jt d
H aad start, sand
rttu m t to Portia O Spancar,
P O Drawer 1)11 Santord,
F I*. 1)7)1 Closing date Oct. A
I f ll E O E

RtTS AND i n r t
Seminole M em orial Hospital
overlooking B e tu lilu l L a k e
Monroe it currently slatting a
Stand by Pool tor RN's and
L P N ’s You will raceive tidt
pay during orientation and will
than ba placed on P RN status
and ealltd in at needed Thit is
a grtal opportunity to loin a
growing o rg an iiatio n , and
work with a highly dedicated
item of professional.
Wa oiler an excellent salary and
b an alltt, gaebage. II in
tyresled pleas* contact our
Personnel director a l:

CO M M ERCIAL
Refrlgarollon
Man.
M u ll
B«
Ei
per lone #d. Apply in Rorton
ZSIh ond Park Ave. Food Barn.

1I41B. Ill It.

EA RN DO la 1)0 par hr. with
flawletgh in your homo. Call
S7 4 HH* lor appt

Santord. Florida HTT1

Ms-in-4tn*iini
Equal Opportunity Employer

PARK P LA C E
Associates Inr Realtor*
JJ) 81*0

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F SANFORD R EA LT O R
Excellent B u n nell opportunity
m good location Complete
stock included in this priced
* -educed to IHOO

) BDR. 2 bth,scr porch, carport,
cm H A A w W D7S mo +
dep J7J f404 alt S p m

1)44 S. French
1)141)1
Alter Hours: 1* f 1000, 111 4771

IANFORDOPT. TOBUYI ■
7 bdr caroprt. kidso k 1250
Cottage, turn nodro IJJ5
SAN FO RD U N FU RN APT
) rms, applic .kids,S225

TnL_

SANFORD Apartment
JBOrm Porch. Kidt, S750

Santord — I bdrm * de*T
ceram ic
bath,
lu rn it u r r
available, adulls. S12S mo. I
441 74*1
SANDALWOOD Villas Airport
Blvd . Santord 1 Bdrm, 2 Ba
The Realty S'ort. Realtors
I *71 I f l l
M arlnar'iV illagaonLak* Ade I
bdrm from IlM . 2 bdrm Irom
t ) « Located 17 f ) just South
ot Airport Blvd. in Sanford All
Adulls 11)1470

S A V -O N -R E N T A L S
Seminole
I l f 7)44
SAV ON R EN TA LS REA LTO R

W—Mobile Homes
Ji FT M O B ILE Home on St.
Johns River Near Geneva
Scenic Location Semi Private
D rive. All u tilitie s paid
Adults only SJMMo 141)111

II

37—Business Property
For rent or lease — 10.310 tq It.
industrial or warehouse 111
W 1st SI , Sanfurd 17)1100

C U T E Efficiency SltO mo
Utilities nol included
I 444 4421
Apartment For Rent
T Bedroom Furn
)I)I7 4 2

31A—Duplexes
SANFORO spacious 2 bdr,
l bth. air, drapes.
IU 0 mo + dep ) ) f IS4)
) r d R. air ww carpet, stove,
retrig w d hook up. no pels
SlM w iln leese A sec 111 If*)
) BOH . 1 bth 1S41 Ridgewood
Ave Santord, kit turn. D l l
mo ? d ep . no pets, call
collect If f 172) eves IfS 0071
days

32—Houses Unfurnished
jb drm , 2 B with
double car garage, in
Deltona Call P 4 14)1

BUILD IN G in F E R N PARK
Zoned All Nice Wooded lot
Many trees. Central location,
owner will assist SIS.000

37-15—Rental Offices

OWNER SAYS S E L L J Bdrm 1
Bath on large lot Has wwc
Fireplace, above ground pool
Owner motivated D7.SO0

SM A LL O F F I C E
PAR
T IA L L Y FU R N ISH ED , PLUS
C O P IE R ' ij s o M O N TH!!
CA LL
111 9141, OW NER
REA LTO R

COUNTRY LIV IN G 2 Bdrm 1
Balh Low down payment, and
owner will llnance 417.S00

Office Space
For Lease
1)0 772)

J BDRM R EN T A L Excellent
location, new carpeting, nice
lot, 4715 Mo plus security.

37D-Industrie I
___ for Rent____

IA LT O R J l l t f f l Day or Night

LE A S E-S A N FO R D
7,000 Sq
Ft
P rim e 17 12
Location
Ideal
light
M anufacturing
or
Com
mercial Full Air conditioned
Plenty O lllc u Space, and
parking Call Mr Buie
3J2 SSI0

Harold Hall

48—Condominiums
CONDO furn I bdr. fully
equipped kit., pool. 1st A last
plus lease 174 )2SJ

REALTY* INC.
R EA LTO R

41—Houses

78DR Country cotlagt. central
heal SIM mo Includes water
Older only need to apply
7)1 n i l
) BOR, ) bth, t it r a large great
room, dimng rm , huge
modern kit., wood bufYlng
sione lireplace. entire house
carpeted A draped, screened
porch, large tot, quiet neigh
borhood. close to school Ret A
dep 122 1410
SANFORO 2 bdr, 2 bth. ap p lic.
Including w d . no pete S irs
Uep req 12) a)U , ]?) )44f
) BDRM. H i Bath Kitchen Furn
carpeted Fenced in backyard
plenty of shad# trees. Neer
school in Ravenna Park. S27S
mo V 00 deposit. I l l lit ) .
LOCH ARBOR I ) , CHA. carpet,
garege porch, lanct. shad*.
44)0 + deposit Phona 4)1 S0f4
A T T R A C T IV E I bdr . Uy bth,
CH A, washer d rye r, ton
vemently located U7S
J J ) 4)70
1 BOR. can lralalr, lanced
yard, dose to
town U U m p I2I0S4S

323 5774

HOUSE YOUR F A M ILY
EA SY
A SSU M PTIO N
Lew
payments 2 Bdrm Near naw
H ospital.
ZO N ED
COM.
M E R C IA L . lu p tr potential.
Only 137,IM.

JIM
n t Z K MALTY

COUNTRY ATM O SPH ERE In
town P in tcrtsl area. ) Bdrm
Larg e L iv in g Rm . Only
4)1.444.

Reg. Heal ■state Brafetr I
11)4*71
Eve 11). &gt;144
COUNTRY LIV IN G
Vet close in
Beautiful ) Bdrm, 2 Bath, 2 Story
Home Large Eat In Kitchen,
Fireplace. Dual Zoned Air
Conditioning Tastefully and
co m p le te ly re d e co ra te d
Situated on I Acre ot Land,
with several large shade •• *
Priced right at tlf.500

C LEA N , c l b a n , c l e a n ,
O tscribts this tasy living
Hama and Its naighbartsaad.
Paiwlltd Pam Rm , Rat la
K llc k tn w ith R a n i* and
Rafrigaratar. Rig Sdrm i. I
Utility IM gs. + T t x lll Land
scapt* let tar Slf.S*4l!
N E E D P R IM E E X P O S U R E ) J I
Zentd R C 1 . I l l F I. Frtnlaga
on Hwy. Excellent location.
Priced at 144.14*

f t O B B I K ’S

BIALTY

O VER IM« sq It in tfiis 4 1 w in
naw Ctn Heat, big badreantl,
Fam Rm, H i l l scr perch +
heavily Irted let ter enly
444,10*11

R E A LT O R , M L4
J10U4 French
4uite 4
laniard

24 HOUR IB 322 9283
C R E A T IV E
F in a n c in g !
Academy Manor. ) Bdrm, Hy
Ra New carpel 1 paint,
carport Rear fenced Big lot
171.100 111 10)1

HAL C 0 L I U T REALTT

C O M P L E T E L Y R EM O D ELEO
I Unit Aparlmant Hews* with
large re a m t, paddlt Ian s,
sm ekt a la rm s, carp al +
P ttltiv * cash Hew I 447,14411
WE HANDLE R EN TA LS
)U I77 1

NOTICE

Inc.

323-7832
Eves )77 0417
207 E 2Sth St

■INGO

) BDR . 1 bin, assume FHA mlg
17.500 dn Ul.soo total, exc
cond move right In 127 1174
O ELIG tk TFU L Denary - extra
targe ) bdr, 2 bth home with
tots of closets, on '? acre
wooded, leke Iron! lot Dream
kit, r e lrig , island sio vt,
washer i dryer, cent vac
system, w w carpet, 14x20 &gt;
screened porch, patio, and
closed garage, 447.M0
FOUR TOWNES
R E A L T Y INC. B R O KER
4*4 42)0 anytime

\ l
NEW E N E R O Y
E F F IC IE N T HOME
I) Buill In erergy savers, altic
storage. Deltona Area
)!)))I0

you are having difficulty
finding a place, to live, car lo
drive, e iob or some service
vou have need ot, read all our
want ads every day

STEM P ER AGEN CY

B E A U T Y Shopfor rent
French Ave
))) 510*

M fllo nvllle
T ra ce
Apts
Spacious, modern 2 Bdrm, |.
Beth apt. Carpeted, kit
equipped,
CHAA.
Near
hospital A lake Adults, no
pets 1170 I I I FIS)

31—Apartments Furnished

jT I

TH E C E N T U R Y 21 SYSTEM
H E LP S more people buy and sett
more real estate than anyone
else in America Call today
and let il work tor you Call
27) 3050
Hayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
4) 5 W JSIh SI
Santord
Each office is independently
owned and operated

) BDRM Apt Furnished
1771 Mo NoPets
)!)* » !

323-5178
Oflice Manger
Medical Assistant
Phy Therapist
Part T Investigator
P T Secretary
Cashiers
Waitresses
Factory
Phone Solicitor
Service Tech
War enouse
Delivery
Mechanic
Assembler
Janitors

Affordable
Santord
Homes tor Rent. See Now
Brand New 7417 Marshall SI
111) mo
) Bdrm, I 11 Bath Fenced 1U1
Elliott 4)7) mo
) Bdrm. H i Bath Fenced 1X7
Monteruma D M mo
H D R E A L T Y INC.
R EA LTO R
D 9 IM 0

la r g e

STORE CASHIERS
Good salary, hospltalitallon, I
weak paid vacation evtry *
months.
E ip a r la n c c
not
necessary
For In ttrylew
phone Ihe manager a l :

41—Houses

32—Houses Unfurnished

H IM

S11

2M4 Oak Avt ,
Sanford

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
Win 825 5100
Did you know that your
club or organiialion can
appear m this lifting each
week lor only 4) SO per
week? This 14 an idaal way
lo inform lh* public ot your
club activities

I s I M I

M L*

311-0881

KNIGHTS OF
COLUMBUS

Alter tir«. 22) 7144 and 1)14141
321-0041

d Is a b l e d

^
AM ERICAN
V ETER A N S

R « « . tor

0
Alger A Pond
RIALTY, INC.

Chapter
»
Hwy I l f )

South ot ian len l
General Meeting

1st Tuet Z JO
Cocktail Lounge open Mon
thru Sat IlN oontillT

NEW l A k E M ARY — High
School area 7 Bdrm I Bath
horn* with lancad yard
Perltct starter home, with
owner financing Low down
payment 4)4.400

Bmgj
E arly Bird
ever y Wad S Sal
evening at I 1SP-M

VA R E P O ) Bdrm I Bath home
with carport utility rm. Cent
AH Only 4U.000

II your club or organiiation
mould iik* to be included in this
listing call

CALL

Evening Hm ild

323-7843
REALTORS

C L A S S IF IE D
D EP A R TM EN T

M M I1

:

r *

— •# 9 .x.
v 4-r* .» *1#*

**
f
',** '•*«/&gt;•*♦** ■

y

■

*88 * \ # e*P a.p*. *
• * » A * - w « **.«

*

�I

■11—Houses

M O B IL E
HOME _
Furn
doublrwidt and lot with dock
** Johns River US too 00

REALTOR

323-5324

h ea l

O STEEN
5 ACRES
P IN ES SCRUB OAK
TERM S

esta te

Mare room in your attic, garage
Sell idle item s with a
Classified Ad Call a friendly
ad 'a»er at 377 ja ilo r H I *»*3

REN T with Option 3 I New
Carpet, freshly pointed. S3S0
Lie Real Estate Broker
7M0 Sanford Ave

^C7

STENSTR0M
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader
W E L IS T AND S E L L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN THE
S A N EO R O A R EA
COUNTRY A TM O SP H ER E) J
BR. I Bath home lor the
Handyman al heart! Enioylg.
shaded lot w horses welcome!
•
SIS 500’
A T T R A C T IV E! « BR, J Bath
home m Ravenna Park on a Ig
corner loll CH AC. Eq Kit
cnen. fenced F tp Just spl'd A
pamird! Good financing avail.
u s toot
JUST FOR YOUI ) BR. J Bath
home in Oreamwold w Ig
B P S . Pool A Palio. BBO
Greenhouse. F R A Much
Morel tai tool
EX T R A S G A LO R E! 1 BR I
Bain home on Ig corner lol m
desirable areal CH AC. WWC
Eq Kit w BB. F R . Ig sern
porch! Sat *00’
M A YFA IR V IL L A S l J A 1
Bdrm., 1 Bath Condo Villas,
neat to Moyloir Country Club
Select your let. Moor plan A
interior decor! Quality con
structod by Shormoker lor
sat.iss a upi

C A LL AN YTIM E
IMS
Far*

322-2420

a t l a s lOiaa
1bedroom 57500
Tat 575*

C H EC K THISOUT
B E A U T IF U L ItSJ Royal Oaks &gt;8
wide 3 bdr. ? bth, garden tub.
delu*e ca rp el, cathedral
ceilings brick fireplace, avood
siding, shingle root, paddle
lan and many more extras
Only SJt *00 VA financing nb
money down. 10 •« down
convmt.onal See a! Unde
Roys Mobile Home Sales of
Leesburg, u S Hwy aal S tOa
7S7 037a Open weekdays S
7.30 Sun 17 a
CH ECK OUT U N CLE ROYS
LA R G E selection ol la wide*
prices start law s VA finan
dng iB money down, 10*.
conventional

T A LL
H a.500

O ST EEN 1J A C R ES WOODEO
P A V EO ROAD FRO N TA G E
sia.ooo

RUMM AGE Sale al ihe Geneva
Melhoctisl C h u rrh nn 1st
Street. Friday A Saturday,
Oct *th A 10th * a m to 5 p m
Lots ol stuff very reasonable
Coffee A sandwiches tor sale.

G E N E V A 7' r A C R ES WOODED
ZONED M O B ILE 117.500

57A-Guns A Ammo
GUN auction Sunday Nov
Sanford Auction
IJ15S French Ave
More mlo3?J 7740

59-M usical Merchandise

S E IG L E R R E A LTY
BROKER
3765 HWY. 17-92
321-0640

PIANOS K orqan* large &amp; small
%farftng at low a% 1149 95 Bob
B.sil Music Center A Webern
Auto 301 W 1st Sanford

43- B—Lots &amp; Acreage ~
__________ Wanted
W A N TEO budget p rices 5
bedroom house tor senior
CllUms lobuy. P O Box 114 C
O Evening Herald. P O Box
I4S7, Sanford. Fla 71771

47-A—M ortgages Bought
______
a Sold

46—C om m ercial P ro p erty

See our beautiful new BROAD
M ORE, front A rear BR'S
G R EG O R Y M O BILE HOMES
3803 Orlando Dr
373 5700
VA A F HA Financing

7 APARTM EN T Houses For
Sale by Owner Will llnanct
most 373 430*

We pay cash lor lit A ?nd
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 77* 774*

K’ds outgrow the swing set or
small bicycle? Sell these Idle
items with a want ad To place
your ad. call your friendly
Classified gal at The Herald.
377 7411. or S3) t t t j

NEW Nob'lily, 3 bdr. 7 bln, dbl
wide, shingle root, wood
s*d&gt;ng Oct special Sll.ttS
delivered A set up
Open Sundays
Uncle Roys Mobile
Home Sales Of
Leesburg tOa 7S7 037a

50—Miscellaneous for Sale
CNAKF PROOF BOOTS 14* *4
ARM Y NAVY SURPLUS
310 Santord Ave
371 57*1

44B- Investment

C 3 35 mm camera Acgui. w
case, exposure meter, (able,
screen prevewer slide sorter,
proieclor. tri pod, batteries.
Hash bulbs, SI00 373 7304

_ Property___

1*77 MASTE Office Trailer ITiSO
fl Central Air Heat Naw
carpel and paint Excellent
condition
Ready tor im
mediate use Sa»95 377 1300

IN V E S T O R S
PLEA SE'
7
Triplex units tusl arrived
Purchase separately or both
lor UO 000 with owner holding
Call on Ihis one! June Porilg
Realty Realtors. 377 S47S

43—Lots-A creage

SEW AND SAVE
SIN GER Zig 2«g and cabinet
P a r balance sts
or 10
parm enlssr 50 See al Sanlord
Sewing Cmter, Sanlord Plaia

47—Real Estate Wanted

L A K E MARY aiarge
lots nice trees
S15 000 each 377 am 7

TRAD E seasoned 110,300 Is!
morlgage paying 1301 m o .
1*7* Grand Prlx some cash lor
equity in house or duplex 373
0106 or 131 &gt;542

it you arVn’t using your pool
table, take a cut, and stfl II
with a Herald classified ad
Call 377 7411
SANFORD R EA LT Y
R EA LT O R
373 117*

Garage sales are in season Tell
Ihe people about it with a
Classified Ad in the Herald
377 7411.131
*V«J

N GA. A N.C MTN LOTS —
S C E N IC V IEW A L A K E
FRONT. SOME MORTOAOES
AS LOW AS 7&gt;. P ER C E N T .

We buy equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage
L U C K Y INVEST
M ENTS. P O Box 7500. San
lord. Fla 77771 377 4741

Don l Despair Or Pull Your Hair
Use A Want Ad 377 7411 or
131 **» 3

50-A—Jewelry
WE DOING ring set lire 7
1)50 or best otter
574 5*71
STORING IT M A KES WASTE
S EL LIN G IT M A KES CASH
P LA C E A C L A S S IF IE D AD
NOW Call 377 7411 or S3I t t f j

At part ol tha continuing process of keeping tha Cem prthtntivt
Plan rtip antlvt ta changing circumstances and perceptions at
community needs camprthenslva emrndmtntt to the Plan hav* baan
prepared
Tha primary lstu *i associated with the amendments are presented
below The Beard at County Commissioners considered the cam
praheniive amendments in public hearings on July II. 1*11 and
August It. I f I I ,
Tha pur post of tha public hearings is ta provide the public an op.
pertunity la prtstnlcomments lathe Board ol County Commissioners
tor ar ig iin tt tho droll amendments. AH interested individuals are
encouraged la make their views known
Ta help in tha public rtviaw a summary al tha draft amendments,
the draft amendments and tha minutes at the Local Planning Agency
public hearing whara the amendments were discussed have baan
campiled into tha report ''D r ill Comprehensive Amendments —
1*11." The report is available for rtviaw at tha Planning Department
at tha Courthouse In laniard A limited number of tho reports are
available lor distribution to groups roprtsenllng diverse business,
praltiiional, civic and community interesls. and ta mtmbars at tha
gantral public. All intaraited groups and individuals a rt encouraged
la critically review these draff amendments, ask gutttlens and
provide reactions Contact Woody Prlct. Planniag Director at 777433* a it. tit tar information H alt at tha Planning Department it
available ta discuss the draft amendments theuld individuals ar
graups sa desire
SUMMARY
A. Amendments ta the Short Range Develepment Plan
t Identities exceptions lo Table 10 "Land Use Categories Defined in
Terms ol Zoning Districts" designations ol toning classifications
permitted in land use categories
7 Provides genera) definitions ot land use categories
3 Sett out criteria lor allowing PUD toning in land us* categories
other than PUD
4 Describes intent and purpose ot Transitional Areas
5 Includes Iwo alternative revisions lo Table 10. "Land Use
Categories Defined in terms ol Zoning Districts"
a Alternative 1 permits a new toning district ( ( S lor Convenience

THE

Store Commercial) in i l l land us* categories except Low Intensity
Commercial
b Alternative! permit I a new toning district (C 5 for Convenience
Store Commercial) in only Iht non residential land us* calfgorles
other than Low Intensity Commercial
B. Amendments I* the Development Frpmtwprh
I Identifies Low Intensity Commercial as# lend use category
7 Introduces end provides policies lor Trensllionel Areas
3 Presents policy, pursuent to satutory requirement, providing lor
group home end loiter cere facilities in Medium and High Density
Residential and PUD land use categories
4 Clarities density ranges lor residential lend use categories
C. Amendments te"Appendli C — Th* Amendment Precast"
1 Provides procedures and worksheets to be Incorporated mio
"Appendix C — The Amendment Process" selling out how amend
menls lo the Lend Use Maps are to be reflected once adopted by Ihe
Board
J Presents revisions to "Appendix C — The Amendment Process"
required because Ihe lour filths 14 5) vole requirement tor tpecillc
amendments was deleted by statutory action
(Preservation and Conservation land use categories ar* expressly
excluded Irom consideration lor amendment al this time I
THE BOARD W ILL CO NSIDER ADOPTION OF THE FOLLOWINO
O RD IN A N CE:
AN ORDIN ANCE AMENDINO ORDINANCE NO. 77-35. TH E
SEM IN O LE COUNTY CO M P R EH EN SIV E PLA N ; PR O V ID ES FOR
E X C E F T IO N S TO T A R L E
II OF TH E
SHORT RANOE
D EV ELO P M EN T P LA N ; P R O V ID ES D EFIN IT IO N S OF LAND
USE C A T E G O R IE S ; P R O V ID ES FOR IN TEN T AND P U R PO SE OF
TRAN SITION AL A R E A S ; P R O V ID ES FOR CHANOES IN TA B LE IS
OF THE SHORT RANOE D E V E LO P M E N T F L A N ; AMENDS
O EN SITV RANOE I IN D EV ELO P M EN T FLANNINO ANO
R E O U L A T IO N OF T H E D E V E L O P M E N T F R A M E W O R K ;
PR O V ID ES FOR A D EQ U A T t S IT ES FOR O RO U F HOME AND
F O S T ER CARR F A C IL IT IE S ; P R O V IO ES FOR LOW IN TEN SITY
CO M M ERCIAL AS A LAND U SE C A T E O O R Y ; PR O V ID ES
P O L IC IE S FOR TRAN SITION AL A R R A S ; PRQVID RS POM
TH H EE FIFT H S ( l l t h i ) M A JORITY VOTE OF OOVERNINO
RODY TO ADOPT S P E C IF IC A M EN D M EN TS; PR O V IO ES FOR
LAND U SE MAP, CHANGES TO TH E MAP ANO W O R K S H EET S ;
PR O V ID ES FOR EXCLU SIO N FROM SEM IN O LE COUNTY CO D E,
S E V E R A B IL IT Y AND AN E F F E C T IV E D A TE.

total J . Sta*
Chairman
Baard at Caunty Cemmttsieners
Seminal* Ceunty

U N IN C O R P O R A TED

AREAS

O F SEM IN O LE COUNTY

The sooner you place your
classified ad. Ihe sooner you
get results

67—Lawn-Garden

Overslocked, must dispose ol all
kinds ol turnilure at reduced
prices All lop grade and in
good condition Dining Rm.
and Dmelte Sets Bedroom
Sets and odd pieces Living
Room sets and Hide A Beds
and chiari plus all accessories
p.ecrs Open daily 10 5 pm

D E L LS AUCTION
*
CEN TER
*
323-5620
3 P IE C E sectional sola S50
Swivel chair SJS Colonial
chandelier S13 Col S3
Call 377 45*1
ROUND dining table 110 Sq end
table 130 ( pc brown velvet
sola 1130 177 71*0

72—Auction
F IL L DIRT &amp; TOPSOIL
Y ELLO W SANO
Call Clark &amp; Hirt 173 7540

65—Pets-Supplies

* *• *

REN T A Washer. Dryer.
Refrigerator, or TV
*04 773 69*3
Kenmore parts," service, utru
washers MOONEV A P P LI
A U C Es 17104*7

•

/

79—Truck s-Trailers
S T E E L BOOY utility trailer
4' i x l x i l m *140 Wes camper
)» )S 8 4 ____________________________________
1*77 CH EV Y CIO P'Ck up Long
Wheel Base. V I , 1 *n»ed Slick,
Runs Excellent
F air
1*93 111 1774

80—Autos for Sate
7) T BIRO Loaded. New Tire*.
Blue with White Top. or 74
Cutlass Supram* No money
down ITS mo 33* *100,13 4 4405
Dealer
____________
l*r* DODGE Diplomat 1)00 dn
and take over payments See
al 703 Holly Aye
Looking tor a mb’ The Claisltlod
Ads will help you find that lob
1*73 C A D ILLA C Coup* Devllle
Full Power. AC. low mileage.
AM FM Asking *1730
_____________ 371 «71_______________
FOR s a l e to clot* estate. 1*77 4
door Oldtmobilt. *3.000 miles.
Cash required Call f a m.-J
p m 111 17Al

★ BAH Auto S a le s *

77—Junk Cars Removed
TOP Dollar Paid lor Junk A
Used car*, trucks A heavy
equipment 377 3*90.

Have some camping equipment
you no longer use? Sell il all
with a Classified Ad in The
Herald Call 177 7411 or S3I
*»*) and a friendly ad visor
will help you

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
11*11*1

l*M Buick Rivera
1ST* Old* Cutlass
Supreme Brghm
1*7* Chevrelet Cemer*
l*7SR akb lt*D r
Its* Pantiac
Bennlvlllt Brghm
1*7* Chevrelet
Caprice 4 Or.

tti.igg
14,4*1
11,177
S3.777

11.M l

Bank Ha«ncits) available
SIN . Hwy. I7 »l
Casselberry

^ ^ A Y T O N A AUTO AUCTION
Hwy t). I m il* west of Speed
way. Daytona Beach, will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at ( p m. it's
the only on* in Florida You sat
the reserved price. Call *Oa
7j&gt; *311 tar lurther details
1174 OLDS Delta I I 7 Door V I
Automatic. Air. power win
flows, steering and brakes
Runs excellent, needs paint
15*5 S3) 1774

BUSINESS SERVICE USTMfi
A N D LET AN E X PER T D O T H E JO B
To List Your BusinessDial 322-2^11 or 831-9993

Additions A
Rtmodtling

Landacaping

Ctaaning

BATHS, kitchens, rooting, block,
co n crelr. windows, add a
room, Irre estimate 97) 144)

Air Conditioning

ERRO R T R R I IN S T A L L E R
landscaping. Old Lawns Re
pieced N 5 ) B l

B E T T Y BOOPS
C L E A N IN G S E R V IC E
janitorial. Palming, Yardwork
C A LL FOR ES T IM A T E
A F T E R Sp m 372 *115

Landclearing

E V E RY DAY IS BARGAIN
DAY IN TH E WANT ADS 111
7411 o g l l l «**1

Chris will service AC's, refrlg,
Ireeiers, water coolers, mile
Call 111 5113

Beauty Core

T O W E R S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y Harriett's Beauty
* uok 31* E 111 SI , 3JJ 3741.

A creag e! lol clearing
Fill dirltop soil
lor sale TT) 143)

Clock Repair

Lawn Maintenance

G W A LTN EY J E W E L E R
204 5 Park Ave
317 450*

DUNN R IT E Law n Servlc*.
Mow. edgr', trim, vacuum,
mulch, sod Haas 331 75M.

e ------ - * - 111 Iconcrete
wotx

Nursing Center
OUR R A TES A R E LO W ER
Lax *ye w Nursing Center
*1* E Second S t , Santord
37) *707

Concrete Work, looters, lloors 1
pools Lan d scap ing R sod
work F r e a r s ! 1)3 710)
t MAN Q U A LITY O PERA TIO N
« yrs n p Palio*, Driveways.
He Weyne Brel 171 1171

Painting

Electrical

Heilman Painting 6 Repair*.
Quality work Free E e l, Disc,
to Seniors IM 14*0 Rater.

Quality electrical work 77 yrs
experience Minor repairs lo
complete wiring 3)10114

Painting**-

No lob loo large or small.
Quality a must Call 1710071
References F r. E l l .

Handyman
Painting, carpantry. all typas of
horn* repair* Call tor Ira*
estimate 131 I *75

•

Homa Imgrovamant

Fredd ie Robinson Plum bing.
R og eirs,' f o u n t s . W. C.
Sprinklers 3111)10. 31)670*

* »%

PCW tT**»lln §

Remodeling Ip o c ta llit
We handle th*

wRoSelallat wax

B. E . Lin k Const.
122 7029
Financing Availed!*

ROOFS, laafesrapaiigR, Replace r * m * eaves and iMngt* wart,
I ice* sed. lasarad , banded
Mike 113-4371.
Christian Roofing 17 yr* exp.
M* 5750. Ire* est Reroofing,
sp tclalll* in repair work A
naw rooting _____________
SOUTHERN ROOFING IS yrk
exp , re roofing, leak ipaclal
III
Dependable A honesl
price Day or night m l ) * )

Sandblasting
IA N O BLASTIN O
O A V IIW R LO IN O
173-41**, SAN FORD

Small Hama I
S M A LL home re p a irs ,
repair, fret est. All
guaranteed 13)14*5.

» A 4-

root

-O ■

I W CVvv WWOI

BUSHHOG MOWING
GOADING
1115717

Plumbing repair - oil typo*
water healers A pumpo
31)04/3

J A B Horn* Improvement '
Carpentry work ot any type.
Roof repairs, gutter work,
painting (interior ar exterior I,
plumbing, spaciaiu* in mobile
home repoirs A roof cgating,
and wood patio decks Free
estimate 373 *054

Il

R w a g u u ^ U xu|

-A -

Plumbing

C IN T R A L FLO R ID A HOMB
IM PR O V EM EN TS
Painting. Roofing. Carpentry
Lie Bonded A Guaranteed
Free Estim ates MAIM*

M E IN T Z ER T IL E
Newer repair, leakr showers our
specialty. 75 yr* Exp M* IS*)

*&gt; •* n

j a p

1*10
SU5UKI350
371)7*3

CONSULT OUR

Camplet* Ceramic Tlla Serv.
walls. Moors, countertops, re
model, repair. F r est 33*0111

* ♦

76—Auto Parts

CF A P ER S IA N S Adult
Females While. Black
SIS0S230 37) 3515

Ceramic Tile

• I •• - ^ « &gt; * ■

1*71 FORD Step van,
new tires, new motor.
17500 cash 37) 7)4*

ANIMAL Haven Kennels board
mg A grooming, Needed
Pekingese A sm alt silv er
poodle lor slud Male Owners
call 371 5757

T IR E5 4G 71x14
Whitewall Belted Like New
S7S.I3I 1774

SID E by side
A maria 1173
3401 Cypress Ave

750 HONDA K 7 74 000 ml orn­
ate cond SfSO or best offer
m m i)

★ M9 7989*

75A-Vam

P U P P IE S
Free lo a good home
333 3S47

I R E E male Chihuahua I yr.
old. thott. loa
good home 448 114*

M A K E ROOM TO S T O R E
YOUR W IN TER ITEM S
SELL
"D O N 'T
N EED S"
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 3)7 J t l l or 131 m i end
e friendly Ad visor will help
you

-Mr
i&lt;**
* ' * * * * ■1
■ MW.----------- ---

75 GEM 37 tt travel trailer, very
clean Mutt lee lo appreciate
Call atlrr 4 p m weekdays,
anytime on weekends 11) 571)

CHIHUAHUA P U P P IE S
FOR SALE
327 173)

52—Appliances

mow Hill Kennel otters Cat l
Dog Flea Bains IS up 14
Hour. Full Service MS 571)

d

75— Recreational Vehicles

3 y r OLO female Collie 1100
Black mix, male tree lo good
'Kime 37) 747#

WILSON M A lER f UR N il UR E
i n 313 E FIR S T St
177 S477

Make your Budget go lurther.
shop the Classified Ads every
day

"Person are advised that, it they decide to appeal any decision mad* at this meeting, they will need e record ol tha
proceeding*, and. ter such purpose, they mey need to ensure the! a ugrbellm record of tho proceedings is made,
which record includes Ihe testimony and evidence upon which tho appeal I* to bo bated "

Somebody I* looking for your
bargain Oiler il today in th*
Classilied Ads

F R E E black miniature Poodle.
7 yrs old. well trained
377 4407

used Car Pari* all make* an)
models 3)7 71*7 W* buy Used
Cars and Truck*.

Animal Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kennels Shedy.
insulated, screened, tly proof
inside, outside runs Fans
Also AC cages W* cater to
your pets
Starling slud
registry Ph 3)3 57S3

H X X X IM X *

For E sta te . Com m ercial 0E
rResidential Auctions A Ag
praisal* Call Dell'i Auction
■111 SAM. : _______________

K ITTEN all black beaulitul A
playful female Free to a good
A lovmg home Call a lirr 7
p m 37) 1481

Boarding A Grooming

••w t,

ALUM IN UM , can s, copper,
lead brass, silver, gold Week
days I 4 30 Sal * I k o k o Mo
Tool Co *1) W 1st St ) } ) 1100

51-A—Furniture

★ ATTEN TIO N *
BIG F U R N IT U R E
LIQUIDATION SA LE

IPs like pennies from heaven
when vou sell "Don l Needs"
with a want ad

Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rug*
Bridget Antiques
3711101

GA R A G E door cypress.
Like new
727 731 * or 37* 3705

NOTICE OF REGULATION OF LAND USE
The Board al Caunty Cemmlsilener* at Semlnala Cewnty, Fieri**,
pr opoirt ta regulate Ihe use at land within the araa shewn In the map
In this advertisement. A public hearing on tha proposal will ba held an
Octabtr tl, 1*11, at the hour at liM p .n i, ar toon thereafter, in Ream
m al tha Seminal* Caunty Courthouse, laniard. Florida. Tha public
hearing Is balng held In order ta discuss and htar comments an ad­
ditions and revisions as camprthenslva amendments la tha adapted
Samlnalt County Comprehensive Plan.

SLIM
BUO GETS
ARE
B O LS T E R E O WITH V A LU ES
FRO M
TH E
w ant
AD
COLUMNS

61—Building M aterials
I SETS Custom Made Drapery 43
m long Cos) II IOC Sell lor
1700 Double Bed new. 1100
Color TV Antenna 150
373 5751

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
FromStOtoSSOor more
Cell 371 1474.377 4440

78—Motorcycles
WILCO SALES
N U TREN AFEEO f
Hwy 41W. -7111171
CASH A C A R R Y P R IC ES
Hog Finisher Pellets
15 40
Layer C
15*0
Rabbit PellrM
SI 15
Bee! Kwik
14 15
14 S Vitality Horse
Pellets
14 10
V/ Corn
15 10

68—Wanted to Buy

mountain tot*
near lake, covered
with tree* 332 12*3

la rg e

77—Junk Cars Remove*

67—Livestock- Poultry

I

COM M ERCIAL J A C R E S O N 17
*7 N E A R
la k e
M ARY
B O U LEV A R D SISO.OOO

W ANTED 100 lo 700 acres in
Orange or Seminole Counties,
toned lor mobile home sub
division Send all details In
eluding location, to P O Boi
nas. Ocala. Fla 37171.

Shop Uncle Rovs Mobile Home
Sales. Leesburg. U S Hwy aal
S *04 787 03)4 Open 7 days

R E G I S T E R E D red A gray
horses lor sale
Horses
boarded 1*5 mo Hobby Horst
Ranch 5 mi w ell of Wekiva
River on Hwy 4t

54—Garage Sales

G EN EV A 70 A C R ES WOODEO
COCHRAN ROAD B3.S00 P E R
A CRE MAY D IV ID E

42—Mobile Homes
&lt;Ht

BA TEM A N R E A L T Y

Good Used TVS.SJ5 A up
M IL L E R S
741*Orlando F r
Ph JJJ0JJ2

O STEEN
W OO D ED
A C R ES B17.500 TERM S

REALTOR. m 74*f

p len ty ol
prospects
Advertise your product or
service in the Classified Aas

66-H orses

a r ea .
FRO N T

fa lls

W OO D ED R IV E R
A CRE 1)5.000

Cal IBart

D E S IR A B L E l o c h 4 RBOR - 1
Bdrm ? Both on lore? corner
lot u r.ioo oo
CO M M ERCIAL - Stole Rood I I
I plot Acres close to new
hospitol Owner financing

w e k iv a

OWNER W ILL FIN AN CE
Large 3 OR. 28 Fam ily Home in
to*n bu1 very private E i
cedent condition Including
t*and n e* roof A pa.minq
Yours tor
Mult see

Ewnlng Hart Id, Stntord, PI.________ TswidBy, Ott. 4 ,1H1—1 |

5J —TV-Radio-Stereo

43—Lots-Acreage

4)—Houses

SANFORD REALTY

1

FONSECA PLUMR1NQ Con
struct ion, Repairs, ■morgen
cy Lie . tended, ms »S4*S.

*

*9- f

•* D

J U N G L E llm
Tree Ser
Trimming, topping A removal,
tree ottlmaio (also rubbish
removal 1 B14 74M
mar pniTRaakiR vita',
Trimming, romgelng A LentscogHtg. Free I n . m m

«

I

�t

B L O N D IE

«*- I wal— H anlftitalw ftFl

ACROSS

43 Find
Answtr to Previous Putjl*
44 Do tti« cnwl
............... .... \^m i ■ i n in
1 Side of i
48 Sell* not*
[ im o iln n lQ n n
48 Alloy
□□□
S HouMwift'i ti- 51 Part of th*
□□□□
do (abbr.)
psych*
8 Traval on foot $2 Should
1 2 ld *a(Fr)
SSOrdtrtd
per
13 Tim*I period
59 Fitttn
(ib b r)
60 Prod
14 Holy Imagt
61 Pounds(abbr)
15 Sshrege
62 Beyond Umbo
16 Flowing
63 California
16 Polishing
county
stone
64 Sup
20 Eggs
68 River duck
24 Latvia's
42 Lowest class
21 Girden
capital
moisture
of animal
DOWN
25 Mesdamas
22 Scale not*
45 Skin tumor
23 Prophet
Sag*
(abbr)
47 Everything
28 Speed
Seth's father 26 Minute
48 The three
measure
Lifted (Fr)
opening
wise men
jabbr]
Gates
27 Vast
49 Ferrous metal
28 Canadian
Madam*
29 Part of the
50 Aid in diagnos­
rebel
(abbr)
psych*
ing (comp
30 Hawkey*
racked
31 Balls
State
7 Whin*
wd)
32
Waal
34 Did cat's work 6 Cheese state
53 Eiultation
33 Uphold
36 Snatch
(abbr)
35 Plants grass 54 Hawaiian
37 Therefor*
B Sour
dance
38 Electric
10 Worship
38 Performibl*
currant
(abbr)
55
Divulge
40 Sow
11 Was aware of
57 Bustle
17 Automotive so- 39 City in
41 Female
58 Summer time
soldiers
ciety(abbr)
Norway
(abbr)
(abbr)
19 Long ago
41 Twist

Cn

1

2

3

4

5

12

13

IS

t6

18

6

7

8

9

10 11

14
17

19
22

25 26 27

|
J

■
"
35

34

I
13
29

_ j1

1
42

■
45
48 49 so
58

J‘
■
57

■

r

30 31 32 33

■ I
31
38 39

■

37
40

■
24

_
|

St

j ■
46

,5

52

53 54 55

58

SB

60

61

62

63

64

65

1

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BF.DEbSOL

For Wednesday, October 7, 1981

BUGS BUNNY

YOUR BIRTHDAY
October*. 1981
There could be some very
pleasant things happening (or
you this coming year in­
volving the security you want
for yourself and your family.
You'll be given the op­
portunity; Just don't let
friends talk you out of it.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
You've heard the expression,
"You are what you think."
Well, this could be applied to
you today concerning what
you think your worth is in this
world. Romance, travel, luck,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career for the coming
months are all discussed in
your A stro-G raph which
begins with your birthday.
Mail fl for each to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Charm and good humor work
well for you, so don't give in to
being argumentative, even
when provoked. Keep your
wits about you and laugh
everything off.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) "Insiders" infor­
mation which may be given to
you today must be treated
with the secrecy it deserves.
Tell no tales and you can't be
accused of the leak.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jun.
19) You may not want to be
alone today, but don't go so
far as to pick up everyone’s
tab just to keep them around
you. This could never bring
you happiness.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) Don't think you must
babble senselessly Just so
others will know you're

by Sfoffttl ft Htimdahl

around. Most of the time,
people prefer the company of
a listener.
PISCES i Feb. 20-March 20)
The only person who is
thinking down about you
today is yourself. You might
talk yourself right into being
miserable by negative self­
judgment.
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19)
Keep your opinions to yourself
today, especially if they are
demeaning Inward another.
You could find yourself in hot
water if you voice them.
TAURUS i April 20-May 20)
Being a nice person could get
you thrown together with
someone everyone else is
trying to avoid Speak up so
they don't palm him or her off
on you.
GEMINI i May 21-June 20)
You’re in a sociable mood
today, which might be just the
reason you can't concentrate.
It's best not to begin things
which, once begun, must be
finished.
CANCER (June 21J u ly 22)
Getting along with others will
lie no problem today, so long
as you keep everything
aboveboard. If anyone feels
he or she ts being talked
about, hurt feelings will
result.
I.EOi July 23-Aug. 22) Keep
busy today. Avoid getting into
discussions which might be
touchy, especially with family
members. Why spoil whul
could be a pleasant day?
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Mental
p u rsu its
won't
necessarily be your strong
suit today, so if you find your
concentration straying, stop
and do things which are
routine.

Aspirin Unproven
Heart
DEAR DR. I-AMB - I am
confused about using aspirin
to prevent heart attacks and
strokes. I have been taking
aspirin because heart attacks
seem to run in my family.
Now I have read that aspirin
doesn't help women but only
helps men. That seems odd. Is
that true? Why would aspirin bination of asp irin and
work anyway? Does it thin the alcohol, often used by people
blood? If so, will it cause a to treat a cold, is especially
person
to
bleed
or hard on the stomach and
hemorrhage? Should you take should be avoided by all.
D espite its draw backs,
aspirin for high blood
aspirin remains a rather safe
pressure?
DEAR READER - There medicine if a person knows its
are lots of unansw ered limitations and does not abuse
questions about the use of its use. Its effectiveness may
aspirin in preventing both be limited some by taking it
heart attacks and strokes. So with meals but the food helps
far it has been proved to to protect the stomach from
provide some help in irritation.
preventing men from having
DEAR DR. I-AMB - Would
recurrences. It has not been you write something about a
proved to prevent attacks in
brain wave test* I've been
people who have never had a
told they find out about your
stroke or a heart attack and it past with these tests. I have a
has not been shown to im­
friend who is going to have
prove the outlook in women.
this. They say it doesn't hurt
Why? No one knows for
you but they hook you up to a
sure. Aspirin in the correct
machine with lots of wires to
dose — and authorities are
your brain. If it is real bad 1
still trying to find out what is
won't tell her.
the best amount, which may
DEAR READER - There
be smaller than commonly
used — will help prevent the ts nothing to it. Your brain
clumping of small cells in constantly creates electrical
your blood called platelets. impulses. If it didn't you
Platelet clumping is the first would lx* dead. Those elec­
step in the formation of a tric al im pulses a re tra n ­
blood clot. Cigarette smoking smitted throughout your body
causes clumping. I don't think but, of course, are strongest
anyone should start taking over the brain itself
even small doses of aspirin on
Tlie lest simply attaches
his own to prevent lieart at­
electrodes
to the scalp to
tacks or strokes. As The
Health le tte r number 8-8. measure the electrical ac­
Aspirin
,and
R elated tivity of the surface of your
Medicines, which 1 am sen­ brain. The wires and elec­
trodes are not attached to the
ding you explains, lliere are
brain in any way. Some
potential liazards to regular
techniques do involve putting
aspirin consumption.
very fine needles in the scalp
Others who want this issue
hut
not through the skull or
can send 75 cents with a long,
into the brain.
stam ped,
self-addressed
envelope for it to me, in care
Now the test will not reveal
of this newspaper, P.O. Bos your |last. Its uses are ac­
1551, Radio City Station, New tually somewhat limited but it
York, NY 10019.
is an im portant test in
Aspirin in the plain form or study mg brain function and
in combination with antacids evaluating symptoms that are
or other preparations cer­ som etim es caused by a
tainly can induce bleeding. change in brain function —
Chronic use of aspirin often such as unexplained fainting,
causes irritation of the lining headaclH's or visual distur­
of the stomach. The com­ bances.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
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Opening lead *2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sootag
The unlucky expert had
cornered us for the first
time in months
“Have I got the hard luck
hand of all-time for you.
was his start

Then he showed us today's
hand and remarked that all
South players in the weekly
duplicate had bid and made
four hearts The play started
with a diamond won bv East
as cheaply as possible and
the lead ol the diamond ace
at trick two All Souths
ruffed and all Wests, but
one. overruffed and led their
remaining trum p South
would lose the spade finesse,
but could then ruff his two
losing spades with dummy's
last two trumps and maYe
four
Against our hero, on trick
two West played a low club
w ith o u t any a p p a re n t
thought In fact there was no
thought West hadn’t seen his
king of hrarts at that point
in time
Now South led the queen
of hearts and rose with
dummy's ace After all East
was marked with that king
and it could be a singleton It
not, South could stilltake the
spade finesse and make four
or fiv e d epending on
whether or not it worked So
he led a spade from dummy
and finessed his queen West
took his king and said.“Look
what I lust found " Then he
led his king of trumps That
was the third defensive trick
and Ihe unlucky expert could
only ruff one losing spade
and was down one for a rero
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN i

ANNIE

FRAN K AND ER N E S T

by Laonard S tarr

YES' a TROPICAL CLIMATE
IN THE ARCTIC~toO THAT
YOU, HR. AM, PTERODACTYL HAS BEEN
W TlN CRE
EXTINCT FOR MILLIONS OF
ARE
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�</text>
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                    <text>74th Y e a r , No S -T h u r s d a y . A ugust 27, 1 9 8 1 -S a n fo rd . F lo rid a 32771

Evening Herald—(USPS aai-280)—Price 20 Cents

It's A S w e a t B o x '
Modernization Delayed As Tenant Urges Turbo-Fans For Housing Authority Units
Iv flinHpri
T h e llOO.OhC tederally
funded
modernization program at Redoing
(iardens, one of six public housing units
in Sanford, has been delayed.
T h e San ford Housing A uthority
B o a rd iSH A i of C om m ission ers
Wednesday night voted to delay the
project after a tenant and new Com­
m issio n er
E.
Wain C um m ings
questioned the scope of work in the

l..
modernisation eplan.
Teri Buralti, a tenant in the project,
said if turbo-fans are not installed on
the roof of the 100-unit apartment
com plex for sen ior c itls e n s , the
proposed Insulation of walls and in­
stallation of ceiling fans in apartments
would be a waste of money. The goal of
the modernisation project is to reduce
heat in the ipartm ents during the

.
summer tim e, she reminded. Turbo­
fans are installed on roofs of buildings
to provide ventilation of attic space.
Newly appointed Commissioner E.
Wain Cummings, a county building
Inspector by profession, said insulation
"only slows down heat, it doesn't stop
it. If you don't get ventilation, in­
sulation will be inefficient," Cummings
said.

Boy, 11,
Killed
In Crash

'
Maurice Parks, SHA director of
plants and operations, said the m ajor
goal of the modernization program is to
reduce the heat in the Redding Gardens
apartm ents in the summer. He said
when hot weather begins in late Spring,
apartm ents' temperatures at Redding
Gardens rise into the high 90s and stay
at those high temperatures until late
October.

Pact Falls Through

Investigators said the accident oc­
curred Tuesday shortly alter noon not far
from the boy's home. They said the boy
was riding on the right fender of the
pickup truck his mother, 38-year-old
Patricia Federinko, was driving.
Mrs. Federinko's pickup truck was
traveling west on Center Drive when It
collided with a car driven by Debra
Peterson, 29, of 1(13 Center Drive.
Casselberry,
Mrs. Peterson had Just driven her car
out of her driveway and was attempting a
left turn to head east on Center Drive
when th e a ccid en t occurred, in­
vestigators said.
The boy was thrown from the fender on
impart and landed under the Peterson
auto, F IIP investigators said. The boy
was pronounced dead at the scene, they
added.
No charges have been filed against
either driver, pending completion of the
investigation.

Phof« by Ttm VHKMlV

S a n fo rd

H ousing

A u t h o r it y

F l e m i n g an d B a r b a r a

e m p lo y e e * .

I.in d a

W illia m s ,

f la i l

W a s h in g to n ( le f t to r i g h t ) , p a c k b o x e s in

p r e p a r a t io n to m o v e o u t o f S a n f o r d c ity h a ll a d m i n i s t r a t i v e o f f ic e s
in t o o f f ic e s a t C a s t l e B r e w e r C o u r t.

Moving Day For
Sanford Housing Authority employees
began moving from office space at the
Sanford City llall today to former
quarters at Castle Brewer Court on West
10th Street in the city.
The move will u v e the authority about
11,237 In monthly rental fees to the city.
Within days alter Joseph Caldwell
b e ca m e chairm an of the housing
authority board of commissioners he said
the administrative offices would be
moved back Into one of the city ’s public

housing projects not only to save money,
but also to place the administration of the
public housing back in the projects
themselves.
„ Currently the authority adminlstraUon
operates UU bousing units in a u public
housing projects tn the city.
Although the authority had a lease with
the city of Sanford extending until
February, 1983 for the space, the city at
the authority’s request canceled the
lease.

Housing Authority Audit Set
By DONNA E ST E S

Herald Staff Writer
While the federal government continues its probe into why II
cost the Sanford Housing Authority (SHA) $333,000 to buy,
renovate and re-sell seven houses to low-income families, the
U S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
has Instructed the S11A to do an audit of that program to find
whether it actually owes the housing authority money.
lin d a Williams, SHA interim director, told housing
authority commissioners Wednesday night, HUD wants an
independent audit done of the Community Development Block
Grant (CD BG ) program from its inception in 1977 to the
present time.
Although the program has been discontinued, one staff
person, who is completing details of the program, remains on
the housing authority payroll.
The federal agency also recommended that the authority
contract the work from the Sanford accounting firm of Greene
and Dycus.' which recently completed an audit of other SHA
accounts. Mrs. Williams said currently she la negotiating with
the accounting firm for the additional work.
Greene and Dycus recently completed an audit of other SHA
accounts for the period of July 1,1979 through June 30,1911.
The work cost the authority $3,300.
Mrs. Williams said although the Federal Bureau of
Investigation seized records of the CDBG program , the FBI la
giving the authority access to those records for auditing
purposes.
She said the new audit of CDBG is to begin on S e p t l
The city of Sanford sponsored the federal CDBG program
through the SHA. Its purpose was to buy houses in need of
repair, to renovate and repair those houses and then re-aell
them to low income families.
U s t April Sanford withdrew Its sponsorship after City
Manager W.E. "P ete" Knowles discovered that $334,238 07 in
federal money had been spent while only seven houses had
been acquired and repaired and that only two houses had been
re-eold.
E arlier this summer, F B I agents seized records of the
program and one agent was quoted as saying the records were
to be turned over to a federal grand jury.
The HUD through its Jacksonville office, however, In a 14page m anagem ent review report noted that the CDBG
program may actually owe SHA money, and that funds of the
federal program and the housing authority program may have

TODAY

Dear Abb)
D e a th s...................
Dr. Lamb .

2A
4A
IB
....... IB
4B-3B
2B
2B
....... IB
........2A
...
2B

A tenant's participation meeting will
be held to consider the matter.
- DONNA ESTES

Iron Bridge Hook-Up

The dead boy is David Matthew
Kederinko, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerom e Federinko. IBM Center Drive,
Casselberry, according to the Florida
Highway Patrol.

...

fans via th e th erm o sta ts without
ventilation in the a ttic space would be a
waste of money. She said the tem­
perature in her bedroom at the apart­
ment complex, since there is no cross
ventilation, at lim e s reaches 113
degrees. " I t ’s a sweat box," she said.

$ 11 Million Jeopardized

An investigation is continuing today
into the death of an il-y e a r-o ld
Casselberry boy killed when he was
thrown from the fender of the pickup
truck his mother was driving.

Action Reports
Around The Clack
B rid g e ....................
Calendar
.... .
□ s u llie d A d s . . . .
Comics . ..............
Crossword ..........

He said the modernization plans call
for installation of hoods over ranges to
take up heat from rooking and vent it to
the outside. The plans also include
changing heating therm ostats in the
apartments to permit fans to operate
not only for heating, but also for air
circulation in the sum m er a s well, he
said.
Ms. Buratti insisted turning on the

E d ito ria l.....................
&lt;A
Florida
SA
Horoscope ........... ....... !B
Hospital ................... ........ SA
Nation .........................
3A
O urselves....................
IB
Sports
IA-7A
Tclevtsioa ................ . . .
3B
Weather ....................
IA
World .......................... . . . . IA

been "co-m ingled.”
The report noted that the former housing authority director
devoted half his time to the CDBG program while his entire
salary was being paid from regular housing authority funds. In
addition the report notes that commissioners and the director
See AUDIT. Page $A

• By TENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer
An agreement that would facilitate
hook-up of Seminole County and area
cities with the Iron Bridge regional
wastewater facility could not be reached
Wednesday, Jeopardizing an $11 million
federal grant.
The grant would be used to purchase $8
million in bonds to fund the installation of
wastewater transmission lines to the Iron
Bridge facility once an agreement is
reached.
According to Ernest " P a t" West,
executive director of the South SeminoleO ran g e County W astew ater T r a n ­
sm issio n A uthority, the balk by
Casselberry. Winter Park and Seminole
County "in the final hour" could
"s e r io u s ly Jeopardize an $11,832,000
federal grant and $8 million bond issue."
T h e T ran sm ission Authority was
created in a special act by the Florida
legislature to help facilitate the hook-up
of wastewater transmission lines from
government entities to the Iron Bridge
facility. According to West, the Authority
is also responsible for helping secure
grant monies for the hook-ups.
According to Casselberry Mayer Owen
Sh ep p ard , the agreem ent's penalty
clause concerning excess flow is the
ca u se
of
consternation
am ong
Casselberry officials.
City Council vice-chairman Frank
Schulte said that Casselberry is allowed
1 8 million gallons of wastewsler per day,
a cco rd in g to the agreem ent. " T h e
(revised) penalty clause which we
learned o( Tuesday night from the mayor
stales that any excess water will Invoke a
penalty cost of one month's charge for
each day of excess use," Schutle said.

Sheppard, ch a irm a n of the tran­
smission board, said he neglected to tell
the council members until Tuesday night
of the July 13 meeting a t which board
members approved the revision of the
penalty clause.
The original clause, approved by
council members, called for a penalty of
one percent of the total fee for any use in
excess of 200 percent of the original
allocation, Schutte said.
Schutte said Casselberry will be the
greatest user of the system and has
already peaked at the proposed use
allotm ent
"W e would be fined ever)’ day,"
Schutte said. "Not only would we
probably go over the allocation through
normal use, but there a re leaks in the
lines and rainwater often Infiltrates the
lines. This would definitely push us over
the amount."
Schutte udded that the penalty for
CaiMlberry exceeding tu allocation
would be approximately $3,000 a day.
" I can't and I have told the m ayor that
we should not support any penalty
clau se." said Ed Keullng, Casselberry
utility director.
Winter Park, on the other hand, does
not feel the charges a re distributed
equitably, according to assistant city
manager John Imton.
"W e feel it's front-end loaded," Linton
said. "We don't want to pay 30 percent
while we're only using IS percent.
E ven tu ally , the am ou n t m ight be
reduced but we think we should pay for
only what we use."
lin ton said that while other cities
within the group anticipate rapid growth,
Winter Park does not.
"W e Just want to pay our fair share,"

Union said. "W e don't want to pay for
someone e lse '* growth."
The Seminole County Board of Com­
missioners said they feel Winter Park's
claim s h a v e m e rit, according to
Assistant County Administrator Jim
Easton. Easton said the commissioners
met Tuesday night and decided to hold
off on the agreem ent until the issues are
settled.
"The Commissioners feel that Winter
Park's issues need to be settled to
determine not only the impact that will
be made on the city but on Seminole
County as a w hole," Easton Mid.
According to W est, the Authority will
be working with Casselberry, Winter
Park and Sem inole County officials to
"iron out these differences."
At Wednesday's hearing, Circuit Court
Judge Kenneth l&lt;effler granted the
Authority a continuance until Sept. II,
three days after the anticipated conv
plctlon date of Uw Iran Bridge facility
construction.
The Iron Bridge facility, owned and
operated by Orlando, is located in Oviedo
and has capacity to treat 24 million
gallons of w astew ater a day, according
to Raymond llodell, construction project
coordinator.
"We've already begun testing at the
plant to determ ine its rspabilities,"
llodell said. "A nd, when the facility Is
fully operational it will serve Orlando for
the first year and then hopefully
Seminole and North Orange County."
Any changes made in the original in­
terlocal agreem ent must be unanimously
approved by all participating dties
before bond validation can be made,
West said.

Rhyming Lawsuit Set
To Tune Of $ 1 Million
ROANOKE, Va. (U PI) - It's not exactly Shakespeare,
and it's not quite Clarence Barrow. But it's a lawsuit, and it
rhymes.
Jeffrey Goldstein didn't leave home without his American
Express traveler's checks But when they were stolen and
he didn't get the quick refund the firm promises, his lawyer
filed a rhyming, $1 million false advertising suit.
H ere's how the poetic pleading goes:
"H e was much impressed
"W ith the advertisement of American Express.
"H e knew by heart — it could not be doubted:
' When going abroad, don’t leave home without I t "
Goldstein's lawyer, Burton L Albert, knew the poetry
wasn't Shakespeare, but he told the University of Alabama
freshman he decided to write tn rhyme because the
predicament "lends itself to a little hum or."
Goldstein alleged American E xpress reneged on Its
advertising promise to promptly replace stolen or lost
traveler's checks.
Goldstein, II, went to Europe after working through high
school to u v e money for the trip. But his traveler's checks
were stolen and he alleged the company waited six days
before refunding the $720 he lost.
"Je ffr e y Goldstein, a pathetic soul,
"H ad lost his checks, had nowhere to go.
"And when he went to American Express,
"T h eir response created great d istress."
Goldstein said he did not starve, but he had to eat
sparingly and drop some stops from his Itinerary. He ex­
pected the prompt refund the advertisements trumpeted.
"B u t, a s the tale of Jeffrey will reveal,
"A M E X sometimes reneges on their d eal."
While he waited, Goldstein contended, American Express
refused to give him a small amount of money to tide him
over.
The suit accuses the company of "intentional infliction of
emotional distress ... breach of co n tract" and
" . . a third claim allowed by our laws
" F o r damages incurred by advertising false.”
Nancy Muller, an American Express spokeswoman, said
Goldstein's problem seemed unusual and suggested "m iti­
gating circum stances" in the case.
Spokesman Paul Feldman said in Europe it usually takes
longer than the advertised 12 minutes - but not six days —
for check replacem ent He said records showed Goldstein's
replacem ent authorization took one day.

N * r*M H m tt

A s t h e c o n s t r u c t io n c o m p le tio n d a t e f o r th e Iro n
B r id g e

w a s te w a te r

p r o b le m s

s till

tre a tm e n t

p la g u e

an

fa c ility

in te rlo c a l

n e ars,

ky Ttm ViikmI

a g r e e m e n t b e tw e e n S e m i n o l e a n d N o rth O ra n g e
C o u n ty g o v e r n m e n ts .

hookup

For Winter Springs

Charter Revisions On Ballot
Those proposed changes to the Winter
Springs city charter are back on the
November ballot for public approval, but
the voters will get to voice their opinion
an only some of the changes which took a
13-m ember commission months to agree
on.
By a 3-2 vote, the council Tuesday night
decided to "permanently table" an or­
dinance which would here repealed the
ordinance spelling out the recommended
changes.
What that m eans Is that on the fall
election ballot, city voters will see only
what councilman Hap Arnold railed

f

"c o im e llc "
c h a rte r
re v isio n s—
extending coundlmen’i term s from two
to three years, and changing the coun­
cil's name to commission.
In M ay, the 13-m em ber ch a rte r
revision commission presented council
members with two additional changesSwitching the method of electing coun­
cilman from the present at-large system
to a series of five single-member
districts, and mandating tin t Winter
Springs have a city m anager Instead of
leaving it up to the council to decide
whether the city has a chief executive
officer.

The council, however, scrapped those
two proposals and agreed to submit to the
voters in a (all referendum only the name
change and extension of councilmen'i
terms.
On July 28, commission member Gary
Massey complained about the council's
" tin k e rin g " w ith the com m ission's
recom m en dations. M sssev chided
counctlroen a s doing a “disservice to the
13 people who worked so hard on (hat
commission and to a ll the dtixens of this
city."
Council m em bers Arnold and Maureen
See CH A RTER, Page SA

�7A—tysntoq H«r*td, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Al»g. 77, W l

For Armed Robbery

Sanford Man G ets 3 Years To Life

W ORLD

By B R IT T SMITH
Herald S taff Writer
Twenty-four-year-old Sylvester Davis of Sanford will spend
al leaat the nest three years in prison, possibly the rest of his
life, for his part in a New Y e a r’s Eve armed robbery in the
parking lot of a local grocery store.
Davis, of SI Redding Gardens, was sentenced in Circuit
Court in Sanford Wednesday to sis months to life Im­
prisonment. Because a firearm was used in the crime, he will
have to serve a minimum of three years behind ban . In ad­
dition to the Jail time, Circuit Judge Kenneth le-IBer also gave
Davis a IS-yesr probationary term on a conspiracy to commit
robbery charge.
Davis was convicted on both counts April 21.
He was accused of robbing Ja m e s and Nella Jones at gun­
point in the parking lot of the Pantry Pride store, 2944 Orlando
Drive, Sanford. Taken was S30 rash and a payroll check
belonging to Jones' brother.

IN BRIEF
Angola Calls For U.N. Help;
Warns Of Worsening Baffle
LISBON, Portugal (UP1| - Angola called lor U.N.
pressure to halt a South African invasion, began a lull
m ilitary mobiUiation and threatened to throw its 20,000
Cuban troop* Into the •‘worsening" battle If world
pressure does not end the attack.
At the United Nations, a spokesman said SecretaryGeneral Kurt Waldheim cut short a vacation to return
to New York today to direct diplomatic efforts. The
spokesman laid the attacks were " a dangerous
escalation of fighting In the region."
Angola, warning the four-day South African attack
on guerrillas could cause a wider war, Wednesday
called for the Security Council to "take measures
likely to avoid confrontations of greater amplitude,"
the Angolan news agency said In a dispatch monitored
in Lisbon.

Shortly alter the hold-up. D avis was stopped in Del nod for a
routine traffic check, but disappeared when he w u allowed to
enter a nearby home supposedly to get his drivers license. A

Sanford Eyes Land Deal Profit

1

r

AREA DEATHS

Amlrak management ;&lt;a* proposed a train
service-cutback of about 10 percent, mainly to
the E ast and Southwest, but plana to add two
new trains on the West Coast.
Neither Sanford nor the central Florida area
will be affected by the cutback in sendee,
according to an Amtrak spokesman al the
Sanford terminal.
"W e have two northbound and two south­
bound trains — the Silver Meteor and the
Silver Star — out of here every d ay ," the
spokesman said. "And that’s the way it’s going
to sta y ."
The two new trains include a Spokane,
Wuh.-to-Portland, Ore. connection for the
Chlcago-Seattie Empire Builder and a new
overnight train between I/is Angeles and
Sacram ento.
The recommendations made Wednesday are
subject to approval by the Amtrak board.
They reflect a boom in demand for train
service on the West Coast, Amtrak officials
said.
However, cuts were deeper than expected in
the E ast, where Amtrak recommended cutting
back three of the 27 New York-Washing ton
trains, one of the 10 New York-Boston trains
and five of (lie 12 New Haven, Conn.-toSprtogfleld, Mass, (rains.
Amtrak also decided on deeper cutbacks
than expected to the West Virginia area, but
by cutting the Chlcago-Washington Cardinal
back to only a Chlcago-Cinctonatl tri-weekly
service, and by dropping a weekend train (ra n
W a s h in g to n

Survivors include his wttc,
Peggy, Altamonte Springs;
son, Carl P. J r ., Toledo, Ohio;
brothers, John, Toledo, Ohio,
Jo e , Tucson, Arisons.
.G srd en Chapel Home for
F u n s ra ls , Orlando, la In
e of iarrangements.

G

DAVID
IVID FEDEKINKO
i uavld
Fcderinko,
Id Matthew
M&lt;
|1. of 1120 Center Drive,
"
.diedTuesday at
Hospllal-Altamante
the result of an accident,
porn on Nov. I, 196* in
ftlm h u rst, III. he w ai a
(tudent and moved here In
1973 from Carol Stream, I1L
Re was a member of the
• lllan d congregation of
ah 's Witnesses.
S u rv iv o rs
Include h is
rents, Mr. and Mrs. Jerom e
Federinko of Casselberry;
paternal grandfather, John
F ed e rin k o , Chicago, III .;
paternal grandmother, Mrs.
Lavcm e Smith, Villa Park,
III
Baldwln-Falrchild funeral
Horn*, A ltam onte, Is In
charge of arrangements.
KARLGAUKSTERN
' K arl Joseph Oaukstern. 77.
of 202 H acienda V illag e,
Winter Springs, died Monday
at
F lo rid a
H ospitalAltamonte. Bam In Germany
May 9, 1904, he moved to
W inter
S p rin g !
from
I a vs Utile, N .J., In IN *. He
w u a m echanical engineer, a
designer and a Catholic,
j Survivors btCude his wife,
M rs. F rle d e l G au k stcrn ,

E i r n l n g IflemJd

Winter Springs; son, Martin.
Pittsburgh. P a.; sister, Mia
Ktrchoff, Bremen, Germany;
two grandchildren.
Baldwln-Falrchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements,
RICHARDBATON
Richard Anthony Paton, 37,
of 7311 Blue Jack et Place
West, Orlando, died Sunday
as a result of drowning In
L ake F airv iew . Born in
P aisatc, NJ „ March II, 1944,
he moved to Orlando from
DeLand to 19*1. He w u a
maintenance man for Woolco.
He Is survived by his lather,
Kenneth A. Paton, Orlando;
brothers, Kenneth A. J r .,
Nutley, N .J. and Robert J .
Paton, Freehold, N .J.; two
slsteri, Carol Adams, Orlando
and
Linda
D lm odica,
Belleville, N.J.
Baldwin-Fair child. Atoms
Avenue, l i in ch arg e of
arrangements.
WHrTLEY DAVIS SR.
Whitley Davis Sr., *2, of
2291 Frog Ave., Sanford, died
Satu rd ay
morning
it
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
He Is survived by a son,
Whitley Davti J r .; daughter,
M n . Rosetta Cooper; step­
daughter, Ellen Martin; aix
grandchildren, Leon, Turner
and Keith Davis and Derrick,
Carolto and Ricky Cooper;
two gnat-grandchildren; and
numerous nieces, nephews
and cousins.

W ilio n -E ic h e lb trg e r
Mortuary Is to charge
funeral arrangements.

O A V II, M S . W M I T ie r . SR. F u f w r a U W u K v ilw M r W N Ilar
c u . i t l r . S S . o l » t l f r 00 A v e .

UnlorO. wtw 01(0 SOurdlr *1
{ •m m o l* M t m a r 1(1 H o ip H d ,
wilt bo *t J F m , I tlv r d e r , at
Morning o io ry M S O w m . E.
St (to « 0*O 44 U n to rfl. wt1l&gt; mo
A t . Anorow Evono off K M mg.
Kvr&gt;«; in A m town Cw n rtrry.
SontorO
W ilton titlM b o ro o r
m ortu err &lt;n chorg*.

**&lt;n o

Thursday, August 27. lMl-Vol. 74 No, I
fvwuoee Mtfy m * to-asy.
laiwdar Sr 1st Saafcrd
H o t* . i M . m

n . ef«&lt;»

sawed-off shotgun w u found in his car and he w u later
arrested.
In 1979, Davis served as s key prosecution witness against
Gregory Mills who was being tried for the shotgun murder of
retired Sanford businessman Ja m e s Wright. Davis received
Immunity for burglary and robbery charges in return for his
testimony, and Mills was convicted. Mills is awaiting
execution.
CONVENIENCE ST O R E R O BBER Y
The Shop li Go at WUey and Sanford avenues w u robbed of
9 *5 *0 by a masked gunman late Wednesday.
Judith Shelton, the 26-year-old store clerk,- told Seminole

to

M s rttn s b u rg ,

W .V a .,

u sed

mainly by sightseers and backpackers.
The recommended cutback la a drop In the
bucket compared to the reductions that would

hive been forced by President Reagan's
original budget proposals.
Reagan recommended a $613 million federal
subsidy far A mtrak, which could have killed
long-distance passenger service.
The board was expected to haggle over some
specific cutbacks, and there was no guarantee
final approval would come quickly over them.
According to Amtrak and industry sources,
other elements of the plan management was
prepared to recommend Included:
- The P acific International, Ira n Seattle to
Vancouver. British Columbia, would be ter­
minated.
— The North S ta r, from Chicago to Min­
neapolis and Duluth, would be killed. But the
C h lcago -Seattle E m p ire Builder, which
normally operates three limes a week to the
winter, would operate daily between Chicago
and Minneapolis so the Twin Cities would
continue to have one dally train to Chicago.
— T he W ashlngton-Cum berland, Md.,
lectio n of the W ashlngton-Cincinnatl
Shenandoah would continue because the
Washington section of the Chicago-New York
Broadway lim ite d would be rerouted to
operate over the Cheasie System east of Pitt­
sburgh, instead of Ita current route through
Philadelphia.
- The C h lrag o-T eiai Inter American would
continue to operate, but only three times a
week south of St. I/nils. In addition, the train
would be halted a t San Antonio instead of
U n d o , and the branch to Houston would be
kilted. However, there would be a new con­
nection with the New Orleana-Los Angeles
Sunset lim ite d , allowing service for the first
time from such cities as Dallas and little Rock.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPO RT: Heavy thunderstorms fldoded ex­
trem e northern Texas tarty today and Interne sUrms plunged
through portions of Oklahoma and Uuialana. Southern
California, where temperatures Wednesday soared as high as
109 degrees, was expecting three-digit mercury readings again
today. Thunderstorms and heavy rains tale Wednesday
knocked out power to norther Illinois, stranding people atop a
live-story amusement park attraction. In the northwestern
part of the state, a downpour flooded basements and dislodged
a bank ol earth above ■ state road.
AREA READINGS 19 a .n i.i: temperature: 79; overnight
low; 74; Wednesday’! high: 90; barometric pressure; 30.01;
relative humidity: 97 percent; winds: South at 2 mph, .29 in­
ches of rain.
FRIDA Y’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 7:27 a.m .,
7:22 p.m. lows, 1:32 a s n .. 1:44 p.m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
s, 1:21 a .m , 1:32 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 1:01 B in ., 1:17
p m ; lows, 7:34 a m , 1:21 p m
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
M Miles: Wind east to southeast around 12 knots becoming
southeast 10 to II knots by tonight and Friday, Seas 3 to 2 (eel
decreasing 2 to 4 feet by tonight. Winds and seas higher near
scattered thunder storms.
AREA FORECAST: Mostly cloudy through Friday with
showers and thunderstorms likely today and chance con­
tinuing through Friday, lllg la today mid to upper 80s and
Friday near 90. Lows tonight In the 70s. Wind east to southeast
10 to I I mph but stronger near thunderstorms. Rato
probability 60 percent today, 30 percent tonight and 40 percent
Friday.
EXTEN DED FORECAST
Partly cloudy with widely
scattered mostly afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lows
in the low to mid 70s north and near 80 south. Highs ranging
from the mid IQs to lower 90s.

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

PRICES
SM ASHED
ON ALL

CONCORDS

W AG O N EE R S

EA GL E S

CHEROKEES

SCRAMBLERS
SPIRITS

PICKUPS

if a n it Wat*. II.NI MaMO, M i l t * MaaMt, M M S i
it Was* I L U i Maw*. I M lt I f
vaar. w aN s r

FINE FURNITURE AT GREAT SAVINGS!
L U n it e d S u r n i t u n e

S a te s .

Is on e o f the fastest g ro w in g fu rn itu re ch ain s in th e U nited S ta te s and this Is why.
1. Our *2 store buying po w er In su re s you the low est p o ssib le p rice av ailable.
2. Our own fleet of tru c k s e lim in a te s any m iddle m a n hid den co st.
3. W e do not b e lie v e In h a v in g our cu sto m ers pay fo r fa n cy frills and high
o v erh ead .
4. P erso n a lised s e r v ic e m e a n s th a t we tre a t you a s w ell a fte r a sa le a s before,
c o m e In end brow se to s e e fo r y ou rself.
5. W e g u a ra n te e you R ia l w e w ill beat any o th e r sto r e p rice s on com parable
q u a lity m erch a n d ise.

[U n ite d u j/u rn itu re S a l e s .
o ffe r s th e s e fam ous n a m e b ra n d s

★
★

BASSET ★

KR0EHLER ★

ARMSTRONG

SPRIN G A IR A SOUTHERN MANOR and moral

SINGER *

[ U n it e d S u r n i t u r e S a l e s .
Sk 3

550 N . H w y . 17 A 02 L o n g w o o d

B

I EA SY T E R M S I

^

.

MON.-FRI 9-9

1

J^

I

0f 5 R 0 4

3 3 1 -7 2 8 8
SAT. 9 6

« ..., e l S L m n -

o*u«M

SUN. 12-5

"Managing for Profitability"

A course of action
for small businesses.
In today's uncertain econom ic climate. South­
east Bank knows a small Ixjsinevunan needs all
the help he can Ref.
That’s why w ere offering a tnurse tiesigned to help you manage your business more
effectively.
“Managing for F’rofilability" is three days
of intensive, highly instructive insights into
ixisiness operations and procedures, financial
management and control tec hniques.
In practical, down to earth language, we ll
t over such topics as Balance Sheet and Income
Statement Analysis. Understanding and Using
Ratios as Indicators of Effectiveness, Finding the
Break-Even Riinl o f Pricing Decisions. And
How to Prepare a Budget and Profit Plan.
Since its inception in 1979. more llun
1,000 peofile all over Florida Ivive taken advan­
tage of this program. They have found it an

invaluable tool (or nunaging tin* financial asfiects of their Ixisiness - whether manufactur­
ing, retailing, most ruction, sales, services or
the [Holessions.
The thru ‘ -day course will lx* given at
Errol Estates Country Club in Ajxifika on:
Wed., Sept, 10
1;3 0 PM- 5 PM
(Dinner Served)
Thurs.,Sep!.17 8 :3 0 A M -5 PM
(Lunch Served!
Fri.Sept.lB
8 :3 0 A M -5 PM
(Lunch Served)
To register, ca ll Mr, D aniel O ’Hara,
Assistant Vice President al (305) 237-2011.
Tuition is $225.00 for the three full sessions,
including text, materials and meals. It’s also
tax deductible.
In times like these, a small txjsinessman
knows who lx* can cixmt on.

C O M E SEE • DR I V E . ONE A W A Y !

SANFORD MOTOR CO.

Southeast National Bank of Orlando
You c a n co u n t on u s*

»*•, t u M . eta. n m .

to e w t Clati Fvittt* Fate al Iaalaf4 Fiartea H » l

p s.H i vaar, M IN

of

Funeral Notice

iu im

Courts
★ Police

Central Florida Area

i The Sanford City Commission has agreed to pay off 175*.77 in
:delinquent taxes to acquire a piece of property on which It may
ibe able to make about (2.000 In trofit.
f City commissioners earlier this week voted unanimously to
pay off the taxes to obtain a lot 1M feet by 20 feet north of W.
p ith Street between Southwest Hoad and Oleander,
t The lot assessed value of the lot Is 12,6*0.
* City Manager W.E. " P e te " Knowles in a memo to the city
commission recommended the city acquire the lot for the taxes
Sowed and sell it at Its assessed value.

eas a salesman, a Catholic, a
J.S . Army World War I!
veteran, ■ life member of the
Hsabled American Veterans
and V e te ra n : of F oreig n
Wars.

★

A mtrakCuts Spare

ALEXANDRA, Egypt (U P Il An Egyptian
newspaper says Secretary of State Alexander lialg will
represent the United Stales at the start of the resumed
Palestinian self-rule talks agreed to by Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin.
Despite the Alexandria summit agreement Wed­
nesday by the two Middle E ast leaders to resume the
talks in late September, Egyptian newspapers noted
the United States has not named a new chief negotiator
to the talks, which were suspended more than a year
ago.
But the newspaper At Akbar, In a dispatch from
Washington, quoted "well-informed American aources"'as saying Haig will represent the United States presumably to host the resumption of the talks. It gave
no further details, saying only Egypt hopes the next
round of talks will be in Washington. There was no
comment from Washington on the report.

j CARL P. MUHAWflKISR.

A Fires

N ew Trains On W est Coast

Haig May Affend Talks

&lt; Carl Paul Murawskl Sr., 2*,
Of 12* O rien ts
D rive,
A ltam onts Sp ring s, died
Tuesday al Florida Hospital
Altam onla. Born In PHIiburgh, Pa., Dec. 2, 1122 he
noved to Altamonts Springs
from Toledo Ohio, in 197*. He

A c tio n R e p o rts

County sh eriffs deputies that a man with a stocking over his
face entered the store Just before midnight brandishing a
revolver.
The bandit went behind the counter, emptied the cash
register, and fled on foot, Shelton said.
DROWNING VICTIM RECOVERED
The body of a 37-year-old Goldenrod man who drowned
Sunday while fishing in Orlando’s la k e Fairview w u
recovered Tuesday afternoon.
Richard Anthony Paton of 7313 Blue Jacket Place In
southeast Seminole County .'ell over the side of a boat while
fishing in the middle of the fake Sunday afternoon, according
to an Orange County sheriff’s rep ort
He apparently sank and becam e entangled In some weeds,
the report said. It took divers until 1 p.m. Tuesday to find the
body.
T E E D O FF
Arden Jensen could be reaDy teed off.
Jensen, 33, of 33* Spanish T ra ce Drive, Altamonte Springs,
reported to sh eriffs deputies that someone broke into his car
Monday and stole a set of golf clubs and a pool cue. Total value
of the stolen merchandise was estimated a t 1930.

A M C
5 0 8 S. FRENCH A V .

JE E P

'

•

201 East Pine Street. Orlando, Florida 32801. Phone (10512 )7-2011.

322-4382

in re.

%.. * %.

v

. - tsarI

r - . * i. V a J - l

\

.34Sh.

�Evening Herald, Sanford, FI,

To Subsidize Housing

NATION
N BRIEF
North Korean Missile
Fired At U.S. Spy Plane
WASHINGTON (U P Ii — North Korea fired a sur­
face-to-air m issile that exploded within several miles
of a U S. spy plane flying a "routine mission” in South
Korean and international airspace, the Pentagon says.
The incident occurred Wednesday, one week to the
day after the dogfight over disputed Mediterranean
waters in which two U.S. Navy fighters shot down a
pair of Ubyan Je ts that had fired at them.
"The incident posed no threat to the aircraft, which
landed safely," L I. Col. Je rry Grohowski, a Pentagon
spokesman, said of the missile firing.
The Pentagon, in its official announcement, said:
“On Wednesday, Aug. 26, the crew of a U.S. Air
, Force SR-71 flying in siouth Korean and international
j airspace reported sighting a contrail and subsequent
| air burst several miles distant."

: 0/1 Royalty Ripoff Probed
•
WASHINGTON (U P I( — A congressional watchdog
• agency estim ates the public will be shortchanged by as
j much as $400 million this year on oil royalty paymenta
; — just the latest episode in a continuing 20-year ripoff.
Today, a special five-member Investigative corri! misaion appointed by Interior Secretary Ja m e s Watt
was (0 convene the first in a series of hearings that will
• attempt to put an end to the scandal.
As lead witness, acting Comptroller General Milton
; Socolar was to present the General Accounting O ffice’*
• findings on the dimensions of the royally ripoff and
some unrelated thefts of oil from federal and Indian
; lands.

i M o re Elderly Victims Found
DETROIT tU P I) — Five more elderly people,
shuttled secretly from a boarding home in Florida to
Detroit, have been discovered by police in raids on two
homes. Two additional victims were found in licensed
homes.
The raids Wednesday morning were at boarding
homes in the city and suburban Oak Park believed (0
be operated by daughters of Lucille Walker, 66. who
faces five kidnapping charges lor fteeing five elderly
women to come to Detroit from her Miami boarding
home in early August.
In addition, authorities said two other victim s of the
Miami-to-Detroit connection have been located. The
two, John Flow ers and Frank Connor, both In their 60s
and from M iam i, were staying in licensed foster-care
homes.

Thursday, Aug. If, IttI—2A

Builders Ask For Housing Finance Authority
By D A RLEN E JENNINGS
Herald S ta ll Writer
Members ol the Seminote County
Home B u ild ers A ssociatio n ap­
pealed to the Seminole County Com­
missioners to pass, by resolution, an
emergency ordinance declaring a
housing emergency in the area
The ordinance would d e a r the
tray for the county to establish a
Housing F in a n c e Authority so
cttiiens interested in low-interest
housing bonds could apply for them.
Members of the H-B-A asked the
county once before to approve the
Housing Finance Authority, but the

county turned them down saying the
board needed more information
about the program than the m em ­
bers had presented.
The H-B-A members told the
commission they do have the sup­
port of the mayors of Sanford and
Altamonte Springs on the bond issue
and that one survey reveaLs 90
people ore in favor of the bonds in
one subdivision akine.
The deadline for beginning the
banding program is Sept. 1, and to
beat it, the commissioners will have
to pass an emergency ordinance
before n e st w eek’s com m ission

meeting.
M.O. “ B ill" Solorenko, chairm an
of the Duval County Housing
Finance Authority says Jacksonville
was the first UJL city to pass a
single-family bond issue and he
believes it would be a real public
service if the ciliiens of Seminole
County could benefit frot® the
program.
“The program helps young people
live in good, clean shelter, and it
helps the American Dream cotne
tru e," Soforenko said
The Duval official said he also
believes the low-interest bonds have

a "rippling e ffe c t" on older adults
whose households have been
reduced after their children haw
gone out on their own. The bonds
Dien allow them to replace the
bigger house, which they no longer
need, for a sm aller home at lowinterest rates.
Je rry Feinsteln, a partner for the
building firm of Residential Com­
munities of A merica, says there is a
need in Seminole County for housing
in the $36,000 to $37,000 price range.
"This housing can be produced
and people can afford it at lower
Interest rates. People can afford

$400 and less payments a month,”
Feinslcin said.
Two co m m ission ers expressed
disfavor with the bond issue for lowinterest housing. Commissioner Bill
Kirchhotf said he would like to see
the Housing F in a n ce Authority
discouraged in Seminole County.
"The federal government sees
problems with it and the program is
not as broad a s it once was. I would
propose
sh ared
ap p reciation
mortgages. It is being discouraged
at the national level and by informed
entities on the local level," Kirchhoff said.

S a le
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Protests M ark Equality Day
By L'ailed P r e n International
In Washington, 21 women chained themselves to the
While House fence. In Seattle, three women staged a
Federal Building ait-in. And in Salt tak e City, a woman
climbed atop a statute of Mormon pioneer Brigham
Young and sm acked a policeman with tier shoe.
The protests were among hundreds of events Wed­
nesday that marked Women's Equably Day — the lis t
anniversary of the 19th Amendment giving women the
right to vote and the designated start of a last-chance
push (or the Equal Rights Amendment.
Thirty-five states have ratified the ERA. Three more
are needed by next June 30 for it to become part of the
Constitution.
Rallies, m arches and demonstrations were the order
of the day and women in Washington, Seattle and Salt
la k e City got them selves arrested to call the nation'*
attention to their determination to win full equality

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�V

Evening Herald
tUSPi (II )M)
300 N. FRENCH AVE„ SANFORD. F I JV. 32771
Area Code 30V322-2611 or 131-0993
T h u rs d a y , A ugust 17, 1981— 4A
Wayne D. Doyl*. Publither
ThomasGiordano,Managing Editor
Robar IL oven bury, Adverllitng and Circulation Director
Roma Delivery: Week. 11.00; Month, H 2 5 ; 6 Months, W OO;
Year, W OO. By Mail-. Week. $1.2i; Month. $5.25; &lt; Months.
W OO; Y ear. *57.00.

The M essage
Won't Be Lost

V

c LO ^

By DIANE PETRY K

The F -M s returned fire with Sidewinder air-toair m issiles and downed both Libyan fighters. The
dogfight took only 60 seconds, and there isn't
likely to be another unless Libyan dictator
Muammar Khadafy is willing to lose more of his
mostly Soviet-supplied air force.
But the significance of the encounter goes far
beyond the facts cited above.
In truth, the U.S.-Libyan confrontation has been
building fo r som e time.
The xenophobic Col. Khadafy cla im s absolute
sovereignty—as opposed to sim ply resource
■ o w n e rsh ip over a ll Mediterranean w aters with; in 200 m iles of the Libyan coast.
i He extends this sam e arbitrary claim to air­
-space above that 200-mile limit.
j These claim s are disputed, and hence
.Ymrecognized, by almost every other nation on
:earth, including the United States.
I

: Even so, it’s one thing to contest the territorial
^claims of an unpredictable strong-arm type like
; Khadafy and quite another to deliberately
!|chaUenge them by sending a Sixth b leet battle
:;group into the Gulf of Sidra, as the United States
p d .

i The R eagan administration is denying that any
:■of this was d eliberate, but it can hardly have been
: otherwise.
a

_

'

t The Libyans have b e e n h a r a s s i n g N a v y p la n e s
ithal fly within Khadafy ‘s 2 0 0 -m llc lim it for m a n y
7 months.

|

But even these provocations might not have
been sufficient to prod Washington into insisting
i on exercising the Navy’s rights of free passage
| were it not for Muammar Khadafy’s international
3 conduct.
^ Kadafy is more than just a regional
^troublemaker and a particular threat to such U S.
| friends as Egypt, the Sudan and Israel.
^ He In also an indisputable link in the in­
te rn a tio n a l terrorist network that threatens
•countries throughout the non-communist world,
•i The Khadafy regime is the conduit for Sovietijbloc arm s and technical assistance to terrorist
j; groups in Europe, the Middle E a s t and Asia.
Khadafy also shells out large quantities of his
jown pctro-dollnrs to bolster anti-A m erican causes
(from C entral America to the Philippines.
And finally, Khadafy has perm itted Libya to
;jbecome a vast storehouse of Soviet weaponry
available fo r transshipment to p laces like South
[iYemen, th e W estern Sahara and Ethiopia.
*

For all of these reasons, and b ecau se Khadafy
had attem pted to establish his own terro rist ring
in the United S tates, the Reagan adm inistration
expelled.Libyan diplomats last M ay, an a ct just
Abort of a form al break in diplom atic relations.

S
-i

And now, the administration has demonstrated
that it d oesn’t intend to permit Col. Khadafy to
,;!bar the S ixth F lee t from International w aters or
llh e skies above them.

8

The m essage won't be lost on th e rest of the
3 world's K hadafys, or those they serv e.

You le ft before 1 could assure you they would
be crushed, tom asunder and thrown out with the
used kitty litter. With pleasure.
You also left before f could tell you there’s help
available If you can’t quit smoking on your own.

. In one sen se, what happened the other d a y in the
M editerranean skies 60 miles off the Libyan coast
was a sim ple enough affair.
Two U S . Navy F -I4s from the c a r r ie r Nimitz
were intercepted and fired upon by two Sovietbuilt SU-22 Libyan fighters in air-sp ace the world
recognizes as international and thus open to the
planes of a ll nntions.

To the gentleman 1 met at Gooding’s super­
m arket in Altamonte this weekend: I destroyed
your cigarettes.
The store’s restsursnt didn’t have its, “ Please
Walt To Be Seated" sign out, so you said you
were ju st going to sit down
I noticed you were smoking, so I made a paint
of choosing Uie opposite side of the room saying:
“W here’s the nonsmoking se ctio n !"
" I don’t think they have one,’’ you replied.
" I t ’s wherever I sit,’’ I said.
You continued to smoke through dinner, but
when you were leaving you approached my
booth.
"W ill you do me a U v c r!" you asked while
handing m e your pack of Kool F ilter Kings. "G et
rid of these for me. I’ve tried to quit 10 tim es and
it Just never worked."

Florida Hospital offers M a y How-ToQuil
courses on s regular basis. The next session will
beheld at Florida Hospital-Altamonte Oct. 18-22.

Out 11 you’r e in a hurry there’! one beginning
Sept. 20 a t Florid a Hospttal-Orlondo.
The course begins at 7:30 p jn . and no preregistration la required. There’s a CO fee, but
think of all the money you're going to save.
I Just want to add there's a good reason l
choose to sit in nonsmoking sections whenever
available.
According to the American lung Association
studies have shown there Is twice as much U r
and nicotine In sidestream smoke than in the
smoke sm oker's inhale. There's three tim es s i
much of a compound called J-4 benzpyrene,
which Is a suspected cancer-causing agent. Five
times a s much carbon monoxide, which rota the
blood of oxygen. And SOtimes os much ammonia.
Other compounds in sidestream smoke are being
Investigated.
Carbon monoxide is a colorless, ordorless gas.
One study shows (hat after only thirty minutes In
a smoke-filled room the carbon monoxide level
In non-smoker's blood increases as well as the
blood pressure and heart beat.
When non-smokers leave a smoky en­
vironment, it takes hours for carbon monoxide to
leave the body.
R esearchers have found that smoking seven

cigarettes in one hour — even in a ventilated
room — created carbon monoxide levels of 20
parts per million. In the scat nest to the smoker
the level shoots up to 90 parts per million, twice
the maximum output of carbon monoxide
allowed far industry.
Some studies indicate at the levels of carbon
monoxide commonly found in smoke-fQled
rooms people becom e temporarily physically
impaired.
They may not be able to distinguish relative
brightness, lose some ability to judge time In­
tervals and take longer to respond — such a s to
car UUllghu.
These levels of carbon monoxide In the blood
also create physiological stress in heart patients.
A smoker Inhales and exhales mainstream
smoke for about eight or nine times with each
cigarette for a total of 24 seconds. But the
cigarette bums for about 12 minutes, constantly
polluting the a ir with sidestream smoke.
Studies are also linking sidestream smoke with
the harmful, long-term effects we all know so
well.
So If you c a re about your family, friends and
co-workers, m ake your 21st try the successful
one.

D O N GRAFF

WASHINGTON WORLDS

Budget
HassieAs
Usual

Smoke
Filled
Rooms?

If there Is one thing every new president of
recent tim es has in common, It is the
necessity of rethinking — and sometimes
rethinking and rethinking - the budget.
Now It is President Reagan's turn to return
to the fiscal drawing board, only earlier than
most of his predecessors. He has barely had
lim e to sav o r m ultiple co ng ression al
triumphs on a cosi-trlmmlng budget and the
follow-up tax-nil ting bill giving him almost
everything he really wsnted. Now the word la
out that there la something like a $20 billion
misunderstanding in his projected budget
deficit for 1981
It is nol going to be the $42.1 billion
estimated Just weeks sgo but, as the ad­
ministration's own economists now aee It, in
the neighborhood of $80 billion. That Is an
expensive neighborhood, but well-populated
by now. Jim m y Carter moved in earlier, a s
did G erald Ford. The latter’s $61 billion
shortfall bequeathed to the former still stands
as a record that even Reagan may be unable
to top.
The problem, It now appears, Is that the
economy Is not behaving as expected Just
weeks ago. Interest rates continue a b ­
normally high — although this has been the
situation for so long now that ll may be ap­
proaching time to regard them as the new
normality. And the economy has continued
m art sluggish than hoped, meaning that It Is
not going to generate tlw tax revenues an­
ticipated even with the coming cuts.
This la pretty much what critics of
llesgonomles were predicting Just weeks ago
when the White House was having Its way on
Capitol Hill. But never mind, that was weeks
ago.
Today, all the president's budget m en a re
looking (or ways to cut additional fat out of a
budget that In the social services area Is
already alm ost a candidate ItaeU for food
stamps.
Will they succeed? Probably, on paper. Will
the economy then behave as expected? If so,
it will be to almost every realist’s surprise.
Will they have to try again? Possibly. They
might even go for Carter's record In that
category — three attempts st deficittrimming budget revision In his last year.
And he still left Incoming Reagan holding a
$60 billion bag.
But that Is now history — that Is, months,
not Just weeks, ago.
What we are now seeing Is another
validation of some already well-known truths,
that 1 ) forecasting and managing economic
trends rem ain more guesswork and chance
than anything resembling a science and 2 )
even allowing (or this built-in Imprecision,
federal budget-making continues to be a s
much as exercise In wtshfi'lfUlment a s s
realistic counting of the costs of government.
The Reagan administration, we a re still,
being told, is engineering ■ radical reversal In
the trends of government, American style, of
the last three or four decades. But when It
comes to budgeting processes. It's beginning
to look Just like old times.

By CLAY F. RICHARDS
D P I Political Writer
WASHINGTON (U PI) - Separate con
m ittees of the Republican and Democratic
parties last week began the Job of overhauling
the way Americans elect their president.
A third commission, the Duke University
Forum , Ivended by the school's president an$l
former presidential candidate, Terry Saijford, has already completed Its research cji
the topic and Is writing Its fins] rep ort
Mem bers of all three groups have made It
d ear there will be some fundamental changes
in what they believe is a system that Is urjwieldly, too expensive and most of all does nqt
result in the best person being elected
president.
Except for the liberals, who are largely
responsible for the system the way It 1$,
almost everyone Is calling for what In essence
Is a return to the smoke filled rooms.
Both parties want to see fewer prim aries, a
shorter primary season, a greater role by
party leaders tn picking candidates, and thus
a diminished role by rank and file who
otherwise are not Involved In party politics

BUSINESS WORLD

How To Fire And Be Fired
By LeROY P O PE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK ( U P I ) - T h e way buslnesi is
going nowadays, executives have to learn
much more about how to tire people
gracefully. They also have to learn how to
accept being fired themselves.
This sobering advice comes from laurencc
Stybel of Baboon College a t Wellesley, Maas.,
who also runs an outplacement agency In
Boston that uses retired executives to find Job
m atches
The accelerated pace of mergers and
acquisitions is causing a lot of firing, Stybel
said, but InflaUon, high Interest rales, severe
compeUtion and live need for technological or
strategic policy change also get people fired.
Indeed, Stybel added, firing la now so com­
mon that much less stigm a attaches to it than
In the past.
Being fired seldom Is the end of the world.
Stybel tsld 80 percent of Hired executives who
aval] themselves of outplacement services
find a new Job In three to six months and Si
percent find ■ post that pays better than the
one they lost.
Most people still re a ct to being fin d with
anger and depression. It Is a harrowing ex­
perience and m ost chief ex ecu lives find 11
almost s i difficult to have to (In someone.
Firing someone or accepting your own
firing is, like truth, often a highly relative
matter, Stybel u ld . He offers suggestions on
how to bring soma grace Into the proceeding.
For those who a re fired, he suggests:
-R eco g n iie that being depressed over
dismissal Is normal. "D on't run to t
psychoanalyst's couch."
-Recognise a t once that your bargaining
power for a good severance settlement Is
high. The company that doesn't treat fired
managers generously wlU have trouble

recruiting executives. So hold out for a good
settlem ent.
- C u t your losses and complications. Avoid
a "business as usual" attitude. Devote all
your efforts to finding a new Job; forget other
social and business obligations.
—Try to progress rapidly to the 'iet's-geton-wilh-lt" stage. Too often the fired
executive goes through several other reaction
stag es: " I t 's not happening to m e !” "Why did
ll happen to m e?" " If only...” ”I'U show those
SO B ’* ! ’’
For the executive who has to do the firing,
Stybel offers these suggestions:
—Always fire on Friday. That gives the
victim a weekend st home to think things
over,
—Be precise. There's no way to cushion the
blow. TYylng may Just lead to false hopes of
reconsideration. Stybel cited one case In
which (he CEO was so timid the victim didn't
even gel the message and showed for work
the next day sg If nothing had happened.
—The best month to fire la January because
that's when the fired person will have the best
chance of finding a new Job rapidly. The wont
month is June.
—ft's best to give the exact reason for the
decision to fire.
—T h e severance pack ag e should be
negotiated In complete detail and put In
writing. The dismissed person should be
given continued medical and Insurance
benefits for a substantial period.
—Too long ■ severance pay period la no
favor. II may only encourage the fired one to
lak e a long paid vacation and pul ofl Job
hunting until It’s too late.
—It's often an excellent Idea to let the fired
executive continue to have desk space and use
the company phone for Job hunting.

There Is also a desire to see the party con­
vention return to play a dramatic role tn the
nomination process, rather than a dull fourday television show.
Whether Jim m y Carter and Ronald B aa*ah
go down In history as good presidents, U b
perceived as wrong that the best way to win
the White House Is to be an unemployed
former governor with loti of time to ca m ­
paign*
The current system, politicians argue,
requires • two-year, fuil-Ume campaign,
blocking out such hard working public otdetail a s Senate Republican Leader Howard
Baker, who lost to Reagan In I960, and Rep.
Morris UdaU, DArti., whom Carter beat tn
1978.
The political pros a rt also unhappy with the
fact that party discipline la so weak that
candidates think nothing of challenging a
sitting president of their own party a s Reagan
did Gerald Ford In 1978 and Sen. Edward
Kennedy did to Carter last year.
In bath case s the party squabble left the
Incumbent president weakened In the general
election battle and both, of course, lo st
While It is unlikely that system win revert
to one dominated by the political b o w , many
would like to see conventions where favorite
son governors of New York, California, Ohio
and Florida wheel and deal their big
delegations.
And they want to find a way where the race
for the presidential nomination Is not com ­
pleted sometime shortly after the Janu ary
Iowa precinct caucus and the February N e f
Hampshire primary.
The bottom line la that politician believe a
strong party system makes a stronger
democracy. Up until Reagan, every recent
A m erican
p residen t
since
Dw ight
Elsenhower tended to Ignore the party that
elected him. And none ever served a second
term.

JA C K ANDERSON
JERRY’S WORLD

CIA's Secret Plan Sounds Like Minefield
WASHINGTON - The Central Intelligence
Agency Is quietly returning to Its old w ay* of
stirring up secret mischief abroad. But
because Its own covert capabilities have been
dismantled, the CIA Is using foreign forces,
some ol them ol dubious reliability, to carry
out Its clandestine activity.
Of course, the CIA is keeping these plans
hush-hush. But Intelligence reports indicate
that the Intended victims usually i r e the f ln t
to team about covert activities directed
against them.

t «•»*■*•* •»

Tm trying to figure out how I con delegate
EVERYTHING, to we could spend the rest of
our term. here, on the ranch!'

The CIA may have acknowledged the real
reason lor concealing Its change ot tactics
from the American people. A top-secret
planning document wants that openness
"could panic an American public which has
not yet recovered bom the Vietnam morningalter syndrom e."
CIA strateg ists are actively planning un­
dercover operations in cooperation with such
countries a s Egypt, Israel, Turkey, Pakista n .
Guatem ala, South Africa, South Karen and

—.«. ^

Communist Oruna.
Same of these projects are already In the
works. Through Egypt, for example, the CIA
Is tunneling covert support to the rebels In
Afghanistan and la p rep aring covert
operations against Libya. Both Egypt tad
Turkey will be used to mount operations
against Ayatollah Khomelne tn Iran.
Through China, the CIA Is even supporting
the Jungle farces of the murderous Pol Pot in
Cambodia.
In Guatemala, the CIA has arranged for
secret training In the liner points of
a u a s s tn itlo n . T h is h a s been provided
through Cuban em igre groups, with the CIA
keeping a low profile.
The Guatemalan asaasstna Intend to use
their new skills against Cuban “revolutionary
agents” - theoretically, at le a st But un­
fortunately, the Guatemalan government
takes a broad view of who should be classified
a s a "revolutionary a g a a L "
This could be almost anyone who opposes
the ruHjig regime. The sssaMinatlon program

Is directed, according to intelligence sources,
out of an office in the preaentia! palace. The
victim s have Included health workers who
m erely agitated against the distribution of
baby-food formula that, In some {daces, Is
mixed with contaminated water.
T he CIA la also giving Cuban em igres
commando training again, apparently un­
mindful of the lessons of the B ay of Pigs.
Plans h a re been discuased to parachute them
Into Cuba and to use them to harass Cuban
economic missions and intelligence fronts
throughout Latin America. They wlB also
open a Radio Free Cuba, with U .S. technical
and financial assistance.
In the Middle East, the CIA Is working with
Israel to disrupt the radical elements of the
PLO. But the Israelis have used the same
operations to destabilise Saudi A rabia, which
happens to be a staunch Am erican friend and
oil supplier.
L I G tn r iN G E R E D L A W M A K E R S; In
their Losing hauls over the budget earlier this
sum m er, House Dem ocrats resorted to an

expedient m ore appropriate to aocondal
men than to upright members of Congrt
They filched an envelope lull of Republi
amendments on Us way to the printer.
The Incident nude Rep. Bob M lctid, R .
the normally pladd minority leader, hepp
mad. He complained heatedly to t p * * * " O'Neill that members of the Democri
Study Group had waylaid the envelope i
peeked a t the contents, thus giving
Democrats advance Information on
GOP’s budget strategy.
The Dem ocrats then hurriedly tried to &lt;
Uw m aterial to head off Hw QOPi moves,
. there wasn’t lim e ; the lasWnlnute ccnfu
nude a mesa out of the amendments, wt
took House budget experir a long tins
untangle.
O’Neill, abashed at the disclosure,
firmed his party colleagues' misbehavior
apologised to M ichel "A couple of pi
were responsible, and the rest of us ha
knowledge of U ," bo said.

.V

?a«B

'V

�E v ttd n g H erald, S a nford . F L

Casselberry Sets Open House

Feminists Planning
Statewide Campaign
TALLAHASSEE (U PI) — Fem inist* plan to camp a ljn in all of Florida's legislative districts In an 11thhour effort to pressure the Legislature to ratify the
Equal Rights Amendment
Leaders to the National Organisation for Women told
a news conference Wednesday that they still have
hopes for ratification In Florida although the
Legislature has either rejected ERA or failed to take it
up yearly since i n .
Three more s tile s must ratify ERA by nest June JO
In order for It to become part of the Constitution.
Thirty-five states have ratified it thus far.
"W e do believe there Is a substantial number of
people In this state, especially Social Security people,
who have not been activated," said Glorida SackmanReed, a NOW field worker from Washington sent to
organise the Florida campaign.

Five Children Die In Fire
HOMESlEALi ( UPI) — Investigators say panic, and
lack of a smoke detector led to the death of five
children in a fire at a suburban home south of Miami.
They said the fire, which apparently started with a
worn out wire In a living room air conditioning unit,
m ay have been smoldering for two hours before it was
discovered.
"A 110 smoke detector would have saved five lives,"
said firem an Anthony Spadaro, after carrying two
dead girla, S and 8 years old, from the house.
He said they were "beautiful little blond girls in lwg
nightgowns. One was resting her head on her hands
like she was sleeping."
Officials said when John Paul Dixon, S4, and his wife
B arb ara, 38, were awakened by the fire he tried to
throw a pan of water on It while she called the county
emergency number. The pan melted and the Are had
put the phone out of order.

S h e's Not Insubordinate
TALLAHASSEE (U P I) It may be "con­
temptuous" to crumple a poor employee evaluation
report Into a ball and throw It on the boss's desk but It Is
not insubordination, according to a state appeals court.
As a result, the 1st District Court of Appeal
unanimously decided Wednesday that the Leon County
Board of Education lacked sufficient cause to suspend
V em le Smith from her Job In the school system's
transportation office for nine months without pay,
According to court papers. Miss Sm ith was sum­
moned by her boss, school Transportation Director
Conway McGee, on May *, 1979. and presented with a
copy of an evaluation of her work performance.

More Malathlon Spraying Set

V, I W 1 - 4 A

Husband-Calling Champ

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

Thursday, A y .

Senior Center To Open
ByTEN!YARBOROUGH
Herald SUM Writer
The Invitation has been extended and
everyone Is invited to the grand opening
of the Senior Citizen Multi-Purpose
Center on Saturday at 4 p.m. In
Casselberry.
The center, located al 3)0 N. la k e
Triplet Drive, has been designed to
provide a central meeting place for
senior citizens aged GO and over and to
accommodate already existing services
for the elderly.
A ccording to C asselberry g ra n ts
co ord inator Leona Cadenhead, the
t330,000 structure wilt officially open
Satu rd ay following a ribbon-cutting
ceremony by Casselberry Mayor Owen
Sheppard.
“ On Saturday at 4 p.m., the Mayor will
rut the ribbon and an Invocation will be
given by William Hamilton, the area
vice-chairman for the Area Agency on

• ••

Aging,” Cadenhesd said.
Following re m a rk s fro m various
dignitaries expected to atten d the
ceremony, tours of the facility will be
given for the general public, Cadenhesd
said. R efreshm en ts w ill also be
available.
At 7:30 p.m., there will be a dance with
a live band playing "easy-listening"
m u sic. According to C adenhesd,
everyone is encouraged to come and
enjoy the music and dancing at no
charge.
Tours of Die facility will also be given
in the evening.
"W h ile the dance Is p articu la rly
designed to get the seniors to come out
and see their center, we also want to
encourage the general public to attend,"
Cadenhead said.
The center Is equipped with a full
kitchen, a dining room and meeting

rooms. Cadenhead said the center's
primary focus is to provide a place for
the elderly to m eet In a central location.
In addition, the center will also be used
to house counseling programs by the
County Mental Health Center, Inc. The
Mental Health Center will pay no more
than )90 a month for the facility's use to
cover utility costa.
Services by the Federation of Senior
Cilixens Club# of Seminole County Inc.,
will also be provided a t the center. These
services Include meal programs, legal
assistance and employment services,
including volu nteer program s, to
C a sse lb e rry and Sem inole County
residents aged GO and over.
The Senior CUUen d u b s will pay no
more than 360 a month for use of the
facility to cover utility coats.
According to Cadenhead, the center
can also be rented for I fee to groups
other than seniors.

DETROIT (U P I) — When Inza Briile calls her husband,
you can bet he hears her.
Her ear-piercing "C laaaam Teeeennnnce" a y , lasting no
less than 22 seconds, has won her the husband-calling
championship the past five years si the Michigan State
Fair.
The 83-year-old D exter, Mich., woman said the per­
formance "tuckers m e out and sends me to the
wheelchair,” but she still is Intent on defending her title
during competition In Detroit Sept. 4.
"When I'm through, I'm exhausted," she said. " I had
back surgery sam e y ears ago, ao I keep a w heelchair’
nearby, and, after I call, t go into It."
Mrs. Brlsle said no special training Is Involved. "Y ou
either go out there and do It or you don’t do i t ."
.
The fair payi off with a prize of 33) 30 and a blue ribbon,'
but Mrs. Brisle said the real reward Is the achievement
itself.

A Place For Scouts

Charter Revisions On Ballot

I Continued From Page U )
Boyd agreed that the commission's
changes should have been submitted
directly to the electorate without first
being screened by the council, and voted
to scrap the proposed revisions and
cancel the referendum.
The m atter was left up In the air,
however, when they couldn’t decide what

to do next. There was some desultory talk
about forming a new commission and
starting all over again, or submitting al)
ol the commission’s original recontmentations to the voters for their ap­
proval.
But Tuesday night, Boyd and Arnold
were out-voted by coundlmen Martin
Trencher, John Torcaso, and Jim Hart­

man who said the council had a right to
review the commission's work and m ake
changes where they thought necessary.
Trencher was absent when the July 28
vote was taken, thus allowing Mayor
Troy Piland—who votes only to break
ties—to side with Arnold and Boyd.
Trencher was back Tuesday and voted
with the m ajority.—— BRITT SMITH

"Id le minds are the devil's workshop," Joseph Caldwell,
chairman of the Sanford Housing Authority Board of Com­
missioners said Wednesday night, urging his colleagues on the
board to allocate space for Boy Scouts to meet In one of the
public housing's six p rojects.
So, Better U fc Boy Scout Troop 832 was given space In
Edward Higgins T e rra c e , located at the comer of P ecan and
l turd streets.
Caldwell, a Boy Scout in his youth, said promoting Boy Scout
activities can be a g reat asset to Hie housing authority, adding
his opinion that It could cut down on vandalism In the projects.
"One thing for sure It can’t hurt," he said.
The boy scout troop Is to be given a room al Edward Higgins
where their equipment and other paraphernalia can be per­
manently and securely stored and where they can hold regular
meetings as well.

1100 FRENCH AV. SANFORD

STERCHI’S GIGANTIC
9-HOUR STOCK
FRIDAY

9 t. 6

TAMPA (U PI) - Weather permitting, a helicopter
was scheduled to apply another application of
m aUUtion4*c*d bait today In a M-aquare-inU* area
infested by the Mediterranean fruit fly — the third
ippUctUon In s wtek.
And, a s Florida officials continued their battle to
eradicate the cropdestroytng pest, pressure was being
applied on federal officials to take over the battle
against the pest In California and to place all California
produce under a quarantine.

•••

Audit Set
( Cm tim ed From Page 1A)

Organ H trcw ltn Covorod
E a rly American

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M MW SU. O r . " * . O f ,
M ildred V. Haynes. Tltutylll*

Legal Notice
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D IS C H A B O IS
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Carm an Dam lnguat, Dettena
Denial A Gcedland. Deltona
Jdemee a BnsW . O ran* . City

Legal Notice
IC B O P IA L l
auction at W 9* A M .
V 11. IN I. at MS N.
a. Santoro. F ltrte a . to
eusem en-i IMS an I M
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n*. H arold B yn d trA

Transfer 4 # * « •■
FtOTMU 1JT1I
tot V 4 Septembw 1

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CALL FOB BIDS, BIMQVAL OF
■UILDINOI AND OTHIR ML
FBOVIMINTS
i t l M b ids w ill M received t l
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Florida n m . lu l l AM I Of la llrO M
crossing an s a AA wvW aA Sanfora.
at n i t A M 00 too If# 8a y t4
V p tto itw r IN I. to r HU U U ana
ram ovsl. o r too demolition and
rem outl. a t buildings ana oltwr
I m p r e v o m tn li I r a n le c s tio n t
ta r roaa co nstru ction
I S a d Ian 77W0 I N I . SR
AA. SaoiinoU County. Percott NS
and IM; F A N No R R S 11a 1(11
The M l w ill ba opened publicly
and an n eu n cad a l I M t l m
dtiig n a ia d tor receiving tham.
No bid w ill b t considered unfest
It ia subm itted on too o ttk le l Bid
P re p e ia l fo rm pravidad by lto
F lo rid a D e p a rtm e n t o l T ra n
apodal Ion Such prapatal form s
and Uttar m at Ian rapardm g th a
C all tar t u t ar, im paction at tto
buildings m a y ba etoeuwd tram
Property M anagam ant Section.
F lo r id a O a p ir t m a n l a l T ra n
tpertallon. P O l o t a l, CM. ana.
F lorid a 11110. P n o m (TOO IM
. Bat I M
Tha O epertm enl reserves tto
rig h l le ra ta ct any ar a ll btdt and to
■M ir* technical errors a t may to
a lam ed bast ta r tha I n t t m l at tto
d a ta
Proparty Managam ant tectum
Si ala of Floy u a
Departm ent e l T ra m p w la lla n
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1111

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made trips concerning the program with the SHA picking up
1 the ta b rather than the program.
In a cover letter with the management review report over
, the signature of J.C . Cotie, deputy director of management,
housing division, HUD, Colle said the regular housing program
may have been “ neglected during the previous executive
director's administration of the Community Development
Block Grant far the city of Sanford."
The review also noted that regular funds were used to ad­
v e rtis e the homing rehabilitation re-sale program. The report
points to “many other expenses related to the CDBfl
program " being paid from SHA accounts. The review
recommends that the housing authority determine how much
of Its money was spent for CDBG related expenses and to gain
repayment of that money. The review said SO percent of the
ex ecu live director’s salary for six y e a n from June, 1971,
through Ju n e, 1 W , should be recovered from the CDBG for the
anthdrlty,__________________________________________________

)t •

1 B 8 S

BUY ON STERCHI’S
PERSONALIZED
CREDIT PLANI

|

�SPORTS
IA -Ev*n&lt;ng Herald, Sanford, FI.

Thursday, Aug. 17, ltd

5

Long Invites Area Joggers

Seminole Community College
Jamboree Kicks Off Season
By SAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
Terry Long's Ninth Annual Seminole
Community C ollege C ro ia Country
Jamboree kicks otf the running season
Saturday with four cla ss divisions.
tang, SCC's highly successful track
and cross country coach, said 30-40 high
schools will probably attend. He also
stressed that Hie m eet ts open to
everyone.
"It's a temi-furnui gcl-lo-gctlier wliicli
gtvei the coaches a chance to aee their
runners in a competitive situation," said
Long, an e i-F Io rid a S ta le running
standout. "The vast m ajority ol the
coaches run two or three teams to in­
dicate Just where their runners stand."
A 12 fee will be charged for each
runner. The schedule of time and events
ts as follows.

INpn
*q « 10 *nd urxJff b o y t and g .rlt on# mil* run
• pm
p g i 11 f ind u n d e f f nr It tw o m&lt;lt# ru n

• W pm
o p tn d iv liio n lour m tl# rvrn fo r m m a n d w om an

ItM P m
#9* II and u n d e r boy* » h ff* m il# run

S e m in o le IliR h ju n io r M ic h a e l W o o le n i i e x p e c te d to b e o n e o f th e
m a in m e n o n f i r s t y e a r C o a c h T e d T o m b r o s ' e r a s * c o u n try t e a m
ulonK w ith T y l e r J o h n s o n and H u g e n e Z e l g l r r . A re a h ig h s c h o o l e r s
g el th e ir t a s t e 17! to p -flig h t c o m p e t itio n S a t u r d a y w h en T e r r y L o n g
h o sts t h e S e m i n o l e C o m m u n ity C o lle g e C r o s s C o u n try J a m b o r e e .
T h e e v e n t, w h ic h is In Its n in th y e a r , is a l s o o p e n to lo c a l jo g g e r s .

Plaques will be awarded to the top girls
and boys teams. The top 10 finishers in
the one mile run will each receive a T•htrt, A T-shirt will also be given to the
top 10 finishers in the girts, boys and open
divisions.
All participants In the Jamboree will
receive a ribbon. Team entries must be
registered prior to the m e e t Registration
will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p m.
Saturday in the SCC gym. Ail races will
start Irom the gym.
"We want to give everyone a chance to
run under a casual yet competitive-type
situation," said Long. The former 9.7
sprinter feels the Seminole County teams

Cross Country
will be in the thick of things Saturday.
"T he (Tom ) Hammontree girls will be
very strong and David Huggins has done
a good Job at Lyman for 10 years, so
they'll be lough,” said Irxig when
assessing the county chances.
Hammontree, 1-ike Howell's hard­
working roach, returns three girls from
last year with 1980 times under 13
minutes. All three are Juniors.
Kerry Hyler leads the trio with a 12:18
clocking over two miles. Kathy Compton
is nine seconds behind at 12:27, while
Shelley Carlson ran a 13:45
Huggins returns a fine sophomore in
Doug Me Broom along with three seniors
— Alan Demlno. Craig Stapleton and
Brett Stockdale — to the Greyhound boys
team. "W e are looking forward to the
meet because its our tin t all-out com­
petition and II gives us a chance to see
where we stand,” said Huggins Monday
night.
Lym an's girls coach Joe taughltn
returns Susie Brtngardner, sister of exGreyhound Kathy, who had a fine year at
Austin Peay, and Junior Angie Diiello.
Brtngardner is a senior.
While ta k e Howell and Lyman have
established program s, 1/xig Is also
looking to ta k e Mary and Seminole to
enter the picture along with perennial
powerhouse Trinity Prep.
"M ike Gibson was a prime contender
at ta k e Brantley and you can't count him
ou t," tan g said about the Ram s' track
and cross country boss. "Bu t he's
probably still a year away. “ Both Nate
Perkins (girls) and Ted Tombros (boys)
have g e n e ra te d som e In terest at
Seminole and I ’m anxious to see them
step into the picture."
Taking

over

lor

Gibson

al

ta k e

Pro Golf

Watson said the World Series probably
wilt be his last U 5 . appearance of Hie
year, although he left Hie door open.
he felt the Firestone course was playing
" I 'll play in the Ryder Cup &lt;in Great
faster than usual.
Britain i and In one or two tournaments in
"] think the scores will be really low Japan in November," he said. "Other
because you're getting a lot of roll," he than that, I'm finished for the year, but if
said. " I allot 65-736343 l u t year and I It comes down to deciding the moneythink you're going to have to shoot that winning title I might change my mind.”
type ot score again this year to win.”
Watson ts battling Floyd and Bruce
The field ot 77 players includes Hie top Uetxke lor the money tiUe, and those
13 money winners on the U.S. tour plus three also appear to be the most likely
the top players from around the world, choice lor TCA Player of the Year.
including Jupan's Isao Aokl, who was in a
Among those who just made It Into this
much better frame ot mind Wednesday year's World Series, and also one who
alter his stolen goll clubs were returned. must be considered a prime challenger to
G erm an Rernhnrd t a n g e r , South Watson, la Jack Nlckiaus.
Africa's Mark McNupty and Britain's
" I ’m playing fairly w ell," Nlckiaus
Peter Oosterhuls, who also had hla clubs Mid after his practice round Wednesday
stolen and returned, are among the other with Lee Trevino. "I have played well
foreign competitors.
most of Hie aeaaon."

GOOD
B U R K IN G Prim e question Is Russ
Washington. Can they lure big tackle
oil his P acific D ie? b his knee
rehabilitated? For insurance, they
have Je ff Williams from Washington.
Guards are old and still devastating Ed White, Doug Wllkeraon. Don Macek
Is steady at center. They a n bringing
along young linemen lika Bob Rush and
Chuck taew en for protection, VERY
GOOD
D E F E N SE
LINE Three Pro Bow len plus Leroy
Jones add up to Imposing front (our.

• * - * » - '* * mr

■—

Hie 77-year-old Tombros traches at
Wilson Elementary School in Paola.
Seminole is his first coaching Job, but he
Is no stranger to cross country.
Tombros was an all-county and allconference cross country and Hack
se lectio n a t Vineland, ( N .J .) high
school. While at Marietta, (Ohio) College
Tombros ran In the nationals his
sophomore year.
“ I think Michael (Wooten) and 1&gt;ler
Johnson will pretty much battle for Hie
number one spot,’’ said Tombros. " I
think they will pretty much anchor the
team throughout the y e a r."
E u gene Zeigler, ano ther re tu rn e e
along with Johnson from last year, will
lend experience lo the Seminole squad.
"Betw een those three we have u solid
nucleus to build around," added Tombros.
While the Fighting Seminoles a re a bit
on the Inexperienced side. Hie sam e can
not be said about George Austin's sm all
school powerhouse. Trinity Prep.
"T rinity is going to be good. Of course,
they’re always good," pointed out lon g
about Hie Southeast Seminole County
outfit. "Anyone that beats them has gotta
be tough."
Making Trinity tough is a fam iliar
name — McNulty. Shannon, a la k e Mary
resident, is a three-year veteran for the
Preppers, who have won two state titles
in the past three years.
T racy Johnson, who along with Alinda

NEW YORK (U PI) - John McEnroe
and Chris Evert IJoyd, Hie defending
champs, have been named top seeds for
the men’s and women’s singles com­
petition of the U S . Open Tennis
Championships.
H ie tournament begins next Tuesday
and continues through Sept. 13 at the
National Tennis Center in Flushing
Meadow.
McEnroe has won the Open the tast two
years, and also added the Wimbledon
championship he won last month from
Bjorn Borg.

i
ItAV MOM) FLOYD
. ..ch asin g Watson

Fouts Flings
To Best NFL
Pass Catchers
i COACH DON C O R YELL; "We want
: to Improye In every phase because
i we're competing in one of the strongest
•divisions In football. 1 honestly believe
j any of Hie five team s can win. On the
•Chargers, we feel that Chuck Muncie
and Mike Thomas proved we can run
the ball as well as pass 11"
O FFEN SE
PASSING Super. The am i belongs to
Dan Fouts, who threw for 4,713 yards In
'80; there's no reason he shouldn't do It
again. Young Ed Luther moves into
backup spot. There la no better receiver
contingent than J J . Jefferson, Charlie
Joiner and Kellen Winslow. They like
the looks of E ric Setvers s i spare TE.
Notre Dam e'a Pete Holohan has chance
to make It. EXC E LL EN T
RUNNING Chuck Muncie may be
controversial, but he has spectacular
ability. If Chargers can wheedle full
season out of him they'll have balanced
attack. He'll team with Mike Thomas.
They drafted pair of Interesting, underailed rookies, Jam es Brooks and
Amos U w ren ce, for spot duly. VERY

trad in g the Sanford step will be
Michael Wooten. The tall, graceful Junior
was a top-notch halfmiler tor Coach
Hank Davlero's Tribe trackers.

T E D TOM BROS
. . .generates enthusiasm
"Punky" 1angle, is Hie sentw half of
Austin’s "Sanford Connection.'Tingle is
a Junior. Both with McNulty give Austin a ^
formidable Hio.
McNulty, however, will not partake in
Saturday's Jam boree since she is on
vacation.
"Shannon and T racy run very com­
petitively ," observed ta n g . " I f they stay
a t that level, Trinity will be very com­
petitive at any level, not Just A or AA."
Gibson, one of the biggest contributors
to girls track In the state ol Florida, is
starling over at t a k e Mary. "Our goal
this year is to develop a team that can be
a s competitive a s Trinity Prep.
"II you can beat Trinity Prep, you can ,
go somewhere in this a re a ," assured !
Gibson.
That already seem s to be a foregone '
conclusion.

Evert Top Open Seed

Watson Readies For World Challenge
AKRON, Ohio (U P I) - Although he's
not playing particularly well, Tom
Watson is ready to accept Hie challenge
of defending his World Series of Golf title.
Watson and 28 other top world golfers
will be shooting al a 1400,000 purse when
they tee oft today, with the winner
walking otf wiHi 1100,000.
“I'm playing mediocre golf," said
Watson, who still leads llay Floyd by
sonic 113,000 tn Hie PGA money-winning
race. “I ’m not doing anything par­
ticularly well, t a s t year, l was doing
everything well when I cam e here."
Watson shot three 61s around a secondround 71 t u t year fur a 71-hole score ot
270, good enough lor a two-shot victory
over Floyd on the 7,173-yard, par-70
Firestone Country Club course.
Gunning for a record fifth straight
PGA Player of the Year Award, he said

Brantley will be Jim Marshall. Marshall
is inheriting an established program
enhanced by senior-to-be Tracy Bonham,
an outstanding distance runner last year.

Borg, the beaten finalist to McEnroe
last year, and still seeking his first Open
crown, Wednesday was seeded second
among the men while 16-year-old Andrea
Ja eg er was seeded No. 7 behind Evert.
Although Jaeg er has yet lo win a m ajor
championship, she recently was elevated

Pro Tennis
lo second tn the women s rankings, also
behind Evert.
Ivan lem ll, seeded 16th last year, has
moved up lo No. 3 , while three-lime Open
champion Jim m y Connors fell back to
fourth.
Completing Hie m en's seedlngs are No.
3 Jose-Luis Clerc, Guillermo Vilas, Gene
Mayer, Eliot Teltacher, Roscoe Tanner,
Brian Teacher, P eter McNamara, Johan
Kriek, Yannick Noah, Wojtck Flbak, j
Vilas GerulaiUs and Brian Gottfried.
Tracy Austin, who handed Evert only*
her second setback of the year in the fln a r
o l the Canadian Open last Sunday, wu&lt;
seeded third among the women while'
Hana MandUkova, the beaten finalist to*
Evert in I960, was only No. 3 behind
Martina Navratilova.

Tight Ends
Expect To Help
Chiefs' Teepee
There can 't be any better pair ol
ta ck les than G ary " B i g H a n d i"
Johnson and Louie Kelcher, In addition,
they signed pass rushing Don Reese as
free agent and v liu a lite K eith
Ferguson as a rookie Fred Dean-type.
In their standard 4-3, Chargers are
equally strong against rush and pass,
E X C E IJJ2 N T
LIN EBA CK IN G Woody Lowe is
untouchable on right side; the other
Incumbents — Bob Ham In middle and
Ray Preston an left — stay on Job
because ol seniority. There a re in­
teresting prospects in Linden King and
Uth round draftee Carlo* Bradley, but
they'll still go with the experience.
FA IR to GOOD
SECONDARY Some Juggling b likely
at free safety and left com er, where
Glen Edwards and Willie Buchanon,
re sp e ctiv e ly , are showing som e
slowing. They have high hopes for
rookie E rv in Phillips, im p ressive
athlete. P ete Shaw’s return from knee
injury means big boost at safety. Mike
Williams has become most dependable
coverage man in Chargers' scheme.
FA IR to GOOD
PROSPECTUS
T h is b obviously one of the
powerhouse teams In NFL — exciting to
watch, alw ays threatening to stampede
an opponent. Without reel weaknees.
And they brought in Su iaU n ls Ja c k
Pardee and Jim Wsgstalf to Jack up
deep defense.
PREDICTION First In AFC W e*!;
should win handily.
•

s i t u s , * ■ » fc.- r

Williams Wants To Play,
Dolphins Say 'Elsewhere'
MIAMI (U P I) — Running back
Delvin Williams says he finally wanb
to play ball, but Hie Miami Dolphins say
that tf he does it will be elsewhere.
Williams has been the subject of
controversy since late last season and
earlier this summer refused to report to
training camp because he says he was
mistreated In Miami. But Wednesday
he let the Dolphins know through a
representative he planned to show up
Thursday.
" I told the representative to advise
Delvin that he could save himself the
trip," Shuts said. "W e have continued
to try lo trade Delvin Williams and been
unable to work out any deaL

Pro Football
"We will m ake our decisions on the
pecple here tn training camp. I am
going to put Delvin Williams on waivers
tomorrow (ThursdayI," Shula said.
Williams' agent Greg Lustlg said he
finally convinced Willis ms to report
alter arguing for six months, but now
he has to go looking far another dub.
Williams Is under a $770,000 contract

COACH MARV LEVY. "W e're young
but starting to get experience. Our
quarterbacks. In their third year, will
make a difference. We have big p b y
capability. We drafted tight ends for the
spot where we were hurting and now
should take another step forward alter
finishing M last year."
OFFEN SE
PASSING Job up in a ir a lte r Bill
Kenney's strong finish b i t month of ‘80.
Steve Fuller, with tin t cb tm to Job,
can't relax. He's good leader with
mobility, still unproven arm. Willie
Scott or Maurice Harvey at T E will
make all difference in receiving corps.
They'll even make returning wide
receivers Henry Marshall and J .T .
Smith look better — maybe. FA IR to
POOR

Overweight Stabler Joins Oilers

RUNNING Duets profess unconcern
about shipping Tony Reed, who was
their best, to Denver. They drafted Jo e
Delaney, a small speedster, to back up
Ted McKnight, laic proven threat, a t
halfback. Strong finish of Jim Hadnot
leaves him tn line for fullback Job,
backed up by ex-TE Mike Williams.
POOR

HOUSTON (U P I) - The Houston
Oilers believe Krony Stabler, who
ended his five-week retirem ent Wed­
nesday because of quarterback Gifford
Nielsen's injury, may b e ready to run
the offense sgainst L o t Angeles in the
team 'i regular season opener.
Stabler returned to Houston from his
Gulf Shares, A la., home and m et with
the OUcr o iflciab and the media far Hie
first time Knee the end of last season.
The 35-year-old N FL veteran said

BLOCKING Biggest area of Im ­
provem ent expected . B ra d Budde
shows signs of becoming stellar guard.
Matt Herkenhofl seems OK after couple
ot knee-pbgued y e a n . They hope to
coax another season out of veteran
center J a c k Rudnay, team leader. But
holdovers like Tom Condon and Charlie
Getty a b o must show progress tf Chiefs
i n lo stabilise their offense. GOOD
DEFEN SE
LIN E It will be unmatchabb tf Mike

I,

Williams had charged during Hie
offseason that coaches, pis y e n and
fans a l Miami had made his life
m iserable and demanded to be traded.

when Nielsen tore a shoulder muscle in
last Saturday’s game with Tampa Bay
— an injury that will sideline him for
several weeks — he decided rejoin his
te a m m a te s and end his su rprise
retirement.
" I made up my mind a couple of days
ago," said Stabler.
Coach Ed Biles said it was con­
ceivable Stabler could be the team 'i
starting quarterback for the Sept. •
regular season opener.

U l ! « M a J* .. » &lt; t : a

Yr.

a*t *• »«r -*wa».Jth V* *ww. #1
p.

JLW«■»-a**.»

» •* — jm,

Bell can finally p b y full season, tite r
knee and bicep problem s. He's in
a s pass rusher with Art Still, who was
all-pro end b s t year. They have 1 tough
nose guard in Don Parrish, and some
experienced people lurk behind every
position. E X C E LL EN T
1JNEBACXING E xcept (or Gary
Spani, the work of Chief linebackers
h a t been d isap p oin ting . Frank
Msmimaieuga, a physical type, hasn't
developed a t expected Whitney Paul
has been hurt. Thom as Howard will
have to hustle to stay ahead of Dave
Klug at outside spot , and Larry
B lsnton th re a te n s to oust Manu.
There's no apparent rookie help in
sight FAIR
SECONDARY The starting quartet is
young, swift and impressive. But Chiefs
a rt looking for suba to step into
emergencies. G ary Green is ill-star
co rn erb sck , and high-priced E ric
Harris, once most unbacked last year,
wasn't far behind. Gary Barbara is tops
a l tree safety, but rookie IJoyd Burros
wtll challenge S S Herb Christopher.
VERY GOOD
PROSPECTUS
II the Qitefs a re dragged down below
J 0 6 again, It’ll be because ol a lagging
offense. Levy has to settle on 1 per­
manent cast of ch aracters and get a
in n in g back who’ll scare people. But
that defense is overpowering
PREDICTION Third In AFC West,

•nd 300 again.

’ ----------------- ^

*V

1

trjs -» &gt;T S * f

�Cards Red Hot,
Templeton Act

'Mick, Why Don't You Drink Canada Dry ?
I Did, And A Coupla1Other Countries Too'

ML B a g e b a ll
pened," sa id San Francisco Manager
Frank Robinson. “ It was just bad pit­
ching. They can say it fired them up, but
we |ust didn’t m ake good pitches."
Cobs f , Padres 7
In Chicago, reserve third baseman
Sieve D itlant smashed a two-run homer
with two out in the bottom o( the ninth to
liil the Cubs.
Dodgers I I , Pirates I
Steve Garvey drove in live runs and
ItonCey lashed live singles lo highlight a
19-hit attack and lead the Dodgers to a
three-game sweep, in Pittsburgh.

(i ARY C A RTER
. . .swinging hot stick
scoreless innings. Ron Heed, 2-1, suffered
the loss.
Astros I, Mrts 1
Art Howe drove in five runs with a
sacrifice fly, a single and a double,
helping Houston snap a four-game losing
streak , at New York.

M u rc e r S in g le

Eipos I, Reds 1
In Montreal, G ary Carter, still hobbled
by a bad le g , drove in (our runs with a
tworun hom er and a two-run single to
back a four-hitter by Bill Gullickson and
propel the Expos.
l i f t fielder Tim Raines continued to
perk up a fte r an early second-season
strike. Raines doubled lor the second
straight d ay and stole two bases. He
leads the m a jo r leagues with 56 thefts.
Braves J, Phillies I
At P h ila d elp h ia , R a fa e l R am irez
singled home Glenn Hubbard with one
out in the 10th Inning to spark Atlanta.
Winner R ick Camp, 7-1, pitched three

W h ip s

T w in s

A L B a se b a ll
Yankees I, Twins 2
Also in New York, pinchhtttcr Bobby
M urcer singled home Dave Winfield with
the tie-breaking run in the eighth inning
to boost the Yankees.
Royals 6 , Tigers 1
At Detroit, 1-arry Gura pitched a
se v e n -h itte r and C esar G eronim o
triggered a live-run fifth inning with a
tworun homer to spark Kansas City.

--------- Bad Boy--------Obscene Actions Louder Than Words
ST . IiOUIS (U P I) - G arry Tem­
pleton has been trying lo talk his way
out ol St. Louis for y ea rs and he Just
may And actions speak louder than
words.
The Cardinals' gifted, bul unruly,
shortstop w ss lin ed 15,000 and
suspended indefinitely without pay
alter he was ejected from Wednesday's
game lor making a serie s of obscene
gestures to the crowd.
“ When Garry grows up to be a man
and publicly apologizes to the Ians and
his teammates, he can p la y ," said an
angry Whitey H enog, the Cardinals'
manager. "Nobody will do that to the
SI. Louts fans while I'm m an ag er."
" I Just don't understand the boy,”
Henog laid
don't know why he ha*
been playing like he has. He really
hasn’t been giving good effort. He’s
trying to disrupt the ballclub. I'v e got 24
other guys busting their ta ils to try to
win. He's kind ol Just going through the
motions.”
Templeton’s actions overshadowed a
three-run triple by Dane Iorg that
highlighted an eight-run fifth Inning
and ca(Tied the Cardinals to a 9-4
victory over the Sait F ran cisco Giants.
The Incident started In the first inning

when Templeton struck out, but San
Francisco catch er Milt May dropped
the ball. Tem pleton made only a half­
hearted jog toward first before veering
toward the dugout.
The sm all crowd lhat had walled in
rain (or m ore than an hour (or the game
to start, began booing and Templeton
responded with an upraised arm.
Home-plate umpire Bruce F roe al­
ining ejected Templeton before the
start of the fourth inning.
“ He went goofy and made two im­
moral g e stu re s," Froemining said.
“Alter the first one he was ejected. He
wanted to know wby he couldn't go into
the stands and challenge the people who
were gelling an him ."
After he was kicked out ol the game.
Templeton walked toward the dugout,
stopped, clutched his genitals and
gestured to the crowd. Then he raised
his linger before Herzog grabbed him
and pulled him into the dugout.
“We had a scuffle, su r*," said
Herzog.
“Whitey grabbed him amt pulled him
in the dugout," said lorg, who was on
the bench at the lim e. “The players
went and Jumped in and separated
them."

“Whitey had to be restrained by
coaches, players and everybody e lse ,"
said Froemmlng.
H enog said be told Templeton to wnil
In Ihe clubhouse, bul Templeton quickly
packed his bags and left without
speaking to reporters. He did not a c ­
company the team to San Diego
Wednesday night.
" I told him to wait for m e and he's
gon e," said Henog
W hatever the
fans said to him he had co m in g ."
Templeton earlier this season had
demanded lo be traded (or the third
tim e In two years,
" I don't think I’m going to have any
respect (or him II he com es b a c k ,"
catch er Gene Tense* said. “ It disrupts
the ballclub. We're In a pennant race.
W e've got too good personnel here (or
one guy to ruin it (or us. I ’ve lost all
respect lor him ."
S an F ran cisco M an ager F ra n k
Robinson, who had a lull view ol the
incident, said, "... I have never seen
anything like that and I hope I never do
again. It's too bad something like that
has to happen in sports. 'Dier e 's no
place lor It."

M ajor-Leagu e Roundup
Standings
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442
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NEW Y O R K i U I ’ l ) Mickey
McDermotl fiaii only one purpose in
mind.
He had to g el up to his room without
anyczie seeing him . Four in the morning
was no time for him to be coming back
lo the hotel. Not when tic was expected
to be in uniform at the ballpark in only a
lew more hours.
Always r e s o u r c e fu l, he rnlered
through t l * basem ent and looked
around for the elevator. As soon as it
arrived, he pushed the button tor the
tilth floor hoping feverishly he could
make it lo his room non-stop.
When the elevator got to the lobby,
Ihisigh, it stopped and the door opened.
To bis unspeakable horror, McDermott
suddenly found him self face to (ace
with his m anager, ihc man who handled
the New York Yankees, Casey Stengel.
It took only two seconds tor Stengel to
siie up M cDerm ott’s condition.
“ Drunk ag ain,” he growled.
McDermotl gave the old man that
litipikh lillle-hoy grin of his.
“ Me too," he said.
That was in Boston in 1956 when
McDermott w as with the Yankees alter
both It* Red Sox and Senators had
given up any hope of straightening him
out. Sometime later, a triend of
McDermott's, distressed by wtiat he
was doing lo him self with the bottle,
suggested lo him :
"M ick ey , why d on't you drink
Canada D ry ?"
" I did," was ihe cheerful response.
"And a coupla' other countries, too "
When he was 17, the skinny,
lirrballlng M cDerm ott already wa*
making the co v e rs of nalional
magjuines and being hailed as "Ihe
next lefty G ro v e ," He broke the
American A sso cia tio n record with
Ixniisvllle by striking out 20 batters in
one game and a fter he followed that up

1

AT S E M IN O L E
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by fanning 19, t l and II again in short
order, Ihe Red Sox brought him up in
1948
M cD erm ott took his first drink when
he was 21.
"A lte r th at," he says, "I thought the
Atlantic Ocean was a ch aser."
H e went from bad to worse, then to
ro ck bottom.
Tod ay, you see a completely different
Mickey McDermott.
\
H e has gone through an alcoholic
program , hasn’t fad a drink in two
y e a rs and is a live, vibrant human
being again. He's excited about the
work he’s doing, representing profes­
sional athletes for B a n ie Sports In c., in
tz is Vegas.
T h e organization is headed by Tino
Barzie, a man who has had con­
sid erable success in the entertainment
field as well a s In baseball. B a n ie has
b e e n a ss o cia te d with such show
business greats as Frank Sinatra,
Ja c k ie Gleason and ihe two Dorsey
brothers, Tommy and Jim m y, and now
m anages the young up-and-coming ac­
tre ss Pin Zardora. Along with his ex­
perience as a manager and producer,
Barzie operated the Pawtucket, R .I.,
and Bristol, Conn., minor league d u bs
with Jo e Ruias.
"O n ce you're an alcoholic, you know,
you’re never considered completely
cured even tltough you quit drinking,"
s a y s ihe 52-year-old McDermott. “ They
ca ll you a ‘recovered alcoholic.’ Well,
I’m a grateful alcoholic — grateful to a

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Pinbusters Meet
An important meeting of the Deltona Pinbuslera will be held
Friday at 1 p.m . a t the Bowl America bowling complex In
Sanford.
Gladys G ranahan emphasizes lhat all interested parties
should attend Ihe meeting.

tJ

kE 9 4

Shortly before he went on the wagon.
McDermott was in a Malibu Beach
restaurant when a woman cam e over
asking him for his autograph.
" I ’d appreciate it so much, Mr.
Hayden," she said.
"'M r. Ilayden ?'" McDermotl drew
back in his chair.
“You're Sterling Hayden, the movie
actor, aren't you ?" the lady asked.
"You mean I look lhat old? Je w , he
must be al least 90. isn 't h e ?"
Sterling Hayden is only 65. The way
he was going before he quit drinking,
Mickey McDermott never bothered too
much about counting.

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Sanford Recreation Superintendent Jeff Munson has pul out
the word that Rag football coaches and officials are needed for
the upcoming season.
"We need help to run a successful program," said Munson
Wednesday afternoon. Officials will be paid for their services,
while the coaching will be voluntary. 7 *y J
Interested parties m ay ca ll Munson t . JB 4T 81.

All interested players i r e invited to attend the next meeting,
Tuesday, Sept 1 at 7 p.m. in the Civic Center. Advertisers
interested In helping finance the league a rt needed. F o r more
information, co ntact J e f f Munson, Sanford recreation
superinterdent, at S O - l l l l .

"In the end, It also cost me whatever
self-pride I had. I know Ihe one I hurt
most was m yself."

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

Football Needs Coaches,
Sanford Softball Forms

In other Sanford sports newt, the Sanford Men’s Softball
Association held its organizational meeting Wednesday night
with seven team s attending.
The tail league will run eight weeks with gam es on Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday. The games will start Sept. 11.

Milton
Richman
UPI Sports Editor

Greyhounds
Wtdiiffida f nifftl m utt*

man like Turn Barzie, who had enough
faith in me after 1 cam e out ot ihe
program lo ask m e what I wanted lo do.
I told him I'd like to handle ballplayers
because I thought I could and he said,
'All right, we’U give it a sh o t'
•We've got 52 of them in various
professional sp o rts," McDermott ex­
plains. "Tony Arm as with the Oskland
A’s and Reggie Tlteus with I t * Chicago
Bulls are a couple of the ones we
handle. Young athletes making the kind
ol mcxiey they're making today need
Ihe proper kind of representation
someone like Tino B arzie can provide
because he has seen a lot of them go
down ihe tubes. I'v e seen the same
thing myself.
"When you're a professional athlete
and you're young, you don’t realiie how
quickly It's all going to be over."
Drinking. McDermott says, cost him
everything he ever had.
" It cost me a fortune in money, Jobs
and my m arriage," he reveals.

3

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The St. Louis Cardinal* a re hot, but
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at shortstop Garry Templeton.
H enog lined Templeton 15,000 and
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far making obscene gestures a t Ian*
during Wednesday's gam e with San
i Francisco the Cardinals won, 9-4, to
I remain atop the National le a g u e East.
"U he wants to play, he will have to
make a public apology," said a milled
H enog. “ Nobody will do lhat to the St.
Louis fans while I'm m an ag er."
Templeton made the gestures three
limes and was elected from the game in
the third inning. As he got to the SL Louis
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J " It kind of got us fired u p ." Iorg said,
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T h u rs d a y , A u g . 27, I f t l —IB

Double Ring Ceremony Unites

PTFI'J-rr;

Miss Casselberry, D.H. Welch

W O W

INSTALLATION
Mu* Catherine l-ee Casselberry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Lasinard C asselberry, of Casselberry, becam e the bride of
David Howe W elch at 7 p.m. on Aug. 7, at Community United
Methodist Church of Casselberry.
Mr Welch is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lester L Welch of
Fullerton, Calif.
Officiating a t the candlelight and double-ring ceremony
were the B e e . Daniel L Casselberry, of Neptune Beach,

brother of the bride, and the Rev. Wight Kirtley, pastor of
Community United Methodist Church.

Installation cl the Women of
the Moose, Sanford Chapter
IBM, for the 1981-82 season
was held in a bower of roses
ceremony at the loy al Order
of the Moose home. Palmetto
Avenue. O fficers Installed
were, upper photo. Iron! row,
from left: Thtresa Krnls,
recorder; IJnda Powell, J r .
G rad u ate U rgent; Vivian
Mann. Sente Regent; Ruth
Eve, Junior Regent: Inei
Sessions, chaplain. Bark row,
from le ft; Mina Sw eet,
a s s is ta n t
guide;
trrn r
M a ste rs, Argus; Evelyn
Nowak, Sentin el; D arlene
Woodworth, musician; and
Lots laFollette, treasurer.
C h airm an Installed w ere,
lower, photo, Irora left: Mavis
Waddell, publicity; Maryjean
Ronolto, child rare; Donna
R ogrrs, College of Regents;
Norma Dalfron, library; and
Itunnle Yarborough, ritual
director. Bark row, Irom left;
G lendeen
Cutter,
M oosehaven; Eva G reen,
membership; Norma Riipnll,
h o sp ita l; V irginia B orem ,
sta te re co rd e r; E llia b e lh
Ja c k , social se n ire; Kathry n
Stover, Moosehart; and lJd a
Foye, Academy ol Friend­
ship. Degrees were received
at the Moose International
Convention held at New
Orleans in June by Donna
Rogers, College of Regents,
and Virginia Borem. State
R e co rd e r. Verna Dickens
served as the 1988-81 J r .
Graduate Regent.

The bride was given in marriage by her father.
She designed for her wedding a formal gown of Ivory velvet
belted with a crepe back satin cummerbund and appliqued at
the scooped neckline and cameo sleeves with Alencon lace.
The draped hemline, was caught up by clusters of ivory satin
rosebuds and ribbon bows which cascaded into a graceful
chapel train. Her fingertip veil was crowned with a wreath of
white roses, carnations and baby's breath.
She carried a cascade bouquet of white roses, carnations and
baby's breath and containing a Bible covered with mother of
pearl from the Holy land.
Her m atron of honor was Valerie Bussell, of F t. Walton
Beach, who wore a red satin gathered full-length skirt topped
with an ivory peasant blouse and a fitted vest of black velvet
accented with narrow floral trim. She carried a hurricane
tamp candle wreathed by a bouquet of red and blue carnations,
yellow d aisies, and baby's breath.
Matching outfits, all designed by the bride, were worn by the
bridesm aid* who included Melenda Edmlston, of Casselberry,
Susan Welch, of Fullerton. Calif., sisters of the groom; and
U sa Bledsoe, of Casselberry. Their bouquets were identical to
the matron of honor's.
The flower girls were Shannon Casselberry, of Casselberry,
and Michelle Casselberry, of Neptune B each, nieces of the
bride. Their outfits matched the other attendants and they
carried baskets of flowers.
Attending the bridegroom as best man was his father, (.ester
Welch. Groomsmen included Kevin Jon es, Buena Park, Calif.,
brother-in-law of the groom; Richard S. Casselberry, of
Casselberry, brother of the bride; Donald Bledsoe, of
Casselberry and Patrick Edmlston, brother-in-law of the
bride, of Casselberry.
Danny Edm lston, nephew of the bride, was the ring bearer,
and he carried an ivory velvet heartshaped pillow with ribbon
stream ers attached to the rings.
Organist for the wedding w u Mrs. Donna line White and Cliff
Ragsdale and Shirley Wallace provided the special music.
Sandy Henael was in charge of the bride's book.
A reception was held in the church fellowship halL Following
a wedding trip to Palm Beach, the couple will be at home in
Orlando.

M il. A M ) MILS. DAVID HOWE WELCH

CALENDAR
THURSDAY, AUGUST H
Sanford A A, a p in ., 1201 W. First St.. Sanford. Open.
Frirn di of the f Jbrary of Seminole County quarterly
m eeting. 7 p .m .. County A g ricu ltu ral C en ter
Auditorium, Highway 17-82, Sanford. County Librarian
Jean Itheim will speak on the county library system
and future plans New members welcome.
Senior C ltlsro i tour to St. Augustine (or “Cross and
Sword." bus leaves leeds at Semuioie P lata,
Casaelbeny, 3 p m ; pick up Sanford Civic C enter, 3:30
pm. Call 333-7434 (or reservations
Sound-ol-Sunshloe Chapter Sweet Adelines, 8 p m
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, B ear Lake Road.
Forest City.
FHIDAY, AUGUST 21
17-92 Big llook AA, I p.m. Messiah Lutheran Church,
17-12 and Dog T rack Hoad. Closed.
Tanglrwood AA, I p.m., SI. Richard'* Church, la k e
Howell Kd. Cloned.
SATURDAY, AUGUST21
“ The Cross and (he Switchblade," a feature film on
David W ilkerson's mission in New York's ghettos, will
be shown a t Seminole Garden Apartments at 1699 W.
Filth S t., Sanford at 1:10 pm . The showing la open to
the public.
Second Annual Winter Park Mall Gymnastics
lav national two-day meet, 12.30 to 3 p .m , m all center
court.
SUNDAY, AUGUST 31
Navy Orlando DUklaad Band, “ Deep S is " , in
concert, 2:30 p.m .. Loch Haven Art Center. Open to the
public.

The bride is a costume specialist at Walt Disney World and
the groom is a free lance musician.

Who Am I
G
? ame May Be
Confusing To Older Kin
DEAR A B B Y ; 1 work as an
side tn a nursing home and I
have a m essage (or people
who visit relatives and friends
tn nursing homes. Older (oiks
sometimes get confused and
forgetful, so when you walk
tn. Just put your am is around
them and s a y , "H ello,
Grandma. I'm M argaret lor
whatever your name is), and
I've come to see y ou !"
Abby, my heart just aches
when someone comes to visit
an older person, and the
visitor starts oil with, “Hi,
Grandma. Do you know who I
am? What'* my nam e? Who
am 1? ”
Then poor Grandma feels
foolish or too em barrassed to
guess because she might be
wrong. I hope you have room
lor this in your column.
tX )V ES OLD FOI J(5
DEAR LOVES; I make
rssm
fa r
worthwhile
suggestions. I'm sure that
most visitors play Ibe "Who

DEAR A B B Y : I am plan­
ning my wedding and have hit
a snag. I want an outdoor
wedding in my backyard,
followed by a reception
outside, too, but the weather
here is very unpredictable
that time of year, and If It
should rain , we couldn't ac­
commodate that number of
people tn our house.
I'm planning a 4 p.m.
wedding. If the weather holds
for the cerem ony, but 11 it
starts to rain around the time
of the reception, we could
move the reception over to the

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ch u rch , w hich Is within
walking distance from the
house.
If at 4 p.m. it looks like rain,
we could have the ceremony
at (he church, too.
How should the invitations
be worded? "Outdoor wed­
ding and reception-w eather
perm itting"? Or, “ If It looks
like rain, go to the church. II
the weather t i fair, come to
the house".
Please help.
MAKING P U N S
DEAR MAKING P U N S :
Since the weather Is un­
predictable that time ol year,
some s f your guests may
predict rata and gs la Ibe
church, while ethers may
predirt fair weather aad gs la
y s v bouse. Play It sale and
have every th in g a t thr
church, where you won't have
to prey for good wratbrr.
DEAR A B B Y : Seven years
ago when my husband died I
w u 4 1 1 thought my life w u
over. We'd been married 21
years, had no children and
were completely devoted to
each other.
A year ago I moved from
Chicago to Florida and took a
Job selling in a fine store.
There I m et the most
gorgeous man I ’d ever seen.
il'U caD him " D a le ." ) He's
the sw e e te st, m ost un­
derstanding man in the world.
Dale is 21 and everything a
woman could want in a man,
but he if gay.
Please don’t think I'm a
crazy 43-year-oUl lady, but
we've been living together for
sis months. No aex, but ■ very
warm friendship. Of course
I'd like it to turn into
something m ore, but for the
time being. I'v e never been
happier.
Since we’ve been together,
Dale has had only one date,
and that w u with a 19-yearold male. But Dale promised
he'd never see him again
because he w ants to go
straight so he can marry me
one day.
Abby, what I need to know
Is, what a re a gay's chances
for going straight?

DEAR

IS

IN LOVE AGAIN
LOVE: SUm -

evea with strong motlvatloa
aad tairaaive psychotherapy.
I w ee asked a dMlagaiihed
psychoanalyst that question,
and he replied, " I ’ ve had SI

211-2201!. FIRST IT.
SANFORD
322-1324

” V| I

1 f 9 f f •

t

percent surrrse. I had two
gay patlrnU who wanted to go
straight. I sorrrrdrd with
one. And with the other one, I
failed."
Do you hate to write letters
because you don't know what
to sa y ? Thank-you notes,
sympathy
letters,
co n g ra tu la tio n s, how to
decline and accept Invitations
and how to write in Interrstlng letter are loeluded
In Abby's booklet. “ How to
W rite
le tte rs
lor
All
Occasions." Send $1 and a
long, stamped I IS rents), vel)addresied envelope to: Abby,
U tte r
R ooklet,
II040
Hawthorne B h d ., Suite SOM,
Hawthorne, Calil. 90250.

NOW SHOW ING FALL 1981
Wearable A rt— Collectable {inert
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(fiSTW i&amp;THE l i m e FOf?
CINEMA K ?

by C h ic Y o un g
(fEMEMBEH WMENYOUOPNT
uA « Td BE A MATHEMATICIAN
TD 6 0 TO THE M O VlES?J

Aniwar to Prmoul Punt*

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I Communictl 46 Mil* partnt
ing ini1rum*nt 49 OrvouK
II Quick lunch 51 Prop*try
pltc*
53 2«irtion
13 Car pin (I
compound
wdi)
54 M*nit*« (2
14 3-*l«m»nl
wdt)
tub*
55 Poodi
15 Forward
56 Plant pin [pt |
IS 0ry.lt win*
17 Tidal wiv*
DOW N
19 Put down

20 B*hind
22 Buggy
25 Inditmrt* in
ord*r

For Nerve Deafness

20 Aton*m*nt

1 Cat* and doga

2 le**r *1

42 low

21 SkimM

22 Agnculturil

3 Auditory
4 New (prtfit)
5 Command

labbr)
30 On* Of tt&gt;*
Evangal.1t*

6 On* who
long!

32 N o t h d*ity

9 H«rom« o1 A
Doll i Hout*
I 0 l.ni*
whirlpool

27 Hugh
borturoutlr

7 Cut

31 $miu mount 1 Ulrng ip**cti 26 Spirit limp
33 Brown*
34 Trty«J
35 G*fi«tic

mllirill

1

2

16 Acgir*
4

5

)t

carp family
47 Sourc* of

35 Hmg in told! 46 Dapotiti
36 Nothing
moittura
3 7 Put* up
50 Fa*l
mon*y
indnpotad
40 Songt
52 Mik* Ik *
4 1 Put* It rail

13 P*ntit*uch

3

pripoi.t.on

29 BKk talk

12 tanguiih

libbrj
31 Ag*|

43 Biblical

44 Eight |Sp|
23 Uncivil
24 Similar m kind 48 Fish o&lt;th«

26 P rn id* nt

6
12

7

1

9

10

13

14

IS

■
|
"
1 ■1
F m ■■
1
1
■
I

1

16

11

"

"

20

"

22

23

24

30

27

25

28

29

”

32

”

34

35

36

”

”

42

43

44

"

"

47

41

"

49

50

51

53

52

54

55

56
-C

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE B E D E OSOL

For Friday, August 28, 1981

EEK &amp; MEEK

by Howie Schneider

1 I'L L HAVt A SC O T C H
O JT M E B X W

!

MjMAtT D O S O U F E C f I E

U lO S T tV MJE.

D O F O R E X C IT E M EA JT

c r d e r o u b c d

N 3 0 U H )D

y ~

P R I S C I L L A 'S P O P
OH. I CAN \
-,VE L L
H A R P LV
SOON BE
B E U E V E l T ' / eiArCK IN
IW«L / S C H O O L '

by E d S u lliv a n
• J U S T TH IN K.'
ANO TH ER S T E P
FTORWARP' A N O T H E R
CORNER T U R N E P '

B U G S BUN N Y

b y S to ffe l A H e lm d a h l

A „L C S U T S A B S ’T . I KNOW YOU PU5 UP A CH EST

COCAJMiNG PBATE BOOTY HANOtTOVER.'
S ---------------------- --------------------------------- —

A N O T H E R B LO W
A G A IN S T O U R
IG N O R A N C E . O U R
N A R R O W V IE W S

-rtH

r - iS '

c r4

YOUR BIRTHDAY
AufuitTB, 1BSI
There is a strong possibility
you'll make a new friendship
this comlngyear with one who
is extremely kind and com­
passionate. This person has
keen business instincts and
could help you m ake money.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 21)
There could be considerable
gossiping going on today and,
il you take part, there’s a good
chance you might becom e the
(all guy. IVm'l listen and don't
talk. Find out more of what
ties ahead for you In the year
following your birthday by
sending tor your copy of
AstnvGraph. Matt 11 for each
to A stro-G raph, B ox 419,
Radio City S ta tio n , N .Y .
16019. Be sure to specify birth
date.
LIBRA (SepL 23-Oct. 23)
Beware ol those peddling pipe
dreams today. You're such a
nice guy, tt wouldn't occur to
you that there are persons
who aren't to be trusted.
SCORPIO (O ct. 24-Nov. 22)
Today’s the wrong day to
behave
irra tio n a lly
or
erratically and, by all means,
avoid Involvem ents with
individuals sbout who you
know little.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) An u n re a listic
mental attitude might cause
you to throw a m onkey
wrench Into s o c ia l plans,
causing co n stern a tio n and
spoiling e v e ry o n e 's good
time.
CAPRICORN (D ec. 22-Jan.
19) You have the tendency
today to get off on tangents
and suddenly sw itch ob­
jectives, Just when you have
the goals within reach. Focus
in on one atm.

Surgery No Help

AQUARIUS (Ja n . 20-Feb.
19) Coworkers could create
confusion and complications
today
unless
ca re fu lly
shepherded. B e sure they
follow the game plan Instead
of going off in uncertain
directions.
PISCES (Fe b. 20-March 20)
It's much too easy to talk
yourself Into believing how
you'd like things to be today,
rather than to face the truth.
Don't take any gamble*.
ARIES (M arch 21-Aprtl 19)
Usually you know your own
mind, and act accordingly.
This may not be so today,
became another could plant
so many seeds ol doubt that
your actions could become
erratic.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
II you can't figure out what
the family wanta, it's best not
to start any new projects in
the home today. It's hard
enough to finish what you
begin, with all this confusion.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Leave those credit cards a t
home and don't shop unless
you have hand cash In your
hand. You have a tendency
today to spend more than you
should.

DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
writing to you about nerve
deafness I have been told by
an ear specialist there Is no
help (or iL One day I read
about a woman who had nerve
deafness and a surgeon
replaced the stirrup bone with
• tiny wire which vibrates
when struck by sound waves.
In her case the bone had
become rigid. After surgery
the first sound she heard was
her husband and two children
walking Into the room. What
can you tell me about such an
operation? Is it possible now?
DEAR READER- Y o u are
asking about two different
problems. I am not familiar
with the published story you
rite but your story Is that of a
woman who had atoaclerosis.
It Is a common cause of toss of
hearing.
T he
bone
degeneration
and
regeneration that occurs can
fix the xmall bones in the
middle ear so they cannot
vibrate.
N orm ally
the
vibrations are picked up by
the internal ear which in turn
Is connected to nerves that go
to your brain.
When the little bones are alt
that is Involved there are
several operations that can be
used for this. Even bone
growth over the Inner ear
(cochlea) that transmits the
waves from the tiny bones can
sometimes be helped with
surgery.
Nerve d eafn ess m eans
involvement or damage of the
liny nerve receptors In the
Internal ear or the nerve itself
between (he ear and the brain,
or the hearing center in the
train. This is a different
process but the nerve endings
can be Involved too In ad­
vanced o to sclero sis. Most
nerve deafness cases cannot
be helped with surgery.
To help you understand the
mechanism of hearing and the
different causes of hearing
loss, 1 am sending you my new
Issue of The Health Letter
num ber 16-6, Y our Vital
HearuigOlhers who want this
Issue can send 75 cents with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope for It to me, Ln care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box

NORTH
m u
♦ A t4
V II
6 A ll
♦ A7141
WOT
EAST
♦ lOSJ
41
▼K J I
V A 1011
♦ &lt;2 1961
6KI71
♦ 714
♦ QIOII
SOUTH
♦ nq j i m
VQTIS
♦ J4
♦ K

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Ju st
when you think you have all
the aruwers la when a sur­
prise could bit you. Your beat
course of action today Is to
tread water carefully and
slowly.

Now some people ( but not
a ll) with some degree of nerve
deafness can be helped with
hearing aids designed to fit
their particular type
hearing loss. A detailed
evaluation by an audiologist
to identify the nature of the
hearing toss Is helpful in such
cases and should be done
before stlemptlng to select s
particular instrument.
DEAR DR. IA M B - Does
chicken Uver have much iron
in tt like beef Uver? And why
is tt you never see liver or
cabbage served In hospitals? t
thought both were healthy.
DEAR R EA D ER - As s
matter of fact chicken liver
contains more iron than beef
Uver. Liver Is one of the lew
good food sources of iron.
Som e other food sources
contain iron that cannot be
absorbed read ily by the
digcsUve system. One hun­
dred grams of chicken Uven
contain 7.9 mg of iron. Beef
liver contains 6.3 mg. But call
Uver contains B.8 mg. For a
real iron boost you might
want to use hog Uver which
contains 19.2 mg per 160
grams.
Liver is a good food except
that It is relatively high in
cholesterol. That should only
be important if you need to
limit your cholesterol Intake.
One hundred gram s of Uver
contain 300 mg of cholesterol
I suspect that hospitals
don't serve Uver because it is
not popular with aU that many
people — Including patients
And cabbage Is a gas former
A hospital Is a bad place to
have gas in addition to other
medical problems. But 1 see
apple sauce ta popular In
hospitals and It ti a gas for­
m er for many people.

nine easy tricks, but needed
10.
There were two ways to
get the 10th One wouldIbI e to
get to ruff a heart. The other
to set up dummy's fifth club
(or a discard South should
find a way to have his cake
and eat it, too.
At trick two he cashed hts
king of dubs. Then he leads
a low heart. If E ast wins It
toms out that he can't lead a
trump. South will get to play
a second heart and he sure
of ruffing the third one. Of
course. South will chuck his
losing diamond on the ace of
clube somewhere along the

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer North

CANCER (Ju ne 21-July 22)
If you abuse the family budget
today, the entire d a n may
have to su ffe r the con­
seq u en ces.
M o m e n ta ry
personal gratification won’t
be worth IL

1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.

WIN AT BRIDGE

U tt

Thursday, A u g . 2 7 ,1 t i l

n i

IB —Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

R L O N D IE

Saelk
!♦
44

Opening lead ♦ 3

By Oswald Jacoby
sad AIsa Ssatag
South won the trump lead
in his own hand and studied
dummy for a while He had

If West wins and leads s
trump. South will play the
nine from dummy It will
hold. Now South can play
and ruff a small club. Enter
dummy with the ace of
trum pi Play ace and ruff a
•mall dub and get to dum­
my with the ace of diamonds
to get a heart discard on the
last good dub
Suppose E ast produces the
I t o l trumps on the second
trump lead Trumps will
have broken 1-2 and there
would be no way to stop a
heart ruff
iN E W X P A P H E M T O T M U t ASSN I

•441

by Lvoftird Stirr

in r

**&gt; »

++ A

�Evening Mersld, Sin lord. FI.

REALTY TRANSFERS
A lm o n V K m n y o , l a t l i n n
V o uH S a n t h u &lt;L * | E . y l. n l 0 ,
*

Btk II, H f lf ir r Home* 0 ft S«-c

C W |44 000
Q iiir A m f f H e f t 'd To vV iitr» t
S«r
.ft, *if Suva PL. l( jf J} ft'ilt A
if 'l f »'nfl! 0 J M Vfil *00
G fe a te r C w H lr C o ro to Jen t
V f f q i f f *qi 4 * jt?hlf*r« i 8 - k ^
v j ' . l o t 110 S a u V lh to S f &lt; fo u r
*a) tgo
0 4 n ft f
H a lt % * t jo ,&lt; * to
N a t'C m A d * M o t in v C o , lo t l i t
Spr.nq 0 * 4 * on % IMOOO
Naftonw'irJe AAuf tint to trpiHtft
l »r»rv?Sd\ 4 *» M 4 »n#l» c lo t
*
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f .t t f .t .A N o ug h t j t ir q
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to
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U « 000
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no* ooo
io h n B WiH&gt;am* 4 A t Je an e ttf
*0CrA 0 A A i l i r f 4 At C acoi Sor
lo t It ft.h A B ra n tle y Shore*. J%t
Afln t^O 000

f Qu i# Realty in i to V i f .i #n C
G ilb e rt, i q l - U n
IS* 900

I, C a p tlff a no.

S d 'r » G C r o A 'r , 4 At Carpi*
l to June E A n q r f a s sg! lo t H i
Bel A*r* M d lt Un T *o W 700
H a rr* W C h m t m a n i l l iq l to
Em AnueH L citr t 4 a I G luttpp*
lo t J |\ili t M f t f lr f M cm rt DM ,
Sn O ne tSI.QOQ
G re a te r Con s ir C a rp *p jo t*
. T o il 4 uni G fA C H l'il Lot 111
S a lu iaM b Sec F o u r, 167.9QQ
V.-trondA H o m n Inc to C ft A r lf i
C Odv&lt;* 4 a » M ic h e l* |
L o l |J
l r o j r R&gt;dg«* u n II ftlMOO
C lI illlf M M O ffiei to ChAM et L
G iven*. t | l
to* t)
H ic k o ry
&gt; C reek 110,000
M o t U rn k l o r it ic 'I# to FI C oca
Cota B o ttlin g Co E* j of N W 1* of
S E S o f Sec ?7 70 » H I S 000
£ b rr* to p h e r M
A * g g rr\ 4 a !
V e r4 S to Jam ** A fta a c io n 4 *t
S y lv ia K , l o t 70, B it E G f r r f i
Aood la k e * . U n I HQ 000
C o m p le t e I n f e r io r * Inc
to
S l'firm J
i&amp; m 4 Suutn M

T O N IG H T S T V

C h e rn o v b o fn %qi t o t la ft* ),
CnSar O flg* SV7 900
l net.* c O a r * to $tevtm H
V ^ r . lf 4 A t P * u la j
L o t II)
N a m b i* * a d d |#9,|0Q
fte b e tc a D
B f f l f t f l f 4 fiiib
V ( h # f lH to A lb e rt D M ille r 4 A t
t o u i . r ft l o t ;» p ih j M o tx lf
V j n o r Jnd Sec . I* 900
B jo a io l
C a lla h a n
4 *f
Bcee*t.» f to S im o n M BencJer 4
At O h su n
lo t j| .
.V r iit A im
Savar* S e t O n e fS I 000
m * E M in e r 4 A t C atch to lu r e
J D u n n ig i , l o t SJ Mo a rH l i l t
R rp l . SH.S00
S C r u m lic n 4 e l G r* c e
to B o n j» d B s h i K i 4 A t Sue A

Ltr t f

The Vcxjf nq*

f 0 » tro * t t n v e i f o r i l t d
to
n » P ro p e rt&gt; e iF If fro m h A
1 •t
♦ H\N', of N E '4 of Sec
) U I )0 etc . i t sos }00
r i t r . c * I d l y B e p r E%! Freo.»
W tfulhr to P itric» A A nn L i l l r . lo t
t* ftlfc II. E A tfp ro Q h s d U n S
1100
M ic e T C h A tlo t, s o l to W ill em
j C h ,tM o s4 A t j j n e t a
lo t 7. ftik
a S A e e fA A te r C lu O U n I.S770000
B 0«*f G C o m p o e ll 4 A t N encv
to B e 4 D odson %gl #l o t i 17 4 19

MADAME KATHERINE
PM M 1 AKl) CRVS 1A1 IIA ll HI AOING
P « * l - P m r n l — F u tu t*
1111J im w k i
AitAttts

ION J # OOD

(305)
831-4405

I HI &lt;H K S NO RTH O l 1 ) 0 0 1 R A ( K N il
ON HIMPMIS I f »*4 «I

I CMMl f INI (Ml Bt II »AN k ACM W
i t m |k» «M»»t ItMi Ik* Sk&lt; | A*** Ae««
iiB uik.* *.* !,, iv i . i ar *. ffc*&lt;*e

AGENTS-APPRAISERS-AUCTIONEERS

DISPOSING OF ASSETS?
C oncern for business or p erson al p ro p erty Is a
fa c t of life . Disposing of or liquid ating those
a s s e ts is often a p ro b lem .

Our s a le s p ro g ra m allow s the s e lle r to se le c t the
d a te and p lace ol sale, to th e co m p lete
s a tisfa c tio n of a il.
A ss o cia te s is ready to a s s is t with any o sta ta ,
b u sin ess o r person al property to b e sold
p riv a te ly o r a t public sale.
Call us today tor Ihe best in re s u lts.

b illy h. w e lls an d a s s o c ia te s
y

§

=

EVE NINO

11-00

s

r

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

PRICES
SM ASHED

O ] T O CD O n e w s
H (3 5 1 ANOY QRIFF1TH
® ( 10) THE TO M COTTLE SHOW
M enial Pat&gt;enf A woman tftarei
her horrifying f ip a n w K M of bemg
m four m enial mstitutiont

805
I I (1 7 ) FA T H ER KN O W S BEST

8 :3 5
7 :0 0

?

L* O U R INCREDIBLE WORLD
Q
PM
M AGAZINE A to d
t .p w t » h o c o t iu m n met i i m h .
p«1, m hom* h c t « i , I T . i t , cow
L .I " ^ tu n lo tt. Ch«* I f . m . n ;w
cru tl . , lo o d p c c x f iu x Jutf, U t
w it p f f w o t i nw lU iw c r w tog
JOrC, K u lh M A h f t , CIM&gt;«
Counting conghAW
1710 JO K E R 3 WILD
i i . (351 b a r n e y m i u e r
tD (1 0 ) U A C N E IL / LEHRER
REPORT
7 :0 5
I I 1 17) A L L IN THE FAMILY

7 :3 0
O * T IC T A C O O U O H
J o M T H CEN TU RY WITH W A l.
TER CRONKITE
( 7 : 0 f a m il y f e u d
f t (351 RHOO A
tD (1 0 ) OtCK CA V ET T O u « l
Peter Utf&gt;no« (R)
12 ( 17) OCT SM A R T

800
I)
4
N B C MAQA21NC WITH
O AVin B R lN A lt Y
11) Q
B K) B E N D CO UNTRY A
tennevfcee feim iamrfy kiru§gt*i fo
kurntm m |h* ehermath of
CMf
War
(7 U R U N A W A YS WHERE ARE
THEY NOW
11 (3 8 ) MOVIE
Another Time
Another P lace (B W K10SB) Lana
'Turner Barr^ Sutlnan A lernate ear
^ re iiM jn d e n l kufferi a breaktfoen
over ihe death ol her married lover
O) (1 0 ) THE GO LD EN AOE OF
TELEVISION Marty Rod Slerger
and rfancy M aichand ita/ in • 1S5S
production of Paddy Chayefskyt
tvaepiay about a homely butcher
who ta iii irt love anth a plain girl

M OTOR

AM C

CO.

JEEP
322-4382

Q

I
u

J

MOVIE
I JO H N DAVIDSON
8 I U E R V O R lf FIN
S 5) S U P E R M A N
(1 0 ) S E S A M E STREET (R )g

4 :0 5

I t (351 OOMER PYLE
( 6 ( 1 0 ) SESAME STREET (R)EJ

12:00

ST A R S K Y ANO HUTCH
O CHAR LIE S A N G E LS Tha
Angw , and Botray a ita r a l, a phony
U FO club tu tp a c ia d ol d&gt;w&gt;oung ol
&lt;t, m a u n , r w m b a t anw latatg
thaw monay |R|
I t (3 5 ) J t ij B A K K E R
1 2 :3 0
0 (3) TO M ORROW C ioatt, Lota
fa ra n i newripapav edrtot Hank
G rttnapun, hel*l man Cklf Perl
man. Libaraca (R|
O

new s

10:00

5 :0 5
0 ( 1 7 ) OZZIE ANO HARRIET

n \

1:00 p .m .

Aug. J ill thru StpMlh J:10 p.m. tol:00p m.
Sslurdays, Aug. }fth 4 S*pt. Jlh9 ■ m. to Noon
3S40S. E L M A V .
SANFORD
JJJ1I00

5 :3 0
I G i l l W AN S IS LA NO
| M'A'S'H
I NEW S

535

D IR E C T O R I M I R I A M R Y E W R I G H T A V A L E R I E R Y E W E L D

I t (1 7 ) B E VE RLY HIL L B K LIES

SANFORD P L A Z A — O PE N MON. SAT. 10 »

1100
8 (J) WHEEL O f FORTUNE
(T) O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
( L Q THREE'8 COMPANY (R)
f t (35) BUD BREWER
(D (10) STUDIO SEE
11:30
O ® PASSWORD PIUS
UD Q THREE S COMPANY |R)
H (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
I T (10) B O O K B iR D

1:10

AFTERNOON

1 :5 0
12 (1 7 ) MOVIE
Commando
&lt;1»B41 S la a a rt Grangar Oonan
Gray

200
O ( £ d a il y d e v o t io n a l
300
3 :3 0
(Z) P
MOVIE
IN , Gw dw t Ol
A t m ‘ |C l (1*3t) M ariana DlVtrlcli.
O w l * , Boyar
3 :8 8
12 (1 7 ) MOVIE ' Samaon And Tha
Saa D aattt
|tM 0 | t r l M orn .
Mar gar at Laa

12:00

CARO SHARKS
O NEW S
5 i THE WORLD OF PEOPLE
t i l 10) ERICA
. _

1 2.03
12 117) FREEMAN REPORTS
12:30
NEWS
I a
t h e YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
D P RYAN S HOPE
35) FAMILY AFFAIR
(10) FAST FORWARD

SI (41

to o
) ® OATS OF OUR LIVES
J ALL MV CHILDREN
35) M o v ie
( 10) THE EDGE O f SURVIVAL

FfUOAY

103
12 (17) MOVIE

MORNINQ

1:30
(1) O AS THE WORLD TURNS

5:00
(7.1 O MARCUS WELBY. M D
8:30
SUMMER SEMESTER

O

ij

5 40

200
O ® ANOTHER WORIO
" T O N I LIFE TO LIVE
TO) FOOTSTEPS
2:30
Ll i O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
03 (TO) DICK CAVETT
300
) TEXAS
) QUlOtNO LIGHT
I GENERAL HOSPITAL
"" ( LEA V S IT TO SEA VSR

6:00

0 l l TODAY IN FLORIDA
l O HEALTH FtU O
t j j U BUNRtSE
I f (35) JNJ BAKKER

3 05
Q | t 7 ) FU N TIME

) b u r I i r s t h u l l / deserves
D i a m o n d s , o u r I irs t f a s h io n .

8:09
12(17) HOUYWOOO REPORT

M a cT A V IS H

8 :3 0
(J)O

ed alu n

7.00

DISCO U N T C A R P E T S
HAS M O V E D TO
JO) M A G N O L IA A VE.
S A N FO R D
PH &gt;1) H l l

0 l i , TOOAT
T l O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KUWAIT
ID Q OOOO MORNING AMERICA

ECKANKAR*

6:45
I D (1 0 )A M WEATHER
6 :5 5
(7? O OOOO MORNING FLORIDA

f.leganllygifhw rafifH 'Jal iiiwharfie,
from S250

R E O IO N A L SEM IN A R

7:05

S e p l. 12.11,1991
* • * • • • • • » •

1 2 ( 1 7 ) f u n t im e

7 :25
0 J ) TODAY IN FLORIDA
QD O OOOO MORNING FLORIDA

l i O K N O TS LANDING vai lac at
•utgw , lo O a t.n u n a il V a ha. can
cat tJ lha colon 1N 1
7 Q m i jo
f t (35) tNO EPENOENT NETW ORK
NEWS

fiery st'lilaim set m H h a u l ,\v/&lt;/,
a f W i M iis t f i / l j o t t h e tw r v e il fc u v .

FLA. STATE

351 M ER C IA OiOS

(10) VILLA ALEGRE

(7J O TAXI Bobby le u hometeei
flam e li«« mm h** apartment mfirie
ihe i gone, then retu rn i before ih e i
found nee q u e rle ri (R| p

(J Q H O G AN S HEROES
II (3 5 ) W O ND ER WOMAN
f f l (1 0 ) LIVE FR O M SATURN

10:00

CD O M OVIE
Number On# |CI
1 t*C«) Cnartton H a ,ton ja u ic *
W altar

5:55
Q ' i ' DAILY DEVOTIONAL
® Q d a il y w o r d

t ) Ctl MOVIE
H w nl O H . mg,
l l t l . l B a lt, D am ,
BU ct A
t w it, , h aim tad vtclorian
m anw m with • w . o l it, o w t IRI
31 O
M AONUM. P I T C *
a .a tia O b , t t . C o w O ua,g on
c h a g a , ol drug anuggtmg |R)
(D O
B A R N E Y M ILLER Tho
•quad , imbai g*aa at f w a n in g buttr*. w o o l w a l l ta &gt; n an unaapactag
tm n to aa xJ Iha tutanoo, (Rl
tD I 101 MOVIE
A o rN W w M m g
I C H t W t t r ,a d A t t a r t J a n . P o*
•It A BCTig Hand-dance team givee a
performance et England at the time
that Queen (M a b e th II n putteg
Ihe hnaf louchee on her matnmontai
plant

B EGI NNI NG T HR U A D V A N C E D
SPECI AL EVENING CLASSES FOR ADULTS
CALL OR S T O P B Y
OUR I NG R E G I S T R A T I O N HOURS
Aug. lilh thru JlthfiJO ..m. lo 1:00 p.m. tnd ):)0 n.m to 1

11:45
3 ) (10) STORY BOUND

to o
lD

CHILDREN-TEENS-ADULTS

500

10:30
O 't ) BLOCKBUSTERS
) 0 ALICE (R)
i t (35) DICK VAN DYKE
CD 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R&gt;

O

B A L L E T - T A P - J AZZ — JA Z Z E X E R C I S E

U (3 5 ) I D R E AM O F JEAN M E

12 (17) HAZEL

BULLSEYE
J RICHARD SIMMONS
,35) I LOVE LUCY
(10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

^ID a n c e S h irts

REGISTER N O W FOR

4 :3 0
4 :3 5

9 :0 5
12 (17) FAMILY AFFAIR

C School o f

a

4 :0 0

1 1 :4 3
12 (17) MOVIE
Our Man I N '
{l« M | Ja m a , Coburn. CM , Go,an

«

• S P E C I A L S E S S I ON
•
' i

NO CH AR G E
F r i. B v t t t e f t . i l . i p m , ,

* • • • • * * # • • »

7:30
TODAY

OOOO MORNING AMERICA
5) b a n a n a s p u r s
10) SESAME STREET (R|CJ

BOO
( I ) Q CAPTAIN KANGAROO
f t (35) FRED FLINTSTONE ANO
FRKNOS

THE DIAM OND STORE
ZALES

HILTON INN
FLORI DA CENTER
IM 0 I N T G R N A T I O N A L D R IV E
O RLAND O

/AI *s i hi I 'I I IM f lf U M , -H iA T flA V HAMI
ASM
Mi-H fi ,'l‘l •-VfSk* kffirffi gwI ||*W1, •t *rtv fUlgn. 4##j D|»m F«{ l«ih
llutkl tAtM- t t hllFV'l

BRINQAFRIEND

8 :05
12 (17) LASSIE
8 .2 5
0 f i ) TOOAY W FLORIDA
(J j Q OOOO MORNING FLORUA
M
1
ft
8)

8:30
I TOOAY
O OOOO MORMNQ AMERICA
(35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
j 10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

Friday Seafand buffet

8 :3 5
Q ( 17) MY THREE SONS

APPETIZER-SO UP A N D S A LA D BAR

900
1 11 h o u r m a g a z i n e

2 In what year tta i Alaska
admitted to Ihe United
Stale* a* the 49th itate? (a)
1951(b) 1955 ( 0 1959
1 A sudden temporary
weaknesa or numbness o{
the tare or lim bs rould be a
warning sign o l a stroke
True of False?

l DONAHUE
) M OV*

r—

Ocean Gems

[O F to y d T h e a t r e , |

m

FRIED SHRIMP # FRIED PERCH
BAKED FISH # SHRIMP CREOLE
CLAM CHOWDER • CRAB CAKES
FRIED CLAMS
CRAB ROLLS • HUSH PUPPIES
CORN-ON THE COB • FRENCH FRIES

tm

•w y trw m rw , Q Q ,
^ ^ A LIB IA E S

ANSWERS

508 S. FRENCH A V .

O rla n d o P u b lic
B ro a d c a s tin g System

1005
1 2 (1 7 ) MOVIE

11 (1 7 ) M OVIE
W ho, B w i
Siw pm g In M , B « |T ll» U | D « w i
M arlin
E 'lia b e lh Montgomery
While turfing h it piychiatrtat, a
«oap opera t i n &gt;% purtued by h»8
hm t an l fue fiancee

t T o k y o R o m h a i b r r n p ir doiw d ( o r r o m m it t in t U n ­
io n d u rin g W o rld W * r II
T ru e o r F iU e '*

COME SEE • DRIVE ONE A W A Y !

H (1 7 ) THE rilN T S T O N E S

: T P * » C N E W S N K W T lP lf
I t (3 5 ) W A N T E D D EA D OR ALIVE

52 (17) WORLD AT LARGE

Tho World Almanac*

PICKUPS

SANFO RD

1 1 :3 0
0 (D TONtOMT O tm t ho.t BA
C o tby O u M t , Johnny Dart 0&gt;
1 anocat Snath Tina Tumar

8 .0 8

CHEROKEES

SPIRITS

3 35

I n d tp a n d tn l
A rta n la . G a

9 :3 5
12 (17) I DREAM OF JEANNIC

(7 O NEW S

7 :35

n 1171 NEWS

C J ’s

tD 110) o v t n EASY

9 :3 0
(ID (3S| ANOY GRIfETTH

1 1 :1 8
■ B ( 17) NK1MT g a l l e r y

$

n (1 7 ) THAT O iRL

W A G O N EER S

SCR AM BLER S

In d rp a n d y n !
O rta n d a

11 O M ' A ' S ' H

6 :3 0
f ) l i N B C NEW S
l } ! 0 C B S NEW S
f ! O A B C NEW S
H (351 C A R T E R COUNTRY
f f i ( iO l M ERE S T O YOUR
HEALTH A lt h m . lR l: j

1 0 :1 5

ON AIL

EAGLES

o m o N E w s
5 fB E N N Y W U
10) P O S TSCR IPT S

8 00

9 :3 0

I vt-mngt MS 111 ?U9

CONCORDS

1 0 :3 0
I D (3 5 ) POFH O O C3 THE CO U N ­
TRY

9 .0 0

It is not a problem lor A sso cia tes.

«

i N I C I D ayto na B e ach
O rlando

THURSCAY.

• I I I ! &gt; l O l [ • H A H H 1 A I .I • 81 S I M VS

B U N IN B U SIN E SS TO R 5 0 S T A R S
IN PRIVACY O F MY HOME
HOURS 8 A M ■9 P.M CU^rd Sunday

IC B S I O rlan do

M (351 u n o r r r s u p c r s t a r s

JJ (17) THE ADOAMS FAMILY

BifcC ’..sni.irmu. \prmgs LAheOa*
V ( 1 | 7 | soo
N s M u iS O lA h d e j r to m ,p |
f 'd j s t r . c s in&lt; , l o t I flik I, 1 * 4*
M ills S h o r n S4.000
M m r i»s AOOve, L f » gm | i^ n *
M ills S h o fe i |4 000
v»n»«. i» in B 'k I. 1 4 M .rts Sh .
u ooo
4 ln , r . I t It fli4 I I k M l t i S h .
M 000
V im e I t 17 ft '4 l 14 M it t Sh .
S i ooo
B u iie ll T S A d » n J r to p,m«el o
A f|m ,in n 4 A t 4 A ren D , lo t 4
A ie t A A * e r O a 4 s S A r e t A A t f f
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M a c s 4 At V if g m i* l . l o t JS.
•Vekiv* G o lf V i l U i . Sec
Ta o
1*1 MO

©(35)
© (17)
(10) ©

fA B C ) O rlan de

BEGINS SEPT. 8th

3 :3 0

C aw * Ch

In a d d &gt; l„t, I* tha ih , n n « ii ln t , d . c b la v t t ia n la b t t r i b t n m ay H m , in Fa m d a p an d an t c h a n n tl U ,
SI P a ltr a b u rg . by la n ln g ta ( h iiw iH 1: tun in g t , c h in n y 1 11, w h lt ll i s r r i t t i p o r t i an d ma C h rtiH a n
B ra a d c a t im g N a tw w b (C B N ),

levs pert,

!♦? ooo
V on e n tC rA tie ft A id to E va
V F*.*r* 4 « o ie 4 A c e M v y one
♦ t»n «•
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fJ J o h n v B e e r S e c t U 4 7t I t ) l

Tm u t r im

C 4M * Ch

GD O
®o
® e

Thursday, Aug. 17,1911—18

U S

I N ONLY
w u i g a I I I I I U I 'BOJJ, |

Jorge Gomez M.D.P.A.
ANNOUNCES

P 1 A IA

■ 1

M S ONLY

5 PM Till 11 PM Children Under 12-‘/ i PRICE

® N cy

the relocation of his office

&lt;C.UMlicrx

for the practice of Cardiology

EN JO Y YOUR FAVORITE

COCKTAIL

and Internal Medicine

IN THE

BUCCANEER LOUNGE

L0NGW00D MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.

NITELY

1385 WEST HW Y. 4 3 4
SUITE 206 IO N G W O O D , FL.,

M O O S .O R L A N D O D R ,
N v y t r iJ S U l l j t .
C LO S E O T M U N IO A Y

For Appointment C all 831-2222 o r 323-5360 S

■-» -w *

es &gt;

-4

#

V

M I- M H

SANFORD

PVT. BENJAMIN

I M

•

r

1

* 9

�r i

« *-E rB f)tn E HdfB Id, Sanford, FI.

Legal Notice

Thursday, Avfl.to. (H i

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

legal Notice
N O T IC E

N O TICE OF S H lB I F F 'S I A L E
NOTICE I I H E R E B Y O IV E N
that by virtu* o i thel certain W rit
o* Execution issued out o* end
under the m *I o l the C ircu it Court
o* Semmof* County, f lend*. upon
ottno l lodgement rendered In I V
otorotoiO court on Itio tu n doy at
M arch, A 0 . 1*11, In Itiol cortoln
cot* entitled. A u rtlllo A rro o io .
Pieintitt. v i Cherni* Moot. Inc .
e tc . rt ol. Dotondont, which
etoreseid W rit ot E lo cu tio n n o t
dolly trod to m o ot S h e rlll ot
Seminole County. F lorid a, ond I
V v # Itylod upon I V fo llo w in g
d e scrib e d p r o p o rly ow ned by
C h rm it H a u l. Inc . to ld property
be.ng located In Seminole County.
F lo rid a ,
m o rt
p a r t ic u la r ly
deter ibed o t follow !
layout t r y and Ig uip m ent
I IR &gt;1 Double Baam Infrarad
Oual Control Im l
&gt; Sta n ie tt H eel Vacuum Tank
with motor—1)0 gal
I G C G a t Cnromatogrecei
,
I Olympwt M icroscope I IS mm
camaeat and II A lt O ptical - T E
eteclronlc control
,
I M icrotom e— Ttieemot Elec
l reeling u n it Yam ato Kokl SUcor
and Otym put Model M A to I
I Auto Teehnlcon
^1 Spectropeiotmeiaf Speclranic
I Stain lata Steel Vacuum Tank
1M gat with m olar
I Slalnleta Steel Vacuum Tank
MO gal
I IBM Typewriter
1 Oven Precision
1 O erter 1*1 ln c t £ f* n r Leery*

■ I A u to c la v e S to rm ie r tte a m
p re tt. tt
I Copy Mocnino with paper
dtlpeniar
*
I I SI tin ie 10 V ie l Vacuum lank
tM gal
. 1 C ham kal Pump* II tta in le ti
new s
&gt; l Largo Autom atic S la rlllie r
I Centrifuge detractor Elec
I pH M eter Electronic
I Scale, Toledo
1 P tr e iln Matter Beth e le c , i t
I pH M eter Battery
t Sc Mot l Tonometer
t C e n t r ifu g e in t e r n a t io n a l
.Clinical
I M ite G iettw ero
' I F lin e r Colony Counter
. 1 Drum C io tert tor ) l gel end S
got.
t pH Meter M etrlon IV oloctric
, I Culture Heirigeretor
{ t fo rt ion Balance Dial O G re m i
■ a PlaulCondentar
i I Vacuum P rtttu ra Pum p
I C ham kal Grmdar
I I C ondenter
' I Inhalation Unit [or A n im a l!
I OpMhelmotcepe
1 Water Bath Electric
■ I Egg Incubator
1 1 Small L ift
I b oiet Carton Slldot too
I l Hammer G rinder E le ctric
• I SI arm or C a ll

I Cendenter M.llitet tiling
1 Anim al B elenct In k ilo and
g r im
I Magnetic S tirrtr w Hot Plato
Snd the undaretgned a t Sheriff el
Seminole County, Florida, w ill a l
II M A M on the M lh doy ol
Augutl. A 0 IMI. otter lo r tale
ond tell to the highest bidder, tor
ceth. tubloct to any and o il
esttlksg llont. al Iha D C F E N
DAN I S P L A C E OF B U SIN ESS,
la* Center0 D rive. CataoaBaery.
F lo e lo a . th e aoevo d e tcr.b e d
per tonal propoety.
That to ld 10la la V N tg m ade to
eetlify the le rm t ot told W rit ot
Esecutlon.
John C P e ll. Sheriff
Seminole County. F lo rid a
Publith Augutt 0. IS. 10. IF. with
the tele on Augutl M . I H 1
d e l J)

IN THE CIB CU IT CO U R T FOR
SEM IN O LE CO U N T Y . F LO R ID A
PR O RATE DIVISION
Frio Nvm ker II M l C P
O lvliloo
IN N f li B S T A T B OP
N O EL R BALD W IN.
Dec ootod
NOTICE OP A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
10 A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
AGAINST TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
ANO A L L O T H ER P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D IN TH E E S T A T E :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IFIE D
I h il
the
td
m in itlra lie n o l the e tlo lo o l N O E L
R. B A L D W I N , deceased. F ile
Number II M l CP, it pending in
the C ircu it Court tor Sominolo
County, Ptorldo. Probata O ivition,
the addratt ot which It Sominolo
County C o u rtho u se. S o n lo rd .
Florida th e perianal repreton
tallvo ot the estate tt K E N N E T H
BALD W IN , whoso e d d rtu It I K I
thundrrbird A n n u a . Brookavlllo.
Florida 11SII The nam e end
address
ol
the
p e rso n a l
.re p re te n ia liv tt attorney are tat
* term below
Ah persons having d a lm t or
dtm en d t a t o n a l the ttta to are
req u ired .
W IT H IN
T H B IE
. M O NTHS F k O M TH E O A T E O F
TH E FIR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O T IC E , to trio w ith the
c le f t at I be above court o written
statement o l any claim or dem end
Ihey may hove E tc h claim m u ll
be in writing ond m u ll indicateIhe
bat it lor the claim , the nam e and
addr ett at the cre p t or or h it agent
or etlom ey. ond Ihe amount
• claim ed II the claim rt net yet
duo. Ihe dole when It w ill become
duo shall M title d It the cla im it
contingent or vnlxyumeled. the
nature ot Ihe u n cirteln ty shall
tit le d II the claim it secured. Ihe
security shall be described The
■claimant than dttiyer lu tlic ie A f
capret ot mo claim lo Iha clock to
enable Itio d o r k lo m o il on# copy
la each personal rtp r tttn ta liv e
A ll portent in tarttlad In Iho
estate lo whom o copy ot this
Notice al Adm inistration h o t boon
aieiied are rebuked. W ITH IN
• 'T H R E E M O N T H S F R O M THE
OATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
THIS
NO TICE, lo m e any ebfectione
,.*ihoy may have that challenge the
stolidity o l th# decadent t w ill. Ihe
q u a lilic a lio n a o l H it p e rso n a l
repretentaiive. or the venue or
- iu rttd k lm n o l m o court
A L L C L A IM S . D E M A N D S . ANO
O B JEC T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D
W ILL B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
Dale of lho ll r t l pubtkeHen ot
O b ' * N v tK f p i M m k s lilr e le n
AU GUST K . I N I
Kenneth Baldwin
A t Personal Representative
at me E tia to ot
? f N O E L R B A LD W IN

*

pm tH U

A T T O R N E Y PQ R P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E ;
X JO H N A B A LD W IN , E M ,
f t * B A LD W IN i D 1 K I0 U
* 0 Highway IF B|
F e r s e M k Plor.de »
H Fi M
.T c ie p q jn . o a i i k i a l I, ala
P u b W ^ A u g u tl » . IF IN I

OIL m

B

N0T1CB
OF
A
P U B LIC
H E A R IN O TO C O N SID ER TH E
A D O PTIO N OF AN O R D IN A N C E
B Y TU B C IT Y OF S A N FO R D .
F LO R ID A .
Notico It haraby given that o
Public Meeting w ill be hetd o l the
Com m h lio n Room in the City Hell
In Ihe C lly ot Sanford. F lorid a , ot
1 OOo clock P M on September 14.
IN I. to consider the adopt ton or on
ordinance by the City ot Sanford.
F lo r d s a t lo llo w t
O R D IN A N C E NO 1141
A N O R O IN A N C E O F TH E C IT Y
OF S A N FO R D . F L O R ID A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E CO R
P O R A T E A R E A OF TH E CITY
OF S A N FO R O . F LO R ID A , U PO N
A D O P T IO N
OP
S A ID
OR
O IN A N C E. A P O R T lO N O F TH AT
C E R T A IN P R O P E R T Y L Y I N G
EA ST OF A N O A B U T T IN G TH E
IN T E R S E C T IO N OF C O U N T R Y
C L U B RO AD A N D C R AAA r J it M
S T R E E T ) ! S A ID P R O P E R T Y
b e in g

s it u a t e d

in

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F LO R ID A ,
IN A C C O R D A N C E W ITH TH E
V O LU N TAR Y
A N N E X A T IO N
P R O V IS IO N S
OF
S E C T IO N
1FIB4*. F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S .
P R O V I D I N G
F O R
S E V E R A B I L IT Y .
C O N F LIC T S ,
A N D E F F E C T I V E O A TE
W H E R E A S , there h o t been tiled
w ith the City Clerk of the City of
Sonlord. Florida, a petition con
tolning Ihe names el Ihe property
owner I in the area described
hoeemefter requesting annexation
to the corporate area ot the C ity of
Se.ilvrd. Peer k m . ond requeuing
to be included therein, and
W H E R E A S , Ihe Pro eorty Ap
p r a lta r at S e m in o le C ou n ty,
F lo rid a , h a y in g c d r ll ll t d lh a t
there are two property owners
Ihe tre e la be orm eied, and that
to ld property owners hove signed
Ihe petition lo r am e n t io n , end
W H E R E A S . It hat bam deter
mined lhat the property described
horeusetter H reasonably compact
and contiguous to m e corporate
area ot the City ot Sanford.
Florida, and II hat further bean
determined that Ihe armeaation ot
told proporly w ill not result In the
creation of on enclave, and
W H E R E A S . Ihe C ity ot U n lo rd .
Florida, it m a potnion lo provide
m u n klp ol t r r v ic r t lo the property
described herein, and me City
C om m iition a f Ihe C lly ot U n lo rd .
Florida, d e im t it In the beat In
1t r a il of Iho C lly ot accept la id
petition ond to onnee to ld
property.
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D B V TH E P E O P L E OF
T H E C IT Y
OF
SAN FO R D .
F L9 R I0 A
SECTIO N I Thai Iho loflowing
described properly tllu e ie d In
Seminole County, Florida, bo ond
the lam e It hereby annesed to and
mode a p a ri at the C lly ot Sanford.
Florida, purtuenf to the voluntary
annotation provisions ot Section
If! 0*4. Florida Statutes
Thai part ot Lot St, Now U p u la .
Plot Book 1. Page tt, lyin g south ot
Country Chib Rood, loot port in
rood, and tubloct t t lo pari last
W e il 1 ch e n s lo re te e v a tia i ol
D o le Rood Eelem ent
The above detcr.bed properly It
further described ot o portion ot
that cortoln property lyin g t o i l of
and t bu lling ihe ire or section of
Country Club Rood and CR atA
llt t h S h eet). t e d properly being
tltw a ftd In S om in olo County,
Florid*
SECTIO N I: That u pjn this
Ordinance becoming effective mo
property owners and any resident
on the properly described herein
th o ll be entitled lo o il Ihe r ig h ii
and privilege! and im m u n illtt ot
ora tram time to tim e granted lo
r t lid t n t t ond property owners ot
Ihe City ot Sonlord. F lor Ida. and at
are further provided In Chapter
t i l . Florida S la lu in . and t h i l l
further be tubfect la the respon
iR sllltiet e l residence or ownership
at may tram lim a to lim a bo
d eterm in ed by Iho g o v e rn in g
authority ot Iho City ot U n tord .
F tor Ida. and the provisions ot it 'd
Choptar in . F lorid a Statures
SECTIO N J: It any taction or
portion ot ■ taction o l this Or
dlrsonct proves to be invalid,
unlawful or u n co m lilu lio n o l. It
th o ll not bo hold to hsvelfdelo or
Impair the validity, force or eft eel
ol any taction or port ot th is or
Omenc*
SECTIO N t That a ll Ordinances
or port! ot Ordinance* in conflict
herewith be ond thd tom e ore
Isoraby repealed
SECTIO N S: That Ihn Or
dinonce shall become etfocltve
Immediately upon lit postage and
adoption
A copy shall bo avoiiabrt ot Iho
O tfk o ot mo City C le rt to r a ll
persons deeding lo eaamitse the
Um e.
A ll p o r tle t In I n la r t t l and
cilitono th o ll hove on opportunity
to bo heard at told hearing
By order ot Ihe City Cem m isakn
o l the City o l U n to rd . F lorida
H N Tamm, i t
City Clork
Publith; August I], 10, IF and
September I, Itgt
D E LT A

IN T H I C IRCU IT C O U R T . IN
A N O FO R S E M IN O L E CO U N TY.
F L O R ID A
CA S E NO. i l IIM CA IS X
A H M A L C O M ond CO R A L O U X
M A L C O M . ms w,l*.
Plain tiffs.
IB.
C H A R L E S W ROSE and J E A N
A N N RO SE, h is w .Ii
Defend anlt
N O T IC B O P S A L !
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
m ot, pursuant lo an order or a
fin a l lo d g m e n t o l fo re clo su re
entered m the above captioned
action. I w ill to ll Iho property
situ a te d in S e m in o le County.
Florida, dtecribed as
LOt I). H I C X O B V C R E E K ,
according lo the plat Ihereol as
recorded in P la t book II. Page I L
P u b lic R e co rd s of Sem m eie
Cum ty. t t a r d a .
and
Lof f. H IC K O R Y C R E E K , ac
cording to me pfal Ihereol e l
recorded m P la t Book I I. Pago I L
P u b lic R e co rd s e l Sem tnolo
County, H o rd e , el public sale, lo
Iho inghotl ond b e ll O dder lor
tosh, ol Iho West Irani door of mo
lem m ote County Courthouse m
U ntord. H o n d o . Semmeie County
on me ll»h day o l Irpr amber, it t i
(S E A L )
Arthur H Beckwith J r
Clack of mo t k c w l Court
B y Susan E Tabor
Deputy Clark
M IL L E B B CO O PER. P A .
Attorneys tor P la m l.ll
P O D ro w n m i
Orlando. H o r d e JKBJ
Publish August t t IF. IN I
DEL W

OF
A
P U B L ltf
HEARING TO C O N SID ER TH E
AO O PTIO N OF A N O R D IN A N C E
BV TH E C IT Y OF S A N FO R D .
F LO R ID A
N otke It hereby given that a
Public Hoarusq w ill be held ot Iho
C om m ,tlion Room In the City H all
in the City ot Sonlord. F lorida , at
T 00o'clock p M on September la,
m i . i o consider the adoption et on
ordinance by the City of Sanford,
Florida, ot toiiow t
O R D IN A N C E NO. IM I
AN O R D IN A N C E OF T H E C IT Y
OF S A N FO R D . F L O R ID A . TO
A N N E X W IT H IN T H E COR
PO R A T E A R E A OF TH E C IT Y
OF SA N FO R O . F LO R ID A . U PO N
A O O P T IO N
OF
S A ID
OR
O IN A N CE. A PO R TIO N OF TH AT
c e r t a in

pro perty

l y in g

BETW EEN COUNTRY CLUB
RO A O A N D CR C iA (1STH
S T R E E T I A N O WEST O F AIR
PORT
B O U L E V A R D ,S A ID
P R O P E R T Y B E IN G S IT U A T E D
IN
S E M IN O L E
COUNTY,
F L O R I D A . IN A C C O R D A N C E
WITH THE V O L U N T A R Y AN
N E R A T IO N P R O V IS IO N S OF
S E C T IO N 111 g tt. F L O R I D A
STA TU TES . P R O V ID IN O FO R
S E V E R A B L lT V . C O N F L I C T S
AN D E F F E C T I V E O A TE
W H E R E A S , there hat been Hied
with ihe City Clerk of the City of
Sonlord, Florida. 0 petition con
to .rung the name ol Iho property
o w n tr In th e a rea d e s crib e d
hertm ofler requesting onneeolion
lo Ihe torpor ole area or Iho C lly of
U n lo rd . and
W H E R E A S , Iho P ro p e rly
Appraiser or U m in o le County.
F lo rid a , h a v in g c F M lfio d ih e i
in e rt It one properly owner In the
area lo bo armored, and mot told
properly owner hot signed the
petition lor anneeation. and
W H E R E A S , it hot been deter
mined lh a l the properly d r ie r .bed
her m e tie r it reasonably compact
and contiguous It the corporate
area of iho City or U n lo rd .
Florida, and •! hat further been
determined lh a l Ihe a m e ie lk n ol
sa d properly w ill not rotutl us Iho
creation of an tn c itv e . and
WME R EAS, Ihe C Hy of Sonlord.
Florida, it m a position lo provide
m unicipal t e r v le ft lo Iho property
described herein, and the City
Commission ea mo C lly of Sanford.
F lor do. deems It in Iho b a il m
Itresl o l Iho C lly of a cc rp i said
pelIIIon and la in n e r te ld
property
NOW. T H E R E F O R E . B E IT
E N A C T E D B Y TH E P E O P L E OF
THE C IT Y
OF
SAN FO R O ,
F LO R ID A
SECTION I Thai Iho following
described properly situated In
Seminole County, Florida, bo ond
•he tome it hereby tnnoeed lo and
m adt a part of the C lly ef U n lo rd .
Florida, pursuant to fha voluntary
annaraiion provisions of Section
i n Baa. Florida S io iu ttt
The Northerly a ll leer or me
following described properly
Beginning IF* leaf W e ll o l the
SE corner ol Section St. Township
It S. Range M E , run N orm l l ' t
chains. W e ll 114 le ft. S IT";
chamt. E l i t Itef la potnl of
beginning
The above described properly it
further described t t o portion of
m ol certain r*opartr lying bel
ween Country Club Rood and CR
I M A tis ih S lr t e ll and watt of
A irp o rt R o u le v e v d i t a id p ro p e rty

being situated m Seminole County,
Florida
- *
SECTIO N 1
Thai upon m is
Ordinance becoming efloctlvq Iho
proporly owners and any resident
on me properly described harem
shall be entitled W oil Ihe rlp h is
and privileges ond im m unities as
ore from lim e lo llm t granted Ig
residents and properly owners of
Iho City of Sonlord. Florida, and os
are further provided In Chapter
H I , Florida S la lu lfi, and shall
further be aublact lo Iho respon
lib ilille t o l residenct or ownership
os may (ram tim e lo lim e be
determ in ed by lh a g o v e rn in g
authority of m e City of U n to rd .
Florida, and m e previsions o l said
Chapter 1)1, F lorida Slatulas
SECTIO N 1 II any section or
portion ot o section of m is Or
dmence proves lo be invalid,
unlawful, or unconstitutional, il
snail no! be held lo Invalidate or
impair Ihe validity, force or effect
uf any seel ion or port ot th is or
dmence
SECTIO N a Thai oil Ordinances
or parts of OrOmancat m conflict
herewith be and lha sam e are
hereby repealed
SECTIO N S
That this Or
dinanct m a ll become effective
im m ediately « on its passage and
adoption
A copy shall be available ot the
O ffk* of Iho C lly C le rk lo r a ll
persons desiring i« n o m in e iho
same
A ll p a r tie s , in In lo re sl and
cdllens shall hove an opportunity
lo bo hoard ol u i d hearing
By order of the City Comm,talon
of Iho C ily Of Sanford, F lo rid a
MN T amiss. Jr
City Clark
Publish August II. K . IF and
September ), n i l

DEL rs
IN T H B
C IB C U IT C O U R T ,
B IO H T IIN T M
JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
AND
FO R
S B M IN O L t CO U N TY. F LO R ID A .
CASE NO II li M C A g a - l
IN R l i T H I M A R R I A O I O P
K A R E N I STO KES.
P rlllio n rr W ilt,
and
C H A R L E S R STO KES.
Respondent Husband
N O T IC B O P ACTIO N
TO
C H A R L E S ! STO KES, whose
Iasi known agorest and residence
was TH E ST A T E OP G E O R G IA
YO U
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IP IE D lh a l an action lo r
dissolution of m ontage h o t been
tiled against, you In lha C ircu it
Court of Sam inoH County. F d r d a .
C a u N o l l I W C A M E. ond you
era required lo Servo 0 copy ol
your written defenses, il any. to it
on JA C K T B R ID G E S . E S Q U IR E ,
ot C L E V E L A N D E B R ID G E S .
Post O H k t Drawer 2. Sanford.
H o rd e , JIFFS, on or before Sept
10. IN I. and III! the original with
Iho Clark ot this Court either
before seeve on Petitioner's A l
lornoy. or irem edial sly ih tre e lta r,
otherwise a default and ultim ata
lodgment w ill M aniseed ogo dat
you tor the robot demanded m Iho
Pet it o n
W ITNESS m y hand and lh a soot
of m u Court on this la th day ef
August. A D , IN I
A R T H U R H. B E C K W IT H JR
Clerk of iho Ctrcutl Court
By C a rrie t Bi-onner
Deputy Clerk
Publish August IF. September L
IB. IF. I N I
O CLUI

IN I H E CO U N TY C O U R T FO R
S E M IN O L E CO U N TY. P L
S U M M A R Y C LA IM S D IVISIO N
CASE NO. IM 4 IS -S P B J
S A N F O R O
A I R P O R T
authority
ptom titt,

rt

IN T E R N A T IO N A L
INC

a ir s h ip s

Defendant
N O T IC E O P S A L E
N O TICE IS H E R E B Y G I V E N
that I V undersigned. A rth u r H
Beckwith, J r , Clerk t* the Court,
Semesolo County. F lorida , w ill on
t V IRh day o l September, IN I . ot
It A M . at I V w n t Irani door of
the Seminole County Courthouse.
U n tord. F tor too. after tor u&gt; eend
sell a l public outcry lo I V highest
and best bidder tor cosh, t v
fo llo w in g d escrib e d p e rso n a l
properly located a l Sanford A ir
port. U n fo rd . Seminole County.
H ereto, lo w ,I
I M V fH T O O r OF B U IL D IN G I f!
i n t e r n a t i o n a l a ir s h ip s in c

SOUTH SID E
Three 1 phase motor Sewing
Machine
Singer W NIW10J
a- * II Work Table. Laym a
III C on ic F ru ttru m P a tte rn
machine and table
II) TM O - aaiG - OMR FT C
Montgomery Ward Law n M ower
with spare blade
III Burner Work stand
III F ire Eitin g un h se
III IF A l FHCMontgom ery w a rd
Atr conditioner unit — window
111 Door curtain
(III Window curtain
II) IS sect alum inum m ast bool
III 0* sect alum inum m ast hnat
III push brooms
III garbaqe con with garbage
III R o lls Gaslight fabric ap
p ro ilm a te ly 100 No &gt;rolt 44’* s T
IN ) Robs assorted scrap fabric
III ro lls 1" nylon strap 100 yd
roll
J10 yds I ' V gas ta o r k l a v
10010 41" nylon fabric partial
rolls
t i l r tluorrtcant light fu tu re s
(I) paint tra y s k m iscellaneous
rollers
NORTH SIDE
III &gt; i a Laundry ham per on
coasters
t i l l Slacks red. white A blue cut
le o rK sleeked In hamper
Beth,eem Area
III Shp. |cy lin d e r. II cubic tt
minute *0 gallon lank
S hp. J phase FOOV motor
III S in k s I" water Irop
( t l R1 Simpson Grom et set loot
powered
II) I co m p a rtm e n t c lo th in g
locker
(II Work labia 14" a JO" with
drawers
III Over slutted choirs
III Homemade coffee table
III P ll* ca b in et I I " a 1 4"
standard
III U t k balloon patterns 1
computer lope
H I Block co u c h '
(II O ttic tc h a if L Desk set — ton
1 brown
III SOOO B TU a p p ro u lm o le ly
toov A C
No work
II) 10 * FI Work Table w m elt
111 la * a l w ork Table w m e lt
(II S lo c k co m p u ter p r in t ou t
sheets
111 a* a I Homemade bed w ith r
■ I p e c* of foam rubber
H I garbage can
II) mop
(I) Portable d e h u m id ille r
(I) to t u la U s r t spray gun
i l l O tiiiim p e t e ll A Mowed *"
OiOmesee CRT
H i Adapter A note lor S D Loo
Wetoer IT 101
i i ) n o Amp r m a c o c s o
le e Welder
(II U niv H igh irtgu en cy A R C
iie b ilire r IS' coble
(It Argon cylinder
III la h r w eather r e c e iv e r
•Tucker)
(I) Respirator fpam tl
(I) Pneu Nibbler
111 Pneu D r ill
II) Pneu Rivet gun
(11 Bucking M r s
lis t C ie co s a tsi t i n s
III S im p son l i e " c y l head
lem peralure gouge
III Simpson SO M icro am p 1"
dial DC mefer
I t e ll cylin der v e d lam p gauge
1' With tw itching e c e n t o r it t lo r a
cylinders
III R ebuill airspeed Indicator
with J ' i " d a l - X to I X mph
III Custom b u illlt t l hand SJ &gt; JJ
negy Prop
III U o r s Torque wrench
III set M e k o sheari
111 Ham m ers
III left aircraft shears
, H I right e k t r a lt sheers
III boa v * hot* clam ps
1 pr welders glevel
III 4" belt lander t X V II
amps I Shop m ale!
I l l I t " Variable speed B lock A
Decker d rill
II) Ingersell Rand No 1104
Pneu d r ill
III Snap on Torque wrench No
H i l l lb
&lt;11 B H O ib cable Tension meter
t l ) F ilt e r
R e g u la to r
o ile r
assembly tor Pneu toots
(II P a rtia l airdrom e M a n a t
compitf#
III Un.m al S L . Com bine!ion
D rill P ra ts A lain* with accrete
(11 A ircra ft Gel ceil bat ter lo t
with charger
(II Cam bridge Variometer
III w e lt teerie cutlee
III Flou r drafting labia lam p
III Y a rd d ia lin g mac rime case
III SF- • Fa- drafting table
II) Blue print stand (S shelf!)
(1) to " t FT' Homemade la b le t
III Montgomery W ard A C 140 V
II 000 B T U approi
II) U lllily Table la " • JO"
sh e ik
III Retrigeretor ( W lio rd l
I D H a l o lit* d lia o m a ch in e
(a*"l
(I) Electrotus Tank Veccuum
cleaner
II) Sheet OJS Alum *■ a •
III Shod OJS Alum 4' a 4'
It) M odified I cyl V W enguso
w&gt;lh m g 'n e components porttolty
assembled wills engesd w ork Wend
H I Lloyds am Im portable r
I l i t miscellaneous d r iftin g
utani.H (tquorot. tr long tot I
H I droning chair
(It 14 m ilk Hoot
IF) u w hors el
Components tor &gt; a ir s h ip
prestu rlia h on tyslem p a rtia lly
M u m b le d on portable w ork table
H I Classroom desk (tor chief
mg./teer I
O l F k * eatinguilfw r
Over hoed
IF l ) V l" D a OJS eM t A lu m
tutang I P long
(I) lle -0 ■ &lt;11 M i l A lu m
tubrno I P long
III) 1 0 i
I M eMI A lu m
tubing I P long
14) to "0 40*1 Alum tubing t r
tong
j
141 S 1*'0*041 A lum tubing I P
twig
111 to " 0 SO*I Atom tubing I P
tong
(() I " a I " a t%" angle Ida I
Alum angle IP

37 In v e slm en l O p p o rtu n itie s

Legal Notice

CLASSIFIED ADS

111 Hy" II tto" 1 to" ongte Mat
Alum angle IP
tat Rons a- a r ■ o n snoot
Atom toJa
( I I J hp JJOV C o m p re sso r
motor
111 50 sections »ir hot*
H I M " • S4" Plyw ood i g labto
tor A irsh ip
(1) to " a l
a to " Marks*
plywood
III M ilk stool
(41 Fly* shaft Storage reck II a
J*
III O rlll prtss I* speed &gt;e "
chuck bench type to hp motor
110V with tobte
H I garbage con
H I 14" a la*’ q j t " F k * H U S
welding le b lt
(II J*" a to" « X " Plywood
work labi* with 4" Sears v&gt;te
III 14" a !4" Hoar plan
H I A lr c o A C DC H e llw e ld e r
with Tig Torch, regulator 4 Argon
bottle
III Seers A C — u m e as other
Itite t
O l Welding helmets
H I 11" C r e llt m a n ban d saw
•nm m etal cutting speed reducer
III Spor* I m Argon cylin der
H I Sears red ial a rm taw J K V .
Rotary planer, disc u n d e r I P ’
blade
H I Trash can
It) Plywood w o rt tabl* la " a
*4" I 14"
1 gallon m itt paints A thm nort
H I P a w l Irty
SO Ib. m ite angle ken
(SI »" " C clomps
(41 ste e l IP g a llo n propan e
cylinder*
111 Atom 10 gallon P r e p a v
cylinders
O l 14" a la " w ork tobies
plywood
H i End taai*
I Sel blow er hou sin g plug
components
(41 P ' ■ 4" I I boards
III IHO to Revolving airsh ip
cabin constructing i g w ith a
mechen.coi level tacks
111 p a ces 1" 0 a OH 4 0 0 steel
lubmg Ip- .
III P iet* O il a J*" • FP'
Stainless Heel Meet
(II Piece 0141 a to " a ad"
Ham lets ile a l sheet
III p tfta OHIO" a &gt;*" stetruest
steel sheet
( I l to " a 40" Piece form ica
H I P k c e to 1 a- a r M arin e
plywood
III Piece to ■ a- a 0' Com
m erciol plywood
H I Breadboard A .rsh ip control
surface pneu m alic Actuator Cervo
ir t le m
(II ro ll IIOO lb I oaporimerstel
[lo in (p la it k I — nam e unknown,
type unknown
O l S n e ttl 4' 1 r ■ I " U r o th a v
Foam
(II A irsh ip Cabin If omowgrk —
pert lolly comp le ft
A pproi lemiety F p‘ toll
*0” wide
IT " tong
Constructed at I K Ib Alu m in u m
tubing
(111 Window curtains
111 Wooden folding chair*
pur m in i lq F in a l Judgmaof on
lered in Iho above styled pending
ca rte
W ITN ES S my hand and I V tael
ol u td Court m is la m day at
August, I N I
IS E A L I
A R T H U R H R E C K W IT H , JR
Clare ot me Court
•y: B iiia q a tn KHiusger
Deputy Clem
Publish Augutl IF A September L
IN I
DEL IK

IN T H I CIR C U IT C O U R T FO R
M M I N O L B CO UNTY. F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E DIVISION
F ile Nuns M r I1-4B4-CP
DtvHiea
IN R E 1 E S T A T E OF
JESS A R T H U R R I L E Y JR .,
Deceased
NOTICE O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L PER SO N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
O EM ANO S
AGAINST TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
AND A L L O T H ER P E R S O N S
IN T E R E S T E D i n T H E E S T A T B :
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
n o t if ie d
lh a l
th *
id
minis tr el Ian of Its* eslete at JE S S
A R T H U R R I L E Y JR , deceased.
F ile Number II 4 M C P . It pending
• V C ircu it Court tor Urnm oto
County, Florida. Probate Division.
I V address ot w h k h 1s Srm m oie
County C o u rlh a u tt. S a n la rd .
F lo rid * IITFI. Th* p e r M n o l
representative ef me oefat* It
M A R Y R. R I L E Y , svhos* address
it t i l Bradshaw D rive, Sanford
Florida HFF1 The v m * and
a ddress
ot
Iho
pe rso n a l
representative's attorney or* sol
•arm below
A ll person* having cla im s or
demands again*I m* r t i a it ore
rtq u ira d ,
W IT H IN
THREE
MONTHS F R O M T H E D A T E O F
THE F IR S T P U B L IC A T IO N OF
THIS N O TICE, to III* with t v
clerk ef I V eoovo court * srrlffws
tlatemesd of any cla im o r demand
they may hove Each cla im mus*
M in writing ond must indicate I V
b a in lo r Iho claim . Iho nam e and
address o ft V u r d i l or or h it agoni
or anonsoy, and the amount
claim ed II Ihe cla im It nof yet
due. m* del* when it w ill become
due shall M title d II m * cla im is
corstmgont or unHgutdatod. I V
nature of I V uncertainly shall be
tia trd II i v claim to secured. 1v
security M a ll be described T V
claim ant t v t l dal Ivor iid lk M f it
ca p u t ot I V claim 1* m * clo rk to
mebto m# clerk to m olt a m copy
to ooch poeienel roprooonlatlv*.
A ll persons infer at tod In I V
estate to whom * copy of IBM
H o ik * ef A dm inistration ho* Boon
m ailed ora required. W ITH IN
THREE M O NTH! FR O M TH*
DATE
OF
THB
F IR S T
P U B LIC A T IO N
OP
T H IS
N O TICE, to t v any ebfecnent
in*y m ay hay* l V I chollonqa t V
validity *1 I V decadent's w ilt, t v
q u titfic o tto n i o l th* p o rto n a i
representative, or I V venue ar
Iw risPciion of m* court
A L L C LA IM S . O E M A N O S . A N D
O B JEC T IO N S NOT SO F I L E D
W IL L I E F O B E V E E E A R R E D
Del* ot t v lies* p u M ko lto n *4
v s N o fk * at Adm inistration
August IF. t t t l
t M ott R Bitoy
A s Personal R e p rfta n ttiiv *
of I V E s la ls of
JES S A R T H U R R I L E Y JR.
D t C M lt g
A T T O R N E Y FO E P E R S O N A L
R E P R E S E N T A T IV E :
THOMAS A. S P E I B
Of S P E E R A S P E E R , F A .
P O B01 1U4
U n tord, F lo rid * JIFF)
lotophone; (M i) S I BOS I
Pubflsh August IF. A Upeowsbor A
to ll
O I L I lf

i
,Tr.* - -S f JAt v’

u,

Seminole

Orlando-Winter Park

322-2611

II you aren't using your poof
tebi*. take * cue. end sett &gt;t
with e Herald tie s s ifie d act
COM to l J i l l

831-9993

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

RATES

I llmt
!»c b
HOURS
S CPfSMCVtlvB times 50c S
7 consecutive times
I 00 A M - S:M P M
M O N D AY Itiru F R ID A Y II cinMCtitlvB times . 17c a
SA T U R D A Y f

E tp m m c e d O ra l E s io lr In .a s
tor o flrrs Jo*nt P t r t k iM t k m
to sm ell investors l* * * 4SF

Noon

ling
lint
Oc
lino

W— Room s
S A M OSD
Rees w kly A
monthly rates U til i v
K it
too Oak M u tts 141 FH1

SI N M in im u m
’ ] L in t s M in im u m

Mev* * room to rent* le t a
classified ad l - V a Im a re tor
you'

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

Lg airy turn shed M a id service,
wkly rm ta l a .a I now a l l
Palm etto to lto a i

Sunday - Noon Friday

W—HilpWanNd

*—Personals

RN OR LPN

W HY BE L O N E L Y ! W rit* "G e t
A M a le " Dating Servlet A ll
ages P 0 Bo k MFI. Clear
water. FI. IMIB

t i l t v 111 Shift F u ll tim e
A pp ly In person S o n lo rd
Nursing Convalescent Center.
tSO MtUenville Ay*

Lonely Clff A lla n Singles
Meef Christian Stogies &lt;n your
' ere* W fIf* U u lh a rn C h ristia n
Singles Club. P O B ox 1111
Sum merville, S. C. 1*4*1 *r
t a ll 1 *01*11 Wto I f m
Lo n ely . Write "B rin g in g Pebpi*
Together Deling S e r v k e l" A ll
ages A Senior C illlw s t P .0
u o i. wusfot n e v u s,F I* . JUOf

G y m n a s t ic s ,
s w im m in g ,
structured activities School
P k k up available A ll or port
of I V doy In m y homo U J

tort_______________

Babysitting In m y V m o L o tt *4
lev*, moots, doy hours only
I ret l » I0U
SPUR OF T H E M O M E N T
■a b y s i t t i n g
h i tto*

f-Good Things
To E*t
11

■ 1

f

•

Sweet Potatoes
SO lb b oiW S O
4 lb* tor II 00
O ih t r F i r m F r t t h P ro d u c t.

W* Tf kt Food Stf mps
LEROY FARMS
SR 44
Wfltson'iOWFfrm
Cooking Pears — I l l s
per
bushel You pick H 4 Sum m it
to. L O U Helen IW4) 7J» IFJI

il—Instructions
Tennis in tfru e tta — U S P T A.
Certified Group or P rlv o la
lessors Children * sp ecia lly
Ooug M o lkso w siu
111 IMF
H A N N A M U S IC
AtoAk lessons piano, G u llo r,
fuss hen I*
m tK i
_

AVO N R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S
T V P o ri TI me Career
*aa J B F t - Collect SSlIFOa

CAU

Evening Hours

Cnl 322-2611

Elfley ceunlry livingT ^ Bdrm
Apfs
O ly m p ic s i
r a il.
Shenandeeh V illage Open S I.

C IR C U L A T IO N D E P T ,

turn*

Equipm entO prrotor Iv
toorllng salary SltO w bly gm
grebe and I yrs experience,
operating V a r y construction
•qu tpm en l
M u s t p o sse ss
t ip t r f t n c t
in
o p e ra tin g
d ra g lin e end n ave v a lid
F lo rid a C h t u llu t r lic e n s e
A p p ly
S v m iv l*
C o u n ty
Pereonnol. C o u rlh o u l* . N
Perk A te , Sanlard by August
IS. IN I Applications accepted
Monday thru Frid ay I M a m.
till Noon Equal Opportiasity
Em ployer. M F. M V.
E V E R Y D A Y IS B A R G A IN
D A Y IN T H E W AN T A D S J i t
I t l l or 1)1 m i
E X E C U T IV E D IR E C T O R
Responsible tor adm inistration
ot a ll pntsas ot p u b lk housing
in c lu d in g p la n n in g , t ls c a l
management, supervision. Co
ordination of aeo conventional
u n ite. Im plem ent p o lic ie s
adopted by liv e m e m b e r
board Manaorm enf otsporl
enc* College degree prefer
red. P H M ce rtificate r*
quired within I V ll r t l year,
lam .tartly with governm ent
regulations helpful Salary no
goliabi* Sand resume 10 p 0.
V i K IS. U n tord . F la J2F7I
Th# weather s perfect lo r a
b a c k y a rd
te l*
—
s e ll
everything lest with a w ant ad
C a ii u i m i or m te n
P a rt lim e m a n ic u ris t lo r
p ro g rritir* salon In L a ke
M a ry 111 *SII. Oves 114*71)
P e ri lim e van d river
l o a n ■ wee*,
t l IS me v u r . is a also

*

I head someone with large
mower to mow overgrown
yard to) a IF) After F

Needed - rep torsi.ft operator
*t yard man Apply G ator
Culvert C * . Sanford A i r v r t

322-2611

Setuftly guard lor nights A
wees ends Aooly at CoOi* Boat
Co. IM Silver Lake Rd.
U n tord

C IR C U LA T IO N D E P T

E v e n i n g l le m ld
Hoy Kids: Looting tor on ostra
dollar f A sa M om A Dad to tot
you hoy* a c la s s if ie d ad
ta re *o sal*
I P H I I ? port tim e, *1 1 port
tim e Apply L ik o v io w N ursing
[ a n te r.S H E R s q
l ontpyg.

to,

TIREDT
Of Waiting GaiT
Tim* On Fruitless
InftrvltwiT
RELAXI
Let us Place rtu In I V lo b or
C a rte r you a r t w o n tin g
Hero* lu l l a I v at our
list Msgs
IN S U R A N C E S E C R E T A R IE S
Good Opportiauly
EL E C T R IC IA N S

U v o ro l Openings

*

O F P IC E T R A IN E E S
Heads same typing
C A S H IE R S

PortavFullllm r
COOKS

LO W LO W F B I - T E R M S
tttl FRENCH
m ill*

lo g d Notice
N O TICE U N O E B F IC TITIO U S
N A M E LAW
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y O IV E N
lhal i v under!Ignad. d o tk ln g to’
wig age ks busrsett under t V
fictitious v m t t l A M E R I C A N
G E M A F F R A I I C R S Ot Altam onte
MafL Ns I V CRy *1 A tttm o n l*
S prin gs. F lo rid * . Iftton d l to
rtg k to r I V U ld nemo w ills I V
Clerk to t V C u t * * Court *1
U rn mow County. F tor Ido
Doted to Alexandria. V A , tM*
IFib d o r to July Stool.
K A Y JE W E L E R S , IN C
E V : M R . levlngton,
F H E S IO E N T
B Y : Alton* Soar*,
SECRETARY
PuBfltot: Augsnt U . K . 17. Sop
IonA t r A m i
DEL n

U n tord — I bdrm » den.
c e re m lc
b a th ,
lu r n lt u r o
available, adults, t i l s m o 1
sat i n i
F R O M I ISO
1 • * &lt; " « " ' * 0 '* A v a ila b le
-"R u n by Appt O n', )( ( | }gn
. Bdrm Apt) from m i I A r t
Bdrm also oven Pool, tennis
court w s w ngv

DELTONA VILLAS
(11 Carr ibean St., Oytton*. 1 m il*
otl I * 1 bdrm. 1 B. adult s oW y.
appliances A laundry I acuities
furnished. C H A A . WW Car
paling, monthly rent from
il*7 F o rlu rth a r .n to ca ll DOS)
n i* s * t
M ariner's V illage on L a ke Ada S
bdrm Irom ITIO, 1 b d rm from
SFH Located IF 11 lust South
&lt;* A irport Bivd m Sentord A ll
Adults 111 UFO
C tfJ tF tt
a P k JIT
F a m ily A A d u llt
Pools id* } Bdrm*
Cove Apts

in F*gO.

M E t lH
s e c tU n .
M a ste r’ s
Open on

J 1•A p a rt m e n ti Fum tshto d
I bdrm. stove A ty in g , no pets
IM •&gt; •
»F® sac a l l
Palmetto Ave . 1111*41
a room apt ID * m o «
S lot Deposit Pets O K
UF s u e
U n tord 1 Bdfm , Kids. Pets (too
Down | K ) M o U* FIDO
SAV ON R B N T A L S ■ ■ A L T OR
S A N F O R D - I r m . s ir . u til Inc .
1100 dn. tu g m o ) K IIOO
SA VO N R EN TALSREALTO R
Furnished apartments lor Senior
Cltliens i l l Palm etto A v t . J.
Cowan No phone ta ils
SANF P K A V E . - I bdrm . tpl.
1X 0 V . SIIS mo I K n a a
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
Large, nice, water furnished
Adults v pets S its mo SISO
Deposit 111 French A v * to l
M i l or a n a*SI
Completely turn I bdrm ept
Hardwood rigors, t Replace,
no pets t m m g ♦ |}00 sec

P M waitresses. Experienced in
l l v dining Apply ks person
M onde, thru F rld ey l a p m
Deltona Inn Deltona

t

Child Car* Teacher 3 p m * p m
M thru F, f ye degree
required U l t U a
Receptionist Switchboard
operator far m anufacturing
Co located in Sanford M ust
h e re neat op p o o ra n c* A
plea sa n t p e rso n a lity a lo n g
with good typing skill* C o ll
H I ISeg tor tppt
Recrptianjsl Switchboard oper
a*or lor m anufacturing C o
toeatod ks U n tord M in t i i i m
v a t appea/anct A p ira ta n i
p t'S o v i.ty along with good
typing skill* C a ll to l ISad lor

II—Situation Wanted
WWW do general housework,
cleaning or baby sittin g in
your homo by the hour In t v
S on lord ore*
H o v o own
transport of ion C o ll between a
and g p m I K FSSi

up lo S * H r.

AAA EMPLOYMENT
WE'RE WORKING
LET US WORK
FOR YOU

M r tlb n v lli*
Tree#
A p fs
Spacicus. modern 1 B drm . 1
Beth apt
C a rp e te d , k it
equipped,
CHBA
Near
hosptet A lake A dults, no
pels siFo j n n s i

RN F u ll Tim* F I Shift. A p p ly at
Lakevtew Nursing Center t l*
E. in d S I , Sentord__________

US

bookkeepers

W« ihavt n p ir im c n li lo r «nf
Jun* P o r|fg » M if v
H titto r 3271471

HouHy Woge plus Bonus

Needed - Assistant manager,
Super market etperience Also
slock men Apply Food Barn.
l!fh to A Perk Av* , U n to rd

•O Y S IG U U S
A C S 13-17
L A IN EXTRA $$
AFTER SCHOOL

tt-Aptrtmfnh
_____Unfurnished_____

f r per ranted Cooks o il M i l l s ,
needed F o s llr * R e s ta u ra n t
Hw y 11 PI Sanford

I f - H t t o W M f T lB d

1 Steeping rooms Reasonable
Meals negotiable Ideal lo r
Senior C H iie n or C o llr g t
Student la k r V a r y A r ta H I
te n

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS

Evening Herald

A—Child Care

■■■—

C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
BOARDS A R E
GREAT
C LA S S IF IE D
ADS
ARE
EVEN BETTER

Bdrm with Balcony
Now
tuemtur*. Cent HA, W a ll to
W all ca rp e l co n v e n ie n t lo
Downtown m i mo to ) FFOF
or 1)1 1**)

la k e M ary Clean turn
R e lia b le M a n o n ly
children, pels, to) m o

Apartment tor rent 1 X 0
per month 1st
_______ A lest M l tart________
Looking Far 0 N m H orn e t —
Chock t v Wont Ads tor houses
c* every m e and price

JIA-Duplexes
LO N G W O O D LK F R N T - ) rm .
kids, tto*On. S IM mo to* FXO
s a v -o n r i n t a l i b e a l t o r

Chrptta tor rant. 1 bdrm .
I B, Carpeting, appliances
________C a n to ) isge
For rent — ) bdrm. I B new
O uplei. Sanford area, a ll *(*&gt;!.
in sid e u til, w w ash er d r y e r
hookup Call O rlando *)* 4144
or K S *FN eves

H H Jw In m

Opportunities
Two questions W ill you be
Insane tolly Independent In 1 to
S sea rst Aye you paid what
you or* w orth! 11 not c a ll M l

_______________

B E IN D E PEN D EN T
I «*e« sever*1 people to se rv ic e
cu sto m ers
lo c a lly
tor
re g u la b le w h olesale r e t a il
business W ert Irtm home
Am bition mof* im portant than
r ip e r tone* Good earning*
Eactflessl potential, C o ll SI*

CAN YOU SUL?
E i t r t m t t y p ro llla B I* d ire c t
to tte ry
d i s t r ib u t o r s h ip
o e o lle b l*
w ith
n o ilM t o l
company lo r guoldiod ap
p fk a n ri ideal lo r poapto with
ouoct solos tmpoetone* and lo r
POOPI* In Iho in s u la tio n ,
v a t I V and O k tond.ttoning,
roof m a t t end energy related
busin ess Add t* r a n t in g
bus moss o r start buim rs* port
I N v and w nrt into tuH llwso
Foslrst growing industry Ml
I V cosaslru. C o ll I *00 l i t M S4
tor tro* iitaraiwr*.

S A N FO B O - I bdrm . carport,
kids. SLS wk U f FXO
BAV-OW R B N T A L S R E A L T O R
1 bdrm. ) ( » a i Ridgewood
Av*. K it. turn , u n m o e d tp
__ Ho prts n s I FI) eves

C Houm

O n iu m SfiN d

For rant — nice rot irtm ant hem *
w ith en closed g a ra g e in
d e lig h tfu l D e le r *
A ls o 1
Idem. ) 1 m obile hom e Ns
Moodowto* By t v B lu e r F o u r
T m rv s R u t t y Inc B roker
S U t lM

tCONVENIENC[
STORE

CASHIERS
Good u to ry . n o ip iio it t o t w 1
week po&gt;d vacation tv o ry A
m onths
Eaponenc*
not
n ece ssa ry
F o r in te r v ie w
phone the manager a t :
A irport Bled
Cassef Berry
Celery As*.
Lake Mary

1) 1*111
1X-1TIS
in o iu

in

,
» •

r

. S \ P s &gt; *w

It 1

r t . - . 'v . V . '* : .
«
Jt

Apf
No

■

bus

�I I

32-Houses Unfurnished
C tU fftw ry ) txSrm. ,n&gt;
m ftev U tf. CM A. farn i up*.
io cifion N o pen, vacant, 1U1
mo . le a tt, advance, depet t
2220100

41— H ouses

LANDLORDS

333-7133

Harold Hall

) Br. in G round Pool Country
Club M a n o r Sanford I m i d
1)50 m o HI. m i «nd iioo
Deposit *4f M X
D rBery Cl«an ) Bdrm . ) Bain
house
Cent H A . C a rp e t.
R efrigerator. Stove C io it t g i
I end II V} o il D irksen D r (1M
mo HI end lost 110* Sec Drp
NS II* A ll* Only resporvb ie
Oertom app ly
S A N FO R D — | bdrm . parch,
A&lt;H. pot*. m s m o ) ) f 1300
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

REALTY, INC.
REALTOR

S*nlord - 4 bdrm , I ' j B. fenced
y ir d . c o n v e n ie n t lo c it lo n ,
available Sepi I ) ) ) 13)1
N u r ly N r * 1 Bdrm , Deltona
Country Sotting w D Inti IMS
w di*c, SOS 44t
I
) bdrm . 3 B w in
dou b lf c o rg o ro g o .ln
__ Deltona C o ll 5)4 Its?

BATEMAN R E A L T Y '
L ie R o il E m i t Broker
IM S Sonlord Avo
3101 Sum m erlin I l l s * USD drp
Owner

322-7643

J J — H ouses F u rn ish ed
Rtw reetonty A 3 bedroom cider
Nome w ith large liv in g and
fam ily room s, eat in AtfcNen,
front porch, and carport. Attic
fan Located near grocery,
laundrom at, and restaurant
Owner m aintains yard Other
re n te rs on p ro p e rty are
retired W rite Bov No 112* t o
The Evening H erald P Q Bon
US7e Sanford. F la 27771.
S A N FO R D - cory cottage, air,
Aids, no dep . 077S 129 7700
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

J4 —M o b ile H om es
G E N E V A — Seer oo. 1 bdrm , oir.
k id l. polo. USO DO 3300
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

37—B u sin e ss P ro p e rty

O R A N G E C IT Y
13 Y3. 1000 tq
II b u o ln cto co nd o
New,
b e iu lilu l.I n W hispering Pineo
io*4i tor proloooionjl oil it oo
or rootouronl (M S) 101 l*)4

Lorgo Irom o hom o ut L ok o Mery
cm beoullful wooded ocro I
bdrm. F lo r m o r 41h bdrm . t'y
B. C H A , c e r p o l. dro p o t,
gerogo. co rp o rl II* too 111
1)14

THE p r i c e IS R IG H T ! 1 bdrm
* brick F ire piece. Dining Rm.
wood llo o rt lorgo tcreonod
perch ♦ leitced yord in greet
ereo lo r only lie.M O II
PR IC E D TO S E L L ! R e tie o n Af
with greet growth potm tiei In
m id d le
of
m ushro om ing
downtown butm ottot. Super
le r m ii i m .m o i i
P R IC E D B E L O W M 1 R K E T I )
bdrm C B home only 1 y rt old
■n pood neighborhood, priced
thoutendt le tt then m orbel lor
e ovlch tolo UnNoord t l ol
U l. t p g il
C O M P A R E P R IC E S ! Ore* IN I
tq If In IfUt 4 bdrm , 1 both w Ig
F u n Rm , D ining Rm , big
tcreoned porch, Cen hoel 0
new ree l I Owner w ill help w
Hut to ty etw m p H e n Only
t u . e e t ii

C A L L 333-5774
NOw 1 bdrm . 1 8 heme in
DeBery C H A A . corpoi. eppi,
ottum o m lq e Johnny W elter
Reel E tte te Inc Brewer 111
MSI, otte r I: Mg I X )
Algor end Pond R e o iiy Inc
1M W Loko M e ry Bled
Properly Menogom ent 11) 1M1

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
R E A L T O R . M LS
1)01 S Franc It
Saita a
Sanford

24 HOUR m 322-9283
K js if
\\v\\. r : v r v n -

OH ice S p ec,
For L o o t,

i:

o s 3m
SANYO D
3SX tq II. It Induttrlel or
Com m orclol B uilding on 13 01
10® ft In oNIco tpoco Coll
111 SSIO o r BS4 4141
Com m ercial BuildmQ tor rent
IWO tq n M X mo ,
HI t loot m 1411
C lo n llit d o at oorvo m o buying A
tolling com m um iy every dey
Rood A u to mom often

331-0041

M LS

"T H E O I K S " of Sonford 4 Br,
I S ■ F P L , e ll emenil.ee, pool,
lenntt UIS.MO
C O N V E N IE N T Neighborhood )
Bd. I S B. Fenced, u tility rm
Coed t ie r ter tlt.tg g
1SS U M E M T O E 1 B drm . 1 B M
Sonera Lge r m t . eel in eiick.
meny ca tro t. l i t . MO
NOT M A N Y L E F T Ot Ihlt peic* I
• d im . t B Lge d elete, big
yord. H i m

4 1 - -H ouses

I D '. 0 0 4 1

JUKI

REALT O B

A.JRr hre. 11)4*1) end 111 1154

w « « e u irr
' Reg R e el E tie to Brofei
111 1431
Bog n u t o .
N EW L IS T IN G 1414 E lm Avo.
Sim ply lovely T h l f l Bdrm
homo h o t C ontrol H A A end
screened porch Greet neigh
bur hood too Paetible owner
financing MS.too
_

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
EeceU tnl But moot opportunity
m good locollon Compioto
sloe* included m m u prico of
UNO
1S44S. French 131 t i l l
A fter H oofs: M t t N I . m i n t
By owner — J bdrm . I B. fully
corpetrd. lew down peymonf,
only SI) 000 1)4 1U I

{TEM PER AGENCY
E N JO Y
A
LAKE
V IE W
BoouM ul wooded Ml, in oo
c e lle n l lo c o llo n end t o ty
lo rm t O nly IIT.SOG

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Ssnford's Soles Leader
W E L IS T A N D S I L L
M O R I H O M E S TH AN
A N T O N I IN THB
SAN FO R D A R I A
■ e ovtilull &gt; B R . I Both Romo In
Grove M eaor w C H A A . WWC.
Lg E a t in K it. F R . F in e on A
quiet cut do IOC SI1.IM
lu l l For V eu i 4 B R . 1 Beth home
m Upglond P ore w F R . l o t in
Kit. C H 1 A C . WWC. Pel to.
Itnced yd B m orel SII.IM.

A T T E N T IO N I N V E S T O R S 13*
A cro t w ith Iro n ies* on Mwy 40
W Owner l,none mg available
Only u t . t x

Heodymen S p o d e ltl 1 SR. 1
Both home oa I f A c m Foelo,
F F L . wood llo o rt L oH of
eoientiei lie.M O

R I A L TO R &gt;5)4*11 O . i o r N.gnl

Spec lout 1 B R. 1'y Bom. F R .
Now Root. N ew ly punted,
noor P m ocroU School, lorgo
Mncod bock yord
A A M C CLA N A H A N
U c R e o lE t it le Broker
___________ D U B ) ____________
H U M gen*. Rut me owing oof n
mo Rock yard Isn 't) SHI llw tm
0 went ed Coll t t ) M i l .

R E A L ESTATE
R EALT O R . J7 U « *
F aw Vat* Oy &lt;*&gt;#***f 3 fig ? * , t
Bafh M as unary hom# Larg*
lol w ith fru it fre»» In Country
include* M o04It Horn* 17x40
» 't Bafh on K w y 077 372 111!
aH *

BATEMAN R EA LTY
U c R to i E t i n e Brohrr
1A40 Sonlord A ye
Mendy V e n t P a re d ,to, Apert
ment B ldg E e lr e lot Priced
under lo d e y 't m o rk e l 114 I X

323-7443

331-0759

43—M o b ile H om es
See our beo u llfu l now B RO AD
M O R E , irenf A rear BR *
g r e g o n y m o b il e h o m es

1401 O rlando O f
111)100
V A A F H A F Iflln c mq
Nrw 14 e 10 RoyOl O a k t ) bdrm.
1 B. 114 t»5. or 14 ■ 44 1 bdrm.
V i B. t il. * * ! delivered A tel
up within 1M m iles w o hove
V A financing, no money dawn
or ton von lion ol . 10 *. down
Eoty fin ancin g only ot Unci*
R o y s M o bil* Homo Seles u.S.
441 Leesburg |S04&gt; 113 0)14.
open w t t k n lg h lt 'III ):]*.
Sundays 110 p m
THIS IS N O M IS PR IN T
Nrw 14 &gt; M R o yal Oaks 1 bdrm. l
8. fireplace. cO 'hodroi coning,
great ro o m , g a rd o n tub.
completely furnished A many
m ore e i l r o t . o n ly 131.310
dolivertd A tp t'u p within 1)0
m iles V A no money down,
cony on nonet 10 *, down Shop
lln cl* R o y s Mob.I* Hem*
Solas In Leesburg, on 441
South (0041 313 0)11 Open
week nights 'III I P , Sunders
I) 4 p m
I ff) Lu v 1 bd rm . I B mooli*
home 14X0 1)3 4441 otter 3
eves, a il dev Set A Sun.

e s , t a l l p in e s , so m e
p a s t u r e . ROAD
FRO NT
a g e . r iv e r a c c e s s , gen

E V A 111000
30 A C R E S w o o d e d R O LLIN G
H ILLS IN G E N E V A A R E A
UM 0 P E R A C R E , SELLER
F IN A N C IN G . M A Y D IVIDE
)• i A C R E S . T A L L P IN E S .
G E N E V A . S1J.JOO. LOW IN
TEREST
ASSUM ABLE
MORTGAGE

M A Y F A I R V IL L A S ) I A I
Bdrm ., I Both Condo ViH**,
n o il to M e y lo ir Country Club
Soled your M l. floor Won t
inferior d tc o n QgeliTv con
iN o d o d by Ik eem e te r M r
M M M A ngl
ASSO CIATES N E E D E D ! Now
or oeporionced
C o ll Herb
Slendrom o r Led A lbrigbl
Mdoy E d iK O e e r tu c c o ttl

CALL ANYTIME

322-2420

IMS
Fdfh

N EW L O G H O M E
By OwMr-BffHdtr
3 BR —With Left Tint Can Be
Used as 3rd BR Or Den
SoACRE LOT
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL)
MS-J74-171! • M S -U J-4 1 E )

70V ON 1/01. N E A R NEW
WINN D I X I E C E N T E R COM
ING AT L A K E M A R Y B LV O
ZONED
C O M M E R C IA L ,

m ix
e

h o m e s it e s

in

♦ . A C R E S W O O DED L IK E A
P A R K , O N T O P OF A H IL L IN
G E N E V A 140,00*. T E R M S
A V A IL A B L E
P ) A C R E S W O O D E D , RO AD
F r o n t a g e in o s t e e n

iu . n o
I A C R E S W O O D E D JA CKSO N
BAY
AREA.
O S T E iN .
114100. S E L L E R F I N A N
CINO ■
S ll O L E R R E A L T Y B R O K E R

A rt you * lu ll lim a d riv e r w ill) A
port hm * cor T O ur d o ll.flo d t
ore loaded w ith good buy lor
SenMrd P rim e M M A cro t w
options for toning. ID.XX) w
Terms W M e lH fo w sk l M l
t m . Eves US D U

44-Commtrdal Property
P R O F E S S IO N A L B U S IN E S S
O P P O R T U N IT Y — 1 ig rm v
enclosed porch**. C B hom*
n o il la Longumod Pool O m ici
A sking Uf.iOO Owner % ml**
Gehr R e a lty H I 1S4I. OHar hr*
n s t ii* .

S U N D A Y . A U G U S T 1*1 F.M.
NEW — U S E D -A N T IQ U E

M S Acre* L a k e M e ry Good
reed If cm eg* — Term*. Bob
/ M . B o ll J r P. A milll
Broker

* Bonk hnoncing a e o ilo o k *
JSN H e y 11 t l
Couolborry

Shotgun*. Rifle*. Hand Gun*
im p e d ion fro m 10 a m Aug
30fh
Ca*h, Vl*», M C . Am Expre**

IF I t Hr w re c k * S e r v ic e d
H gh ost price* paid tor lunk or
used cor* I. truck*

•S A N F O R D A U C T I O N *

♦

H IS S . F R E N C H A V E

33 M o n te C a rlo E s c con Low '
m .iroge AsS.ng S40X Coll
between * A 1 0 m M l *S54

%

1AV TON A A U TO AUCTION
Hwy *1. I m il* west of Speed '
way. Doytono Beach, w ill hard '*
a public A U T O AUCTION
ovary Wednesday at I p m II*
in* only on* in F lo rid * Yousef
Iho reserved price Coll X 4 .*
155*111 tor further d o t iH

C o lle c to rs Hem — must Sell —
e* K a rm on n O hio E s c tend.
11350 E vet only Wt 1313

n i) m *
71 Chovoli* M alibu Good
lire*. PS 6 PB.
SS5GM14511

m o re in f o u u h i

31 C a p rice A ll power Eou pprd
tor R V 51.000 m iles 115 4111
51350

• l( t * ( * * ( * * M * M M I

[A \ H P T w iiS S i
[ •

uo. h

W A * U U 6 T ao&gt;KlN Cjw
N I W ____________

65— P e t s S u p p lie s

47-A— M o rtg a g e i Bought

&amp;Sold
Wo pay cash lo r H I A )nd
mortgages R a y Logg, Lie
Mortgage Broker l i e 3300
We buy e q u ity in M outei.
a p orlm on u . vacant land end
Acreeg*
LU CKY
INVEST
M E N T S , P O Boe D M . Sen
lord. F lo M i l l ) U D 4I
M o vin g lo * n ew er homo,
e c e rlm e n ll S oli "do n 't noogt"
ta il w ith a w ool ed

W—M s c e lU rv e o u s fo r Sale
FOO TLO CKERS
ueeeup
A R M Y N A V Y SU RPLU S
)I9 son lord Ay*
111 S3tl
U tillly traitor Sale 10. closed
heavy duty fram e, alu m bet,
tingle Bel*. MS* 111 IM f
M E N 'S . L A D I R S ' A N D CH IL
D R E N ’ l II *v eft ell lie *
Denim Je a n t. L ibe rty S IM
O v e ra ll! end R e o lt. B od y bird
(OH te fo d lo n of m ee.
WILCO S A L E S H W Y 4 4 R 4 M l
W OF 14 S A N F O R D W ) i « &gt;
Cor doe*. R iv e r rock.
P e l.o tio n e t. G re et* traps.
P H d rin kin g bowl. Slept
Send Cement, Steal blocks.
M ire d * Concrete Company

S 1 A -F u rn itu re
W ILSON M A lE R f U R N i l UR E
211 U S E . F IR S T ST.
277 5*17
XirtQ lit# b td (No fra m t) WO
Good Condition

German Sh«ph«rd M ai* 7 Yr*
Sup*r w ith c h ild r e n t i c
Watch dog 0300 277 S757
K illt n t -- Oeawtiful and playful
all black* t m a lt, 1 female
F to o to o good L lovmg home
Call after 1 0 0 p m 272 1*01
Anim al M*v#n if«nn#u rwMrdmg
L groom ing Needed Lhe*a
Apto 1 im a il t ilv e r poodle for
*»ud M a lt owner* c e ll 277
1707
ARC A U iR an M a la m u lt* la rg e
boned, f mk% old male* Shot*
worm ed, e«c
m arting*
1700 272 0411____________

1

66— H o r s e s
kppoiooto registered stud, black
with w hite blank*! Alto If
month old U lly . u rn * color
m i l l * oner *
67 — L iv e s t o c k - P o u lt r y
W itc e tiie * n u t m e n a Feed!
Mary 44 W, — 172 4070
Mog F im*her F t lief*
U AS
la y e r C
I ! 00
Cattle F affener Pellet*
tS 70
B e fiK w ik
0495

68—W an ted

to Buy

A ntiques
D ia m on d *
OH
Pointing* O riental Rugs
Bridget A ntiques_______ 11)1X1
Aluminum. CAnt. copper, lead,
brate. Oliver, gold Weekdays
1 4 ) 0 . S ol *1 KOKOMO Tool
Co *11 W H I St 11) 1 IX

______ ___________

7S—R o c r o a lio n a l V eh icles

I Pintos Pintos Pintos I
3) A u tom a tic
III)
3) A u to m a tic, a ir
lllt l
3) A u tom a tic
SWS
34 4 Speed, a ir
11*11
31A utO .*ir
5)04)
a ll i l i a

H 3 ) W ln n e b o * * F u lly Self
contained Sleep* 4 C rn l IIA,
C ru tt* co ntrol w ith Generator.
Very good condrlkm 4444140
ca ll a ll 4 p m please

H34 Ckddy M odol Celias E iir o
Cleon. R u n t Great. I Or
nondrop Green, W ill Demo
1)115 1113*13
7 4 Olds Cut l o l l PS. PO.
PW . AT, olr. IllSO or
b i l l Oder M 113M

C L A S S I F I E D A D S DO A JOB
W H ICH C A N B F DONE NO
o t h e r w a v c a l l M ila n

76— A uto P a rts

ISM F o rd F a ir lone sport coup*. 4
cy lin d e r Autom atic, runs
good tw o Ml 1414

4G 71X14 b e lie d w hitew all tire*
L ik e new. 090 firm
fl* *774

- 1 9 8 1 - A U G U S T - C L E A R A N C E - S A lt -

77— Ju n k C a rs Rem oved
Top D o lla r P a fb to r Juflk 1 Used
cor*, true** L heavy equip

mm t n l sow
“ k u V J u n k c A r s T ti U E E T
F ro m 010 to 0SO or mor •
C a ll 277 I4i4.jp2 aaao

ON ALL

C A S H FO R CA RS
R g n n tn j or not
139 I H I

7X-Motorcycles
X L 75 Honda
177 S.
222 0711 after 4

CONCORDS

W A GO N EERS

EAGLES

CHEROKEES

S C R A M B LER S

C i's

SPIRITS

PICKUPS

•0-Autos
COM E

11 T B ird Loaded. New Tires
Blue w ith W hite Top No
money (town. SfS mo 1)0 e ix .
4)4 440) D ealer

DRIVE ONE A W A Y !

SEE -

SANFO RD

34 C a d illa c C P E D fV ill* Bronq
N tw po inf. * ic e llo n i c o n d tlw
Soil Ih lt week asking U fa )
M l !4»»

MOTOR

HIS M u tlo n g II Ohio Yellow
with w hite v in y l lo p A M FM . 4
I pood ) » 44*5

CO.

JEEP

AM C
508 S. FRENCH A V .

322-4382

CONSULT OUR

For U to — A ll noon qvtel ty
furnitvr* A app Jlm ct* , only 3
mo* old. » m i n a v tf v**d,
must t o o to a pp rvcla tt 791
fit*
C ia tsih td Ad* w in Alw ays g ivt
rou m ore
M'U&gt;c:h , Mmcfi
W ort fhah ynu tio * c f .

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

i 3 — A p p lia n c e s
■fenihor* part*, service, used
w isher* M O O N E Y A P P H
A N C E S 113 0**1

To List Your Business...

Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Good Used T V s . t i l l up
M IL L E R S
Ml* O rlando F r
Ph M l *15)
IS ■ C o lo r co m b ln o n o n . I l l
Stereo A M F M .
I tra c t
recorder MS 4434

54—Garage Sales
Homo Baked Garog* Sole to
sponsor Coke show lot M o ils
on Wheels IS e l S Palmetto
Saturday 1 a 1)1*101
W om an'i cloth**, knfck knocks.
M ite F rid a y . Saturday and
Sunday 111 W ll ih SI
M u lll fa m ily yard sol*
Sal
o n ly .* ) l i l t Oak A y*. Rofrig.
o.shwether, m isc
Carport Sal* M l Fairm ont Dr
Sunipnd E tlo lo s Saturday and
Sunday
1 F a m ily Gorag* Sol*. I l l
B rlo rw e e d D r
Id y llw ild *
Sot I S Trie veto. c n lW 'i pte
me toblo, recorder playee. etc
y a rd sal* F rid a y Saturday.
11.1400 E lm Avo.
Sanford

ESTATE SALE
C O M P L E T E H O USE F U L L
OF F U R N I T U R E .L I N E N S .
R E F .S M A L L A P P L IA N C E S ,
C L O T H IN G . M ISC
SAT.. A U G H &amp; SUN , A U G M
5 &lt; n C H E R O K E E C IR C L E
SU N LA N O ESTATES
* M T 0 4 00

55-Both A Accessories
14' flb o rg la ti bool. Ftdly *d
lu ilo b l* I ro in o r. IIS* 101
•redsnow Ay*. M l 4504

59-Muslcal Insfrvrmnfs
■-------- -------------------R o co n lly lurtod
U p rig h i piano SXO
MUM)

60—Office Supplies
1 o io cw ily * wood desk.
I m otol lypm g desk, 4
m is c item*. M l IM4

41—Building Materials
Building Sol*. A ll sleet door
span building* S lg sayings
Lens m o la r m a n u fa ctu re rs
Form &amp; C om m e rcia l from
U 15 So FI C a ll 1)1 4445
50 trusses.
IV tors
M l 1314 a lter 5

47-Real Estate Wanted
C A S H F O R E Q U IT Y
We con d o* * M l« fir*.
Coll B e n Roof E tfo fo P I fee*

IS P a c e r lo ir condition
tte]
13 Aspon Slotion Wagon
534*1
1111*11 or 111 1130

339 79B9W

H llO id * Regency
SS43I
H IO B u ick L a S d b ro C u ilo m tlH I
I* ' B o n n e v ille
Brougham .
O r te i loaded trees
71 Pon tia c Sunbird Liko now.
SI 141
ae P o n iio c F ire b ird . • clo siK .
SUB*

• G U N AUCTION •

Air Conditioning
Chris w ill oorvico A C 'I, rotrlg.
trooiors. w ater coolers, misc.
Coll M l 4311

Beauty Care
T O W E R ’ S B E A U T Y SALON
F O R M E R L Y H a rrio tt's Beauty
Nook 11* B. let S I . 1)11141

F I L L 01 B r m o p SO IL
Y E L L O W 5A N p ,
C a ll C la rK 4 M irl M S 3M*
Lawn M ow er S ales on* Service
Wo to ll in* B e il and Sorylci
the R e st Bo b B a ll West am
Aulo M l W 1W 14.

Electrical
E L E C T R I C I A N 1* yr* t i p All
type* e l o it c ir ld i work t l lo ir
prices 1)14114
Qua Illy o itc trtc a l w ork M y r i
t e p o r it n c * M in or rtp o iis is
co m p ltf* W iring 111*1)4

Anim al H a v en Boarding and
G ro o m in g K e n n e ls Shady,
irw u lllod, tcreonod. I lf proof
meide. ou tride runs Font
Also A C cogot. W* color lo
your p o l l
S to rtin g tlu d
ro g itlry Ph M t 1351
Snow H ill Kennel offer* Col 6
Dog F lo a Both* 15 up 14
Hour. F u ll S o rv K * 1*5 5311

Building Contractor
t i l l C o r t o . H a t * C e rtifie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
R o tW on llol or Com m orclol.
Now o r Rom odolod 171*4*4

Ceramic Hie

R em o d elin g

E iperion cO d m oid w ill do *11
your h o u s e d o a n in g nor*
Courteous. Prom pt Service
Coll Lou ise 41* 1451

in Th* Evening Herald. I lt y
Close lo your phone become
something wonderful It about
to h«pp«fi
H t OOSY U place a Ctostilied Ad
W e 'll oven help you word
H C o ll 111 1411

Nursing Center
Remodeling Specialist
OUR R A T E 1 A R E L O W E R
L o k o view H u rtin g Center
*1* E Second t l . Sonlord
M l 4301

Handyman

Wo handi* th*
Whole B o ll *t Woo

B. E. Link Const.
323-7039
F in a n cin g A veileO H

Fom llng, c o rp tn tr y , ell typos *1
bom* re p a irs coll for Ire*
oof l moI t M l IF31

Hauling*
Yard Work
Mauling 4 Yard W ork M b off
with Rd m illl no ant Ml
14*1 L d r r y , Joyce B rytrd

Odd Jobs
1

4 a Hom o Improvement —
Carpentry work ot tn y ly p t
Roof r tp o lr t. gutter work,
pointing |in terior or o e ltrlo rl,
plum bing, tp o c io lil* to mobile
hom* re p a irs 4 roof cooling,
and wood p o lio dock* Fro*
l i t 2002

othmolo

Homa Improvement
CENTRAL FLORIDA HOME
im p r o v e m e n t s

Painting, Roofing. Carpentry
Ltc Bonded4 Outromood
Pro#Retlmelti tllt*ll
R e s t/ toning Potnling. quality
w o rk , low py ices
Roy's PomtlagM I N K

C im plelt Ceramic Til* tore,
wills, doors, countertop*, r*
modol. repair F r osf 11**111
M E iN T J E R TILE
Ntw or repair, leaky shower* our
spociaHy. IS yr* •* * •** Be)

Maid Service

F o d d io lo n t installed
r t i id t n lio i t ie c t r k o l work,
c a ll M l a m

Boarding A Grooming

ni-go«o

W A N T E O — lot a cro t or mar*
with good or pa M r* , d o t* la or
on * loko In Sem inole County
Canted Juno P o rtlg Realty
Moellers. H I 0431

★

73—Auction

orange

G R O V E AT U M A T I L L A S U M
Ea c h , c r a z y t e r m s

•0-Autos

★ BA H Auto S a l e s *

DO N'T S T O R E IT, S E L L IT with
* tow cast C tjs iifie d Ad

43— L o ts-A c re a g e
sacr

M-Auter

For E i la t * . C o m m e rc ia l •*
R e siden tial Auctions A Ap
p ri'S O H C o ll Dolt'S Auction
M l SAID

J J — T V R a d io -S tereo

S C L E A R E O D U P L E X LO TS IN
SANFO RD
S l l . MO E a c h .
ZO N E D F O R Q U A D S OR OF
F IC E S

Country L ir ia g l I RR. I Retn
home on 10 A d Ad| 10 Ac
A v illA R I t l A ll l i l t te tr*
touched Y o g 'll H re It tor
Ift.OM .

ue.soo

CallBart

1 A C R E S C L E A R E D L A N O IN
P A O L A SIS.000

EXCELLEN T
B U S IN E S S
L O C A T IO N S m e ll b u ild in g
iitu eted m high I ro llic ereo
Zoned G C 3 only S1I.OOO

Cuotom b u ill 11 « greet rm .
gerege. on dbl wooded Ml.
S53.0X w o ttu m o io n % m.go
m ) t ) l o rio f t _____________

Beautiful 1 B drm , 1 Both Home
Lorgo Fern d m . Coni. HA.
O u ttiending th e d r M l end o
matt p re tlig o u t locol.cn Only
S54.SX ThH you m u tt fee

Thurtdsy, Aug, 13,1W1-5B,

71-A n tiqu es

PIONEER* k lW A M HA.NE T^EiK '&lt; E 6 M&gt;.T\rfi4 &lt;tf. YJlTVE
M M J R .1BUT P E ( W » ) A 3T i t . ' t r i l $ V X *
/ DIMPLY T fiE KXIU
Trtl* I* TriE BL3 OHALLEliiE
BEFORE ThtE FLOWER*.
YOUY E B E E N WAITING W R !
TrIE M liH T BER3EETH!
.WANKING 0R 1E$ OUT FOR A
REAL P IET R 3 0 P -T H E MORE
* U N R « - ' WEU. C C W «
O SE5ITY FOREVER MTH
&gt;0U E A T TKE MORE
liO O a E P lE T F a O P ^ ;
YOU U &amp; E

Sonlord — A ttra c tiv e 77 yr. o4d
homo on 140' at Lobe Onore }
bdrm. 1 B. 1 p orch et Properly
con be pi,t US.OOQ. lerm t,
tow 1 .o ro tl By owner I ITS
_ S E _________________________
R A M B L E W O O D — New Listing
4 bdrm , I B, split pion with
pool. ♦ I l ' i l f rn clotu re Th-t
cutiom .ted homo u M c e lrd on
the prim e lot In Romblewood
Mony p i ir o t Included in the
purchoto p rice
Shawn by
open tnt men!
F R A N K D A L E Y , INC.
REAL ESTATE
U S U I)

BEST P R I C E IN TOW Nt Would
you believe only U f . t M lor o 1
bdrm w dro p tt. tge. tof +
koto Itnced yord w Irootf
Owner w ill hold mt« or toll
FHA V A II

For rent or lo o t, — 10,130 tg It
Induttrlel or warenous* t i l
W. I l l S t . Sonlord m i NO
SAN FO RD
3.OX iq ft It In duttrlel or
Com m orclol B uild ing on 13 03
I.0 X It In o il ice opoco Coll
S ll SSIB o r 114 41.3

333-5774

H IO H R A T E S O O T
YOU DOW Nt
C i l l u l tor Owner
P m in ce d Hem et

ME M AN AG E REN TALS
H A R O LD H A LL R EALT Y,
in c . h e a lt o h m in i

_

Inc
E v rt n iU t t
10) E is m St

Q ualified ten»ntivu*,llr^
N o lo * UT3JO#
» V O m t N T * a R E ALT O R

331-0759

HAL COLBERT REALTY

1 Br Pool 104 Country CluR
Orty* V A F H A Conv SM ON
N*w Roof 443 M X flick er

Evening Herald. Sinferd. FL

w ith M a jo r H oopla

OUR B O A R D IN G H O U SE

41— H ouses

Home Repairs
QUALITY AT A PAIR PRICE1
Gen Rtpolrt 4 improv If yr*
tocolly Senior DIM MSIMS

Painting
H eilm an P oin tin g 4 R e p tlrt
Q u ality w o rt F r e t E s i, Due
to Senior* ISO BOX Rotor.
T E R R Y 'S IN T ER IO R S
W a llp a p e rin g , p g m lln g Low
prices G uar w ork 311*4)4

Painting Aor
Pressure Cleaning
No lo b lo o large or smell
Q u a lity * m ust C*H M ) H f l
R eferences F r E l l

C L A S S IF IE D A D S A R B FU N
AD S t l A O A USE TH EM
O F T E N Y O U ’ L L L I K E THE
RESULTS

Roofing
• il l Evan s
IS yoare oepor i*n&lt;o
M l *1)1___________
O NE P H O N E C A L t* S T A « T * A C L A S S I F I E D A D ON ITS
RESULTFUL
END
THE
N U M B E R II i B I W I ________
• O O P S , leak* rtp olrod. R e o H it
i t n on oaeot end sMwg l* work.
Ilcoaso'd. la t u r o d , bonded
M lk i l l i u n .
C h ristia n Rooting I) y rs t ip
14* SIS*. Ire* o i l Retooling,
tp o c io lil* m rep air work 4
now roofing
S O U T H E R N R O O F IN G 11 YU
o a p . r* looting, look spociol
■SI D e p e n d a b le a honotl
prie* Day Of nlghl M71M1

Sandblasting
Hypnosis

Clock Repair
G W ALTN EY j e w e l e r
X 4 S P a rti Ay*.
M l 4X3*

ft

.

m --- 1.

Concren vwrx
Cancroft W ork. M odorL floors a
pool* L a n d s c a p in g fc sod
work F r t o o s l Tn 310)

MYPNOSIIM
Hop Smoking. Lot* W
oighl,
Build CorHidencot. Improv*
Roltllgnkhlp*, and much
mortll Alter ytati of
research. Dr Coso,. on*oeik«
ladder* in hypnoLK. has won
Ih* Event Award for hit
prtvtn tochniquot Office
down*own Sonford ( am I
pm. Co.) Ml 1100 far op
pointman) or Mormttion

Freddie

R o b in s o n Plumbing
R e p tlr t.* fOuctli. W C
SprinkJors mill*. M
&gt;«3»*

FON SECA

Con

p l u m b in g

Mrml Ion. RopoifL Emergen
cy Ik.. Bonded. In i M)4Bf|

P lu m b in g ro p o ir - *11 Ivpes

I4 N D B L A IT IN Q
D A V IS W B lO I N G
M l 41**. S A N FO R D

Tree Service
H A B P B R 'S T R E E S I R VICE
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                    <text>Evening H e ra ld -(U S P S 481 2 8 0 )-P rlce 20 Cent*
73rd Y ear, No. 2 94-F rlday, Ju ly 3 1 ,1981-Sanford, Florida 37771

omic Squeeze
Winter Springs Feeling Growing Pains
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Stall Writer
Winter Spring*, like moat cities Its
size, is laced with a most perplexing
problem.
While Inflation, unemployment,
and ever-increasing taxes are
forcing Its residents to the wall, the
city Is In the midst of a period of
rapid growth which fosters
burgeoning demands for more and
better public services.
City council members, charged
with governing the nearly 11,000
citizens of Seminole County's fourth
largest municipality, are regularly
besieged with requests that demand
additional funding.
Since city department heads
began submitting their preliminary
budgets in May, the council has
received numerous major requests
ranging from 160,000 for a police
building to (123,000 in road im­
provements.
Also the council Is continually
trying to finance a long-range
capital expenditure plan which calls
for the spending of several million

the ones we already h a v e ,"
.
.1____ _ |A --------------------a n lllll
their budgets from municipal taxes. rev enue through a 10 percent utility Rozansky says.
dollars over the next five years.
franchise
fee
Ours
is
only
4
per­
Winter Springs, at 16.5 percent, Is
According to estimates of the city­
Where wlU the money come from?
c e n t"
planning department, the growth
That is a question looming large far below the average, which no
The city’s favorable tax rate may
over the council's collective head. doubt causes many transplanted help speed the realization of one of rate which has added nearly 10,000
Northerners
to
rub
their
hands
in
people to the local population in the
City Manager Richard Rozansky
the city fathers' top priorities - the
past decade Is expected to continue
'
,
hopes that property Uses can be glee.
One possible explanation for the attraction of "clean" industry to the at the same pace for the next several
held down and revenue obtained by
area,
thus
giving
the
local
economy
difference could be that two vital
attracting new industries.
an industrial-commercial lax base, years.
"By 1985, we anticipate having
In the proposed $1.9 million budget services often provided by “something we don't really have
municipalities
—
trash
collection,
15,000 people living in W inter
for fiscal year 1981-82 which begins
now,"
Rozansky
say*.
Springs," Rozansky says. "Given
Oct. 1, the largest chunk of revenue and water ami sewer service — is
But should that aim be ac­
comes from ad valorem property supplied to local residents by private complished, the city council will be the existing boundaries and
taxes. Nearly 16 5 percent of the businesses, thereby freeing the city faced with a classic quandary con­ probable development trends, we
budget money comes from this from raising the capital to un­ fronting almost every progressive can probably hold 30,000 people. At
derwrite those costly endeavors.
the rate we're going, it won't take
source.
Also playing a role in the low tax governm ent in the nation: a too much longer to reach that figure.
S tate revenue sharing funds
favorable
lax
rate
attract*
growth,
“ As the city expands, the revenue
provide 15 percent, elec trical rate is what City Manager Richard the growth causes demand for more
franchise fees contribute another Rozansky modestly claims to be services, and those services cost from the new residents will, for the
12.5 percent, and utility taxes swell “ good management." For example, money, necessitating higher taxes most part, pay fir the expansion."
he says. "Theoretically, growth
the city's coffers by roughly 9.5 a total of $481,163 - or ap­
To Rozansky. the key phrase is
proximately 22 percent of next
percent.
expanded services, not new ones pays for growth."
The theory has worked so far and
On first glance, it would appear year's proposed budget — will come “We've been experiencing rapid
that residents may soon have to from monies left over In various growth for the past several years," Rozansky says he sees no reason
why the trend shouldn't continue.
assume a much greater share of the accounts from this year.
Rozansky likes to brag that Winter he says, "and we've been coping
But should the unforeseen occur,
tax burden. In some northeastern
with it all along.
Rozansky warns that there Is only
stater, for example, as much as 80 Springs has the second lowest tax
“ We haven't had much demand
percent of city budgets arc derived ra te in the county. "Only for new services" — the biggest
See Winter Springs, Page 3A
from local property-taxes with most Casselberry's is lower and that's budget busters - "Just expanding
cities raising about 50 percent of only because they raise a lot of their

’
f

£

;

RICHARD R O Z A N SK Y

Crime Lab M ay
Leave Sanford

Cable TV
Completion
Promised
Under prodding by Winter Spring* city
council members, Seminole Cablevislon
has agreed to complete extension of
cable television service into three
residential sections of the city.
Seminole Cablevtsion executives have
pledged to finish the Job in one of the
areas within 60 days; residents in the
other two development* will get cable by
the end of the year.
The matter was brought up at Tuesday
night's city council meeting by coun­
cilman lU p Arnold who noted that whan
the council gave Seminole Cablevislon its
10-year franchise in March 1929, the
company agreed to provide cable service
to almost aD of the dty within 18 months.
"But to this day, much of Hacienda
Village, the Highlands, and TuscawllU
are not covered," he said.
“ I submit ATC (American Telephone
and Communications, the parent com­
pany of Seminole Cablevtsion) has not
complied with its agreement and their
franchise should be revoked." Arnold
said.
.
Steve McMahan, ATC regional
m anager, countered that his firm
•serviced what was there at the Ume.
not necessarily everything that was
developed after that 18-month period. If
we missed anything, and perhaps we did,
we'll go back and get it done." he added.
McMahan pledged to Install cable In
Tuscawilla within 60 days, and to extend
service to the Burgess Road, Shane
Circle, and Walden Terrace areas by the
end of the year.
Based on those assurances, Arnold
agreed to drop his suggestion that the
firm's franchise be revoked.
To ensure such delays don't happen in
the future, the council Instructed City
Manager Richard Rozansky to set up a
procedure for notifying Seminole
Cablevislon of planned housing
developments so cable TV service can be
installed by the Ume the homes are ready
for occupancy. — BRITT SMITH

j

somewhere between DcLand and
Kissimmee.
The present lab was established in the
early 1970s. Sanford officials agree that it
would be nice to keep the facility, but the
land is not available. In fact, the city is
looking for a five-acre tract to purchase
(or location of a public works complex.
However, the lab, which serves many
Sanford Mayor le e Moore said today
Central Florida law enforcement that the city really doesn't have any land
agencies, may stay in Seminole County, it could donate to the state. “ II we had
because the city of lak e Mary has land extra land we would use it as live site for a
available that could be used as a location new public work* complex aite,” Moor*
lor a new lab facility, which la supposed said. He added if the city sold land it
to be built within the next few year*
would prefer selling it to someone who
The current facility, located at the would put it on the tax-rolls. State owned
Sanford Airport, has become over­ land is exempt from local property tax.
crowded.
Moore said Tom Rucker, the developer
The city of Sanford la one of the 65 who is purchasing 7.5 acres of city-owned
communities and law enforcement land adjacent to the Evening Herald
agencies which have been asked to assist
office has indicated an interest in
acquiring additional land for his
in finding a new site.
The Florida legislature during the 1981 proposed apartment complex.
-We might sell the current public
session budgeted $240,000 (or land
' acquisition and architectural planning works site I located behind the Evening
Herald) if we can find a place to put the
for a new 31.000 square-foot, single-story
public works complex," Moore said.
facility. If a site is acquired and the
Meanwhile, the City of la k e Mary has
planning completed in time, the Florida
Departm ent of l.aw Knforcement offered the state 2 5 acres of a 10-arre
.
H t r . l * PKOlO *V T tm VIIKtal
(FDIT.i, which operates the facility, will parcel off Rinehart Road as a lab site &lt;n
Ducks, like human*, somrtimr* disobey regulation* pcrtainlm; to v*al*‘r- rhr be seeking funding for construction a long-term lease arrangement.
Mayor Walter Sorenson said today the
Sanford City Commission this week refused to obey instructions to limit lawn during tlie 1982 session of the State
FDliv crime lab, since it is govern­
sprinkling, because they had cut water use elsewhere. These ducks at hurt legislature.
mentally oriented would be appropriate
Mellon Park behind the General Sanford Museum obviously decided the ban a­
The site should be a minimum of 2 5
acres and preferably centrally located at the site.
gainst swimming applir* only to humans. ________
By DONNA ESTES
lie-raid Staff Writer
If the city Is depended upon to furnish
the land for a new site, Sanford probably
will not conUnue to be the home of the
Central Florida Department ol Law
Knforcement Crime laboratory.

DUCKS IN
DEFIANCE

Lake M ary
M oving To
N ew City Hall

Could Open In A Yeor

ComBanks Eyes Sanford
.
ComBanks of Seminole County has IU sights on Sanford for a

______h.H
nvntheir
identities.
W'e refer We
to our
community ih*ir
and had
own Identities.
refer to our other
offices as ComBanks — Butler Plaza. ComBanks — Springs
pl4H ( and *o on to give each of them their own identity, said

new banking facility. P°“ ‘Ux tw0 " * ,ul
downtown and a drive-in unit at a separate location in the city.
That was confirmed today by John Squires, president of ^ComBanks now has the Casselberry bank, the Deigwood
ComBanks of Seminole County who said as soon as his com­ bank, a bank in la k e Mary, one at Altamonte Mall, as well as
pany agrees on the right site, or two. ComBanks wlU make the the Springs' Plaza and Butler Plaza facilities.
•And we put up three ol those In the p u t 12 months alow, the
move.
. ..
And there's a possibility his bank already is near taking an ones at Springs Plaza, lake Mary and the one at Butler
option on a site In Sanford, “ but it may be •
Plaza."
Now that those are complete “we can concentrate com­
location, so we're not ready yet to be that specific about it.
pletely on the one we want in Sanford." Squires said.
BOSTON lUPly—Some 800 bridge
u y s Squires.
What n ak es Sanford an attractive prospect for ComBanU,
enthusiasts were so engrossed in their
Nonetheless, downtown Sanford is the first choice (or a new
tournament matches Thursday night
ComBanks facility, Squires added, panting out it appears the Squires u id , is its apparent Inevitable growth along with the
.
most of them failed to notice a nude
grow th will continue there and expand in a couple of areas, constant effort* to attract new industry"There are pros and cons, of course, he said. Sanford,
quartet that streaked through the ten­
such as along W. First Street in the area the new Central
according to some observers, has traditionally been a stow
sion-filled hotel ballroom, where they
Florida Regional Hospital is being built.
were playing.
Squires also said he thinks his company will be located in growth area. And It seems to be a self-contained city, which u
why we feel it's crucial to find that Just-right location. At U*
Sanford within 12 months, “ maybe less."
Two men and two women, all nude, ran
same Ume, I must admit I've never seen a more active
Just a few day* ago. Dennis Courson. president of Flagship
through the ballroom
chamber of commerce, or a more energetic e*w ” v,*
Bank ol Seminole, said his company is adding another faciUty manager at a chamber, such as Sanford s Jack Horner,
in Seminole County, but could not divulge it* *°c»uon yet.
said.
One other reason Squires u y s downtown Sanford seems to Squires
-That means to us, that Sanford is a city which maintains an
be the prime choice for another full service b a n k - there are
two of them there now as well as a savings and loan association on-going effort to bring about iU own growth," he noted. "You
have that new hospital going up along the lakefront; Sanford Is
Artie* Reports ............................•**
_ Is the unusually large anvounts of savings on deposit.
the county seal, which always is a plus; and that continuing
Arouad The Clack ......................
"Between the two banks in downtown Sanford alone there s a
effort to attract new industry, which Sanford certainly can
Bridge
......................................... V A
million dollars' in deposits, not to mention the deposits at the
accommodate, Is attractive to us.
Calendar .............................................
uvm gs and loan asaociation." he said.
"We’ve been looking closely at the Sanford market for me
Classified Ads ...................
“ That's a lot ol deposit* in one area, and we W c«Wkn$ * • past three years and came close a couple of times to sewing it
Comics
............................. J?* can gel a piece of those deposits and provide the additional
up. but we Just didn't locate that enactly-right site. Now we feel
Oo*sv*.-d
............................... “ A
banking services we feel are called for," he addad.
much closer.”
... . .
„
DearAbby .........................................
Squires claims his bank, with Us current six separate we're
Squires lives in Altamonte S prinp with his wife and two
Deaths...*........................................ w
facilities in Seminole County, is one of the larger, "tl not the children. He Is a graduate ol George Peabody College. Nash­
oTum b
“A
largest." banks In the county with Us rwwUy S to r e d
ville. Tennessee and has a law degree.
tu t o r i a l.............................................. «A
combined total assets of between (^m illio n and W rmU‘«v.
Prior to Joining ComBank in May 1978, he was president of
Horoscope ..........................
Squires. 34, Joined the Seminole County banking firm four
Robertson State Bank. Springfield, Tenn.
Hospital.........................................“
y ean ago when there were two ComBanks in Seminole County
Squires Is a director of the Greater Seminole Chamber of
Nation........................................... “
__ ComBanks of Casselberry and ComBanks of Ixxigwood.
Commerce, director of the Seminole Y.M.C.A., member of the
............................................... . j u s -When we began getting down to the business of expansion, Greater Sanford Chamber of Commerce. Ixmgwood-Winter
we decided to change the name to ComBanks of Seminole Springs Chamber of Commerce, and the Seminole S..uth
Television
....................
County. But we also decided to retain the names * those two
Rotary Cub. - TOM GIORDANO
Weather........................................ •“
banks because they had already been established in the
World
..........................................

Bridge Is Important

TO D A Y

JOHN SQUIRES
...‘Sanford Is
A City Which
Maintains An
O n-G oing Effort
To Bring About
its O w n Growth.'

The doors of the Jake Mary city hall on
East Crystal U k e Avenue will be closed
lor the last time today.
The new city hall at the former
Chamber of Commerce Building on
Country Club Road will be opening for
business at 8 am . Tuesday.
City offices will be dosed Monday.
In the meantime, city officials and
dtizens with help from five prisoners
from the county Jad a(e putting tl* final
touches on the renovation of the 1920s
vintage budding the city has acquired fo ­
ils municipal headquarters.
The first d ty council meeting in the
3,500 square foot "new" facility will be
held Thursday night.
“ It's been a labor of love," Mayor
Walter Sorenson said today. The new
building, was acquired by the dty for
$35,000 and renovations, when all the bills
are tallied, probably wUl cost another
$35,000, Sorenson said.
The wooden structure with an oldfashioned metal roof was built in tha
1920s as a meeting place for the com­
munity.
Sorenson, the dty hall stall and
volunteers began wurk on the resteralioo
about six weeks ago. The wainscoting In
the main meeting room has been stripped
of its Robin's egg blue paint and
revamished to bring it as close to its
original appearance as possible. The
walls and metal ceiling have been
repainted bone white.
Sorenson noted the budding has been
Jacked up to make it level and some old
beams that were either "tired or termite
ridden" have been replaced. "The
budding should be good for another 50
years,” Sorenson said.
-DONNA ESTES

�JA— Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Friday. July 31,1961
P a rtn e r

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Is Optimistic That
Economic Plan Will Work
WASHINGTON (UPIl - Assured ol congressional
passage of the pillars of his economic recovery
program, President Reagan says "the responsibility is
on us" to make sure it works.
In addressing 200 Georgia Republicans at an Atlanta
reception Thursday, a confident Reagan said of his
plan: "1 happen to believe that it very definitely will"
succeed and return the nation to orosoeritv.
"America now has an economic plan lor tier future,"
Reagan said in a separate Atlanta appearance before
the 2,500-member National Conference of State
legislatures.
"We know where we are going," he said. 1We are
going forward, we are going onward and we are going
upward, and as I have said before, we are leaving no
one behind."
Reagan was In a jubilant mood In his first public
appearances since House passage Wednesday ol his 33month, 25 percent la* cut. His audiences, however,
were almost subdued.

C on gre ss Will Try Again
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The House will gel one
more shot at the administration's plan to end the $122
minimum Social Security monlhly benefit received by
3 million Americans.
House leaders decided Thursday to allow another
Social Security vote after a powerful committee
chairman threatened to hold up President Reagan's
budget cuts unless immediate steps were taken to
restore the benefit.
Alter hurried meetings between House and Senate
leaders ol both parties, Chairman Richard Bolling, DMo , was persuaded to settle for a symbolic vote that
would express House displeasure with the plan.

Body M a y Be Exhumed
NKW YORK (Ill’ll — Prosecutor* may order the
exhumation ol the body ol Dennis McNeil, brother of
two Wall Street businessmen whose accusations
triggered the resignation of former CIA Deputy
Director Max Huge), In determine II he was beaten to
death.
“I am looking into the death ol Dennis McNeil,"
Queens District Attorney John Santucri said Thursday,
lie said the attorney general ol Maine, where McNeil,
who was ft, is buried, has agreed to cooperate with
New York medical examiners if an exhumation is
cedcred.
"The Medical Examiner’s Office reallies there Is the
possibility the dealh was due to a ruptured spleen,
which in turn could have been due to some sort ol
criminal art, specilically an assault," Santucri said.
The olftclal cause ol McNeil's dealh June 1 at City
Hospital Center in Queens was listed as natural causes.
A copyright glory in the Chicago Tribune, however,
said Stanley Keltmaf, a director of the McNeils' New
York-based Triad Energy Cnrp., told the FBI McNeil—
Triad's marketing vice president - was “abducted
and beaten" twice earlier this year and he suspected
(out play in his death.

In

Escape

C a p tu re d

Accused Triple Murderer Gives Himself Up
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI| — An alert woman deputy shertll on a
lonely patrol in northwest Hillsborough County spotted the
residue from an escaped prisoner's makeshift meal early
today, resulting In the surrender without a struggle of a man
charged with three killings.
The apprehension o( Paul Beasley Johnson, 31, of Eagle
tak e, triggered a massive search ol the same area lor accused
bank robbert Michael Ernest Haager, 27, of Tampa, who had
escaped from the Polk County jail with Johnson Tuesday night.
About six hours later, a tip that Hangar was at a mobile

home park In north Tampa sent deputies converging on the
area.
A mobile home was surrounded and Haager gave up without
a struggle.
Deputy lunda Vaughn was on patrol in the Tampa suburb ol
Citrus Park about 3 a m. when she saw a part of a loaf of bread,
the remains of two cans of beans and a pair of shoes beside an
elementary school.
Deputy Vaughn and scores of other Hillsborough County she­
riff's police had been alerted to watch [or Johnson and Haagar.

even though Polk County deputies were convinced the two
were bottled up within a nine-mile perimeter ol woodlands and
citrus groves between lakeland and Bartow. Deputy Vaughn
had a photo ol Johnson pasted to the dashboard of her patrol
car.
Vitim she saw the discarded foodstuffs, she searched the
area, then headed across the street to a convenience store to
see II it had been broken into. As she was checking it out. a man
walked up, identified himself as Johnson and said he wanted to
uit’a hlmtaif un He was unarmed.

AREA DEATHS
MRS. ELLUTA KNIGHT
Mrs. Elluta Mae Knight, 87,
ol2637 Elm Ave , Sanford died
today at Seminole Memorial
Hospital. She was a native of
Fayettesville, Ala., and
moved here in November,
1980, from Thorsby, Ala. She
was a homemaker and at­
tended the First Baptist
Church, Sanford.
Survivors include a sister,
Mrs. Coloria C. Ellison,
Sanford, and several nieces.
Gramkow Funeral Home is
in charge of arrangements.
MR*
NATHANIEL
FRANK UN
Mr. Nathaniel Franklin, 58,
of 1200 W. Blue Rerun Blvd.
Apt. 6, West Palm Beach, died
July 25 at St. Mary Hospital in
West Palm Beach
Survivors include his
d e v o te d
c o m p a n io n ,
Elisabeth Parker; mother,
Mrs. Cora I’hiliipe; ihree
brothers. Clarence Franklin,
West Palm Beach, Jessie
Franklin, Belle (Hade, and
Gordon Philllpe Jr., Orlando;
six sisters. Cora lee Woody,
Sanford, Louise Francis,
Belle Glade, Ruby Hines,
Del.and.
Ruth
Patton,
Bloomfield, Conn., Dorothy
Oliver, Rochester, N, Y-, and
Bertha Brown, Sanlurd.

W il s o n - E i c h e lb e r g e r
Mortuary is In charge ol
funeral arrangements.
MRS. SUSIE G. BOOKEY
Mrs, Susie G. Hookey, 73, of
1123 Hickory Ave., Sanford,
died July 23 at her residence.
Site is survived by a son,
George Cambridge J r .;
sister, Mrs. Rosa C. Stewart,
Sanford; six grandchildren,
Angela Nelson, Santa Ana,
C alif., Julia Davenport,
Sanlord, Cynthia Jones,
F ullerton, Calif.. Juanita
Burney, Goldsboro, N. C., and
George awl Timothy Cam­
bridge, Sanford; live great­
grandchildren; two nieces
and three nephews.
W ils o n -E tc h rlb e r g e r
Mortuary is in charge ol
arrangements.
MILS. SA IJJE MAE HUM­
PHREY
Mrs. Sallie Mae Humphrey,
65, of 1214 Lincoln Court,
Sanlord, died Monday at
Seminole Memorial Hospital
She is survived b y lour
dau g h ters, Mrs. Daisy
P resley,
Mrs.
Phyllis
Freeman, Mrs, Mary Terrell,
all of Sanford and Mrs. Joyce
Jackson of Belle Glade; one
son. Spec. 4 Michael Nelson,
Germany: one sister, Mrs.

Mable Nelson; one brother,
Henry Sim mons, both ol
T allah assee; lour grand­
children, Amelia Dewberry,
Anthony Freem an, Willie
Presley, Cart Presley, all ol
Sanlord, and Willie Mae
Jackson, F t. Lauderdale;
several nieces and nephews.
W ils o n -E ic h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge ol
arrangements

Dm Thompson, Shartlah Hall,
Clara B. Manuel, Corean
Brothers
and
Voncile
Stephens; 38 grandchildren;
seven grea t-gfand children;
six sisters; two brothers;
seven, aunts; seven uncles,
and
numeregis
nieces,
nephews and cousins.
W il s o n - E i c h e l b e r g e r
Mortuary is in charge of
arrangements.

MIL LUCIOUS MOORE
Mr. Lucious Moore, 74, ol
Route 1, Box 352, Oviedo, died
S aturday at the Good
Samaritan Home, Sanford.
He is survived by a son,
ILL. Moore; iwo brothers,
Ernest and law W. Moore; a
cousin, Ms. Ethyl Aytch; and
num erous
nieces
and
nephews.
W ils o n -E ic h e lb e rg e r
Mortuary is in charge ol
arrange me nta.

DAVID CREWS
David Crews, 12, ol 3410
Palm Way, Sanford, died
Wednesday night at Seminole
Memorial Hospital as the
result ol a traffic accident.
Born in Del-and, he attended
lake view Middle School.
He is survived by his
mother, Mrs. Judy Crews;
father, Doyle Crews; both of
Sanford; grandparents, Mr
and Mrs. Sid Morrison,
Sanford, and grandm other
Tressle Crews, Sanford.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA
is in charge of arrangements.

MRS. KATIEM SMITH
Mrs. Katie Mae Smith, 56,
of 4660 Gilbert St., take
Mqjuoe, died July 24 at
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
She is survived by her
husband, Walter B. Smith,
Albany, Ga.; (our sons, Jessie
B. Brooks, Eddie law Smith,
Walter Smith Jr. and Clannie
Smith; live (laughters, Willie
rT -—

Funeral Notices
SMITH, MRS KATIE MAE —
f onerel t r iv e r t lor Mr* Katie
Mae Smith. SI* of 4440 GJIbert
It., U nit Monroe, who d«ed July
24. at Seminol# Memorial
HotP'ttl, will be at 2 p m .
Saturday.
tt
Providtnct

M«ttionary Baplitt Church.
PovgUt Avenue. Lode Monro*,
mth fht Rev Jam** 0 Hag n.
bettor, officiating Burtalwillbe
m Retllawn Cemetery* Sanford
AMton Eichtlbergrr Mortuary
n in (harg*
FRANKLIN MR NATHANIEL
— Funeral service* tor Mr
Nairn/iift FranMrn. 14, of 1200
W Blue Htfon Blvd , A pi a.
West Palm Brae tv who d *d July
2S, in Wet* Palm Bract* at St
Mary Hospital, will b* at noon.
Saturday at St
Matthew
M»**»onafy Bapfttf Church, Eatt
■Main StSanford, w iiM N i Rev.
T L JfflLini, pastor. officiating

Burial will b* &lt;n RettUwn
Cemetery, Sanford Wilton
Eicbtlberger Mortuary it in'
charge
HUMPHREY. MRS SALLIE
MAE — Funeral %erv&lt;ce* tor
Mr* Salt!# Mae Humphrey, AS.
of 1214 Lincoln Court. Sanford,
who died Monday at Seminot#
Memorial Hospital, will b* at
S 30 p m ,
Saturday,
at
Springfield Mi**ionary Bept'tf
Church, Wett ITfh Street and
Cedar Avenue, Sanford, with fht
Rev Enoch River*, pallor,
officiating Burial will be n
Re*tiawn Cemetery WII*on
EiChribergtr Mortuary .* .n
charge
CREWS OAVIO
Funeral
service* for David Crew*. 12. of
2410 Palm Way, Sanford, who
ti ed Wednesday, will be at 10 20
a m , Saturday at Britton
Funeral Hpm« with fht Rev.
John Jack.ton officiating Burial
in Oefclawn Memorial Park
Britton Funeral Mom* PA in
charge

KNIGHT. MRS E LLU TA MAE
— Funeral service* for Mrt
Eihrfa Mae Knight. If. of 7427
iim Ave, Sanlord, who d&gt;ed
today at Seminole Memorial
Hospital, will be af id i n .
Saturday at Gramnow Funeral
Heme Chapel wilh the Rev Paul
Murphy officiating Buna! will
be in Elmwood Cemetery,
Birmingham, Ala Gramkow
Funeral Home, Sanford, it in
charge
BOOKEY, MRS SUSIE G —
Funeral serve** for Mr* Suite
G BooAey.
of I I ] ] Hickory
Ave , Sanford, who died July 71
at her home will be at It a m
Saturday af New Bethel AME
Church. Eatt Mam Street,
Sanford with the Rev M M
Burke Jr pastor, officiating
Burial wi&lt;lI Be «n Rett Iawn
Cemelery Sanford WiltonPnheibergef Mortuary it in
charge.
MOORE. MR LUCIO US F yneral Iff viett tor Mr, Luc .out
Moore, H, ol Route 1. Bor 2S2.
Oviedo, who deed Saturday at the
Good Samaritan Home, Sanford,
will be at i 20 p m Saturday at
the Witton Eichfiberger Chapel,
1110 Pine Ave , Sanford w in the
Rev OW William* officiating
Burial will be in Rvttlawn
Cemetery, Sanford Wilton
E&lt;h*ib*rgef Mortuary 1* in
charge

OAK LAWN
MONUMENT CO.
Rt. 4, B«x 144, Sanford
Ph. i n O l)
• All Trp «t Moflum.ntt
• C m tltry LtMtrlftp

• •„«&lt;* Wirknt

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p^E LE C TR o^
v

RENTAL &amp; SALES CO.

No. 7 L a k e v ie w Plaza — 316 C o m m e rc ia l Street
Sanford, F lo rid a 32771

(305)323-7885
- SERVING Orange — Seminole — Volusia Counties

Two S u rg e o n s Suspended
CHICAGO (D PIi — Two surgeons lave been
suspended (or 29 days and (ace a dismissal hearing (or
operating on the wrong lego! a 9-year-old buy wlm hud
a birth defect.
"The place is so anguish-foiled,” Ron Weisa, a
spokesman for Cook County Hospital, said Thursday.
"Everyone Is so upset and disturbed that It happened.
"We still don’t know exactly what happened. A very
thorough, intensive Investigation la going on. This kind
ol a thing shouldn't take place."
Officials at the hospital, one of the largest medical
lacililies in the country, refused to identify the boy or
doctors involved but confirmed the mixup took place
and said Hie two surgeons have been suspended.

RENT TO OWN-1 WEEK 99
st

SERVICE

PARTS

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: A series of tornadoes touched down
In eastern North Dakota late Thursday and heavy rains
prompted flood watches today In Arinina and Oklahoma,
where up to 6 inches of rain already has caused flooding in
some areas. A storm 25 to 50 miles east of Oklahoma City
unleashed rainfull ul rates of 4 Inches per hour Thursday,
causing Hooding from Prague south to Seminole. About 6 In­
ches of water Hooded Oklahoma 51 about 3 miles west of
Tahlcquah, Okla. Thursday morning temperatures (lipped into
the ids over much of the Great lakes, Ohio Valley and North
Atlantic Coast and dropped into the 30s in areas of West
Virginia, Six Northern dllcs, from Philadelphia to Chicago,
also reported record low temperatures. Sunny skies lingered
over the Northern Rockies to California, the Pacific Northwest
and most ol the Great lakes.
AREA READINGS i l a.m .ft temperature: 79; overnight
low: 73; Thursday's high: 98; barometric pressure: 30.li;
relative humidity: 87 percent; winds: South at 4 mph.
SATURDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 9:50
a.m., 10:17 p.m.*, Iowa, 3:31 a m , 3:36 pm ,;
PORT
CANAVERAL highs, 9:42 a m , 10 09 p.m.; lows, 3:22 a.m..
3:17p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 3:34 a.m., 2 :0 p m ; lows, 8:59
a.m., 9:52 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST; St. Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
SO Miles: Winds variable, mostly south around 10 knots
through tonight becoming southeast 10 to 15 knots Saturday.
Seas 3 (ect or less, but winds and seas higher near scattered
afternoon and evening thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Saturday with
scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms, Highs in the
low 90s. Lows in the mid 70s. Wind variable 10 mph but strong
and gusty near thunderstorms. Rain probability 50 percent
today, 20 percent tonight and 40 percent Saturday.
liiritiiiK l l e n tl d

4msm &lt;*'•»»»

Friday, July 31, INI—Vol. It, No. 3N
(foil, .» • u m « ,. ti c p i u ii r i ir i , n , u&gt; i»«
h „ * m. im

..w x t „•&lt;»*»«,*•• *• '*- rw m u

l*c«M Clot N lU H r.ip *1 iMltra. FHrUa Ittll
H .«. DMi.trr' W H i 61.661 **••». »*»( » «fo«l*X. I8M8I
v »w , M *

a , m » iii w m * 41-JIi

‘ •T*1 • •*•••»*■

04 Mi V»»r. Ul.**_________________________________

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�Evtnlng Herald, Sanford. FI.

W O RLD
IN BRIEF
Iran Q uake Deaths
Estimated At 8,000
ANKARA, Turkey ilIPIi — Working through the
ruins o( smashed villages in sweltering heat, rescue
teams dug out scores n{ bodies today to raise to more
than 1,300 the official death toll in iran's devastating
earthquake, Tehran radio said. U.N. officials
estimated 8,000 were killed.
Tehran radio said rescue workers recovered another
100 bodies from the rubble being cleared since the
quake — measuring 7.3 on the Richter scale — struck
southeastern Iran's Kerman province Tuesday night.
Iranian relief teams Thursday Hew more tents, food
and medical supplies to as many as 60,000 people
directly affected by the earthquake that hit Kemian
province Tuesday, toppling buildings and Rattening a
string of villages.

Ousted President To Return
IjONDON lU P li — Gambia's ousted 1’resident Sir
Dawda Kairnba Jawara vowed to return home today
and put down a coup by leftist troops who seiied power
while he was in l/ndon for the royal wedding.
“It the airport is open I will go straighl io Banjul,"
Jawara told a television interviewer in London
Thursday, on his plans In return to his capita) "If not, I
will fly to Dakar ISenegal I, then find my own way in."

Royal Pair 'Happy'
ROMSKY, Kngland lUPl) — Prince Charles and his
Princess Diana were ensconced in the secluded
Hroadlands estate today for a final day of privacy and
tranquility before plunging back into the public eye on
their Mediterranean honeymoon cruise,
The only first-hand report of the couple's tw inlay
interlude of calm before embarking Saturday on their
cruise, came from a police superintendent checking
security al the 6.000-acre Mountbottan estate.
He came across a couple Thursday walking together
so deeply involved with each other he did not disturb
them.
"Prince Charles and Ihe princess of Wales," tie said,
"looked very, very happy.”

P O T

L U K

W IN N E R

Friday, July )l. l i l t — JA

The Tax Cut: Don't Expect Immediate Windfall
WASHINGTON i U PII - Congress
soon will complete action on
President Reagan’s tax cut plan.
But while the first reductions Lake
hold Oct. I, it will have little initial
effect on most Americans.
In fa d , people making less than
$10,000 a year will get such a small
tax cut next year — offset by in­
flation and increases in Social
Security payroll dcdudlons — that
they will end up paying more taxes.
The Senate planned to give final
approval to the president's 33month, 25 percent across-the-board

tax package today, sending it on to a
House-Senate ctxiference to resolve
differences between it and the House
bilL
Although the first year of the tax
cut ts billed as a 5 percent reduction,
it will amount to a I S percent cut for
calendar year 19(1.
Workers' federal Income tax
withholdings would be adjusted to
reflect the average 5 percent tax
reduction through June 30, 1981,
Then the second installment, a 10
percent rate cut, will take effect
July 1,1982, boosting the cumulative

People making loss
than $ 10,000 a year ...
will end up paying
more taxes.
effect to a 15 percent cut from
current rates — a little more
noticeable In workers' paychecks
The final Installment — another 10
percent rate cut — would take effect
on July 1, 1983, for a cumulative 25

Because it is an across-the-board
cut, those with the highest incomes,
who pay the most in taxes, will gel
the largest reductions.
The effect of the tax cut from 1982
through 1984 for the average family
of four with a non-working spouse
and two children anil claiming about
23 percent of its adjusted gross in­
come in itemized deductions would
be:
—At 115,000, the family would

...Winter Springs
I Continued From Page IA|

reduce its current $1,233 tax liability;
by $151 in 1982. $226 in 1983 and $281;
in 1984,
I
—Al $30,000, the family would c u t5
its current $3,917 tax liability by $405 •
in 1982. $744 in 1983 and $914 in 1984 ;
—Al $60,000, tlie family would cut [
its current $12,634 tax liability by ,'
$1,255 in 1982. $2,370 in 1983 and
$2,928 in 1984

percent cut in individual tax rates on
the average over a 33-month period.

—At $100,000, the family would cut
iLs current $27,878 tax liability by
$2,137 In 1982, $4,648 in 1983 and
$5,822 in 1984

W o m a n Robs B ankfs)

Mayor Troy Ptland recently suggested
that once Sunshine Park next to city hall
on Rdgemon Avenue Is improved and
spruced up, persons who use the park
could be charged what is commonly
called a user lee. Rotansky says that
user tees could also be charged for a host
of other city services such as building
inspections or emergency medical care.

one place to turn for increased revenue
— local taxpayers.
The state and federal revenue sharing
programs, which will pump $373,491 into
city rollers next year, liave come close In
the past few years to being phased out by
disillusioned lawmakers.
Should the programs be killed, "and
you can never lell what will happen in
The money raised through user fees
Washington and T allahassee,” the could help pay for several major capital
council would have to turn to John (J improvements looming in the future —
Taxpayer to take up the slack, Rozansky purchase of the North Orlando Water and
says.
Sewer Corp., and construction of a new
One possible solution could be the city hall, (wo projects which could carry
levying of user fees as opposed to more a total price tag in excess of $5 million.
taxes, the theory being that only the
people who benefit from a service should
Indications are that the budget will
continue to climb upward, perhaps
be required to pay for it,

pulling taxes along wtlh it, Itoiansky
says. However, the increase, If any,
probably will tie small and gradual, he
adds.
State taw prohibits any municipality
from exceeding i tax rate greater than
$10 per $1,000 of assessed property value
without first seeking public approval in a
special election,
The city’s present rate is $2 05 per
$1,000, and Rozansky says lie doesn't
anticipate having to hold such an election
anytime In the foreseeable future
"Hell, we probably wouldn't hit $10 per
$1,000 if we were built right to the gills,"
he says. Then he leans back In his chair,
smiles and says, "I can just hear all
those transplanted Yankees rubbing
their little hands in glee,”

TAMI’A.Fla. (UPI) - A gray-haired woman who robbed
the Atlantic Bank office in the Hast Gate Square Shopping
Center Thursday may he the same one who robbed a bank
in a shopping center in Clearwater July 6, an FBI
spokesman said.
The spokesman said there was "a lot of similarities" in
the methods used in both robberies and in the physical
descriptions of the woman.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Srrmnoit M tm oitil

Tammy L Titobf, Lake Mary

July 19 t*«l

OISC MARGES

ADMISSIONS

Santoro
Anna M Beverley
Andre* J Snipule. DfBary
Stanley R Jafvlt, Deltona
Betty M Leonard. Deltona
:
Mat ion# P Motlrr. Orange City »

Sanford
o « r \t\ D Baker
Verna M Barton
Pamela L Clark
t forance Bingharn, Deltona

Habelle V Kuman. Lake Mary

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solar or heat-recovery units tor water
D € S tG N € D
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yrri

HARRIETTH. BOYD
WINNER

K IT T Y WISE
M ANAGER

MJ0 Pol Luh winner at Lalio Mary i t Food Store in
Lake Mary was Harrlatl H Boyd, 101 W. Lake Mary
Blvd., Lak* Mary.

IP O T

L U K

W IN N E R

M m e

tt

BREVARD COUNTY
A.B.W., Imc.
A.C. Notary Gmipiny
Aquarinu Beach-Aquarirui Dev.
Architectural Builders, Inc.
Artisan Homes (Chuck Zahm)
BikL Homes
Rumford-lhll Company
IW.itKmJe Girporat ii m
I\m IVIchcr, General Gintractor
Carmine A. Bravo, Developer
A.C. Brut, Builder
Broadway Enterprises, Inc.
Brodsky Construction, Inc.
Brookfield Enterprises, Irvc.
Dan Bryan Ginst., Inc.
Cameron Dev. Gup
(lm.lin.il Industries, Inc.
CarinaIG instruct ion Gx
Childre Homes, Inc.
Cleveland Enterpnses, Inc.
Aaron E. Gxist Construction, Inc.
Robert L. Gichran Gx, Inc.
CM. Darden Gmstruction Gx
Sam IVcarlo, Inc.
LVmeo Builders, Inc.
Gordon O Donovan, Gen. Bldr.
Eastern American, Inc.
EIHe Gmstruction, Inc.
Envmxlcsics, Inc.
J. W. Faull Development Gx
Warren Felti, Gen. Gmtr.

JOHNO. ROGERS
WINNER
Use Pol Luk winner al Cassaltwrry SS Food Store in
Casselberry wes John D Rogers, 10) Plnecreit,
Lengwood.

P O T

L U K

W IN N E R

Garcon Development, Inc.
General Dcvelopinent G up
G.H.L Construction Gx •
D.J. Glass Enterprises, Inc.
Paul Harris, General Builder
IListings Ginstructk&gt;n Gx
CKirlesD. Heller—
Rock Pit Rd., Tovvnlvouses
Hicks Gmstmction Gx
EJ. Holmes Ginst., Gx
Honeymoon Hill, Inc.
Indian Bay Builders
Kapir Const., IncKey Home Builders
K-Kraft Gmstruction Gx
K R.C. Development Gx
LGista By Tlie Sea - Bittners LTD.
Ed LaFlcur
Lamarr Gut Gmstruction Gx
Litcs Construction, Inc.
Marshall, Inc.
Ronald E Marshall fit Sons, Inc.
Jessie McDuffie Ginst., Gx
Jim Messer, Gen. Gintractor
Charles W. Middleton, Inc.
Mills Gmstruction Gx
M.R1.
Natale A. Nobili, Gen. Gmt.
Nutting G instruct am G&gt;rp
Palatial Grnst., Co.
Pjlm Bay Builders, Inc.
Pinedo Corp

f f

PlymelGmstruction, Inc.
Bivi.i- Ball.mt me Gup
David ftitnam Architects
T.ll Quinn
R.GI. Development G up
Rulurdi6x Winkler Builder*
Rivemakes of ML., Inc.
Roick, Inc.
Royal Enterprises IVv., Inc.
Seahurvl l Vvelopmcnt, Inc.
Sheridan Gmstruction Gx
Siegel Homes, Inc.
J.T. SmithGmstmctionGx
John W. Smith Gmstruction
Jerry Solomon Ginst., Inc.
Edward Speno Const. 6c I\v.
Stott ler, Stagg N. Asvic.
Sun Up Builders, Inc.
Tompkins Development Gup
John M. Topjxt St Sons, Iik.
Del Travis Const., Ii k .
Virgil J. Weler. Bldr.
Western Style Home, Inc.
Wicklum GmstnKtton, Inc.
Wmdcrview Development, Inc.
Zeeto, Inc.

%

,y

SEMINOLECOUNTY
Budderficld, Inc.
Cardinal Ind.
Gmtincntal I lomcv-Rumblrvtvxxl
Rolert E. McKee
Universal Structures, Inc
-Seminole Wxxls

i‘
i

BRIAN BURGESS
JACKIE HILL
STORE CLERK
WINNER
U00 Pot Luk wlnntr al Airport** Food Store in Sanford
wot Jackl* Hill, 1ST Bathuno Clrtlo. Sanford.
J

f

M- M »-

.

♦ '* *" **

*

�',«A— Evtnlng Mir*Id, Sanford, Ft.

Friday, July It, m i

Graham Blasts Reagan For New Immigration Policy
; MIAMI (Ul’ti — Florida officials ore
; complaining that the Reagan ad; ministration's new Immigration policy
I announced Thursday doesn’t do enough
’ (or refugee-hooded Dade County,
t Gov. Bob Graham blasted the Reagan
; administration (or ignoring the "crushing
| problems" lacing Floridians shortly
latter UJ». Attorney General William
| French Smith made thq new proposals.
"The policy does not address im! mediate problems of criminal aliens —
j instead, the attorney general even
; suggests the possibility that they will
| simply be dumped on our communities
' with no redress." Graham a i d at an
Jtemoon news conference.

The federal government’s policy does of the federal government as to how
not address the sta te 's "crushing they'll deal with the situation. The
problem" of "over-saturation” of the re­ conditions that exist In Dade County are
fugee population in South Florida, unacceptable," he said.
Smith said the policy statement was a
Graham said, and the need to restrict the
placement of aliens with fictllioui move In the right direction, but didn't go
far enough. He feels that the federal
sponsorship.
"The policy announced does not even government should assume full financial
mention the most urgent situations we and legal responsibility far the refugees.
" We a r e disappointed," agreed Sergto
must fare at the Krome North refugee
Peretra. assistant Dade County manager
facility in Miami," Graham said.
State Attorney General Jim Smith said and chief liaison officer on refugee
during a visit to Tampa; "What Is problems. "We have not analysed the
inadequate as far as Florida is concerned policy yet, but the newswire reports
Is, 1 don't see any immediate attention we've aeen indtcstes It does not address
the problems we are facing In Dade
being given to Dade County.
"We really are going to be at the whim County.”

Pereira said no one from the south
Florida area was a member of the task
force that drew up the policy and a
member of the group spent only about IS
minutes listening to Dade officials.
"There’s really nothing new (in the
policy). There’s an awful lot of rhetoric.
It might be pie tn the sky," Ptreira said.
He said much of the policy will require
legislation by Congress and "that takes
quite awhile" to achieve.
He said the new policy on refugee
residential status lacks appropriate
funding for aialsUnce.
"For example. It does not Include
anything about eligibility for medical
assistance. That burden falls on the

sea and the return of excludable aliens to
their homelands.
Under the new plan, it will take Cubans
who arrived in the Marlel sealift last
year five years instead of two to obtain
legal residency, which is required before
they can bring over family members.
Citizenship would require 10 years and
that has made It easier for those seeking
to reunite with their families.
"This is horrible,” said Jorge Perez, a
Martel refugee. "If I have to wait 10
years before I can bring my family over,
I'm going back to Cuba."
The Rev. Gerard Jean-Juste, head of a
dissident Rattan refugee center in
Miami, said he was "outraged".

shoulders of local government,” Peretra
said.
About 140,000 Cuban and Haitian
refugees have poured into south Florida
In the past 11 months, and residents and
officials alike are complaining that the
federal government isn't doing enough to
help.
"The bottom line for us here Is that It
doesn't address the problems of Dade
County and we’re not satisfied.’1Peretra
said.
He agreed that the Immigration and
Naturalization Service needs the ad­
ditional funding proposed. But he said he
was skeptical of the policy's statement on
interdiction of refugee-carrying boats at

Moonlight
Shop Sanford Plaza store tonight 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. for storewide savings!

Beauty

Cooking

Luggage

Curling Brush

Club Classic
Cookware Set

24” Pullman Women’sor Companion Girls’-Boys’

11 Only
Aluminum barrel with
plastic bristles and cool
tip for easy handling.

99

2
Beauty
Makeup Mirror
2 Only

1 Only

4 Only

Broken sizes, styles

Orig. 99.99

Orig. 52.40

Orig. to 15.9?

Now 3 9 9 9
Place Setting
Correlle*
4 place setting.
A Only

Orig. 34.9?

Now

999

Shoes

Orig. 40.99

Now

*15

Now

999

Now

99*

Tennis

Roller Skates

Athletic Apparel
Shorts-Shirts-Baseball
Jerseys

3 only

Orig. to 512

Now

Boys-Sizes 3-4-11
Orig. to 44.99

599

Now*

Tennis

Baking

Men’s

Men’s

Wood Racket Press

Wear Ever®
Load Pans - Cookie Sheets
Cake Pan and Others

Hats - Baseball,
Golf, Casual.

Back-To-School
Ray Suede Athletic

Orig. to 7.50

Oxford

Orig. 2.99

Now

;

99*

Orig. to 15.99

Play Back
Now

Orig. 10.99

499

Now

599

Now

99*104W

999
Now

Orig. 14.ff

Surf

Men’s

Men’s

Men’s

Morey Boggie
Boards. &gt;o„i,

Fashion Slacks
Solid &amp; Fancy

Athletic Shorts and
Swimwear

Sport Shirt and
Dress Shirts

Orig. to 54.99

Orig. to 519

Orig. to 514

Assorted styles.
4« Only

Now

24"

Now t )

Now

2"t.4"

Tune Up

Fishing

Musical

Zebco®

Happy Tooter External

5 ’ Centennial Rod

Musical Horn.

15 Only

99

Changeable Tunes

Now

1

99

Orig. 44.9?

JCPenney
Spark Plugs

Now

44“

Now
Orig. to 1.04

limit •

Now 1

99

Motor Cycle
Helmets
1 Only
*

5*

Fits somo Ford, Chovy, Pontiacs. J F ™ A

Orig. 5.88

Orig. to 515

10

Orig. 31.99

Now

999

Of course you can charge &gt;1

SA N F O R D PLAZA

Limited Quantities
Closed 5 to 6 p.m.
K m
•m i J C

Hwy. 17-93 A State St.
Open Monday thru Saturday 10a.m.-9 p.m.
Open Sunday 13:50-5:30 p.m.

�Evening Herald, Ssnlord, FI._______ Friday, July 31, Ittl— 5A

Woman Cleared In Stabbing Death
An all-woman Seminole Circuit Court Jury deliberated fee
an hour Thursday before finding a U-year-old Sanford woman
Innocent of stabbing her boyfriend to death four months ago.
It was the second trial in a month for Ruby Dean Edwards
; whose June 24 trial on a charge of manslaughter ended in a
imlslriat when a six-member Jury deadlocked and could not
■reach a verdict.
Edwards, a cabbage cutter who lives on Sipes Avenue in the
Midway community cast of Sanford, was accused of fatally
laUbbing her live-in boyfriend-James Houston- on March 28.
g There were two versions of what happened that morning
recounted in court Wednesday, and jurors apparently chose to
..believe Edward’s story,
- Seminole County sheriffs deputies testified that when they
arrived at the Edwards home where the stabbing occurred
around 1 a m.. Edwards openly confessed to the slaying,
.saying she had slabbed Houston after he accused her of having
.another boyfriend.

A c t io n R e p o rts
* Fires
* Courfs
★ Police
But a tear)-eyed Edwards took the witness stand Wednesday
and told the jury it was all an accident. She claimed that she
was about to cut Houston a piece of her barbecue sandwich
when he nude his accusation. She whirled to face him, she
said, and he walked into the flashing blade of her knife.
Dr. G.V. Garay, county medical examiner, testified that the
knife struck Houston at the base of the neck and penetrated
deeply enough to sever an artery under the collarbone, causing

him to bleed to death.
In other court action, James William Terry , 36, of Sipes
Avenue, Midway, pleaded guilty to aggravated assault.
Sentencing was deferred pending completion of an in­
vestigation into Terry’s background. Ten-y was accused of
chasing his wife and daughter around his house and yard on
May 10, threatening them with a hatchet.
ANY PU C E BUT HERE
Tammy Mae Rrice sure knows how to pick her spots.
The 20-year-old Oviedo woman crashed into a street light
pole Thursday ... right in front of the Sanford Police Depart­
ment, 815 S. French Ave.
"At least," said one officer with a grin, "she didn't have to
go far to find a cop."
According to a police report, the accident occurred shortly
after midnight.
Brice was charged with reckless driving and driving while
her license was suspended.

$348,239 Awarded
For Disfigured Finger
JACKSONVIIJ.E, Fla. (UPI&gt; - A woman who said she
lost part of her right Index finger after a surgeon implanted
a non-sterile fingernail was awarded $348,239 in damages
by an nil-woman circuit court Jury Thursday
Mildred A. Shinn, 33, filed a negligence suit against Dr
Curtis A. Juhala, Methodist Hospital Inc., and the Florida
Patient’s Compensation Fund. The implantation took place
nearly three years ago.
"The nurse goefeid because she was not following
procedure. Both hospital and doctor were at fault," the
woman's attorney, W.C. Gentry, said in closing arguments
He asked for damages in excess of $200,000.
As a result of the failure to sterilize the fingernail. Gentry
said, the finger became infected and part of it eventually
rotted off,

Moonlight Sale tonight!
Shop Sanford Plaza store tonight 6 p.m. until 10 p.m. for storewide savings!

Select group
of ladies’
sportswear.

Select group
of ladies’
handbags.

Junior and m isses sties.
Selection includes tops, pants,
skirts, blouses.
Orig. to $15.

Canvas In an asso rtm en t
of fashion styles and colors.
Summer colors.
Orig. to $10.

15” square
decorative
pillow.
Assorted prints.
Coordinating colors.
Variety ol labrics.

Now only
Now only Now only
1.99 to 3.99 1.99 to 2.99 3.99
Junior &amp; misses’
swimwear.

Save 50%
on brass &amp;
wood lamps.
Wood candlestick.

Now 14.99
B rass candlestick . Orig. to $40.

Now 29.99
Ladies’ tunic.

Ladies’ dresses.

Ladies’ gowns.

Select group ot sum m er dresses.
M isses and junior sites.
Orig, to 113.

Cool polyester-cotton'blend.
Comfortable w a lti length.

Now 9.99
Pantyhose.

Now 4.99
Junior romper.

9.99 to 12.99
Misses’ blouse.

Now 7.99
Junior shirt.

Sheer sandlefool style.
G reat stock-up p rlct.
W om en's site.

Overall sty la in p astel colors.
Poly-cotton.
Orig. $19.

Shod sleeve, button front.

Shorl sleeve terry cloth.

Orig. $13.

S, M, L.

5 3.1 9
Knee-hi hose.

Now 9.99
Terry romper.

Now 5.99
Terry robe.

P erfect for pents.
Ribbed top for comfort.
W om en's sixes.

Assorted p astel c o lo n .
S, M, L, w om en's.
Orig. $9.

Assorted pastel colors..
W rap styla, *« sleeves, knee length.
Orig. $11.

i,

p r. fo r

t i?

100 pci. polyester knit.
Cotorlul print blouses.
O rig. 113.

Good assortm ent of lfy las.

Now 3.99
Group of girls’
sportswear.
S um m er styles.

10
j

3.1 9
Luggage.
p r. fo r

Select group of pullman, totes
and carry-ons.
JC Penney and Samsonite.

50% off
Men’s tank top.
|

Orig lo 530.

Now 4.99
Needlework &amp;
Qtitrhprv kite
d l l l v l i v l jf

Now 5.99
Ladies’ shoes.
Select group.

lU lw i

Sunset ..J iffy ..O rig . 5.50 lo 534.

50% off
Men’s shirts.

Solid colon with contrast trim.
Poly-cotton bland.
Orig. ItO.

Terry sportsMrti In poly-cotton.
Ribbed collar and cuff with stripes.
Two button pticket §nd pitch pocket.
Orig. 111. . Aiiorted colors.

Now 3.50

Now 6.99

Orig. 13.W to 34.lt.

Now 5.99
Ladies’ terry
tube dress.

Orig. to $10

Now 1.99
Men’s shoes.

i

Vinyl and suede,
Sixes 7 lo 13
Orig. to l i .tt .

Now 5.99
Men’s shirts.
Terry sporishlrf In poly-cotton.
Classic 4 button plackat.

Pastel colors. ..Orig. $11.

Orig. $14... Assorted colon.

Now 5.99

Now 7.99

All 4 JCPenney stores will close at 5 p.m. and reopen at 6 p.m.
Shop our giant Moonlight Sale tonight 6 p.m. until 10 p.m.!
SANFORD
SANFORD PLAZA
Many other unadvertised specials
and sales throughout each store!

Hwy.17.flt Stall St.
Open today f a.m.-S p.m.
Open tonight 4-10p.m.

H K l l l t l .■
0

�r

E v e n in g H e r a ld
IUSPS X I }H I

3 A 3?

h

Retiring Casselberry Police Chief George
Karcher and his successor, Fred McGowan,
have many things In common. Both are veteran
law enlor cement officers. Both are dedicated to

.

300 N. FRENCH AVE.,SANFORD, FLA. 32771
Area Code 303-322-2611 or 1314993
F rid ay , July 31, 19S1—6A

And both have served in the Casselberry Police
Department for about the same length of lime.

When It comes to law enforcement, citizens
would do well to remember that crime
prevention Is everyone's business.

Karcher, who today steps down as police chief
after serving 10 yean in that capacity, was a
New York City police officer from 1948 to 1968.

Police agencies cannot be expected to carry
the whole burden by themselves. They need help.
CiUzens a n help themselves and help police

C lO c
By JOHN DIXON

SCIENCE WORLD

Shameful Episode

. Are
Sneakers
Healthy?

.

BERRY'S WORLD

"What Coos Princa Charles havt that I havan't
g o tr

4

serving almost nine years in the Casselberry
department, was a New York City police officer
for 11 years.
They didn’t know each other when they lived In
New York, but their mutual Interests brought
them together in Florida.

To Correct A
Manzanar, Tulc Like, Minidoka, Topaz, Gila
Itiver, Poston, Hear! Mountain, G ranada,
Jerome, and Kohwer are meaningless names now
for most Americans, who are two generations
removed from the significance of these desolate
Western places.
Hut Japanese-Americans ever remember them
as locations of the major internment camps where
they and Japanese resident aliens on the West
Coast, 120,000 in all. were imprisoned during
World War II. These ghostly names recall one of
the most shameful episodes in American history,
when an entire group of U.S. citizens was stripped
of civil rights and denied freedom foe no other
reason than that of race and national ancestry.
Nevertheless, without minimizing this stain
upon (he nation's history, it is wrong for
Americans and the world to judge this mass in­
ternment in isolation, outside the context of the
t e r r ib l e time in w h ic h it to o k p la c e , The massive
Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor on December
7 , 1941, was the first such onslaught by a foreign
power in American history. Most of the Pacific
fleet was destroyed or crippled. It appeared
initially that the West Coast lay exposed to in­
vasion or bombardment. Those days were laden
with national disaster.
All across the far Pacific, the Japanese were
sweeping to victory after victory with U.S. forces
everywhere in retreat. There was serious
sabotage in Hawaii and the Philippines, believed
to be of Japanese origin. Unlike German
Americans who were scattered and undislingulshable in the nation, the highly visible
Japanese were concentrated on the West Coast.
The hysteria that is now so easily derided was
actually a m atter of genuine fear, worry and
uncertainly. Indeed, Sen. S.I. Hayakawa, himself
of Japanese descent, says the relocations were
perfectly understandable."
And so in February 1942, President Franklin
Roosevelt followed the advice of military leaders
and signed the now infamous Executive Order
'JUKI authorizing the roundup of JapaneseAmerieans, who in the process lost their homes,
(arms, businesses and most of their worldly
goods.
The relocation and internment was in­
stitutionalized into law in 1944 by the U.S.
Supreme Court in Korematsu vs. U.S. The
decision upheld Roosevelt’s relocation order.
Throughout their ordeal, the Japanese-.
Americans in the camps adopted the attitude of
shlkata ga nai” — so it goes."
busy with its postwar building, the country
largely forgot the Japanese-American in­
ternment. In 1D4H, Congress got around to enac­
ting the Japanese-American Claims Act that
returned only about 10 cents on the dollar of an
estimated $400 million in lost properly.
During recent years, some second and third
generation Japanese Amcricans have become
activists agitating to rigid the internment wrong
As a result of their lobbying, Congress and the
Carter administration last year established the
Commission on Wartime Relocation and In­
ternment of Civilians to examine .igain the cir­
cumstances of the relocation, to determine
whether Ihere should be financial compcnsalion,
and lo ensure against another mass internment in
some future national emergency.
The activists are pressing compensation claims
for up to $25,000 per family ordered to the camps
about $3 billion in all. This is wrong and
unrealistic. Even if the U.S. Treasury were
overflowing, there is something degrading in the
thought that everything can be set straight with
money. Indeed, Senator Hayakawa accuses those
Japanesc-A m ericans seeking reparations of
pulling a hustle" on the government, and he says
the vast majority of Japaiiese-American citizens
oppose it.
We believe it is irrelevant now to try and set any
monetary price on the war-time internment and
we trust the commission will nol attempt to do so.
On the other hand, there should be no argument
about U.S. recompense for proven property losses
which have never been paid. These should be
provided for in full. Beyond this, the most ap­
propriate act of contribution would be an official
United Stales upology to the surviving JapaneseAmericans, who might then find in their hearts
the grace lo forgive the memory of a dark time.

McGowan, who moves up to police chief aftrr

their profession. Both are natives of New York
City. Both served with the New York City Police
Department for about the same length of time.

Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovtnbury, Advert lilng and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, 34 2 ; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year. 343 00 By Mail: Week, 31,21; Month, 3121; 6 Months.
330.00; Year. 312.00.

r I" f1 *

NEW YORK (DPI) - Contrary to the
opinions of parents and shoe store managers,
most pediatricians surveyed in Philadelphia
say Inexpensive canvas sneakers are all right
for the feet of infant*.
Dr. Jeffrey Weiss and associates from
Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia
queried the three groups about footwear after
noting an advertisement for a nationally
known brand of shoes gave the impression
that children need special shoes to help them
learn to walk.
They reported their findings in Pediatrics,
the journal of the American Academy of
Pediatrics. On the sneaker question, they
found:
—Of tot parents queried, £3 percent thought
wearing sneakers Is unhealthy. Most opted
(nr high lop, laced, stiff soled shoes and said
they were so advised from salespersons, only
20 percent of whom had shoefitting training.
-Seventy-two percent of salespersons said
wearing sneakers is unhealthy. In addition to
recommending hard soles for toddler's shoes,
the ma}orily of the store managers suggested
high tops and laces and often a steel shank.
The average cost of the shoes recommended
by salespersons was 118,74.
—Only 23 percent of the pediatricians felt
sneakers were NOT suitable for kids. The
Philadelphia doctors usually recommend a
sneaker that costs around 310. They said this
recommendation was for the sake of both the
feet and the parents' budget.
"We
therefore
recom mend
that
pediatricians should routinely advise parents
about buying infant shoes. Including making
parents aware of misleading advertising
claims,” Wiess and colleagues said In the
report.
"This should be done by the five or six
month check-up to prevent parents from
purchasing shoes before they are needed."
Other points (mm (lie pediatricians:
—Arch dnd ankle tuppnrta, steel shanks,
and hard soles are neither necessary nor
desirable for infants and (oddlea.
—P ediatricians who say inexpensive
canvas sneakers are appropriate footwear for
infants note that sneakers allow flexibility
while protecting the foot from minor trauma.
—Although most parents and shoe store
managers still think that wearing sneakers is
untwalthy, a 10-year follow-up of a study ...
reported no foot deformity due to wearing
sneakers.
The attitudes about sneakers were elicited
from questionnaires administered to parents
of 104 kids, 9 to 13 months of age. In the Jef(erion Children's health center. The patients
were from a range of socio-economic classes,
with a predominance of the low socio­
economic, Inner city classes.
Other questionnaires went to to 1U doctors
and 69 to shoe store managers. Seventy-six
percent of the doctors and 32 percent of the
i shoe store people tilled out their forms.
The ad that prompted the study staled
that a baby's "toes tre curly, his muscle tone
is terrible, his m etatarsals are un­
derdeveloped and his tendons are Inex­
perienced."
The ad says "if he expects to walk, he'll
need a little help from our shoes."
"In our search of the literature we could
find no evidence to support claims that shoes
promote walking skills or fool development,"
the report in Pediatrics said.
"In fact, there Is evidence that shoes may
actually cause more deformity and less
mobility of the fool
"Infant shoes with hard soles may delay
walking and aggravate tntoetng and outtoeing
— as well as impede the development of
supportive foot muscles."

by establishing Neighborhood Witch programs
in their communities.
By "keeping and eye" on their neighborhoods
and reporting suspicious incidents, people can
perform a real public sen-ice.

c

The Neighborhood Watch concept originated
several years ago in densely populated urban
areas where crime was rampant. A cooperative
citizen program was clearly needed to help
safeguard Uvea and property.
The message Is dear: As Seminole County
continues lo grow, so will the need for "selfhelp" programs such ss Neighborhood Watch.

ROBERT WALTERS

BRILLIANT OPINION, SANPY! TYPE up nine
Copies and see t o t the other Justices
Each GET ONE, WILL You, s w e e t ie ?

I S T e j n ’*! mea’
JtoCXY MTH. H W j

ROBERT

W AGM AN

Loss Of Model Bureaucrat
WASHINGTON - Dr. Peter F. Infante, the
head of the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration's Carcinogen Indrntification
and Classification Office, has (or years been
hailed as one of the government's best
scientist-admin is tra to a.
Now OSHA want* to get rid of him. The
reason: "insubordination.”
Infante has refused to change a deeply held
opinion that is supported by lest data and that
was the government's official position until
the Reagan team took command. His OSHA
superiors want him out because he won't alter
his views to match those of the new political
order.
At Issue ts whether formaldehyde causes
cancer. In the final weeks of the Carter ad­
ministration. Infante's office published a
bulletin warning that formaldehyde produced
a high rate of cancer in tested animals and
might do the same In humans. It urged that
further testing begin at once.
The chemical formaldehyde has many
consumer applications; It Is used, (or
example, In hair products, toothpaste and
home insulation. Its classification as a car­
cinogen could substanUally injure a multimillion dollar industry. So, it was not sur­
prising that the companies that produce and
sell formaldehyde fought back through their
lobbying arm, The Firmaldehyde Institute.
The industry contends the scientific data
are "ambiguous” and that new animal testing
must be undertaken before the chemical can
be considered even a potential carcinogen. S.
John Bylngton, a lawyer who once chaired the
Consumer Product Safety Commission, was
hired to press those arguments.
Infante earned the Industry's wrath in
January when he testified at a Consumer
Product Safety Commission hearing on the
use of formaldehyde in home insulation.
Infante stressed at the hearing that he was
not speaking for OSHA or as an OSHA
scientist; instead, he was merely giving his
personal views and citing research with
which he waa familiar.
Hll testimony was instrum ental In
producing the commission's 3-2 preliminary
vote to ban IV use of formaldehyde in home
insulation. (Since several members are being
replaced, the commlnlon la likely to reverse
itself when the issue comes up for final ac­
tion.)

Infante's "insubordination" stems from a
letter that he sent in May to a French scientist
at the International Agency for the Study of
Cancer. The letter did not mention of the
views on formaldehyde of either OSHA or
Infante. However, tt did discuss a new study
by the Chemical Industry Institute for
Toxicology that found that 95 of 240 tested rats
developed tumors after exposure to large
doses of tiie chemical.
Bylngton and the industry learned of the
letter and wrote one of their own to OSHA
demanding Infante’s removal
Infante was subsequently informed by Dr.
Balius Walker, OSHA's dircctcr of health
standards, that he was to be dismissed tor
refusing to change his views despite knowing
that the agency had done ao "because of the
growing body of conflict and disagreement
about the scientific evidence concerning the
toxic effects of formaldehyde." Attached to
Walker's letter waa a copy of the industry's
demand (or Infante's removal.
No one at OSHA — and especially not
Watker — will comment on the matter.
Infante plans to fight his removal. He says
that he made no official statements con­
cerning formaldehyde after the Reagan
inauguration and that he never Indicated that
it was OSHA's position that the chemical
caused cancer. Moreover, he says that he waa
never told that the government's position on
formaldehyde had changed — “and I'm the
one who's supposed to review policy questions
like this."
"The American Cancer Society reviewed
all the data on formaldehyde and concluded It
was a carcinogen," he saya. "The federal
review panel made up of representatives of
all tfederal) agencies dealing with health
questions reviewed the data and determined
it was carcinogen.
"So where ts OSHA getting its information
that the scientific community now has
doubts? It's not from within government and
It's not from without. The only thing I can
conclude is that the doubts hare been raised
by the industry."
The Infante cate will most likely be fought
out before the Merit Systems Protection
Board, which was created in the Carter years
as * court of last appeal for government
employees who think their superiors have
treated them unfairly. This could become a
critical test of the direction of the board under
the Reagan administration.

Watt: A n
Expected
Martyr?

:

WASHINGTON (NEA) Interior
Secretary James G. Witt appear* to havedeveloped a truly innovative approach to
service in the federal government — th e .
concept of a member of the president's,
Cabinet as an eipectant m artyr.
a
Walt seems to relish the notion of having an
opportunity to provoke the additional crises,
confrontations and controversies that almost .
certainly will cause the White House finally to . 11
lose patience with him.
At a recent press conference, Watt could
barely disguise his belief that he Is likely to be
replaced by President Reagan — probably V
sooner rather than later.
One Journalist wanted to know U the White Q
House had placed any restraints on Watt's
handling of sensitive Issues.
"Not yet," replied Watt with a broad grin.
Another reporter asked if he sensed any '
diminution of White House support.
"I haven't yet," said the smiling secretary.
The responses to such questions alw ays’’
included that "yet," the tantalizing qualifier1•
that Indicates Wstt Is indeed anticipating a
showdown with Reagan or his senior aid es.n
What are we to make of this man who has, *
with such zest and glee, simultaneously an- *
Ugonlzed the governors of various states,
executives of the world's largest oil com- ‘
ponies, every environmentalist In the nation
and assorted members of Congress, both'1
Democrats and Republicans?
Critics and defenders agree that Watt Is an **
exlradortnartly principled man who fervently
believes in the correctness of his actions and
who embraces an unwavering philosophy*’
based upon strong ideological and theological 1
views.
J
As a result, his dedication verges on 1
combativeness, his self-confidence Is easily
confused with arrogance, his intensity bor- '*
ders on maniacal behavior.
What fascinates an Intrigues this city's-’
denizens of sll political persuasions is Watt's u
steadfast unwillingness to compromise —
even for the sake of self-preservation.
His behavior is regularly compared with
that of Secretary of State Alezander M. Haig, “
the only other member of the Cabinet whose '•
abrasive personality has aroused high |
passions during the lin t sis months of the ’*
Reagan administration.
Unlike Watt, however, Haig understands
the exigencies of politics. On the several-1
------ 1_ . •earlier
—H— m
occasions
this. year when the"
secretary of state’s behavior raised eyebrows il
tt not hackles, he went to considerable lengths'
to mollify his critics.
There are a variety of options available to
Watt to placate those he has antagonized or to
merely gtin a temporary tactical advantage
over his detractors.
He could, for example, Instruct the Interior
Department staff to identify a series of
symbolic - but not necessarily substantive —
initiatives he could take that would be per­
ceived as conciliatory gestures.
But the available evidence suggests Watt
either never considered those possibilities or
rejected them, to recent weeks he has only
reinforced the reputation he acquired to
earlier months u a man determined to rape,
pillage and plunder the nation's natural
resources.
Those actions Include:
— A proposal to kill hundreds of wild horses
and tgirra.
— Refusal to back down on his program of
leasing 1 billion seres of offshore land (or oil
and gas development during the next five
years.
— lifting federal protection from the
whooping crane, one of the country's most
cherished endangered species.

JACK ANDERSON

Halting SS Minimum Could Be Costly
WASHINGTON - Millions of elderly
Americans subsist on meager Social Security
pensions, which leave them too poor even to
afford cut-price meats. Some satisfy their
craving (or meat by eating pet foods; others
exist on a diet of starches and water.
Now these forgotten Americans are caught
up In a political slurm-unddrang over a move
to eliminate the ItO a-m onth mandatory
minimum Social Security payment. Budget
director David Stockman predicts this would
save about 3496 million by next April.
It would be s saving, unfortunately, at the
expense of the nation's most pathetic in­
dividuals who would lace reductions to their
income of as much as 3900 a year. Rep. Jake
Pickle, D-Texas, claims that moat of the
sacrifice will be borne by women over 83,
nearly haU-a-millian of them to their Mb.
The bureaucrats who Will recompute the
payments, meanwhile, have another concern.

This is spelled out by the staff of the House
Ways and Means Committee to an internal
memo. The Social Security Administration's
computer system, they write, "is to such poor
condition that this task cannot be done
automatically and must be done through
manual reprogramming."
The agency already has a computer crisis
which, the memo warns, "will be greatly
exacerbated by the massive Job of finding
these beneficiaries and recomputing their
benefits."
Much of the money that will be taken from
the elderly, therefore, will have to be spent
either to upgrade the computer system or to
pay far the tedious paperwork. It would taka
all the available claims adjusters, working I t
hours overtime each week, a t least two full
months lo execute the cuts.
An Internal document from inside the
agency's Office of Central Operations warns

that the undertaking "would create critical
backlogs to other workloads ... resulting to
both underpayments and overpayments. The
district offices will be Inundated with
requests. We can also predict an increase to
complaints to congressmen.’'
This could create another cloud on the
horizon. "Beneficiaries to large numbers
across the nation," the memo notes, "will be
faced with reductions or eliminations to
benefits, overpayment notices and poor
services." So the question Is posed: "WUl due
process be required before adjusting benefits,
and, if so, with what assistance and to what
Urns fram e?”
to laymen's language, the question might
batter be phrased this way: Will the people
whose benefits are cut have the right to be
notified beforehand and to file objections?
Concludes the report: 'The reaction and

service deterioration wtU persist for a t least
one year.”
Footnote: An administration spokesman
suggested the alarms were ao much foiderol
The internal report, he a s u re d my associate
Tony Capaccio, "doesn't c a n y m uch
weight"
WASHINGTON WHIRL Justice
D epartm ent joggers m ust now carry
credentials to their sweatsuits. A notice
prated at the entrance to their building
demands they must have official ID cards to
gain re-entry to the premises.
—The Pentagon is finally tightening up l u
security at Its vast arsenals of small artna
and ammunition, to the last decade,
ihouiandi of weapons have disappeared from
military and naval bases each year. Now with
an intensified policing procedure, the num­
ber* of thefts and loaes to 1M0 was reduced
to 111.

�OURSELVES

I

Evening Hen Id, Sanford. FI.

Friday. July )1. lf«l— 7A

-

Gardening

Grow ing Plants From Seeds
The rich displayi ol (lowering plants
Men throughout the county seems to
entice home gardeners to get out their
garden tools and plant.
But whether or not you're wanting to
plant o rnam entals, (lowers or
vegetables, I think that starting plants

contain seed of other crops or weeds and
should be the correct variety. For best
results, buy quality seed from a reliable
dealer. Seeds sold in packages should
show crop, variety, germination per­
centage, and chemical seed treatments,
if any.

from seed causes the most confusion.
Growing plants from seed can be very
rewarding just so certain guidelines ore
(allowed. Plants o( many annual (lowers
and vegetables may be started indoors.
Vigorous plants started Indoors (lower
sooner and produce an earlier harvest
than those started outdoors.
Home g ard en ers can also grow
varieties that may not be available from
local nurseries. Proper selection of jour
seeds is hall the battle.
First of all, good seeds should not

Seeds should be kept dry and cool to
ensure good germination at planting.
Paper packets are best kept in tightly
sealed cans or Jars until planted
Many new vegetable and flower seeds
are hybrids. Hybrid seeds often cost
more than non-hybrid varieties.
However, hybrids usually have increased
vigor, b etter uniformity, better
production, and sometimes specific
disease resistance. F.ach gardener must
decide w hether the added benefit
Justifies the added cost. It often docs.

Tom

Davis
trim
Horticulturist
rn -n n

Some experienced gardeners save
their own seed. Tills practice Is risky
unless the gardener knows the proper
techniques for selecting, producing,
handling, and storing the seed.
Seed from hybrid plants should never
be kept. Likewise, it may be unwise to
keep seed from plants that are readily
cross-pollinated, such as sweet com,
squash and pumpkins.
Containers for starting your seeds

, Rewarding

should be clean, sturdy, and fit into the
space available for growing pianlj in the
home. Having the proper container helps
get seedlings off to a good start and may
save work in later stages of seed
development.
Wooden Rats, plastic trays, clay and
plastic pots, peat pots and peat pellets
can all be used for seed production.
The medium used for starting seed
should be loose, well drained, and fine in
texture. You may use commercially
prepared mixes or materials can be
mixed at home.
------Hanging baskets are popular outside
year-round in Ftorida. They acki coolness
to your landscape. Hanging baskets,
made with almost any kind of container
imaginable, provide attractive land­
scape accents and are easy to make.
To prepare the basket, use a well-

draining potting soil and leave a two Inch
space between the soil line and tire top of
the basket (or watering. Wire baskets
should first be lined wilh a material that
will hold the soil, such as sphagnum
moss. Plants should be placed at the
same depth at which they *were
previously grown.
Immediately after planting, the basket
should be thoroughly soaked in a tub of
wifttr. Because hanging baskets are
exposed to dry, hot air on all sides during
the summer, they do much better in the
shade. They also require daily watering
during hot summer weather.
The most convenient watering method
Is immersing the basket In a tub of
water; however, this might break or
damage plants drooping below the basket
edge. Regardless of the method, always
water thoroughly. Hanging basket plants

need regular feeding lo replace nutrients*
that are washed out of the soil.
As soon as the plants are established
and growing, they should be given a
complete, liquid, houscplani fertiiirer on •
a weekly or biweekly schedule. Many
plants are available for hanging baskets,
those with drooping growth being the
most preferable.
A few Include achunenes, hanging
geraniums and begonias, cascade mums
and petunias, im p atien t, lanlana,
Christmas and Easter cactus, ferns,
Vinca, flame violets, conunon mint,
English Ivy, wandering Jew. burro tail
anil kangaroo vine,
Alt Seminole County Cooperative
Extension Service programs are open lo
all, regardless of race, color, set or
national origin.

Object' Clause In Wedding
Rites M akes Priest Cringe
DEAR ABBY: You asked if anyone
ever attended a wedding that was ac­
tually stopped when the minister asked,
"U there is anyone present who knows
why these two should not wed. let him
■peak now or forever hold his peace."
It happened to me when I was brand
new in the priesthood. Unfortunately, my
seminary training didn't cover this
situation.
It was a fashionable wedding and the
church was full. A woman screamed,
“They should not wedt" 1 took the ob­
jecting woman and the bride and groom
to an adjoining office, and asked the
woman to state her objection. She
replied, "I speak In the name ol the Holy
Ghost," The bride fainted. The objecting
woman ran outside into the dead of night.
I have never been able to locale her
since. She was a stranger to both the
bride and groom.
After a long delay for everyone to
become composed again, we went on
with the ceremony, and as far as I know,
the couple 1 married lived happily ever
after.
This incident made me do some
research. Why is It necessary to ask far
objections? Everybody attending the
wedding had received a special printed
Invitation. If anyone had grounds to
object, he had plenty of time to reveal
them before the time of the ceremony.
1 discovered that this part of the
marriage service is considered the fourth
bana The clergy published the banns on
three Sundays before the wedding date.
If no one objected to the wedding, the
marriage could be performed. The banns

A person preaches a sermon, but does not
prearh u wedding service. Preaching is a
function, not a title. The word “minister"
is more comprehensive of what an or­
dained person does.
RECTOR, ALL SAINTS
EPISCOPAL CHURCH,
MIAMI,OKLA.
originally took the place of a marriage
license and blood test. But today, we
have more sophisticated ways. So, it does
seem anachronistic and unnecessary in
today's marriage rite to include this
invitation to object, t still cringe when 1
read it.
EDWARD E. HAILWOOD. RECTOR.
TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH.
ORANGE, CAUF.
DEAR ABBY; Although I have never
had an “objection" raised in 80 weddings
I've performed, I know why the minister
asks, "If anyone present can show Just
cause why this couple may not be
lawfully wed, speak now or forever hold
your peace."
Years ago when records were not as
complete and accurate as they are today,
it was necessary to raise the question of
“legality." Someone present might know
that one of the couple was already
married, or they might be long-lost
cousins and not aware of it, or some other
legal m atter that might prohibit the
marriage was not known publicly.
And white I'm writing, Abby, 1 want to
make another point: Some readers refer
to their clergymen as “preachers," An
ordained person is more than a preacher.

DEAR ARBY: When I was married in
1946, my age and date of birth were in­
correctly stated on the marriage license.
1 said I was 21, but actually I was only 20.
Being a country girl and naive for my
age, I didn't think much about it at the
time.
It started to bother me, so I wrote to the
Bureau of Statistics and asked them to
please correct the records. I was sent a
copy of the corrected marriage cer­
tificate. Now what I need to know is: Do t
need to be married again in order to be
legally married, or am I already legally
married?
ST1U. BOTHERED IN VA.
DKAK BOTHERED: You are legally
married, and there U do need to have
another rrrrmony.
Gelling married? Whether you want a
format church wedding or a simple, “ do&gt;our-own-thing" ceremony, grl Abby'*
new booklet. Send fl plui a long, selfaddressed, stamped 131 eenlt) envelope
to: A bhy't Wedding Booklet, 1*0(0
Hawthorne lilvd., Suite MOO, Hawthorne,
Calif. 902SO.

CALENDAR
SATURDAY, AUGUST I
Block parly to benefit Sanford Christian Sharing
Center, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., between Southwest Road and
Mulberry Avenue on ISth Street. Bring canned goods
and dried staples Free fish and salad. Entertainment
sponsored by Sister Eddie Robinson, Ml. Olive Fire
Baptise Church.
SUNDAY, AUGUST*
Ballroom and round dancing, 8 p.m., Temple
Shalom, Providence and Elkcam Boulevards. Deltona.
Seminole AA, 3 pm ., open, Croaaroeds, Ml Lake
Minnie Drive, Sanford.
Sanford Big Book AA, 7 p m., Florida Power and
Light, Sanford.
"Yamg-aVHeart" daaet, 1 p.m., DeBary Com­
munity Center, Shell Road, DeBary. Instruction, 7:30
pjn.. Open to public.
MONDAY, AUGUST 3
Home Bouden Association of Mid-Florida general
membership meeting with U. S. Rep. Bill McCollum as
speaker, 6 p.m., Maitland Civic Center.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 1
Better Breathing Society Discussion and Therapy, 3
p.pi., Church of the Good Shepherd, la k e Avenue,
Maitland.
Seminole AA, 8 p.m., open discussion, Ml Lake
Minnie Drive, Crosvoads, Sanford.
Winter Springs Settoma, 7:30 a m , Big Cypress.
Longwood Rotary Club, 7:30 a.m., Longwood Village
Inn.
TOPS Chapter 370. 7 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Sanford.
Sanford Lions Club, noon, Holiday Inn on la k e
Monroe.
Longwood Serioma, noon, Quality Inn, t-t and State
Road tSt.
AJ- Anon, noon, Mental Health Center, Kobin Road,
Altamonte Springs.
Weight W atchers, 7 p.m., Summit A pts.,
Casselberry.
O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m., Florida Power &amp;
Light, Sanford.
Soundof-Sunshine Chapter Sweet Adelines. 8 p m ,
SL Andrews Presby terian Church, Bear Lake Road,
Forest Dty.
Sanford-Seminole Jayctes board, 7:30 p.m., Jsycee
Building, French Avenue.
Sanford Toastmasters, 7.30 pm ., Rich Plan offices
second floor, Third and Magnolia, Sanford.
South Seminole Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p m , Triplet
Drive, Casselberry.

SUMMER LAB SESSION
Seminole high school graduate Marchela Jackson,
1901 U. Kith SI., Sanford, gets an assist from in­
structor M a rs a Lovett during a biology lab session
id the University of Central Florida, where she’s
spending (he summer in preparation for fall
classes al the university, Jackson was selected for
Ihe special Kducalional Opportunity Program
based on her potential and ability. S h e 's a ls o
taking courses in Knglish and mathematics as
part of ihe summer curriculum:

S te ts o n U n iv e rs ity 's n ew ly -fo u n d ed c h a p te r of K appa A lp h a T it el a , n a tio n a l
w o m e n 's fr a te rn ity , in itia le d 29 c h a r t e r m e m b e rs last s p r in g in clu d in g , lett
to r ig h t: J o a n n e Hood of N o rth S e m in o le , K layne S hields of S a n f o r d ; T racy
( i r a n a t a of llra d i-n to n ; I.ynn M ir a c le of C le a rw a te r and F r a n c e s ( h a n d le r of
O rla n d o . T h e D el.an d c h a p te r is th e 99lh fo r the so ro rity , o rig in a lly founded
In 1H7o a t In d ia n a A nbury ( l a t e r D e l’auw U n iv e rsity ).

SORORITY
INITIATES

The Garden G a te

G a r d e n In A J a r
By HIBISCUS CIRCLE
Garden Club of Sanford
Whew’ ll lias been the hottest summer, much too hot to get
outside and work in the garden.
Besides, water is loo scarce to keep things growing. But
there is another way to fill that longing lo see things grow.
GROW SPROUTS.
It is simple to grow a “Garden in a Ja r." Sprouts lake little
time, very little water and no hot sun.
When seeds are germinated it increases the nutritional
value, it's a source o( raw food and it cuts down on the calories.
Sprouts arc crisp, sweet and tender to serve in a salad, sand­
wiches or as a green vegetable in casserole, soup or oriental
dishes.
Sprouts are rich in vitamins, wheal and beans have more
protein. They make a good meat extender chopped into meat
dishes and lumtsh more fiber in diet.
It is most Important to use seeds that have not been
fumigated nr treated with pesticides for planting Buy seeds
for human consumption at food stores or health food stores.
The alfalfa and mung beans are the most popular. Try
soybeans, sunflower seed, chick peas, mustard, radish and
wheat seeds.
The amount ol seeds you use depends on the amount of
sprouts you need and the size of the seeds. If you are using a
gallon jug and making sprouts for (our people you use one half
cup ol seeds. It also depends on the kind of seed. Alfalfa (my
favorite) Increases tremendously in size, while the larger
beans like mung beans, or soybeans, Increase relatively little
In size
There are many containers on the market (or sprouting, but
a wide mouth Jar. one quart or one gallon, with a square of
cheesecloth and rubber band to cover the top, does the work
Just as efficiently. Wish the seeds in cool water before star­
ting. Place in Jar and cover with one cup of water.
1*1 stand eight to 10 hours or over night. Pour off this water
next morning (save it to water a plant or put in soup). Rinse
the seeds and drain off the water. Keep covered with
cheesecloth and place an its side on kitchen counter. It Is
important lo rinse three times a day. During the last day or

W. VINCENT ROBERTS. M D.

JUST ARRIVED

and

NEW SHIPMENT OF

DAVID C MOWERE.M D
in the practice of Obstetrics and Gynecology
at
Medical Arts Building, 1301 East Second Street
Sanford, Florida 32771
(305) 322 5313______________

CO INC.
PRINTING CO.,
Ph. m i n i
HI Magnolia Avo., Sanford

Is closed for vacation m*.

Until
qu.lilr

ml II W« knna^ run C«n Mir.l.* I n tik i without
w.r.m.nthi*, tin* tttvict inO (linrlvl diipntii.im

SIDEW ALK

CLOSEOUT
ON

ALL DAY SATURDAY

AUG. 1

R

C

M

In Bloom
Select Your Colors

■

S

CeCe’uj City

MEN'S
CLOTHING

10 a.m.-* p.m.
Shirt* SI.00
Slacks $2.00 up
Suiti 18.04 up
Sports Jacket* $5.00 up

take pleasure in announcing the association of

and

C
f *"V
/

NELSON

STEPHEN R PHILLIPS, M U.

JUAN L RAVELO, MD.

two of sprouting you can move into more light.
The color of sprouts determine the taste. While sprouts are
slightly sweeter and nutty tasting. Green wheat sprouts arcmore like Rrass. Wtieal seeds need lo be shuken more to keep
them from sticking together.
Alfalfa sprouts develop in three to four days. Tliey should be
about three inches long when ready. Die bean sprouts are
shorter when ready. When Ihey grow too long live) are tougher.
Mung beans sprout in four to five days, but wheal seeds take
seven to ten days.
Sprouts may be placed in plastic bags or light containers and
stored In refrigerator for four or five days. Wlwn one batch is
done, start another.
Good Harvest! - NITA MORELAND

IS

Grown Especially 4 ^ 0 0
For Florida Soil
#

Up

JEA N NORRIS
F E R N S A E X O T IC PLANTS
I# k lain log la S tru t. H tn tn tf I t U M t .

AtrKM VMMtt
M l Celery Av*., Ph. m i n t , Sanford

S

econd I MAGE

Aubrey A Margie Combi, Owner*

PH. 323-9421
SIM S. S AN FO R D A VE.
CO RNER OF AIRPORT S LV O . A S AN FO R D AVE

�SPORTS
IA—Evening Htrald. Sanford, FI,

Friday, July 31, Itll

Play Ball!

Ov/edo's 8-4 Curfew Coll
Rocks Fernandina Beach
By JOE DrSANTIS
Herald Sports Writer
Fusils — For most 13-year-olds week
nights are associated with some kind of
curfew. Tommy Ferguson's 13-year-old
Oviedo (AAAI all-stars broke curfew
Thursday night, but tn llie eys of their
orange-clad following this scrappy band
of Seminole County hall players la
anywhere bul In the doghouse.
As a matter of a fart, they’re one step
awBy from a trip to the I AAA) state
tournament thanks to a rain-delayed 8-3
sectional come-from behind vlctoi7 over
nemesis Fernandina Beach.
“We just kept chipping away," said a
liappy Ferguson following the victory
that seta up this morning's 9.30
scheduled return encounter that sends
the winner to the state tournament in
Sulphur Springs.
Oviedo's Cinderella squad beat the
midnight deadline by 20 minutes, but not
before overcoming a rough start, l-anky
right-hander Craig Duncan surrendered
a first-tnntng three-run homer to mound
rival Byron Felder before Blanking
Fernandina Beach on just three hiti and a
meaningless unearned run In the second.
"Craig has a habit of allowing runs real
early," noted Ferguson. "It usually takes
him a little while to gel his pitches
together."
It look Duncan all of one inning to find

his stuff. Duncan cruised through the
next five Innings without allowing a
baserunner past first and at one point
retired eight straight batters, including
lour via the strike out route.
While Duncan was by no means
overpowering, kli breaking pitches and
an occasional fastball kept Fernandina
Beach off balance, while Oviedo scrat­
ched back into the contest.
Oviedo began its comeback bid in the
top of the second inning with a single run.
left-fielder Royce Moore laced a clean
double and managed to steal third, while
Duncan was working Felder to a 3-0
count.
Surprisingly, Ferguson gave hla
scrappy pitcher the green light and
Duncan responded with a textbook bunt
that resulted tn a clean RBI stngle.
Oviedo knocked live score at 3-3 in the
top of the fourth. Moore again got things
going by working Felder for a walk.
Duncan encored with his second single
for the night and both advanced when
first baseman fenny Hill drew a walk to
load the bases.
Fcrnar.dina Beach Manager Benny
Alvarei decided to move Felder to
shortstop tn fsvor of diminutive Cor­
nelius Williams. The curve ball specialist
Issued Mark Hofmann a base on balls to
force in one run and Oviedo tallied again
via a throwing error by catcher Ron
Veal.

Ocoee Section 1

7 p.m. Altomonto vs.
Jacksonvlllo-San M a loo

Then the two squads battled through
four scoreless innings before Oviedo
finally made good on one of several
scoring threats.
Third baseman Ellis Bell broke out of
an O-for-3 slump to open the final frame
with a crisp single to left Held. Beil drew
two strikrs with his aluminum bat before
railing on the wood model for a base hit.
Shortstop Dave Wood reached on an
error and Randy Ferguson loaded the
bases with Oviedo's sixth hit of the night.
Terry Gammons then lined Into a double
play, leaving Oviedo with runners st
second and third, but just one out to work
with.
After a long conference, Fernandina
elected to load the sacks again by issuing
Moore an intentional pass. Duncan
followed with a little melodrama as the
stage was set — llie final Inning — the
game lied —two outs — the bases loaded.
Duncan took Williams to the full count
limit before eyebalttng ball four to bring
tn the go-ahead run. Oviedo scored agxln
on a passed ball and scored three more
runs on RBI singles by Hofmann and Hill
to close the frame with a commanding Id
advantage.
"We always play comeback," smiled
Ferguson about the late-tnning explosion.
OVIEDO
EllitBHI. to
DawWood. %\
Fvr gutan, 7b
T#rry Gimmom, cf
Wort# Moor#, If
Cr«rg Duncan, p
Lenny Mtli lb
Doug Dos#*ll. ph

Mark Hofmann, c

At

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DAV E WOOD

... probable pitcher
Jimmy Andre**, rt
TOTALS

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FERNANDINA BEACH
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OVIEDO
ON 200 S -1 9 3
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FERNANDINA BEACH
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4 14 43 2

NEW YORK &lt;UPI) - Federal
mediator Kenneth Moffett announced an
end to the 49-day-old baseball strike
early today.
"ft's a good deal," Moffett said, "It's
just terrific.”
The announcement ended the longest
and most bitter dispute In the history of
major-league baseball after a marathon
negotiating session and paved the way
for the resumption of the season as early
as next weekend.
Moffett officially announced the end of
the strike, which was prolonged over the
issue of frte-agent compensation, at 3:43
a m. EDT. He said the agreement was
reached at 2 a.m. EDT. It was believed
the Intervening time was spent In
notifying owners and players of the
settlement.
Moffett appeared elated at the set­
tlement.
" I’ve never been so relieved," said
Moffett, "but I'm right back in the
trenches with a noon press conference on
the air traffic controllers."
Negotiators used a ruse to gain privacy
(or the intensive talks that produced the
agreem ent. They announced the
negotiations would take place early
Thursday afternoon at a midtown hotel,
then proceeded to another location.
The meetings included Marvin Miller,
the executive director of the Players
A ssociation, Donald Fehr, general
counsel for the association and Hay
Clrehey, the owners’ chief negotiator and
law MacPhail, president of the American

LISA SIMKINS

D E N IS E S T E V E N S

league.
Both Miller and Grebey had spent th t
previous day meeting their cor ■
stitucnctes and indications were tlw :
both needed to “cut a deal,” M ilk 1
because of increasing player unrest an I
Grebey because of the willingness cf
several owners to submit the enttr i
matter to arbitration.
The season will resume Aug. 10 and th
All-Star Game will be played Aug. 9 i
Cleveland. Moffett said he developed th
feeling the sides were ready for a
agreement early Thursday altemoor
"1 predicted it at 2:30," he said, addin
he was in contact with the sides abou
"every two hours." When asked tf b
kept the negotiators on track, he sail!
"They were keeping me on track. The:
did H themselves. Just Uke last year.
Not even the intervention of th
Reagan administration was able to em
the dispute sooner, l-ast week, I-a bo
Secretary liajTiiond Donovan summons
the parties to Washington, encouragethem to vigorously pursue a settlemen
and imposed a news blackout.
But after (our days, the talks fell apar
and did not resume until Thursday. In th
interim. Miller met with the executlv
board of the Players Association an
spent Wednesday in l/&gt;s Angeles briefin
players on the progress of the strike.
At the same time, owners for the
American and National leagues
separate meetings in New York,
met

SHELLY HAIILEY

Broncos Buck For Region II Title
By SAM C'OOK
llrraldSpurts Writer
JACKSONVIUJC -T o n ig h t's 7 o’clock
name against the Jacksonville Astros is
not just another tournament game lie
Manager Roger Hlchanlaon anti his
talented Seminole Bronco solthall girls.
Albeit the Broncos have participated In
six tournaments already this year, notie
can equal the magnitude ot tonight’s
opening round game o( the Southern
Hegional Slow-Pitch Tournament for
girls age IS and under,
It Is this tournament experience,
however, that lllchardsnn along with his
Mossy Helms and Jim lew is
II earn the Five Points entry
De two spots at the Region II
Tournament in pine Bluff, (Ark.) Aug.
13-16.
The regional has drawn a nine-team
Held with squads (rum Tampa, Mobile
(Ala.), South Miami, Hollywood Hills,
Clearwater, another A labam a team

KRISTIE KAISER

I
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called the Jopers and two entries—Astro
and Doverettes—from Jacksonville.
Semtnole has faced three of the teams
and beaten two of them. "We beat the
Tampa Mustangs, U In s practice
tournament," recalled Richardson. The
Broncos hold an W victory over the
Clearwater Confederates. The loss was
an 11-0 pasting at the hand* of the same
Jax Astros which the Five Points group
encounters tonight.
Richardson has a lineup sprinkled with
experience, depth, power and speed,
lake Howell two-year veteran Shtela
Dixon will Wad off and play left-center
Held. Dixon batted .439 and rapped two
triples during the year.
Shortstop lisa Stmkins, a .410 hitter,
will bat behind Dixon. Rtcharson’s third
plate hitter Is 13-year-old phenom Denise
Stevens. The tall and pretty left fielder
has excellent power along with a .430
average and was named most valuible

MELINDA KIDD

** .a#- *V**

• • m* J** f %■*4

player In a tournament hosted and won
by Semtnole. In that tourney, Stevens
cracked two homers out of th« park,
rapped five doubles and triple (or 18 runs
batted tn.
Rlghtcenter fielder Mtchells Brown
will bat clean up. Brown batted .331 She
is followed by Kathy Richardson, one of
the three daughters of coaches on the
team. Richardson turned tn an 18-8 log as
the Bronco hurler. The lelt-handed
control a rtist has two tournament
shutouts to her credit.
Another co ach 's d au g h ter-Jill
l* « ts—does the catching. Lewis led the
Seminole squad In hitting with a .483
average. Brown-hatred Kim Avertll will
bat seventh and play second base. Avertll
batted .300.
The third coach's ingredient, tori
Helms, plays right field and bats eighth.
Helms bailed .119. Third baseman Bev
Slough ts penciled tn at the ninth spot.
Slough hit .110. Kristie Kaiser, a 133-

KAREN DE SIIETLER

htlting first basemsn, bats 10th.
Depth ts one of the major strong points
of Richardson’s team and he has five
solid reserves which he feels are almost
interchangable. Karen De Shelter Is a
solid .317 hitter. Terri Blayney provides
some power and a 138 batting average.
Melinda Kidd, Marne lewis and speedy
Shelly Harley are the rest of the bench
strength.
Along with the championship tn the
Semtnole tournam ent, the Broncos
captured the Metro crown which enabled
them to make the Jacksonville trip and
two third place finishes.
Richardson's league winner H D
Realty has supplied six players, while
four came from Lewis' division-winning
State Bank of Forest Ctty. The lak e
Mary Police Department supplied two
players, while Badcock Furniture,
Tennessee Valley Aluminum and Rlnker
Materials each contributed one member.

SHEILA DIXON

i;

BEV STOUGfl

�Frldsy, July II, 1M1—f A

Evening Hen Id. Sinford. FI.

SPORTS
IN BRIEF

Tim e Running O ut ForNicklaus
milling he gears his game around the major championships.
Nicklaus has no time table for how much longer he will
continue seeking those major championships.
"If il ever becomes a drudgery’, that’s when I'll quit," says
Nicklaus. "I’ve always said I'll play as long as I’m competitive
and as long as 1 enjoy it."
Nicklaus may have done better In the British Oficn if lie
hadn't learned on Ihe eve of the tournament that his son, Steve,
had been in a traffic accident and charged with drunk driving,
a charge that was later dropped.
After that opening 83, Nicklaus, assured his son was all right,
bounced back with rounds of 66-71-70 the final three days.
Tom Watson, out in front again In his drive toward Ids fifth
straight ITiA tour money title, has also lost ground in the
■•majors" since his Masters victory in April, tying for 23rd In
both the U.S. Open and British Open f where he was defending
champion),
"Winning the U. S. Open is my No. 1 goal, but winning the
PGA isn't all Rial far behind," says Watson. "Maybe it wasn't
as prestigious as It should have been when 1 was younger. Bui
since I started playtng in 1973, it’s always been on great
courses. If it weren't played on top courses, I might have
trouble sustaining my game into August. That's no problem at
a course like the Atlanta Athletic Club,”
Watson says his only complaint against the IYi A Championship is “the tendency lo alter course*. I'd rattier have a
standard against which to judge myself over (lie years. I want
to be able to compare myself with the great players who came
before me, on the same courses they played.
“1 Just hope I'm around a lew mere years and show I can
play and win over a span of time, like Jack. The amating thing
about his career is its scope. He's won major championships
more than 20 years apart.

DULUTH, Ga. i UPI) —The sands of time keep running out
for Jack Nicklaus.
Any other golfer might be willing to rest on the laurels of 19
••major" championships. But Nicklaus. 41 and unsure how
*** m ck
TEES CEE //V
much longer he can sustain his desire to play competitive golf,
TEE 6 3 * 0 EGA CHAMEWiStt/P, AT TA£ ATiA&gt;rA
would like to put his total of major victories out of reach of
Am ET/CCiO'P //V GtOAG/A, AUGUST 6-9, t/£
those who follow.
M U HAVE A SHOT A T eeCOV/MG TTS VA ST
I j s t chance in 1911 for the "Golden Hear" comes this week
$/X-T/A1£ aVAME; AAfP EAO/EG TEE EOVGEST |
at the Atlanta Athletic Club, when he competes as defending
un P££e n p e p s t 4/a ’g o e A n y o e t h e
champion in the PGA Championship he has won five tunes
A AJO A CNAMEtONSH/ES.
before.
p e m y S a u t e mas
The PGA itself represents another goal fir Nicklaus last
THf E G A S / A S T
year’s triumph tied Nicklaus 11963-71-73-75-801 with Walter
Hagan (1921-24-25-26-27) as the IT.A s only (ive-Ume cham­
pions. lie won’t lie content until lie is the tournament's only
sixtime winner.
*
But Nicklaus, winner of both the U.S. Open and PGA
Championship last year, has been losing ground this year in his
bid for another "major.” He tied lor second, two strokes
behind Tom Watson, in the Masters alter lending through 36
holes; lied for sixth in the U. S. Open won by David Graham;
and wound up tied for 23rd in the British Open, 14 shots behind
winner Bill Rogers, after opening with a 13-over-par 83 -w orst
round of his illustrious career.
But the "majors" always bring out the best in Nicklaus, who
haa been third or better 46 times in the (our major cham­
pionships in his two decades as n i*o. And a lot of people were
wriling him off even before he captured both the US Open and
British Open last year.
Nicklaus, a devoted faintly man who spends a lot of his time
these days constructing golf courses, admits he doesn't get as
worked up for the routine lour stops as he once did. He insists,
however, he still tries to win wherever he plays although ad-

JACK STALKS THE GREEN... by Alan Mover

Blackman, Schayes To Play
In Stokes Benefit Game
MONTICEILO, N.Y (UPI) — Rolando Blackman
and Dan Schayes, a pair of first-round NBA draft
choices, will take part in the 23rd annual Maurice
Stokes benefit basketball game Aug. 11, to be played at
Kutsher's Country Club in Monticello, N.Y.
Blackman, who led Kansas State to the West
Regional final last season, was drafted by the Dallas
Mavericks and Schayes — the son of former basketball
great Dolph Schayes —who helped Syracuse to the title
game in the NTT, was selected by the Utah Ja n .

Bartkowski Half Way Famer
5UWANNE, Ga. (UPIl — Couch lee man Bennett
says quarterback Steve Bartkowski wtli play about
half of Saturday’s NFL Hall of Fame game between
Atlanta and Cleveland in Canton, Ohio, and defensive
back Kenny Johnson who has been out with an injury
will start.
The Falcons cut kicker Mike Browne, University of
Idaho, and signed defensive back Eric Johnson from
Knoivtlle College.

Todd A grees To One Year
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (UPI) - Quarterback Richard
Todd, entering the option year of his contract, Thur­
sday agreed to a series of 1-year contracts with the
New York Jets. Terms were not disclosed.

N /CKLA U S

Hancock Leads Canadian, Nicklaus 3 Shots Back

Bull Next Up For Muham m ad
NEW YORK (UPI) - World Boxing Council light
heavyweight champion Matthew Said Muhammad
will defend his title against No. 3 ranked challenger
Jerry "The Bull" Martin on Sept. IS,

OLftnUwtawl fef fcrr-f F#*lt.tr* Sykibrat*

only to slide to 136th this year, fired a 3- Pooley, Mike Reid, Bob Eastwood, Bill
undcr-pnr 68, Just one stroke ahead of Sander, Jim Thorpe, and Tom Jenkins.
nine others at 69.
Jack Nicklaus kept the opening-day
Imn Hinkle and Tom Kite, two of Lho theme alive by finishing in a group of
most consistent players on the tour, were eight at 1-under 70 after starting the day
equaled by not-so-wrll-knowns Don with two bogeys in his first four holes.

OAKVIU£. Ontario (UI*ll — Phil
Hancock led the field today niter the first
round of the 5340.000 Canadian Open golf
tnurnument.
Hancock, an affable Alabaman who
rose to 40th on the money list last season

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M ELBOURNE
RO UND

D U U f lU

O v icdo A uto P a r t s s o f tb a ll t r a m a lo n g w ith S u n n ilu n t! a n d K ieh P la n fro m

Sanford competes in the Florida Recreation Soflball Association Stale Totirnament at University Field in Melbourne tonight through Sunday. Auto Parts
open* the tournament against Ace Automotive ol Vero Beach at 7 p.m. Sunnilaod
takes on Hughes Oil Sonlcs of Daytona Reach at 8:15 p.m. and Rich Plan, San­
ford’s city champion, plays Daytona Reach’s A’s at !l p.m. The Oviedo players in
the front row (Irft to right) are Itico Peterson, Dave lludick, Kenny Hall, Roll
Robertson, Danny Hale and Ted .Miller. In the back row are Glen Robinson,
l.loyd Wall (injured and will not play), Mike Galloway, Ruddy Stuinpf, Dave
KiOiardr and Mark Whigham. Hick Grant has returned from Miami to lake
Wall's spot.

Gant, who has five second place
inishes this season, toured the
Jabama International M ohr Speedray at 195.197 mph Thursday to capture
be pole position for Sunday's 134,000
'alladega 500
Driving a Buick, Gant edged Bobby
dlison for the coveted pole.

Gant became the 12th driver to win a
pole position this season on the
NASCAR Winston Cup Circuit.
"Winning the pole here at the world’s
fastest speedway means a lot," Gant
said. "Qualifying early (Gant was
fourth out) helped.
"We were sweating It out a lot while
the other guys ran. You know, I’ve been
the second-fastest qualifier (or races
this year five times and have finished
second about eight times in races. I'tn
really happy to finally win the pole
position.

Allison, who leads the Winston Cup
points race and was a favorite to win
the pole, pushed his Buick around the
2.66 mile tri-oval at 19177 mph. He wtli
start on the outside front row.
Gant turned in a time of 46 863
seconds while Allison drove the
distance in 48.913 seconds.
Dale Earnhardt qualified third in a
Pontiac at 194.417 mph and was
followed in fourth place by Terry
Labonte in a Buick with an average
speed of 194.275 mph.

"Red" Bagdro, Willie Davis and Jim
Ringo.
Both of the coaches — Sam Rutigliano
of the Browns and Ierm an Bennett of the
Falcons plan to play most of their
veterans for the first half.
Rutigliano said Sipe suffered from a
lack of pre-season action in the early part
of last season, so he plans to give him
plenty of work this summer.
"He wasn't as artistic In September a

T w in s W in In 10th
Gary Gaetti, Tim I-audner and U nce Hallberg all slanuned
home runs Thursday night a s the Orlando Twins upended
Chattanooga, 5-2 in Chattanooga in 10 innings.
The O-Twins Jumped on former Miami University standout
Neal Heaton for Gaetti's solo homer — his 24th — in the first
Inning. It was the only hit Heaton surrendered until the ninth
frame.
Lauder immediately opened the 10th with a solo blast to
give the Twins a 5-2 edge. The homer was Laudner's 35th, just
two shy of the Southern League mark. After Heaton walked
Tim Teufel, he was pulled In favor of Tim Owens, who
promptly surrendered llallherg't iworun shot
The three-O-Twins round-trippers lifted their total to 138 for
the
Asheville holds the league record with 148. The
Twins conclude their Chattanooga series tonight before
moving to Knoxville Saturday.

r

11thrace — 111.1; n is

4 40

Q (IS with 12) 11100
A-I.4S2; Handle N i l 414

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MARCH OF DIMES

year ago as he could have been,” ' said
Rutigliano. "Brian knows that and he's
told us that he needs more pre-season
game time. I'm a smart coach and I
agreed."
Despite some grumbling from veterans
about starting play a week earlier,
Rutigliano like* starting the exhibition
season Saturday.
"Having an extra pre-season game is
positive for us,” Rutigliano said.

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YOU.

Fans Hope For N o Sham e In Fam e Gam e
ANTON, Ohio (UPI) - Fans have •
il to expect Saturday’* Hall of Fame
ve won’t be quite the fiasco last year’s
hiheetened, scoreless tie was, but
■use it'a the first exhibiUon game,
i the Cleveland Browns and Atlanta
cans figure to test • lot of inex(enced players.
be nationally televised contest begins
1:30 p,m ., following installation
(monies for George Blands, Monts

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Bridesmaid Gant Looks For Wedding
TALUDEOA, Ala. I UPI) - Harry
lant has always been the bridesmaid,
he stock car driver who runs strong but
wver wins. Maybe, he says. Sunday
rill be his day.

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078x15
H78x15
L78X15

Price
40.89
71.W
24.99
25.99
28.99
27.99
21.99
29.99
31.99

FET
1.43
1.85
1.11
2.09
111
2.34

2.42
2.94
2.91

0fl c a r

MICHEUN “X” 4 “XXX”

U | / _ | | PLUMBING S
w a i l h e a t in g inc
ph u i s u i
1001 Ssnlord Are Sanlord

Steel Belled Redials

She
j **71111
CN7l t 1*
DR7BH4
ERTIilS
FR7BI14
OA7Mt4
HR7IH 4
QA7l i 1l
HA7II 1I
7*74x11

L A ST FREE C A S H

H g POT LUK DRAWINGS at
Airport
”66" Food Store
imi sisroet ii,o tsntoeo

AJbo Fits
PI IU 1S
PI 71*14
OlllstS
Pills IS
PlWsI*
Pltlst*
PUSH*
PllSstl
PHtitl

Price
UK
HR
41N
MM
MM
7LM
7SM
TIM
TIM
DJI

FIT

111
Ml

1-14

IBB
IBB

171
100

MS
S.B1

111

r s m
■vesis
(M ill
M ill
mm

SB.M
8U8
1BJB
M.88

m e n
tiiiit
N H
1Still
44.BS
W ill
4BB*
W/74il| SB.M
iM /nm
M .M

rrn
144
U t
1.71
US
1.M
1.4B
1 SB
1*7
t .n

Plus old tire off car

Celery " 64" Food Store
H K iio r &gt; n ,« ( txnioso

Lake M a r y " 6 6 ” Food Store

L*&lt;l wist il ,o t tun o si,l i t , i mss,
Castelbcrry ” 66'' Food Store
euiMCis mo **» in ciimttss.

IS SATURDAY, AUGUST 1st., 1981
r o r LUK CAMS iNOS *T ALL IT O M IA F T E * AUGUST III. DSAWINOSI

» » • r * * •

We Don't Sell Factory 2nds or Blemished Tires

IS
i

7 BIG LOCATIONS
1U 0 1 ORLANDO DR. (17-91) SANFORD 3 U U M
711 H O R A N O I A V I . 44M U1
H U f t. CO LO N IA L D I . If f SMI
MS I t MORAN B L V O H I4 7 M

I

NN (. OBANBl AVI. HUM*

IMS t . O A A N O B A L IM T B . Q M S U
• A t I - I I M OB AN BLVD. I76I7M

O P 6 N MON DA V TU B U I A T U B D A Y I A J S . T IL 4 P M .

I
.

June H*N

1

�I

IOA— Evening Horotd. Sontord, FI,

Friday, Jwly 31, 1W

Legal Notice

legal Notice

31 Apartments Furnished

CLASSIFIED ADS

Electricians Commercial evp
Saniord. No th.ldrm or pels I
rag Semmote County license
FICTITIO U S NAME
F lC T IT lO U l NAME
norm Alt. Carpet, all alectr.c
helpful Apply at lob sift Rfd
Notice tl heraby given that wa
Notice Is hereby given Ihet I 4m
Seminole
Orlando-Winter Park
■ppl.antes 17* up 371 401*
Bug 4 Tuscan.lie Rdt
engaged ,n bus mesial H I Cypress Ora engaged &gt;n bus.nets al I7S
Woodflrt Way Caaielbtrry,
DaBary, Sam.nott County,
li t a Classified Ad help you tmd
CONVENIENCE STORE CASH
The Huskey Co to Oetcetfvint tin
Florida 17707 Seminole County,
Florida under tha fictitious nama
more room for storage
lERS Good salary hotP'tfll
Bat Alfa Homes Inc to Jamas G
Conttr Coro Lot It. B'&gt; tt
Florid# under the llctlltoui name
GATOR FENCE CO . and that I
Uttt.hed Ads tnd buyers
teflon, t week paid vacation
Walton Jr 4 wt Thelma H . Lot
S » r &lt; 1 « t t t Oekl, Vf&lt; II. IM.KM
inland to register said nama with ot DOMICILE OESIGNS. ond met
CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
last
every 4 months Now looking
Magnolia S«c Corp to Ron 104 Bat Aire Hills Un 7. IS4.7M
we intend to register MM name
tho Ciaak ot tha Circuit Cowl.
I H i m ........................... Me • Un«
tor vtper.enced people ready
M t .r f Conttr Co Lot U. Wtf.ve
FR C . Inc
to Pedro A
with the Clerk ot the Circuit Court,
Sam molt County, Florida in ac
HO URS
SANFORO
- 1 bdrm a.r. kids,
]
contgcvtlvB
time*
Me
■
lino
to wort For interview phone
Gutitiarret 4 wt alcalde Lea 47. cordanca w.ihiha provisions el the Semmole County, Florida In ac
Club Estates. Sot tighi l i t .000
ut.l me. U ! dn Jit 1X0
7consacutlvo timas
41c
the manager at
T.baron Cove Sea.HO
I 00 A M - s 10 P M
W.lllem M Henderson 4 *1
cordencewithlhe crovisions ot the
Fictitious Nama Statutes. Town
SAV ON RENTALS r e a l t o r
Airport Blvd
731 4711
J W Hlckmon to Jana E
Section 145 0* Florida Statutes Fictitious Name Statutes. Town
P it,tut to Sr Edmund Trebutly.
MONDAY thru FRIDAY II conMCvtlv* times . He a ling
Cauefbcrry
13* 177!
Section 14} * Florida Stotutfs
to t. Lot 17. Blk C. Druid Him Graham. Trvilee, NW’iOl SW'v ot ISS7
SATURDAY » Noon
s i n g l e AND ON t h e GO’ Put
tl.M Minimum
CeferyAve
171471)
ten
Pork SHOW
SVy'.E ot Dodd R d.S EC 10170
Robert Salinsk.
your skis In your (Y.vote attic
--------------------] Un»t Minimum
. Last Mary
177 4741
Thomas Kuhn 4 wt Barbara J. uo oqo
Publish July 74 114 August 7, 14
Lg David A Wemysi
Modern Stud* EtliClency w.th
to EiHon Fondor Un 17, Bortreo.
J i m E Graham, tnd 4 Tr fo m i
Jean 6 Wamyss
DEADLINES
tu.tt .n bookcase and rnergr
C O M M U N ITY
B U L L E T IN
SEC t0S);.0W
Robert A G v ik itw lc i 4 wt
D EK 111
HI lelent design 777 1101
BOARDS
ARE
G
R
E
A
T
Deborah N W '. ot &gt;W'. o« SW'.
Publish July 74.11 4 August 7.14.
Noon The Doy Before Publication
STATE OF FLONIDA
Michael M Bonqiri. odm Ml
CLASSIFIED
ADS
ARE
Jbdrmeoaftmmt SlOSmo
E ot Dodd Rd . Sac 7411 70
H it
Deportment el Stats
Lcono K 10 Michael 4 N 11IV of &gt;40 00C
even b e t t e r
• Dtp JunePorfig
DEK 1U
Sunday-Noon
Friday
I
certify
that
OCOEE
GARDEN
Lot W. Opol Torr 1100
Realty. 77114’ l
W errtn L Rerghuil 4 wt
Cory C Thompson, igl to Patricio H 4 Both a Ann, sgl to V IL L A S . L T D . heretofore a
Retired Gentleman wantad to do
ttodnor G Croon, lot. Lot 11,Son* Charles L Klllom 4 wt Brando 5 . i.mited partner ship termed under
1 Bedroom alt utitit.es 4 cable
Gtnerol M a in te n a n c e Ap
pad. (Ptlly turn'ihed, SJSO
Chapter eld Florida Statutes
Soutl. U 000
pro* 10 hrt per week, no age
n o t ic e to p u b l ic
Lol f. Sanlondo Ests SW 0*
777 7044
havng its principal place ot
limit, but must bo m pood
Nolle# Is hereby given that a
Sandra L Dunn, sgl 10 Denial
IOCDI Honrr Schr*.ef 4 wl
business
In
A
LTA
M
O
N
TE
health 777 flOS
Public Hearing will be held by the
4-Pmonab
Rebecca to Iht On lot Hour inc., N M Silver lo 4 wt Barbara A N 47’
J—
Cemeteries
I Bedroom Furnished Apt with
ot E IV of Lot It McNr.lt d Lot 4 4 1 IS' ol 7 blk 11. SPRINGS. FLORIDA was duty Planning and lonmg Commission
Palm and Screened Parch
Security Guild lor weekond
canceled for loilure to tile IN I .n tha City Commission Boom.
Orange Villa, grantor lilt esl &gt;100 Oeamwold. 3rd Soc 1*000
S77S mo 171 O il)
night
thilt
Immediate
unattached’ Lonesome’ Hart
1 Spaces Section R Catholic
Mabel L Burton 4 hb Kirk to Annuel Report. Pursuant ta tha City Hall. Saniord. Florid# at 7 14
Wlnttr spot Oou to Edward L.
open.ng If interested cell
proyitlons al Section 470 31. P M an Thursday, August 4. IW ,
Trial Membership lull 170
Garden woodland Memorial
Ronald R Massey 4 wt Janice C ,
Lom birdt, Co Inc Lot I I
furnished apartments tor Senior
Cob'! Boat Company J7313f0
Florida Statutes, t hereby give lo consldte ttst follow mg change
ConfMentiet Dignified D'S
Garden &gt;1* ea 70S sal 41)1
Lot 11. Blk E, Normandy Addn
Tuscewme. Un I, lll.t *
Cmiens 114 Palmetto Aye . J
Sanford
location
^
NOTICE
mtfut
newspaper,
which
I
amendment
to
the
Zoning
cteet
0
liter
ant.
Countrywide
John O Cirtton 4 mrt Mtr|or&gt;* Cb set 0*
Cowan No phono calls
IS
published
In
SEM
INOLE
LHeroturt
Doting
ol
Prestige.
Ord
nance
of
tho
City
Ot
Sanford.
Linda
Clark
to
Hobtrl
w
to Jock O For roll i wt Marie B .
carp enter
C O U N TY Florida, that said Semmole County. F lordt
Wiltlamitown, Mass 41147
Simmons 4 wt Mary M . Lot 17.
Lot 10, Spone or Heights tt.OOO
7—Personals
pl ushelpe hs
limited partnership hat Med all
Retorting from MR t. Multiple
Tat 11)114 1*47
31A-Duplexes
IOCDI J r ttK i H Covington Ramolawood S4S.4M
Lots of steady work lor Local
Andrew W Hall 4 wt Vivian lo delinquent reports end paid ell Fomily Residential Dwelling
ItOfm McConehel to (I N Stokot
Farm Good Pay Call atrly
tees
required
under
lew
OHtflct
To
that
ol
OC
7,
General
Donald E Stormer 4 wl Ltona M,
4 Jenice Stokot. md onlmont
WHY BE LO N ELY? Write ’’Get
I hereby reinstate Mid limited Commercial District
AAA EM PLOYM ENT
COMPAT A OATE
New Dup'ev.
Lot 11. Blk I. Foirlene E s ti. SEC
II*
A Mata’’ Daring Servlet All
partnership's Certificate of
Tnat property «escr.t*d es the
Tskt I mlnuta lo listen to
tq u 'P p e d k .tc n e n SlTSmo
LOWEST F E E -T E R M S
I Raplat SILO*
Btrton B Pilcher 4. Ccorgo M
ages P O Bo» *71. Clear
Authority
at
ot
December
II.
1400
Eost
Is
ol
tho
SE’.
ol
Section
11
recorded m eiM ge-1 403 *71
Call 71) &gt;450
Indian Ridge Patio Homes Inc
1417 French Ave
77)3174
Wtlltt to Richard Bottrlght 1 not.
water, FI l l l t l
the year tor which Iht limited Twp 70S. Rge 10E, lest thet
NW NSI or write Compst A
Betty. LOt t iott W I O'. Ltko lo Sharon * Moore Sgl. Un 44.
portion
lying
SE
of
U
S
1
7
el
partnershi
p
was
last
granted
a
Dote
P
0
Boa
t
i
ll
Summer
Laka
M4fy-74i
Ruskm St New
■
Telephone
solicitors
needed
tor
Indian
Rutga.
Condo
Ph
II,
Sylvin E llitot t i l l*
Lonely Christian Singles
Being more genarolly described
Certificate ol Authority
1 idrm . CHA. WWC. 4)10 Mo
Jeycees project Evening
villt, S C 7444)
Meet Christian Singles m your
M iry A Ctiritllo B hb Pout to ua.en
as
NW
ol
U
S
17
tl.
test
ot
Given under my nand
hours, salary * Commission
1st 4 last 7*3 31** or 3431*4)
Leroy F Levans 4 wt Jamie to
Paul W Chrlttlo 4 « t Miry A .
area Write Southern Ctelslian
and tha Great Seal ot Semmole Community College
171IS4S
Orlando
par ] M , ot blk 11. loti port, Lawrence F Glaiel Foihunt Sac
Singles Club. P 0 Boa m l
S-Lost
ft
Found
Tho
planned
use
ot
this
property
tha
State
ol
Florida,
at
C.trut Co Pttt ot Gonovt Tr. In Three ttJOW
Summerville. S C 7*441 or
L4NF ORD - 7 bdrm. kids. pool.
.4LESLADY — Experienced m
Tallahassee, the Capital, this is County Operations Conttr
IQCD) Karan L Saucy norm
call 1140)171 N » 74 hrt
SEC 1114)7. I l l I I *
(Mumcdal bidet J Including ot
SI IS down 1)39 mo 13* 77M
ladies’ ready to wear Apply m
the 70th Day of July. IN I
Jock N Birrott 4 art l iron to McMahonltaFF Oil Lot 14 Foa
Lost — Letgewniiemaie pit bull
lonelyt Write ''Bringing People
licet,
tiro
notion,
storage
1AVDN K IN TA LS R iA L TO R .
George
Firestone
person
No
phone
cells
Ro
lum p tntorntt'l Mtniotm onl Run St*
vicinity ot Sunlond eree
together Oaling Service!" All
building,
public
works
operotlom.
Secretary
ot
Stott
Jay.
I
l
l
E
1st
St..
Sanford
Brant Draper 4 wl Sandra to
inc . Lot S, Blk O.Gotl Vino E t t t ,
Reword &gt;71 letl
rs
4
Senior
Cltllans
P
0
detention centers, entmtl control
(SEAL!
SEC Morodlth Minor Un I Soopeveb A Pillar 4 Wl Alice,
B-Houm llwfttmhhed
last, winter Haven. Fla 17444
coofotions end other evicting uses
RN S to 14 30 LPN’l lo I I W.
Publish July 31. IN I
Lol II. Blk F. Carnage Hill Un 1.
its. so*
The Planning 4 Zoning Com
psri limf of full time M#d»cal
P ER 1 »
SI 10*
4-CWId
Cir*
Oolorot C Hull to Edward E
SinfortJ. 1 fidf m. 2 Bftth, Crnfrat
mission will submit o rtcom
Conctfrfi. H I 01)1
Joseph J Luby 4 wl Grace ta N O T IC E
Dotmtrtit 4 Ctrolyn J Stoon. Lot
OF
A
PUBLIC
Hi«ft1
pdhtltcf family
mondot.on to the City Commission
11. Blk K. Foamooro Un 1 tit WO Bryan Adams 4 Susan, E Sa S’ at
HEARING TO CONSIDER THE
room, fenced bicii yard, enc
Babysitting
In
my
home
day
or
Nrediecretttrv
Earn
money
in lovor ot. or ogamil. the
IN R l: T H I M ATTER OF UN
Lotlor B Hitchcock, rttl to Lot a 4 W 70-5* ol Lot S. Blk J
ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE
fftrpart
bofttporf,
no
H00
mght
Breakfast,
lunch
or
requested
chongo
or
amendment
with
your
hobby
Call
Ann
no
CLAIMED BONO MONEY H fLO
Elvo J Hitchcock, tgi W 100' ot Northgtta Stt.SM
BY THE C ITY OF SANFORD,
supper SIS wk 77) SCSI
mo Utr Utt. 1700 dfpovt 171
Tho City Commission wilt hold t
tfll
BY THE SEMINOLE COUNTY
Albert Klimberg 4 wt Harriot to
Colt It 4 17. Blk G. Normtndy
FLORIDA
»5oa #vt
Public Mooring m tho City Com
SHERIFF'S D E P A R TM EN T ANO
Dart C. Llpps. tg l, Lot 47.
Addn CB . I I *
Molico is hereby given that e miision Room In tha City Mall.
NEED A SECONO INCOME*
Child Cora Slate License 14 yrs
PURSUANT TO F.S. 114)1
Havmm Park 3 Bdrm, Ftmily
IOCDI Col P.por Sr to Weklue Devonshire It 10*
Public Hearing will be held at the
No
mv
.
no
kits,
no
lee
Big
Saniord. Florida. Florida at 7 M
evperienca US wk for 1 child
N O TIC I
Florida Land Co to FI fletid
Rm. lor rQ Kftcfwn equipped
Commission Room In tha City Mall
Dev Corp , Lot tl. Weklva Covo,
money In spare lima ) 7 ) ! ) l i
p M on August It. I tit to consider
7)1 7414
Nolib• II hereby given ot tho
Comm. Inc Lot 1 Greenwood
U4S
1**1 Security Aft 5
n the C.ty Ot Sonlord. Florida, at Mid recommendation
PH Ono. &gt;1*
following
unclaimed
cosh
bond
Lakes. Un 7. 1st Addn 111,WO
7 * o clock P M on August 14
RCA to Altn B Malone 4 tvl
m V i7
All partial in Interact and monies Ming hold by the Seminole
•BIT. to consider the adoption ot on citnens snail hav* an opportunity
Robyn L Lot 31. Middrn Ltko PH
SPUR OF TH E MOMENT
i l —Situations W anted
Conttr Dev to Elmar E
J bdrrmin 1 B, fenced yard, gat
County Sheriffs Deportment, to
II. un I &gt;41.4*
BABYSITTING
Chance, Jr 4 wt Rhode A , lo tto ordmanco by tha City ol Sonlord.
lo ba hoard at le d hearings
heat, A C, newly pamtvd 1300
wit
Flonde.
title
ot
which
Is
os
RCA to Wiltiom A Sutton 4 » '
&gt;734)44
Geneva Terr . Amended Piet,
Part lima — Mature lady tor
By order at tho Planning and
month Attff S MS 7174
CAIN
RONDS
tot lows
Jocguolino, Lot It Hiddon Ltko. sate®
gen ottice. type, calculator
Zoning Commission ot tho City ol Allen, Ardie T
SM
00
ORDINANCE
NO.
11
41
PH II. Un t &gt;40.1*
Comte Dev loMyrlemt King,
71*
Country
Club
Rd
,
1
0
)
Saniord. Florida this 11th day ot Anderson. Larry H
Clean I Bdrm, 3 Bath Cant HA.
17104
ANORDINANCE OF TH E C ITY
6A H e a lt h 4 B eauty
Gontro Martino, tgl to Jamot sgl Lot If. Geneve Terr Amended
July. IN I
large Yard lit. taif and drp
Baiiiie. David
S773W
OF
SANFO R D.
FLO R ID A.
M Brody 4 » t D,imo L . Lot 194. Piet Itf.lM
JUST THINK. IF CLASSIFIED
J Q Galloway. Chairman
Buckley.
Patrick
a
SIMM
tlfS rno 130 M il
A M E N O IN G
C HAP TER
74.
StUtOlitO SOC I, 144.0*
AOS
DIDN'T
WORK.
THERE
Leckie Contr . Inc. to James M
City at Sonlord
Burt, David Percy
171*
SHAKLEE H ER B TAB LETS
SECTION 74 It, 1 THRU C. AND
Fdward D Ttyior 4 wt Gltdyt
WOULDN'T BE ANYI&gt;
Flfltlmons 4 wt Josphine A
Planning and Zoning
SANFOND
4 Br. *&gt;r, MdV
Butera. JohnH
SIS*
WE D E LIV ER
toChing Chung Lin 4 art Poo Hut,
111' ol Lot 7. Blk A. Slovak Village SECTION 71 IS. 4 THRU b. THE
Commission
prt%. I?00 dn. 1775 3)9 7700
Crven. F rederick
174 M
71) 7*1
CODE
OF
THE
CITY
OF
SAN
E » ol Lot » 4 4 W IV ot IS!,
i d ita ooo
Publish July 77, It, IN I
SAV
ON
RENTALS
REALTOR ,
Calf.
Charles
Henry
e
1371M
Oueens Mirrot &gt;0 Addn CB
H —Business
The Babcock Co to Norman FORD, FLORIDA, AS AMEN
DEK tl
Craytord.Barry E
1710 OO
DED.
SAID
SECTIONS
tal.O*
Cohen 4 wt Cornne. Lot 4t Crane
U—Instructions
Q r p o r h jn if ie s .
Garrity, Brenda Kay
SIMM
PROVIDING FOR A SCHEDULE
John k Ctntrtll III 4 «t Ntncy
Roost village 177.1*
LANDLORDS
Gtnnero. Joseph
113 00
W ATER
AND SEWER
to Oran &gt; Warren 4 a t Suttn A ,
Samuel Itll etc . Tr fo Equity OF
Hell. Gerald J
S70M Tennis Instruction — U S P T.A
Qualtf led fenanti wart mg
R
A
TE
S
:
P
RO
VIDING
FOR
lANOttICM
SHOP
—
G
rM
t
Lot I), Blk It. Weetherilield bid
NOTICE
OF
ANNUAL
MEETING
Really Inc Un lit, Sandy Cove
Noire 319 7700
Henderson. Robert L
111*
severability,
conflicts
Opportunity
♦
growth
Addn 1410*
Certified Group or Private
o f l a n d o w n e r s o f s l a v ia
SI®
Houser. Willie J Jr
1103*
a n d e f f e c t i v e oatc
SAV ON RKMT A ll. REALTOR
petonflpt in oicotlont down
Mtrtin Variant Corp to Robart
lessons Children o specialty
d r a in a g e
d is t r ic t
of
Equity Realty Inc to Cyrlt H
James. Willie J
IIM M
A copy shall be Available at the
town location Good form*
V Hall 4 wl Jtanntllt f , Lot 41 Morris, tgl Un 777, Sandy Cove
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Doug Me lie tews* i 71! JM)
J bdrm 7 ft family room.
Jones. WilburnF
SUM
Ottice at the City Clerk lor all
110 900 Morotd Molt Rtottfe
blk !. Stoat Point Amended plot
TO E LEC T A SUFERVIIOR OF
ISO.9*
I car garage. In
persons
desiring
to
eeamlnt
tha
Justus. Amot
M l*
Piano lessons
lot Rooitort m m *
» 4 .t *
SAID DISTRICT
Semgel{all, if tgEqu.lv Realty same
Deltona Can 574 u n
Keen. Ronald B
1U4M
Sonlord Area students
, Chtrlti A McPherson Jr 4 &lt;*l
NOTICE IS H ER EBY GIVEN
inc . From SW cor ol SEC l i l t 7*
Two flwntiom Wilt you t&gt;o
All parlies Its interest end
kinnaird.Gimda
11*1*
Vic Ha to Oan.at J V&lt; Dona 11 4
Can I f f M il
“ DCLTONA s rmi. air aidft.
thet e meeting of the owner I ol
OtC. 1 parent S in
ftftftnciftlly mdopmdont t* J to
citifons shoM have an opportunity
lebDffttf.Valeria J
III*
nf Walla Lot 7* laka Harriot
waiher. S300 mo 339 7700
lands sltuoted
In SLAVIA
Michael A Logan 4 wt Susan to to be two'd ot Mid hearing
5
yoprt?
Arp
you
poid
wtiot
labonte.
Raymond
A
1141*
Ella SJI.0M
O R AIN A G E
D IS TR IC T
OF
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR
Cindy L Conner , tgl 4 John
By
order
ol
the
City
Commission
you
or*
worth?
It
not
coil
333
Lawranca,
Jerry
SIOM
Plckatt't Poet Co. Inc la Nick
13-SpBcUI Notices
SEMINOLE COUNTV. FLORIOA.
Romano III, igl. E'v ot Lol HI,
Leo. Randy Edward
SIS*
Cl#1
*.*&lt;fifd Ad* will always give
MBuii.na.Sgi
Bag HWcor ot O P Swope Lond Co Plat ol Black ot ine City ol Sonlord. Florida
will bo hold In the Memorial
M N Tim m , ,r
Lucas. Jamas. I l l
1)1 M
you me tt
Much . Much
Lot I. Blk 1. Raplat ol Part ol
Building
(former
City
Hall)
In
Hammock In d mobile home
Help
the
Humane
Saciefy.
Came
City
Clerk
MedOOl.Cacll
A
SIOM
78
—
Apts,
ft
Houses
More
than you tipacf
Townsne ot North Chuluota 1 S40AQ0
Oviedo. F teeIdo. ot ten orciock,
Publish July It. M l J
Hitch with Creative fie
Medi
ton.
Eddie
131M
OBteoCk
q
M.
on
the
IP*
dov
of
Avguol
To Share
John I Donovan 4 wt Vettna
o f k tet
7 Bdrm. thed. carport I13S
prrtaiont at Pubde m tha
IQCOt Jottpn Ntc olio 4
Matenay.Craig J
1*4*
A D IN I, tor tho purpose ol
Bobby E Semcntl 4 wt Meredith
Butler Plata July list and
111*
Theresa lo Theresa Nicosia. I t 4.
month ♦ ft1SO d»p Aft S 34f
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
Meeting one supervisor tor sold Medley. JohnM
Lol a, Lake A m Ettt Un One
M.ddie
aged
woman
wants
to
Aug 1st Call Ann OX t f l l
Mayer. Mary E
ill*
Ink D. North Orlondo Ranchai
S4«1 or 373 4S7*
HEARING
District tor o Irrm ot three veers.
share her house 4 tvpenses in
II7S *0
U IM
Soc Thtaa. » «
Tho Seminole County Board ot
which tied Ion (very acre Ol Myers. ThomasW
LavetnaOtlo Sandnar 4 wl La.t
Lake Mary w.th same 77)47*4
Have
a room to rent? Let a
II
you
ott
having
difficulty
U S Horn* Corp fo flr»di*r H
McCormick. David A
IIOSM
lend In the District shell represent
lo Wm G Oiler 4 wl Laura S . W Commissioner! will hold o public
classified ad find a tenant for
i.nomg a ptaev. to live, car to
U IM
ft » f. LUtdi. I of )2a F oi
w .ii shara mrnome
one shore and each ownar shall be Nash Richard W
111’ ot Lot 71 Hess N II I Naw hearing to consider
rout
drive, e lob. or some service
&gt;74 M
Ph III, 145 000
St* wees pays all
a
he h e a r in g
to r
a
•nulled lo volt In person, or by Nurmen. Julian E
Ups ala 110 000
you nave need at. read all our
U IM
Gatttm Moont to Char Its T
111 4*1
prory in writing duly signed, tor Oswald. ArmStockty
Sunland 301 Fairmont J Bdrm, 1
Winter Springs Oav to Sol Dale r e q u e s t f o r w a i v e r to
want
ads
tvery
day
Palmer.
Lee
G
1S4M
Mtthit 4 vvt Bonnie. Commanct
t h e
t w o
v e a r
every ocre 01 land owned by turn In
Bath. Fla rm 1)00 mo ♦ S7S0
Builders Inc Lol If. Tuscowilia.
Single
Lady
looking
for
same
fo
at NW cor ot SEC. U 7117, ate
Payne.
EdwardC
SIMM
REQ UIR EM ENT t o in c r e a s e
such O 'tlrlclj guardians may
Sec Dtp 377 ?4S4
Un e. II 0*
Porter. Kenne'h wade
11! M
shara
my
horn*
&lt;
expenses,
t
h
e
IN
TEN
S
ITY
o
f
l
a
n
o
u
s
e
SIMM
epresant
than
wards,
parsonai
Jackie C Howard 4 wt M.ldted
U IM
Catalina Hotntt Inc. to Fronk
teas 1 Bdrm. 7 B Saniord
1 bdrm. H i B. family room,
from
r e s id e n t ia l
to
raprasantallvts may raprtsanl . Protler. Jack w
T to Judith S Baker, sgt 4 Starr
US*
Accord.no 4 *1 Joan E , lot S.
area 7f* )SfJ alt 3 p m
gameroom. fireplace No pets
Mines ot dretried persona, and Ridanpoa. W illo i
Davidson, t g l . SW1. ot N E ', S ot r e s i d e n t i a l p r o f e s s i o n a l
Robinson,
Samuel
Jamas
134
M
Hickory Creak. Sit,HO
1350 mo , 1st. last 4 SSO dep
prlvelt corporation! may be
d is t r ic t o n t h e f o l l o w in g
Help wantad all departments
RR. last W SSO' SEC 733010.
Spaces.
Anthony
U
S
*
Varv.n R Clark 4 « l Con
represented
by
their
oHicars
or
177 MS0
Apply
mperson
d
e
s
c
r
i
b
e
d
p
r
o
p
e
r
t
y
m ow
F
tmala
wants
la
Short
til*
stance J to Richard L Motco 4
Lot I end Lot SA. Or.ante duly agthoriied agents The Staley. Samuel
Holiday Inn I 4
Robert W Simmons 4 wt Mary
1
bdrm
house
Ills
mo
170 M
wt Oract, Lot 4 Blk H, Sum
e l i t i me lot it r of the Starling, Cheryl 0
Gardens 1st Addition, PB 14 Pg
Wf Handle Rentals
M to David I. McClain, sgl Un
311 t ill
111IM
mar cat No . SEC 7. &gt;14 1*
M#f*td Hatl Reaffy inc
WANTED CoreespondenuHorn
470. Heather ton Viil, Unit One 17. Public Recocdk ot Semmote acreage at such District shah be Stone, Virgil Lee*
teller.
RichardL
U
S
*
Jordan 4 Jordan Rtallr Inv
neenury
to
constitute
e
quorum
County,
F
lor
wo
Realtor. I73S774
the Lata Mary, longwood and
m ow
thermal. Harold H
US*
Inc. to Jonn K Cantrell 4 wt
The hearing will bo conducted in tor the purpose ol holding such
Geneva areas who hove o flair
Oscar E Marthia. Rtpr Ett
JtRooms
Threat,
Pansy
V
U
S
*
3 Bdrm. I Bath
Nancy P , S 17'elE tie SOIt ol Lot
Room 7* ot tho Seminole County ettction ond to ironiert such other
for writing This is a pail time
Georgia ta Al Crawford — Lol 4
111 M
Kitchen E qiuip No pels
71. Forttl lake i d &gt;41.1*
Courthouse. Sonlord. Florida ot busman os may come beiore tho Topo. Will if
position, working from your
blk II. Tier A. Saniord. SUM
Be*ut.luf clean all new ileepmg
Vacca. Stephen
SIMM
References required 177 7)49
Henry 0 Nawall 4 Ralph C
mooting
I W P M on AUGUST. IS. IH t. or
homo gotharmg news tram
IOCDI Dr rand Equity Grp Inc
rooms Linen ond meld service
Verier. Robert K e
SMS CO
,
i
Ktllay to Michtat K Vc Kenney 4
OAT ED IMS ttth day of July,
your community lo be
Tr to Defend Equity Group. Inc , as soon thefoallorot possible. The
provded
Available
now
Coll
Midway 3 Bdrm Good
Voiker.R
E
SIOM
wt Motif A . 1*4 of lets 71 IS 4 E
published In o column Ap
S ', ol S W , ol IE la SEC » 71 le 4 hearing may be continued from A O tSSl
11)1441
or
inqu.ro
it
07
Condition
Large
Fenced
Weber.
Craq
S
e
S14HM
l
l
f
W
H
EELER
.
JR
I I V ol S I T ot 14 Blk B 4 N'y ol
(ficonts must be aMe to typd
N 't ol S W . ol S W . ot SE1. last time to time as found neceseory
Felmefte Are
Yard SJ7S 322 07U
*
Weech. JudithS
U IM
Chou men
vacated Bnnl A y , ate . Crystal
Written comments moy be tiled
and have a note for news and
Rd SEC 10 It It SIM
Whitakar. FranctiK
UO 00
s
W
R.
CLONTS
Park I d li t WO
ilh
the
Land
Management
like people Contact Doris
Robert L Thomas. Rapt Ett
SANFORO
—
Rees
wkly
4
Willingham.
Mary
A
U
I
M
s JAMES D COLBERT
IOCDI Cvnihie Phillips, sgl lo
13—Houses Furnished
Dittrich, attar I p m . dally,
Genevieve A Baldwin to Oolphut Division and theta appearing will
monthly rales Util me Kit
a bonds may Be in pending lilts
Al the Board ol Supervisors
Cynthia Phillips Donahue 4 hb
tor oppomtmtnl Tha Evening
Pearson IMarr ) 4 Mertand t » heard
!M Oat Adults Ml 7*4!
Said
cash
bond
monoy
which
will
ot
Sievlo
Dromoge
District
ol
Thomas A III. Lot 14 Windward
Herald,
777
7411
Persons are advised that II they
Deltona — Attractive, neat,
Ballard. Sr IMarr I — Lot I. Blk
90 UNCLAIM ED on or beiore
Semmole County. Fioeldo
Square td . SEC I SI*
0. Laka Oaks la c . Sanlando drcida to appeal any decision
dean A C. no pats 1 bdrm
September 1. ISOI, shell be
Looking ror o New Home* —
Publish July &gt;1. 4 August 7, IN I
Jostph L Gmgr at Jr 4 wl
M-Apartmanh
mode al this meeting, they wilt
Springs 410 0*
U77 7 bdrm UW
declared
F O R F E IT E D
to
Chock tho Wont Ads lor houses
Of K t)
ttaian to Goorga Eliott, sgl. Un
need a record ol tho proceedings.
W A Hallman Jr. tr to Oilia J
Urfarnhjwd
Seminole County
ef every sue and price
71. Bay tree Sac I S lid *
ter such purpose, they mar
Hives 4 wt Patricia 0 . Lot lot
Persons having or claiming anj
Sal Terre Homat ln&lt; to Allan M.
need to antura that a verbatim
Frank L Woodruffs Sd 111*0.
intarast In said funds or any
LAKE jENNte APTS 1, IVy 4 7
Adams 4 wt Talula W . Lot 44
record ol tho pcocoed.ngt &lt;* made,
George R DamVwood 4 wl
S A N F O ID - 7 bdrm. i.r kidi. 1
portion
ol I ham shall tile thfir
Bdrm an Lake Jennie in
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
Apple valley Un 4. &gt;1140*
which record includes the
IN THE C IB C UIT COURT. IN
jan.ee to Pierre L. Lambert 4 wl
pets. 110 wk 1)4 7700
written
claims
with
the
sherttl
or
Saniord
Pool,
roc,
room,
Samuel tail ate to Eguity
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
SAV ON RENTALS R EALTOR
trana C . Lot 114 Davonth.ro testimony ond evidence upon
dark
ol
tho
court
ot
tho
county
outdoor
B
•
Q.
tennis
courts
4
Raolty Inc , Un lad Sandy Cairo
which
the
eppeal
it
to
be
made
FLORIDA
SHOW
SANFORD - AIRPORT BLVD
having custody ol such funds
disposals Walk to shopping
II*.
Board ol County
Gall,more Homes Inc lo 417
CASE NO. It 14ft.CA 111
- 1 bdrm STM mo 77* TIM
within tho lima spec Hied by u n
Adults only Sorry no pets
Eguity Ratify Inc to Marla A
Commissioners
IN RE TH B MARRIAGE OF
Douglas Ave . Ltd . Lott 17. It 4
*73474]
notice and shall makt sutlicitnt
Otlchtr IMarr I Un 140. Sandy
IA V « N R lN T A L S REALTOR
Seminole County. Florida
IS. Blk G. Sanlondo Springs Tr 47.
SOLOMON COPELANO JONES
proof to said therirl or dark at fill
_t I
Cove 177.100
By Robert Sturm.
sits*
HUSBAND
Apt tot tent, un turn. 7 harm. I
ownership and upon to doing shall
Joe B Baktr 4 Judith s sgl to
Chur then
Samuel Jail ate la Equity
AND
B. A C. STM mo e SI® soc.
be
ent
iled
ta
receive
any
part
ot
34—Mobile Homes
Frankk S luthtrland 4 wt
C O R N U O F lark
Attest Arthur H Beckwith J '
Haaily Inc , Un It. Sandy Cove,
MAE C. JONES.
771 1*74or li t 1141
tho moneys so claimed Uniats
Jocqutt.no K E 177 IS' ot W
~
~
**
A N D F R IN C H
Publish July 31. IN I
SI*
WIFE
h
ROM
SH4
claim
Is
Iliad
within
such
lima
at
7071 41 Ol S 417’ Ot N 'l Ol N R '.
Equity Realty Inc to Scott O E K JU ______________________
N O TIC I OF ACTION
SANFORD CANAL F R O N T~ 1 '
I Bedroom Apts Available
aforesaid,
alt
claims
m
tolerance
SEC tl 7b 71 at at SU4 494
Year
future
aur
cittern
Painting 4 wt Barbara. Un I*.
in t h e c i b c u i t c o u b t f o b
THE STATE OF FLONIDA TO
barm. air. S77S mo 77* 7740' !
Shown by Appt Only SLIla*.
IOCDI Joanna Ayers to Mtivin
Sandy Cov*
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLOBIDA
SOLOMON COPELANO JONES. thereto are lor aver barred
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR ;
John E Polk. Shoe IN
t Ayerc Lot 7 Triangle Terr
Samuel Jell etc to Equity
WHOSE
n e s id e n c e
and
p b o b a t i d iv i s io n
1
Bdrm
Garage
Apartment
S77S
Semmole County. Ftortdo
SANFORD 7 bdrm, fvrn. oir, «
11*
Really inc . Un III, Sandy Cove.
a d d r e s s is u n k n o w n
File Number It Mb CP
Futl charge double entry btpr
1st last end dep Call Eves 7?)
Publish July 11. t ill
113* an, S7I3 mo 771 77*
(OCDI Hampton s Howland Jr
S ie t*
YOU
ARE
H ER EBY
MvtSMS
Please
sand
complete
resume.
1*11
D iK 117
to Nancy L Howland. Lot •
SAV ON r e n t a l s REALTOR • *
Equity Reelty tnc to William C
N O TIFIE D T h a t MAE C JONES
IN RE ESTATE OF
Including address and Phone
P.ntcrtit His Rtpl SIM
OHen J r , sgl. Un m . Sendy
Comfortable 7 bdrm. I bath. Stove
ELSIE R COOPER
HAS F IL E D A P ETITIO N IN THE
no ond references to Qoi 104
Linton W Smith 4 wt Susan B
N O TIC I
OF
A
F U ILIC
Cove. 134.*0
and refrigerator. Lorga screen
Oeceased CIRCUIT COURT OF SEMINOLE
C D Evening Harold. F 0 Boa
37—Business Property
lo Sherwood C lanyiilo 4 wt
h
e
a
r
i
n
g
t
o
c
o
n
s
id
e
r
t
h
e
porch. Well to wall carp* near
Sylvia S Data to Romano M
C O U N TY .
FLO R ID A .
FOR
NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION
14S7. Sanford, Fig.
Cynthia. Lot 7*4 Spring Oaks. Un 4 Crana Imarr 1. N 1 acres ot E'v ot
ADOPTION
OF
AN
ORDINANCE
Downtown Bus stop. I4S Wk e
Tlso administration ot the estate DISSOLUTION OF MARRIAGE,
117.1*
BY T H I C IT Y OF IANFOBD,
Office or business
LPN I I 7 part lima. &gt; II part
N E '.o l N E '.o l N W , Hass E IS
Utilities. ST* Sec Gap
ANO YOU ARE REQUIRED TO
ot ELSIE R COOPER, deceased.
Dorothy M Jodvasl 4 nb
FLORIDA
lima Apply Lakeview Nursing
13®sa It 1*14FronchAvt ’ ■
lor rdl Sec 13 IS H SI’ WO
Pell children welcome. Aeon.
File Number It TOOCP. It pending SERVE A CO PY OF YOUR
William to Da«.d F. Gtarson 4 wt
Notice
Is
hereby
given
that
Call 1117104
Center.
It*
E
Tnd
S
t.
Sanford
William L Colbert, repr ast m the Circuit Court tor SemlnoW W R ITTEN OEFENSES. IF ANY,
Aug tif. Inquire 477 PllmWto
Public Heating W ill be hold ot the
Marco W , Lot at, Davonih.ro
Harman E Ooerr I# Ktvui G
Are or Call 777 *441
County. Florida. Probate Division, ON K E N N E TH W MCINTOSH.
O AKAQI lor lease - potential
Commission Room m the City Hell
4 heavy *
ll l.l®
Sullivan. Lot 4. Blk I 4 Lt 17. Ilk
tha address ot which is Seminole E S Q U IR E , O F STENSTRDM.
tor body shop, used cor Ml,'
m the City of Sonlord. F lor Ido, ot
Ban F Goldsmith 4 wl W
operator needed Please apply
Tl. OfttmwaUJ. Vd Sec . SI 000
MCINTOSH. JULIAN. COLBERT
County Courtnousa, Saniord
1 Bdrm Apft from 1111 1 4 7
was originally a gat station
I
«
o'clock
P
M
on
August
to.
Oiana ta Rauban L Andvrson
4 am S p m ITS W Warren
Jesse S Cleveland le ChOvncey
4 WHIOHJkM, P A . ATTORNEYS
F lor MO 3T7F1 The nomas one
Bdrm also avail Pool, lonnit
Lorga corntr lot. Good
t*gt. lo consider the sdopHonof e«
I Mott 1 E 7*’ Ol Lbt 71 4 W 74 04
Aye., Longwood City W Long
F. Holloway 4 wt lla P.. I t , i
cowl 7170474
FOR P E T IT IO N E R . WHOSE
addresses el tha personal
location m a n *
ordinance by the City ot Sonlord
74. Queens Mirror So Rcpl Addn
wood.
Fig .,
an
EOF
Lot I 4 W M* ot 4. loch Arbor.
ADORESS IS F O S ) OFFICE BOX
representative and the personal
Mtilonylllt
-T
r
a
c
t
Apes
Fioeldo, title of which is al
Affirmeliva Action employer
Cry4l4l Lokts Club Sac SS.WO
CB . &gt;47.100
1330. SANFORD. FLORIDA* DFT1.
representative's attorney ora sat
Spacious, madam 1 Bdrm. 1
Commercial
Bu.id.ng lor rent.
R B Bannatt 4 wt Francma to forth below
Marvin A Coo* 4*1 Francos la
AND F IL E THE ORDINAL WITH
Bath apt. Carpeted, kit
II® tq ft ,S a*m o .
ORDINANCE NO 1141
Darrell E Camp 4 wl Elba A , Lot
Oar don 0 toilrow. Bag »V N ol
THE CLERK O f THE ABOVE
All inltreslid persons ora
Help
wanted
immediately
—
equipped,
cm *
Near
1st4lost m u l l
ANOR OINANCEO F TH E C IT Y
47 Wtklaa Club Ettt. Sac 4
7E cor o l iW i .it N l'* SEC 711
COURT
ON OR
requ.rrd to tit* with this court. S T Y L E D
Cocktail waitress#!, part lima
hospital 4 lake Adults, no
OF
S A N FO nD .
FLORIDA,
SIW.OOO
X ate S4I.S00
■ E F O R E Sepltmbtr 4. I t ll
WITHIN TH REE MONTHS OF
wning room waitresses, part
pots
-SI74
717
*333
A
M
EN
D
IN
G
C
H
A
P
TE
R
It
Kenneth J Darling Jr 4
Grigory F Hughes, sgt to
OTHERWISE A DESAULT AND
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
time mernienenct man. 4
37B—Ptntal OHices
S E c riO N
t i l ) , g Him
OonaM ta Lucian H Mar ns 4 wt
vanca Barker 4 wt Dorothy, Lot
THIS NOTICE (I ) all claims U L TIM A TE JUDG M ENT WILL
mature (11 or older I security
THEREOF. THE CODE OF THE
‘Baler couafry living* I
Mary
L
.
Lot
4
Blk
C
Son
I. Blk D. Flamingo Spr mg* I*.000
against the estate and 17) any BE E N TE B E O AGAINST YOU
guard
4
bouncer
Apply
*
tha
Oft lea Space
CITY o f SANFORO. FLORIDA.
Apis. O lym p ic i t . Fool.
Sebastian Haights, Un One. obIe&lt;1&gt;on by an interested person FOR TH E R E LIE F DEMANDED
PI R ttld Comm., Inc lo
Cavalier Meter inn
For Lease
AS AM ENOED. SAID SECTIONS
Shenandoah Village. Open t i.
sit 1*
CerWoceE Brooks, sgl Un A. Bl
IN THE P E TITIO N
to whom notice was me,lad that
■74)71)
PROVIDING FOR A SCHEDULE
at
4
it
it
_____________
17. Wokivo Fairway Townhomo4
Hoy
Kefs
Look
Us)
for
on
emtre
W ITN E S S M V HANO AND
challenges the yelidity ot tho will.
OF R E F U S E COL L E C1 ION
110 0*
dollar*
AM
Mem
4
Dad
la
I*
Its* queliflcalient ot the personal O F F IC IA L SEAL OF SAID
IS rlrU R Y
J tF h R T M Iffft
Professional otl.ee Spact Lake I
FE E S FOR SIN G LE FAM ILY
Floyd E Hungycult. Jr 4 wl
you have * class.lied ad
COURT ON TH E 17th OAV OF
rtpresrnletive.
venue,
F a m ily 4 A dulls tet Hon
Mary Bled. Naar 14 tl** Mo *
R E S ID E N C E S ,
m u l t ip l e
garage sale
Ntllio p to Dennis L Crawload 4
JU LY. A O IN I
jurisdictlen ol tho court
FICTITIOUS NAME
Pools
Mo
)
Bdr
m
i
M
atfar’t
R E S ID E N T IA L USES. AND
1774417
vM Linda Lol 41. Sleepy Hallow.
_
___________
»
ISEALI
ALL
CLAIM S
ANO OB
Coro Apis I D 7*40 Open wi
Notice is heraby given that I am
BUSINESS
OCCUPANCIES
1st Actn sal *0
ARTHUR H BECKWITH, JR
JC CTIO N I NOT SO FILE D WILL
Cabinet furniture motor. Oidft
angagad In but mail el I t * Via
P R O V I D I N G
FO
VICtof Z Amocabiata 4 wl
J7&amp; Industrie I
CLERK OF CIRCUIT COURT
BE FOREVER BARREO
riper lanced parson toe custom
Mermota
Saniord. Semtnald
S EVER AB ILITY.
CONFLICTS
Marie p to Richard E Fowler Jr
Publication ol this Notice has
S E M IN O L E
C O U N TY,
Mariner t Village on Laka *de 1
Mica I urn. lure Sanford area
ANO E F F E C TIV E OATE
County. Flortdo under the Nc
----------------N fR m
;
4 W. Jaan R Lot »* Gruyavlaw
FLORIOA
begun on July IT. tfll
bdrm Irom 1713. ) bdrm Horn
lilloul M in t ol g AtNEOW
4711717 days. 771 04*4 eves
A copy shall bo avatloM* ol Iht
Personal Rrpresenlalive
By. Suson E Tabor
Village. S4S.7*
MAGNETS, and that I mltnd ip
S3S4 Located 17*1 lust South
Ottict al Ih* City Clark lor all
PR IM E LOCATION :
RCAtoDavHlR Thomhlll 4 wl
LYNN C COOPER
D E P U TY CLERK
parsons desiring Ig tsamln* the
raBlsier Mid nama with tha Clerk
ef Airport Blvd m Sonlord All
AVON B I F R I t B N T A T I V t l
Sharon, Lol I I HMdan Laka. PH
7.4* tq ft Fully Aly C Free­
HM East Jink use Circle
S TEN S TR O M .
M C IN TO S H .
lame
Adults M l 407*
ot tho Circuit Court. Samlnoto
lha Pari Tima Carter
standing matanr y bu.ld.ng, on *
II,
t Sis.)*
Saniord. Florida 17711
JULIAN.
County. Florida tn accordance
All partita in intarast
44f M7* - Collect 111 470*
3 Bdrm Apt IIIIW
busy Highway I? »7 IT* It M j
Attorney
lor
Perionol COLBERT 4 WHIGHAM. F A.
•RCA to Phelps L Whitt 4 *»
with tha previsions ot tho F «
cilltmt shall hast an opportunity
Tnd kf . SIM Mo
oflKa ideal mutt, purpose]
Rfpretenletivo
A TTO R N E Y S F O R PETITIONER
Rebecca l * 14 Hidden Laka. PH
to be hoard at seia hear mg
tittou* Noma SlatcFH. TOWN
*714*11
facility, toad.ng dock Catty
RN OR LPN
POST O F F IC E BOX (I N
By order ti tho Clly Commit ton
Section BAS* Florida Statutes Pn.llip H Logan
it. Un i M M *
Post ottice Bos 7171
Sonlord M l SS14
SUITE 77. FLAGSHIP BANK
01 tho City ol Saniord. Florida
■kMomrtai Spcmflt ■"*•• ,ftt ™ t*»
4 11 #nd 1)4 Shin Full lima
Do you need storage spec**
Saniord.
F
I
11,’71
Sig
Jackson
Enterprises
H
N
Tamm.
Jr.
SANFORD.
FLORIDA
11771
Monlor Constr Corp IMS 4 J 4 4
Apply in parson Saniord
Modern 7 Bdrm ranch apart
Moving |g g newer home,
T Stephana (1031 7711440
Publish July 71, August 7,14. II.
WoodMidga at
Un
City Clerk
woodbfidtie
ai Iht Springs.
n
r
Robert
Kooerr W
w Jackson
Jacvw,,
Nursing Convalascant Center.
mant with attic arse*pentr y and
apartment* Salt "don’1reeds '
IN I
Publish July It. August 7. IH1
Publtth July It. 1441
till
III, 11 47 44 4 Lots 41 4 4). Tha
publish July 114 17, H - “31, I*
hug* linen doiat m 1MI.
tS4 Meitenv.ilr Ay*.
Iasi with a want ad
DEK US
OEK 111
DEK 141
Springs Whispering Fines. SEC 1 p e n tl

REALTY TRANSFERS

322-2611

831-9993

nr

Legal Notice

574-1040

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVE.
CALI 323-5176

.it it it it it it it it

legal Notice

L

V* * '4 •» •* ■MB’ 4* *

s t a g * '

�41— Houses

m t
POM 1C M A I 77 v v

41— Houses

« — Mobile Homes

H arold Hall R e a lty

»♦* our beautiful new BROAD
MORE. Irord A r . . f BRs
GREGORYM OB i l E HOMES
2903Orlando D&lt;
32) $200
VA 4 FMA Financing

INC. R EA LT O R S, M L S
323 5774

R if D lllE lt lt t Brokrr [
e »» m m *

h i -smb

JUST R EO U CE d - Spac.out 4
bdrm. 1 I ) story home la
eat m Me* Jolt Of twill Ini,
paddN tan. cleat In
1 B 4 'n . 1 Bath Block Homo on
ne t Slrtfi in Stnlord Ownn
ttv t HO 000 Down and takt
ovtr (noftatot of tr» VA or
FHA tll.000

s t e m p e r ’a g e n c y

Day or N ig h t

YOU ASKED FOR li t
bdrm on hyp* lot
shade trees Owner
FMA or VA lor enly
Ceil new

Lovely J
w large
wtll tell
It 7 .m il

PARK AVE ADDRESS — At
tractive 2 bdrm, l *» bam CB
« new Central H A. large
bedrooms ♦ fully equipped
eat in kitchen Murry at
ll4SMt

DON'T WAIT This 1 btfrm 1 R
home hj| room »o eapand 4
good
on won t ta\t at
only I7S 500

OWNER MAY FINANCE this 2
bdrm on prime M4 t I IS corner
parcel toned RMOI Terrific
potential! MB 9*0

OOtL MOUS€- Thu cute 2
btirttl 1 i home &lt;1 wfovt you "ft
looking tor Eactllent |t«r|«r
home with iitumebi# mor
.tgeoe Only 422 SOO

OVER ISM SO FT «afhis lavely «
bdrm w II ■ 11 POOL. Fam
Rm. office, breaktjtf rm +
utility w waiher A dryer
Can t be replaced at ISMSOt

I A C H E - Motile home oKey
with permit E#ty terms, low
down peymfht, only iwwo

POSSIBLE TERMS held by
owner on spacious 4 bdrm, 2
bath w Fam Rm 4- screened
porch on tarf t shaded let
Ml. tilt

r ea lto r m m i
I N I )«9 MOO. Ill Itll, Ml 1137
Multiple Lilting Service

Le«e
tk ih itu ,
reduced!
Country living, fireplaces,
trwt. 2 bdrm. IS b Owner
UI.OQO A4i 201| or 1)1 7*00
For %*)# Of owner 2 bdrmu I i„
living rm, dining rm 4 kitchen
CHA. carport. 70 e TO geregr
well, tenerd yd S«ttO dn 4
iM uini mtge 12) 75?*

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F S A N FO R D R E A L T O R
2S44S Trench 222 07)1
Alter Moure )«* *000. )22 0779
Alger and Fend Realty Inc
IH W Lake Vary Blvd
Property Management 22) 7M3
Sanford Ailractive 77 yr, old
home, on 3*0 fI of LafcfOraro
1 Bdrm t bath property can be
split MS 006 by owner I 793
*2*7

ROBBIE’S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
1111 i Frtncb
Stnlord

24 HOUR B

322-9283

HAL COLBERT REAITT

Are you a full t&gt;m# driver with a
part time car? Our clatsiheds
are loaded with good buy for

C A L L 3 2 3 5774

43— Lotv Acreage

KJSli'
UKAL K ST. \t

S Acres East o4 Orange City on
Mywiand Blvd SIS 000 22)
7*4) Alt 4

f

K
321*0041

MLS

CHARMING 1 Bdrm, 7 Bath. 1
Story, pool, screened game
room, h i ,toe
GOOD ASSUMPTION
than new 2 Bdrm
Country
Kitchen
Fenced 144 *00
,

Better
1 Bath
CHA.

WOODMERE PARK ) Bdrm. 2
Balh, largi kitchen Owner
motivated wilt hol'd mortgage
142.500
Den t watt to BUY Real E.faff
# BUY Real Estate and waitttt
LAWANAKISH
REALTOR

32) 0041
After hr 1 )1) 7t|4 and 111 IIS2

UK
E «n m oan
________ W . « m u ,_________
f in a n c in g

it

bi*, split plan, ashing Its,006
OWNER FINANCING
home
w iflcemt 3 1. dming rm. eat
n kitchen, corner w a lot. *
separate I br furnished rental
cottage All this $59 500

B A TEM A N R E A L TY
L c real Estate Broker
2*40 Sanford Ave

3ZJ-07S8
Assume FMA Mortgage Cory 2
Bdrm Mom#. Fireplace Huge
Living Rm Cent Air Aik leg
t i l 100 Call 10S 24*7)77
OSTEEN Small 2 Bdrm home
Newly remodeled, new appil
antes Fenced lot 72*15*5
$14 $00 22) 0417. 14* $*$•
Beautiful 1 Bdrm, I Balh Mom#
large Fam R m . Cent MA«
Outstandmg shady lot and a
mosI prtsfigous location Only
$54,500 This you mvst see

CallBart
real e s ta te

STENSTROM
REALTY - REALTORS
WE LIST AND S IL L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN TMB
SANFORDARBA
JUST LISTED ) Bdrm. t Bath ta
Ravenna Parht Cent H A.
Wall Walt carpet, brhlatl
Naek, WAD. New Reel.
Screened Pallet Lots Morel
MM*
BEAUTIFUL ) Bdrm. I Bath
home en tree shaded lot in
quiet neighborhood! Cent H
A. wall w ill carpet, Coty
fireplace. Fla Rm , Dining '
Rm. Porch and Motet is*.ego

JUST FOR Y O U t) Bdrm. I Bath
Mama to Mayfair — 1 bin from
Lake Monroe, double let,
fenced yard Beautiful Decor
throughout! AH the eitrast
taijgg
MAYFAIR VILLASl 2 4 )
Bdrm , I Bath Cende Villas,
neat to Mayfair Country Club
Select your let. Moo# plan A
tnlenor dtcer* Quality can
Strutted by Shoemaker tar
$47.39* 4 upI
r ea lto r s *

llOthce* Throughout
Central Flo.Id.

LAKE MARY
J 2 J -I H 0
SaTW lake Mary Blvd
IN OR IF T WOOD VILLAGE
li + ■ f i j ii i l. ll. W M dtd
• t in I I Mm From Oawn
Iran Itrrlofd Gt.nl Onki.
Paiturot.nd. I I ) FI. On Paved
Bond W Artesian Well 144 004
BMM
b.luM ul Count,. Mom. F h I.
4 Weedrd Acr.v F .n c d . I
Bdrm. 1 I.ItJ. Finoltd Den W
F t . . . 144*. VA I ’ i Pel Aitum
tkl*. On. T .* r Full Warranty
m 4140
New Lttltn. Spanish 11.14, &gt;
Ho.v N.w Ctnl.tl H ..I A Air,
I Btdreami. I Bat**, Furr
Ream. Fire plan . B . l . l l l . l
Bit W.lk Dorunlown 141,10.

SALES
ASSOCIATES
NEEOEO
9 opgningt l.tl
Call Frank

_____ msm----------

ASSOCIATES NEEDED! New
or *iper 1#need Call Herb
Stenstrom er Lee Albright
today 4 discover success!

C A L L A N Y T IM E

mi
Park

322-2420

R E A L TO tO
Muttlpl« Listing Service

41- B— Condominiums
For Sale
I Cranes H*®H townhousa,
drlute ) bdrm- T 1 8. lake
,* • Ivnrui. luimm.ng 111
,pp, &lt; m«f» I *n OJA llk»
now. Oltum mlg 111 IJ il
For Ir.v t w cpf-on lo bu&gt; 1 Conao t it Airport B l . d ,
LonlgrO 1 Mrm, } B, CHA,
r otnj. l i o n , On pot*). » , ) J » r
dryor.pcol.dubAojn* tU .IM .
119 0«0 dn *,ll com .drr
tmond. H i . ov*r M rm onll
t ilt mo 0u iin .il l i t Colt
Gtotcock m WO

PRIM E OFFICE SPACE
NOW AVAILABLE
EN TRA LLY LO CATED IN DELTO N A

2166

Shadow Lk Woods-Lg wooded
lot,* owner will finance below
current rate, iow down 172
1430

Tires 4 M inis Whitt waits,, 4
plus 2 Belted tires tike new
H00 931 1774

Sanford Prime 11 5* Acres w
cptions tor ien&lt;ng S97.50U w
Terms W Maiic/owskl 277
7H). Eves 323 1147

Used Lumber FT 7»4‘*
20c per ft
)7) 9*29 after Sp m

ST JOHN'S FRONTAGE
WITH J BDRM M OBILE

COLOR TV SALE

home

h ig h

e l e v a t io n

.

CLASSY PROPERTY. GEN
E v a a r e a iss .ooo
S ACRES. TALL FINES. SOME
p a s tu r e
road f r o n t
a g e r iv e r a c c e s s , g e n
E v a 131.000

74 FLA TTE O LOTS IN GEN
Eva
w o o d e d l ik e
a
park
MAKES 5 7 HOME
SITES. $40000 TERMS
2 t ACRES TALL PINES*
GENEVA $11,500. LOW IN
TER ES T
ASSUM ABLE
m o r tg a g e

i acm es c le a r e d lan d
PAOLA 111,000
ic l e a r e d d u p l e x l o t s in
1ANPORO 111,100 e a c h .

ZONEO TOR QUADS OR OF
FICES
m
ON IM1. NEAR n e w
WINN DIXIE CENTER COM
ING AT LAKE MARV BLVO
ZO N E D C O M M E R C IA L .
HTi.OO
. HOM EJITES in o r a n g e
GROVE AT UM ATILLA SJMW
EACH CRAZY TERMS
i ACRE WOODED LOT IN E n

HANDYM AN SPECIAL
4
Bdrm, I Bath, ] Story Home
with Lovely weed floors, Ft#
Rm . Dining Rm , Large Bdrm
and much merit II 1.500

SQ. FT. W ITH SPACIOUS

PA RKIN G FACILITIES.

t e r p r is e

iiooo

seller

TERMS
&gt;'i ACRES WOODED ROAD
FR O N TAG E IN O S TE E N
SIT.JOO
1 a c h e s w o o d e d JACKSON
BAY
AREA.
O S TE E N
m . wo. s e l l e r f i n a n
CINO
SEIOLER REALTY BROKE*
m ih i

43B-L0I1 &amp; Acreage

305-574-1432

it ,,.

a S K W H S je s a

'

3 RCA s It .nch Pori Panasonic
It «nch Pori , lenlth )| in
Comole Phiico 23 in console
and some Bl Whf Fort at tow
as $49 Cash or 110per mo with
warranty Also New Color Sell
m Stock Trade in accepted

HOOVER
Convertible d flu it vacuum
cleaner with attachments
L.kt new pay balance $*• or a
payments of $17 Authorlted
Dealer tor Panasonic Vacuum
Cleaners lee at Sanlord
Sewfng Center Sanford Plata
across from Burger King

4;— Reel Estate Wanted
w*nl*d 10 Our 1 L*«rm. IB
rout* no urcAfM pr.nc.poli
onir Indud* pr.&lt;» drwr.p
I-on. Addrrtl. 1 l*lt No Smd
rtplr To Bo* No &lt;0T c a
Evening H*f*ld, PO Bo. IUT
Senford, FL 1ITII
R&gt; buy *ouily In Houle*.
*p*rtm«nlt. «*&lt;«nl lend in*
Acr **g*
LU CKY
IN
VESTMENTS. P O Bon ] » &amp;
Unlurd, Flo JJ7TI n ) .711
HAVE CASH
FOB Y O U t FARM
O t tU ILO IN O LO TS.
&gt;ul&lt;i C u p u lliH i IM 111 &lt;1*1
•* Ill-M il
WNiltu*. IN* H ( * l « l IN*** il •
t lt iv l .d *d 10 Ml** II Try
on* loan
Don I H*nl*ri Whtl h**( youT
N*«d &gt; 1 Bdrm Mom* Prlct
«nd i*rmi nrgulKM* US *4*1
- i t t - l ---------------------------------------CASH TOR EQ UITY
W*c*nik)t*&gt;nMNrt.
C*IIB*r1 R**l E l l , l , m i m

47 A—Mortgigw Bought
4 Sold
w* P4T (tin lor 111 4 jro
morlgtgti t « y Lrgg. Lie.
Marlgtg* Brptrr m TIM

Foe Salt — New Pedal Power
three wheel lades 2 speed
frcyctt. baby blut, w ftary
powered, hand 4 loot brake
{complete) $450 Phone 229
0204

7 family sale Sat 9 4, n* Last
Minnie Dr (Park Ridge
Subdivision! End tables,
lamps 4 lots of mile items
Moving
furniture, mite , Frt
4 Sat Can deliver, Follow
Signs on E 20th near Locust
321*719
3 family garage sale Silver wart
service tor 10. couch 4 chair. 2
stereo sets, lawn mower, gas
heater, chair, auto access.
tools, alt kinds of books,
clothes baby'adult, dresses
sue 20' 4 maternity dresses
W Catamafihd, 72 Toyota
Corona Housthoid items Fri
4 Sat 9 5 7 ? n m 1019 Santa
St (between Burger Chef 4
Bahama Joe s)

*7 Chevy $225
73 Chevy $)7S
139 4941

AUTO AUCTION
i? b’bAYftSN'A
*v
ftw , Fl. 1 mil* » n l 0. Sp*Af
**Y, Dx.tom Brtck. will hole
* public AUTO AUCTION
»Y*ry w*un*k&gt;«, *11 p m (If .
Ih* only on* In Florid* You ML
lh« w k » H prlt* Coll K4,
MS 1)11 lo, lurttiof dftxiti,

75— Recreational Vehicles
27 Travel Trailer Fully sett
contained, met and clean
DeBary
4*1*10*

Garage Sal# Saturday l a m
Misc
items, Furniture.
Clothing 7547 Georg-a Ave

H O P DOLL ARt
ror your cor or truck, r*p*r
die** ol cond Prefer running
Ft** towing 111 t i l l Ag«r|t.

76—Auto Parts
115 ' Super Swampers lk #
new whit# ra sed
inters, SXX) 372 7*1*

55—Boats &amp; Accessories
II OrrpV, 10Ml'
Johnson 4 trailer 1416 or
best otter 27)5)44

Top Doitor Po.d tor Junk A Ucrd
cerk. truckk A hnouy rgu.p
mtnt 11! STM

77-Junfc Cars
Removed

6J—Lawn Garden

NO M O NLY DOWN Ptymtfltk
ITS month Mont# Coflo. PS,
P I Auto. AM TM ktnro. Ilf A
mony other e.trek I lf It00 or
•)c MOS D**i*r

BUY JU N K C A R S 4 iRVCkS
From 110to 150or more
CaM 277 1*74. 277 44*6

FILL DTHTA TOPSOIL
Y E L L O A IA N O
Call Clark A M'rl H I rug

71 Plymouth Gtond Srdon *11
mwnr w oif. Sf00 H I OUT
doyk. 11) IMS ettor S

CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
1)9 1949

Lawn Mow*# Sales and Service
We Sell the Best and Service
the Rest Bob Ball Western
Auto 201 W 1st St

T1 Chevy C 10 )r Ton P-ck up.
Long wh*«l b«k* V I Auto PS
Body tough but clt*n mkld.
Hunk •icdlonl Whit* kpok*
wtiefik end good lir n IMS
U U »t
______

Top Denar Pad tor Junk 4 used
cars, trucks 4 heavy equip
m «rt J7J59#0

Americon
RrtMt ItU
oufo, PS
good US0

Don't pile no longer needed
items high as an elephant s
eye Place a classified ad, and
pde the money in your wallet I

85— Pets Supplies
Fret to good home N ee Get
man Shepherd Lab male
Very
intelligent, highly
’ramablr. I I mos old 37M20)
or 222 594*

Motork H jm ol.r
» dr k*d*n. I cy .
Good kllfkrr. rvnk
C*sh l i t 1)14

FRONT DISC BRAKE JOB

M-Horses

New Pads
Machine Raters
New Grease Irals
irinat ■
Pack inner 4 Outer Bearings

$4195

APPAluOSAS
FOR SALE
I I I M il

Retill Brake Fluid
Check Calipers 4
Master Cvlm4ar

JIM LASH'S

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

48—Wanted to Buy

4114 Hwy II 9) between Sintord 4 longwood. Phan# 111 4791
Now Open Set 9 a m 1 p m
_
H.urk I M . m
WWA ■ h fp
C‘ M
.................
W V M tta
»**"*“ •

Aluminum, com, &lt;opp*r Ned
br*M. Ulyor. gold Wrrkderk
M 10. Set T I koko Mo Tool
Co T il W tkl 51 11) 1100

C O N S U L T OUR

Levi 4 Wrangler Jeans
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
110Sanford Ave
227 17*1
Brown River Rock, Ditt Bov
Grease Traps. Dry Walts.
Car Stops- Cement. Sand
Mirada Concrete Ca
20* Elm Ave
227 S7S1

A N D LET A N E X P E R T D O T H E JO B
To List Your Business...

Sl-A— Fumltvira

Dial 322-2611 or 8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

WILSON MAIER FURNITURE
J U U S E FIRST ST , » T S*U

5? — Appliances

Air Conditioning

Kenmort parts, service, used
washers MOONEY APPLI­
ANCES 271*497
MICROWAVE OVEN
Brand new Amana' microwave,
never used, was layaway and
never picked up Only 1291
balance due Can be purchased
for S7I9 cash or payments ftlB
per month Will deliver. Call
1*7 5)94 day or highf Free
home trial No obligation
tt£ PrR E PC?.. 14 cu ftfro ll free.
Or If $S2», now $205 or l i t me.
Agent 1)9 4**

S3— TV*R*dlo&gt;Stereo
Nr*d lol or lond &gt;on*d
tor moo.it hom*
_______ ______________
PASTURE
Eor H o rt.t L**l* *.th or
n-JKoul purenot* option S 10
* «n
MjrkAim ua a ..*
pr*f*rr*d &lt;;« iMO

Yard Salt
Frl 4 Sat 9 )
106 Hays Dr

Don't p«ie no longer needfd
.terns high as an elephant s
rye Place a class-tied ad and
pile the money in your wallet I

For Estate. Commercial or
Residential Auctions 4 Ap
praisals Call Delli Auction
JJJ 5*70

King tu t bed with
headboard and access $250
272 S7S7

VWfiled

50 Miscellaneous for Sale

FOR INFORMATION CALL:

Trash 4 treasures lala Fr 4
Sat 9 20 til 704 Cherokee
Circle. Suniend Estates

7tw»nmetlre$sset$
for sa&gt;«
27) 1077

Sanford's Sales Leador

REAL TOR. 227 7atl

a s s o c ia te s , inc

EVERY OAY IS b a r g a i n
DAY IN THE WANT ADS 227
2*11 or 111 999)

LAKE MARY — Beautiful
waterfroni 11■ acre. E acHulive
area toned WR1AAA. t)S.B9*
Harold Mall Realty. Inc.
Realtors 37) $774

JO a c r e s w o o o e o r o l l i n g
HILLS IN GENEVA AREA
$1500 p e r a c r e , s e l l e r
f in a n c in g , m a y d iv io e

323-7832

ow n er

349-9154

Moving Sale inside house
Saturday only, 7704 Ridgewood
across from Srm.noif High
School Gym
Furniture,
children $ clothes, dishes,
items toe numerous to men
hon Everything: must go

v Bank financing avaitasle •
51N Hwy 17 9)
Casselberry

Del s Auction Service No sales
until Friday. Sept 4 Hay# a1
n ee summer 22) 5*70

Ferfilijer Spreader Gun Rack.
Small I I
Clothes. Toy*.
Glassware M'SC F ro m lp m
till? Saturday and Sunday
7a)4 S Chase Ate

Sat . Aug lit I a m, Mil Cor of
1st 4 Pint S t. Geneva An
hque turn . plants 4 mite

71 Volkswagen Station wagon.
$19*1
71 Mont# Wagon $7***

When you place a Classified Ad
m The Even ng Hyraid. stay
cfoie to your phone because
something wonderful is about
to happen

2 Family Garage Sal*
Saturday 9 )
11* E Airport Blvd

Ail Shelf Itemi will be sold at
21"* Off Regular Frfce. e»
eluding beer, feed, mllh, ice
cream', breads, candies., chips,
Pepsi. Cokes and c»ggs
Dealers welcome

72 pinto Hatchback $1560
71 Bu&gt;Ck Skylark 4 dr. $)7M

Auction Every Monday Night, 7'
P M Sanford Auction til! 5
French 373 7)40. Daily 101

3 Family Yard Safe, 161 Forest
Dr Loch Arbor Antiques
foots, household items lawn
equip Much more 9 2 Sat

7family carport sale Sat 4 Sun ,
Aug 1 4 2 Lots of great items
452 Palm Dr . Sanford

*

* 3 3 9 7989#
7f Chevy Van I44||

Sunday. Aug 3 9 4 216 E
Commercial St Household
items, furniture, clothing
mr$c Very rtasonabif All
proceeds donated to National
Kidney Foundation

G O IN G O U T O F
B U S IN E S S S A L E
310 A V E . C G E N E V A

★ B &amp; H A u lo S a le s 4

77—Auction

4 Fam ily sale N tween old.,
clothes 4 'Office ma&lt;h 10? Club
« d . Fn 4 Sat t til

r7t Brigadier 12 *#S, 2 bdrm, 1
B CHA. asking $12,500 &lt;9041
7)1071)

80-Autos

Antiques
Diamonds
Oil
Paintings Orient*! Rugs
Bridges Antiques
37) J901

Moving sale
antique cha rs
brass tamps, turn, wrought
-r©n pat*o turn . mfsc Thvrs .
Frl . Sat t S. 200 Palmetto

Concord id add 7 or 3 bdrm. fire
resistant wans, wood t*d&gt;ng 4
in ogle root only 112.995
14 ■ se . only su,ee$
14 b 70 ,on»y|l).*eS
No money down VA IB# down,
FMA Shop Uncle Roy s Mobil#
Home Sales US 441 $
Leesburg &lt;*041 717 03)4 Open
Sundays 17 4 p m . week n-ghti
til 7 20

TERRIFIC ASSUMPTION on )
bdrm country home in Lake
Markham area Beautiful Fine
Picwtc throughout Lakevitw
let n r at*fit Mi,eon

68— Wanted to Buy

Moving
sale
Vied Sat
Everything must ©a Fur
niture, girls clothes w e *
odds 4 ends a loti of tuns i
mil* off 25th St on Upsaia «d

R lA O THIS TW IC I
24 ■$*' Concord or 2**«St*
Hartford Both ) bdrm. 2 B w
Shingle root, wood tiding,
defutf carpet, drapes 4 ap
phancat Your choice at
H9I9S Only at Uncle Roy's
Mobil* Home Sales In
Leesburg No down payment
VA. all other financing 10*.
down Shop Uncle Roy t
Mobile Mom# Sales, US 441 S
Leesburg |904J 7i7Q224. Sun
days 12* pm wkrughfi*, j so

Friday, July 11. Itll— ITA

Ev«ning Her*Id, Sintord, Ft

54—Garage Sales

STEREO
Zmitfi »*tnu» twtoJ* ti*rn.
AM FM I'.f m ,*dKk I M**B
tu'DKbl*, I IfKk l*p« pUy*.
SoU n*« 1*00 • r**( buy *f
only SUB &gt;t *r •**. ovff
p n m n jll II* pw month NO
MONEY DOAN C*11 R l l j l l
&lt;t*y or n.Bht F(*&lt; hom* If 1*4
No oblip*&lt;«n

Chfls will sefvic* AC'*, rtfrig.
freeitrs. wttar cooltrs, misc
Call 272 *737

Beauty Car*
TOWER'S BEAUTY SALON
FORMERLY H*rrl*trk Boouty
Nook SIT I III t l . 111114)

Boarding a Grooming
Animtt H*«*n boarding or*.
Grooming K*nn*is Shady.
iMuKlod. kcr**n«d, tty proot
in*id*, outs Id* rims F*m
a im AC c*g*k Wt etter lo
your p i ll
Sterling stud
ragiklry Ph H I SIS)
Snow Hill Kenntl ott*r) C*1 A
Dog f i ** Baths IS up 14
Hour, Full S*rv.c* MS 1)11

Brosti Cutting
CUiTO M WORK
R*«konabl*
Ratal.
1r*«
Estlmatf Call Early A M. pr
Ey* n )IS 4 lo r (»S i H I 1104

Zfnllhtttrto llp ttk trt.
d,*mond pouil nttdlt. |IM
1111)1)___________

■ill Corso. Slat* CartlMtd
B u ild in g
C o n t ra c t o r
Rokldonlial or Cammarclal.
Now or Romod*J*d 1510*14

Good UlOB IVY, U S B up

MILLIE*

Tk 111 ( i l l

C L A S S IF IE D AOS MOVE
MOUNTAIN! o* mtrchtnd.it
tvtry d«r
A t h t .t t l f « mort Color TV t
lor IM H trb l TV m i t.
S*nlor&lt;l A tt H I 111*.

54-GarageCarportYard Sab
Carport Sale
Sat. Only 9-3
P.ng Pong t»b1*, *ntK)uok. 10
speod bik*. gtesL loots. *rmy
cots, turn A much more

I blk east of Mai lonville batwwn 20th &amp;
24th St.
11(4 LUCB I T U CT.
ESTATE SALE
Anliguot. *ppl'*nc*s. to r ad
• «rllk«m * fllt. lu rn llu fT ,
cWTiIng. iruii SAIurdty *nd
Sunday I d )4tli and Sanford
Ava. and toJMw sign* to 140a
Grand,,»* Ay*

I
T M

« * T

T

Ironworks

Plumbing

Concret* Work, footwv Moors A
pools Londkc*ping A sod
work Frog,*st 1)1 TIP)

Al's oJnamtnlol Wrought iron
W-ndow Bars «nd Socunty
poors 4111*4*. Orlando

Freddie Robinson Plumbing
Repairs, faucets, W C*
Sprinklers 272 6516. }7 ) 070*

I M*N. QUALI1Y OPTRA! ION
T yfk tap Pot-os, Dr.«to*.k.
t f*c Woypo H ,,i ))J 1}))

Landscaping

Pressur* Cleaning,

l a r g e t h e e in s t a l l e r

COLO* TEL*VISION
Z*n&gt;m » ' (onioM color TV
Orlo.n*l prlc* ovtr STOO
B*l*nc* 0u« tltl or Ilk* over
poimmtt I lf ptr month S1.ll
In •r*rr*nly NO M O NEY
DOAN A ,11 drli.tr Coll Ml
Sift d*r or n.gM F rtt homo
I riot

M llOrltndoDr

Concrete Wbrk

Building Contractor

Kkdl gone, but II
thaback yard Mn’tT toll H ttltti
-a wont ad Call Ml t ill

Car Repair
Minor or Mai or ■ tp*lrs
L m worry A Jnconytnlonct —
Writ coma to you M l 14M
HokOy'l Mob. to A*M lory let

Catpat Cleaning
iuly
bPmbkkTII.
Fro*
doodarumg w shampoo A (loop
Wtam. Ibdrmlratlk art* Mo*
m li* rm, dm rm. and hall U t
Only SM tor tack additional
room M l«* K

Ceramic Tl la
M IIN T 1 IR T I L I
New or r*p*.r, lo*»y tnowori our

OW ALTNEY JEW ELER
W S . ParkAei.
m *so*

Elactrical

Lnndscaping, Old t*«n* R*
placed MS SMI

to yrs o.p aii
typos id otoctrlal work at fair
prices IT ) 4114

e l e c t r ic ia n

Quality *l*ctric*l work *t • fair
price 1) yrs &gt;rp*ri*nc*
M.nor repairs to complef*
wiring 17)011*
Poddl* lant install od.
rrk-dmi Ial*t*c1rlc*l wor*
call n i l ) . )

Lawn &amp; Garden
Service

Remodeling

Mowing,
edging,
rubbuh
removed Scheduled to suit
your needs *71 254*
Tomorrow may bt fh# day you
sell that roll a way bad you've
newher# to t oil away
If you
piece a Ctess«ft*d Ad today
Lawn Mewing
I T LACK IY
21M941

TancT
e -

Vobile Homes. Mouses, Roofs.
Trucks. Trailer, etc Portable
Unit Harold Rankin )71 27SS.

Remodeling Specialist
We handle the
Whote Ball of Wat

B. E. Link Const.
322-7029
f ,nenc.ng Available

Roofing

’•V

SALE
Summtr Wood FmceSaK 1) 000
it ol wood fane* and posts
must bt soldi Con bv cr*n el
Sontry Foncts 1)1 Mw, D T I
Longwood Wld* selection
Como early S*i* coBlmurs Mil
morchondise is *11 sold
Hurry I Hurryl 1104111

OUR RATES ARE LOWEIT
Lakev.rw Nursing Center
t i *E Second SI. Sanlord
m m

Odd Jobs

Handyman
Pointing, carpentry. *11 types st
hom* repairs Call lor freo
estimate H I 1T7S

Hauling A
Yard Wbrk

J A B Hom* Improvement
Car penury work ol any type
Root repairs. Butter *ork.
pa nting (interior or nteriar).
plumbing, spoc.eiij* Jn mobile
noma repairs A root coaling,
and wood patio deck* free
estimate l i t 14*1

Hauling A Yard Work II salt
with Ad i n till na ans n i
14*1 Larry, Joyce Bryant,

Painting

Horn* Improvement
C EN TR AL FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
PatnMng. Rooting, Carpentry
L k . Bonded A Guaranteed
Free Byhnuter CH*41

Horn* Repairs
* ALL PHASE OOESlT A L L *
repair*. slitCcP. r* not,
re Krtanmg
A LL PHASE C0N1RACT(
J# W IT ID or *111IS1
Q U A LITY A TA FA IR P R IC E l
Gon Repair* A Improv I ) yro.
tocitty. Son,or Dike DA1H6
UN CLU TTER YOUR CLOSET
Sell those Ihieigt met era ,utl
tek.ng Up sptc t wilt) * want ad
its the Herald IT) 1(11 or 111

Write Way Rooting trd Pem.'t
ting. Guaranteed work Ffee
Estimates Ph 111**1)
' *jt

Nursing Center

111

Heilman Painting 1 Repair*
Quality work Fre* t i l Ditc
to Senipra. I R U N JUttr.
sous* Pointer -1*1 Cteso Word,
reasonable prut* I I star*
e.p Kenneth Holt 111 US*
anytime altar I
TER R Y'S INfE RIOR*
WallpaperIng. Blinting Lap
prices Guar work H I (D a

Plunking
PLUMBING

Sandblasting
s a n o b l a s t in o

DAVIS WBLOINQ
m » m , SAN FORD

H A R F I R S T R E I S IR V IC I

trimming, removing A Lend i
scopmg Free E st Jill)111
II you eren l using your pool
tobJe, take o cue. end sell .1
with * Herald cless.iwd od
Call 111 111I

IN FLATIO N FIGHTER
SPECIAL
V
10 Day* only tabor on sort o n ].
cnalr SKf Plus pur Meterlti
All work guaranteed. H I Tall
tor trig est pick ups A d.iiy,
H O O Bryant

Cun

siructlon. Repair*. Imergan

cy. L k . Bond**. In* m t O S
plumbing rtpar — alllypes
fialuri rtpJecammt
water hoaltr* 6 pump*

sm s

&gt;:hr.tf,en Rooting I) yrs tip
14T S1SB, tree est Retooling,
spocialii* m repair work A
now tooling

TrttSarvica

H O U II PAINTING
Inter ter A Is ltn tr
H T. LACKEY 11) S U :

FONSECA

ROOFS. Neks repaired. Rtpl.c*
ratten ear** end *h&lt;n*l* work. licensed, lasured. bended *
Mia* m m ______________

Window Rtpairs
All Wmdowi repair ad Class
Replaced. Porch Rescreen.ng ,
M (1*1

�*

B L O N D IE
IM
GONG

\f
\\

1JA— Evening Htrild. Sanford, FI.
JU S T A
M IN U TE ,

PO TO O R E A L IZ E T mA T

you

e v e r y t h in g i o w n w il l

Friday. July 21. 1M1
w o u ld n t w a n t to

INHERIT A HOUSE W ITH A

BE YOURS

t

- ^ - t SH A B B Y

9

ACROSS

by Chic Y o u n g

HES HOT A THOUSAND ^
AND ONE W AYS TO 6 E T&lt;
ME T O C U T T H E GR ASS

9

B EETLE

B A IL E Y

V ' K h J O W W d A T '5 W

by M ort W a lk e r

^

’T

W U A T S W RONG

wrrtf You, saro^ / i 'il

TELL VOU WfJATfc IdRojJG
WITH VoUH

9

9

f

46

Three (pretis)

• Oomest*

employ**
’ "IKfupt i2
«dti

St Heavy Iplr
S3 Aitronom&lt;|l
object
55 ln»id*
56 Smoothly
courttout

Stick b&lt;rd
*4 indO'tM

57 Tim* ol y*ir

IS 0'«|m*"l

SI 1oHowt

24

25

N o Real Problem
DEAR DR. LAMB-1 am

27

28

28

32

33

34

35

36

37

38

42
51

43

44

" ■

29

30

48

49

39
41

40

by Bob M ontana

..

52

■
S3

55

56

57

58

54

HOROSCOPE

"

your m other's case is
unusual.
I can see why you might
think travel would make your
problem worse since the
vertigo Is similar to the
'v e rtig o seen In motion
1sickness as in air travel. But
in M eniere's disease, the
disturbance In balance Is
caused by overdistention of
SO
the little balance canals with
fluids. These little tubes do
not contain any air so the
' changes in air pressure with
air flight should not be a
significant factor.
•»
When the middle ear is
Involved In other conditions,
air flight Is Important because
the middle ear chamber Is
31

By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, August I, 1981

by Howie Schneider

E E K &amp; M EEK
—

r~

IS E A G A M IS H C t t U G T H A T f t C R E

w e ll

U H L P U T T H U ? T A X -C U T S W U G S

M I N E IM T H E BAJOK

i m

l o t

F v rru jG

‘t O j m / t j u r p a i d f o r

L A S T V t A R S F R IV O L O U S
S P E JU D k JG Y t T

IN T U B B A k X A N D W O T S F E A l D
IT F R W O C U S L V

BUGS BUNNY

by Stotfel i Heimdahl

HAPPY BJK'THCW '&amp;'iOU HAPPY BiRTW
happy a ^ rw c u v X A e

caw

O f Flying

Fe ar

planning an airplane trip and
'6 IM*
need
some advice. I have
17
OOW N
Meniere's disease and have
■| Pit gently
:o Vigiieoi*
1 Dunks
heard that I shouldn't fly, as It
2 Russian rnr«r
•P'tid
will make the ringing worse
21 £tt&gt;«»
3 Actrttt
and I will iiave a permanent
*9 Brott brttd 42 Jipiris*
compound
lout*
hearing loss. As it is I have
23 Kmd ol I»n*i 4 Sluggish
21 l**d*'S
sssh (pi|
27 On* ittut ol • 5 Building nmg 22 Bsnk
only 20 percent hearing In the
43 Ittstn
6 Orchcltr*
"(M P lptl
23 lit*
left ear but the right one is
44 Goddtss of
tcclion
32 G'*«k *pic
24 Ch«*rt (Sp |
normal. Should I chance it or
fit*
7 Drooped
po«m
25 is successful 45 God (Sp |
(&gt;pl01i«*l
33 Constellation
stay at home? This disease
26 Afftbi*
8 tndun
34 Edgy
47 Protrusion!
seems to be hereditary; my
35 Dot* on
9 lit* Yugotltu 28 Ris* tnd fall 48 BibKH
mother Is afflicted with it but
36 M.d«itt
i«ld*r
29 Golf club
brolhir
(rnpar*
10 Work
30 Gi4nt ol fury
her* ‘j more advanced. I’ve
49 Showing good
11 Words ol un
39 Hlfeditary
lilts
had one attack but she has
d«rstind&gt;ng |2
blueprints
tudgminr
31 Ntgstts
had many and both her cars
wdl)
40 Shoot hom
50 V*ry |fr|
37 Inwsrd
imbuih
12 Intimous
are affected. I'm 46. Would
52
(iCISSnrtly
38 Vsntilsta
Rom*n
42 Wis md*bt*d
54 6 g coff** pot you recommend an operation
41 Irntition
*mp*ror
to
for me?
1
4
7
a
9
10 11 12
2
]
e
5
DEAR READF-R-Your
story touches on two cardinal
14
13
signs of Meniere's disorder­
hearing loss and ringing in the
15
IB
ears. The third Is vertigo
which many people describe
17
19
a s dizziness. The disease
■ "
■ "
usually involves only one ear;
21
22
23

A R C H IE

Answer to Prnnoul Puril*

47 Cumin*

‘ 3 O'lnge jnd

® n

9

YOUR BIRTHDAY
Augait 1,1981
Some interesting changes
could occur tor you this
coming year which, at tin t,
you may resist However, as
lime goes on you'll be quite
hippy these things happened
as they did.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
There Is a good chance you
might be tempted to renege on
doing something with or for ■
family
member
today
because of a more appealing
s e l f - i n t e r e s t . D o n 't !
Romance, travel, luck,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career for the coming
months are all discussed in
your Ailro-Grsph
which
begins with your birthday.
Mail II for each to AstroGraph, Box 489, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019 Be sure to
specify birth date.
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept. O l
Unless you arc careful, you
could unconsciously spill out
confidential tilings to a nosy,
probing neighbor. Guard what
you say today.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Make a list of Items you wuh
to purchase before leaving the
house, even if fust going
grocery shopping, because
today you could spend,
wastcfully or thoughtlessly.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)
Your intensity to accomplish
your goals today could have
you coming off as being a bit
too dictatorial. Temper your
actions and words

situations you're unprepared
to handle.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Don't suddenly back out of
any obligations to friends
today, just because you may
not be in the mood. You won't
like yourself If you spoil their
day.
AQUARIUS lJan 20-Feb.
19) Your judgment isn't at its
best today, so don't try to
make decisions Involving
major objectives. Walt until
things are more clearly
defined.
PISCES (Feb 20-March 201
Although you may have in­
tentions of getting a lot ac­
complished today, It Isn't
likely you will. Too many
disruptions could stall your
projects.
ARIES | March 21-Aprtl 19)
Social plans may develop
some minor problems early In
the day, due to unexpected
changes. Be prepared to be
flexible and It won't get you
down.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Someone In the household
may get you so confused
today you might not know
which end is up. Try, If you
can, not to be influenced by
outside pressures.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
It's not unukual (or you to
start something and then not
finish it. Today, you are ex­
ceptionally susceptible to this.
Don't begin any lengthy
projects.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Splurging, whathar
on
yourself or for those you love,
has its limits. Don't go
overboard today to the point
of foolhardiness on a spur-ofthe-moment whim.

filled with air. The pressure in
the chamber then varies as
barometric pressure is in­
creased or decreased during
flight.
There are many causes for
vertigo. Actually, Meniere's
is only responsible for 10 to IS
percent of the causes (or
vertigo. To help you sort this
out, I am sending you The
Health Letter number 9-10,
Dizziness and Vertigo. Others
who want this issue can send
75 cents with a long, stamped,

self-addressed
envelope 'o
me, in care of thts newspaper.
P.O. Box 1551. Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019
An operation is sometimes
done to relieve the pressure of
excessive fluid in the balance
canals. Such a decision must
be based on careful extensive
exam inations in each in­
dividual case. Many people
with Meniere's disease never
require an operation and in.
some people the disease
titerally burns itself out and
disappears. I hope you will be
one of the luckv ones.
DEAR DR. IAMB-1 hope
you will tell me what StokesAdams syndrome is and what
causes it. Is there any cure (or
it? 1 Just had a permanent
pacem aker Implanted. In
looking over my records, the
diagnosis reads StokesAdams syndrome
DEAR READF.R—The
names of people who describe
medical conditions are often
attached to them. A Mr.
Adams recorded a caw of
slow pulse, in which the
patient
suffered
from
repeated cerebral attacks of
an apopletic nature.”
The very slow heart rate
results in inadequate blood
flow to the brain which can
cause fainting or even con­
vulsions. The common cause
is damage to the electrical
c o n d u c tin g
m echanism
between the top (atrial) and
bottom (ventricles) of the
h eart, called A—V heart
block. Ib is Is usually from
fatty-cholesterol deposits in
the arteries to that area.
The pacemaker you hate
will prevent your heart from
beating that slowly and will
maintain the blood flow to
your brain. It should prevent
such attacks.

W IN A T B R ID G E
711 It

NO R TH

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Exit

Opening lead +J

By Oswald Jacoby
•ad Alta Soatsg
Here is another hand from
Harry Shearer's article on
individual tournaments
He sat South and on the
assumption that North's
-hreeclub

Stayman request for a fourcard major, Harry got to
four hearts North, obviously
confused, decided to pass
and there was Harry (lying
blind in a fog with both
motors showing signs of
trouble Anyway, Harry
made the best of what he
was looking at.
Dummy s queen of spades
won the first trick He led a
diamond and finessed his
queen successfully Two of
dummy's diamonds went on
hts see and king of spades
and he ruffed his last spade
Back to his hand with the
ace of diam onds and
dummy's last trump took
c a re of his own last
diamond Seven tricks out of
seven in the bag
A club to his king and
West's ace give the defense
Its first trick West led back
a club and Harry was in
dummy He led a club That
was all dummy had East
ruffed wrllh the seven of
hearts Hsrry overruffed
with the jack and led his
four of hearts Poor West
had to win with his eight and
give Harry the last two
tricks with the
queen of trumps
What's more four hearts
bid, five made, turned out to
be almost a top score
iN tw s e m .* » v r n ii ans w in ,

by Ltom rd Stgrr
WOW) RARK-I
HE r

UP, TOU

TUMBLEWEEDS
t i p t o e t o m y tk o o l u

hoi t h e

m o o n has pone arose,

:
Y h a ir ,

th ep ee,

f

______ _ „

\f

s p k in k l in m o o n p u s t o n m y n o s e

S

/s

CHEEPIN' FLEETLY WT PlSKREETLV,
■yOO-HOO, PRINCESS, It IZ MEJ

p r in k l e ? m o o n p u s t in m

-

»

NESTLIN' MONOTHE PANPRUFFTHERE.

■

■
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’ # 5 ? JL* e r t f ’w1 4 1 L * '

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�E v e n in g ll&lt;*mlcl

LEISURE
Complete Week's TV Listings
—

F r i d a y . J u l y H &gt; *•*

H .it id

Klyhl slr.k an,I . p " d y «rn ,h ,u n d , bunt Iran, “ lb . ch n..“

P hot* b y T t m V i i k #«*

.ha .U r . . 1 . m e . a. S.n,lnnl. (ir.jh nn m . lU rk In C . . . . l b . r r , , I V d . « . P - u e ' . h r

Zipper.” a mtchanlcal rabbit lure Inn. shownl. Ily Ih. lime a ,'og Is .n le r.il in an nlliclal race he Is a polish'd performer, bal lots o( Iralnlng
woes on behind the scenes beforehand.

Those Pampered G reyhounds

It’s A D o g 's Life, A n d . i G o o d O n e
B y 8AM COOK
H erald Sport* Editor
You can’t breed ra c e horsea with Jackasses.
Lake Mary’s Rod Connell didn’t exactly make that
profound statem ent. He doesn’t core about race horses or
jackasses. Greyhound raising and racing ore Connell’s
business, but when it com es to spelling success, he spells
it B-LrOO-I&gt;M-N-&amp;S.
“ Bloodlines. T hat’s w hat it is all about," said Connell.
43 who runs his business from a ranch-like facility across
from la k e M iry High School on Longwood-lake Mary
Hoad.
"A dog has to have good ancestors If Its going to be any
good,” pointed out Connell. "T ak e a look at Noble Beauty
here. She’s 10 years old and still putting out good litters.
Noble Besuty had Just produced five pups snd although
she Is considered old by mothering standards for a
greyhound, Connell w as hoping for two grade "A " dogs
from the flee.
“ I’ve known Noble’s fam ily for 20 years. You have to
i_

___ I oi

have the bloodline and som ew hat of a gut feeling to be
successful." said Connell.
And successful Is whal C ornell and his wife, Aroell, and
operation manager Martin McKenna have been. To the
tune of about 1300,000 purse earnings a year.
“T hat puts ua in the middle of about what the people of
our level earn," said Connell. But Connell’s operation is
by fa r middle-of-the-road. He has over 100 dogs of which 80
percent will make it to the track.
The national average Is 25 percent. When a person hits
50 percent, he Ls satisfied.
Why Is the Connell organisation an successful?
One reason Is that the 18-year veteran goes first class.
No expense Is spared to raise the best greyhound. A good
exam ple la the use of C araclde, a $37 per gallon liquid
which prevents heartworm.
"Som e people can’t afford It,” said Connell, a former
football player In law ton, Okla. and Columbus, C.a. native
before coming to Central F lorida. "B ut we believe It
m akes the difference."
The expensive tonic is adm inistered to the dogs every
4______ ---------------------------------------------------------

m v w iv w

day until they head for the track . It w ards off the i n ­
fection which la transmitted by mosquito bite.
“ H eartw orm s have put many people out of business,"
Connell said. The disease may not show up in the dog until
12 lo 24 months later and then It’s hard to cure.
’’T hey’re never the same a fte r they get It," agreed
McKenna. "T he worm may be three feet long and there
m ay be m ore than one. It w raps around the greyhound’s
h eart and ham pers its running."
But th a t’s not going to happen to Connell’* dogs who
race the best circuits tn St. P etersburg, SeminoleO rlando, Sarasota, Daytona B each, Palm Beach and
Monticello.
"W e believe In getting totally Involved,” said Connell
who puts In a t least a 60-hour work week along with his
staff. "And th at’s seven days a w eek," reminded Aroell
who shares In the week.
Connell estim ates he spends 12 a day on the dog’s
Continued On P age t

�3—g v tn ln q H tn k l, Stnford, FI._______Friday, July 31, m i

...A D o g's

Life

(Continued (rum I’ag r l |
nourishm ent which Isn't made up of “(Jravy T rain."
"We let them eat as much as they w an t," said Connell.
"The average la about three pounds a day. Of course the
little ones eat less, but the big ones m ake up for It."
The m eal Is sim ilar to a seven-course dinner except the
courses a re not separate, but a conglomeration of beef (30
pounds), liver (13 pounds), chicken (1 2 4 pounds), tripe,
apple sauce, turnips, a dry feed (J im Dundy or Purina
Dog Chow), powdered milk and loads of vitamins.
This m enu Is offered twice a day, so it's easy to see why
Connell h a s to have his two m eat freezers stocked every
day.
When the greyhounds are ready to run, Connell has the
facilities to turn them loose. He has eight, 300-foot pen
a re a s w here the greyhounds can build endurance and
strength toward their expected 40-mile p er hour speeds,
lie also h a s sm aller running pens for younger dogs.
"The running Is natural. They love it and it's con­
tagious," said Connell. “ Usually from 0-9 In Ihc morning
and the sam e tim e at night. When one pen gets going they
ull do. I t’s really quite a sight to see."
But Connell has run across dogs th at don't like to run.
" It's ra re , but it does happen. T h ere's not too much that
you can do. You can take him out to a field with a d irt bike.
Anything to give him incentive," said Connell.
Along with 100 greyhounds at his ranch, Connell has 36
running a t Daytona Beach, 40 at S arasota and 30 at
Monticelki. Despite the constant gam bling environment of
the track , Connell does not partake In the betting.
"I'v e seen loo many dog people m ore interested In
cashing Dial ticket than In the dog," Connell explained. "1
love to wutch them run, but I'm In it (or the dogs, not the
gam bling."
McKenna pointed out that live 3-16 of a m ile race Is the
Indicator of which race Is best for a p articu lar grevlwund.
"Dogs a re like athletes." said McKenna, 26, who has
been with Connell (or two years. "They la v e a certain gait
Just like athletes are sprinters or distance runners.”
II a dog Is strong at the finish, u a y b e his best race Is the
H of a m ile Instead of the shorter one.
While Connell and his company — which Includes Karen
Brown, Rugcne Bouie and Jim McKenna — spend a lot of
tim e outdoors, the paper work Is very extensive too.
When th e breeding lakes place, on acknowledgement
form Is completed as part of a very thorough checkwork
the National (ireyhound Association does to ensure no
hanky-panky.
Sixty-three days later when Die pup is born, the birth
certificate Is filled out complete with Sire-Dam, date of
birth, etc.
In another 60 days, the dog is tattoed, which Is a very
intensive identification process which gets right down to
the exact color (light, (lark nr horn) of each toenail and
color m a rk s on the animal.
In live greyhound's right ear, the month and what dog of
the litter It is will be tattoed. An exam ple would be July,
1961.11 would rend 7-IA. Seven is jo r the month, 1 is for
1961 und A represents which litter dog It Is.
In Ihe dog's right ear is tattoed the breeding registration
num ber. All th at's left is naming the dog. which Connell
feels should not be done in a hurry. Tlie fee is $3 for NCSA
m em bers and $10 for non-members.
Some dogs are not named until they are a year old. Most
begin th eir racing career at 18 months. It usually runs
about live years. The best time (or breeding is when Uh*
dog is five ur six years old.
All of which Connell enjoys very much und believer
other people will soon catch onto in abundance. "Dog
racing is Just breaking the cru st," observed O'Connell
"M ore sta te s a re picking It up every year.
“ It's a better spurt titan horses because it's cleaner and
legitim ate. You don't have any Jockey holding a dog back
a t the finish line," continues! Connell.
All of which makes a dog's life (or Connell, who wouldn't
have It any other way.
"T hry say when people die, they'd like to come back as
a greyhound because they'd be well taken care of."
If that’s true Bod, reserve the penthouse (ur me.

PH O T O S BY S A M

COOK

Operation M anager M artin McKenna checks out a greyhound.

Inside the greyhounds' living quarters at the kennel.

Could this be a sign these greyhounds may be rail dogs" o ris it belly up
to the b a r" time at Connell's Lake Mary Kennel?

�Evening Hk

'Seizure'
Film ed
A m id Real
Life, Death
On the first tiny of filming
th e
b ra in -o p e ra tio n
sequences ol "SeUure: The
Story of Kathy M orris" in a
suburban hospital in eastern
Los
A ngeles,
shooting
couldn't begin until no o n much later than usual.
Before the crew could
move their lights and sound
equipm ent in and set up the
c am era In Operating Room
N o.l, before Leonard Nimoy
and Penelope Milford could
run through a rehearsal,
they had to wait for the
completion of a nasal and
s e p ta l re c o n stru c tio n and
b ila te r a l polycctom y, a
cystocopy and transurethral
resection of a prostate and a
le ft
Inguinal
h er­
niorrhaphy—that is, plastic
s u r g e ry ,
a
p ro state
o p e ra tio n and a hernia
rep air.
"Seizure," starring Nlinoy
a n d M iss M ilford, is a
d ram atic special based on a
tru e story of a young singer's
brush with death during
b ra in s u r g e ry and her
m iraculous recovery. It will Kathy Morris tlrftl sits wilh I’rnelopr Milford, who portrays her in
Seizure: The Story of Kathy M orris." a dram atic special based on the
be rebroadcasl Tuesday on
true story of a young singer's brush with death following brain surgery, to
CBS.
N im oy
p la y s
the be rebroadcast Tuesday, on CBS.
neurosurgeon who cannot
gowns, paper cap s and paper
door.”
explain what went wrong one of their six operating
It was serious business, all booties, ail of which m ade it
with the surgery, and Miss rooms to play Tails pretend'
right, and the m em bers of difficult to recognize anyone.
M ilford p o rtra y s K athy in w hile th e re a l lifeM orris, whose survival and and death operations were the film crew paid constant To get around that, the crew
h a n d -le tte re d
attention to w hat w as going m e m b e rs
recovery the surgeon is even going on all around us.
some stick-on labels and
m ore at a loss to explain.
"The first day, there was on in the surgery wing.
Gut film crew s are nothing gave th e m se lv e s id en ­
A bout
th e
film ing,
an emergency where a kid
if not notoriously irreverent. tification name lags on a
producer Ix-e Miller says, had had his foot crushed.
"T he Im portant thing that Then, the next day, while we Since the other O.R.’s In the medical them e: Dr. Pepper,
surgery wing w ere still being Dr. Proctor, Dr. Feelgood,
we all had to keep in mind were doing our ‘thing,’ there
used white the fHiring was W hat's Up Doc?, Dr. Who,
w as that we were guests was an attem pted hanging
proceeding, the whole crew Dr. No, Witch Doctor, Dr.
th e r e .
T he
hospital
suicide case with a crushed
graciously allowed us to use throat in the O.R. next had to w ear long surgical Seuss, Dr, Strangclove,

i

M, Sanford, FI.

Friday, July It , I W I - ]

and cars
and bullies
and police
Because you can't punch
your teacher
or punch your sister
unci because kids steal stuff
ami people say Pm dumb
and people say I'm stupid
Because 1 can't ride a
horse
and 1 can’t do what 1 want
T hese poem s a r e by it’s unfair to be a kid
KEVIN K EE N E
Seminole County students
kindergarten through 11th MWTON ELEMENTARY
grade. They resulted front
the Florida Poetry In the
Schools program taught by I s t a r t flying th ro u g h
poet Bob Wishoff of Oviedo
clouds relaxing
and E velyn M antz ol like a rainbow after a
UeLand.
pupils
a re
storm
provided with a general
KEVIN HALL
theme, hut n rr not told UW TON ELEMENTARY
what the) should write.
TYI.EH MO It ETON

WOODLANDS

ELEME­

NTARY
KIDS
Can't drive
1 want to drive to M ars
Can’t go to work
Have to do homework
Go to
1 grade 2 grade 3 grade
4 grade 5 grade 6 grade 7
grade
8 grade 9 grade
college
They get punished
Can't boss
Have to take tests
Have to learn to get hurt
Meascls
thicken Pox
Get yelled at
Can't write neat
Have to go to bed
E at peas spinach broccoli
asparagus and squash
They don't get to choose
where to live
Kni.STIANSF.AMAN
I.AWTON ELEMENTARY
Because of dumb teachers
ond parents

Scene
All the slow c a rs
d an k , clank, clank
below- the tree tops

DORIS JENKINS
l-MVTON ELEMENTARY
Secret Time
The father lim e clock
is sitting very still and
lonely
It has a mysterious look on
its face
A ghostly expression
"F ather Time,
what is your secret," I
say
"My poor little body is of no
use
since you cam e my w ay,"
lie said,
"1 have not been able to
laugh or cry,"
A1.AINA WILLIAMS
LAWTON ELEMENTARY
Picture yourself on a plane
in the sky.
When you go higher, you
change the look in your
eyes.
Suzanne Miller
Woodlands F.lrtnrnlary

Knots Landing' Star Survives In Script, For Real
By DICK KLEINER
HOLLYWOOD - Even
before it cam e out. Franco
Z e ffire lli’s
new
d im ,
" E n d le s s
L o v e ,"
was
causing a flap. It was given a
prelim inary X-rating by the
movie board — Zeffirelli
reedited it lo get an R —
b e c a u se of the rep o rted
steam y love scenes between
the film 's teen-age stars.
Don M urray plays the
la th er of the girl in those
scenes, Brooke Shields. A
n ew co m er nam ed M artin
Hewitt Is playing Brooke’s
boyfriend. M urray feels that
the X-rating for the first
version of the film was
totally wrong.
Of i-ourse, the film has sex
in it," M urray says, "but it is
beautiful, positive sex. It is
not the degrading, sadistic

type of sex you see In so
many movies today.
"I would w ant my own
children to see this movie.
T h ere a r e m an y o th er
m o v ies, w ilh guns and
violence, lhal I would not
want them to see."
M urray, who was wearing
an anti-gun button on his
shirl, believes lhal showing
guns and excessive violence
in movies does much more
harm than showing sex. He
feels th at the way Zeffirelli
portrayed sex In "Endless
Love" could h arm no one.
F or M u rra y , w ith his
perpetual boyish face and
boy-next-door a ir. "Endless
la v e " is something of a
departure. While hls role is
not exactly that of a heavy, it
is distinctly unsympathetic.
And, for him , being un-

I)ON M U IU IA Y
sym pathetic is u n u su al He
Is a lw a y s th e guy the
audience identifies with and
Ukes.
"The only other p art I ever
did," he says, "w here I was
not sym pathetic was ‘Planet
of the Apes.' And th at was
almost a cartoon strip. It will

tie Interesting lo see If the
public reacts lo me being
kind of mean in any p ar­
ticular w ay."
In hls TV series, "Knots
la n d in g ," on CBS, he is the
focal point, die n earest thing
to a hero you can liavc on a
soap opera. And he is in­
terested to re a d the next
script for the show — all the
scripts have been delayed by
the w riters' strike — because
the last shot left him going
over the edge of a cliff.
"All I know is that I must
have survived somehow,"
Murray says, "because I
have a contract for next
year. But I don't know If I
was badly injured or w hat."
I had dug out an interview
I had had with M urray, back
In 1959, when we were both
working in New York, and

showed him the quote he
gave me then. He had said
dial lit* would never do a TV
series "because dial would
be the end of m e as an ac­
tor."
He Laughed about that and
said that he could have been
right when he said that.
"Actually," he says now,
"when I did my first TV
series — 'The O utcasts,'
about u black cowboy,
played by Otis Young, and a
white cowboy, played by me
— it pretty nearly was the
end of m e as an actor. At
least, I couldn't get a p art in
a feature film for four years
after that series.”
More re c e n tly , M urray
sa y s , he w as v irtu ally
confined to Broadway and
the stage, because the only
movie scripts he was being

offered "w ere either soft
pom or else horror film s."
The turning point for him ,
he says, was when he played
Judy G arland’s father In
"Rainbow,” die TV movie
about J u d y 'a e a rly life,
w hich w as d ire c te d by
Jackie Cooper. From th in
on, he says, things have been
considerably belter for him.
"Endless Dive” may be
an o lh er tu rn in g
point,
because lie feels It is a high
quality film (hat could boost
him into top-flight movie
rotes again
For a while, Ihotigh, it
looked as if he wouldn't be
able to take die part. Zef­
firelli hud offered it to him ,
but Murray was busy doing
"Knots la n d in g " and the
sch ed u les w ere in to ta l
conflict.

�r

4— E v e n in g H e re Id , S e n lo rri. F I.

F r i d a y , J u ly 11, I N I

Actors' D ream s Sharply Focused
By l l i m i THOMPSON
often Independent.
W alter Mitty escaped from
Danny Kaye, who played
a nagging wife and Ills Mitty in the movie version of
mundane life with dream s of "T he Secret lJfe of Walter
glory In the fables of w riter M itty," tops the list of those
Jam es Thurber. For Mltty, who put real-life activity into
the
d re a m
w as
th e their dream fulfillment, and
fulfillment in Itself.
who harvest visible results.
We all have a little of
Kaye uses his training and
W alter Mitty in us, but ac­ skill as a Jet pilot to whiz
tors, at least, manage to use around the world (at his own
these dream s in practical expense) to raise funds for
pursuits. A survey of the UNICEF, to foster its health
dream s of actors, both for e d u c a tio n p ro je c ts and
c a r e e r ad v an cem en t an d health treatm ents, and to
personal fulfillment, shows entertain as many groups of
them to be much m ore little kids as can be clustered
sharply focused than Mil- w herever he lands.
ty’s.
T h at’s not the only project
Most of tire actors we’ve in which he channels his
talked to on the "dream - prankish comedy talent to
fulfillm ent" subject a re n 't help a good cause. In Sep­
sitting around Just wishing. tem ber, on Public Broad­
They’re active, aggressive, casting Stations, he will co­

conduct (with Zubin Mehta)
l)ic New York Philharmonic
O rchestra in a "U v e from
U ncoln C enter" benefit for
the M usician's Fund.
The men and women who
com m it Diemsetves to acting
c a re e rs may become famous
long before they can call the
shots on what roles they
want to play.
B u t D an iel Spielberg
figures this may well be this
y ear to get both television
and stage roles that he likes.
He’s now In production for
Die new CBS series about a
te le v isio n new s division,
"Close-Up: Jessica Novak."
D av id p la y s the news
director to whom Jessica
(H elen Shaver) reports.
And the next time Daniel is
free, he knows what he wants

G o G u id e
If you're thinking of getting out of the house and are
looking for something to do this weekend, here are a
few suggestions;
Cross and Sword plays nightly a t 8:30 p.m . except
Sunday Dirough August 30 (The only Sunday It is
scheduled) a t the Cross and Sword Amphitheatre
located on A1A South in St. Augustine. For m ore in­
formation or tickets, w rite P.O. Box 1965, St.
Augustine, 32084, or call 1904 ) 824-1965. Group rates are
available, as well as a senior citizen discount.

DANNY KAYE
to do.
" I'm going to do ’Talley’s
Folly.' I don't know for sure
where we’ll do It. Just say
that a s of now, discussion is
underway for Burt Reynolds'
theater in F lorida.”

LOU MEETS

Central Florida Zoological Park, open daily 9 a in. to
5 p.m. U.S. Highway 17-92 between 1-4 and Sanford.
Picnic facilities.
"Y oung-at-Hcart" Dance, every Sunday at 8 p.m.,
DcBary Community Center, Shell Hoad, DeBary.
Instruction, 7:30 p in. Open to public.
G eneva G eneotoglcal and H isto rical Society
Museum, First Avenue, Geneva. Open Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
or by appointm ent by calling 349-5205.
"B ye Bye Birdie" will be presented by Florida
Sum m er Tliealre, 8 p.m., July 23-25 and July 30-Aug. I
at Stetson University's Stover TTieatre In D el-and. Call
904-734-1186 for reservations.

ALL KINDS
While nt a iinttiiiliiiii
retrea t, Lou Grant &lt;Ed
A snrr, right) meets u
m em ber of a doom­
sday
group
(E d
Harris) who says he is
a rm e d against any
th re a t to his wellbeing, and Lou soon
learns that Hie man
means what he says,
on Lou G rant," to he
rehroadeust Monday
on ('IIS.

Hollins Hep 'l l , Annie Bussell Summer Theatre,
Hollins College. Winter Park, presents: "The
Mikado," July 17,21, and 29,8 p.m.; July 25 and August
1, 2 p.m .; "On Golden Pond," July 22, 25, 30, 8 p.m.;
“The B at,” July 18, 23, 24, 28. 31 and Aug. 1. 8 p.m.;
July 18. 2 p.in. Call 646-2145 lor reservations.
Senior Citizens go loO nce Upon a Stage to see "Play
It Again, Sam ", Saturday, August 8. le a v e Sanford
Civic Center, U a.in., pick up at Casselberry I-eeds.
11:30 u.m.
“ Sea the A rts" all proceeds benefit Uie a rts through
PESO, Sea World, Orlando, August 1,6 p.in. through It
p.m . Tickets on sale nl special reduced rales. Scars,
Bur dines ami PESO office.

A Town Llko Alice1

Th e a te r '
To Present F irs t
A u stra lia n Production
T W a s fe r p / e c e

The Em m y award-winning
s c rie s
“ M a s te rp ie c e
T heater” will launch its
second decade beginning Oct

4,
w ith
the
six-part
d ra m a tiz a tio n of Nevil
Shute's beat-seller, "A Town
Like Alice."

Concert by Eric leik u , guitarist from the University
of Central Ftorida, 2:30 p.in., August 23. fjoch Haven
Art Center, 2416 N. Mills Avc., Orlando. Free to public,
donations accepted to defray expenses.
Dixieland Concert by Die Navy Band of Orlando, 2:30
p.m ., le c h Haven Art Center auditorium, 2416 N. Mills
Avc., Orlando. Free to public.
Improvisational concert by " S a ltjg ra iz " featuring
flick Weidley and Daniel Flick on Die fiddle, mandolin
and guitar, 2:30 p.m., August 9, Loch Haven Art Center
auditorium , 2416 N. Mills Ave., Orlando. F ree to the
public.

The various productions of
the weekly series, which is
sponsored by Mobil, will take
viewers from the war-tom
Jungles of Malaya to an
u n to u ch ed A frican E den,
from the pleasures of royalty
to the foibles of would-be
movie tycoons.
"A Town lik e Alice" will
b r th e f ir s t A u stralian
production ever presented
on the PBS dram a. Starring
Bryan Brown and Helen
M orse, a n d film ed on
lo catio n
In
A u stralia,
M alay a,
S co tlan d
and
I on don, the movie tells the
story of two prisoners of war
whose ro m a n c e begins
during the Japanese take­
over of M alaya and ends In
lhe.,4 u»VaJi*jj.oytbadL . „

"T h e Best Bacardi Pina Cotado" contest for area
lounges to benefit H onald M cD onald H ouse,
Gainesville, 11 a.in. to 4 p.m., August 22, Orlando
M arriott Inn poolside. Entertainm ent. Open to the
public.
Morse Gallery of Art, 1-amps, windows, pottery and
vaaes from Die personal collection of le u ls Comfort
Tiffany. 8 a m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, 1
p.m . to 4 p.m. Sunday. 133 E. Welbome Ave., off Park
Avenue, Winter Park. Continuous guided tours.
A rrangem ents in advance for groups of 12 or over, call
845-5311. Special August exhibit: Weller Art Pottery;
featured painting, "Florida M arshes" oil by M artin J.
Heade.

B e e th o v e n p o u r e d ice w a te r o * e » h it h ee d w h e n h e u t d o w n
create music, b e lie vin g jh e t it itim u le te d h i t b ie in .

,to

�E vtnlng H&gt;r»ld. Ssntord, FI.

Frt&lt;Uy, Jwty I I , IM1— S

TELEVISION
July 31 thru A u g u s t 6
C tM t Ch

Cable Ch

(D O
® O
® O

(ED(35)
(5) (17)
(10) ©

(A B C ) Orlande
IC B S I Orlande
Orlande

independent
Orlande
Independent
Atlanta. Oa
Orlande Public
Braadcasting System

In addition fa tha channalt lilted, c a b ltv iiu n itib tc rib e rt m ay tuna In fa independent channel 44,
St. Peter tb a rf. by tuning ft channel l i tuning te channel I ) , which carries i par ft and the Christian
Sraadcasting Netwark (C B N ).

Specials Of The W eek
SATU RDAY
EVENING

8:00
I B (3 5 ) AGAINST THE WIND A
Matter Of Life And Death''
Jonathan it pursued try Q d v i i
whsie Mary it m need of medical
cara and facat daath (Part 10)
9 :0 0

(IB (3 5 ) EDWARD THE KING

Tha
Edwwd a Im a la

Royal QuadnlUi
monopokied by foreign affairs and
A romanca with an actress

11:00

ED (1 0 )
Of

TH E

THE NATURAL HISTORY
W ATER C LO S ET Th.»

young boy and a mantaffy ratardad
farm hand
9 :0 0
SPECIAL Tha Gottamar
Aibatrott Flight Of Imagination1*
Tha high! of a 70 pound a o g n ta u
aircraft ovar tha Engkah Channal by
a taam of American aviation
enthusiasts it documantad

CD ( 10)

1 1 :3 0
(D
O
CBS R EPO R TS
Tha
Dafanta Of Tha United States In t
five part tanas Dan Rathar. Waltar
Cronfcit# and othar corratpondantt
•■amma tha Umted Statat chancat
of dafanta and survival m tha event
of a nuclear war (Part 1)(R)

humor out muucal Mm documantt
man t ingenious attamptt over tha
yaart to daal *»th human waste (R)

SU N DA Y
EVENING
7 :0 0
(D (1 0 ) MISTER ROGERS TALKS
WITH PARENTS ABOUT DIVORCE

Frad Rogaia hotl* a lorum loi
quaaliona horn partnt* on Ihau
Chadian a laaknga and laaia about
divorce (R)

MONDAY
AFTERNOON

ED ( 10) A
TRIES

1:00

DANCE O f TW O COUN­
CHINA ANO AMERICA

Artistic diractor of tha Houston
BaCet Dan Stevenson a raturn to
tha People t Repot** of China to
mttrucl ttudantt of tha Peking
Oanca Acadamy m Wattavn danca
tachnrQoat it chronicled
EVENINO
7 :3 0

O (D YOUNQ PEOPLE S SPE­
CIAL Tha Mjyburnavi A warm
friendship develops bataaan a

TU ESDAY
CD

(1 0 )
TH E
TE N E M E N T
Oviginaffy broadcast m Fabruary
1M7. Jay McMullen s Mm portrait
focusat on mne buck termites living
m tha Oakland taction of CNcago
an updata it mcludad

8:00

8 00

(1) O TH E W ONDERFUL WORLD
O f TH O SE C U C K O O . CRAZY ANI­
MALS An array of Hokywood t
most famous animal start display
tha* taiantt m eirerpts trom a collaclion of mamorabta tcraan and
( television pa*for maneat
ED ( 10) NATtONAL OEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL National Parks Play­
ground Or Pared*#*?’’ Efforts by
tha National Park Service to restrict
tha pobhes accatt lo Amanca t
parks m hopat Of putting a halt to
anv*onmantal damaga poaution
and enma ara eiammed (R)

(S O

1 1 :3 0
(1) O
C B S R E P O R TS
Th.
D*l*nM O l 1h» Unilud S la in In a
fr*» oaM tana*. Oan Ratha*. W arn
Cronkila and ollta, coriaapondantt
a.amma Iha U » la d Stala* tbanca*
ol Oalania and aurvnal m Iha a»anl
Ol a nuciaa* war (Pad 4I|R)

TOP O f THE HILL Wayna

Rogart. Mai Farrar, Eft# Sommar,
Sonny Bono. Adnanna Uarbaau.
Paula Prentiss and Gary Lockwood
star m th*t pratantation of Wwm
Shaw t story tat m tha braathtakmg
atmotphara of tha 1M0 Ofympct
at laka Ptaod (Part 1|

10:00

900
(| O SEIZURE THE STORY O f
KATHY MORRIS Panalopa Mdtord
and laonard Ntmoy star in tha trua
ttory of a young Singer • brush with
daath foftowwtg turgary and har
struggle to racovar (R)

(1 0 ) FOUR OAYS O f THE
MASAI Mambart of tha Masai lube
ara foaowed tor four days at thay
go about tha* daily Itvat m a Mm
shot m Kanya dose to tha Tanjarean bordar

1 1 :3 0
IS) O
C B S R EPO R TS
Tha
Dafanta Of Tha Umtad Statat In a
fry*.part taviat Dan Rathar Waftar
Crook ita and othar corratpondantt
a vamma tha Umtad Statat chancat
of dafanta and survival m tha avant
of a nuclaar war (Part ?)(R )

(S) O
C B S R E P O R TS
Tha
Dafanta Of Tha Umtad Statat m a
Iha part tanas Own Rathar Waltar
Cronkit# and othar corratpondantt
aaamma tha Umtad Statat chancat
of dafanta and survival m tha avant
of a nuclear war (P a ri3 )(R )

ED

11:30

W ED N E SD A Y

T H U R SD A Y
MORNING

AFTERNOON

1:00

10:00

M ISTER ROQERS TALKS
WTTH PAREN TS ABOUT DIVORCE
Frad Ftogert hottt a forum for

(1) O
A U O U S T M AO A /IN E
Sharron LovafOy raportt on tha
probiamt of a» w*vat of rmktary

ED ( 10)

(f ) O C B 3 R EPORTS What's
Good For Ganaral Motors
Mar­
iana Sandart eaammes tha contro­
versial decision of tha city of Datrort
to lavaf a neighborhood 10 maka
way for a Ganaral Motors factory
and fobs

FRID A Y
AFTER N O O N

ED

1:00

SPECIAL A Ptaca Of
Oraamt Tha complation of tha
National A* and Spaca Mutaum it
ealabratad
(1 0 )

EVENINO
7 :3 0
( I ( 0 THE R O O TS O f ROCK N*
ROLL Tha Taan Id oft' Mott Paul
Anka G uattt 9 abian N#* Sadaka.
Frank* Avalon. Fbek Nal ton. Elton
John (Pari 7)
8 :3 0
a A FRIEND IN DEE0 Paul
Sorvmo start m fhtt story of two
Iran agar % whota kvat tuddanfy
bacoma mterfwmad whan ona of
Iham it disabled

(l

1 1 :3 0
(I) O C B S R E P O R TS Tha
Dafanta Of Tha Umtad Statat In a
trve part tenet Dan Rather Walter
Cronkite and othar corratpondantt
atamma tha United Statat chancat
of dafanta and tor vtval m tha event
of a nuclear war (Part 5)(R )

MORNINO

0:30
Q (4 ) 2-CO UNTR Y FISHING
l7 O
THE BASEBALL BUNCH
Hott JoMwi» B*ncA Ouatl Am

7:35
32 (17) THE BASEBALL BUNCH
Hotl Jobfm* Banco

AFTERNOON

1.00
( 4 ) WREST U N O
(1 0 ) TENNIS Mutual BanaM
Lila Opan SanuOnaN

8

2:35
(Q (17) BASEiuLLL'S HALL Of
FAME - AN WSJOE LOOK
3:00
BASEBALL TOOAY
S (&amp;' GREATEST SPORTS LEOENOS

3

20

a ( I ) NBC SPORTS SUMMER
SEASON NASCAR Pocono MO"
stock car raca. Ro&gt;»t Horaa Sbow
(from Wamcaay. EngUndL A U N
National Woman t Coaagiala Tan.
no CoamcMnaOtpa (Vom Tampa.

A m ). PKA I uM Contact Karat#
Ch«mpton»Np«. Pro SoflbH *ith
(Of O kmwm Ii Sudl

SU N DAY

Summar LNympic Gamaa and tha
Pan AmsutEFi Gama*

MORNING

3:30
( } ) O CAHAOUJN OPEN Ihecov-

T U ESD A Y

11.00
(1 0 ) VIC BRADEN S TENNIS
FOR TH E FUTURE Tha Votay '

E V EM N Q

Vic Biadan haipi n n a i omcom*
Iha Nai ol gomg lo tha nal dunng a
voaay and damonalialaa whal lo do
onca you gal that* (R )Q

32 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Pawlucfcal
Rad So* *a Richmond Brarat

gama balnaan tna Atlanta Falcona

A FTER N O ON

W EDNESDAY 8 SPORTS

and tna Ctavaland Biown* (trom
Canton Ofuol

a ) O CANADIAN OPEN livaco*-

« » 0* ol th# thwd round of p*ey in
this golf tournament (from the Olon
Abbey God Club « OAinu* Ootar-

WIDE WORLD o r SPORTS
SLxaO coaaraga
ol I N Ha* ol Fana

4:30
CD O
S P O R TS S ATUR D A Y
Tho*oogr*b»ed hors# racing - The
Whitney Handicap (tva horn Sara*
toga. N Y L The Calgary Stampede
(from Calgary Canada)
&lt;D (1 0 ) VIC BR A D EN S TENNIS
FOR TH E FUTURE Tha Voaa»"

Vtc Biadan haipa tnawait omcom*
tha laar ol going lo Iha nal during a
voaay and damonalialaa whal to do
onca you oat lhara iRItJ

5:00
S

(1 0 ) S O CC ER MADE M OER-

5:35
&lt; U | 1 7 )w

r sstu n g

O

7:35

2:00
waga ol Iha hnal found ol play m
i n * golf lournamanl (horn Iha Gun
Attwy God Club m Oaanda. Omar,
lot
to (1 0 ) TENNIS Mutual Banafit
LAa Opan Fault |Jomad In Prog-

'•“ &gt;

2.05

(1 7 ) BASEBALL Richmond
Biamaaa Tolado Mudhana

O

4:00
(7) O NATIONAL SPORTS FE8TI-

Field Carlyle (Mark Harmon) risks his
political future by puhlidy flauntiii)&gt; his af­
fection for l.anc Itallou (Cristina Haines) in
Flamingo Hoad," to lie rehroadcast Monday
on NIIC.

WEDNESDAY

Sports On The Air
SA TU RDAY

S routm aatrr
Siddons (Fred M acM urray)
trllsyoung Whitey Whitr (Kurt Itussctl) of his
plans l» adopt him in Fart I of "Follow Me,
Hoys!" on Disney's Wonderful W orld." to air
Sunday on N ltl’.

9:00

EVENINO

8:00

EVENINO

man a gym for toddfart. tha Amerl-#
can wtna boom, and old bakaft
about lata pragnancy (R)
EVENINO

quasi ion t trom paranlt on tha*
children s feeling* and faart about
divorca (R)

A U O U S T S. 1M1

EVENING

7:35
12

(1 7 )

BASEBALL PawtuUal

Rod Soi vi Richmond B /am

FRIDAY
EVE NINO

7:35
IX
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Richmond
B u n t r t Tolado Mudhana

Tim O'Connor plays a police captain out lo
prove that a priest's fall off the Oolden Gate
Bridge was murder not suicide, in ' The
Golden Gate Murders," to air Wednesday on

�4— Evening Hereld, Senlord, FI.

Friday, July 11, It ll
11:05

FRIDAY

J u ly

Bo v m v i ! o»eOO Mudfwis

600

0:05
I X (1 7 ) FATHER KNOWS BEST

030
O i ) NBC NEWS
1 ) 0 CBS NEWS
(7 ) O ABC NEWS
Hll (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
0 ( 10) BNEAK PREVIEWS

0:35
I I (1 7 ) TH A T GIRL

7.00
O 4 1NEWS
I I I O P M MAGAZINE U4 Cavla

m ilt (Mti the Sky Kmg*. Ko&amp;y
Orant a convention oI mmtatur#
pioum enthuuast* Jerry Baker on
bontnUMCuHwolion Cifrt Carrot
on u n Joon fmbery introduce*
l« o Henalayan block bear tub*
(7 Q JOKER'S W HO
l i t (351 BARNEY MILLER
ID (1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT

7:05
11 (1 7 ) A U IN THE FAMILY

7:30
O f t ) TIC TAC COUGH
( O w n n'.IFE » f CRISIS
( 7 ) 0 f a m il y f e u o
(f | (3 5 ) RHOOA
0 110) D C K CAVETT
BASEBALL Ruhmand

rj

IH A 7 A

t w ir

T w /a H

O *4) TM f R O O TS O f ROCK N*
M OIL Rock Start* Rolhng Most
Frankie Avalon Quest! The flamngos The Chant*** WoKman Jack.
The Drifter* l.ttie Anthony Pat
Boon# Conway twitly Danny and
lb# Juno*a. Carl Perkins (Part 1)
&lt;%) O TMf INCREDIBLE HULK A
frxrn** k r k k b r*po&gt;l«F Irymg to
maka a comeback outmoneuver*
McOaa to gat an interview with tba
Hulk tR»
(7 ' O BENSON IW .»o r i 10 , h &gt;
out w a d taMa out of a baa and ha*
to be rushed to tha hospital (R)
(It) (3 5 ) MOVIE
faabaM fo r­
ward
(Cl &lt;197?) Oen Ga/iara.
Eddie Albert A tough World War It
general lake* charge of a dtnaon
wbch it plagued with problem t
ED (1 0 ) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW

* »* II

Cl) O

OR SEUSS'S PONTOfFEL
P O C K . W HERE
ARE T O U T
A m m ilrd A good natured but
goofed up pick* packer with onthe yob problemt gala tome help
from an unuauai tource (R|
ED (1 0 ) WALL STREET WEEK
Option Sl-atagw. Quad Kanneth f Dolan opttona ipeaaatt.
Shear aon l net) Rhoadea
O 14 THE ROBERT KLEIN SHOW
ComndiAn FLobatl K iw i n joined
by Rodnay Oangniwid Jane Cu*ttn
and «po.t»ca»la&lt; M a x Alban ta&gt; a
talwiCAl took al aoma Amancan loa-

9:30
0

(1 0 ) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL

Taiaa* Bhjngiaaa *

; f lA Z A

II 1 i i i t ..

10:00
O (4 ) STEVE A L IE N COMEDY
HOUR Csueata Jonathan Wmtera
Rich little ift)
CS&gt; O DALLAS J R take* a tenet
of actiona to re eaiabkah hit power
and increase tha [w m g wealth |R)
CLD(3 5 ) INOCPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
( D 110) A U S TM CITY LIMITS
f-iua P*au*u laagua I Bobby
Bata (R)

R

••»!»

lim n

F ill

DOLLY PARTON ••
'

1005
H ( 17) NEWS

1030
a s (3 5 ) CAR CARE CENTRAL

11:00

O ' i ) ( D O 17 ) 0

new s

It (,V&gt;) BENNY HK.L
I D ( to ) p o s t s c r i p t s

CONVOY BUDDIES

jm C A W E E K L Y
I J O

^ e

V

FURNISHED BEDROOM

CAVALIER
M O TO R IN N
3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(ON LAKE ADA)
(305 ) 33 1 04V0

• a##aa« Peel
• Maid ta rv K a
( H Hear Pkana lafvlca

• II Channel Cable TV
• L lva E n ia rfa in m .il)
F N iy h l. In Lawnea

• Family N ttlavranl
■ H icitn cy a a t. Available
Af llif h t ly Miehar Rale
• Spatial Ditcawnl Oa
M anlhly R a i n

M A D A M E KATH ERIN E
PA1M ■CAHO •CRYSTAL RAU HI ADINfi

Paal — Pvesant — Future
IffIPFIIL AUVKI ON Alt All AIHS
• LITE «LOVE • MARRIAGE • M JSIN U S

Lonanooo

( 305)
831-4405

11:35
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Mothra ll» « Z I
FrantySaaai Mwodu Kouumi

SA TU R D A Y

12:00

BEEN IN BU9NEJM FOR SO YEARS
IN PRIVACY OF MY HOME
HOURS 8 A M - 9 P M Cloard Sunday
S SLOCK* holt III OF DOG TRACK RO
CM M U n M tt IV sM e i
I CMMl r u e VMB B I O I M I N W e
«*NSB tt* |WM&lt; I f m It* AM l l w « haa*
n e e e e »BWs t u •» ee w w t w r«#4

MORNING

5:00
7 O M ARCUS WELBY. M D

A u g u s t

1

4

ED 110) S O C C E R MADE IN GER
MANY

NEWS

1 Z ( 17) RAT PATROL

6:05
I I (1 7 ) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

0

&gt;D

d a il y d e v o t io n a l

2:50
17 - O

6:30
a 4 2 C O U N TR Y FISMINO
i l l O M IGHTY M OUSE 1 HECKLE
5 JECKLE
(D O
t h e BASEBALL BUNCH
Host Jobna, B*och G u n l

them

6:35

NEWS

3:20
(7 ) a
MOVIE
5leaa iB'W l
(19501 Ann Sheridan Vctor Mature

Older Women
Face Scrutiny
Ttie fastest KrowtnK urnup
01 piMir people tn the nation
today Is older women. Many
a re d iv o rc e d , lacking a
pension or Social Security
and have planned little — or
not a t ull — (or their older
years.
On "August Magazine,"
Thursday on CBS, editor
Sharron I zivejoy looks at one
subset o( women who are
particularly hard hit: the exwives ot military men. A
federal law guarantees that
the pension of a military
man is untouchable, that II
belongs to him alone.
Ms. lAJve)oy and producer
Phyllis Hosworlh speak at
length with several military
ex-wives, as well ax with Col
Jo h n S h etfey , a re tire d
Marine and executive vice
president oI the National
Association (or Uniformed
Services, who is involved in
In ten siv e lobbying effo rts
against reform s that would
d iv id e m ilita ry benefits
between the soldier and his
ex-wife.

1200

EVE NINO

1 X ( 1 7 ) r o m f &gt;e r r o o m

7:00
O 4l NEW ZOO REVUE
V
O
TH R EE
R 0 B 0 N IC
STO O GES
gn O PLASTlCM AN / BABY PLAS
U (3 5 ) JIM BARKER

7:05
I t (1 7 ) VEG ETABLE SOUP

7:30
f ) 4 l OlLLIOAN S ISLAND
) Q S TAR TREK
it O K I O S W ORLD

7:35
I I (1 7 ) TH E BASEBALL BUNCH
Noel Jofwwty Bench

8:00
O

4 I THE FLINTBTONES
T l O TO M AND JERRY
I j h O 8UPERFRIENOS
11; (751 PRAISE
iD
(1 0 ) H E R E 'S TO YOUR
HEALTH TIM [bug InJutby |R|

O 1 ) JONNY Q UEST
) ) 0 FAT ALBERT
U WEEKENO SPECIAL My
Deer Uncle Sherlock A 17 yearotd boy u«e* hr* power* of deduc­
tive reaaonmg lo *oNe a my*»ery in
hi* hometown (R)
O ) (1 0 ) HERE 8 T O YOUR
HEALTH Acne (R ):;

12:30
Q 1 ) AMERICA S TOP TEN
111 O D IU K PACK
(7 ) O AMERICAN BANOSTANO
1D D O ) THIS O LO HOUSE Bab
V4k « mi* . tba ground, rvrlh « land
K kpa dM gnar and Iba car pantar.
pul on ra a rod radar clapboard.
(R i g

12:35
I X ( 17) MOVIE
The Ptetnwnon
|t9M| Don Murrey. Guy Stock we*
A tno of fomout Wettern charac­
ter* try lo stop a white man from
keikng gun* to Indian*

1:30
(1J O MOVIE
Search for The
God* (C) 11975) Kurt Rutke* Ste­
phan McHattie
Three young
•rchaeotogittt d«*cover a 50 000year old Pueblo medeOFon contain
mg tent* that Earth wai vtwted by
ancient attronaut*
(7) O
BLUE JEAN NETWORK
‘ Akce Cooper

2:00

8:30

2:35
I I (1 7 ) BASEBALL S HALL OF
FAME - AN INSJOE LOOK

6:35
1 X ( 17) MOVIE
Th* Sword Of Ak
Beba (IM S ) Refer Mann Jocefyn
lane Ak Babe once wronged by
hta p ro p o s e d fath er-in-la w
becomes e champion of the down
trodden

9:00
0 4) GODZILLA
(7) O FOF4Z ANO THE HAPPY
DATS GANG
1(1 (3 5 ) AM A ZM O GRACE BIBLE

QD ( 10) flower show
9:30
O (1) BATMAN ANO THE SUPER
7

(7 ) O

RICHIE RICH / scooev

3:00
O &lt;fi BASEBALL TODAY
(7&gt; O GR EATEST SPORTS LEQEF406
DO (3 5 ) MOVIE
Tba Man Who
O ad T»&gt;ca (C lflS TO ) Sluarl Wbtiman. Bngrtte f oe*ey An arVt! prekumed dead i* diecovered to be
very much atrve and mvofved m
tom# very *hody Oeekng*

3:20
O
« ) NBC SPORTS SUMMER
SEASON NASCAR Pocono bOO
Hack car raca Royal Hotya Shot,
fbom WambWy. EnglandL AIAW
National Woman . Cokagiila Tannr. CbampMinibtp. ilrom lamp#
Any I PKA Fuk Contact Karat#
Champaont/up. Pro Sob baa mtb
lb# Cmcmnati 5uda

3:30

ooo

ail

(35) LIFE BEGINS AT CAL­
VARY

(D (1 0 ) CO O KIN ' CA JU N
THE n i L L NEST
lJx and Paul Wescott don't
10:00
w orry about the empty nest (I) O POPEYE
ID HO) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
syndrome.
PAJNTINO
All their retirem ent plans
10:05
come ap a rt at the w ants as. H I (1 7 ) MOVIE
Mob. Deb
(I
S
M
)
O
fk
g
o
.. P » t .
IVcbwd
one by one, their three grown f t .H k .i l bktkd
on tbk novkl b .
children return to the family Hurmm M p i k . Tbk Ckplkm al tba
home In "And They All Lived abaku Paguod bkcoma. caught
up Ml k bkXMjtba.ty qua.1 lot van
Happily Ever A fter," a half- gaanea agaui.i an akivva atMa
hour comedy to be broadcast
Tuesday on CBS.
10:30
One daughter returns with O 4 : DAFFY DUCK
T O 1HUNOARR THE BARBARI­
h e r hu sb an d and child AN
because of a financial set­ 1* (3 5 ) SPACE t r n
back, a son drops out of 0 (to) TH E O O O O NEIGHBORS
11:00
college and decide* to live at
thi jet son s
home (or six months, and H
T ARZAN I LONE RANGER
another daughter leaves her
h e a t h c l i f f a n o d in g *
groom before the honeymoon CAT
(or a "tria l separation "
0 | TO) ROM AONOLI S TABLE A
Rue McCUnahan stars as Fanc. Maaliaa. Suppa. iH|
11:30
Liz, and Dick la te sa a plays
Q 4 MONO K O N G PHOOEY
Paul W cscotL.
' U OURQANQ

U (35) MOVIE

JV.arv.Oava fCi

7:00
0 1 1 IN SEARCH OF...
i T ) O HEE HAW
(7 ) O LAW R ENCE WELK
(fi) (3 5 ) WILD. W ILD W EST
0 (1 0 ) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACO U ES C O U S TE A U

7:30
O

CO FLORIDA S WATCHING
Intamational T oufiun In Florida

7:35
12 (17) MOVIE
ftying leather
neck* (1951) John Wayne Robert
Ryan A tough Marine commander
trie* to fthow hie men that duapkne
i* the key to kurvtval on the bathe
field

8:00

O GPBARBARA

MANDRELL ANO
THE MANDRELL SISTERS Guettt

Charlotte Roe Ronme M4*ap |R|
S O ENOS f not and Turk
on a gang of fur robber* (R)
(D O EIGHT IS ENOUGH None,
becomes a local star attar appear
mg m a TV commercial, and Joanrue has second thoughts A.&gt;out
beevi a career woman (R|y
l i t (3 5 ) A G AIN ST TH E WIND A
Mailer Of Life And Oeath

Jonathan i* pursued by GrevtHe
while Mary is m need ot med&lt;*i
care and lace* death (Part 10)
CD

(1 0 )

EVENING

4 ) O CAMAOtAJM OPEN Uvacovaraga ot Iba tbad round Of play ai
Ib.t golf tuurnamant ilrom tha Gtan
Allbay GoN Club at Oaknaa. Onlar*of
CD O WIOE W ORLD OF SPORTS
l rva covaraga ol tba Haa of Fama
gama balaaan Iba Atlanta f meant
and Iba CJavaland Broama |trom
Canton. O M

3.35
I I I (1 7 ) M O W
Dark Pauaga
11*4 II Humph, ay Bogart lauran
Bacak A man a K a p a . from San
Quanlm to prova hunwM amocanl
of murdaring rva a ,la

4:00
0

(1 0 ) TH E TO M C O TTL E SHOW
Vwtnam Nurva An Army nurya
d a c u iia i tba horror, of Irving and
a o tm g arwd.1 tba arackagaof Iba
Vatnam war

4:30
(I) O
S P O R TS SA TU R O A Y
TKorougbbrad bo**m racing .. Tha
Whnnay HandKap (Inra bom Saratoga N T ) Tha Calgary Stampada
|bom Calgary Canada)
tD (1 0 ) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR TH E FUTURE Tha Voka&gt;
VK Ibadan harp, . a v a l ovarcoma
Iba Mar of gomg lo tba nat dwaig a
.oka. and dam on.i. afa. wkai to «a

AT

POPS

Singer Ctoo Lame and her huv
band *a■optional John Dankworth
totn John Wrfkam* and tha Boston
Pop* lor a performance of Ju»t
Tha Way You Are and a Sondheim

B ' D TO BE ANNOUNCED

If )
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
tD (1 0 ) JULIA CHILD ANO COM PANY

o

6:30
Q 4i NBC NEW S
(| l Q C B S NEW S
( J 1 O NEW S

1:00
O l ) W RESTLING
(Si O JASO N O F STAR CO M ­
MAND
11) (3 5 ) MOVIE
The Legend Of
Boggy Creek (C ) (197?) David
He** Lucy Grantham A myttenout. harry creature prowt* the
iwamptandi of A rk a n u i
ID (1 0 ) TENNIS Mutual Benefit
LKe Open Semifinal*

6 05
I I ( 17) THE PART FUOOC FAMILY

6:00
0 1j ) (T l O NEW S
fit! (3 5 ) BIONIC W O M AN
0 (1 0 ) ALL C R EA TU R ES OREAT
ANO S U A LL k

if

6:20
O ' 4 1DAILY DEVOTIONAL

1:35
I I (1 7 ) MOVIE
Ihe Slory 01
SaabHtuI 11*4«| Lon McCaaui*.
She lay TampM

5:35
1 1 (1 7 ) W RESTLINQ

AFTERNOON

5:35

100
(J i O

(I9S?) Robert Stock Barbara Bnfton Man eating hont mterrupf the
construction of a rerfroed n Africa
ID (1 0 ) JULIA CHILO ANO COM PANY Sunday Night Supper (R)

o SUMMER SEMESTER

12:30
O L#1 SC TV NETWORK *0

0 1 (3 5 ) o n iZ Z LY ADAMS

5:30

5:55
J O STARSKY ANO MUTCH
7) O m o v ie
A Faranya To ,(J } O DAILY w o n o
A r m .' |C) (I M F ) Koch Hud Km
600
Janmlat Jona.
(5 1O 30 M INUTES
01 (3 5 ) JIM BARKER
(7 O MOT FUOOC

200

(S ) O THE o u k e s OF HAZZAAO
I ha Ouket liy to help *notd lam*,
btand t » w a moontfimng habil
IRI
(7 ) O MOVIE
Kaagdom Of Tha
SpuM*. ItB /T) Wattam Shalnar
T illany Baking A tpeoet ol mutant
tarantula'. tun out of food and
attach an A/iyuna town at aaarch of
humanpiay (RttJ
( U (1 0 ) M ARTY ROBBINS

I^

0
f j ) TO N IGH T Hoot Johnny
Ca n o n G u a .lt Ang&gt;a D-cAnton
Dorn Daknaa
T O u a -S -H
■7 ) Q ABC NEWS NKJMTLINE
11 (3 5 ) W A N TE D DEAD C * ALIVE

6:30

900

7:35
(1 7 )

11 (1 7 ) NlOHT GALLERY

11:30

EVENING
000
O II J j O ' O N C W 3
T r (3 S l ANOY o m e f i t h
H jllO lS T It C M A L O N G

11

31

9:00
O
(3 ) B J AN O TH E BEAR
Rutherford Grant robe two rmthon
donor* horn a bank and then
frame* B J • lady trucker* lor the
crime (ft)
4)
MOVIE
A llaal Ama*.can
Hero 1 9970) Brian Dermehy For­
rest Tucker Sheriff Buford Putker
attempt* to ruh a Tennessee
moonshmer out of buemess (R)
ID O
LO VE B O A T A gambbv
.acfut. Vicki 10 balp bun can tba
long p io l. and Iba gathand ol a
to.ma* tat man grow , paalnu. of bn
new kvette image lR )fJ
M (3 5 ) EDW ARD TH E KING Iba
Royal Ouadnlle Edward * tena rt
monopotued by forergn affair* and
a romance with an octree*
O ) (1 0 ) MYSTERY The Roc mg
Game Odd* Agams! Jockey Srd
Hattey decide* to mve*t*gata my*te
nout happening* at the Seabury
racecourse after he erepor*b*y
mfure* hr* hand m a steeplechase
race (A K J

a

10:00
O
(1) G A M ES PEOPLE PLAT
Featured m e n and women *
mechanaciM bu* ndmg. a Shark
rodao Iba 4 ]«d annual Soap Bo.
Da.by pan 2 of tba Oak Jockay
Inwfationaf Talk Oft 1R 1
® O FANTASY ISLANO a hap».
ly -vantad coupfa an anga lo maal
a . lofal lU k n g a .. and t n angagad
woman maafa a bfackmaka* bom
ha.pa .1 (H | :j
a t (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
tD (1 0 ) FLAM BAROS Edga Of
Tha Cloud'' Wnaam gat* lo lad tty
tt*. fad plana lo Ffanca and Cfwnttna n promo tad lo racaplion.l al
tbaboM i P a ilb iiR c j

10:05
31 ( 17) NEW S

10:30
a n (3 5 ) TH E BAXTER S

11:00
Q (IlC D 0 1 7 1 0

new s

11; (35) BENNY HILL
0 (10) THE N A TU R A L HISTORY
OF THE W A TE R C LO S E T Ihn
b u m »u u . mukuial Mm documani.
man . aygamoua atlam pl. ova* Iba

1 1 n u ila u c tl O n P a g e 7 )

�I

Evening Herald Sanford, FI.

SUNDAY

August 2

MORNING

5:05
3 1 (1 7 ) R A T PATROL

5:35
I I ( 17| A GRICULTURE U S A

(7) O

5:55

d a il y

mono

10:30
O
4 MOVIE
Low# Story (Cl
(1970) Ah MacGraw Ryan 0 Neal A
young widower lacarti bit rela a
victim ot leukemia
D O MARSHALL EFRON S SUN­
DAY SCHOOL |R)
(J i O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

8 00
O'! O AGRICULTURE U S A

6:05
IX (1 7 ) BETW EEN THE LINES

6:30
ISj O F A IT H F O R T O O A Y
(7 . U VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION

6:50
Q

J ) OAILY DEVOTIONAL

7:00
Q 4) OPPORTUNITY LINE
I S I O ROBERT SCHULLER
(1 ) O PICTURE OF HEALTH
f j) (3 5 1CHANGED LIVES

7:05
I X ( 1 7 ) JAM ES ROBISON

7:30
f ] ||i M ONTAGE THE BLACK
PRESS
( 7 1P TO O A Y'S BLACK WOMAN
I I I (3 5 ) E J DANIELS

7:35
1 X ( 17) rr IS WRITTEN

8:00
B
VOICE OF VICTORY
H O REX HUM BARD
( I ) Q SHOW MY PEOPLE
H ' (3 5 ) JONNV QUEST
(D 1 10) SESAME STREET (RJ g

6.05
DX (1 7 ) THREE STOOGES AND

FRIENDS

8:30
Q 4 1SUNOAY MASS
ll)
D AY OF DISCOVERY
171Q ORAL ROBERTS
(ft) (3 5 ) JOS1E ANO THE PUSSY-

o

10:35
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Btaahlatl At Tiltany * (Vim 11 Audrey Hepburn.
G ro «g r Pfppard llatad on tha %ir&gt;

ry by Tiumon Capoio A sophatfi
c itn l New Yock pu»g«ri rK O untri
V

vpts I romantic

2:00
l&gt; O CANADIAN OPEN lira in ,
rr age of tha tmal round of pfay at
Ihra goff lounament (Irom tha Gian
Abbey Golf Chib ai Oat nhe Ontar*

lot
7) P
MOVIE
h ii. r h On Any
Oooi
ill Wl 119491 Humphray
Bogart JofmOarah AyoungCIhcago hood goat On tnaf lor murdarmg
a poheaman
CD ( 10) TENNIS Mutual Benefit
Lite Open Fmete * tJomed *n Progree«|

2:05
11 (1 7 ) BASEBALL fkchmond
Orevexvt Toledo Mudhent

11:30
J O FACE THE NATION
I O TONY BROWN S JOURNAL
3J) (3 5 ) MOVIE
Blond* Knorrt
Batl (B 'W ) (19471 Panny Single
ton. Arlhui Laha Dagwood it laad
w h m hr it caught impmonatng
hit b o ti
CD (1 0 ) VIKINGS' HrUtrn Wa%
M rrr the controvert* turtoundmg
the m*\tmou% Rut tribe it tie
m inrd (R )IJ
AFTERNOON

1200
&gt; O SPECTRUM
7 C J ISSUES ANO ANSWERS
CD
(1 0 )
SO U TH B O U N O
Showdown At I hr Hoodown'
The Snvthv»hr Fiddtoft Jomboroa
it the tile Of a Showdown brtrern
tm*ot thrmp*on f r.kj«* Mott end
Prut Chrrtm m . a young contender
tor the K o r n

f ) I J J S CLUBHOUSE
i l l O SUNOAY MORNINO
(7 ' O KIDS ARE PEOPLE TO O
Guests Broote Sh*kJt actor Bri­
an lim a. TV hosl Dane* Terno |R|
HD (35/ TH E FLINTSTONES
ED ( 10) MISTER ROGERS |R)

9:05
I X (1 7 ) L O S T IN SPACE

9:15
O 14j O UTLO O K
9 '3 0
Q 14 1GOSPEL SINGING JUBILEE
iff! (3 5 ) TH E JET SONS
03 ( 10) WORLD OF THE SEA

1000
(J ) q

KIOSWORLO
31 (35) MOVIE
Meucan Hay.
rida IB. Wi I m i l Bud Abbott. Lou
CoataNo Ta o man gal enrobed m
tofnt M «iiC8n high |*nk* whan thay
MH Oul lo hn d a loti H M t mint
CD (10) NOVA Ananal Otympr
ant The baauty. andiaanca and
powot of (w m k m m the «od a n |ui&gt;
lapoM d with O#ymp&lt; athtaiM p«»Kx*mftg Ita lt which t u n pataM i
m I hr arwntl kingdom (RKJ

10:05
1 X (1 7 )H A 2 E L

S A TU R D A Y
yaert lo deal with human aatia |R|

P 4 M EET THE PRESS
V O BLACK AWARENESS
7 p DIRECTIONS Tha Mural 04
Mated*
In# Ighl lor rahgnut
Iraadom which occurrad *1 Macula
canturrat ago and lit ralatanca m
Ilia M ..trail today are aaamned
ED (101 FLORIDA FOCUS

1:00

4:00
f j 14 MOVIE
H . I (Cl (196*1
Gene Hackman. J m B*own A% a
plot to cover up an excape attempt
•ornate* m a stele prison not
if) O
MOVIE
the Tevmmat
Man
(C l (19741 George Segal
Joan Mackett Baaed on a novel by
Michael Crichton A man become*
e gusnea p g involving electrode
implanting when he suffer* Irom
bUckoutt which make turn violent
7 O NATIONAL SPORTS FESTI­
VAL I've and tailed coverage of
the conclusion of competition held
IN* week m Syracuse New York
among over 2900 amateur athlete*
m 33 sport a mckudmg moat of
those wNch ere m the Winter end
Summer Olympic Game* and the
Pen American Game*

G u a m Tha Nighthawtt

UNTOUCHABLES Whan
an honeet booh* it murdarad Iwt
ton taaht Ehol N atl a aid

1:30
O (4 ) SIX MILLION DOLLAR MAN
1/ P WRESTLINQ
® T (1
i (0 ) W ALL STREET WEEK

Option Siralagma * Ouaal Kanneth F Dolan optiona Spaciaklt.
( C o n t in u e d fro m P i ( r I )

4) PORI RA/T OF A LEGEND

1 1 :30
O
( I I SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE
H otl S lat* M utm Ouaal KaWy
Fiadm an |R|
'5 0 MOVIE
Hahacliom m A
Golden E ya (Cl (IM 7| Euabatn
Taylor. Marlon Brando Wh4a hrt
n te romance* a toftow officer on
Arm* othcer become* »l treeted to
one of the men m htt commend
(J ) P MOVIE
Damn ra m m
IC I ( I I M I Tab Munlar Goan Var
don With e lithe help Irom the Dev*
0. an egmg betebefl tan becomet a
chempsemtfwp beApMyer
3 1 (3 5 ) TA LES OF THE HAUNTED
1 2 :05
ThaAmifuiflDr
Chltarhnuaa
119161 Edeard G
Robmton Humour ay Bogan

IX (17) MOVIE

M

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1:30
O
(| ) CAROL
FRIENDS

BURNETT ANO

1:35
(? ) O

NEWS
(1 7 )

MOVIE

Chat I pant

11957) Anthony SlMf Odd* V « l M

200
O

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1000
15) O
TRAPPER JOHN. M 0 A
hard bo*led ea-stfipteeter (Rite
Moreno| feds m love w«th a hand,
capcted doctor (Harold Fluxse*) (R|
( D ( 10) T O THE MANOR BORN

10:05
&lt;1X(17|NCWS

505

10:30
Il(i(3 5 ) JIM BARKER
(D 410) THE O O O O NEIGHBORS
4 &gt;(5 O

EVE NINO

600
f j ' 4 1(1) O &gt;7 10 NEWS
(TJ (3 5 ) BIONIC WOMAN
ED (1 0 ) MAGIC M ETH O O OF OIL
PAINT IHQ

6 30
0

4) NBC NEW S
I THIRTY MINUTES
J ABC NEW S
ED (110)
0 JULIA CHILD ANO COM­
PANY VIP lu rc h |R|

7:00
O
(4 ) DISNEY S WONDERFUL
W ORLD Follow Me Bor* A tre«
efmg seiophone player settles n e
uneM town end set* out lo we the
heart of a tedy by becoming a
scoutmaiter (Pert 1)(R)r?
( 1 ) 0 « M INUTES
( 1 1O THOSE AMAZING ANIMALS
Featured
a bomb-retnaving
whale truths end mylhs about po»sonout snakes, an effort to save the
wMd burros m the Grand Canyon
(Rl
W H O KINGDOM
I M ISTER ROGERS TALKS
W ITH PARENTS ABOUT DIVORCE
Frad Rogart hoalt a lorurn lor
quattiorn Irom parantt on lhaa
thddran t laakngt and laart about
divorca (Rl

M

NEWS

(JR)

t X (1 7) CARIBBEAN NIGHTS

11:30
f ] 141 MOVIE
Undarcovar With
l l * KHK (IV7UI (Ion Ml*ad.lh
James Wasriwright An undercover
FBI agent intihrates an Alabama
branch of the Ku Kkia Klan |R|r;
&gt; O SOL 10 G O LD
( 7 ) 0 M ONTE CA R LO SHOW
(11) (3 5 ) i r s YO UR BUSINESS

11:35

7*
30
31
33
34
36
39

— Lancaclar
Daatta
W m ddaect
Dip
— A in u
Greg —
Actor M i l

— Kntgh)
Long ilo ry
Satisfy
— Holbrook
Mad Khoot

»ut)|
54 Skid
55 — Day At A
Tuna
56 Place
57 A ctio n
— Novack
D OW N
1 tha —
Runner
7 Alan —
3 Son ol Shorn
4 Oaiy —
5 Irma pail

d a il y d e v o t io n a l

2:05
(7 ) a MOVIE
tha 0 »W AI four
OCtoch (C l (19*1) Sparxar Tracy.
Frana Smalra

3:35

3X (1 7 )

MOVIE
Sfwrkxt t t m n
m Watfungfon 119411 Bata Hathbona fagalBfuca

4:25
7 p MOVIE
tha Old Man WHO
C ta d wod (C l 11979) tdnard G

37 — de Fiance
38 Actress
Sharon —
40 'Thin Man
dog
41 Daytime TV t
— Hope
4? — Connery
43 Unemployed
45 Petal —
(Cokiinbol
46 Toilet cate
4 7 Consider
48 However, tor
short
50 New Guinea
port

6 (lotion hock
ay player
7 —

Tart anion
■ One Lite To
9 Unclot*
11 Mingled with
13 Sma* atova
19 Name Fr

12:30
7 U MOVIE
Tha Thraa S m a rt'
IU Wl 119651 Kim SUnlay Garal
dme Page

Every Wednesday

12:35
IX (17) MOVIE
Sacral Man
(195*1 Marthas Thompton
lodar

John

1:30
0 4 1 DAILY DEVOTIONAL

2:05
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Barra S la n t
Daughtar 499441) Rod Camaron.
Gaorga Munigomary
(7 )0

3 P ie ce In d iv id u a l

3 25

Chicken Dinner

3:55

INCLUDES CHOICE OF ANY 2

new s

(7 j O MOVIE
One Horse Town
(B/W M T9M ) Janet Gaynor FTobert
Taylor
S I (1 7 ) MOVIE
Men m War
11997) Robert ft yen AtdO Flay

• F re n c h F rio t
M a ih t d P o ta lo v s
• C o t* S le w * B » k * d B e a m
A n d H o t R o ll
R t f l u U r 52.21

t C l h 4,

3X (1 7 ) TU S H I to n Bat Twill

7:30

33

31 (3 5 ) SPO R TS AFIELD

8:00
O (4 ) CHIPS A man « f » i a Ion
was killed by e drunken driver
forms a v«gAente group ehote
actions soon turn wesous an j reck­
less (R)
(51 O ARCHIE BUNKER S PLACE
Murray gait lad up mlh Arch*
and thraaiant lo a ala oul (Rl
(D O
MOVIE
S O S Man*.
(19791 Dand Jantaan O o r* Laach
man Tha couraga and horror tha!
attompamgd Via motl Oag* taa
drtaataa avar ma taitkig ol w*

71 Pi lastly
vaslmanl
73 — sanctum
74 Weeding tool
75 — gratia
aitis
27 Miss Martel
76 Actor —
Glass
79 NF1 score
30 Theological
degree
32 late actor
Edeaid —
Morion
33 No — , and*
oi butt

Poet
47 — Space*
44 Shortened

li t (1 7 ) OPEN UP

itii:

IX (17) NICE PEOPLE notl David
Aden Jenten

7 U

11:05

I X (1 7 ) LAST OF THE WILD

535

70 Sidy
77 In narna only
74 Larry —

11:00
O

t Char lo lls —
4 — Calloway
7 Potty Holli­
day 9 fOt*
10 Widamoutl.ad pot
17 Damon
14 Ac 101 —
lo in
1$ — Rich
16 Awhward ona
17 Roman
grafting
I t Smgar Vic

48
49
51
52
53

7:05

1:50
IX

I)
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th e
JE FF E R S O N S
Paranmal nvala Oaorga and Tom
chaflanga aarh othar into runnaig a
76 m** marathon (Rl
3 1 (3 5 ) JIMMY SW AOGART

5:00
ill (351 G R IM L Y ADAMS
ID ( 10) FIRING LINE Can Amrri
ca CompeteT Guest Peter Peter­
son

11) D A M K I. M 5IARVIN
A CR O SS

9:30

4:35
TX (1 7 ) 1HI3 WEEK IN BASEBALL

8:35

1:05

3X (17)

1 1 :05

3X (17) TUSH not! BA lutn

90S
IX (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

1 X (1 7 )W R E S T U N G

O
4 M ONEY MATTERS Mott
John E Event Guettt Carter FUnd*N
.i m BiifM
a nHaekini
TREK
&gt; O |SSTAR
T
ISSUES
1.7 Q | MORAL
MC
Vh r Dry Of The
ilJ (3 5 )I IMOVIE
Ootphm
(C l H973I George C
Scott Tnth Ven D rv rrr A group of
dO&lt;ph*nt ere kHJnoppod from thee
ir im rr by saboteur* *ho ere
scheming to blow up a yeehl carry. mg the prettdenl of the li S
CD (1 0 ) W ASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)

O

8:30
I O ONE DAY A T A TIME Ann i
mother e recent vwdow goes out
on e date with Schnesder (Ml
3d (3 5 ) JERRY FA lW E LL

9:00

3:00

CROSSWORD

805

O QD MOVIE
SI lyat (19761
Cherles Bronson. Jecquekne Iks
set A former fournekst is heed by l
wealthy tern tencser to recover a set
of m c rim in s tin g ledgers in
etchenge tor f 100 000 (Rl
( ) o ALICE Vers S long lost Aur.i
Agathe rides into Phoemt on e
motorcycle end tries to convene
Vera to *pkt with her to greener
pastures (M)
ED ( 10) M ASTERPIECE THEATRE
F E S T IV A L
OF
F A V O R ITE S
Upsteirs
Downstairs
The
Bolter James end Ha/et are invited
to I to■ hunt and Rose end E d e e -1
are sent along to take care of them
(Part 3 HRt

31 (3 5 ) MOVIE
tha 1m Star
(H -W H 1957) Henry fond* Anthony
Per km* A bounty hunter and a
young sheriff team up to tame the
town butty

Friday, July I I , IM I—7

U
(1 7 ) A TLA N TIC CITY ALIVE
Host Boh Fubenks Guest JP
Morgen

2:30

12 30

BOO

I .lame rt racounlad |R|
I T (351 OAY OF DISCOVERY
ID (1 0 ) EVENING AT POPS John
Wat amt and tha Bolton Popt a i
(omad by norld rarvyrmad aoprano
laontyna Plica lot a par human, a
ol Puccmi t Un Dal Ol Vadiam
born Madam# Ruttarhy and talar
Itont from Vardi t EroarnI

0
4) MOVIE
The Broken Star
(H fW ) (1959) M o »e d Duff U U
Bar on A U S Deputy M v U u i it
•■posed by hit M tn tm t tor mur­
dering a rancher tor he gold

odrenture*

1100
i O THE LAW ANO YOU
fcD (1 0 ) VIC BRADENS TINNtS
FOR THE FUTURE Tha VoAry
Vic B rtd m M p i yr o n t ovncomr
thr
ol going to tha not during a
votoy and domonttr *tos wh*f to do
oner you gat three iRK J

CATS

Snaarton l oab Rhoades (R|

a1

1?
4•

S o u t h * rn
F R IE D C H IC M N

Th e lo v tly camellia it named
after Qeorga Joseph Kam il,
■ m m io n a r y w h o f ir il
brought tha thrub from
lh * O r la n t t o E u r o p t .

1

89

WE U S E O N L Y
TOP Q U A L IT Y C H I C K E N

All foodt Cooked In
Port Peanut Oil

322-9442
2100 S. French Ave.
Hwy. 17-tx-Sanford

AI 'Constantino-Owner

�S— Evening Herald,lento rd, FI.

Friday. July I I, 1W1

Marriage Expensive Way To Get Laundry Done'

Al.l MacfillAW

By CINDY ADAMS
NEW YORK - Richard
O r e , obviously a gourmet,
ordered franks the other day
and then drowned them in
ketchup. . . Gene Wilder Is
Itching to m ake a sci-fi flick.
. . Baby Brooke Shields
washes h er valuable lialrs
dally with baby a h a m p o i.. .
Ask Paul Williams his height
and he grins, "5 foot 2 inches
short” . . . Mym a to y whose
late Izite TV movies make
everyone think of h er as the
p e rfe c t
w ife
sm iles,

A u gu st 3

MONDAY
EVTNiNQ

f f lO WILDLIFE IN CRISIS

600

o&lt;3) (i&gt;O'no news
n (361 a n o y antrriTH

7:35
0 | 1 7 )a E T SMART
600

ED ( l 0 ) ERICA

6 05
11(17) FATHER KNOWS BEST
O 14) NBC NEWS

0 ID new s

PM

MAGAZINE U*ri

M W utrtc! Dim On f*ni and find out
Kow.tfMt death of **
John
Lennon hat pftruefed lh#m, i tolly,
wood’s i«t#i dot to* to the tt«rt,
Chef T«ni prepare* Lfungenen cfwth*n. Dr ytfAtto on
LindA
Marin m d t en outdoor mirhel m
Morocco

&lt; 7 )0 JOKER'S WHO
It (351 BARNEY MILLER
0 ) (T O )
REPORT

MAC NEIL / LEHRER

it I a

WKRP IN CINCINNATI Th*

itAtf U**t to h*tp M#fh find out
wftelher hi« drinking ha* gotten out
of hand |R)
CD O BULBA Ttir* carefree f u i
*«*nte of a U S em batiy itaff in a
mylfMCAi land it Mit*rrop(#d by a
Vint from An off&lt;4*1 from horn#

1!) (35) MOVIE

r«»&gt; Id (i»7TI

(■null llorgron*

V x a M.mi

To

divert .ittrmtnin from hit ettape
p*Ann

a

convict tgmlAt a bU i* that

become* a raging fore*! fire threat -

•0100 a *m*it lown tn Dragon
tD (10) PLIMPTON ADVENTURE
IN AFRICA
60S
11 (17) MOVIE
L o w Slort
lieTOIAtiMacUra# IU w i O N m i A
young widower racatti hit wd* a

7:05
1 1 (1 7 ) a l l i n t h e f a m i i y
7:30
0 Ml YOUNG PEOPLES SPE­
CIAL ‘The lUftH iriw t A aatm
tnandtlup

l it t l e h o u s e o n the

fw* tits Ml a niMghfxjfimg town (R|

CBS^WS

(7) O ABC NEWS
1)1 (351 CARTER COUNTRY
CD ( *0) FLOWER SHOW
6:35
11(17) THAT OIRL
7:00
o

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danalopt bataaan &gt;

young biif . n j * n w r i i R i iw d t d
Iw n hand

v«clim of leukemia

8:30
(»' O THE TIM CONWAY SHOW

|R|
(J) U

9:00
t ) (31 FLAMINGO ROAD Claud*
Weldon offers FMdding a divorce
from Constance *n exchange tor a
politicat favor, and Lana t past
ftnoify catch** up with bar (Mi
CD O M*A*3‘ M Mambart of tha
4077th wrestla with tha twahaiing
w rvna haat and a variety of partonal problem* (R)
MOVIE
Tha Oova * (tt7 4)
Joseph Bottoms, Deborah fUfftn A
young man finds romanca wtuie
saamg around tha world
ID {1 0 ) SPECIAL Tha Gossamer
Athatrass Flight Of Imagination"
the fTight of a 70 pound angtnaiess
averat! over tfia English Char net by
• teAm ot A met it an aviation
•flifurtiast* is documented

9:30
111 O HOUSE CALLS A darangad
man plant t * bomb aomawhara m
Kanwngton Ganaral |R|

1000

ID O LOU ORANT A Tub alory
about tha turvtvaMI m o m w i l hilt
homo loi Lou and R o ut *fwn trw
too *&gt;• caught in a ki«a&gt; tlorm |R|

0 (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

(D( 10) FIRST RUN
10:10
I I (1 7 ) NEW S

I t (35)
ROAD

10:30
NASHVILLE ON THE

O ® (I O 7) a NEWS
II I (3 6) BENNY HILL

I LOVE HER ANYWAY A

K .jllrtlx * n «1 young « n m in hNi m
lor her vita* al a doctor t apconl
nwtl. atilt d iw tlro u t rn u rtt

BUDGET
OPTICAL

tO 110) POSTSCRIPTS

11:10

12(|7)N)aHTOALLERY
11:30
Mi 'HE BEST Of CARSON

Gi*e»t» Kata Jack ton. Marilyn
Morn# &lt;R)
(D O
C B S R E P O R TS
1h«
DHaot* Ot tha Unrtad S la in " In a
h n pail aa t m Dan Halhar Walla*
CronLita and olhar corraapondanlt
aiarnma in* U n ia d S la m chanca*
al iW i i i h and texvna* m ih* avant
o la nudaai aa# iPad 1IIR1
1) 0 A BC NEW S NK1HUINE
I t (3 5 ) W A N TE D DEAD OR ALIVE

11:40
0 (17) MOVIE
Pan* Whan 11
Stalin'

( 1064)

William

Holdan.

Audrty Hapburn
1 2 :0 0
f* Ij »A
IR‘|u
|

a
F A N T A S Y ISLA ND A
(M m a h d lytoon g o n aba* a ma
bonaa# and an acid* m il* Ih*
turning ground* o* m ancaaio*
Draco* |R|

at) (35| JIM BARKER
12:30

0 141TOMORROW Gunia bora*

SANFORD
2544 FRENCH AVE.
(ACROSS FROM SAMBO'S)

323-8080
Saturday
1.1P.M. f
9A.M.
AM

DIANA IU)SS

yet designed for man to get
his laundry done” . . . Angie
Dickinson: "P eople label me
a sexbomb. OK. But I see
myself as the steam ing type,
not the exploding type"...
Raquel Welch: "A fter a girl
gets a guy, why should a two
Luck license entitle her to
turn off all that charm she
turned on d u rin g c o u rt­
ship?”.. .Tony R andall: "IPs
only natural a person grows
qulter as he grow s older.
He's got more to keep quiet
about."

According to A r iito tU 'i rulei of rhetoric, true beauty of txp rttlio n end power to
pertuede go hand in h in d with lincerity.

thoma* H*a*n*. aongranl** Pna
Corana. Fan Parkar
(1) O STAR3KV AND HUTCH
1:10
( D O MOVIE
Th* Lit# Ol r m n
Zola' (0. W ) |m i l Paul Mum. Gal*
5 end#*gawd

1:30
( D O NEWS

2:00
DAILY DEVOTIONAL
7) M O W
Haro • Niand
1 tftZ ) J a m n Maaon. N a m * Brand

3:05
( D O NEWS

3:35

(D O M O VE

Daytim e Schedule
MORN(NO

8:30
0 1 4) TOOAY
m 0 OOOO MORNING AMERICA
5:00
(ft) 135) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(D O MARCUS WELBY, MD (D ( 10) MISTER ROGERS (R&gt;
(TUE. THU. FRI)
8 ‘3S
505
0 (1 7 ) MY THREE SONS
1 1 (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
9:00
(WED)
O il HOUR MAGAZINE
5:30
I D O DONAHUE
(!) O SUMMER SEMESTER
( J I B MOVIE
f| (35) COMER RYLE
5:35
ID O AMERICAN LEOION CON­ (D 110) SESAME STREET &lt;R) tj
VENTION (WED)
9:05
0 (17) FAMILY AFFAIR
5:45
11 (17) WORLD AT LAROE (TUE.
930
THU)
0 (35) ANOY GRIFFITH
5:55
9:35
O H DAILY DEVOTIONAL
0 (17) I DRtAM OF JEANN1E
(T O DAILY WORD

6:00

11:00

0

Thru Frt.
9*.m.-J p.m.

9-year-old nephew home who
lies around doing nothin',
"Ten D ays th at Shook the
World" m ay end up shaking
star and producer WarTrn
Beatty w ho sa n k every
farthing he ever had into it —
including his hom e. Fifty
million clam s is in it so f a r ..
. Cheryl T lrgs, who is not
exactly an ugly ducking,
considers D iana K ou the
m ost b e a u tifu l
woman
around today.
Bart Reynolds: "M arriage
is the m ost expensive way

(f o

PRAtUlf Wfdfrwo# JonilTwi Qatv*y and htt ton Ml out to Ind g

630

'll

(T| ( J FAMILY FEUO
(fl: (35) r h o o a
ffi( 10) DICK CAVETT

‘E veryone but my four exhusbands, that Is.”
All
M a c G ra w ’s
new
passion Is h er cat. The thing
sleeps curled up in the same
four poster as its m istre ss.. .
Ja c k K lugm an is about to
sh o v e a ll h is upcom ing
s tre n g th a n d b re a d into
raising horses. How much
strength I don't know, but
the word is the bread will be
a couple of mil. . . Kicky
Shrodrr, a hot 8 years old,
earned 1300,000 for “The
E arth lin g ." Me, I got a lousy

Tth Ih* Curl H*

0 4 1 TODAY IN FLORIOA
id

O th e l a w a n d y o u im o n i

111 O SPECTRUM (TUE)
II) o BLACK AWARENCSS (WED)
J ) 0 THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
ID O HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
(D O SUNRISE
0 (35) JIM BANKER
6:05
12 (17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT
6"30

(DOEDAilEN
6:45
Q J('O )A M WEATHER
6:55
(D O GOOD MORNING FLORIDA
7:00
0I4ITOOAY
(Tl O MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
(D O GOOO MORNING AMERICA
(35) FRANKENSTEIN JK AND
THE IMPOSSIBLES (MON)
I t (35) 81RDMAN AND THE
GALAXY TRIO (TUE|
ID (15) SPACE GHOST / DINO
BOY (WED)
1(35) FANTASTIC FOUR (THU)
1(35 HERCULOlDS (FRI|
1(10) VILLA ALEORE
7:05
0 (1 7 ) FUNTIME
7:25
0(41 TOOAV IN FLORIOA
UJ Q OOOO MORNING FLORIOA
7:30
O &lt;1 TODAY
iTl O GOOO MORNING AMERICA
lit) (351BANANA SPLITS
0 (1 0 ) SESAME STREET (R)Q

1:00
0 (fl DAYS Of OUR LIVES
(?) O ALL MY CHILDREN
iff (351 MOVIE
(D ( 10) A DANCE OF TWO COUN­
TRIES CHINA AND AMERICA

fMONi

0 (1 0 1 EVENING AT SYMPHONY
IRI(TUE)
(D (10) MISTER ROOERS TALKS
WITH PARENTS ABOUT DIVORCE

Sffio,

EVENING AT POPS |R|

tD I fO) SPECIAL (FRI)
1:05
0 ( 1 7 ) MOVIE
1:30
(I) O AS THE WORLO TURNS

2:00

O ' 4) ANOTHER WORLD
ONE LIFE TO LIVE
10:00
tD 110) FREEDOM ?000 (MON)
0 D B U L LS E Y E
ID 0 RICHARD SIMMONS (MON- ED ( 10) IT'S EVERYBODY'S BUSI­
WED. FRI)
NESS (TUE)
(1) 0 AU0U3T MAGAZINE (THU) ED ( 10) THE AMERICAN ALBUM
n (35) I LOVE LUCY
(WED)
0 ( 1 0 ) ONCE UPON A TIME (THU)
CD (10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
ED (10) THE INCREDIBLE VOV10:05
AGE Of MARK O GULLIVER (FRI)
0 ( 17) MOVIE
2:30
10:30
(5 10 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
O &lt;4 BLOCKBUSTERS
(D (TO) DECKCAVETT
iTl 0 ALICE (fl) (MON-WED. FRI)
O f (35) DICK VANDYKE
3.00
(D ( 10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R) 0 (T) TEXAS
111 O GUIDINa LIGHT
11:00
(7) O general h o s p it a l
0 1 4 1WHEEL OF FORTUNE
I f (35) LEAVE IT TO BEAVER
(T j 0 the price is rkjht
ED ( 10) POSTSCRIPTS
Tl Q THREE'S COMPANY (R)
g (351 GLENN ARNETTE
3:05
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11:30
3:30
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Of (35) THE FLINTSTONES
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(D (TO) BOOKBIRD
3:35
11:45
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(D (10) STORY BOUND
4:00
AFTERNOON

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3Q
_ JJOHN OAVIOSON
(j a Q MERV GRIf f IN
12:00
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O (31 CARO SHARKS
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4.05
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0 ( 1 7 ) THE ADOAMS FAMILY
tD (10 COOKIN'CAJUN &lt;MON|
03 (10) ROMAONOLI'S TABLE (R)
4:30
0 (35) I DREAM Of JEANN1E
(D (10) MAGIC METHOO Of OIL
PAJNTPIQ (WEOI
4:35
0 ( 1 7 ) HAZEL
® (101SOUTHBOUND (THU)
m i 10) ERICA (FRO
5.00
12:05
I HOGAN'S HEROES
0 ( 1 7 ) FREEMAN REPORTS
5) WONDER WOMAN
10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
12:30
8:00
5:05
0 ( 4 ) NEWS
® Q CAPTAIN KANGAROO
a l (35) FRED FUNT8TONE AND ) □ THE YOUNG AND THE 0 ( 1 7 ) OZZII AND HARRIET
RESTLESS
r n il n o s
5:30
&gt; RYAN'S HOPE
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6:05
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&gt; Q M 'V I 'H
■
10) SUM CLKSME (TUE)
007)
T O NEWS
, 10) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC O (TO) E1ECTNC COMPANY (R)
8:25
1TOOAV n FLORIDA
(101 SPOLETO '§1 (THU)
5:35
OOOO MORNING FLORIDA
O (17) BEVERLY MLLftUJCS
(10) FAST FORWARD (FRR

n

�I

Friday. July 31. I l i l — »

Evening Herald. Santord. FI.

Eclectic Choreography

T V Circles

'Solid Gold' Showcases Dance Talent
B a b y ,"
for w hich he
received a Tony nomination,
and his Tony Award-winning
"Happy T im e."
C arlisle’s late entry into
dance—he began his training
at the ripe old age of 16—did
not stand in Die way of rapid
success. A fter only a year of
instruction, he w as accepted
to Juillinrd. While still at
Juilliard,
Carlisle
established his own company
and w as shortly named by
the New York Tim es as one
of the 10 "upwind-coming"
dancer-choreographers.
Betty Brawley is Carlisle's
assistant choreographer on
the show. S I* began to dance
at the aye of 3 in her Toledo,
Ohio, hom e; and
from
the ages of &amp; and 12, Ms.
B raw ley an d h e r two
s i s t e r s —b i l l e d
"T he
Hoscbrock S iste rs"—toured
the G reat (dikes area in an
act
d ire c te d
and
c h o re o g ra p h e d by their
parents. An Olympic caliber
skater, Ms. Brawley chose to
trade the ice-skating rink for
a c a re e r in dance.

TU E S D A Y
EVENING
600
O
* &gt; O
&gt; O NEWS
II (3 5 ) ANDY GRIFFITH
(O
(1 0 )
S O U TH B O U N D
Showdown At T
Hocktown
Th# SmdhvtMf frckltoet Jim b otN
it It* via ol • tlio«do*n Ixlw w n
Mntot thompeon f tm jm Mott and
Paul O f i t m « t « yguog torfwvje*
to* th*» c*o*n
6 05
I X (1 7 ) FATHER KNOWS BEST
630
Q 'S I NBC NEWS
IS ' O C B S NEWS
m O ABC NEWS
II) (351 CA R TER COUNTRY
t S (1 0 ) S P O L E TO SI M « r » »
lh a Wool The mletnational Ian
guag# of rrwm* it eiptoreO b f l»o
very diftefent group* performing al
Spotato •• Inrfta • Kalita*Mi and la
Claca Theatre Company

A ljg U S f

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a fob teaching at
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ditcovft tfuit an mtandad flop can
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m tha O to land taction ol Chicago
an update it mcludad

8:30
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PILY EVER A FTER A middia tgad
coupto looking forward to tom#
time akma have 10 abandon thee
plant *h*n f a ir threa grown ch4dran ratuni to ttto homrtlaad
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lavaina and Shu toy houta %*t at
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P M MAGAZINE Tha camPtoQn to m* a now kJo I to Amanca t (J ) O SEIZURE THE STORY Of
KATHY MORRIS Pentoope Mdto*d
l#«fi
an a i tomato Manna
hoof camp. Si*v# Canoy m a n a and Leonard Nsmoy tlar m the true
story of a young tinge* t b*uth with
ta t » * v ^ Copt Cairo! on tha cok*
death foUowtng turgery and ha*
pmh and bahaveor Imd# Haim
nda* hortabat* on a Mo* ocean tlruogto to recover (R)
(D O THREE’S COMPANY JaU
baaefi
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JOKERS WHO
Cetdy mytlenoutty vamahwt (R)CJ
I BARNEY MIUER
(TO) UACNEIL / LEHRER tD (1 0 ) NOVA Tha Butmett Of
Eatmctton A loot it Itoon at tha
REPORT
muflimeJhon doMa* trad# in endan­
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J X (1 7 ) ALL IN TH E FAMILY
detptte I he tact that many forms of
animal Me ora headed to* aihnc7 :3 0
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| (J )T C T A C D O O G H
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TE R C R O N K ITf
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FAMILY FEUO
rant * ra a owner tandt ai an afh351 RHOOA
ciancy aaparl lo chat* up on Nancy
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6 :3 5
11 (1 7 ) T H A T GIRL

(T o i

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7 :3 5
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Rad S o i i t fUchmond Braraa

8:00

B ( D LOBO Parfcmt accidanittty
capturat a nofonou* hrt man |R|
1 &gt; O W ALTER CRONKITE S UNtVER9E

CD O

HAPPY DAYS Marion •
Hogg* m o m to I

10:00

D A IIC K I, W Y N N E
While in high school, she
d anced w ith th e Toledo
Ballet and at 17 was chosen
by choreographer Hon Field,
at th e tim e h im self a
newcomer, to tour with the
St. l/iu ls M unicipal Opera in
th e ir
su m m er
stock
program. That sam e year
she headed for New York
where s i* enjoyed great
success dancing with such
g re a ts a s B ob F osse,
M ichael B e n n e tt, Tony
® * ( 1 0 ) EXCH ANGE Tha Th -')
( .
The ttyW» i t iite m Teaat and
ton the state t largest oty. o*e
aipforad ; j
1 0 :0 5
11 (1 7 ) NEW S
1030
II (3 5 ) B A CK S TA O E
QAANO OLE OPRY

AT

THE

11:00
( I «&gt;(.* O ' U N E W S
II (3 5 ) BENNY HILL
ID (1 0 ) PO STSC R IPTS
1 1 :0 5

IJ (1 7 ) NIOHT GALLERY
1 1 :3 0
II
4 TO N IG H T Hutl Johnny
Cerson Guests
Loretta Lynn
Charles Hefson Realty
(S) O
C B S R E P O R TS
The
Defense Of The Untied Stales In a
hve part series. Dan Mather Walter
Cronfcite and other correspondent!
e«em«ne the United States chances
of defense and survival m the event
otanuctoar war lPart?)|Rl
m U ABC NEW S NtQHTLINE
(Q) (3 5 ) W A N TED D CAO O R AUVE
1 1 :3 5
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Midai Run
11169) Richard Cranna
Ftad

Altaiia

12:00

(| O m *a *
•B’ M
Tha Odataa f Ita
(J O MOVIE
119741 Jo n Vo-gM
MaumJian
SchaB
9 ( (3 5 ) JIM BAKKER

Ctiannolia anil h e r mentor.
Hon Fields.
After a two-year run a s a
featured dancer in Broad­
w ay’s
" M a n * ,"
Ms.
Brawley moved w est. To her
credit on the West Coast
were specials and series with
such notables a s Sammy
Davis J r ., Julie Andrews,
Dean M a rtin a n d G ene
Kelly.
In 1976, Ms. B raw ley
began to do fre e la n c e
choreography (ur young acts
on the nightclub circuit. Her
big break cam e in 1978 when
long-time friend C arlisle, for
whom she luid danced in
many TV specials, called her
to assist him on the "Rich
U tile Special."
Darcel Wynne, a native
of Pittsburgh, began to study
dance at 11* age of 3. As a
perform er with a num ber ( f
a m a te u r
and
scinip ro fessio n al tro u p e s in
Southern C alilom ia. where
she moved in her early teens.
Ms. W ynne’s s ty le an d
technique a ttr a c te d the
a tte n tio n
of
su ch
choreographers n s Carlton
Johnson, Claude Thompson,
1-cstcr Wilson, Jo e Trem aine
and Carlisle. In short order
her professional career was
launched.
She is now the principal
dancer and second assistant
c h o re o g ra p h e r on “ Solid
Gold." Ms. Wynne has ap ­
p eared in m u n y o th er
telev isio n sp e c ia ls and
variety shows. Among Uiese
are "Carol B u rn ett," "Hcdd
F o ss" and "U iu g h In."
Her feature h im credits
Include "T he G reat White
Hope," "M arne," "Funny
l.a d y ," " T h e L a st Two
Married Couples," "Jesus
C h rist S u p e r s ta r " and
'X anadu/

VVoids in the list below appear acioss. up. down,
backwaids and diagonally in the diagram Find each
word and draw a circle around its letters then cross
the word olf the list Some circled letters appear in
more than one word The letters that form the answer
will be left over Unscramble and arrange them lo
create a word, or words, that will provide the answer
Clua: HERO OF THE HACKERS

A S N S A
1D E NG
A R E 1S
R 1R P U
E B G N N
T A E E J
0 P G O H
0 A N G A
H E A L N
S L K Y P
F E 1L E
DR A C E
S Y R T T
K A A A E
K P S E M

(S O L U riO N

FREE
PEGBOAHDft
s h e l v in g

W ITH ANY
R O BIN SHED

1:4 5
IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
Fanlara For A

2 :4 0

(D O NEWS
i ] (£&gt; NERO WOLFE A young
woman haa* Naro lo loo* ado lha
3 :1 0
mytlariou* cacumttanca* u n ­
ffl O
MOVIE
rounding har talhar •daalh |R)
tokyci lU'W i (I94JI
(D u HART TO HART A matlar
JohnOarhaM
criminal u*a* an mlarnaUmaPy
3 :1 5
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IX (1 7 ) MOVIE
pound* ol gold ado Ota country IR)
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Ot (35) WOEPENOENT NETWORK
• f i8 B U iii.g / i&lt; e it o B a t i&gt; h t U

Da*lm*lron
Cary Gram

Comancha
IndaCntlal

«-IWNWMM*NV

N oib Young ran a mile in 8 minute* 30 tecondi carry
mg a 150 pound man on Hit Lack. Young weighed 198
poundi. He made the run on April 12,1915, at Melbourne,
Auttralia.

1 :3 0

d e v o t io n a l

A E N S J
1O A D N
S N R E L
D 1S P E
V R A T C
U L A O R
M Tk L U R
S u E E E
M T T B F
A T E S L
U C E N O
N L E 1G
10 CW U
P H R R C
P S C 1C

11 U n » t . 1 word* |

W'"SW°Od

(1) O NEWS

2:00

S D
C N
0 N
R L
E P
A E
R 0
C E
R O
1B
UM
A P
R M
L A
R O

Ace. Amateur Army Arrue Bel. Birds Bogey Card
Champs. Chip Club Columbus, Course. Cut Onver,
flag. Games Golfer. Green. Hagen. Harmon. Iron
Irwin, Jones, la g . Lead Lie, Mart Nelson Net Ohio
Slate Open Palmer Pars. Pale. Pay Peele. PGA
Pins Play. Pro. Pull Putter Roll
Shooter Snead. Sport. Slar, Swing. Tag Tee Tie
Tour. Tournament Trap USGA. Walked Watson.

JULY SPECIAL

1 2 :3 0

Daalh Scana ()964| Richard Egan
Vn-aca Lindtort

N
E
M
A
N
R
U
0
T
H
S
L
B
T

HURRICANES COME AND GO
BUT OUR SHEDS
ARE HERE TO STAY.

i l If l TOMORROW Gua*l San
John Towar IR -Taa )
(D O ST ARSKY AND HUTCH

O (3) d a il y

R A
N R
0 M
S Y
T R
A U
WO
L T
E T
1C
RW
G O
A 0
A D
A G

i—

Kevin C arlisle displays his
award-winning talents os the
choreographer of Operation
P rim e T im e ’s syndicated
variety series, ‘‘Solid Gold."
hosted by Dionne Warwick.
H is w ork is showcased
each week on the series by
the eight Solid Gold Dancers,
b u t C a rlis le ’s eclectic
c h o re o g ra p h y h as also
graced nightclub, concert,
te le v isio n a n d th e a tric a l
stages since his professional
beginnings in Use niid-1950s.
H e h a s choreographed
countless television specials,
variety shows and series
including "The Ed Sullivan
Show," "T he Bing Crosby
Special," Bob Hope specials,
"T he Sonny and Cher Show,"
“The T hird B arry Manilow
Special” —for which he won
an E m m y—"T he Academy
A w a rd s ,"
“ The
Tony
A w ards," the Bill Cosby
series and the Dean Martin
scries. Among liis Broadway
c re a tio n s
a re
"H a rry
Blackstone on Broadway,"
which he directed as well as
choreographed, "Hallelujah

By Bob Bowie

OUR WOOD FRAM E BUILDINGS
meet the Dade County code
without the concrete slab,
Cert. #8 0-3 001 .5

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• Completely installed and
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OPEN MON.-SAT. 9-6; SUN. 1-8

295-3 T 0 0^

�t l — Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

F r k to y .J u h r ll.lW t

Several Hundred Fascinating Tidbits

But Is This Really Anybody's B usiness?
more opportunities, and because it is expected of them
Artists tend to have fiery, explosive love lives. Scientists
arc strictly w ork first, sex second. Politicians are a lot
like actors, but they have to do it away from public
scrutiny. When Harding was running for president he used
cam paign funds to send his mistress on a trip around the
world."

By D A V ID H A N O I.K K

NEW YORK — liana Christian Andersen died a virg in ..
Eva Pcron once had an affa ir with Aristotle Onassis,
Milton Berle with Aiinee Semple McPherson. . .
Philosopher Freidrich Nietzsche had sex with his sister,
Albert Einstein with a cousin. . . Mahatma (landhi
foreswore sex altogether but tested his resolve by sleeping
with naked young girls. . .
Getting interested’ These rath er personal disclosures
are just a few of the several hundred nosy tidbits that
m ake up 'T h e Intim ate Sex Lives of Fam ous People," the
riewest pop reference tome by the Wallace clan — Irving,
Sylvia and their children Amy W allace and David
Wallechinsky.
One of this sum m er's c a n 't miss bestsellers, "The
Intimate Sex liv e s of F am ous People" may even top the
Wallaces' previous boffo fa rt books: "The People's
Almanac" (volumes one and two) and "The Book of
li s t s " (volumes one and tw o).
In all. 207 of history's most famous folks are given the
keyhole profile treatm ent, and if a more prodigious
volume of naughty cocktail p arty chatter has ever been
produced, you've got yourself a scooo.
F ans of sleaiy Hollywood m em oirs may already be
familiar with the bedroom exploits of some of those in­
cluded here, such a s Joan Crawford, Errol Flynn and
Charlie Chaplin. But what m akes "The Intim ate Sex liv e s
of Famous People" unusual is that it tackles the sex lives
of people who. well, you never thought of before as having
sex lives — from B ertrand Hussell to In u is Pasteur, from
Henry Ward Beecher to Benito Mussolini.

Y eah, but is this really anybody's business?
"Sex is universal,” replies Amy. "As fa r as we're
concerned th e re 's nothing unhealthy about th e subject. In
fact, we think the more It is talked about the healthier It
is."
"People feel a kinship with celebrities,” sa y s David of
America’s consuming passion for gossip about the
famous. “ I d o n 't think it’s so terrible."

Amy Wallace, who co-authorwl "The Intimate
Sex Live* of Famous People" with brother,
David Wallechinsky: "Sex Is universal. As far
a s w e're conerrned there's nothing unhealthy
about the subject. In fact, we think th r more it
is talked about the healthier it is."
platoon of free-lance w riters then penned Ute profiles. The
W allaces edited, re-wrote and narrow ed the total down
from m ore than 300. Not that they heaved the extras in (he
trash — David fully expects they will be putting together a
second volume in the ndar future.

"W e definitely m ade an nttem pt to go for people you
never connected with sex before," says David
Wallechinsky, 32. "W e w ere curious ourselves, and we
wanted to make hum an beings out of these historic
characters we've studied in school and heard so much
about. To understand P icasso's paintings, for example, it
helps to understand his life."
Yeah, but la this really anybody's business?
In jumps sister Amy, 28: " In school so many of these
figures are just cardboard ch aracters. But none of us are
cardboard."
David's turn again. "W e’re even taught to emulate
some of these people without knowing what they were
really like. I think our approach casts much Ught on these
people."
David says the source m aterial was a lot more available
than you'd think. "Conventional biographers have simply
avoided much of this m a te ria l," he says. " I t’s a taboo
subject and, frequently academ ic biographers have a pet
person who means so much to them — they tend to get
protective of person. It's not lust sex tju t is left out. Very
often politics is om itted, too. Fur instance, Helen Keller
was an active socialist, but not many people know that
because it doesn't (it her im age."
Not that it was a breeze to dig up the dirt on, say Tolstoi
or Brahms or Ixxiis XV. The Wallaces wore out a full-time
staff of IS researcher s. Once the research was completed a

Despite all the digging the W allace crew cam e up
against a few famous figures whose pHvate lives remain
m ysteries — most notably Isaac Newton, Emily
Dickenson and J . Edgar Hoover.
Some basic patterns em erged from profession to
profession. "Actors nnd actresses have m ore active sex
lives than most people," sayd David, "because they have

: Jt r

-4

L— i i - — - - —

Adds A m y: "W e have a motto - enjoy yourself while
you’re learning. It shouldn't be painful to acquire
knowledge."
Arctic explorer Robert Peary had an Eskim o m istress.
Napoleon B onaparte and the Duke of Wellington both
slept with the sam e French a c tre ss.. . Clark G able's bed
partners called him a mediocre lover. . . the sam e was
said of the Duke of Windsor. . . . ;

M o il re q u este d book* In ISO U S. cdie#.
compiled by tha Amancin Library A llo c u tio n

Fiction

Nonfiction

1. NO BLE HOUSE
by James Clavoll (OeUcorle. $ 19 95)
2. GORKY PARK
by Martin Cruz Smith (Random House. $13 95)
3. FREE FALL IN CRIMSON
by John D Macdonald (Harper A Row. $ 10 95)
4. TH E C O VEN AN T
by James A Michener (Random House. S 15 95)

1. TH E L O R O G O D M ADE THEM ALL
by James Herrlot (St Marlin's. $13 95)
2. R ICH AR D SIM M O N S' N EV ER -S A Y -O IET B O O K
by Richard Simmons (Warner, $14 95)
3. T H E L A S T M AFIO SO
by Ovid D em ent (Times Books. $15)
4. M ARIA C A L L A S
by Ananna Slassinopoulos (Simon A Schuster, $15 95)
5. P LE A S E D O N 'T S H O O T MY DOO
by Jackie Cooper A Dick Kleiner (Morrow, $ 10.95)
•. D A N S E M AC AB R E
by Slephen King (Everest House, $13 95)
7. C R IS IS IN V E S TIN G
by Douglas R. Casey (Stratlord. $ 12 95)
t. S H E L L E Y A LS O KNOW N AS SHIRLEY
by Shelley Winters (Morrow. $14 95)
*. N ICE G IR L S DO
by Irene Kasdsoria (Stratford. $9 95)
10. C O S M O S
by Carl Sagan (Random House, $19.95)

5. TAR BABY
by Toni Mo.rlson (Knopf, $11 95)
•. ANSW ER AS A MAN
by Taylor Caldwell (Putnam. $12 95)
7. G O O D B Y E , JA N E TTE
by Harold Robbins (Simon A Schuster. $ 13 95)
•.REFLEX
by Dick Francis (Putnam. $ 11 95)
t. C O M E POUR THE WINE
by Cynthia Fraaman (Arbor House. $12.95)
10. CAR DINAL SINS
by Andrew W Oreeley (Warner/Dels. $ 12 95)

By S TA C I B IE N V E N U
" I F Y O U 'R E U N D E R 23: It you ow ns van or a pick up. or If you |usl need Immediate
minim um Auto or Tru ck Insurance coverage— you need to call m e."
Yes. according to Ralph K aiarlan. "Y o u may be paying loo m uch (or your Auto In­
surance..."
M r. Kara lien Is fully aware that we, at drivers, are
tired of reading deceptive ads about how we can beat the
high cost of our aufo Insurance, but there It something
definite the! sets him apart— tpeclalltallon. He's an
unusual man in hit line olbusiness, for he Is willing to give
hard luck Y O U N G D R IV E R S a more than la ir chance on
their auto or truck Insurance.
“ I feel that young people. In m any casat, are un
justifiably charged high rates, and I know that many may
t* short on cash That's w hy monthly payments are our
specialty. Furtherm ore, there are n U rg e number ot
drivers under 25 that are paying high rates due simply to
Ihelr age; others are penallied because of their personal
R A L P H K A Z A R IA N

1

The W allaces’ third volume of "The People’s Alnuimic"
will be published in September. Meanwhile, they've
started to w rite a weekly column of unusual facts for
Parade m agazine. "T he secret to our success," says
David, "Is th at we combine education and en­
tertainm ent."

W H A T A M E R IC A N S A R E R E A D IN G

KAZARIAN BEATS THE PRICE!

|-

The book Is very explicit. Just In case it m ight fall into
young or delicate hands the Wallaces decided to clearly
label it "Sex Lives."
"Those who will be offended by its content are
forewarned.” explained David.

—

J U

tastes In automobiles. Finally, customers w ho need minimum Insurance coverage are
turned aw ay repeatedly T o overcome these situations Is my whole reason for being In
business."
Yes. this all sounds quite promising, but |uit how can Ralph Kazarian afford to offer a
tru ly better price to you and me?
" I 'v e shopped for years to find companies who offer the best possible rales for m y
particular customers As a result. I broker business with 30 U Auto. Tru ck . M otorcycle.
M otor Club. Mobile Home &amp; Motor Home Insurance companies that target their effort to
m y particular customers. This allows me to g ive m y customers the Insurance they need
at tha price they want to pay."
And M r. K a ia rla n has proved hlmselt to be quite successful In his approach. A fter IS
years In the business, he's established himself as an Institution within tha auto and truck
Insurance business In Florida.
T o prove his ambition and determination he's opened eleven offices In the last two
years In the Central Florida area In addition to hit Orlando office which It located In the
B rig h t B L U E Building at the corner of M ills and Colonial (I T I J4S4)
Th ere are two additional Ralph K azarian offices located In the Orlando-Sanford areat
Alfam onfe Springs (134 2454) and Sanford (323 2454).
So...If you're really Interested In finding out how to get the Insurance you need at the
price you want to pay— stop by one of Ralph Kazarian's offices.
P d Adv
J.

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                    <text>73rd Y e a r. N o 293— T h u rsd a y, J u ly 30,1981— S a n lo rd , F lo rid a 32771

E v e n in g H e r a ld - I U S P S 481 7 8 0 1 - P r ic e 70 C e nts

Child Killed, One Injured
In Hit-And-Run Accident
A 12-year-old Sanlord buy was killed and a 9-year-old
companion injured Wednesday night when they were struck
by a hit-and-run motorist as they rode their bicycles near
their homes.
Pronounced dead at the scene was D ad d Crews ol 3410
Palm Way. The second cyclist, Ryan I. Stone, also ol
Sanlord, was listed In satisfactory condition at Seminole
Memorial H ospital this morning with both a fractured right
leg and forearm, and scalp lacerations.
According to the F lo rid a Highway Patrol, the boys were
riding their bikes north on S. Sanford Avenue near State

Hoad 427 about 9:10 p.m. when they were hit by an unknown
vehicle which also was northbound. The driver fled, a F H P
spokesman said.
Crews and Stone both were thrown several feet from
where they were struck. At the time of the collision, the
boys were ndlng on the right edge of the road, the patrol
spokesman said "There was no indication they were out in
the middle ol the street."
Wednesday's fatality brings to 17 the number of trafficrelated fatalities in Seminole County this year. — BRITT
SMITH

Longw ood G a r a g e O w n e r
Told To R em o ve O ld C a rs
M#r«H P i » U i by T im V iftc rflf

C h e m is t u s e d i»as m a s k ( lu r in g r e c e n t in s p e c t io n o f c o n t r o v e r s ia l b a r r e ls

City Officials Irked

Toxic Waste Removal
Could Take 2 Years
ll&gt; B it ITT .SMITH
llrr a ld S ta ll Writer
Rem oval of toxic chem icals stared in
barrels on a 2-acre site in Sanford could
take nearly two years according to a plan
revealed Wednesday by the firm keeping
the m aterial.
Although the City Chemicals Co plan
was a positive step toward the ultimate
rem oval of the chemicals, Sanlord City
Attorney R ill Colbert said he was upset to
get the firm 's proposal “ so late in the
game.”
“ I'm appalled at this," Colbert (timed.
"It's typical of what we've had to put up
with since those barrels (of chem icals)
were discovered back In September."
Because the plan was revealed Just
prior to the court hearing in which it was
to be discussed, city and state officials
would make no comment on It. To allow
tune for the proposal to be studied,
another hearing lias been scheduled
before Seminole Circuit Judge Kenneth
la ffle r on August 10 when the plan w ill be
discussed In detail.
City Chem icals attorney Koyce Pipkins
explained that his client's chem ical
specialist had been out of town and was
unavailable for consultation. "W e Just
haven't had time to get this together,"
Pipktns u ld .
That didn't satisfy Doug McLaughlin,
state Department of Environmental
Regulation ( D E R l lawyer, who also
sta rte d to c o m p la in about C ity
Chem icals' tardiness, but was cut off by
U lfle r .
“ We're ifbttlng Into a bickering contest
here," U-ffler said. " L e t’s get off that
and get something done. I too am

disappointed that this plan is coming
forward so late. But I understand the
complexity of the problem. The last tune
we were here, there was no solution at
all. At least this is something." lo ftie r
said. "We need to get the D E R 's experts
to study this plan and see If It's workable.
II It's not, what ran be done to make it
w orkable?" Colbert and M c laughlln said they were
peeved because at a Ju ly 18 hearing on
the dump site issue, Pipkins had in­
dicated he would present his plan to them
prior to W rdnrsday's proceeding for
examination.
"Now we're going to have more of a
delay while our people study this thing,"
M cla u g h lln said, " if we could have had
that done already, we might have been
able to come up with some viable solution
to this mess today.”
The "m ess” to which M cLaughlin
referred is 3,000-plus barrels of chem ical
wastes - which D E R chem ists have
testified include Industrial solvents, lead,
and several combinations identified as
cancer-causing agents — stored at a twoacre site on Airport Boulevard and
Jewett lan e. The city and D E R have
been trying lor months to get the n u r t to
force City Chemicals to close the facility
and remove the drums.
At the Ju ly 18 hearing. D E H 's chief
chemist, Dr. Robert Patton, said such a
process could take up to four years. He
explained that each drum would have to
be tested to determine its exact contents
before a licensed disposal site would
accept it.
According to the City Chem icals plan,
the Job could be done, though not in such

detail, in 86 weeks. Essentially, the plan
c a lls for the identification of the contents
of each barrel by general chem ical
cate g o ry , and re p acka g in g of the
m aterials into more secure containers.
As a safely precaution, local fire
departments, hospitals, and emergency
rescue units would be notified during
repackaging and removal, the plan
states
Final disposal ol the wastes would be
done under strict D E R supervision, the
plan pmvtdes with the materials winding
up either in a federally approved out-of­
state dump site, or Incinerated.
Pipkins cautioned that the ability of
C ity Chemicals to carry out the plan is
contingent upon the company’s "a b ility
to continue its operations at Its site at
3920 Forsyth Road, Orlando. 11 for some
reason operations should cease a t that
site, through governmental edict or
otherwise. City Chemicals Inc. s i l l not be
able to perform the site clearing task."
"In other words, the site cleanup at
Sanford will be funded from earnings
made on the Forsyth Road site."
The cleanup could cost upwards of
8200,000, he said.
Pipkins made a bid for state financial
help, but M cla ughlin said, "We didn't
put the chemicals there and we're not
going to pay for their removal.”
In a related matter, Pipkins reported
that eight barrels of the deadly poison
cyanide, the presence of which was
revealed during testimony two weeks
ago, have been removed from the San­
ford dump and taken to the Orlando
facility.

Casselberry Names Assistant Police Chief
Sgt. Wtnlhrop A. Oates has been appointed assistant chief of
the Casselberry Police Department, according to an announcement today by retiring Police Chief George K a rrher

Cates Joined the department on Oct 1. 1973. after he retired
as a Navy chief petty officer, ending a 20-year m ilitary career,
He and his wife liv e in Ixmgwood

Gates succeeds Fred McGowan, who w ill move into the
department's top post when K archcr steps down Friday
Gates was approved for the promotion by Mayor Owen
Sheppard after Karcher recommended him for the position as
assistant chief. McGowan concurred in the selection of Gates.
He w ill assume his new duties Saturday.

Tonight at 8 o'clock, retiring Chief Karcher w ill be honored
a l a la re w (u rtceplion and dinner at t x r d Chumley’s
H w taurant in Altamonte Springs.
Tomorrow he w ill be honored at an open house luncheon
from I to 3 p.m. at Casselberry City H all —JO H N DIXON

By J A N E C A S S E L B E R R Y
llr r a ld S ta ll W riter
The Longw ood Code E nfo rcem ent
Board has handed down Its first official
ruling by ordering a garage owner to get
rid ol several Junkrd cars.
The enforcement board met Tuesday
night and found John Y a m e ll of 303 la k e
St. N.E., Ixmgwood, in violation of an
ordinance that prohibits keeping of
wrecked of abandoned vehicles.
Y a rn e ll, who o p e rate s lamgwood
Garage on County Road 427, was given
until Aug. 17 to get rid of the old vehicles
at his business
Failure to comply w ill subject Yam ell
to a line of 830 per vehicle each day
beginning on Aug. 18. The fine can not
exceed 8600 a day.
Although the code enforcement board
lias considered other m atters since it was
organired during January, Y a m e ll is the
fust person to be ruled in violation of city
ordinances.
Yam ell first cam e before the code
enforcement board on Ju ly 14, but when
he indicated he wished to get an attorney,
his case was continued until Ju ly 28.
Yam ell was no( represented by an
attorney Tuesday night, but he said he
had consulted with one.
Y am ell told the board that a six-foot
tall, wooden fence he has rrected along
the front of the property should solve the
problem by hiding the Junked vehicles.
The rode enforcement board disagreed
ruling lie was s till in violation. The

O w n e r m u s t k e e p g a ra g e lo t c l e a r o f ju n k c a r s
garage property is toned 1-1 Industrial,
but wrecked and abandoned vehicles are
permitted only in 1-2 Industrial tones.
Y am ell also was critirite d for placing
lor tale signs on some ol the vehicles,
because his occupational license lor
operating a garage fur auto repair does
not include the right to sell used cars. The
garage Is closed although the oc­
cupational license does not expire until
Oct. L
Y a m ell said he w ill comply with the
ordinance and get rid of the vehicles,
which he hopes to sell prior to the Aug. 17
deadline.
Longwood policeman I-arty W. Grose

m an U ri Poralh said.
At least two gunmen opened fire on the No. 66 commuter bus
near a -cooper a liv e Kibbutz settlement outside Jerusalem
Wednesday night. A woman seven months pregnant, Dvora
A rent, 33, was wounded in the back and s to n u d ja n d m iscar­
ried. although she was expected to live. Two other people also
were wounded.
"T h u is ■ very' serious a ffa ir," Porath said. "The govern­
ment w ill w eifh the development and decide how to handle It."

Though denying any connection between the attack and the
week-old Palntinlan-IsraeU cease-fire, Porath served notice
the attack would be avenged.
"We have no cease-fire with P L O ," Porath sold. "W e have
an arrangement with the government of lebanon
"Israel w ill continue to deal with the P L O as it has in the past
whenever and wherever it decides and according to need,"
Porath said.
The P I jO has declared it would respect the cease-fire along
the lebanese border, but would strike inside Israel and the
occupied A ra b lerronlorics.
Begin Wednesday taunted Syria for losing a MiG-29 in a
dogfight w ith Israeli fighter Jets in the skies northeast of
Beirut and u id Israel w ill continue to fly reconnaissance
missions over Lebanon.
“ Today, the Syrians tried to shoot down our plane: and they
used MiG-26*, the best Soviet plane under the sky," Begin told
a lawy ers' convention, and noted sardonically, "It’seasier said
than d - w

Appointed in January
tria l period, the board
function indefinitely as
resolution passed by
mission.

for a six-months
will continue to
the result of a
the city com­

" It's run along pretty smoothly,"
M ayor John Hepp said Monday night, “ I
believe it's what we need."

President Unveils An 'Open
Door1Policy On Immigration
WASHINGTON (U P I) The ad­
ministration today unveiled its longawaited im m igration policy, calling for
le g isla tio n to p ro v id e an amnesty
program (or upwards of 3 m illion illegal
aliens now in the United S tairs and
setting up fines for employers who
knowingly hire ille g a l foreign workers.
President Reagan said the policy was
designed to preserve the American
tradition of an "open door" to foreigners
but "to accept them in a controlled and
orderly fashion."
"Im m igration and refugee policy is an
Important part of our past and fun­
damental to our national interest,"
Reagan said in a statement. "W ith the
help of the Congress and the American
people, we w ill work towards a new and
realistic uiunigratton policy, a policy
that will be (air to our own citizens while
it opens the duur of opportunity for those
who seek a new life m A m erica ."
The adm inistration proposals were
disclosed by Attorney General W illiam
French Sm ith at a Joint congressional
hearing on im m igration and refugees
"We have lost control of our borders.
We have pursued unrealistic policies. We

have failed to enforce our laws ef­
fectively,” Sm ith said. "N o great nation
— and especially a great democratic
nation — can long countenance inef­
fective and unenforced laws."
He told the hearing the proposals in­
clude:
—That it tie made unlawful to hire
illegal aliens, le g isla tio n would impose
civ il lines of up to 81,000 against em­
ployers of more than (our employees who
knowingly hiring illegal aliens. It also
would lU ow the government to seek court
orders against employers who follow a
"pattern or practice " of hiring illegal
aliens.
—A new e x p e rim e n ta l tem porary
worker program for up to 60,000 Mexican
nationals annually. The program w ill be
targeted to specific areas and categories
of Jobs. W ick e rs would not be permitted
to bring in spouses and children and
would not have access to welfare or food
stamp assistance, or be eligible for
unemployment compensation.
- I « g a l status (or quabfylng illegal
aliens currently in the United States
prior to Jan. 1,1960. Those illegal aliens
would be allowed to apply for a new

Mideast Fighting Continues Despite Cease-Fire
J E R U S A lJ .M l U P I I - Israel vowed vengeance today
against Palestinian guerrillas for riddling an Israeli com­
muter bus with gunfire but M id the attack was not connected
- to the ceasefire in south Lebanon.
(Tune M inister Menarhem Begtn's spokesman denied a
report in the Israeli newspaper M a’a riv that Israel had in­
formed Washington Wednesday night's attack on the bus
violated the truce In south Lebanon with the Palestine
Liberation Organization.
"The United States was not informed of anything," spokes­

told the board that Y a m e ll has been cited
for violation of the Junk-car ordinance on
three occasions other than the most
recent incident. Those citations were
issued in 1170, 1974 and I960, according to
the police officer. He was cited again on
M ay 4, 1961.

In Washington, the S U te Department called the incident
duturbing and appealed for restraint.
It was the 16th S yrian Jet shut down over Lebanon in two
years and the second loss of a MiG-23, a high-altitude inter­
ceptor code-named Foxbat by NATO. Israeli fighters downed
the first S yrian MiG-25 Feb. 13 with a Sparrow missile.
Syria endorsed a Palestinian plan to deploy Soviet-built
SAM-6 m issiles around Beirut to protect the city against
Israeli air strikes, but then Mid it could not afford to purchase
the weapons to protect the Palestinians.
Syrian Foreign M inister Abdel H alim Khaddam told
Palestinian leaders some A rab countries were ready to con­
tribute money to purchase the Soviet-made missile batteries,
the pro S yrian d a ily A l Short) reported.
“ Syria did not poaieM sufficient quantitiy of m issiles for
stationing In B eirut, but would welcome any weapons which
m ay be sent to le ba n o n via Syria (or the purpose of defense of
the lebanese and the Palestinians," Kaddain said.

status of "renewable term temporary
re s id e n t." The status would be
renewable alter every three years, and
after 10 years of continuous residence,
those residents would be eligible to apply
for permanent resident status If they
otherwise can not be excluded and could
demonstrate use of the English language.
There are an estimated 3 million to 6
m illion ille ga l aliens in the United States
and their numbers increase by 260,000 to
600,000 each year.

Inflation At The Still
H O LLY W O O D , md. (UPI) - Illegal
moonshine isn't the bargain it once was
in M aryland.
Before state Alcohol, Tobacco and T a x
agents and state police raided and
destroyed a southern Maryland moon­
shine still — operated by a stale em­
ployee — earlier this week, undercover
officers bought a gallon of the illegal
booze (or 826
" T h u stuff is getting tremendously
e x p e n s iv e ," sa id M a rv in Bond, a
spokesman far the comptroller's office.

TODAY
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2*-Evning Hsrald, Santord. FI.

Thursday, July 19, INI

NATION
IN BRIEF
Reagan Savors Victory
On His Tax-Cut Package
W A S H IN G T O N it ll* ! ) - Preside nt R eagan,
savoring a stunning lax-cut victory as an encore to his
equally im pressive budget triumph, had bottles ot
champagrle popped open and said it had been “ a nice
day."
tteagan. in another tribute to his power o( legislative
persuation, scored a decisive win Wednesday when the
House approved his tax plan, rejecting an alternative
pushed by Dem ocratic leaders,
Coupled with carter approval o( his budget cuts,
Iteagan now run implement two ot the m ajor
ingredients o| his formula for Improving the economy
and returning the nation to prosperity.
Iteagan celebrated the victory in the Oval Office with
Vice President George Bush, Treasury Secretary
Donald Regan, top aides and the champagne.
"I believe ti.ese first six months o( 1981 w ill m ark the
beginning of a new renaissance in Am erica," he said.

Casey Survives Senate Probe
W ASHINGTON lU P I ) - CIA Director W illiam
Casey, the first m ember of the Reagan administration
lo be the target of a congressional investigation, ap­
parently has survived unscathed.
The Senate Intelligence Committee Wednesday
ended a day of questioning Casey under oath by
unanimously concluding it found no basis for deter­
mining he Is "unfit to serve.”
Committee Chairm an Harry Goldwatrr, R -Anr.,
who last week said Casey should resign, told reporters
the panel still w ill "chase down some loose ends"
before completing its investigation, probably within a
few weeks.
Goldwaier refused to answer questions.
Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-N.V., the panel's vice
chairman, said there were no matters involving Casey
"which would remotely suggest referral to the Justice
Department."

WORLD
IN BRIEF
/t's Honeymoon T/me For

The Prince And Princess
R O M S K Y , Kngland ( U l’ l l — Newlyweds I’rinct?
d ia rie s and Diana, Princess ol Wales, carried echoes
ot the tumult and multttudrs ot their splendor-lilted
marriage into the solitude and stillness ol un idyllic
honeymoon hideaway today.
There were indications Char le i and Disna spent part
of their first m arried evening watching television
rrp in y s o f their "wedding of the century," They left
T V -schedule maga tines behind in the train which
brought them the 90 m iles from t/mdon to Hornsey.
d ia rie s and Diana were wed Wednesday am id
spectacle and pageantry that had nearly I m illion flagwaving people cheering themselves hoarse. N early 1
billion others w atched or heard the ceremonies around
Ihe world.

Earthquake Death Toll High
A N K A R A , Turkey (I l l ’ l l — Search parties
recovered the bodies ol more than BOO people Irom
Iran's second devastating earthquake In seven weeks
and officials said the death toll could clim b lo 5,000.
Tehran Radio said Wednesday 900 injured people
were treated in Held clinics manned by medical teams
Down into the stricken region HO m iles southeast ol
Tehran,
Pa rs news agency today said the bodies of 636 people
were dug out of the rubble of towns and villages flattened by the earthquake in mountainous Kerm an
province. The o fficia l news agency said &lt;0 people were
killed and 400 injured in the provincial capital.

WEATHER
N A T IO N A l. R E P O R T : Showers and thunderstorms pushed
through the South today ahead of a slow-moving cold front,
Tornadoes were sighted in Trxas, Alabama and South
Carolina. A cold front stretched from New Hampshire to the
Texas Panhandle and sparked showers in New England and
the lower Great ta k e s region, dropping morning temperatures
Wednesday to record lows in four Midwestern cities. Rem ­
nants of earlier thunderstorms in the Southeast lingered in the
lower M ississippi V alley Wednesday. Heavy rains also fell In
southeastern A riio n a and a Hash-flood watch was issued (or
the region. Temperatures dipped Into the (Os Wednesday in
Milwaukee; Burlington, Iowa and Moline, 111., and dropped to
a record low 51 in Chicago.
A R E A R E A D IN G : |1 a.m .i; temperature: 79; overnight
low: 75; Wednesday 's high: 97; barometric pressure: 30.03 A
rising; relative hum idity: 90 percent; winds: south west at 6
mph.
F R ID A Y 'S TID ES: D A Y T O N A BEACH ; highs. 9:04 a m ,
9:I| p m .; lows, 2:41 a m , 2:49 p m ; PORT C A N A V E R A L :
highs, 8:56 a m , 9.23 p m ; lows, 2:33 a m ., 2:17 p.m.;
HAY PORT: hlgtu, 3.02 a m , 2:00 p.m,; lows. 8 20 a m , 950
p in .
BOATING F O R E C A S T : S t Augustine to Jupiter In le t Out
M Stiles: Winds variable mostly southwest around 10 knots
through Friday. Seas 3 feet or less but winds and seas higher
near scattered afternoon and evening thunderstorms.
A R E A FO R EC A S T: P a rtly cloudy through Friday. A good
chance of afternoon and evening Ihundrrstonns. Highs in the
low to mid Ms. Lows in the m id 70a. Wind south lo southwest 10
mph but stranger and gusty near thunderstorms. Rain
irobabilily 50 percent during the afternoon and evening hours.

Eivnitij; llcniltl

&lt;uusw»*•»

Thursday, Ju ly 30. t N I - V q i TX No 293
Swtlaiws D u ll M SvitSti, i m p later*** Sr The tenter*
Mtr*l«. M&lt; . M N Frt*&lt;S *&lt;• . tenter*. Fit HIM
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Han* Otii.tr*

Wteak. II M . Mams. H U : I Mantel. I M N i

te n , m i at. a r Mail
I N N ; vtar. M l M

w#t« t i l l : Mans, n i l : a Mantst.

Police Told To Keep Eye On Offender
By B R IT T SM ITH
H rra id S tall W ritrr
Seminole Circuit Judge Kenneth li- lilc r , disturbed by his
own legal inability In keep an unretiabilitated sex offender
locked up, has Instructed area law enforcement officers to
keep an eye on the man.
In a letter to all police agencies in Seminole and Orange
counties, le ffle r urged that 26-year-old Jeffrey Kossick.ol 1112
Ocelot T ra il, Winter Springs, be kept under close sur­
veillance."
Ijd lle r said he took the somewhat uncommon step of writing
the letter because " I think (he public should be made aware
that this man is w alking among them. They need to be
protected."
I e id e r sentenced K ossick to 15 years probation Monday,
noting dial had he given him the maximum 15 years im ­
prisonment allowed by law , Kossick would have been eligible
for unsupervised parole alm ost immediately because he has
spent the past 22 months in Ihe North Florida Evaluation and
Treatment Center in G ainesville undergoing psychiatric
therapy.
B y putting him on probation, lad de r said Kossick would at
least be under some state control.
Kossick was accused of breaking into a Winter Springs home
on A pril 14, 1978 and attempting to undress a 15-year-old g irl
who escaped Ihrough a bedroom window. According to court
records, Kossick later made a series of obscene telephone calls
to the g irl’s mother.
In his letter, I a id e r noted that Kossick, who was scheduled
to be released from the county ja il today, has been diagnosed
as a "m entally disoriented sex offender , . . and treated
without apparent benefit. According to the hospital reprot, his
propensity for recom m itting sex offenses is extremely high
and he is considered a manifest danger to others."

B U R G L A R , T H IEF, ESCAPIST S E N T E N C E D

Action Reports

An 18-year-old Or land* man was sentenced In Semimile
Circuit Court Wednesday to five years in prison and 20 years
probation a lte r pleading guilty lo charges ol grand theft,
burglary and attempted escape.

* Fires
* Courts
* Police
T E E N A G E R IN D IC T ED F O R M U R D E R T R Y
A 15-year-old Orlando boy w ill be tried as an adult in
Seminole Circuit Court for the attempted m urder of an
Altamonte Springs woman last month.
Charles flnrnell Thomas, of 10109 Barbuda Way, was in­
dicted by the Seminole County G rand Ju ry Tuesday and was
arrested at his home Wednesday. He was being held in the
county Jail this morning without bond on charges of burglary'
and attempted first degree murder.
If convicted, the Buffalo. N .Y. native could receive up to life
imprisonment.
Thom as Is accused of breaking into the home of Marie
M ille r, 10102 Durango Way, on June 27 and putting a pillow
over her face in an attempt to suffocate her.
N o tria l date has been set in the case.
NURSING H O M E F I R E P R O B E D
Sanford fire investigators are looking into a fire which broke
out at the Sanford Nursing &amp; Convalescent Center, 950
M ellonville Ave., around 4:20 p.m. Wednesday.
Investigators said Ihe lire started in a bed in a room oc­
cupied by Iwo65-year-oid women who were away at the time ot
the blare. The flames were confined to the one room.

Tracy A la n Hansen was aroused ol the Jan. 2 theft of gurp,
jewelry, and cash from Steve and Jane G regory. He also ulimitted to breaking into a Coventry D riv e home south hi
Casselberry two weeks later, and attempting to escape (ruin
the Seminole County Ja il with U r n other prisoners on Feb. »
In other court action, a 35-year-otd O rlando man was sen­
tenced to two years in prison after pleading guilty to a charge
of obtaining property with a worthless check.
In addition to the Jail term. John T. B ulled
to pay *500 to his public defender and
prosecuting the case. Bulled was aroused of
check a l the Sun Bank of Pine H ills without
funds in his account to cover the check.

D avid M arsh a ll Gibson, 23, of Winter P a rk , faces up to jo
years im prisonm ent after being convicted of burglary amt
grand theft in connection with the A p ril 28 theft of a slerg-i
from the home of Pam Fleishman. 532 Eldorado Wa&gt;,
Casselberry.
Also, Joseph Thomas H ill, 52, of 630 G ra n t S t„ Longwonl,
pleaded guilty to grand theft auto, and was placed on liye
years probation. H ill was aroused of breaking into Bobby
C la rk's Used Cars, 425 Lake S t„ longwood, on Nov, 25 afc-J
stealing two cars. Ttie vehicles were recovered tn Alabama
lour days later.

Land Wanted For New Crime Lab
It) DONNA ESTES
Herald Stuff W riter
T h r F lo rid a D e p a rtm e n t of Law
Enforcement Is actively seeking a site on
which lo locate its new Central Florida
Regional Crime lab oratory.
The new crim e laboratory would
replace a facility located at the Sanford
Airport, which lias been used since the
early 1970s
During the past week, 65 letters were
sent to Central Florida governing bodies
and law enf.ecenient units asking for
help tn finding a site. The present
laboratory has outgrown its facilities.
The Florida legislature tn its 1991
session allocated 1240,000 for land
acquisition and architectural planning
lor a 31,000 square foot facility.
B ill W illis, analyst-supervisor at thr
Sanford facility, said today a committee
composed of himself, Claude L Trubey,
another analyst-supervisor at the lab. a
representative of slate General Services
and a rep resentative lo r F lo rid a
Departm ent of Law E n fo rce m e n t
i F D L E t Chief James W. Y o rk w ill begin
the site selection process a lte r Aug. 31.

He said the site should be a minimum
ol 2,5 acres, be easily accessible and be
centrally located som ew ltrrc between
Del-and and Kissim m ee. The counties
which are preferred for the new
laboratory site are: Seminole, Orange,
la k e , Volusia, Osceola und Brevard,
W illis said
The Central F lo rid a C rim e la b was
established in the e arly 1970s through the
efforts of Seminole Sheriff John Polk
with cooperation from other area lawenforcement agencies. It was a federallyfunded, mull I-county laboratory at first
and became part ot the Flo rid a Depart­
ment ol la w Enforcem ent ( F D L E l in
July, 1975
There are currently 38 persons em­
ployed at Ihe laboratory, W illis said. Two
positions are vacant and within the next
lew months, the laboratory w ill be em­
ploying six additional workers in an
effort lo speed up the tab work, W illis
said.
labeling the present lab overcrowded,
W illis said II has "w all-to-w all equipment
and people now."
The s ta ll c o n s is ts of four lab

P IU H O II H EN D E R SO N SR.
Plwiroh Henderson Sr,, 86,
of 39 Roland H ayes S t.,
Apopka, died Monday. Born in
Madison, he moved to Sanford
from t-ady la k e tn 1944. He
was a farm hand and a
m em ber of M l. M o ria h
P rim itiv e B aptist C h u rc h ,
Sanford.
Survivors are a sun, Phuroh
H enderson J r „ A pop ka ;
sister, Mrs. Cora G lover,
W eirsdale; b rolh e r, Zcke
Sparrow. Ocala; four grand­
ch ild re n and one g r e a t­
grandchild.
M arvin C. Sanders Funeral
Home, Apopka, is in charge of
arrangements.

M B A P A U L IN E T U C K E R
M rs Pauline E Tucker, 61,
ol 2416 S. Elm Ave., Sanford,
died at her residence. Born in
Gaffney, S. C., she had lived
tn Sard rod fro the past eight
y ra ri. She was a Methodist.
Site is survived by two sons,
Robert
W., of
U p p er
Marlboro, Md. and Julian,
G re e n b e li,
M d.;
one
daughter, Miss Gad Ram sey,
la k e Mary; two sisters, M rs.
Mildred DeBtnder, C lin t o n ,
Md. and Mrs. Sue Ham ilton,
Waynesboro, Vs.
Brisson Funeral Home Is tn
charge of arrangements.

V IR G IL I. C L A R K
Virgd L . Clark, 66, of 681 N.
W inter
P a rk
D riv e .
Casselberry, died Wednesday
at Orlando Hegional M edical
Center. Born tn Michigan, he
moved to Casselberry from
there in 1963. He was a pur­
chasing agent with Am erican
Machinery and a member ol
St.
Augustine
C a th o lic
Church.
Survivors include his w ile ,
E lv a ; sisters, M rs. L e ila
Whcrett, Weidman, Mich, and
M rs. L u c ille S h a k e llo rd ,
G ra n d Junction, C a lif . ;
brothers, Donald, Weidman,
Harold, Plymouth, Mich., and
Herbert, Wisconsin.
Baldwin-Falrchild Funeral

O AKIAW N
M ONUM ENT CO
R l 4. B o i 244. Sanford
I’ O 112 424)
R All Type* Mo«vmrl»l*

DON'T G A M B LE

technicians, who w ork with evidence and
help the analysts, (or four clerical per­
sons and four su p e rviso rs. The
remainder of the personnel are analysis.
I.asl year, 5,968 crim in a l cases were
processed at the crim e lab. Although
there are lo u r other F D L E crime labs in
the state — at Tampa, Jacksonville,
Tallahassee and Pensacola — the San­
ford lab !k&lt;cs a higher volume of work
than any of the others, W .ilis said.
W illis said the site should be a! least 2.5
acres to give sulficient space for a new
sin g le -le v e l b u ild in g , and adequate
parking area, an outside examining area
and trees and shrubs lo shield the
laboratory from public view.
'•We would rather the property were
donated to us," W iliis said, since that
would leave additional money for ar­
chitectural design. He added, however,
that the F D I £ is prepared to either buy
or lease a site.
W illis said it is hoped that the
acquisition of a site and the architect's
plans can be completed In lime to seek
funding from the le g is la tu re tn 1962 lor
construction.

AREA DEATHS

with y o u r in s u ra n c e !
— CALL —

j 1

TO N Y RUSSI
IN S U R A N C E

It.
I

3 2 2 -0 2 8 5

LO W CO ST AUTO IN S U R A N C E

Moonlight
Sale!
we are having our spectacular M oonlight Sale
starting Friday. 4:00 until 10:00 p m. I
Watch tomorrow's paper lor our M oonlight Sale
advertisement then come shop F rid a y , 4:00
until 10 p.m. for even more unedvertlsed
specials throughout the storel

JCPenney

charge

of

Mwy 17-92 4 Slate Bd

M O R E TH AN

Hospital-Altamonte. Born in
Barbour County, Ala., he
came to Central Florida more
than 60 years ago.
U r moved to Altamonte
Springs from Goldcnrod in
1976. He was a citrus grower,
member ol Sanlando United
M ethod ist
Church,
lif e
member of the American
le gion Post 112, Winter P a rk
and was a World War I
veteran.
He is survived by his wife,
M a ry , Altam onte S p rin g s,
sons, Norman C. Floyd Sr.,
Altamonte Springs and James
I). Floyd, Bushnetl; brother,
L a m a r Flo y d . Houston,
Texas; live grandchildren;
lour great-grandchildren.
Senior an Funeral Home,
Altam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.

T IR E S T O R E

F u n e ra l Notice*
M L N D C H SON

FKE1) FLOYD
Fred M Floyd, 17, ol 605
L itt le
Wektva
Hoad,
Altam onte Springs, died
W ednesday
it
F lo rid a

MR

J

SAN FO RD
S AN FO RD P LA ZA

T ir e s t o n e

Hom e is in
arrangements.

was also orderM
the *62 cost If
cashing a *109.19
having sufficient

PM AM OM

S» - F untf t f f v k n tor Mr
Ph«ro* Mpndfr*on S r , Si of ] f
Roland M a y * St . Apopka. *90
d4#&lt;j M o n d iy *&gt;lt be i t I p m .
S a tu rd a y
at M»
M o ra n
P r im . liv e
R a p titt Church,
Locust ar&gt;o lllh . Sanford, * ,ih
the R rv M Smith. palter, of

t a ilin g Body *.ll | « t(*ft
«»tuf (jAy irom to a m to (untrii
tim e
B u n a ) m R e illa w n
Cemetery M a r y * C Zander*
F u n e ra l Mom*. Apopka, m
ch*rg*
r iO V O . MR
FRED M —
Funeral services tor Mr Fred
M F loyd IT ot tOS l ‘tfi« A rktva
Road. Altamonte Springs, who
deed Wednesday, m il be at 10 30
a m S a tu rd a y , at S tm oran
Fun eral Nom e Chapel. * tn in*
Rev Jam es Ulm er ot Sanlando
United Methodi-tt Church of
flo a tin g B urial id Glen Haven
M em o rial Pa rk. Winter p a r i
ViStHng hours 1 4 and I f p.m1,,
F rid a y Sempran Funeral Nome,
Altam onte Springs, in charge

T h e U tility 2 0 ”
s e lf- p r o p e lle d m o d e l
• S q u e e ze and g o c o n tro l
• U p to

T U C K E R . MRS. PA U LIN E E. F u n e ra l s e rv ic e s tar M rs
Pauline E Tucker. 41. ot }4U S
E lm A ve . Sanlord, who d-ed at
her residence, w ill h# at I 30
p m today at Brissan Funeral
Mom* w ith the Her, Tammy
'Stow* 0M1'iftailing B u ria l in
M a ryla n d
Viewing I t p.m
today Hr isson Funeral Home it
In charge

30%

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• Q u ie t, under-the d e c k m uffle r
e Ea s y , fingertip starts
e Solid-slate ig n itio n
e Q u ic k adjust w h p e ls
a

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available

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�FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
Polk County Jail Escapees
Continue To Elude Officers
B A R T O W , Kla. i U I'I i — An accused trip le m urderer
and a convicted m ultiple offender continued to elude
law enforcement officers today as investigators sought
to determ ine how they obtained a saw to cut their way
to freedom Tuesday night.
Paul Beasley Johnson, 31, of Eagle L ik e , and
M ich ae l Ernest Haagar, 17, of Tnmpa, were
discovered missing from the Polk County Jail during a
bed check Tuesday night.
Johnson was scheduled to go or. trial Sept 8 for the
Ja n u a ry m urders of la k e Wales • -&gt;b driver W illia m It.
E vans, St, D arre ll Hay Beasley, 21, of la k e la n d , and
Polk County deputy Themn Burnham. 77, of Winter
Haven.
lla a g e r was scheduled to go on trial Aug. 31 on bank
robbery charges stemming from a theft in la k e la n d
last October.
* Lt. J.J. M ille r warned Wednesday that Johnson
should be considered "extremely dangerous."
“ H e 's in on triple murder now, so what does he have
to lo se ?" M ille r said.

Boy, 6, Still Missing
H O U .Y W O O D , Kla i U P Il - The search for Adam
Walsh, the 6-year-old son of a Bahamas hotel executive
who vanished from a shopping mall, entered Us fourth
day today.
P o lic e reported little progress in tracking down the
youngster.
"W e ’ ve had no ransom calls or anything of that
nature. We really don't know what happened to him ,"
police spokesman Kred Barbetla said today.
A dam was last seen Monday while playing with toys
in a departm ent store at Hollywood M a ll while his
m other shopped (nr lamps just lour aisles away.
P o lice and volunteers combed die area around the
Hollyw ood shopping mail Wednesday and searched
canals and waterways lor the blond, harcl-eyed boy his
parents called "shy and sheltered."
A d a m ’s lather, John Walsh, vice president oi a
Nassau hotel corporation, has offered a 33,000 reward
for inform ation leading t» Adam's safe return.
" H e 's got to be so scared He’s such a great little boy
and so sheltered by us." Walsh said "Y o u I new s i
people are one of our last hopes. We need him back."

Evening Herald. Sanford. FI,

By House Demos

Social Security Cuts Fight Planned
WASHINGTON ( U P I l - Another
Social Security fight is building in
the House, where some Democrats
are plotting a potential attack on the
administration's plan to end the
minimum benefit received by 3
million Am ericans,

promise which would cut n u re than
$3S billion from fiscal 1982 spending,
including ihe m inim um monthly
Social Security payment.
Democrats on the House Rules
Com m ittee d iscu sse d w ays to

revised budget before It reaches the
House floor, could cither hold up the
entire measure or allow an amend­
ment to k ill the Social Security
cutback.
B ep ublicati and D e m o cra tic
leaders of both houses have said
they would try to soften the Impact
of the cut after Congress returns
from its August recess,
But Rep. Claude Pepper, D-FLa . a
member o( the Rules Committee,
said, "Many of us who feel so
strongly about ft are going to do
everything we can to get a vote
before we leave here,"

reverse the controversial provision,
which terminates the 3122 payment
next March, staff sources said.
The panel, the final slop fur die

Discussions of ways of salvaging
the Social Security m inim um were
being spearheaded by committee
Chairman R ich ard Bolling, D-Mo.,

Strategy was mapped out Wed­
nesday, even as House and Senate
conferees signed a budget com­

sources said.
If it is not sidetracked in a rules
battle, the budget b ill is expected to
receive final approval by both
houses F rid a y or Saturday.
Senate
Budget
Com m ittee
Chairman Pete D om enicl, R-N.M.,
called it the "sin g le most heroic
effort at controlling federal spen­
ding in Cite nation's h istory."
" T h is is c le a r ly the most
m onum ental and h is to r ic tur­
naround in fiscal policy in this
c o u n try ," s a id H ouse Budget
Committee Chairm an Jam es Jones,
IMIkla., at a ceremony where the
final agreement was signed.
They said Ihc reduction, still
subject In o fficial tallying, would

Inmate Indicted In M urder;
Fort Confession Not Believed
L A K E B U T L E R , F la . I U P I l - Union
Correctional Institution inmate Thom ai Craig
was indicted Wednesday for first-degree
murder in the bludgeoning death of Vertis
Graham and a state attorney said the grand
jury did not believe the "confession" of former
UC1 inmate Johnny Fort
Craig, serving 15 years for armed robbery,
was in a bed next to G ra lia m on Ihe night of
Dec. 7, 1979, when the v ictim 's skull was
crushed. State Attorney Eugene Whitworth
declined to answer questions about possible
motives.
Fort, a burly, 300-pound convicted mur­
derer, told two state representatives. Arnett
Girardeau and Andy Johnson, both democrat*
from Jacksonville, in June 1980 that he
clubbed G raham to death on orders ol a
lieutenant He said he w as "an enforcer" for
prison ufftnals and gut his pick of homosexual
partners in exchange.
Then in January, Fo rt repeated the same
story on nationwide television when he was

trim Social Security outlays by
between 335 billion and 336 billion.

But Heagan did not get requested
termination of program s such as the

T V b ill is a com prom ise between
House and Senate versions passed
Iasi month and was worked out by
subcommittees of an unprecedented
30-member conference committee.

E c o n o m ic
D e v e lo p m e n t
Adm inistration or the Appalachian
Iteginnaj Com m ission, which sur­
vived at m uch lower spending
levels. T h e N a tio n a l Consum er
Cooperative Bank also survived,
despite the adm inistration's plan to
k ill it.

It contains reductions in virtually
every area of dom estic spending and
legislative changes that w ill reshape
hundreds of federal programs.
It w ill bring the drastic rollback
President H ea ga n w anted in
programs like food stamps, which
were cut by 31.6 billion; child
nutrition, cut 31.5 billion; public
service
Jobs,
w h ic h
were
eliminated; and health programs,
rut 25 percent

It ’s f a l l ^

interviewed by Dan Bather on CBS' 60
Minutes,
But Whitworth, of Gainesville, legal adviser
to the Union County grand jury, said Fort was
trying to get him self transferred out of the
slate penal system to a federal institution,
and succeeded when Girardeau went to
federal authorities with Fort's story instead
of to him.
W hile F'orl said he roughed up troublem aking prisoners for prison olfld als, Whit­
worth said, "Johnny Fort is an enforcer for
him self and other inmates — not correctional
olficers. He us a leader because he is the
biggest. He is a nice guy to visit, but 1 wouldn't
want to live with him ."
He said Fort ran a protection racket ami
loan-shark operation al UCI, and added, "We
have information to believe his life Is in danger
from other inm ates."
Hegarding Girardeau's refusal to testify
before the grand jury Monday — he spent 22
hours in ja il for contempt, Whitworth said

C A P E C A N A V E R A L , Fla. lU I’ l l - Problem s with
the space shuttle's ‘ bionic arm " cargo crane have
been corrected and the Columbia is on schedule to lilt
off on ils second mission next fall, space agency of­
ficia ls said Wednesday.
T h irty hours of tests on Hie shuttle were completed
Wednesday. The rehearsal ran 10 hours longer than
expected because of problems with Die crane, a "bionic
a rm " designed to handle cargo in space.

Semmolt M em o rial Hospital
Jury Jt
A D M IS S IO N S

SANFORD

Head off th o se h ig h ^
w inter fu e l bills.
Your attic's just w a itin g to sa v e you
m onoy in fuel co sts. In su late It with
O w e n s-C o m in g F ib e rg la s Insulation
and watch thoso e n e rg y b ills co m e
down. It's easy. T a k e s le ss than a day
to insulate m ost a ttics.
4x13" 313.44
4x)3" 330 41
P rlc .J Good Thru Aug J l

Build on y o u r
hom e d ive stm e n t
Remodel now.

F ra n * C

TKomai s Conley. Dalton#
t LfvMrd C M il tin., Deltona
Tra tty A OJaon. Geneva
Hen* J Palfffton . L a k e M ary
Clara M Greene, Or am i* City

Du*ftt A Bufli
Ni«id« J D# fluvA
WAlltf E Stffmyf
04* Hj A StOOIII

Hifftryn A i'mit'n* Orange City
BIRTHS

W '.gM , A p o p * 4

EllflNf L. Condff. O fltM W

E d u c a tio n p ro g ra m s, guarded
closely by v e te ra n Hep C a rl
P e rk in s , D -K y ,, a lso w ere not
changed as d rastica lly as Heagan
wanted. The large T itle I program
that
se rv e s
disad vantag ed
elementary and secondary school
students, received 33 48 billion —
niore than this yea r's cut-back level
id 33.1 billion.

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home improvement
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HOSPITAL NOTES

Shuttle Passes Tests

Thursday. July 30. 1411— 3A

Frink A Joveprv.rsr J Mor
mantio a baby bey, D enary

d is c h a r g e s

S A N FO R D
Bobby Lee Brinson

Willi# Nmi Jones
Jerome Washington
Maureen T Wharton, D r B ir y
Jean M Latov*, De-Mona
Irene Nm. Otto Dttiona
V iv ia n M Taytor. Deltona
Tommy L Coot. Orange C«ty
Snaron C Ltfttt, Osteen

o w rm

Ph.33 3 0100
S00 S. M A P L E A V E .
SANFO RD

c o r n iMo

FIBERGLAS

O PE N MON. THRU FRI 3:39 4, SAT. 7:39 4

N ow that we're part of Southeast Bank,
som e things are going to change

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FOR NOME DHIVfftr CA U 322-26)1

&lt;

�y

Evening Herald
iu s p s

I've been wondering whal people talked about
before inflation climbed right through the
ceiling.
What kep i people from buying house* when the
interest rate wa* hovering around t percent?
Everyw here you go these days, somebody
wants lo talk about Inflation, interest rates, o r
gasoline prices.
For a long lim e, I didn't know what they were
talking about. I thought Inflation was w hat lotks
d id to automobile tires.
But nowadays, most (oiks think inflation is
m eaner than a heart attack.
Not everybody suffers from a heart attack.
But inflation strikes at E V E R Y O N E .
But there Is also some good in mflaUon.
At least It's good lor those fortunate souls who
tiad money to Invest back when the economy
w asn't lower tlian a snake's belly in a wagon rut.
It*s just a shame I’m not one of them.
T hat's not so bad, reaDy. M y neighbors —
George and 1-aurie Carpenter and their two kids.
C h ris and David - are not onlv NOT such ocoolc.

*»i ; m

300 N. F R E N C H A V E ., SA N FO R D , F U . J2771
Area Code 30M22-2611 or 831-9993
T h u rs d a y , J u ly M , 1981— 4A
W a tne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, II 00, Month, H S ;iM o n th s , 124.00;
Year. 14300 Ry M ail: Week. 11.23; Month. 13.23; S Months,
$30 00; Year. $57.00.

The Tragedy
Of Cambodia
A world lha! fails to respond lo acts of in­
ternational a g re ssio n only invites more of the
same Thus, the recent United Nations conference
on Camlxidia was not without significance.
The conference, host to delegates from 91
nations, unanimously endorsed a resolution
calling on Hanoi to withdraw its 200,000 troops
from Cambodia. The resolution further proposed
that Cambodians be permitted to determine their
own political future via internationally supervised
free elections.
The catch, of course, is that U.N. resolutions
won't pry the Vietnamese out of Cambodia, As
Though lo underscore the point, Vietnam and its
chief military backer, the Soviet Union, boycotted
the conference.
•
And Vietnam's U.N, ambassador lived up to the
Kremlin's unsurpassed standards of cynicism by
labeling the conference interference in the in­
ternal affairs of the iCambodiam people."
That, femember, comes from (he represen­
tative of a nation that invaded Cambodia, denied
starving Cambodians food aid from the West, and
installed a puppet regime wholly controlled from
Hanoi',
The fact that the Vietnamese also toppled the
barbarous Pol Pol government cannot begin to
justify the Vietnamese arm y’s continued oc­
cupation of Cambodia ltd months later.
What com plicates the seemingly endless
Cambodian tragedy for the United States and its
non Communist allies in Southeast Asia is that
roughly three-quarters o( the guerrillas still
fighting the Vietnamese are under the command
of the genocidnl Pol Pot.
So, even assuming that the Vietnamese could be*
forced out of Cambodia, it w ould still Ih? necessary
to prevent Pol Pot's Khmer Kouges from once
again smitty} power.
The United Nations plan represents the Ideal
solution in that it would remove the Vietnamese
and permit a free election in which Cambodians
would unquestionably reject Pol Pot as well. A
C N peacekeeping force could, If necessary,
provide interim security while the new govern­
ment established its rightlui authority.
But if Hanoi continues to veto the United
Nations peace formula, as appears likely, the
United Stales. Japan and their non-Communlat
allies in Southeast Asia should certainty sec that
the guerrillas who oppose Isith Pol Pot and the
Vietnamese receive all the weapons they need

Check's In The Mail
Tentative agreement on a contract (or the vast
majority of the nation's postal workers comes as a
great relief.
The $4.8 billion cost is n whopping hill tor the
taxpayer, hut the U S. Postal Service says it can
bundle it
with a 20 cent stamp.
The settlement prevented a walkout by &lt;100,000
(Mislal employees - an illegal action that would
have been disastrous.
One has only to look to Canada, where mail
deliveries were halted for weeks, to see what
havoc can be created. Business there is up
against the wall The old gag, The check's in the
mail." ceases to be humorous when payrolls can’t
I h- met and retirement checks don't arrive.
Without assessing the merit of wage und benefit
demands by postal workers, the bad news is that
postage is hound to increase.
The good news is a tentative agreement has
been reached and there is no postal strike in the
offing for this nation.

BOB WAGMAN

The Price
Of Cost
Cutting
W ASHINGTON (N E A i — Ronald Reagan
and his administration swept into town with
w hal they believed was a clear mandate to
slash and save and deregulate an d reform.
But now they are coming up sga inst a hard
tact of bureaucratic life; Savings an d reforms
can be very expensive. In fact, live taxpayers
m ight not be able to afford those that Reagan
and his advisers are contemplating.
Here are a (rw of the many cases In which
the costs ot savings or reforms outweigh the
benefits;
The administration hat announced a cap on
the salaries of top federal bureaucrats — that
is, those who earn $30,112 a y ea r. These
employees w ill receive no raises in ihe near
luture it the administration has it s way.
The General Accounting Ottlce la y s that
d e nying ra ise s to senior g ove rn m e n t
executives w ill save the taxpayers some
money in the short term. But in the end it w ill
cost them a fortune
Ttie G A O reasons that most of the affected
w orkers would not have reached the top pay
level without having been on the federal
payroll (or some lime. Therefore, most of
them are eligible lor retirement benefits.
Moreover, the abilities and experience ol
these employees make them p rim e recruits
lo r private industry, which Is w illin g to pay
them fa r more than they are earning now.
The G A O forecast* that m any ot these
w orkers w ill retire and take well-paying Jobs
in the private sector unless they receive
substantial raises
The pension ol the average senior
bureaucrat with 30 years ol service would
total 192,821 over the next three years. He
would start to rective that pension upon his
retirem ent from the federal work torce even
If he obtained a new Job in the private sector.
Replacing the retiree with a n employee
earning 130,112 annually would cost the
taxpayers in additional tl30^M over the next
three years. So, the combined cost of the
retiree's pension and his replacem ent’s
salary would be $243,164 over three years.
The G AO estimates that the government
would actually save $48,887 per position over
three years by granting top executives a 16 8
percent raise. That is the percentage that the
agency estimates would be necessary to
m ake up ter previous wage caps and to bring
salaries back into line with those paid in the
private sector.
Then there is the administration'* promise
to reduce the federal work torce. It the ad­
m inistration is to cut the bureaucracy lo the
site It has promised while perm itting rapid
growth in the Defense Department, tens of
thousands of employees w ill have to be let go
— or, as the bureaucrats say, " K I F e d ." lor
reduction in (arce.

they don't even know any. Heck, they don't even
know anyone who knuws any.
But down on Park Avenue in Sanford, ihe
Carpenters are doing everything possible lo
Whip Inflation Now (rem em ber that?!.
They haven't given up the necessities like
eating a couple o( meats a day, using electric
lights at night, or letUng the a ir condiUoner run
every once In awhile.
Rut they are not going lo (ly lo South America
this year on vacation.
They are not going to Colorado far a tittle snow
skiing.
They do not ride by new car dealerships. In
(ad, they don't ride m uch at all.
The Carpenter fam ily has given up a lew
1usuries.Things like shews for the kids, breaklast, and other ridiculously extravagant Items
have been deleted from their lifestyle.
Even so, I'm happy to report, the Carpenter
(am ily Is doing just fine.
F iv e years ago, George told me, he sat down
and made a list of his assets and liabilities. He

SPEAK SOFTLY AND
CARRY A BlG S T IC K .

discovered that he had to die and collect his life
insurance just to pay the people he owed.
Now, five years later, in the midst of the worst
inflation in years, he repeated the chore.
George says he Is worth SO much more.
Now he can lose both legs, one arm. and an eye
and he w on't owe anybody a dime.
Speaking of inflation i how's that lo r a tran­
sition? ), lo cal cities are finding out jus! how bad
things re a lly are as they finish work on their
1981-82 budgets. It con be a very upsetting
process.
During a budget work session in Winter
Springs a couple of weeks ago, councilwoman
Maureen Boyd became a little flustered at it all
and spilled a cup o[ steaming coffee ail over her
notes and herself.
Councilman M artin Trencher rushed lo her aid
and, attem pting to bring a little levity lo the
situation, grinned at the press and quipped, "As
you ran tell, it's a hot meeting."

DON GRAFF
WE MUST B E THE
GREAT
ARSENAL OF
DEMOCRACY.

-

1 HAVE A
FOREIGN POLICY.
WE SHALL PAY
ANY PRICE,
BEAR ANY
BURDEN, MEET
ANY HARDSHIP
TO A SSU R E
THE S U C C E S S
OF L IB E R T Y .

SCIENCE WORLD

Survival Of The Fittest
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
DPI Health E ditor
NEW YO R K I UPI i — Amniocentesis took
place at only a lew m edical centers in 1969.
Now the process by which the fetus is
examined In the womb is commonplace.
That point was made by doctors at Mount
Sinai Medical Center a while back when Ihey
told about a c o n tro v e rs ia l procedure:
sacrificing a deformed fetus early in the
second trimester to assure the birth of its
normal twin.
Drs. Thomas Kerenyi and K u rt Htrschhorn
u id the procedure they used In the case now
can be performed at just a few medical
centers — "the way It w as with amniocentesis
in 1969."
But the technology und the trained hands
needed lo carry out "sele ctive birth in twin
pregnancy" — when one fetus Is deformed —
probably w ill be available at many medical
centers within 10 years, they said tn a report
to science w riters
With advances tn am niocentesis the doctors
M id the detection of fetus twins, one with an
abnormality, probably w ill be more frequent
So the option of saving the perfect one and
destroying the imperfect one w ill be outlined
to more parents-to-be during genetic coun­
seling.

Figures Irom the Office of Personnel
Management show that RIFing is not cheap.
A R IFed worker is eligible for severance pay,
allowances, lum psum payments for unused
vacation time and so on.

That will open more debate un the bioethics
front, the Mount 5inai doctors allow. But they
em phaiiie that in geneUc counseling — which
is what happened before permission was
given lor the selecUve destruction of s
deformed fetus so a norma) one could be bom
— the mother Is given the tacta.
And then she and-or the fam ily makes the
decision.

The worker gets one week of p a y lor each o(
his first 10 years on the job, two weeks of pay
for each of his next 10 y e a n and three w eeki
of pay for each year thereafter. The firings
planned fie this summer alone could cost the
taxpayers $300 million.

Genetic counseling was described by
Htrschhorn as a "m eans of communlcaUon."
During the prenatal counseling he said the
mother is told:
—The diagnosis ot a disease that places L'e
fetus at risk tor abnorm alities.

—The course ol llia t disease.
—The mode ot inheritance.
—Various options, including the risks and
benefits ot each option.
The woman and doctors meet several times
rather than )ust once to be sure she's got all
the tacts, Htrschhorn u id .
He said counseling Is "nondirective" —
doesn't lean one way or the other.
"G iven the information, the fam ily makes
the choice." he la id . "The role of the genetic
counselor a lte r that is to support the family's
decision and aee that It ts carried out."
The Mount Sinai doctors talked about the
case Ln conjunction with publication of their
report In the New England Journal ot
Medicine.
They used ultrasound, sonograms, and
other sophisticated technology before ac­
complishing their mission — puncturing the
heart o l the deformed fetus with a hollow
needle and draw ing out about hall its blood.
Soon no heartbeats could be picked up Irom
that fetus.
But the beats from the luiy heart of its
normal twin continued strong. Four months
later, one norm al baby boy was bom. What
remained of the destroyed Ictus — flat,
paperlikr dead tissue — was expelled i t the
same time.
Dr. Arthur Aufses, le n io r vice president for
medical a ffairs at Mount Sinai talked about
the medical center's decision lo carry out the
procedure that destroyed the deformed fetus
tour months before birth.
"The view was that this procedure would be
done to save a life - the life ol ihe normal
fetus." The mother, the doctors reported, was
40, childless and wanted to abert the twin
pregnancy when she learned one would have
Down's Syndrome — be mentally retarded
The doctors u i d the woman selected the
Mount Sinai doctors from a list given her by
doctors at another medical center alter
amniocentesis there showed one fetus was not
normal.

Making It
Clear In
El Salvador
"...only a genuinely pluralistic approach
can enable a profoundly divided society to
liv e with Itself without violent convulsions,
gradually overcoming its differences."
Wise words, especially for our times. They
can be applied with equally urgent appropriateness to many societies around a
troubled world — Britain with Its riot-torn
cities, Poland, Spam, Northern Ireland, Iran,
the entire M idravt for that matter.
A s it happens, they have been applied by
Thom as O. Enders, assistant secretary of
state for inter-American affairs, specifically
to E l Salvador in a "clarification" ot U S
policy toward that Central American coun­
try 's c iv il war.
What makes them special is that the State
Department — rather, the department in its
post-January (unction as an agency ot the
Iteagan administration — is at long last
ge ttin g around to acknow ledging a p ­
p lica b ility to E l Salvador. It doesn't require
m uch ot a memory to recall a much different
reading ot that society's convulsions.
B ack in February. Secretary of State
Alexander M. Haig Jr. was defining them no;
as the product of a divided society but of “ a
well-orchestrated international Communist
cam paign..." And lo back him up, the
department was Issuing an official white
paper that has subsequently been shown to be
— to put it as gently as possible — faulty in
documentation and Interpretation.
B y M arch, the White House was deciding to
overcome differences not gradually but
m ilita rily , authorising an increase in U S .
a n u s aid and Ihe gisignment of American
advisers lo the Salvadoran armed forces.
Come Ju ly and slate suddenly discovers the
wisdom of pluralism. What happened to bring
about the change? Pardon, clarification.
Possibly in part the administration's d if­
ficulty in selling its hard Une on E l Salvador,
w ith Implications ol ever-deeper Am erican
involvement and echoes of Vietnam, to the
U.S. press and public. Possibly its failure to
get any other government of consequence, in
I .at In A m erica or Western Europe, to go
along.
And possibly a realism born of experience
In cre a se d A m erica n support of the
S a lv a d o ra n m ilita ry has not produced
progress toward overcoming differences but
has deepened them. The land-owning and
business elite, declared by Junta President
Jose Napoleon Duarte to be a greater threat
than leftist guerrillas to his government, has
been encouraged to greater resistance to
economic and social reforms.
And the killin g goes on - and w ill until the
t e r r o r is t cam p a ig n being waged by
S a lv a d o ra n se c u rity lorces ag ainst the
p o litical opposiUon and peasant papulation is
halted. Only Am erican policy and pressure
can do that.
Estim ates of the lives claimed by the
convulsions of the last two years range up ta
20,000. Salvadorans have died singly, in
groups and rometimes in wholesale lota, the
v ictim s of abduction, torture and sum m ary
execution.

JACK ANDERSON

Gold-Testing M ethods Less Than Pure
W A S IH N G T O N -W ith a m in im u m of
publicity, Treasury agents have raided coin
dealers in several U S . cities snd have lir t e d
take gold K ruggerand coins, tn Houston, (or
esam ple, the costly counterfeits were so well
minted that they even fooled jewelers.
Most ol the bogus coins were forged from
lead and painted with gold. T h e forgers
sought to capitalize on the p u b lic's covetous
interest m almost anything that glitters.
This raises a question that goes beyond
petty scams: Could big-time crim in a ls with
the right connections, tamper w ith the gold
Ingots in international com m erce'
In an earlier report, I revealed that ingots,
certified as 99.9 percent pure had been found
by a variety of a s u y e r i to contain traces o(
silver, n itrite , copper, sine, iro n and other
elements. The impurities would m ake a
difference in value ol thousands o t dollars in a
1,000-ounce gold bar.
The allegcdlv diluted ingots cam e from
E ngelhard Industries, one ot ihe giants in the
bullion business, whose spokesman la id he

was "d u ck e d " at the discovery. It this should
be at all typical ot the ingots locked in the
nation's bank vaults, the enorm ity o( the
scandal would be beyond norm al newspaper
adjectives.
"We can make m istakes tn other areas,"
M id Engelhard's vice president, Joe Feldstein, "but in this rase, we have lo be purer
than Caesar's wife."
This raises still another question: Who
oversees the purity ot the precious me t i l that
is traded on the open m arket? The disturbing
answrr is that the testing Is controlled by a
tight little cartel ot bankers and refiners.
They are loath to let the sunlight into their
boardrooms or to change their archaic
procedures, even when confronted with
evidence ot slipshod testing.
The cnly real standards m y s a o c u ^ s Indy
Badhwar and Jack M itc h e ll could discover
were strictly voluntary ones. These a rt
rstaUisned by the A m erica n Society for
TesUng and M aterials i A S T M i. which is a
stepchild of the industry.
The ASTM standard c a lls fo r drilling boles

in specified locations to test the chemistry ot
sample ingots. Spokesmen (or the society
acknow led ge th at the standards are n 't
designed to "prevent (raud ‘ but merely to
"ta d lita te com m erce." But i s ASTM insider
has told society o fficials he could produce ■
gold bar loaded with impurities which w ill
pass ihe standard.
The hole-drilling. M y critics, is an anliquated and inadequate method ot preven­
ting gold tam pering. Some espert* contend it
ta no more effective than the crude assaying
method that the Greek scientist Archimedes
discovered 2,000 y e a n ago.
He became so excited watching water
overflow at a public bathhouse, according to
legend, thal he r t n home without his clothes,
shouting " I have found III" Whal he had
found was that some materials, being more
dense than others, displace more water. He
applied the lesson o l Ihe bathhouse lo prove
that his k in g 's crown wasn't pure gold but was
flawed with alloyed surer.
F a r more than a king's crown is at stake in
today's burgeoning gold market. Yet in­

credibly, no one seems to be concerned about
the ineffective testing standards. O fficials of
the Ctanmodity Exchange, Ihe gold trading
m a rk e tp la c e , appear Indifferent tn the
possibility that the bullion they are offering
m ay be full of impurities.
And federal bureaucrats, who w ill raise a
ruckus over the site of the paper used foe
letter w riting, are not disturbed over the
industry's texting methods. Wrote an o fficia l
ot the U S . M int: "We're not in the business ot
c e r t ify in g o r rtc c g n iiin g a ssa y e rs o r
assaying techniques."
In tact, the Mint referred inquiries rig ht
ba ck to the industry -dominated ASTM . w hich
referred my reporter* to an official ol a m ajor
gold refinery. Other inquiries were * n t in
s im ila r concentric circles, without gathering
any meaningful responses.
The Caleb-22 is that the standards a re
accepted sim ply because they exist, and they
exist because they are accepted. None of the
insiders want to risk exclusion from the
charm ed circle by questioning ihe w a y i of the
elite

�Evening HeriId. Stnlord, FI

Thurtday. July 15. Bit — 5A

A m e ric a B ay Is E a ste rn G a t e w a y To So viet U nion
H&gt; K IR S T E N 0. L U N D B E R G
. A M E R IC A B A V , U S S R. lU P I t - On
lhe Soviet Union’s borders west of
Moscow and U n in g ra d , foreigners can
cross into the Soviet Union at many
points along the border. In the F a r East
there is only one route, and Am erica Bay
U It.
: Here on the coast ties the P a cific port
bf Nakhodka, nine days by train from
Moscow, two days sa il from Japan.
Ferries from Japan bring foreigners
through the eastern gateway of the Soviet
Union.
! Both the town and the bay were
thristened on the day in 1859 when the
Russian corvette A m erica, built in
Philadelphia, was caught in a storm and
chanced upon an uncharted harbor. The
bay was named after the ship. The

harbor was called Nakhodka, or ‘ 'dis­
covery."
Just 125 m iles aw ay, the port city o(
Vladivostok harbors the Soviet Pacific
Beet. But Vladivostok has been closed to
Westerners since W orld War II, except
tor the celebrated 1974 visit of former
President G erald F o rd t ic a summit with
President Leonid Breihnev.
Even Nakhodka, a town of ISO,000, is
not well known to non-Soviets. It is
usually only a transit point for those
catching the boat train, a 14-hour express
that runs along the Soviet-China birder
to Khabarovsk, where travelers can
catch the Trans-Siberian railw ay or
make plane connections.
But it foreigners’ stays are fleeting,
their influence is not. Both the business
and consumer economies reflect the

Western contacts, especially with Japan.
Young women in Western clothes
brought in by traders and sailors stroll
the m ain street, as chic as their coun­
terparts in Moscow. In a fish market,
products are chilled in niade-in-Japan
Sanyo freezers.
At a local restaurant, a young man
adding up the b ill pulled out a Japanese
c a lc u la to r. One p riv a te apartm ent
blasted a Western m usic center as well
as n reel-to-rcel tape deck.
In the harbor, heart of the city, Hitachi,
Mitsubishi, M itsui, Sanyo and other
Japanese t. ademarks are visible on most
of the loading equipm ent
Such open use of Western products Is
unusual in the Soviet Union, where an
emphasis is put on industrial selfsufficiency and Western consumer enndj

are coveted and scarce.
But Nakhodka, designated a city for
only 31 years, Is also very Soviet. It is
plagued by labor shortages common to
the F a r East and Siberia. Specific goods
also are occasionally scarce — recent
shortages included cheese, which was not
in the shops (or five weeks. Fresh fish is
virtually unavailable. By the time It
reaches the stores, it has been frozen or
canned.
The ragged village, which Nakhodka
was until 1950, is still visible under the
urban concrete. One ol the city 's major
problems, M ayor Alexei A. Tkachev
said, is that only one road, 20 m iles long,
runs through the town.
’ T h is creates real traffic problems,
you understand," he said.
population turnover t« hteh with an

There are incentives, as in many Soviet
cities with labor problems, to attract
workers. They range from relatively
attractive housing possibilities to a wage
bonus ol up to 30 percent fur those
working the docks and the boats.
Tlie setting of Nakhodka is striking,
perched astride green hills rolling into
the waters of the bay, with beaches
hidden between the cliffs along the coast.

2(19 O rla n d o

Casselberry Plans Action
Against Double Taxation

TTi«* Black Seeds Dance and Drama Group of Rochester, N.Y., under fhe
direction of James Prrkins, will appear at the Sanford Civic Center Friday at
H p.nt. This group consists of youth who are interested in drama. The
repertory performance is being sponsored by the Youth Department of
Trinity United Methodist Church. Sanford as a community service. \
freewill donation will be accepted.

Schools Reopen On Aug. 31
Seminole County public schools w ill resume
classes o fficially on Monday, Aug. 31 (or the
1961-82 school year.
The spring break next year has been
scheduled lo r A p ril 5 through A p ril 9, ac­
cording to the school adm inistrative office.
Thanksgiving school closing w ill be Nov. 2627, and Christm as break, or winter vacation,

w ill be Dec. 21 through Jan t, with classes
resuming on Monday, Jan. 4.
No other teacher days o il or teacher work
days have been firm ed up yet, since those are
negotiable Items and have not yet been agreed
upon, according to a spokesman lor the ad­
ministration.

D ie Casselberry' City Council Monday night
authorized City Attorney Kenneth McIntosh to
conduct a legal study of double taxation.
McIntosh had recommended that he be
allowed to interview legal experts on the
matter, and council authorized him to do so.
McIntosh told the council that the Interviews
could lead to the hiring of one of the experts as
an "outside consultant" on areas which the
city might cite in a lawsuit against Seminole
County.
"I think we should pursue it," said Coun­
cilm an Frank Schulte who, along with other
council members has expressed concern that
county services are denied to c ity residents
although they pay county taxes to support
them.
He has etted as examples the services
provided by the county building department,
county toning office and county engineering
office.
County Commissioner B ill Kirchholf lias
maintained, however, that residents are in
fact receiving those services.
"Anyone is welcome to come down to the
county offices, ask questions, and find out (or
themselves about the services," Kirchholf
said.
Nevertheless, the Sanford City Commission,
on recommendation Irom City Manager W .E
"P e te " Knowles, already has gone on record
as w illing to Join any ol the oilier cities In the
county In protesting 'Double taxation" in any
way necessary, including through a lawsuit.
In other action Monday night, counctlmen
unanimously voted lo authorize Mayor Owen
Sheppard to vide against a 20 percent pay

Agents Liable In Illegal Searches
A T LA N T A t U P I » - In a possibly
precedent-setting decision, a federal
judge has ruled a drug agent Is liable for
money damages because he carried out
an illegal search of a m an's luggage at
Atlanta's Hartsfield International, A ir­
port.
The fe d e ra l D ru g E n force m en t
Administration is appealing the decision,
which the D E A said is the first civil
damage case tn have gone against It.
If upheld on appeal, the decision could
make searches by airline employees
without warrants illegal. It Is already
against the law foe the D E A lo search
luggage without a w arrant but airline
personnel can do so if they believe there
is some danger to passengers or the
airplane.
U S. D is t r ic t Ju d g e R ic h a rd C.
Freeman ruled that D E A agent Gerald
Chapman violated the constitutional
rights ol Alpiiunso Sy lvester Robinson by

Police Chief
Arrested On
Drug Sale

having an airline agent open one of
Robinson's suitcases without his consent,
without a search w arrant and without a
reason to suspect Robinson was carrying
marijuana.
Agents found 22 pounds of marijuana in
the suitcase which Robinson said he did
not own but was carrying far a friend
Robinson sued the D E A f ir (1.3 million
in actual and punitive damages but a
tria l w ill be necessary to determine the
exact amount of dam ages if Freeman's
ruling is upheld.
The case arose when Robinson was
traveling Irom Fort Lauderdale, Fla., lo
l/ix Angeles with a stopover tn Atlanta. A
deputy tn Fort lau derdale asked to
search his luggage and Robinson agreed,
except for the blue suitcase which he said
he was carrying for a friend
The deputy found nothing suspicious
but alerted Chapman in Atlanta who ask­

ed Robinson on his a rriv a l about sear­
ching the bags Robinson again refused
permission lo look through the blue bag.
Chapman said a loaded gun was found
in Robinson's suitcase, and after that, he
had a Delta employee open the blue
su itc a se , d is clo s in g 22 pounds of
m a riju a n a Chapm an then arrested
Robinson.

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Raymond Vlnsik, D E A agent In charge
ol the Atlanta office, said il the ruling is
perm itled to stand, “ it w ill definitely
have an elect. If a federal Judge in lids
district says we have to do il (conduct
searches i a certain way, then we w ill
have to do it that way.”

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II .000
Authorities sakl G rau ap­
proached a woman employee
at a Deland uniform shop
about two weeks and asked
her lo peddle the drug. The
woman notilied police.

If

increase requested by P a t West, executive
director of the South Seminole ami North
Orange County Wastewater Transmission
Authority , lor the 1981-82 budget year.
Sheppard, the city's representative to the
Authority, was told to restrict West's pay
increase to an 8 percent cost o l living ad­
justment.
West is asking lor an increase in his salary
from (25,309 to (30,500, Authority members
have the final word on the budget proposal.
Acting on another agenda item, counc Ilmen
voted ugainst authorizing the city attorney to
attend meetings and hearings of the Seminole
County Commission when discussions of
raising charges for garbage disposal are to be
discussed. Instead, they authorized Mayor
Sheppard to semi a letter to the county
protesting the proposed increase.
"I think it's to our advantage tin t the city let
its objections be known," said Councilman
Schulte.
The county commission Is considering
raising its refuse disposal fee from (6.70 to (9
per ton. Casselberry does not operate Its own
garbage collection service. That service is
provided lo citizens under a franchise
agreement with a private firm . However,
councilmen have expressed fears that garbage
collection lees to city residents w ill be raised If
the county refuse disposal fee is increased.
The council also adopted a resolution
declaring F rid a y "Chief George C. Karcher
D ay." Karcher, who retires as police chief this
month, w ill be honored at an open house
luncheon from 1 to 3 p. p.m. F rid a y at d ty hall.
Karcher became police chief in June 1971
— JO H N DIXON

Robinson's c iv il suit was filed while
c rim in a l
ch arg e s
of m arijuana
possession were still pending against
him. Those counts were dismissed, howe­
ver. when another federal Judge held the
search was illegal.

PONCE IN L E T . F la . IU P II
- The police chief of this tiny
suburban comm unity south of
Day tona Beach was arrested
Tuesday night on charges of
peddling cocaine.
Ted Grau, an eight-year
veteran of the Ponce Inlet
police force and chief since
1978, was arrested at his home
by agents of the Volusia
County Narcotics Task Force.
Re was released on (5.000
bend.
Urau, who was im m ediately
suspended without pay by
Mayor Ayres Davies, is ac­
cused ol selling 11.5 gram s of
Cocaine worth an estimated

L.-C b S T /M O N EY !

There is excitement, too. Stories
prevail of tigers that stalk the hilts
throughout the M a ritim e T e r rito r y ,
claim ing occasional victims. The latest
celebrated incident occurred last year,
w hen a hungry beast carried o il a tractor
driver in a village some 60 m iles Irom
Nakhodka.
Nor do the pity planners la ck humor.
Outside town, perched atop a hilt, sits the
Good Ship Hope iNadezhdal restaurant.
With its ladder to the deck and
restaurant, art deco stained glass lam p­
shades, sloping floor ami enthusiastic
orchestra, It could be an “ in " place for
beautiful people anywhere.
"Youth Is always looking I or roman­
ce," the m ayor noted. "W hat's better
than a town by the sea that we are
building with our own hands?"

influx last year of 16,000, while 12,500 left
lor a variety ol reasons ranging Irom an
a v e rsio n
to
typhoons
to
job
dissatisfaction, Tkachev said.
But he, and the rest ol the city, seem to
take the problems in stride.
"Alter all, we are a very young city —
the average age ol our citizens is only
29," he said.

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SPORTS

»A— Evening H tr* Id, Sanford. FI.

Thuriday, July JO, if I I

Laszaic Lassoes San
,
Altamonte Nears State Bid
B ) s t o r r SMITH
H erald Sports W rllrr
. O C O E E — "W e are no longer in­
timidated by who else Is on the field,”
^understated Altam onte M ajw league
all-star M anager Gene le tte rlo Wed&gt;nesday night liere after Anthony lasza ic
lassoed Jacksonville-San Mateo on three
hits to keep Altamonte In command at
the Section 1 M ajor leag ue Tournament.
W hile la tte rio 's utterance may be
news to some, it hasn't been news to
anyone following Altamonte’s path of
ravaged 10-12 year-old Little league
teams since (lie tournament began.
' "G en e ’s M achine" lias outscored the
-o pp o sitio n. 58-3, A Letterio-coached
1 squad lias not lost this year — reeling off
34 s tr a ig h t v ic to rie s . T onlghl, the
Altamonte team becomes spectators as
Inverness, u 15-9 victor over Northwest
Escam bia Wednesday meets San Mateo
to see who must do battle with Altamonte
Friday. Both games begin at T p m
Wednesday night it was the Majors’
precocious la is z a ir that turned the trick
against San Mateo. The smooth-throwing
11-year-old spaced thrqe hits, whiffed
nine and shut out Jn s as Altamonte
moved closer to a state tournament bid at
Plant City.
The state tournament, however, is the
fu rth e st th in g from the Altam onte
players m inds attests letterlo. “ I'm
proud of tliese players because they’re
taking them une at a time,” said Gene.
“ There's not one kid talking about state.
St. Pete (S outheast Kegional) or
W illiam sport (W orld Series).”
W hile the Altamonte players were

O v ie d o 's O o u k P o w e ll f ir e d o no-

to 7-0 The ail-stars had two runners —
le tte rlo and pinch-runner Je ff McGeath
— rut down at the plate in the later in­
nings, but it failed to dun their
aggressiveness.
• Schm it chased borne his fourth run of
the game in the sixth inning after la s z a ic
singled, Steve Shaker was plunked with a
pitch and Letterlo grounded into a force
at second.

ANTHONY LASZAIC
... Hirer-hitter
taking them one victory at a time,
I Jiszalc w as taking apart San Mateo one
batter at n time. Along with fanning nine,
the cool blond walked Just one and set
down nine in a row at one stretch.
1*11 fielder Ityan I -isle gave Altamonte
all the runs necessary when he ripped n
clutch, two-out double which scored first
baseman Jm u iiy Fox and Mike Schmit.
Bruce Carlson then followed with a single
to plate IJsle for a TO Altamonte edge.
Schmit made his presence felt again
in the third inning. Tuesday's pitching
tiero with 15 strike outs, delivered a
three-run home run which scored Shane
le lt e n o and Bert Marshall, both who had
reached on singles. Schmit, plagued by
die ftu, yanked a 3-2 curve bail out of Ibe
yard
Ixdterjo's second baseman son, Shane,
d rille d a single to score la sza ic with
another ru n in the fourth to boost the lead

At
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Im l it c o u ld n ’t h a v e b e e n m o r e p o te n t th a n th e M a j o r s a t t a c k W e d n e s d a y n ig h t as
th e y h u r le d S a n M a t e o , H-0 .

Pow ell Stuns N iceville
By SAM COOK
Iterate] Sport* Editor
E U S T IS - W ednesday nigh t's
seventh inning cf the sem i-final sec­
tional tournament round game here
between Oviedo and
N ic c v llle Vulparaiso may tiave been the longrst
of p itrh rr Doug Pow ell's young life.
Oh, the game was no longer in doubt
as Oviedo held a 150 advantage with
just three outs left to eliminate
Niceville. But Powell, a stocky righthander, laid something nn his mind. It
was spelled N-O H I-T-T-E-B.
Powell had curve-balled his way
through the first six innings with ease.
In Ihe seventh, however, Powell walked
lour hillers and hit one with a pitch.
When shortstop Dave Wood went
deep in the hole lor Harold Tennanl's
ground ball, though, and nicked Ten­
nant by on eyelash with a strong throw
to first base, Powell had hts 15-1 nohitter amt more Importantly D istrict 14
Oviedo had another shot a t undefeated
FernandtM Beach.
“ He was tired that last inning,”
conceded Coach Charley Beasley about
P o w e ll's route-going e ffo rt w hich
enabled Ovirdu to save Its other two
starters—Wish] and Craig Duncan,
One of the two w ill start for Manager
Tom m y F e rg u so n 's squad ag ain st
Fernandina tonight at 7. An Oviedo win
would here a title game F rid a y mor­
ning at 9.
“ We'll be pumped up tor Thursday,”
assured Beasley. "The kids were
determined to win tunight and get
another shot at Fernandina.” The

undefeated D is tr ic t t l entry w ill
probably counter with Byron Felder
who whipped West Hernando with a
two-hitter Monday
As in an earlier victory I Monday I
over Niceville, some daring base­
running earned Oviedo a (irst-inning
run Wood readied on an error by II.
Tennant’s twin brother and shortstop,
David, stole second and continued in
third base when the throw sailed into
center field.
Ferguson then railed lor a squeere
bunt with his son, Randy, but the pitch
was way wide end Wood scored easily.
In the second inning, M ark Hofmann
walked, raced to third base on a single
by I enm H ill and scored on a nice pirce
of bawrunning when H ill was (licked oil
second base,
Tlius fortified with a 2-5 edge, Puwell
set down II straight batters between
the first and fifth inning. The closest
thing to a hit was a screaming line drive
to center by D. Tennant und a soil
grounder to Ferguson's
le lt by
Willingham on which the manager's
son made a nice play and throw,
During the stretch, Powell fanned
four hitters. He finished with six, but
walked six and benned two hitters. In
tiie seventh, Jim m y Hutchinson drew a
walk and eventually scored when Wood
threw wide slightly to Hotmann on a
Ior re out at home plate.
Oviedo blew die game open by sen­
ding 10 batters to die plate in the sixth.
H ill and Powell each contributed tworun singles to signal the end (or
Niceville.

l/ n g Inning or not, Pow ell was not too
tired to sm ile at the end. Oviedo hopes
that same sm ile w ill carry over to
Thursday evening too.

to ta ls

Oviedo
Niceville

no 0OI 7 10 1 2
000 000 1 ) 0 2

n ic e v ille

v a l p a r a i ISO

D ie d V itim . Jti
Mdrotd Tenneni. p lb
David fen n en f, %
%
Mifce Spencer, c
jt&gt;nn WillrnghAm. if
Timmy Hutcffi^or), II
P*ul Lebrun, cf
pav'd Sweeney, Tb
Terry CrAtn. fl
J jm e i Mim *. lb p

G ifp * w in n in g R B I
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R e v iv e

C o lla p s e d

The strike has forced the can­
cellation of 579 games, or 28 per cent
of (lie season, and caused the In­
definite (Kistpcsiemenl of the All-Star
Gam e. Today original!)1was reserved
as Hie rain date for the classic.
In the unlikely e vent« settlement Is
readied soon, the players would need
a reconditioning period of about two
weeks before resuming regular ploy.
A l that rate, Ihe "stretch drive"
would consist of a Unit six weeks.
Steve Garvey of |» s Angeles said lie
thought It would not be "fa ir to the
fans" to finish the 1981 season if
something doesn’t happen within a
period that would allow us to gel in 16
to 12 days practice and 100 games.”
Bobby G ric h of California said he
could be ready lo play on one week's
notice and said he thought it would be
worthwhile lo finish as little as two
weeks o! the season.
"I think any part of the season we
can salvage, it would be important to
do that," G rich said.
Owners of each league met for

the dislingtished list of swimmers
registered
A lso included in this weekend's
Sunshine State Games schedule are:
pistol shooting, clay pigeon 4in­
te rn a tio n a l
tra p )
shooting,
w eightlifting, volley ball, judo and six
d iffe re n t A ll S ta r H ig h School
Invitational Games, co-sponsored by

IS S m l* *. II H
Spurgeon Cherry Pool
W itt (id*
Park

00p m

||) O 'C m - fM Center

a

wittml High School
* Star in* rational
t» L a d , G ator .u c ia n

O f O'Connell Center

!-eid

r

00 noon
,.mm .ng P re llm m ar-et

-w » •-

-•—
- or

— --

Spencer BAlk

H» P o w e ll l O a tv Swe«*n^ j

P o w e ll H 0 P

Correction
Oviedo outfielder Jim m y Andrews
was incorrectly identified as Jim m y
W illiam s in Tuesday's Evening Herald
Andrews scored Oviedo’s Imal run in
the seventh inning and played right
field. The Herald regrets the error.

l i l l F R E N C H A V E . (17-91)

S t r ik e

about three hours at separate
locations before convening for their
joint session, where Player Belations
C o m m itte e d lra c lo r R ay Grebey
brought them up to date on
negotiations.
"T h e
m em ber clubs
asked
questions," said Ed Fitzgerald of
Milwaukee "We gave the PRC a ll (he
helpful advice we could. The con­
sensus was wc want to bring Die strike
to a conclusion and the only way that
can be achieved is by collective
bargaining. We Instructed the P R C to
ii-auine Uuii p f w r c al t ic earnest
possible tim e."
Fitzgerald's pointed reference to
collective bargaining appeared to rule
out die possibility the owners would
subm it the issue to binding ar­
bitration. M ille r has said the union, in
the Interest of resuming Ihe season,
would go to arbitration.
A s happened to the owners early
this month, the Players Association
has been plagued by voices of dissent.
M ille r, however, attributed most ol

T a lk s

the dissent to bad communication and
said be has the supprrt of the players.

PHONE

M ilter said he still plans to hold
more regional meetings — the next
one ts scheduled lor New York on
F rid a y — to inform the players about
the status of the negotiations.
M ille r also acknow ledged that
m any baseball Ians are upset by the
strike, but said the walkout should be
compared to labor disputes by service
workers.
"F a n s are im portant," he ex­
plained. "but they are not more Im­
portant than other consumers. We're
a ll
annoyed when w e 're
in ­
convenienced, but that doesn't give us
the right to dictate the terms of a
contract."

l-ake Brantley Coach Dave Tullis
has one of his monstrous lineman
competing in Saturday night's football
game. Florida State-bound offensive
lineman Danny Moss, w ill play in the 8
p.m. contest

The 6-foot-2, 245-pound Moss is a
late replacement (or Florida Gatur-lobe Scott Trim ble, who couldn't pass
the physical due to summer surgery.
A p o p ka 's K e ith M u tte rs and
D e la n d ’s Lennie Chasers w ill also
com pelt in the all-star classic which
pits the besi of the North against the
best of the South

10 10 A m

10 00 a

11 00 e m
M o
UF Florida G y m

I 00 p m
v o ilrrh e ii H gn School
A ll Star inv.iaiionei
UF O Connell Canter
Seumm.ng Fmel*
UF O'Connell Center

P it lo i Shoot-ng

Shimming PreLm-nariei

W-rJce Harm flilie 1
P,»!»l C lu h Winter Hk»*n

IIF O Connell Cen'er

II 04 noon
Shim m m g pretim m a»lo
10 S under. II It
Spurgeon C h erry Pool
W e t TS 10 *
Perk

I 00 p m.
Fool pell High School
A ll ite r m *.ietionei
UF F lorida Field
I A dm h iion *&gt;tl t&gt;* charged!

I 00 p m
M e n s B h U e tb e ll M-gn School
AO Slar in .iia lio n a i
UF O Ccnnell Center
I D e d m tiio n charge I

(h-mm-ng Smelt
Women k S a U e lM lI High
School AM tie r tn o ia r.o n e l
u s O Connell Center
111 admvkwn charge)

the F lo rid a G ovrm or't Council on
Physical Fitness and Sports and the
Florida Athletic Coaches Association.

SATURDAY, AUGUST I
I at p m

» 00 a m
V o ile ,g e lt

U F O Conne'l Center
m
C la y Pigeon I inlernalionel
Trapl Shoaling
G el or Sheet S Trap CM )

l ) la. l ) la

S ri

W eighilitting
UF O 'Connell Center

i

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321-0920

ALSO SOUTH S P R 1 N O O A R D E N A V E ,

OPEN
MON. THRU SAT.
l a m l:)0 p m.

15A DeLand

PHONE

736-8003

LIFETIME GUARANTEE

"The players got a full report of a ll
the
developm ents
In
the
n e g o tia tio n s," M ille r sa id , " w ith
particular emphasis on the last two
weeks. 1 never had any doubt about
the players’ suppert."

Brantley's Moss Heads For Annual All-Star Contest

i u. it is. Irs

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D-ive Weed, n
fttindf FerguYon, 7b
jim rr* Andrew*, rf
Terr* G im m o m . cl
O A ig Duncjn. ]b
M ai A Hofm*rws, c
Lm ny Mill, lb
E d d ie T re m b itv, lb
Doug Poe* ell. p
jim m y Mun*ey if
P o y tt Moore, if
TOTALS

Tire &amp; Muffler

N e g o t ia t o r s

ii

F e r-

c h a m p io n s h ip .

SANFORD

ju ly

a liv e .

p la y s

n a n d in a lle a c h
a t ", O v ie d o
n e e d s t w o v ic t o r ie s
fo r th e

49 Days

i M am

hopes

A8 R H Bl

Doug Wynn.\\

Mt

la io a v .

P o w e ll

ft • II t

TOTALS
SAN M A T C O

H erald Photo* t v Icon Smith

G A IN E S V IL L E Over 1,000
xw iqim ers, many who are nationally
ranked in cithe r the Junior or Senior
D ivisions, began competition Thur­
sd ay, Ju ly 30, as part ol the third
weekend of Sunshine State Games
activity. O lym pians Nancy Hogshead,
C raig Beardsley, M att Gribble, Susie
T h a y e r und Dave la u ie n are among

O coee.

a ls o d r o v e in tw o r u n s to k e e p

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w ill.

N E W Y O IIK ( U P h - Negotiators
in the 49-*lay old baseball strike, fresh
-from caucus and needing a quick
settlement to salvage the season, are
scheduled today to revive (lie talks
,lhat collapsed a week ago in
'Washington.
M a rv in M ille r, executive director of
fthe P la y e rs Association, briefed some
” 0 play ers of the progress of the talks
«t a I&gt;is Angeles meeting and later
said he would offer no new proposals
jn the session called by federal
■mediator Kenneth Moffett lor 2 p.m,
j: D T in New York.
! The ow nets, w bo held two meetings,
said they plan to seek a settlement
Vigorously but stressed they would
jieed the cooperation of the players.
' " It was a m atter o( everybody
stating what they le lt," laid 1-ee
M acPhail, president of the American
leag ue and a member of the owners'
negotiating team. "W e still have to
reach an agreement with the other
people, though, before the strike ran
end."

W ednesday

n ig h t In ih e S e c t io n a l 1 3 -y e a r-o ld

i

M U FFLERS

INSTAUM 1

9

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L

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PACKS

COMPLETE DUAL JO B S *135
H EA V Y DUTY SH O C K S |BRAKE J O B
INSTALLATION
11.00
L IF E T IM E G U A R A N T E E

5995

COMPUTER B A LA N C E

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ALIGNM ENTS
MOST CARS . . . . ............... • 1 0 , i

P a r T iro
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SAV E-SAVE-SAVE-SAVE
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4 C Y L . .*...‘ 2 8 .9 6
6 CYL. _ » 3 0 .9 5
8 C Y L mm.* 3 2 .9 5
INCLUDES POINTS, PLUGS, C O N D EN SER

30,000M ILE G UARAN TEE

RADIAL-POWER CUSTOM
PIIJ-7SR-U—J42.4I
Plf$-7JR-14—S47.07
P20S-7SR-I4—$4f,03
Pm.7JR-10-SM.ff
P20S-7SR IS—SM.73
P21S-7SR-4S-Ul.il
P21J.7SR-IJ-Hl.fi
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P IC K U P S A V A N S

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D A Y TO N
4 PLY POLY WHITEWALL
A7lx1&gt;—$24.44
B i l l 13-11)14
D7lx14—U f . 14
E 7 lll4 - U 1 . il
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MUx14—U4.M
071x11— U l . l f
H7lx1S— U4 If
L 7 lx 1 S -U 4 .fi
S ilx lS — t N .U
t U S to U U F . E . T .

�Evening Herald, Sanford FI.

Rich Plan Given Best Chance In Recreation Tourney

Thuridlr, July 70, Itll— 7A

Sanford Softball 'A ' Teams Travel To Melbourne
By SAM COOK
Ht-rald Sport* Fditor
Sanford's three class " A " softball
teams - R ich Plan. Oviedo Auto Parts
and Sunntland — take their aluminum on
the road this weekend to compete in the
Florida Recreation Softball Association
State Tournament at University F ie ld in
Melbourne.
Here's a look at F rid a y ’s schedule;
7 p.m. Oviedo Auto Parts vs. Ace
Automotive of Vcro Beach
M S p.m. Sunnlland vs. Hughes O il
Sonic* of Daytona Beach
S p m. Rich Plan vs. Daytona Beach
A 't
Aulo Parts' Manager Kenny H all said
he's never heard of the Ace Automotive
ball club, but feels Its u combination of
two or three Vero Beach teams.
"They've always Rot two or three
powerful teams in Vero Beach," said
H all. "I'm sure its some of the old Pan
Am Engineering boys."
H all feels Oviedo's chances w ill be
bleak because of injuries suffered by his
club in the past month Veteran slugger
IJoyd W all injured his wrist and had it
operated on in early July.
Oviedo pitcher Jim m y W illiam s got
into a scuffle with a teammate at
practice last week and injured his ankle.
"H e 's on crutches, so he won't be much
good to us," lamented H all " I ’d say our
chances were very, very slim. We have to
w in the first two games, liven just base hi I
the b a ll."
One pleasant happening for H a ll has

Kf

1
1 ) .\ V K l l l ' D I C K

.. \ i i l o P a r i s ' f i l t i l i e r
been Ihe return of power-futting out­
fielder R ick Grant from M ia m i Gram
w ill fill the shoes of his buddy W all in left
field. Buddy Stumpf. N eil M ille r and
Dave RiCharde complete the Aulo Parts
outfield.
Dave H udirk w ill move to the mound

for Oviedo, white M ike G allow ay. Mark
Whigham or Hall w ill catch Teddy
M iller, Bob Robinson, G len Kobtruum and
Rico Pelerson are live infield from lir s l to
third Danny Hale provides backup help
Rich Plan, who ended Oviedo's sixyear stranglehold on the city, cham­
pionship, appears to have the best chance
of the local entries. P la n has a balanced,
young team with a nice blend of power
and base hitters.
H all feels, though, that R ich Plan will
have to rely on the base hits and not the
power si they plan to go anywhere in the
tournament. "They've got some nice
power, but you're not playing at no
Pinehurst i Sanford's fie ld ),” reminded
Hall. The University F ie ld fences are 285
feet to all fields on one diamond and 215
feet down the line and ov er 300 to center
on the other one.
Rich Plan had one of the top power
hitters in the league in catcher Eddie
Jackson F irs t baseman t V n Causscnu*
had a five-home run night during the
year, while right fielder F re d Aiken anil
left (iekler Randy Brow n both clou! the
ball
Smooth-fielding B illy G riffith at second
base amt muscle-man Rod Turner at
third complete the m lleld along with
veteran hurler Burnette Washington and
solid-hitting shortstop t-evt Baines
Singles hitter B ria n Stcrutrom , who
had a great city series, and Fred
Washington are the other outfielders.
Chris Gilm ore ami Bobby Wells are the
backup lie Ip.

Bush, Serum Remedy
Twins' Losing Streak
Against Chattanooga
A Bush in the elev enth inning is worth
two in the hand.
Especially If it’s Handy Bush wlvo
cracked an estra-tnning home run
Wednesday night to lift the Orlando
Twins to a 6-5 victory in Chattanooga.
Bush's clout severed a tliree-gamc
loss skein for the O-Twins and made a
winner of Gary Serum i4-3b The for­
m er major leaguer fumed in two and

two-thirds innings of one-htl relief.
Catcher Tun lau dner crunched his
Jith burner In inch within three of the
Southern league record with Just 40
games gone in the second half. Orlando
concludes its stay at Chattanooga with
single games tonight ami F rid a y la-fore
moving on to Knoxville Saturday They
return home Aug. 5 against the
Memplus Chicks.

G A R Y S K I l l '. M
.. o n e - h it r e lie f jo lt

Sanford's third entry didn't boost the
HI-9 league-leading record that Oviedo
and Rich Plan did. but Sunntland had a
solid 17-13 m ark just the same playing
some tough competition.
One definite contribution to (lie Sunniland lineup w ill be power-hitting out­
fielder Joe Benton, who knocked Klch
Plan into a tie w ith Auto Parts during the
Last weekend of the season with two
rourd-trippers. Benton plays in Orlando
with l.iw son Auto P a rts most of the time.
Joining Benton tn the outfield will be
spray-hitter C a rl l-ce, slugger Chuck
M cM u lla n and le ft fie ld e r Tony
Dunklnson. P ln l Spake and Artie Arndt
provide solid reserves with Spake likely
in see a lot of action.
Hill Stoudenure w ill be hurling for
Sunmtand with C h ris Fra nk behind the
plate The infield from third to first in
l)on Anderson, John Whigham, Torn
Gracey and Steve F e rrell.
Tollle Fra n k c a lls Hie shots as Sun*
inland's manager.
Defending cham pion Pruitt Insurance
and
O rm o n d
B e a c h 's
Daytona
Employment figure to be the teams to
beat in the 25-team field

A U T O M O T IV E p E R M A R K E T

By fn d rd Press International
John M cento hopes the NFI. takes a
hint Irorn the misfortunes of majorleague baseball and settles its tabor
problems without a strike
■| hope we (ow nersi have learned
enough to want In com prom ise," said the
New Orleans Saints owner, "that the
play ers have grown up enough to want to
survive, and that everyone realties that
you can’t afford a strike
"At least we started negotiating about
three years ago on our collective
bargaining agreement. It’s tieen going nn
and on as opposed h&gt; w aiting to the List
minute us baseball did Two or three
years ago, baseball owners gave every­
thing away. Now they're trying tn be
haritnosed and get something back You
don't do It that w ay."
The N F I. p la y e rs currently arc
negotiating to receive a share of
revenues If they are unable to reach an
agreement w ith owners, a strike could
happen in 1982, M ecuin said the owners
are exploring the possibility uf taking
strike insurance

AutoSure

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For your convenience

TTie Yankees’ suit said Cessna ami
Flig h t Safety were negligent In training
Munson "and said negligence prevented
Munson from making a safe landing
and caused the aircraft to trash

LIFESAVER RADIAL ALL SEASON

• fU r tC B - I 16. B I t 7)
I R %S#f)*t
11 70 5 70 4 60
7 * P T*nn#r
4 70 J 00
SB 11 * V « n ill#
|* o
O It 71 37 70 P ( I 13 10 16. T It
) SI I I I 46

r J B
1

D It.I f

IIB r«c # - l | , A 3| |)
4 Norton %Qu^en
7 10 1 40 2 70
. t Or if %C c H rl
7 40 S 00
I I A tta g ir l Floor*#
3 60
Q (6 7) t l 60 P (6 71 I t 46. T 14
7 II SI 4t

$13.

r e

E xS cE

Munson, who lived in nearby Canton,
died Aug. 2, 1979, when his tw txn g in e
Cessna jet eraslied ami burned at AkronCanton Airport He had been trained to
fly the pbine by Flight Safety.

S e rvic e A t C o m p e titiv e Rates

7!h r j &lt;# — 1-16- II ) t 46
lE v f f lt f iQ Del f i l e
7 JO } 00 140
/ O iT u a M c G r # *
3 70 170
6 N « » ff A ra rr*
3 60
O 17 73 t l 60. P 17 7 W 7 I I . T 17
7 61 I)S 60

B A T T ER Y ]
PRICES

A K H O N , Ohio i C P I &gt; The New Y i* k
Y a n k e e s are seeking ft.5 m illio n
damages from Cessna Aircraft Co. and
Flight Safety International, In. , in the
1979 death of their All-Star catcher
Thurman Munson
The liasch.dl club tiled the negligence
sutl Wednesday in Summit County
Common pleas Court, about four weeks
after a sim ila r damage claim was
dismissed by a federal judge

Great mileage at
an economical price

6Co*t&gt;oy M &gt;0rr
6 70 4 70 7 60
7
tut
6*0 140
S Trot Norm #
4 00
Q I6 71 tt 76 P 16 7) 71 66. T 16
7 SI SI 60

k

!

F..J Junior, the St lo u is C a rd in a ls'
No 1 draft pick lablied as an im m ediate
starter at inside linebacker, ended his
holdout

Yankees Sue In Munson's Death

4

S lh M K t — t U . A ) l 01
J fte#*#r'%llo m b e r 3 00 1 40 7 70
I Hlu# C lip p e r
7 70 3 60
) ( K t N utty ttucfdt
600
O II 71 70 10 P 13 II 71 60 T 17
I It ttO 44

Most GM, Fords 6 Chrys. . . EA
ALTERNATORS: Without Built-In Reoulitor.
Most GM. Fords and Chrys. . , EA.

th ro u g h

I,yon of American International ami
Colin McCarty of Temple, and defensive
hack Bob Manning of the U niversity of
M assa eh use tls. Also dropped were
strong safety John ljuinn of Springfield,
offensive tackle Bub Began of Yale,
offensive center Jim B ill of Dartmouth,
and running back le e Walker of Texas
Southern

Ho complained football pLiyers often
do not feet bound by their contracts
"If the players believe so much in the
players’ agreement, then n's a shame
they don't believe as much in tlieir own
contracts," he said "They feel they can
break Hveir own written contracts at
w ill "
In oilie r camps, Ihe New England
Patriots waived nine tree agents to
reduce Ihe roster to 78 players The team
waived wide receivers Reggie Heard ol
Chcyney Stale and J.h n Klein ol Central
Connecticut Stole, nose tackles Todd

4 tltf6 C 6 — 5 14. D t l 76
J triV tS o rm
1 70 4 40 S 00
4HC %
7 70 3*0
I tie*, It W M I
1070
O lllK U O
P 17 41 6S 00 ? (7
I II bo* 1176 40

STARTER

good

( a u s s e a u x , w lm k n o c k e d f iv e o u t of Ihe p a r k o ne

n ig h t at I ' i n e l i u i s l , w ill ta k e p a r t in H ie S t a t e R e c r e a t io n S o f t b a ll
\ s s o c ia lio o i o i i r t i a i t i e n l t h is w e e k e n d .

3rd r*C« — s 16- C J l n
7 SAttt-n*
6 00 I 60 • 00
1L#vntM»
6 tO S 40
iM # c# roon
410
0 (I 21 *6 79 P l l l M I I *
T IJ
1 4) )|0 H

altern ato r

P r ic e s

e n r lie t t h is v e a l

ARE YOU PAYING TOO MUCH FOR INSURANCE?

W rd n tu d ay n*qM r#6V*tt
U tr « c # — l it . O II »
I M yn
W O * 10 J *0
• r.f %5#jpp4iif#
5 *0 3 70
4 J c n n tlrf V f ir ip
J40
a im
iim
r (I m i n s 4i

nt

A u t o S u r e

Pho to b i Bonn.* W .tb oid ! a o b b .n i!

AAecom: C o m p ro m ise In N egotiations

Greyhounds

P arts C ity U g ,

I H t r a id

R ic h f l a n f i r s t b a s e m a n D o n C a u s s e a u v In o se net I ii|i b e fo re a g a m e

p i
i

j

i
i

i
i

K FT

40.40
SI 00
SI 10
41 JO
*1*0
*4.30
i t 10
71.00

US
US
777
1 )*
7 47
7*7
i n
7*4

O T H E R S E R V IC E S A V A I L A B L E
4 Wheel Brake Job (Most Cars)
.......
4 Electronic Computer Balance
Front End Alignment (Most Cars
Oil Change, Filter &amp; Lube
Heavy Duty Shocks Installed
New Bafferies A i Low At ...........................................................
ALL LABOR A PARTS GUA RA N TEED

M .f S

14.00
IJ.fJ
M .fS
11.1S M

JM I

A.O.K. TIRE MART
HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 8-5:30 - SAT. 8 3:30

-j
\

. PHONE 3227480
2413 S. French Ave. Sontord

�• • *

t$

W e've chan ged our nam e,
b u ’i not o u r p e o p le !
TtvVuir

SAVE GAS!

fonmCrff tabrturvpirt&lt;4Suuitw«V

1*4 cjKXjndo. and 4mrrrfcrf d f k*«Lis Urfnl
b t n t a f *n juft S r a 4 v * l B a k in g Cnrpnrtf &lt;m
Iny&lt;iur d#&gt;la diy b*nfcin|l you pruMAr won t w* *great

^iloldrfininf

tohrdp*J&lt;n|wiihlN»umr(tiu4hrful.
h«fdhpnjpirvou*Kik«v^hj% r A n d b a n 4 m g d K rv u m m l

*4 hr mjdr loralfy. by (hr umr mjr\j*r»wrni *uAr hrm
d v g buWTM Mttfl

i§} Southeast National Bank of Orlando
YU, can tounl on in.'

J U L Y C L E A R A N C E !!

SANFORD
MEMBER F.D.I.C

Ut W. AIRPORT BLVD.
PH. 723-4120

Sanford Plaza
C le a n e rs

Wedding Invitations
100 for

PROFESSIONAL Q U AL IT Y
DRYCLEANING

$ 1 7 9 5

M en’s
Ray-Suede Oxford

Hong Kong

Athletic stripe
Great for Back to School

Restaurant

9.99

A L T E R A T IO N S

Now

Orig. 14.99

L A U N D R Y S E R V IC E

Ctaeb Could awl Gilts

W ED D IN G GOWNS
377 4987

Sanford Plata

322-8063
Mary is now back to
work and welcomes all
her customers to call or
stop by

LEVI JEAN SALE
L A Y A W A Y N O W FOR
BACK TO SC H O O L

M O S If

SAN FORD
■■
PLA ZA

APPT. NOT ALWAYS NECESSARY

I S

| s,o res fo r

A n n u a l Sum m er Sale
ONE DAY ONLY -

FR ID A Y, JU LY 31, 1911

20% Discount
On All
Vito mins, Mlnorols, Horb Coptuks
Wo Footuro Solgor, Thompson, Rlchllft,
Plus, Schlffard And Othor Vitamin Lints.

SANFORD PLAZA
BANKAMERICARD
DINER'S CARD
MASTER CHARGE
AMERICAN EXPRESS

OOES YOUR DOG HAVE D RY, FLAKY
SKIN, HAIR LOSS, SUMMER ITCH, ETC.T
TRYO UR

HOT OIL TREATMENT

Pet Animal Supply
SANFORD PLAZA

COVERED

SMOKER GRILL

REO.S3S

*18.00

LAWN CHAIRS

R EG . *1.99 * 5 * 0 0

A L L S U M M E R M E R C H A N D IS E
RED UCEO I
TO C L E A N U P AND M A K E W AY FO R
F A L L M E R C H A N D IS E .

i

25% OFF

■4

45' PER POUND

&lt;
m

Ph. 323-9707

MEN'S SHOES

. w . *4 V . . . W

5 &gt; .l.

~ «.&lt; **•*.« *»

322 7$07
r 41 ONLY

BURT R E Y N O LD S
f a r r a m PAWCBTT
D O M D t L U lS C ____

DON'S SHOES
S A N FO R D PLA ZA A N D DOWNTOWN

D E S IG N E R LOOK -

PC

[ FLAZA II ]
7:M ONLY

BO DEREH
RICHARD H

S T IL L TH E P IZ Z A W IT H

Pizzazz
Now with Salad

SA N FO RD P L A Z A
We discount ev e ry th in g

John's Deli-Cafe
323-6563
Cafe &amp; Caterers

Soft Drinks

TOSHIBA COLOR TV'S, SPEC IA L PURCHASE
S3I9.00
MICROWAVE OVENS - NOW S2S.00 ABOVE
D EA LE R 'S COST.

$200

HAM

»»* ('•

SA N FO RD P L A Z A

IT A L IA N

ACROSS FROM BURGER KING

SAUSAGE

%%

S7 INCH C EILIN O FAN ............................ S99.00

LB. O N L Y

C l OQ

‘ f**

EAT IN OR TAKE OUT

NOW S E L L S EU REK A AND PANASONIC
VACUUM CLEA N ERS. BRAND NEW SSS.00

SANFORD PLAZA

P u b lix

322-8610

Sanford Sewing Center

THROUGH SATURDAY

R R O U LA R O R S U O A R FR C f TEA

HUN

M r. Ed's P iz z a

S IZ E 7-14

SPECIAL

oaaMoaiTaaMiiaav.kiPTON

n n o n b a ll

R E G . SIS

SANFORD PLAZA ONLY

c o k k . s p r it s . sugar r e f t
SPRIT*. TAI. FRISCA. M ELLO
v i i i o . sar . p i r s . i u o a r
r a t * M t. piaa. w i l c h -s

(a

C H IL D R E N 'S

JEA N S

• 1 -

sL’

H op 17(2

[ PLAZA I ]

PLAZA SQUARE

P E R F E C T FO R
BACK TO SCH O O L

Wash, Dry, Fold

.99"

$C87

Watches

O P E N 7 a.m . to 9 p.m.

Drop off service

Pepper... 2 ,

S P E C IA L G R O U P

S IZ E 44*

S E L E C T G R O U P O F L A D IE S '
A N D M E N 'S

C O IN LA U N D R Y

99

D E L A N D AND SO U TH D AYTO N A

ZALES
The Diamond Store

WEISS

RO LL
PACK

2. . * 2 0

*12”

$ 4 8 7

59* - 3/M.00

4

on S a le !

F R ID A Y O N LY
reo

L im it R ig h ti
H f t ir v r d
S A N F O R D PL A T A
O N LY

OFF

Entire Sum m er Stock

AUNT LYD IA S

RUG YARN

&gt;

N O R T H E R N BATH RO O M

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

S A N FO R D P L A Z A ____________________373-4740

MeS g
g y
TORES

DRUGS

Tissue

$ 1 9 9 9

T a y l o r 's

SA N FO R D
PLAZA

EC K ER B

P R IC E S GOOD
THRU
SATURDAY

SPECIAL G R O U P SHOES

G R O O M IN G

323-4635
N a tu ra l Foods

50%

UP TO

HAIR-A-RANGERS
HOURS 94 MON.-TUES-WED.-FRI.
9-7 THURS.
1:34-4:30 SAT.

323-7254

Sanford Plaza

Anniversary Sale
H

LU N C H SPECIALS ‘ 1.99

DINNERS-TAKEOUTS

J C P e n n e y

FR ID AY T ILL 1:30

BROWSING HOURS 14-4

BEST CHINESE FOOD

9-

&lt;

lb.

*1”

322-9411

k

�• 1 • • •

OURSELVES
Evening Herald. S in ford. FI.

Thursday. J u ly JO. I M I - l B

Miss Best
L.W. Turner
Repeat Vows
laictlle M a n e Best and l-eonard Wesley Turner were
m arried June 27. at 7 p m . at the U k e M a ry United
Presbyterian Church, la k e Mary The Rev. A T Stevens
performed the candlelight and double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter ol Mr. and Mrs. Jam es P Best, 117
Azalea la n e , Sanford. The bridegroom's parents are M r and
Mrs. W alter E . Turner, 105 Clyde Ave., la k e M ary .
Given In m arriage by her lather, the bride chose lo r her
vows a form al gow n of candlelightchiffon designed with a high
mandarin neckline and lu ll sleeves of C hantilly lace. Re­
embroidered m otifs of Chantilly lace lavishly embellished the
bodice and double full skirt which terminated in a graceful
chapel-length train.
P h o li b , J i i n U i 4 . l l "

TO ASTMISTRESS
T U A M M lilN t W

IN S T A LL A T IO N

Linda Klrchka. newly installed president. of the (srealer Seminole loaslmhtre, s (1ub ,third from left!, is congratulated h&gt; installing officer. Barbl
Wilder, secretary of Sunshine lleglon. Also installed were, from left. I.loria
.tones, council delegate: llyeann hummer. vice-president: anil Joyce
Stelling. treasurer. Not pictured is secretary Kdle Valentine. The installation
banquet was held at the Quality Inn in Longwood. The toastmlslresi club
meets regularly at the Altamonte Springs Civic Center the second anil fourth
ihursilay of each month._________________________________________ -

Slim Says Cleaning House
N aked Helps Lose^Veight

;

bacon.
D E A R A BB Y; 1 have three daughters ages 7,1 and 9. Ever
since they were toddlers, I have been teaching them proper
table manners, especially how to hold a trek re spoun properly.

streamers.
Mrs. AUison M inor, sister of the bride, M cC orm ick. S C.,
attended the bride as matron of honor. She wore a buttercup
yellow gown, (ashtoned along the empire silhouette, with an
accordion pleated skirt, a delicately shirred bodice with
double spaghetti straps and topped with a chiffon capelct
dipping to a point in front and back. Her headpiece was a
yellow lacy straw hat adorned with daisies and yellow
stream ers to the waist. She cam e l a nosegay of yellow daisies
with light blue baby's breath and yellow streamers.
Bridesm aids were M rs. V icki Best, sister-in-law of the bride,
Jacksonville; P a tric ia Best, sister of the bride, Sanlord;
Kathryn M artinez sister of the bride, Tampa T he ir light blue

Thanks for listening.
M RS. B. IN JE F F E R S O N . LA.
D E A R MRS. B; I wish children -holding spoons like
s h o v r li" were Ibe worsl examples seen on television com­
m ercials. However, in order lo undo the damage, r ip liln to
your ih lld r r n that the children they see on the commercials
have not yet been taught lo r a l properly.
D E A lt A B B Y I've been dating a m arried man for several
y ears H is wife found out about us and is filing for divorce. I
love him and he loves me, but he isn't sure he wants to gel
m arried again So where does thal leave me?
He has asked me to wait and see what happens alter he
works out his present problems, but he won’t make any

teaching them.

Mary Mahany Weds

promises.
Abby, I'm young and attractive and don't want to spend the
rest of m y life waiting for a man who m ay never m arry me, but
l ' Ve been out of circulation for nearly three years and am very
happy and fulfilled when I'm with him .
Should I Invest any more time In what could be a deadend
relationship’ Or would I be wise to hang around and see what
happens? And It I do deride to hang around, how long should I
give him to make up his mind’

UNDECIDED

William S. Juby Jr.

Humane
Society
Benefit
The
Seminole
C ounty
Humane Society and Creative
E xpressio ns,
a
hom e
d e m o n s tra tio n a t lt c h e r y
company, w ill be holding a
fund-raising campaign during
August (or the hum ane
society.
Tables w ill be set up in front
of the Publtx Supermarkets

(or stilchery sales and home
demonstration bookings, a ll to
benefit the humane society.
On Prlday. July 31, and
Saturday. August 1. the table
wdl be at the Publix In B utler
Plaza on State Route 06; on
August 7 and 1 at P u b lu in
J Sanford Plaza; and on August
H and 15 at the Pub lix in
A ltam onte S prings a c r o u

Anyone who is interested in
supporting this cause, who
cannot attend at the above
tim es, may c a ll S h ir le y
D re ifu e rsl at 323-2694 (or
more information

tendant's.
Toby Chapnuin served the bridegroom as best man. Ushers
were Steven C lelland and Frank Kucera.
Heather M. Best, niece ol the bride. Jack.vxiville. was the
llower girl. Heath J. Best, nephew, was the ring bearer.
Following a wedding trip to Daytona Beach, die newly weds
are making their home in Sanford The bride is employed by
Continental Circuits Inc., and the bndegnom is a fireman w ith
the Izwigwood F ire Dept.

The bride was attended by
her
daughter,
Debbie
Mahany. The bridegroom's
beat man was C. E. Busby ol
Orange Park
After a wedding trip to St.
Sim on's Island. Georgia, the
newlyweds w ill make their
tw ite at 305 Tangerine Drive
where friends are welcome.

D E A R U N D E C ID E D : From the farta you've glveu me. your
|rirnd would like to put you ou "h o ld " lo rrv tr. Say goodbye
now. II he really loves you. he wilt otter you what you want m arriage. II not, good riddance.
D E A R A B B Y I married a man whose w ile had died and left
with sm all children. I raised them all. My husband recently
passed away. Are those children 1 raised still m y stepchildren’
And are their children still my grandchildren’ And are my
deceased husband's listers still m y sisters-in-law?
I am confused. Please let me know soon.
MILS S.

W right Watchers. 7 p.m.. Quabty Inn, l/mgwood; 7
p m .. C.otxl Shepherd la th e r an Church, 2917 Highway
17-92, Sanford.
O vere ate n Anonymous, 7:30 p m . Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Sanlord A A . 8 p m., 1201 W F u st St
APAnun, &gt; p m . Crossroads Hallway House. Lake
M innie D riv e , Sanlord.
Retirem ent dinner in honor of Casselberry Police
Chief George Karcher, I p m , l-ord Chum ley's
Restaurant, Altamonte Springs
F R ID A Y , J U L Y 51
Youth F le a M arket. 6 a m. to 3 p m., Community
United Methodist Church lawn. Highway 57-92 and
Prney Ridge Hoad. Casselberry. To raise funds (or
summer trip.
Seminole Sunrise Klwanls. 7 a m.. J e rr y ’s Airport
Restaurant.
Seminole South Rotary, 7 50 a m , l/ c d Chum ley's
Pub, Altamonte Springs.
South Volusia Sertoma. 7:30 a.m., Deltona Inn.
Weight Watcher*. 10 a m., Sears Altamonte M all
Free blood p re isu rr screening, 10-11 a.m. and 3-t
p.m., Deltona Public lib ra ry , 1691 Providence
Boulevard. Deltona.
SA T U R D A Y , AUGUST I
Block party to benefit Sanford Christian Sharing
Center, 9 a.m. to S p.m., between Southwest Road and
Mulberry Avenue on 15th Street. Bring canned goods
and dried staples. Free fish and salad. Entertainm ent
sponsored by Sister Eddie Robinson, Mt. O live F ire
Baptize Church.
TAKI

A

FLORIDA

S U M M E R NIGHTS

OflANGEjIM
•

BREAM

Our Value Priced Baby Dolls
Set The Mood

D E A R MRS. S.: Yet. The relationship* rem ain the same.

H u r r y l L a st D a y s !

Three styles to choose from,
i

all with lace trim and matching

S E M IA N N U A L

bikinis. M ade of 100% nylon
tricot in sizes G, M, L - C h o o se

Romantically
inseparable...

from a wide variety of colors.

U

F IN A L R E D U C T IO N S
ON OUR A LR EA D Y

LOW SALE PRICES!

Styles sim ilar lo Illustration.

. , an Angelin* sheer
peignoir with scalloped

la c e bodice. French
cuffs edged In delnty
laces Closed with *1*
gant satin bow beneath
a tiny rosebud Demure
em pire gown ... titled
bodice of scallop laca
lin e d w ith Angelin*
sheer A scattering ol
lin y baby rosebuds
Satin end lac* embellish
the (lowing skirt.

Ladies', Mens’,
Childrens'
DRESS, C A S U A L &amp; A TH LETIC
A ll Fem o u i N a m « M a k f
tw IwuHu ap**rt««ri

*I

mmt. M l *M*tT •*•*■ *t * iractw*

•&lt; I t w «■■— ■( a * l

Ol coura* you can c har pa it

from Sean.
•

gowns and headdresses were Identical to the honor a t­

T H U R SD A Y . JULY*#

My 'problem'' Is the T V cereal couunerrials. Why do they
show children eating cereal and holding the spoon like a
shovel? When n.y children see children on TV eating like that,
they think that's the correct way, and not the way I have been

Mrs. M ary Hyan Mahany.
2630 U u r e l Ave., Sanford,
and WTlham S. Juby J r . 306
Tangerine Drive, also San­
ford,
announce
th e ir
m arriage on July 11, at A ll
Souls
Catholic
C h u rch .
Sanlord. The Kev. Father
W illiam Ennis solemnized the
nuptials.

MH. \M) MIIS. LEONARD U. Tl'RNER

CA LEN D A R

D K A Il A BB Y : Several ol m y friends and 1 have hit upon a
ureat idea I ff losing weight. We pull down our shades, lock our
doors, and do our himsecleantng in the nude! I know it sounds
kooky, but here's what we do. W’e go from room to room and
force ourselves to look at our bodies in every m in o r we pass'
There's something about a fat. unclothed body that spoils your
appetite come mealtime.
I lousecleaning is good exercise. There's lots ol bending and
stretching. There's only one rule; Alw ays keep your stomach
muscles tight. Alter a while, it becomes a habit, and those
tummy muscles w ill be taut after the body is clothed.
This is no put-on, Abby. P a ss this on to your readers. 1 don't
know anybody who wouldn't tike Jo lose J or 10 pounds, and this
really weeks.
/
St jy S t lN C . DOWN IN SCO T T SD Al£
D E A R S U M M IN G : Now. if you could arrange In watch
yourtrlv r i eat !n the nude, y ou'd hav e It made. And should you
decide to cook la the nude, do wear an apron while trying

Her tiered veil ot illusion, edged in C hantilly lace, was
secured to a scalloped lace headpiece. She earned a nosegay ot
yellow and white daisies showered with baby's breath and

7fljOAlf-£Aih&amp;AA
| «&lt;jtuflOi|

I UkllHJRk Ju%l I or NCHI

X M N O R tH M M A vtN C t
fA N F O N O

RMOWI U M H )

F L O N IO *

JCPenney
S AN FO R D P LA ZA

got 1. FIRST It.
DOWNTOWN IANK&gt;n

Open M o n d a y th ru S a tu rd a y 10a .m .
O p « n S u n d a y 12: 30-5:30 p .m .

J110J04
* tn t i C

C » * N " I **

*• *

9 p .m .

�JR— Evening Herald. Santord. FI

B L O N D IE

Thursday, July JO, tell

by Chic Young

by Mort W alker

B E E T L E B A IL E Y
I TH O UGHT THIS WAS
THE PA Y YOU W6(?E GO.HG
TO LISTEN TO THE M E N S
COMPLAINTS

41 Automotive soci*ty (abb*)
I Intellect
47 F u rl
5 Tlllrr.g bird 44 Oanctr
9 Conjunction
Allan*
46 Ego
(Go* I
49 Intended
12 One* more
13 Secred imig* 53 By way ol
14 Sound ol t
54 T e ll earl ol
cow
|7 w d i)
56 Conclusion
15 Arctic &gt;tnd
17 Energy unit
57 fill with *nnur
18 M ow like i
SB Fammin*
liutfn)
crab
19 Mora ilandir 59 Bo«n
71 B a lltfin a i
60 Countallor
dud*
labbe)
73 Sodium
61 Dnebeck
chiondt
DOWN
(abt&gt;0
24 Ont (Sp|
1 Auto wh**l
27 Wuiical
lymbol
type Ep *1
2 Crou
29 Ora dopotil
mKiiption
37 Nightclub
em ploy**
3 tack
4 Mad* horn*
34 Polar leatui*
36 Should*r |Fr | 5 Wtr* miaiur*
37 Abut*
6 Mythical
ana tor
36 R*v*
39 Adolescent
7 Noon*
1

2

3

4

5

17

75

■

32

46 Pillage
50 Aleutian
•eland
51 fithmg ant*
57 Arduou*
tourney
SS Coral reef
10

11

14

70
23

27
26

79

30

3t

"
34

33

36

35

37

36

39
47

46

Smalliword
Quiet*
Picture hout*
Wort
Actr*(l Moor*
Submit
furnace
B*t*b*ll leam
number

9

8

19
21

74

7

31
33
35
40
43
45
46
47

Lose Weight First
Then Try Medicine

17

18

FDST-6RAPVJAT6
WORK

6

16

by Art Sansom

Et6tfT ? i w w n KNOW YbU

6 Chilean
mountain*
9 Navel
10 Comment on
11 Sullen
16 Ol n*rv*l
70 Girl* (tl |
72 Article ol laith
74 Ov*r IGar |
25 California
win* dittnct
26 Cirrus drink (2
wdt)
78 Hourglait
30 Spac* agency
labbr)

13

15

T H E BORN L O S E R

Antwer to Pr*viout Pun'*

ACRO SS

■

44

43

47

40

"

45
49

46

50

53

54

56

57

56

59

60

61

51

57

55

by Bob Montana

A R C H IE
A P C H iE . lV E GOT TICKETS
TO A STRihrj G CAfTfct
CCPiCEPT TOCWV' W CUlP'iWi
LIKE TO &amp; 0 7

ER IT) LUTE TO
\ HOI/* £
BUT I V6 A tR iA p W PROBM iV
MADE OTHER
GOING TO
P L A N S ' A WASTE IO j R

NOT AT A lt ' I'M ATTEW N O
Afl EXHIBITION DEMONSTRA­
TING THE PRACTICAL

u£V, APCH. A/ED b e t t e r
GET GONG IF we WANT TO
GET GOOD SEATS FOR THE
M/SS B 'XIW CONTEST '

The trouble with treating
people like you ia that the
medicines that tend lo lower
your pressure when It is high
also lower it when It Is on the
low side. The end result often
le av e s som ething to be
desired.

HOROSCOPE
B y B E R N IC E B FJJE U S O L

F o r F r id a y , J u l y 3 1 . 1 9 8 1

by Stoflul &amp; Hetmdaht

B U G S BUN N Y

S o u s e supposed to b e tub qqper a
m o t

-t u p

anPBB n n r

—

.—

*________ '

----

which you’re involved.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec.22-Jin.
t l) Doing good deeds could
reap you rather remarkable
rewards today. Strive to be
sincerely helpful, then stand
back and watch what hap­
pens.
A Q U A R IU S | Jan. 20-Feb.
I l l Team efforts and part­
nership situations are likely to
be far luckier for you today
than things you try on your
own. Forego aolo attempts.
PIS C E S (Feb. 20-March 20)
It’s very Important today that
your goals are in tune with
your highest Ideals. You
should be exceptionally lucky
when doing that which you
know to be right.
A R IE S (M arch 21-AprU II)
Thing* should turn out to your
liking today. You have a gift
(or m anaging others in ways
which are beneficial to you
and also helpful to them.
T A U R U S (A p ril 20-May 20)
A situation which appeared to
be permanent and not much to
your liking w ill undergo a
fa v o ra b le change today,
although the shift w ill be
barely noticeable.
G E M IN I (M ay 21-June 30)
, T ry to aelect companions
today who are enthusiastic
and poaitlve. The right choice
w ill assure you of a very
pleasant day.
C A N C E R (June 2)-July21)
T h is la a good time to bring to
the attention of your boa
ideas you have which could
make you both more money.
Y o u m ight be able to
negotiate a raise or a bonus.

FRANK &amp; ERNIE'S
ORGANIC DljjER

control. You could diminish
your chances of heart attacks
and stro ke s by slim m in g
down. I prefer for people with
blood pressure elevations to
lose excess fat first, before
taking any medicines. Do it
the natural way if possible.
D E A R DR. L A M B —I am a
20-year-old woman and am
considering starting a fam ily
within the next few years.
When I was five I had an
operation for a hernia on the
right side of m y abdomen.
W ill I have to d e liver m y baby
by Caesarean section because
ol the s c a r fro m this
operation? I have heard that
doctors prefer to do a Csectlon on a woman who has
had a (’-section before to
prevent a rupture. Is this
because of fear of rupturing
the abdom inal w all or the
uterine w all?
DEAR
R E A D E R —T h e
concern is that the scar in the
uterus w ill rupture. Even so,
not every woman who has had
a previous Caesarean section
w ill require one the next
delivery. In some cases, such
as a sm all pelvbi that won’t
p e rm it n o rm a l b irth , the
same indication for the first
section w ill apply lo a ll future
pre g n an cie s. Y o u r hernia
operation should not be a
reason fo r a Caesarean
section.

WIN AT BRIDGE
Wilmington. V t . on individu­
al tournaments and how to
do w ell In them He points
out that there are special
NORTH
nan
plays in these events Here is
♦ Q J 10
in example of what we call
VK 1017)
the ’'individual ' squeeie
♦ 1151
You are in six spades
♦ A
because you had mistakenly
WEST
EAST
decided that your partner
♦ A lt
♦ if
wai an underbidder and he
V II
V l t t
or the turned out lo be an
♦ KQI
6 4J
overbidder Not that there
♦ KQ1097
♦ IIH II
are any roses on your slam
bid. but there you are dou­
SOUTH
bled with no play for it.
• K ill)
Anyway you don't give up
VAQJ
You lead dum m y's queen of
• A J 167
spade* at tric k two You con­
•l
tinue with the jack after
Vulnerable North-South
West ducks He wins that
Dealer South
trick and trium phantly lead*
hit last trum p to stop any
W eil
Kent
EsM
le u *
ru fft ia dummy
16
Now a ll you have to do is
I*
J*
Pat*
!•
lo run off liv e hearts while
l)bl
Pat*
Pau
P au
chucking the seven and Jack
of diamonds from your own
hand
Opening lead * K
Come lo your hand with
the are of diamonds and
cash your last two trumps
On the last trum p West has
B y Oswald Jacob)
to decide whether lo hang on
and Alaa Soatag
to the queen of club* or king
ol diamonds
This is an Individual He
The M ay Bridge World
carries a humorous article chucks his diamond winner
•\tw
leapt* DrmniUE visNi
by H a r r y S h e a re r o l

by L a n ia rd Starr

DON'T Da w Dl B ov/Bg
FoO[&gt;,

It » true that people who
have p e rs is te n tly
low er
readings of closer lo 115 over
75 have the best out-look In
term s of the least risk of
having a heart attack or
stroke. F o r most people, and
that would definitely include
you. the first and best ap­
proach is adequate weight

TP

YK-60T BY THAT TIME
THE M M Sn W T HAVE
BEEN IMemSlBU!... i n ,
GRATEfUL THAT 1 flPNU '
F1NP0UT ABOUT IT A
S m C M Y LATER/

||—
YouR

You need to understand
more about blood pressure so
I am sending you The Health
le t te r number 1S-8, Your
V ita l Blood Pressure. Others
who want this issue can send
75 cents w ith a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,

Radio C ity Station, New York,
N Y 10019. Y'our type of
problem i i discussed there.

/kNNt

by Bob T t u v e s

F R A N K AND E R N E S T

ffjrcvT t v i

Y O U R BIR TH D A Y
July 31.1M1
Don’t alt on your artistic,
m usical or creative g ills this
coming year. Take measures
to develop your talents. You
can make a name (or yourself
in the world.
L E O (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
ITalse from you means a lot
to y o u r (riends today.
Whenever you see a pal doing
something worthy of a pat on
the bock, be sure to give it.
Kind out more of what flea
ahead (or you in the year
following your birthday by
sending (or your copy of
AstnvGraph. M ail t l (or each
to A stro -G raph, Boa 489,
R a d io C ity Station, N .Y .
1001). He sure to specify birth
date.
V IR G O I Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
I’ lay your hunches today in
business or financial matters.
Your instincts are very sharp
and your practicality won’t
permit you to go astray.
LIB R A (Sept. 234X1. 23)
Just by being yourself today
you’ll be a standout in any
crowd or gathering, Ivet your
charm and personality glow
forth.
SCORPIO (Oct. It-Nov. 22)
Success ia lik e ly today
regarding goals you establish
lo r yourself, especially when
you arc trying to help others
as well as to advance your
own interests.
S A O R T A R IL ’S (Nov. 23Dec. 21) It’s important that
you maintain a positive a t­
titude today. Once you begin
to feel self-assured you should
be very lucky at anything in

D E A R D R . I A M B — I want
lo a sk about m y blood
pressure readings. I have
readings as high as 170 over
110 and l i t over l it . I am
concerned about these as
m y mother was only S6 when
she had a stroke and two heart
attacks. M y doctor doesn’t
seem to be worried as my
pressure comes back down to
norm al within one lo three
hours, with readings around
130 over 10. I am not on any
m e d icin e tor high blood
pressure but feel I should be.
A m I wrong or is my doctor
wrong?
1 work in a hospital and
have been sent to the
e m e rg e n cy room several
times. I’m 35, weigh 170 and
am 5 feet 3.
D EAR
R E A D E R -Y o u
should be concerned. Your
story is that of a vascular
h y p e rre a c to r, today often
c a lle d b o rd e rlin e hyper­
tension. A lot of people who
have labile blood pressure
n e v e r h a ve persistently
elevated readings. It is a
reflex response. When je u get
excited—and that can include
w h ile having your blood
pressure reading taken—your
arteries squeeie down and
your heart rale picks up,
pumping more blood than
usual, which causes your
pressure to rise.
When you relax the arteries
relax and your heart slows
down, causing your pressure
to fall. This can a ll happen in
a few minutes.

-----

IT CONTAIN* NO

.
1

THOUGHT 5t€
BECAME HY
HUEKMW
YDOSS-TAOSE
SHE l/KEP UN­

PEOPLE INVOLVED
INA RIGHTEOUS
CAUSE SOMETIMES
LOSE PERSPECTIVE,
WliE-THEYPO
RIGHT TWNG
-BUT THE
WRONG WY-

P R E S E R V A T IV E * .

)■!*

F L E T C H E R 'S L A N D IN G

TU M BLEW EED S

by T. K. Ryan

—,—

n p r

by Douflla* Coffin

�• % t e •

E v e n in g H t r x l d , S a n fo r d , FI.-

T h u r s d a y . J u l y &gt; 0 ,1 M I - 3 B

TONIGHT'S TV
a * a ia Gary it xao ng an appaianity
romantic maslwg aniN Jutfy Trani

| THURSDAY

(7 0 »

evtxwa

«

I I (35) art*PENDENT NETWORK

NEWS

ED 110) THE DUCHESS O f DUKE

600

RE6IPE

a
t i o
t o w w
H iJ 5 i A N O v a w fW M
( D i 10) THE TOM C O T U I SHOW
Y*1rv*m N u rtt An Aim* fk/Bd
d»*Cu*Ae* the horrtwt 0* At«ng And
working em idtt the wreckage Of 1**
Vietnam war

STREET Tna O utvO an CTan.a
Tyrrsa bscom sa d vr*., uonao «ntn
h .l n n lils tly ls at lo r d MMNHnafS
-nix ■ g ust) H tna M « » trm ^ l
nan lo h*» ta n ta t |P»I »)|R|

TRY

6:30

Cmle&amp;t

a

4 NBC NEWS

J o
.h o

11(17 ) NEYYS

e ;

C B S NEWS
A B C NEWS

11.00

i

o t o

7:00

for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual

705

Special Edition of the

1 1 ( 1 7 ) A I L IN TH EE AMILY

7:30
B [ f i TIC TAC DOUGH
J O JOTH CENTURY WITH W AL­
TER CRONKITE
I o f a m il y f f l i o
t l I 3 5 )R H 0 0 A
flD j tO l OrCK CAVTTT

H e rita g e C O O K B O O K

800

Recipes for...

I Q A B C NEWS NK1HTUNE
1 1 (3 5 ) W A N T tO DEAD OR ALIVE

11:35
11 (17) MOVIE
The Quitter
M em orandu m
(1966) Georg*
Seg«t Atec (Tymnets

12:00
J o 8T ARSKY A NO HUTCH
*
O
C H A R L IE S A N G ELS
Sabrina ! • « m love mih a young
man
m*y be the murdaV'er the
Angm* ere looking for («|
'11 (35) JtM BAKKIR

controversy in hr* Uriel Bapti-ii
Horn* (H)
7 1 o M O NK a n d MtNOY MwxJy
it fold to gel ah ws|«cvs«ia wtih
com edian' Uotm W ilkam i or to*#

CASSEROLES

200

( j O MAGNUM. P I A weefihy
woman who kve* «n a feed-treated
cloak. and dagger lantaty world
become* a target tor murder |fl|
7 O BARNEY MfLLER Barney M
let! to cool hit heet* m a ceN with a
neurotic .nurder feufepect ehtte hit
lawyer weeks to get contempt ot
court charge* dropped iPart 7H*I

&lt;L I 10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
Quest* Ot The Nation trank
Conner mi and' I'tteWe Parson* star
tn this dramatic ahon ot fiank
O Connor • short story set in irelend m IB j 1 revolving around a per
of knah in *urgents andi the two taglured bniiall feoldieri they v t
ordered to guard (R)

830

5:00

1st • 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week

kno ts

lano m o

.. .I t c o u ld b e a w I n n e r !

p .o .

bo x

tu r

DEADLINE FOR
CASSEROLES...

F irst, Second and T h ird p rlre s w illb e a w a rd e d In
each of the nine food categories You m ay enter
as m any of the w eekly categories as you like.
A panel ot three expert judges w ill review a ll
entries and w inners w ill be notified at the end of
the contest in September lor a taste o lt " to
select the G ra n d P rira winner Decision of the
judges Is final.

7 * 1 O N LY

n n o n r a l l

12:30

4 ( M O V I I L A r jF i) u .
h., if u

* i;? in*

C lO t C D T H U K S O A V

NINE TO FIVE

200
B
4 ANO THER WORLD
7' O ONE L lf E TO LIVE
ID (TO) FO O TSTEPS

A in t iic * n t d n i ik o t n ■ b illio n
p o u n d i o t c o I I m par y w .

2:30
) i O SEARCH FOR TOMORFIOW

$^

eo allen

\

M

C A
J W

w eekly
furhished

0 0 0 0 MORNING FLORIDA

700
(4i TODAY
O MORNING WITH C L A R IE S

(O N L A K E A D A )

(30J) 311 0490

MADAME KATHERINE
PALM

8

C A H t) - I H Y S T A l It A l l H L A I X N O

P a il f lt lf f U

P rtta n l

-

F u lu r a

A O V K E O N A l l A F f A IK S

• L IF E 'L O V E • M A R R I A G E • B U S I N E S S

B E E N IN B U S IN E S S F O R 50 Y E A R S
IN P R IV A C Y O F M Y H O M E
lO N t a o o o

8:00

J O CAPTAIN KANGAROO
f t (351 FRIO FlINTSTONE AND
FRIENDS
605
1 1 117) LASSIE

• M a id S e r v ic e
• i t H o ur P h e n e S e rv ic e
f i l C h a n n e l C a b le T V
f l i r t e n te r ta in m e n t
t N i f h t i in lo u n g e
• F a m ily R e t lA v r a n t
E lfic te n c y Ap t* A v a ila b le
At S lig h tly H ig h e r K ate
• Special D u count O n
M on thly R ate*

3200 S. Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford

KURAIT
(7 p a o o o MORNING AMERICA
H (35) MERCULOIOS
(D 110) VILLA ALEGRE
7:05
11 (17) FUNTIME
7:25
4 T00AY IN FLORIDA
O GOOO MORNING FLORIOA
7:30
TOOAV
GOOD MORNING AMERICA
(I (35) BANANA SPinS
(D 110) SESAME STREET (R|q

bedroom

• *#eot Peel

CAVALIER
M O T O R INN

(305)
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

HOURS 8 A M

-9 P M. C lo w d Sttivlny

1 R L 4 M K E NO R TH O f t H K iT H A L K H I I
cm MfeuiraAf* 11 ••* f t
I no* fu n INI 111II ARM h tMM.ee
U f s m f ie * » • « ! f «*w Ik e 4bC I k«aM k m
life i t Maeitay feta I I «• Vafe | k « ( v t

'D in e WHS H i- -

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

SUNDAY

SEAFOOD
BUFFET

PRIME
RIBS

BUFFET

All You Can Eat

Complete

AIL YO U
CAN EAT

Dinner

Choice of
2 Entrees

with

Soup &amp; Salad Bar

Salad Bar

Vegetables

F R E N C H F R IE S

$5.95

$5.95 $6.95
5 to U p.m.

be postmarked by midnight

S to H p.m.

3 to • p.m.

CHILDREN UNDER 12 — V* PRICE

SUNDAY, AUG UST 9

U v a Entertainm ent in our B u ccan eer Lo u n g e M on.-Sat.
3200 S .O R L A N D O D R .

— L a s t D a t e f o r V E G E T A B L E S A S A L A D S . . . S u n d a y , A u g u s t 2 —-

4L4

(a

y y

1:30

6 55

CORN ON T H E COB

Or Drop OH At Our Office:
100 N. FREN CH AVE.
(By the lakefront in downtown Sanford)
MON. F R I. 1:101:10 - SAT. 1:10 NOON

mmmmm

i- J i

J o
t h e YOUNG AND THE
RESTLESS
i Q RYAN S MOPE
II (35) FAMILY AFFAIR
(!) (10) FAST FORWARD

ED 110) AM WEATHER

CRAB R O LLS

A ll racipes received w ill be published in October
for the Evening H e ra ld 's flrs l annual cookbook
contest.

■

y jl jji Ff{. VYS

6 45

HUSH P U P P IE S

Entrias must

12:00

B

605
n ( 17) HOLLYWOOD REPORT
0:30

SOUP A SA LA D BAR

■

,

) .

WEEKEND SPECIALS

So send In t h a t s p e c ia l r e c ip e y o u r f a m il y a n d f r ie n d s lik e so w e l l

SANFORD. FLA . 11771

ALL SEATS

rU U A I

SUNRISE

SEAFOOD — POULTRY — MEATS — DESSERTS — MICROWAVE

Mail Entries to: EVENINO H ERA LD
C O COOKBOOK

AFTERNOON

Tl (351AU B A R K E R

Food Categories Com ing Up In The N ext 5 W e e k s O f The Contest:

Anyone can enter except Eve n in g H erald e m ­
ployees and their im m ediate fa m ily .

U

1 a AS THE WORLD TURNS

600

Y O U M A Y EN TER AS M A N Y W EEKS A S Y O U LIKE

T Y P E or P R IN T your recipe g ivin g lu ll In­
structions tor preparation, cooking tim e and
tem perature. (Approxim ate num ber ot servings
also helpful.)

t w in

.y I I « l I I I 1WJ Q Q (

1:05

a 4 TODAY IN f LORfDA
1 O HEALTH FIELD

motor inn

NO LIMIT T O NUM BER O F RECIPES SUBM ITTED

No lim it to number ot recipes subm itted but each
recipe must Include your name, address and
telephone

11 45
GD 110) STORTBOUNO

LSCatMlirr

W e e k ly w inners a r e e lig ib le fo r th e G R A N D PRIZE

RULES:

| Tj F V ryd TT&gt;e«trc » I

11 (17) MOVIE

0 4 d a i l y DEVOTIONAL
&gt; O dakvw oro

Abpy

5:35
11 (17) B E V E R LY HILLBILLIES

W ORLD

5:30
t o SUMMEfl SEMESTER
5:45
It 117) WORLD AT URGE
5 55

manauvart Vat la Ihs raataum l

7,|| jhlCWS-

ID HO) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R|

1:00

7 O MARCUS WtLBT, M 0

?

4 : G IlliG A N S ISLAND
» O V A 'I 'H

B

uoo

4 W HEEL OF FORTUNE
i O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
7 p TH REE S CO M PAN Y |R)

B ‘ DAYS OF OUR LIVES
7 p ALL MY CHILDREN
II (351 MOVIE
(0 (10) JAMES MiCHCNCRS

MORNING

10:00
o

ftefie* On Thee

, FRX3AY,

17) o TAX) I ot no ape a, ant taa
ton J*m banonu.1 opsattaU mth
ba u m n g a e&gt;aalcapOtnai iHI.’J
c l)

MOVIE

445

7 P

5:30

11 (171 FREEMAN REPORTS

t l (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

I O

e re

11 (17IOZZ1E AND HARRIET

n (35IOICK VANDYKE
6D 110) ELECTRIC COMPANY |R|

1205

NEWS

Craw

9:00
Cl
4
MOVIE Cakforme Gold
Rufeh
i Premier*) Robert May*.
John Pehner Rafted on Bloc mm by
Brel Her l a An Aiptrsng author
head! west m the tale 1840* in
te a c h ot adventure* to write

505

fD 110) ERICA

Toe* (C||1tl?&gt; M &gt; fneLoy.Jeanne

1 P

&gt;5A

( O ( lO ) M ISTER R O G E R S |R|

10:30
B 4 BLOCKBUSTER S
) Q ALICE |R|

335

830

vz/nas

t t l 17l MOVIE

305

CD O
BO SO M B U O O liS Ma w ,
wM#* about the
h i and
Kip haw* had: while dttgulBed fet
l«ma&gt;a« And thing m a women t
iw d e n c e (Rj
(D I 10) SN EAK P N C V lfW S

5:00
i a H O G AN S HERO ES
II i35| W O N D E R W O M AN

4 C A R O SH ARKS
I O ’ O NEWS
II (35) THE WORLD O f P EO PLE

o t r DAILY d e v o t i o n a l

III (1 7 ) MOVIE
SAArfe’ ( I M ll
Burt Reynold*. Arthur KenrwuJy A
huge *tnt• thArk attack* • dnnng
parry ftdufertfrng tor Bunk an It*#
•ure

4 35
I I I 17) HAZEL

(D ( 101 BOOK BIRD

Gerhetd

8 05

Don't Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

NEWS

(II (1 7 ) MOVIE
De*tmet«&gt;n
Tokyo (tTMSi Cary Grant. John

n (3 5 ) MOVIE
Hombce (C)
( 1867) Pau l Newman
Fredrtc
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Thursdsy, July X, Itll

Lego! Notice

REALTY TRANSFERS
Th* Huskey Co to D e c e it * .,n *
Jp nng w oo d V ill A p tt C p rp to
Conslr C o r p . L o t 11. H lk C.
V lt m *
D rr» ts,
Un
I f l B.
J w re tw a tfr o u t , S o t II. 110.000
S p rm p a o o d VIII. C o n d o . *37.100
E m erit C o n slr C o . I r e to John
W illia m C Conley A a t Roberta
A Rauch t w t Su san J , L o t 11.
D to Jo h n F Doyon A M a r ily n
Carolyn E l l s , t i l HO
F ly n n .b o tn s g l .L o t 14 A E ' r o f 11.
Jo* W W illia m s o n A w t h * i*o
B lk 1. R t t u r v t y o l B it 4 W ild
m f f f . S41 $00
V to W illia m H B ra f.l* 1 a t
K aryn M . Lot I. W e s iv a C lu b
I r tn a C W F Si m o n A h b R J
rm .s «
s* i. i d i o o o
td R o y d tn A B a rth A a t M a r y E .
M $ A J u t t t ia t i. it J r to V ic to r
L o t t I f l A 174
F ra n k
L
E M u rra y A a t D o r n M . L o t t I S.
W o o d ru ffs s d SIS.I N
B it G. L o t t M in t S h o r n . I H t
Leo C
tre p a n ,ar la H u m a n
port, t n ay.
P a r t D o v C o a p . l o t t B it f t
I0 C 0 J C h t r lt t F M o r m o n A wt
D ra a m a o id 4th S tc , SVSOO
J t t n t llt M
to J t o n t t t t M
Ana M
C r u i R iv e ra A hb
M orriso n, tg i . L o t I t, G rte n g a to
ir o b a ld a lo C h t r lt t W Ftnnigan
E t t t t n 1100
( m a r r .l, Lot M . R ic h fie ld . Sat too
W illia m Y e a ric k III to R o n a ld I
L O tero* B tO m o n A a t M o r lt
to D t m t t n o F e r d o m g A. a t
M anco A a t M y N . S H I W o l l o t
H triim to . S it ) &lt;4 o&lt; N HO I t ' o l E
Id. S ia v la F a rm t. I t t t fa 171 O f ot
E 111 4B’ . S I).f N
141 l l ' o l W H O l o o t Lot IS. F o re st
L o t t t d BIS 000
IO C D I Shaaron T A rn o tl llo r m
B o o tti E o tt, Inc 10 L e o n ard
T ru d a l A hb Da* d S to Shear on
C o u t t b t r r y . L o t 1. B it B . Sport
T ru d t A rn o tl A hb D a y id S . l o t
tm o n t Pared,**, le s s p e rt. I I 4 POO
14. W h isp e raood at Sab*I P o in t,
N.choi** B
M ttlo n . t g l
to
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M t llo n , s g i
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R o b e rt E M c K e e A a t G a d C 10
C o th o rin tB S lt llo . t g l ( m o t n t r l.
R a n d a ll L Roberts A a t Sharon
Lot 14. O ritn to G e r d tn s , )n d Addn,
M , L o t 1. Un B. The Terrace.
t in
Sent . ISO NO
i
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M ar tn* Jo G e r m Ed**erds A hb
N S ta rt. Lot 11. B i t D. l o a n L
G ordon L to Thom as A M u in n ,
Country E t l t H r p l . t ll.0 0 0
Lot 1*. H o a e ll E s t t t d . r rp .
IO CO I A lla n L M a t t e r land 1
i l l . MO
a t F r a n c lllt to A lla n L
Mac
C la r in e t R C a r p t n t t r io J N e ill
Fa rlo n d . indiy . L I 7, B it F . T n t
M c G t r v t y A * t le a n C , Lot SI.
Woodlands. I U 0
W t k ir a Cove. Ph One. H O I.N O
D a ..d W Won A a t T a y lo 0 to
Sam uel L L e vy A a t M a r ia to
Juon J F o rre s 1 a t M a r lo V . L o t
M atca r Alum P ro d C o . bag SE
1. lto n ta o o d F a r m . M M O O
cor ot N E '* ot SW '* Sac It 10 10
lO C O t S n tid tr A t t o c ia t t i to etc . S lt fl ON
City ol W inter S p o t p o rt o t Lot B
D ennis W G a llo a a y , sgi to
B l i t , t t c . o R M i l t h t l l t Survey
E ie c u tra n s , I n c . L o t 11. Blk B.
o4 Moses E L t y y G ra n t. 1100
Ste rling P ark Un 1. ssf.tOO
(OCO) C ity o l W in tt r S p o t to
E ie c u tra n s Inc to R ic h a rd G
M arondo nom ay inc . b a g SW Snyder A a t O tb re K . L o t I I . B it
cor o tL o l 11. B lk M. F o e m o a r, (Jn
B. S te rlin g P e rk U n 1. SJ7.S0D
1. HOO
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(OCOI FI L a n d Co to C ity ot M ic h e ttl. s g i. Lot 1. W edgeaood
W S . from SW c o r ot L o t 11. B lk
te n n is V illa s. 140 400
M Fovm oor U n 1. t ie , S I N
Steven Shelton A a t C h ristin e to
T o m p tin t Da* to I t t p h t n □
Lem uel S B a rre tt, L o t It. W ek.v*
C a m tro n A a t C la r a E . L o t I I.
Hitts, Sec I. IfO 000
G r o v t v it a V illa g e . 14*.*00
le w t e id A p t s . Inc to Pam#,# j
Cynthia B H .n o io ia to C h a rio t
Taytor. U n N 3&lt;S0, C e d a ra o o d
M G ra m A a t L a u ra J . L o t II.
V illa g e Condo I, S a o .lX
Blk F. W in ttr S p o t. 1110.000
W in ttr Spot D ev lo C a sd re k
M atto u d k o m p a n l 1 a t N S a r d
ind . Inc . Lot 10. T u tc a a iiia . U n
to John T C a tc ie A a t R u th M . t. Sit.aOO
Lot II, Blk B. S a t t t a a t t r O a n .
C d a a r d E F e r n s A a t R u th A
Stc I. II IS ON
F r e d e r ic k H
Rcnaud A a t
H M ilit r A Sony F I . Inc lo
P a t r ic ia lo D av id G H ill A a t
Ja m a l E Robison A a t D ia n a M . Sutarm* L . Lot t l . O v itd o T e rr .
Lot If, Blk B . C a m t io t U n 4. 110 f N
141.000
1h* R ya n Co to D a y id A B a il A
R C A lo It D a l* G o t m b t l A a t
a t L y n n e P l o t 10 B lk A. F a . m a y
Cynthia L . Lot aa. H id d e n L a ta . Coy*. C B . H I . ON
Ph II. Un 1. 144.400
W ayn* p Thurber A a t V irg in ia
R C A to D on ald R
T h om at.
K ath le en J V an A is t L o t t , B lk
t p l. Lot M . M.dden L a k t . P h It, B. L y n a o o d Rev SW.400
Un I. 141.AN
C h a rle s S C h rltle n te n A a t
L t a . l G l a i l A a t C h a r lo tt t I to Je tn lo Jey C H o stH te r A a t
Aib**t C Sh erm an A a t M a r y K , Sendra S . Lot It, B lk N. Sprm g
Lot II. F o ia o o d . P h a s e On*. l a k t H lllt . Sec 1. H4S.O N
MS. W
G e r a ld R M c G r a lly J r lo G u n n
R icha rd O B y rd A a t S h a r r r L
1 S a a a a ll. lo t s H A M A p a ri ot
t o W illia m G R a n d a ll A a t T t r t t a
N A 11. Blk £ , Santando S p rin g s
k . Lot I I I A W V | o l M 0. *40.000
Tr f t . l" d re p l *10.000
W illiam K B o il A a t C a r o lr n to
U S Hom e Corp to D a v id K
G a ry L W a lk s r ik A a t R oaan n*
T-t)belts, Lot 1. B it E . O a k c r ts t s
V . Lot 11*. F o r t t t B ro o k F o u rth
d. SH.WO
Stc . i f f .000
M ic h e e I G H anson A a t C y n th ia
tra n c e s T A t t n , a id Id K m
neth N p r t s t t y A a t D e b o rah , L o t
to Ja m a s G
Sp u rlo ck A a t
L B it C. L ittle W t t iv t E t t l t4o
K a th a r in e M .L o t It, B it h N u rtn
a . M l WO
O rla n d o le r r H I M
v ir o n . it t l t ' V s Inc lo C h a r it t
IO C D I Nan r. D aniel A a t
P r e m m . r A a t J u d ith A , L o t
O onica lo N e il G D an iel L o t IS.
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Sautaiita, Sec 1. 11.000
I S«f ing«o&lt;4 V 'lla g t A p t C o rd to
E d a m A C t m s h a a A a t D on na
Thomas J C r a a to rd A a t E * a lr n
lo B e ar G u lle y . L td , 1 ISO' o l SW
B . Un IfaD Sp rin g wood V o n a g t
• o l S t 1«of Sec IS II X . A P a r t o l
Conoo , t i t WO
NW ' i o l N E t . o l Set I t I t N . H
tra n t C W F . Stintors llo r m
ol C e n tr ot B e e r Gutty C re e k
W hitt) A hb R J to R o y d an A
*7*1,000
Barth A a t M a r y E lla . L o t t 1ft A
R C A t o L y n n A T ra n tch in e . t g l ,
H I. F ra n k L
W o o d r u ffs t d .
Lot 1, M ifld m L a k e , Ph It, U n I.
W IN
HO. *00

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Legal Notice

legal Notice

IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T O F
T H l IIO H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y , F L O R I D *
C A SE NO II 111 C A ee K
1 T E R L IN G P A R K
H O U 1 IN G
A llO C I A T I O N . IN C ., e F lo r id a
corp o rsiio n not tor p r o lil.
P la in t it*,
vt
J A M L 1 A JO H N S O N .
D e T t n d a n lli]
N O T IC E O F S A L E P U R S U A N T
T O C H A P T E R 41
Notice t g iv e n m e t p u rsu a n t lo a
F in a l
D a la u tt
Judgm ent
In
Foreclosure d ated J u ly 14 I N I in
C it e No It 111 C A N K o l the
C irc u it Court m end to r S em inole
C o u n ty .
F l o r id a
in
a h lc h
S T E R LIN G P A R K
H O U S IN G
A S S O C I A T I O N . IN C .* F lo y Id a
corporation not lo r p r o lil. It th e
pla m llH and J A M E S A J O H N S O N
a r a t h t d t f y n d a n iiil, I w ill s a il to
the highest and bast b id d e r lo r
cash m Ih t lobby at th# W est fro n t
door ot the Sam .not* County
Courthouse m S a nto ro. Se m ino le
County. F lot Ida. at II 00 A M cm
August 1L I N I the fo llo w in g
d escribed p ro p e rly te t lo r th In th e
o r 0** o l lin a t lu d g m tn !
Lot II. B lo ck A . S te rlin g P a r k ,
U m i No T h rt t . as per p la t the* to !
recorded n P ie t Book I I . P ag e s II.
11. and 14. P u d lic R e c o rd s 01
Sam m ole County. F lo r id a
D A T E D J u ly 14. I t l l
IS (A L )
A ith u r H f-e c k w ith . J r .
C lerk of C.icu&lt;l C o u rt
B r P a ttN iA R cbm son
Deputy C U tk
Publish July X . A u g u s t A I N I
DC k 1 «

IN T H E C IR C U IT C O U R T l l t h
J U D I C I A L C IR C U IT S E M I N O L E
C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
C iv il A d '« n N vm bvr II M l C A I f L
C IT IC O R P P E R S O N T O P C R S O N
F IN A N C IA L
CENTER
OF
F L O R I D A INC .
P lt m t if f U )
v%
N IC H O L A S A
D iO M E O I
#n&lt;*
M A R Y E O lO M E D la
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N O T IC E O F S A L E
N o f k ii it tttra b y fliv t n that,
pur w a n t lo «n order or a f in a l
fu d g m tn f of t o f f t ie t iu f f t n t f f *&lt;f m
t b f kbove U k p lio w d Action. I W ill
s e ll t h t p ro p e r ty t i t v f f t d in
S e n u n o lf County. F lo rid a .
L o t 14, B lo ck
G
H O W ELL
C O V E S E C O N D S E C T IO N
ac
co rd in g to p li! th tfa o f n re co rd e d
m P la t Book 21* P e g r t 14 e n d IS.
P u b lic R e c o r d ! o l S e m in o le
Co untjf. Flo rid *
ef p ub lic t i l t s to the ru q n n r 4**1
te s t bidder tar c e ih . at the C m i
F ront Door o l tti* le m m o lt County
Cogrtnouse »n Senfoed Fior»d«.
A u g u if II. I N I betw een 11 00 A M
end : 00 P M
(Seen
A R T H U R M B E C K W IT H JR
C L E R K C IR C U IT C O U R T
B y P e trie ie R o b in w n
D eputy Clerk
P u b lic n July 20. A v g u il I I t l l
D ? K T M ____________ _______

■ B ttm

M4 T N I C I R C U I T C O U R T O R
T H l t it * J U D I C I A L C I R C U I T . IN
A N O FO R S F M IN O t ■ C O U N T V
F L O R ID A
C A S E NO It I t H C A f t L
JO H N SURA T R U S T E E .
P ie m t iM,
n
FRANK
S IL V E S T R I
IN
F IC T IT IO U S M A M l
V E S T M E N T S . I N C . BANK. O F
None* It he re b y g iv e n that I a m
M
O
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A
L
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G
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engaged in but in e t t *1 P O. Boa II
G e n e v a . F la
1111) S e m in a l* S I L V E S T R I
De*end e n t i
County. F lo r id a un de r the IN
N O T IC E O F A C T IO N
iiiio v t nam e o l C h r is t ia n Routing.
TO
B
A
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K
OF
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REAL
i m that I in te n d to re g is te r Said
P o d O H.Ct B ob 400 J
name w ith th* C la rk o f the C ir c u it
M e n !r te l, Quebec
Court. S em ino le C o u n ty , F lo r id a us
CANADA
accordance w ith the p ro v isio n * ol
Y O U A R E N O T I F I E D I b if a
the F ictitio u s N a m e Statute*. To
C o m p lin * to tor•&lt;tot* A m o rtga g e
W it
S e c tio n 111 00
F lo r id *
M t been b led i g i met you m I he
Statute! ttSf
Above nem ed Court. And you A re
A g M a ry J a m T a c t t it
P ub lish J u ly t i M A A u g u s t A II, . r e q v r t d to t« rv * A copy ol your
ontMter o r p le o d n g to the C o m
t« i
p lA int on the P lo m M I » A ttorne y.
D EK tf
Stephen M Stone. E iq u ir e , o f the
U r n 04 S C O A L . W O O DS A N O
STON E
P A . J2| E a %I Pin#
F IC T I T I O U S N A M E
Street. Or U ndo, F lo r d A 2 2 ffl. end
Notice it h ereb y g iv e n that
M
e
the
or
tgihAl
e m n e r or p ie b d m g
are engaged in b u s in e s s at to t
North I) 01. C a s te rb a rry . S r m m o ll m the o ffice 01 the C le rk of the
C ir c u it Court in end For S e m in o le
County. F lo r id a u n d e r the I k
t it d u s nam a o l G O L D E N C O M B County, Fio r.d e . on o r be F o rt
B E A U T V S A L O N , a n d That I m
A ugust 12. I t l l
lend l o n g t ie r t a d n a m a m i n t ha
II you t Ail lo do vo. iv d g m e n i by
C la r k c* t h t C i r c u i t C o u r t , d tlA u it m i l be to ke n o g o .nvl you
For the re lie f dem onded Mi the
Sam mo Ir C o u n ty . F lo r id a In ac
t o rd a n c rw .th th e p r o v lt w n t e l the C o m p lia n t
h W IT N E S S m y bond A A d U A lt h v
F ictitio u s N a m a S W u te * . To W it
ta ctio n I S S N
F lo r id a H a t v la t Tth 0 4 r Of Ju ly . IMBI
ARTH U R H B E C K W IT H . JR
Ittf
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C le rk ot the C M (m f C o urt
M i l a S ta p le to n
R r C o m e E B uvttnef
P ubU th Ju ly la . T A ' » A A u t u t l A |
D eputy C le rk
P u b lish Ju ly f . If. Tl* 20. 1*01
IN I
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IN T H E C I R C U I T C O U R T O F
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y. F L O R ID A
C A S E N O II M S C A f t K
S T E R LIN G PA R K
H O U S IN G
A S S O C IA T IO N I N C . a F u r .d a
rorfm ra tiQ fi nut for prof if.
P « i ntktf
C A R L L w h i t e and E L O I S E D
W H IT E,
D H e n d e n tlv )
N O T IC E O F S A LE PU R S U A N T
T O C H A P T E R 41
N o tic e t! 9 i*m lha f purvuant to a
f m at
D e f a u lt
Ju d g m e n t
m
F o re clo su re dated Ju ly ?4. I f f ! m
Cave N o II M I C A Of K of the
C ir c u it C o urt »n and to r Sem inole
C o u n ty .
F io rn d a .
in
a h lc h '
S T E R L IN G P A R K
H O U S IN G
A S S O C IA T IO N
I N C . a F lo rid *
c o rp o ra tio n not for p ro fit, is the I
pta&lt;nfiff and C A R L L W H IT E and
E L O I S E t&gt; W H I T E a re fhe
defendanti% |t 1 a &gt;11 s e ll to the
h .q h rs f end 'best bidder fo r |AVh «n
the lo b by at the West fron t door of
the S cm .n o If County Courthouse in
S a n fo r d .
S e m in o le
C o u n ty ,
F lo r id a at It Od A M on August
25. I f f ) the Io Mo * ii&gt;q d e s e rte d
p ro p e rty set fo rth .n the order of
fin a l rudqmen*
L o t 22. B lo ck C. S te rlin g Park*
yin it (No One. *% per p la t 1here®I
re co rd e d m P la t Book l i Pag es f j
and e j P u b lic R ecords of Sem inole
County. F lo r id a
D A T E D Ju ly 24. 19ft
(S E A L !
A rth u r H Becktti th. J r
C le rk of Clrcv&lt;1 Court
B y P a in c ia Robinson
D epu ty C U rk
P u b lis h Ju ly 20, A ugust A ITtl
141

j

in

the

c ir c u it

court

fo r

S E M IN O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O B A T E D IVIS IO N
F ile N u m b e r f t 24) C P
D iv is io n
IN R E E S T A T E O F
D O N A L D W M A R TIN *
Deceased
N O T I C E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V I N G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANDS
A G A IN S T TH E A B O V E E S T A T E
A N D A LL O THER
PERSO NS
I N T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE O
th a t
th e
ad
m in is t r a t io n of th e e sta te of
D O N A L D w m a r t i n deceased.
F ile N u m b e r II M2 C P , 11 pending
In
th e
C ir c u it C o u rt
to r
S E M IN O L E
C o u n ty , F lo rid a .,
P ro b a te D iv isio n , the address of
nth k i t it P 0 D ra tte r C Sanford.
FI The personal re p re se n ta tive e*
th e
e s ta te
is
JU D IT H
M
R A S M U S S E N , a hose address is
R o ute I. B ob 15)7. O vie do FI The
n a m e and address of the personal
re p re se n ta tiv e 1 attorney ere set
fo rth below
A il p ersons haying c la im s or
d e m a n d s a g ain st the r t f at* are
r e q u ir e d
W IT H IN
TH FEE
M O N TH S FR O M THE OATF OF
t h e F IR S T P U B L I C A T I O N O f
T h i s N O T I C E , to f ile with the
c le rk of the above c o u rt a w ritte n
statem ent ot any c la im or dem and
they m a y have. E a c h da&lt;m m u tt
be in w ritin g and m ust indicate the
b a n t to r the claim,, the n am e and
a d d re ss of t h a tr e d ter or his agent
or attorney, arm m e amount
jc la im e d If the c la im is not yet
due the d a te wheb if w llf b ir o m e
due shad ge stated* it Ih t c la im m
contm qenf o r un liquidated the
n a tu re of Jhe wncerta n t i sh a ll be
sta te d II the cla m is secured, the
se c u rity sh a ll be d e scrib e d The
c la im a n t shad d e liv e r tufticM w f
cop ie s of the c la im to the c le rk to
e nab le the c le rk tu m a d one copy
lo e a ch personal re pre se n ta tive
A it persons interested In the
esta te to w hom a copy of th is
N o tic e of A d m in istra tio n h*as been
m a ile d a re requ ired . W IT H IN
T H R E E M O N TH S t ROM TH E
DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B LIC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T IC E * to iil* a n y obi re lie n s
they m ay ha v e that challeng e m e
v a lid ity of tn# decedent t *.11 in#
q u a lit ic a f io n i ot th e p e rs o n a l
re p re se n ta tive or the venue o r
ju ris d ic tio n of the cou rt
A L L C L A IM S , D E M A N D S . A N D
O B J E C T I O N S NOT SO F I L E D
W IL L B E F O R E V E R B A R R E D
D ate ot lh* first p ub lica tion of
fh*s N o lt c t o f A d m in istra tio n July
I I. 1t4l
Jud d h M Rasm ussen
A s Prcso nat R e p re sen tative
of the E state o f
DONA L O W M A R T IN
D eceased
A T T O R N E Y rO R P E R S O N A L
r e p r e s e n t a t iv e

O F NO P O I K E O U
500 H ig h w a y If 42
F e r n P a rk , F L )JF10
Telephone JOS 1)4 1424
P u b lis h July 2) )0. IMP
O C K II
IN T l i r C I K C u i l C O U R T O f
TH E I l O M t l l N T M JU D IC IA L
C tK C U II.
IN
ANO
KOR
I t M I N O l i C O U N T Y . I LO R ID A
C A t E NO II 111* C A H R
K E L L E R b u il d in g PRO DUCTS
0 1 O U L A N O O INC .
P la in t i l l
rt
T lW B E R l I N I B U I L D E R } . IN C .
a I W id a C 01 out at ,on
D l t in d ln l
LEV0N E
C U tO j, M

A

Legal Notice

legal Notice

N O T I C E O P P U B L I C ttE A R I N O

N O T IC E o f p u b l i c

th e

¥%

#e-

b o a r d

o f

an

o r d in a n c e

O R D IN A N C E

a m e n o in g

f ill

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s e m in c le
p r

c o u n ty

E h E n s iv e

g e n e r a l
d e n s it y

of

p la n

r u r a l

the

an

use

r e s id e n t ia l

fo r

is

*-*V f ' * 4 lS ^ e #■*

COUNTY

lo w

r e s id e n t ia l

d e n s it y

DEADLINES
Noon The Doy Before Publication

fr o m

Sunday - Noon Friday

b e e n

S U B M IT T E D
BY
W IL L IA M
T R i C k E L . J** . T R U S T E E
F u rth e r th e P L A N N I N G A N D
I O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y W ill hold a
p u b lic h a t t in g m R o o m TOO o l the
S e m in o l* C o u n t y C o u rth o u se .
S a n lo rd . F lo r id a , on A ugust L
I t t t , o r a t toon ih t r t a t le f o t
p o ssib l*. to re v.e w . h e a r com
m t n li
and
m ake
re c o m
m e n da tio ns to th* B o a rd o l County
C o m m iiS io n e r s o n th e a b ove
cap tio ne d o rd in a n c e and re ion m g
A d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n m a , be
o b tain ed by c o n ta c tin g ttw L an d
M *n*o e m « n t M a n a g e r at ITS 4110.
E l l ltd
P e rso n s u n a b le to attend 'h e
h e a rin g w ho w .sh lo com m ent on
th* pro p o sed a ctio n s m ay subm it
w ritte n s ta te m e n ts lo th* Land
M a n a g e m rn l D iv is io n p rio r lo t h *
sched uled p u b lic h e a rin g Persons
a p p e a rin g at the he a rin g s m ay
su b m it w ritte n sta te m e nts o r be
he a rd b ra tly
P e rso n s a r e a d v is e d that, it they
d e cid e to a p p e a l any d tcis io n
m ade at th e ta m e e ting s, they wilt
need a re co rd o l the proceedings,
and. toe su c h purp ose, they m ay
need to e n su re th a t a v e rb a tim
re co rd o l lh * peoceedm gs n made,
w h ic h
re co rd
In c lu d e s
the
l e l l i m o n r a n d e v id e n c e upon
w h ic h the ap pe a l is to be based
B o a rd 01 C o unty
C o m m itiio n e r s
Sem note C o u n ty . F lo r id a
By R o b e rt S tu rm .
C h a irm a n
A ttest A r th u r H B e ck w ith jr
P u b lis h J u ly 30, August 17 A
Sep tem b er t. t t i t
D E k lot_________ ____ _______ ___
ill t i l l
C IR C U IT C O U R T O f
T H E E I G H T E E N T H J U D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
ANO
FO R
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
P R O R A T E D IV IS IO N
C A S E N O *1 *41
IN R E The e t i t l e *1
E l e a n o r b c h n ic e fo o le r
Deceased
N O T IC E O F A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
TO A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
C L A IM S
OR
DEM ANO S
A G A IN S T T H E A B O V E E S T A T E
AND ALL
OTHER
PER SO N S
I N T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S T A T E
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
th a t
Ine
ad
m in is t r a t io n o l I h t r s l a i t of
E L E A N O R B E R N IC E FO O LER ,
d eceased F ile N u m b e r 11)04. is
pmd&gt;ng m the C ir c u it Court tor
Sem ino l* C o unty. F lo r id a . Probate
D iv isio n , the a d d re ss ot w hich is
S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u rth o u se .
P a r k A v e n u e , S a nfo rd . F lo rid a
Th* p e rso n a l re p re se n ta tive o l tho
the esta te is k E N N C T H F O G L E * ,
w hose a d d re ss rs I I I Justin Way.
Sa n lo rd . F lo r id* 33771 Th* nama
a n d a d d r a s i o t t h t p e rs o n a l
r t p r a s e n t a liv r s atto rney a re set
fo rth below
A ll p e rso n s h a v in g c la im s or
d e m a n d s a g a m st In* r t i * i t a rt
r e q u ir e d
W IT H IN
THREE
M O N T H S F R O M TH E D A T E OF
T H E F I R S T P U B L I C A T I O N OF
T H IS N O T I C E . I* til* w dh the
c le r t o l lh * a b ove c o u rt * w ritten
sta te m e nt o l a ny c la im o r dem and
they m a y ha ve E a c h c la im m m I
be m w ritin g a n d m u ll ind ica te th*
b a s is tor th e H a im , th* nam e and
a d d r r t t o t t h a c r e d iia r or h it agent
*e a tto rn e y , and th* amount
c la im e d II th* c la im it not yet
due th* d a te w hen it w ilt become
due sh a ll b e s la te d it the c la m it
con tingent o r un liq u id a ted lh*
n a tu re ot th* u n c e r ta in !, sh a ll be
s ta le d II th e c ta .m i t secured, th*
se c u rity s h a ll be a rse r,o e d Th#
c la im a n t s h a ll d e liv e r tu tlic ie n t
cop ie s o l lh * c la im to the d a r k to
ena b le th* c ta tk t* m a il on* copy
to e a ch p e rs o n a l representative
AM p e rso n s u s te rn te d In In*
e s ia i* lo w ho m a copy ot this
N o tice o l A d m in it lr a t io n h a t been
m a ile d a re t y q u r t d . W IT H IN

c i

th r ee

is a lb

m o n th s

fro m

the

DATE
OF
THE
F IR S T
P U B LIC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
N O T I C E , to IM* a n y o b itc tio n t
th e y m a y h a v e that cha lle ng e the
v a lid ity o t lh * d ecadent i w ill, th*
q u a lif ic a t io n s e l th* p e rs o n a l
re p re se n t* ! v r Of th* venu* or
lu riS iA c tio n o t th* co u rt
A L L C L A IM S . D EM A N D S. A N D
O B J E C T I O N S NO T SO F I L E D
W IL L BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D
O a lo o l th* t i r t l p u b lica tio n ot
t h is NotiCOOl A d m in istra tio n July
10 I t l l
K E N N E T H FO O LER
A t P e rs o n a l R e p r r t m t a t lv t
ot th* E s ta te o l
E L E A N O R B E R N IC E FO O LE R
Th o m a s c g r e e n e . e s q u i r e
104 N P a r s A v e n u e
P O Boa SSS
Sa n lo rd F lo r id a 3)771
I30SI 371 07SI
A tto rn e y to r P e rso n a l
R e p re se n ta tiv e
P u b lis h J u ly 30 a n d A u g u s ts, I K I
O F K II*
FIC T IT IO U S N A M E
N o I k * is h e re b y g iv e n that I a m
engaged m b u tm e s t el 107 Des
F in e r i n . L on g wood Jem ,no!*
C o unty. F lo r id a under the IK
litig u s n a m e o t A B L E T V S E A
V I C E , a n d th a t I attend la re giste r
sa id n a m e m i n lh * C le rk ot lh*
C ir c u it C o u rt, Sam usolf County,
F lo r id a in a c c o rd a n c e w ith th*
p ro v isio n s ot tn* F ic titio u s N am *
H a rm * * . To W it
Section 4410*
F lo r id a S ta tu te s ITS)
S g W I L L I A M IS A A C S
P u b lis h J u ly X . August l 1). IOl
WEI
D E K 1)4

■ r* * - «

4—Personals

p r o p e r t y

h as

*

RATES

1 tim d
SOc Blind
HOURS
) c o n ie c u iiv t tlm *s SOc • lino
I M A M
- s - M P M
TconsocuttvotlniBS
o le
M O N D A Y thru F R I D A Y &gt;0consocutivotlm os J I c B lin g
S A T U R D A Y * Noon
S3 00 M in im u m
*3 Lines M in im u m

COM

p la n

a p p l ic a t io n

H k ik d T u i v C k
m at by v ir lu e ot that c e rta in W rit
o l E lo c u t io n Slued out o l and
un der th* se a l *4 th* County Court
.a O ra n g e C o unty. H o n d a , upon a
l.n a t lu d g t m t n i (m o w e d in lh *
aloe as* &gt;d cou rt on th* la in d a y ot
ju n * . A 0
1**1. &gt;n that cerTam
c a s e em itte d . V ik in g Sales A
S e r v ic e P i a i n t i l l .
v s A r n o ld
B u tle r and w it* . A irs
But tar.
D rfm d a n t. wh en afore sa id W r it
ol t i e t u i &gt;on w as d rfiv t r e d lo m e
as S h e riff o l Sem m ol* County.
F lo r id * , and I ha ve leew d upon the
f o llo w in g d a s c r ib e d p r o f w r t y
ow ned by A r n o ld P B u tle r. J r .
s a id p ro p e r ly bemg located in
S c m m o n C o u n ty , F lo rid a , m o re
p a r t ic u la r !) d e scrib e d a s fo llow s
O n* 1974 C h e v r c lrt V a n , brow n
in c o lo r. V IN N o C G Y I S t U t t a lt *
b e in g s t o r e d a t 17 *7 S h e ll.
C a s s e lb e rry . F lo r id a
A n d th* un dersig ned as SheriM o l
S e m m o l* C o unty, F lo r id * , w ill *1
II 00 A M on th* l i s t day o l
A u g ust. A o I N I . oRav lo r sa l*
and s e ll to th* highest b idder, toe
cash , s u b ie c l to any and a ll
t n i l i n g lie n s, at ttw Fro nt I w a s! I
D oor o l th e Sem m ol* County
C o urtho use in Sanford. F lo rid a ,
th * a b o v * d e s c iib a d R a t io n a l
p ro p e rty
That sa id sat* H being m ad* I*
s a t is ly th* te rm s o l s a d W rit of
C te c u tio n
Jo hn E P o lk . Sher.H
S e m m o l* C o unty. F lo r id a
P u b lis h J u t , M . August 4. I). TO.
ontn tna i l l ) an August I t , I N I
O C K 131
n o t ic e

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT

the

The W r i t ' I ot th* E a s t ■i ol th#
N o r t h w e s t ‘ a o l S e c tio n 14.
T ow nship II South. B in g e JO E * s l,
le ss ro a d rig h t o t w ay to r Red Bug
L a k e R o a d a n d T u s c a w illa Road
l lt s s lh * South *40 re el ot the West
UO le f t t h e r t o ll, a ll ly in g and
b e in g in S tm m o ta C o u n ty , F lo rid a
IF u rth e r d e s c rib e d a s being
West of I use aw, ii* R o a d , t o u t in g
R e d B ug R o a d la S a r r e t M O L I
lO IS T N o II

G E N E R A L C O M M E R C IA L ANO
w h o l e s a l e d i s t r i c t p i II s
I lia ?
B a g m n n g I7M SI II West
01 S E c o rn e r ol L o t at, run N o rth 17
O e g re ts I t m m o le s East 300 It,
N o rth 1) deg rees 1) m inutes West
I W I I It W e ll I t 1 It South 171 S*
It S E ly on a c u rv e 117 21 It E a s t
I IS ft
lo B e g in n in g , s p r in g
H a m m o c k . P B 1. P g 1, Sec IS 10
JO (F u rth e r d e scrib e d as in lh *
N o rth tria n g l* fo rm e d by the in
r e fle c t io n ot SR &lt;17 and O ld I I I)
C o n sistin g o4 le ss than on* a cr*
( D I S T R I C T No 1)
1 u rth e r, a p u b ic hearing w ill be
haid b y the S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y
P L A N N IN G
AND
T O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N O N A U G U S T S.
1*11 A T 7 00 P M . or as soon
th e re a t!e f as possible, &gt;n Room 300
o l th e Sem inole County Couv
m o use Sanford, F lorida. in order
to r e v ie w , h e a r ctm m a ncs and
m a k e ifc o m m m d a lt a n t lo the
B o a rd o l C o unty Co m m s s o n e rs ol
S tm in o l* Count* on th* above
a p p lic a tio n t s i
Titos* m attendance w ill be
h e a rd and w ritte n com m ents m ay
be
t ile d
w it h
the
la n d
M an a g e m e n t M an a g e r H e a rin g s
m ay be con tinue d tra m lim a to
tim e a s found n e c rs s a iy F u rth e r
d e ta ils a v a ila b t* by c a llin g H I
4 ) » . E i l ISO
P e rso n s a re a d v s e d t h a t it they
d e cid e to a p p e a l any d e cision
m a d * at m as* m eetings, they w ill
need a re co rd o l the proceedings
a n d tor Such pm pose, they m ay
need lo e n su re that a v e rb a tim
r e c o r d o lt h e p r o c e v d n g s u made,
w h ic h
rae tte d
in c lu d e s
th *
t e s t im o n y a n d e v id e n c e u p o n
w h ic h the ap pe a l is to be m id *
B o a rd *4 C o unty C o m m .siio n e cs
Sem m o l* County, F lo rid *
BY
R o b e rt Sturm . C h a irm a n
A tte s t A ttn u r H B e ckw ith, J r
P u b lis h Ju ly M. A uo 17, Sept I.
IN I
D E k IW ______________
'
n o t ic e o f ih e r if f

o f

p r e h e n s iv e

d e s c r ib e d

1.0 l i f t O t P U B L I C H t B H I U G
IH t
S E M IN O L E C O U N tY
B O A R D OF
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
w ill h o ld a p u b lic h e a ring in R oom
TOO o f the S e m in o le C o u n ty
C o u rth o u se Sanford . F lo r id a on
S E P T E M B E R I. I N I A T 7 0 0
PM
or as soon ih e te a fie r as
iz n v b i* lo co n sid e r lh* follow ing
P U B LIC
H E A R IN G
FO R
CHANGE
OF
T O N IN G
R E G U LA T IO N S
R O BER T n AND ROBERT L.
m ill e r
m e i o n c fR O M A I
to

a m e n d in g

O'lando-Winter Paik

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

TO C O M M E R C I A L F O R
ThE
P U R P O S E OF H E /O N IN G FROM
A I
A g fI R 1 A A A
S IN G L E
F A M I L Y D IS T TO OC O F F I C E
D IS T R IC T . T H E
F O L L O W IN G

TH E P U R P O S E O F R E I O N I N G
F R O M a I A G R I C U L T U R E TO P
IA S I N G L E F A M I L Y D W E L L I N G
O IS T
THE
FO L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D P R O PE R T Y
The N W ’ • ot the N W 1. of S e tt o n
) f I t I t . le ss Ihe South ) » It end
le ss th e N o rth )*&gt; ti end also, less
th* R W tor S R 110 IA la ta , a
T r a ill t l a cre s M O L (F u rth e r
d e s c rib e d *s a p p r o im a t e ty I )
m ile N W of th e intersection ot
L a k e H a y e s and S R 110 co rrid o r I
1D IST N o II
A P P L IC A T IO N HAS B E E N
S U B M I T T E D B Y B R I A N M A N T IS
P I 10 S i l l
so
F u rth e r , th* P L A N N I N G A N D
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y m il ho ld a
p ublic h e a rin g In Room 100ot the
S e m in o le C o u n t , C o u rth o u se ,
Van lo rd . F lo r id a , o n August L
ISSI. o r as soon thereafter as
y c s s ib te to r t v ie w . hear com
m e n ls
and
m ake
re c o m
m e n d a tio n s to the B oard ot County
C o m m is k io n r r s o n the a b o v e
ra p tw n e d o rd in a n c e and rerom ng
A d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n m a y b r
o b ta in e d by co n ta ctin g the L a n d
M a n a g e m e n t M an a g e r at I t ) a iu ,
E i l 1*0
P e rso n s un able to attend in*
h e a rin g mho w ish to com m ent on
th* pro p o sed a ctio n s may subm it
n f it t e n sta te m e n ts to the L an d
M a n a g e m e n t D iv is io n p rio r to lh*
sc h e d u le d p u b lic hearing P e rso n s
a p p e a rin g at tn a hearing s m ay
su b m it iK fitte n s la t t m m t s or be
h a a rd o r a lly
P e rso n s a r t ad v is e d that. II they
d e cid e lo a p p e a l any M e d a n
m a d e a l these m eeting s, they *111
need • re co rd o l th e proceedings,
and lo r such purpose, they m a y
need to e n su re that a v e rb a tim
re c o rd o t th* pro ceed ing s IS m ade,
w h ic h
re co rd
In c lu d e s
tna
t e s t im o n y a n d e v id e n c e u p o n
w h ich in * ap pe a l is lo ba based
B o a rd ol C o u n iy Com m issio ne rs
S e m in o le C o unty, F lo rid a
By
R o b e rt S tu rm . C h a irm a n
A tte s t A rth u r H B e ik w t h .jr
P u b lis h Ju ly 30. A u g 17, Sept I,
’ l l ’_________________D E k 101

a g r ic u lt u r e

e l e m e n t

S E M IN O L E

fr o m
lo w

o r d in a n c e

Seminole

O R D IN A N C E
77 I t
W H IC H
A M EN D S T H E D E T A ILE D LAN D

co m

to

CLASSIFIED ADS

THE BO ARD OF COUNTY
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y m i l hold *
p u b lic h e a rin g m R o o m TOO o l th*
S e m in o l* C o u n t y C o u rth o u s e .
Sanford. F lo r id a , on S E P T I, I N I
at 7 00 P M . o r as to o n th e re at)* ,
as pessibt*. to c o n sid e r a sp e cific
la n d u s* a m e n d m e n t to the
S e m in o l* C o u n ty C o m p re he nsive
P la n a n d R E I O N I N G
o l ttw
d e sc rib e d p ro p e rty

W H IC H

a m en d s the d e t a iiEo la n d
use

Jl—Situations Wanted

h e a r in g

co u n ty

C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y H ilin o ld a
p u b ic n e a r .ng m R o o m IQQ ot in*
S e m m o l* C o u n i* C e u r in o u t* .
Santord. F lo r «Ja on Sept I, (SOI *1
I 00 P M , o r as s o o n t n e r e illr r as
p o ssib le , to c o n sid e r * tp ecil'C
la n d u s e a m e n d m e n t lo m e
S e m in o le C o unty C o m p .tn *n sl**
P la n a n d R E I O N I N G Of tna
d e s c rib e d p ro p e r ly

SLO UCH
ana
*1 n u r . u tl.t w rie
Th-rd P i f l y D t t t n i l a N t
N O T IC E D P IU IT
TO Th* D rtm o a n ts . I E V O N C A
BLO U GH
and
CAROL
U !
PLO U G H
M l o il* , and A L L
O T H E R S W H O M IT M A Y C O N
CERN
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T I F I E D mat a &lt; am pia.ni to
to , H love on a M et nan. c s L -e n on
in * lo lk M ng p fo o e ,ty .n Sem inole
County, f lor id*
Lot 1. F w a v i Slopes, H o ,
vetnoe O riye . o lt L a s * B ra iO le y .
a cc o rd 'n g lo in* P la t Inereof as
te co rO rd in Plat Book I. P ag * IS
P u b i* , R e c o rd s o l S o m .n a l*
County, F lo rid a
n a s been tile d ag ain st ,au and you
a re re v u u e d &gt;a se rve a cbpy Ol
you, n n t t m detense*. it any to it
on S A M M E lN E R . M a-net L
M u n e r . J* W ail S t m t . O rlan do .
F lo r id a H H I . P ia u ilill Y A lio r n e y
on o r bet o r . A ugust H . 14*1. and
M t in* o rig in a l * m in* C le rk 04
in i* to u t I e-ther b e to rt v e ry * * 0*1
P l a i n t 'l l '*
A t ib f n t y
or
im
m e d ia ttlv t n e r ta tle r , gitiereits*. a
I O ata utl ve ill be im e t ad a g a m it you
for in * re b e l dem anded &gt;n tna
' C o m p ta m l or P e titio n
W llh E S S my hand And tn* le a l
o l tn,| C o urt on in * 1H I d a y at
Ju ly is * I
' is e a li
A R T H U R B E C kW IT H
JR
C le rk oI C ir c u it a n d C o unty
Court
B y E v e C i *01 re*
D epu ty Clerk
P u b tisn J u ly II. M 4 August *, 11.
i»*i
M E * 101

• #■ f*' ♦*' ■ 4&gt;Q-|*' -• ■' tt* hi*.

• • •

p n /1

- •* * a y ** h f *

A Persona Is

W H Y B E L O N E L Y ? W rit* " G H
A M a te " D a tin g S e rv ic e All

ages

PO

Boa 4071. Clear

w ate r, F I 31S1I
L o n e ly C h r is t ia n Sin g le s
M eet ( h n t lla n S in g le s h i your
a re a w r it a S o u ih t f n C t v it t ii n
Singles C lu b. P O Bo» 111)
S u m m e rv ille , S C 7S4SJ or
c a ll 1 101071 SOSO 34 n rs
L cn e ly T W rit* " B r in g in g U to p ia
Together D a tin g S a r v k a l" A ll
ages t Sen ior C itU o n * P 0
t a il. W in te r H a v e n F la 1)4*3
u n u tttc h e d * Lon esom e* Start
T r ia l M e m b e rsh ip , lu s t 110
C o n fid e n tia l D ig m l led
D it
creet D iffe re n t C o u n tryw id e
L ite ra tu re D al m g of P f est ig*.
W illia m s t o w n , M a t s 01311
TH 41)410 1417

legal Notice
N O T IC E O F P U B L I C
H E A R IN G
I h E B O A R D OF C O U N T Y
C O M M IS S IO N E R S
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y Will hold a
p u b lic h e a rin g m R o o m 300 ol the
S e m in o l* C o u n t y C o u rth o u se ,
Sanford. F lo r id a , o n A U G U S T 3L
'*11 at 7 00 P M . or a t soon
ih -rra tte e a t po ssib le, 10 consider
a spec T it la n d us* am endm ent to
th e
S e m in a l*
C O u n lir Com
p reh ensive P la n a n d R E I O N I N G
ot lh* d e scrib e d p ro p e rly
AN O R D I N A N C E A M E N D I N G
O R D IN A N C E
77 2)
W H IC H
am en d s th e d e t a il e d
u se

th e

S E M IN O L E
COUNTY
P R E H E N S IV E
p la n

fr o m

to

d e n s it y

COM

r e s id e n t ia l

c o m m e r c ia l

fo r

6-Child Care

the

P U R PO SE OF R E IO N IN G FRO M
a i
a g r ic u lt u r e
to
c i
r e t a il c o m m e r c ia l , th e
F O L L O W IN G
D E S C R IB E D
pr o per ty

Fro m th* N E C o rn e r o f Section
It. T ow nship 30 South, R ang e 10
E ast, Sem m ol* C o unty, F lo rid a ,
ru n S 00 degrees It* 41“ E . along
lh* E a s t Im* o l t * .d Section II. a
d istance o l 40 I re t to tn* South
R ig h t o l W ay im * of L A K E M A R Y
B O U L E V A R D A N O T H E PO INT
O F B E G I N N I N G thence continue
S 00 degrees 14 t f ’ E . along said
E ast bn* o l S e ctio n IS. a distance
ot 1X 0 00 feet, thence r u n S I*
degrees a*' I I " W . p a ra lle l with
th* N o rth im * o l t * 'd Section i t a
d ista n t a ot SCO 00 feet, th e m * run
S 00deg rees 14 4 1 " E . IlS W I e e t .
thence ru n S 4* d e g re e s 44' I f " W
110M ta rt, th tn e e ru n S M
degrees M ' e l" E
I M O t tret,
thence ru n S SO degrees SO' SO" W
1007 01 feet, thence ru n N M
degrees I I ' 41" W ISO X tre t
thence ru n S •» degrees 41 10" W
10000 feet, th e n ce ru n N
M
d egrees I I ' 41" w
i SO 00 I eel
Ih e n tt ru n S I* d egrees 4 F I f W
B 0 00 tre t lo * point on th* E a s t
lino ol th* West ]** H I t e n ot the
N E I . e l t a d Se ctio n t i. thence run
N 00 deg rees 17 41" W along s a d
E ast lin e of in * W est M e 4 N le w . a
d .sta n ce ot IW0 00 tre t lo t h * South
Right Ot W ay lin e at l a k e M A R Y
B O U L E V A R D thence ru n N I t
degrees &lt;4 I f E 3 IH 47 l**t to
in* P O I N T OF B E G I N N I N G S a d
ij r c y t co n ta in s 71 III a cre s m ore
or le st
(Fucthee d e scrib e d a t at th* SW
q uad rant o t L a k r M a ry B iv d and
R ne n art Road, a n d 1100 It E a s t of
L a k t E m m a R o a d (D IS T No II
A P P L IC A T IO N H AS B E E N
S U B M I T T E D B Y J E N O 'S INC
F u rth a r. tha P L A N N I N G A N D
Z O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M I N O L E C O U N T Y w ill ho ld a
p ublic h e a rin g m Room M o l th*
S e m in o le C o u n ty C o u lt h o u t a ,
Sanlord. F lo r id * , on August L
1*11. o r as to o n th rra a tte r as
p o ttib i* to r e v ie w , h e a r a m
m e n ts
and
m aka
re co m
m en detions lo th # B o ard ot County
C o m m ik t io n ir k on th e a b o v e
captioned o rd in a n ce and letorung
A d d itio n a l in fo rm a tio n m a y by
obtained by c o n ta c tin g th* L a n d
M anagem ent M an a g e r at 121 4110.
E i f ltd
P e rso ns un ab le te attend the
hearing w ho K i l t to com m ent on
the [ r opened a ctio n s m ay sub m it
w ritte n sta te m e n ts to in* L a n d
A lw a g r m m l D iv is io n p rio r lo In*
scheduled p u b lic h e a rin g P e rso ns
a p pe a ring a l th e h a a rm g s m ay
w - 'M kw ( K i v i K w l i nr |K
heard o r a lly
P e rso n s aca a d v sed that, it they
OtCiO* to a p p e a l a n y d e cision
mad* a l the** meet m gs. they w ill
naed a re co rd o l lh* p ro c e v d m g i
end. tor su ch purpose, ihey m ay
need to e n su re that a v e rb a tim
re co rd o t the p ro c e e d in g s i t made,
w h ic h
ra co rd
In c lu d e s
lh *
it s lim o n y a n d a v ld a n c * u p o n
w hich lh * a p p e a l it to b* based
B o ard o l C o unty
C o m m issio n e rs
Jem .note County, F lo r id a
By R o b e rt S tu rm .
C h a irm a n
Attest A fih u r H B e ck w ith Jr,
P u b tisn J u ly 10. L A ugust 17. 1*11
D e x to*
N O T IC E TO T H E p u b l i c
N o tic* is h e re b y g iv e n that lh*
B oard ot A d iu stm a n t of lh* C ity g l
S a n lo r d w ill h o ld a r e g u la r
m eeting on A u g ust It. ISSI in th*
City H a ll a l 11 X A M m order tit
consider a requ est lo r a v a ria n c e
in Ih t Zoning O rd in a n c e e l it par
ta ins to tru M a n d * d « y a rd sat
P ack r e q u i'e m e n is m M R 1 Zoned
D is tric t HI L o t M. B lk II. T f 4,
Town o f S a n lo rd
B e in g
m o re
s p e c if ic a lly
U s e r 'b a d as lo cate d * i lo t s Oak
A n
P la n n e d us* ot lh# p roperty
D uple ■ O w fllm e
B L P e rk m t
C h a irm a n
B o a rd *1 A d tu stm a n l
P u b lish Ju ly x . I N I
D EK im

JU S T T H IN k IF C L A S S I F I E D
A D S D IO N T W D R K . T H E R E
W O U lD N T B E A N Y C

24— Business
Oooortunities
Two p ue si.on s
W .il you be
fin a n c ia lly independent -n 2 »o
I y e f r l l A r t you p a id what
you a r t w o rth ? If not c a ll 123
4404
l e f a C t a ! i f ed A d help »ou i no
m o re ro o m
fo r t t o r e g e
O a tt iG c d A c n fin d b u y e r!
fa it
P lu m b in g D fV . H a rd w a re and
E le c tr ic a l re ta il and re p a r
Bu!*ne!» W WO R e a l E !t a t e
B * !f T e rm !
1143.000 W m
Mal&lt;CIOW!ki R E A L T O R 322
794) E v e t 222 3317

2*—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share
M id dle aged w om an w a n t! tp
th e re her heu t* i * « p e n !* ! in
la k e M a ry w if h t a m t 22)071*
W ill m a re m y hom e
140 week p a y ! a il
221 0105

SPU R OF TH E M O M E N T
B A B Y S IT T IN G
m t ia a

F e m a le w a n t ! t o i n a r e

B a b y sittin g m m y hom e M o n
F rl
Fen ced y a rd tor p la y
N e a r H .gh School 111 )0 tf

3 b d rm b o u !f f12$mo
322 4531

2?-Rooms

6A-Health* Beauty
SH AKLEE h e r b t a b l e t s
WE D E L IV E R
17174*7

II—Instructions
Tennui im tr u c f ton
U X P T A
C fe t lt ’r t G ro u p o r P H v a ta
i n w m Cf»iidr*n a ip a c ia lt y
D ou q M « U cio w tk «
12) 111?
P ia n o l a w n
Sanford A re a itud«nt%
Con w i l i f t
u n r H e rn ia re n e w a l c o u n t b r
m # tl.

f iH C

e p p n w e d . 114 45

2214111
Bab M t a i l J r
School ot R ia l l i t i f e

lan d

of

lo w

e l e m e n t

CO M PAT A DA 11
T a te I m inute to liste n to
re co rd e d m essed * - 1 001 071
SOW s o il ot w gite C o m p e l A
D ate P O Boa N i l S u m m e r
v illa . S C 7*40)

P a r t lim a
M a tu re la d y tor
gen o llc e , ty p e c a lc u la to r
1300 C o u n try C lu b R d
10)

12 Special Notices
H elp the H um ane So ciety C o m e
S t it c h w ith C r e a t iv e E i
p re i- ilo n i a l P u b iiv &gt;n fhe
d u lle r P la t a I u "f 11 i f a n d
Aug l i t C a ll A n n 1)0 94/5

l»-Help VWnW
H e lp ttanfed a il d e p a rtm e n t*
A p p ly *n p e rs o n

H ob d ay in n l 4
W A N T E D C o r m p e n d e n t i fro m
m e L a k t M a r y . Lon o tto o d and
G eneva a re a ! w ho nave a fla ir
fo r w ritin g lhi% t% a p a n lim e
p o iltio n , w o rk in g from yo ur
he m e g a th e rin g ne w ! from
ypgr
c o m m u n it y
to
be
p u b llih e d in a c o lu m n Ap
p ftc a n fi m u !f be a b le to type'
a n d have a h o le to r n e w t and
lik e people
Contact D o rn
D ia l rich, a&gt;ff#r i p m , d a ily ,
tor appointm ent The E v e n in g
H e ra ld

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVE.

CALL 323-5176
C O R N E R O F toth
ANO FRENCH

tour future our co n cern

Jr " k ' k i i ' k i t ’k ' k

•« 4 vU u t clean a il new !ieep&gt;nQ
room! Linen and ma«f le rv ic e
p ro vd rd A vailable now Calf
173 1441 or inquire at 477
ipa imet fr A v t
I^ N F O R O

R e a l w ary ftm onthly rate# U t il inc. K tf 500

Oak Adult! 141 7M3

Xi Apartments
Unturnished___
JE N N IE A PT S I, I ' l l !
fidrm on L a i# Jennie in
Sanford Pool. re&lt; room ,
outdoor B B Q, teruv! court! h
(M p oiJtY Walk lo ihoppm g
A duift only Sorry no pet*
&gt;33 0747___________

lake

Apt tor renf, unfurn 2 bdrm I
fi A C. 1200 mo ♦ tlOO le c
221 M74oel11 1141
F R O M 1190
1 Bedroom A p t! A v a ila b le
Shown by A p p f 'Only 12J*Uajai
t Bdrm Garage Apartment 1725
li t ta il and dep Call C v r i 177
2911
Comfortable 7 bd rm .lq alh . H ove
and refrigerator Large icreen
porch, W ail to w ail carpet near
Downtown B u i It op 145 Wk *
U tilitiet, 1200 Sec Dep No
P e ti children welcome. A v a il
Aug lit. Inquire 4|7 Palm eft o
Ave or C a ll 2211441
1 Bdrm A p ti from 1225 I A J
Bdrm a lid avail Pool, ten n li
court 122442®_______
M t lio n v ilte ‘ T ra ce
apet
Spaoout., modern 2 Bdrm . 1
Bath apt
C a rp eted, k it
equipped.
C M IA
N ea r
h ofpfat A lake Adutta, no
p m *1370 277 97!)
"Enjoy co u n try liv in g ? 2 B d rm
Apt i
O ly m p ic
IV.
P o o f,
Shenandoah V illa g e Open 9 5
R M f l i ___________
LUXURY
ft P A R T M E N T A
F a m ily A A d u lt ! t a c t fe n
P o o iitd e 2 B d r m i M a lt o r ’t
Cove A p t i )21 7900 O pen on
woekono*
M a rin e r i V illa g e on L o i r A d a I
b d rm fro m I73S, 7 b d rm fro m
1704 L o ca te d 17 92 l u l l South
of A irp o rt B U d in Sanfo rd A ll
A d u lt! 223 1470
3 B d rm A pt I113W
2nd St . 1250 M o
1)1 401)

F u ll cha rg e double e ntry b Apr
P ie a a t le n d co m p le te m u m * ,
in c lu d in g e d d r e u and phone
no and re fe re n c e ! to tyoe 104
C O E ve n in g H e ra ld . P O B o i
1157. Sanfordy F la .

Do you need ito ra g e ip a c a T
M odern l B d rm ra n ch a p a rt
ment w » h a ft * and p a n fry and
huge im en O o ie f ) J ) 2201

t P N II 7 p art tim e . 2 II p a rt
tim e A p p ly L a k e v e w N u ttin g
Center. 9191 2nd S I . Sanford

31-Ap«r1rmnts Furnished

la b o r e r ! I&gt; h e a v y eq uip m en t
o p era tor needed P le a t* a p ply
• a m S p m 171 W W a rre n
A v t . lo n g w o o d . C ity ol lo n g
w oo d ,
FI# .
an
COP
A t fu m a liv a A c t io n am pin-'**
H e lp w anted Im m e d ia te ly
C o c tt a il t t i t r e t t e v p a rt tim e
d in in g ro o m * a &gt; fre tte t. p a rt
tim e m a in te n an ce m a n . k
m e fu re (IS or o ld e r) te c u rity
g u a rd &amp; bouncer A p p ly at the
C a v a lie r M oto r Inn
A V O N R C P R I S E N T ATI VCS
The P a r i I «m t C a re e r
444 2079 - C o lle c t 1511704
E le c tric ia n * C o m m e r c ia l eap
re q S em inole County H c e n tt
help fu l A p p ly at job t i e Red
B ug 4 T u u a w - iia m o *

RN OR LP N
* 1 7 4hd I I I S h ill F u ll lim a
A p p ly in p a r s o n S a n to r o
N u n w g C o n v a le scen t C e n ty r.
*J0 M e ilo n v ille A y *
C O N V E N IE N C E STO R E CASH
t E R S G ood s a la ry h o s p tia ii
la tu m , l w eak p a id v a ca tio n
e v e ry S m onths Now lo o king
lo r r ip e r .m e e d people ready
to w ork F o r in te rv ie w phone
the m anag er *1
A irp o rt B iv d
171*771
C a u e tb a r r y
33* 1714
C U rry A . •
3)3 A lt )
la k e M a r y
» ) IM S
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L LE T IN
BOARDS
ARE
GREAT
C L A S S IF IE D
ADS
ARE
EVEN BETTER
I A I E S L A O Y — E ip * ri# n c e d m
la d .e t r ea*y lo w e ar A p p ly .n
person No phone c a lls R s
Jay. I l l E

Santoro. No th ilo r y n o r p ets I
B d rm A .r, C a rp e t, a il t i K t r i c
spill a n cr* SIOCup 33) M l*
S A N F O R D - 1 b d rm . a .r, k id s ,
u til UK. SIS On )}* 7200
SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R
JIN G LE A N O ON T H E GOT P u l
your sk i* in your t r iv a t t a l l it
M odern J iu d o E ffic ie n c y w.tn
b u ilt in b ookcase and e na rgy
c tlu w n t d e ig n 13) I3QI
t u r n or u n i urn apt *300 m o •
S I X dep S I S '. P a r k A v * X )
SUB D o n . I X t f ' t
3 bd rm a p a rtm e n t S lt j m o
• D ep Jun# P o n g
R e a lty , U 2 147*
I Bedroom , a ll u tilitie s A c a b le
p e g c c t ily l y r n n n t i l i w
m e X ) 104*
I Bedroom F u rn is h e d A pt w.tn
P e tio and Screened P o rc h
S37S m o m o m

Funs.shad apartment* to. Senior
C tttitn s 710 P a lm e tto A v e . J.
C n e a n No phon* cel**.

31A Duplexes
New D u p le .,
• q u ip p e d k .lc n e n S llS m e
C a ll X I JOJO
Las# M a r y - J * i R u sk.n !
3 B d rm . C H A . A A C . 11*0 M o i
1st A la st ) t ) X * * o r 3*&gt;0H&gt;!
^ O rla n d o
iA N F O R D - 3 bd rm . L id s. pool. 3
SI7S down, s i x m o I X 730n l
Ik v -O N R E N T A L S B E A i T r ie -

t i f S I . S a n fo rd

« N t 10 SO X
L P N * to SA M .
p a rt lim y o r lu ll tim * M r s c a l
Concepts. I4 t M i l
N e e d ie c r a f le r , E a r n m o n e y
w ith your hobby C a ll A n n D O
947!
N E E D A S E C O N D IN C O M E ?
No I h e , no kiT*. no te# B ig
m oney In s p a te t.m#, X ) 7 X 1

sa n lo rd . I B d rm . I B a th . C e n tra l J
H e a t A ir , p a n e le d
t e m .iy J
roam , fenced b a cs y a rd , a m i
c a rp o rt beatport. no pet*. Scoot
m o 1st. le st. SJOB deposit X I f
iso* tv#
J a n to rd --) B d rm , C B hom# 1st
• S I X sac
W E a cce p t
••mall c h ild St* l i t * a lta r t
p m
re fe re n c e .

1

�*111

32-Houses Unfurnished
Cte#n 3 Bd rrn J B ifft C t r l H A
t Arg« V#rcl 1st lest And d rp
t} M m o I U I I I ) •

S A N F O R D - * Bf
pets. 1700 dn D M

i f . ktds.
JJ9 7700

SAV ON R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

LANDLORDS
O j i f l f N d f fn#n?s w a t mg
No»ee 77* 7700
I A V O N R EN T ALS, R EALTO R
J tx lrrn 7 © fir m ly room ,
1 €8f g j r ig e , in
O t if o n j C e ll S74 1137
O E L I O N m S ffn i. Air Aid*,
w asher 1)00 m o 179 7700
SAV O N R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

7 Bdfm , IfoftJ,

CArpOrf |JJ$
month ♦ ftlSO d tp Aft S U9
Sari o r 37) MM
4 b d rm \ B n C h u fv o fi
III &amp; lA it
C A llA t t f f i p m i t f t t l l

Sunl And 301 F ftir m fn t 3 B d rm , I
B if h , F l i fm $300 m o ♦ S7S0
D a p 377 74$4

I bdrm, 11tt B, firm ly room,
O A m tro o m . f ir r p u c t N o pet*
SJ 50 m o . H I. IAS 9 . $SO d rp
377 1430
W* H in d i* R t n U li
H ir e fd H a II Realty Inc
R tAM Af 3S3S7I4
3 Bdrm* 1 B i l l i
K itch e n E q u ip No p e ls
References re q u ire d 377 7349
- ..... — i
— i— j ________ ,
M id w iy 3 Bd rrn Good
Condition!. L a rg e F cncod
V A fd $335 177 03M

13—Houses Furnished
D e lto n a
A t i r i t f l v e , n e if .
c Ia a h
A C. no pet* 7 b d rm
$23$. 3 b d rm S7I0

574-1040
S A N F O R D — 7 bdrm . Air kid s,
pets, f SO * k 13f 7300
SA V O N R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

•51-Houses
F o r lA t f b y owner, 3 bdrm, 1 B,

Muring h t », dining rm &amp; fcrttfMsn
C H A , CAT port. 70'* 70 Q if ig e .
n tril. fenced »d S*H0 d n 4
m v im e m tg* 373 7&gt;?i________

O A N E M W IL L F IN A N C E
P ao ta L A T R t country home, 4
B d rm . f B a th w ith f t m R m .,
lir r p lic r . on Vy a cre s P r u t
re d u ce d 10 t S3.000

H o m * F o r sa l* fly O r r m i 1010
A f.ilow A&gt; m u* Georgetow n
S*&lt;iion P r.c* IT 1.901 D ow n
IT VM M lg
t i t 100 T r r m i
I T U U m o l, TO »f* I t l l * . N o
c lo ta ig t o i l C a ll ITT M IT

323 5774

Day or Night

W E H A V E m in y
un der M I . I N I H

many hornet

M I N T C O N D IT IO N 3 bdrm only
1§ f f t ®ld W'CfHtr*|i H A. m-m
c p tiA f a tA f hi k itc h e n 4
t c re tn e d p i t *
Toned G C 3

Jut! 144. M l'

in kitchen, separate
D m in g Room cedar trim 4

O W N E R w i l l H O L O ln d m fg
on thift Ig 4 bdrm l Lovely
P O O L w tlid e 4 wraparound

decking for cool lun
neighborhood I »)**•!

CALL 321 5774

SAN FO RO CAN AL FRO N T
7
b d rm , a r. SJM mo 33* 7700
SAV ON R E N T A LS R E A L T O R

17—Business Property
G A R A G E lo r It A M
p o te n tia l
tor body in o p . u ir d c a r lot.
M AI or-Q inAlly A Q«1 ilA t io n
L « r g t corn e r
lo t
Good
location 377 07U
C o m m e rc ia l B uild in g lo r F fn f,
1100 iq H , UOO m o ,
h i 4 Id it 373 1411

~ 17-B—Rental Offices

| ilW

REALTO R. M LS

IB 322-9283

F IN A N C IN G

(§ A M P YOJUf

i:

3210041

M LS

C H A R M I N G 3 B d rm I B a th . 7
Story, pool* tc re tn e d gam e
room . S49 *M
L O C H A R B O R N ice C le a re d
H e m e srte t St MOO to 130.0*0
W OOD M E R I P A R K 1 B d rm , 1
Bath, targe M t h t n
O w n er
m o tiv a te d w ill ho ld m ortgage
$4 M O B

L A W A N A K IS H

REALTO R

321-0041
A I N f h f l 111 T IM an* 111 1*11

in L iit h f n . r a f f iir * • lot.

ST
JO H N S f r o n t a g e
W IT H 1 B D B M M O B IL E

*

home
h ig h e l e v a t io n
c lassy p r o p e r t y , g en
E v a a r e a su o o o

s

r e a l E it A t t Broker

A G E . R I V E R ACCESS. G EN
Eva s u m

321-0751
H a v e a room r§ re n t? L e t »
c la s s ifie d ad tmd a tenant tpr
y o yf

jo a c r e s w o o d e d r o l l i n g
H I L L S IN G E N E V A A R E A

uyoo

r*

I V oIu m tonal O fi* « Space L a i *
M a ry R im N ear I 4 l i t * M a
II I *41'

A

370 Industrie I
____ f o T - H f if lt _______ ______

P R IM E LOCATION

i

7 000 i q ft F u lly A ir C F r e t
sta nding m aso nry b u ild in g , on
b u ly H ig h w a y 17 *7 1700 ft. ifi
o ffic e
id tA l mult* p u rp o i*
lA C ilily . loading doc Ik C a ll
Sanford 377 SS1Q

41-Houses

m

it 'i

e

» * iu in *

JU S T R E O U C E O
S p a t iowf 1
b d rm . 1 A 1 Woty b o m * L a
* a ' ut Lit c f i . le d o* bU'D in*,
paddi* I w , d M r In

I B d rm . T B a in BWk * Horn* on
m e t S lf t f ) m Sanford O n n * r
ta y* I ID 000 Down a n d la k y
o y*r m o rlg a o * or try V A or
F H A U J 000
M o v in g la a n * » » r h o m * .
a p a r lm tn lT $*U "d o n I n * * d t"
la y! w ith a wan! ad

ST E M P ER A G EN CY
DON T W A I T - Tn.y I b d rm I B
hom * hay room la c ip a n d A
good lo t it - o n Wen t layr at
o nly 111 MO
D O LL HOUSE
T h it cut* 1
b d rm I B hom * iy w hat ygu rg
tooking lo r E ic * n * n l y la r t t r
h o rr* w ith ayyum abig m g r
S i . ', S T L S X
1 ACRE
Mob.I* hom o o k a ,
a .in p e rm it E ay y l* f m y, tow
gown p a ,m * n l. o nly 1*000
R I A L T O R 111 1 H I
■ t e l; )«* M M . H I 1*1*. I l l M IT

MyMiyi* L iylik* Itry ic *
L ik e
L e ck R a rl
re d u t* d '
C o u n t r y liv in g t ir * p i a c * i.
Irw il. 1 b d rm , IVy B O w n er
111.000 M l 1011 or 111 IM S

REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford’s Sales Leader
w e LIST A N D I E L L
M O R E H O M E * T H AN
A N T O N I IN THE
SAN FO RO A R IA
D O L L H O U S E 1 B * ,m l&gt; , R
hom* on yhad, lin d y c ip e d !*!!
C * n l H A , w a ll to w i l l c a r
p«l U t ilit y Rm . porch I , nerd
y a rd , and m e re ! S I M M
' e x t r a ! G A LO R E I te rm . I
B ath H am a w ith P in « l* d FI
Rm . C tn l
H A. W ill w i l l
c a rp e l. I U tility n i d i , la r p t
I w ic td , l t * w ith l* ti *1 C ilr u l
T ft* y an* m o ,* I M t.M *
J U I T P O R Y O U I I l* r m . I B a lti
H em * in M a y la ir - I B lk trrnn
L l k * M t n r p p . * « v b l, 1*1,
( n e e d y tr* . B t a u lilu l D * c* r
!hr* u g h o u li A ll Ik* * * l,* y |
M 1.TM
A T T R A C T I V E I B drm . 1 ', B o m
h o m , hi w a a d m ir* p * , k l
C ,n l H A . W alt la w all ca rp * !,
l* r « * u lt ll ly , p i n k , m e t
la n p y c a p ,* L a l i llt .io o
I M M A C U L A T E 1 Bdrm 1 B a lk
h tm * on a i* v * ly U k d ic a p a d
U f m L a c k A r b a r i le ro o n o d
p o rck . o i l m k i l c M n F I R m .
L a u n d ry . W a ll I* W ill c a r p e l
L a r g o l o o m ii L i l y M a r t

acres cleared

s

m i* *
M A Y F A IR V IL L A K
1 A
I
B d rm . 1 B o th Condo V l l l t l .
n o il •* M i d a i r C io o tiy C lub
la lo c i your |#t. IWar p la n A
m l trip * P o c t r l O u tlify CPA
tlr u c t* * By S k to m a k r r Igr
M M M A up)
A S S O C I A T E ! N E E D E D ! New
or ( op*ri**&lt;*d
C a ll H *rR
lI M I t r a m o r L o t A ik r t g k i
it d a y A d iy c a e tr y * c i* ty l

C A L L A N Y T IM E

:r.

322-2420

PRIME OFFICE SPACE
NOW AVAILABLE
CENTRALLY LOCATED IN DELTONA
2166 SQ. FT. WITH SPACIOUS
PARKING FACILITIES.
FO R IN FO R M A T IO N C A L L :

305-574-1432
_____________________ t _____

c leared d u plex

l o t s in

H O M E S IT E S IN o r a n g e
G R O V E AT U M A T IL L A S'SOO
eac h , craty term s

1a c r e

W O O DED LOT IN f N
T E R P R IS E u r n . S E L L E R
TERM S

377 S701

G O IN G O U T O F
B U S IN E S S S A L E
210 A V E . C G E N E V A
AH Shelf ite m s w ill be totd at
71% O ff R e g u la r P r ic e , r*
e lud in g d e fy, fcn J. m lfh, ic e
cre a m , b re a d s ca n d ie s chips
P e p s i.
C okes and e g g s
D e ale rs w e lco m e

349-9154

IMt

68—Wanted to Buy

f a rn lly
la t e
H g g ie h o ld .
C lo ll r i A o ffic e m a t h 10? C lub
R d F ri A Sat v fit

r .n t lq u t t
D ia m o n d *
O il
P lin lin g y
O r . m la l Rug*
Brtogu* A n liq u * *
1)11*01

Sunday
Aug
2 * 4 . 710 E
C o m m e r c ia l S t
N o u ir h o ld
it e m i, f u r m f u r e , c lo th in g ,
m i ic
V e r y re a io n a W e
A ll
proceed* d o n a te d to N a tio n a l
K id n e y F o u n d a tio n

A

a c t io n E v e r y M o n d a y N ig h t, P
P M S a n to rd A u c tio n . 171$ $
F re nch 37)7340 D a ily 10 f

T r a ih A f r t M w r n sa le I n A
Sat I 30 t il ?04 Che ro ke e
C irc le . S u n la n d E if a t e i

When you p la c e a C la s s ifie d Ad
&gt;n Th«* E v e n in g H e ra ld l»ay
nose to your p ho ne b e ca u se
som efhm g w o n d e rfu l t% abduf
to happen

Y a r d S a le
f r l A Sat t $
100 May i O r

* r e M rt. r
» o in m f f ( i« l
R e sid e n tia l A u c tio n s 1 Ap
p r a iia ii C a ll D e ll l A u c tio n
$33 $430

J fa m ily v a le Sat * i. I lk la k e
M tn m t D r
t P a rk
R id g e
'S u b d lv t H o n i
E n d f A b ie s,
la m p s A t o ll o f r m ic it e m i

74—Auto Parts
17 i 1$” Super S w a m p e ri
n e w ,'w h ile r a ile d
le f f r f i 1300 17 7 7616

1774111

F I R S T ST

111 t o l l

52—Appliances
K tn m o r*

p#rfs,

»4\htr%

i f f vie#. ul« 3

MOONEY

A R P LI

A N C E S 47) 0k*r
f’ S h k E P O 1 | cu ff f r o s f f r t t
Ortg | $ 7 f. now 120$ o r I l f m o
A g tn l 13* IM 4

★ 339 7989*
7*
73
f|
M

3 fa m ily g a ra g e s a le lU v e e w a re
M f f K t fo r 10. c o u c h A cha«r. 1
stereo s e tt, la w n m o w e r, g * i
h e a 'e r. cha&lt;r, a u to a c c e i i ,
to o n
a l l k t n d i o f b o o k i,

L*ke

77-Junk Cars
Removed

c lo th e s b a b y a d u lt* d r t i l e s
l i f e 70 A m a te rn ity d re s s e s .
16' C a la rtia ra n d .
PJ Toytrfa
C orona H o u if h o ld ite m s F r i
A Sat * $ 373 3 a a 101* S a rd a
St Ib e tw e m B u rg e r C h e t A
Baham a j o f i l

BUY J U N K C A R S A (R U C K S
1 ro m S t o le ISO o* m e re
C a ll 1)1 I U 1 . 1 7 1 1M 0
CASH FO R CAR S
R u n n in g o r not

33* 1*61

Cnevy V an M a i l
P.nto H a tch b ack . »1S00
Bustk S k y la rk 4 d r, $37M
V0 Ik1
! A lie n $ fa t Ion W aonn

$IM»
t| M e n u Wavon, $7*61
t la n k t*Mancin« a v a iU a la •
|$N H * y 17 *1
C a s s e lb e rr y
D o n ! p*it no lo n g e r
item s high as an e le p h a n t !
eye P la ce a c la s s ifie d ad, a n d
p d f the m oney in yrour w a llt * I
77 M l v t f l d 7 D r . P i . A C .
rad*o, heater, a u to m a tic* r u n s
good t m 377 107!

J

W IL S O N M A IE R F U R N IT U R E
H I 111 E

★ B&amp;H Auto Sales ^

. . . . . .• , . ,-rper
t» »
br«*y, y ilu f f . g o ld W r tk d a y *
I c 10, S a l * I k o k o M o Tool
Co *11 W 1*1 S i 11) I'OO

72—Auction

I f a m i If Y a r d Sa le , il l F o r t i l
Dr
lo c h
A rb o r
A n h q o e iy
»o o ll h o u ie h o ld l l r m t lawn
e q u ip M u c h m o re * 7 Sat

T't A C R E S W OODED RO AD
F R O N T A G E IN O S T E E N

D A Y IO N A A U T O A U C T I O N
a tw y *3, I m ile w e st a i Speed
way, D aytona B e a c h , w ill 'hole
a public A U T O
A U C T IO N
every W ednesday i t l p m . It*f
the only ona m F lo r id a Y o u se t
the reserved p ric e , C a ll Wa
04$D M lo r fu rth e r d e ta il*
IT O P D O L L A R S
f o r your ca r or t r u c k , r e g a r
4)1t t l of te n d P r e fe r ru n n in g
F r e t tow ng 1)1 M i l A g a n t.

Top D ollar P a id to r J u n k 4 U se d
cars, tru cks 4 h e a v y e q u ip
men! 372 $**0
v i . m y D O W N F l W N l ttl
$7$ month M on te C a rto , P S ,
P B , Auto A M F M ste re o , a ir 4
many other e M r a i ) l f *100 o r
1)4 4403 D e aler

74 P lym o uth G ra n d Sedan a ll
power w a r . MOO
371 074*
days. 37) 3*4) a fte r $
7) C h tv y C 10
Ton P ic k up.
Long wheel b a le V I Auto . P S
Body rough but c le a n in s id e
Runs e i te n a n t Whit# sp o ke
wheels and good t ir e s $f*$

i$i m i.
A m e r ic a n M o t o r s
R a m b la r
Rebel 1*61 4 d r se d a n, 4 c y .
auto, P S Good s t ic k e r , fu n s
good $330 Co sh 4)1 1774

CONSULT OUR

S U . 100

LO T S
()) I a c re tots on paved road
|f)0 0 e a ch

\pHens
fle a u lit u l a'»d p i« v fu l
B la u and W h ile F r e e to a
good and lo v in g ho m e 173

M o v in g
fu r n it u r e m » u . f n
A Saif, C a n d e liv e r F o llo w
ir t jn i on C 701h near L o c u li

Sl-A— Furniture

smoo

1

t is o

Brow n R iu e r R o ck . 0*1* Bo*
G r e a ie T r a p v D ry W a in
Car Sto p s. Cem en t, Sand
M lr e c It C o n c re te Co
30*E lm A v e
377 S7$l

in

TOO ON 11 *J N E A R NEW
WINN D IX IE C E N T E R COM
ING AT L A K E M A R Y B LV D
TO NED
C O M M E R C IA L.

C U S T O M B U IL T B Y B U IL D E R
O W N E R I Q u a lity throughout
th is 4 b d rm , J B home m bu ilt
&gt;n boohc ases. 7 sc r eened pat *os
k s o la riu m A ll on * acres*
SIT* *00

1 A C H E S W O O D ED JACKSON
BAY
AREA,
OSTEEN
SlkSOO, S E L L E R F IN A N
CIN G

lot

S E IO L E R R E A L T Y BRO KER

111t i l*

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB

Lake M a ry

43B- Lots &amp; Acreage
Wanted

Markham

PASTURE
F e r H o r i* t L * * y * w ith or
w itho ut p urcha y* option 110
a cre *
M a r k h a m Ro
A r*a
p r « l* r r « l i n 1100

3 B E A U T I E S A L L IN A ROW*
L iv e «n one* rent the 2nd, and
o p era te vdwf business n the
3rd c o m m e rc ia l b u ild in g w
w alk m copter P rim e location
1*0,900

I,
A ir Conditioning

07—Real Estate Wanted
W anted lo b u r ) b e d im
IB
n o u v t n o b io k r r t , p rln clp aly
o nly In clu d e o*N*. d « tcn p
lio n . adO r**t A 1*1* No Send
re p ly to B o c N o
10' c *
E .e n in g H v c a ld . P O B o , 1411
Santord. F L JTF'1

G R E Y H O U N D B N E E O IN G k
tra m in g kennel P rofessional
bpt*ealHDfi w | i runs
m a in
kennel. 7 «g kennels. 0 1 1
b d rm m o b ile hom es. i&gt;fuet?d
on 17 a c re s C a ll lo r details,

W» b u y e q u it y In H o o r n ,
a p artm e n t* , v a ca nt land and
A c rta g t
LU CKY
IN
V E S t M E N T S . P O »oc 1U0.
Sanford. F l a T17M l l l l f l l

1210 000
CALL

323-7843

H A V A CASH
FOR Y O U R F A R M
OR B U IL D IN G LO TI.
Sale* Carparatian Inc 111 OM*
*r 111.Mil

REA LTO RS
41-B—Condominiums
For Sale
C r a n e \ Roos*
Tow nhouse,
d ik u ie 1 b d rm T t B. lake
vie w , ir rw u i sw im m ing , a il
ap pt 4 mor e I y rt o ld D h f
new . 4%sum m tg $31 734B

42-MWie Homes

To List Your Business,..
Dial 322-2611 or 831-99-93

N ,* g lot o* Ian* ten**
ig* m e b tie hom *
______ ITT O il*

C O M M E R C IA L
S P A C IO U S 2$00 iq ft • t Idaal
IqcaNon, heavy tra ffic area
in c lu d e s 3 b d rm 2 B house w
p ool A r l i r a tot 1*4 on t a k e
M e r v h 'v d Owner Will hold
m u rtg a g* c a n tor details

- —

lan d

310 Sanford A , e

su m

SANFO RO
IIJ.IOO E A C H
T O N E D FO R OUAOS OR OF
F IC E S

L O W C A S H TO M O R T G A G E
w in no q u a lify in g 1 4 bdrm 7 B
h#fne w c o v e r e d p o rc h A
fa m ily r m I ie c w t iv * neigh
b orh ood O w ner w li consider
2nd m fg e is* *00

-

p l a t t e d l o t s in g e n
w o od ed
lif e
a
m akes
it h o m e
s i t e s , vioooo t e r m s

PAO LA

R C S i D E N T IA L
L O W D O W N ' 3 b d rm sp lit plen
* a t U ih e d w orkroom , u tility
4 fe nce d y e rn O w ner w ill hold
m fg * *1 13
for 70 y f f
P a y m e n t o n ly f IB? 20 PI
17**00

W ATERFRO NT
roadi a re a l!0.0(»

STENSTROM

seller
d iv id e

t *j a c r e s , t a l l
p in e s ,
g e n e v a , sti.soo l o w in
t e r e s t
a s s u m a b le
m ortgage

Alger &amp; Pond

L O f on c a n a l
a re a HO $00

acre
, may

Eva
PARK

E S T A B L I S H E D tu b d v itto n
L a k e M a r y area, S U too

m in t

per

f in a n c in g

he ad b o a r d and a c c m
377 S7S7

A 5— P e t s S u p p l i e s

M o v in g w ile
A n tiq u e c M i*
b r a n la m p i t u r n , w rought
iro n pat lo fu r n . m ile T h u f l ,
F r l . V a t t $ 7430 P a lm r f lo
i

K log l i l t bed, with

le v » k w ra n g le r i t e m
A R M Y N A V Y SU RPLU S

a c r e s , t a ll p in e s , som e
p a s t u r e . RO AD FRONT

7440 Sanford Ave

Omc* Space
F o r L*a**

&amp;

50—Miscellaneous lor Sale

43—Lots-Acreage

u p a fa l* T 0* &lt;urnnn*d r m t il
CDlllR* A ll m u 11* 100

W ATERFRO NT
L on g wood, S?*€0

e

hsm *

D o n 't w a it t« B U Y Rta* B it a f e
B U Y R o a l E it a t e and w a lt t lt

r

IT .

tVk ip li l plan, l y i ng 111 COO

E H

PIP HIM IN v

D o n t p ie no lo n g e r needed
item s hig h as a n e le p h a n t *
eye P u c e a c la s s ifie d ad. a n d
p.l# th# m oney m y o tir wilt e t t

t a a n M o w e r la te * a n d S e rv ic e
We Sell fh o B e ll a n d S e rv ic e
the W e ll Bob B a ll W e ite rn
Auto 301 W l i t St

M ovm g
s a le
W r d 5 if
E y r r y fh s n a m u s t po
I yr
m fu re . g&gt;ff t Ciu
' H i A
a d id i A t f i d i * lo t i cm .-.nil i
m»te oft 7$fh St o n U p sa l* R »

fm

E « * i 11! M U
_______ J 5 . '_ E J 5 " &lt; S L _ ______

10-Autos
' ) C h*vy IS 'S
13* 1*11

F IL L D IR T A TO P s o i l
YELLO W SANn
Ca ll C la r k A M .M J7) MAO

G a ra g e vale Household .tr-ms A
p la nts • a m 4 p m F r id a y ,
J u ly 31
171 A I d f a n D r .
Sanford

•V

Inc.

m o i H TM tO

62—Lawn Garden

7 fa m ily c a r p o rf lA le Set k Sun ,
A u g I $ 7 L o l l o f g re a t itfim i
4$I P a lm D r , S a n fo rd

fr(

HAL COLBERT REALTY

Tog D O "* ' R a to tor lu h * A Uy*d
{* f „ tru ck* A h**» * »qu&gt;p

tiA M qe &amp;4le S e fu rd A y f A m
M ile
I t e m i,
F u r n lf u r e .
Cio(h&lt;ng 7 S if G r o rq iA A v e .

\

lu.1* 1
I M R i*

0*NER

C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
MOVE
M O U N T A IN S o* m f f t h A o d if
every o av

*» Ch*vy 1)11

■V « y W V m i I Frtncb

24 HOUR

77—Junk Cars Removed

►H tftH ffr SprcAdvr,. G v n RA£k.
S m a ll u
C fo fh e * .
To y $i
G U H A A r# M u c F ro m 1 p m
M l* S4turctoy And SundAy
24H S C h A ie A v e

Ph 327 0)37

W t h a y * lI f e * m o re C o lo r T v s
fo r $7$ H v r b s TV 35*7 S
Sanfo rd A v * $23 1714

R O B B I E ’S
REALTY
li'*

B H O t liid o O r

SJ—Garage Sales

R E A L T Y , INC.

l\ E A L E S T A T E

BREATH'

_

54—Garage Sales

Good u s e d T V 's , 12$ 1 up
M 'llF R S

1

Top

O V E R 17*0 SO F T .n Hut custo m
b u ilt i bdrm t p iif p lan w
I k rtp lA C e . la m
rm* h u g e
screen ed porch 4 heavy lit
le iA tio n lo r low , lew u lililie iA 1 a re a SIS *00

l..

iN^PEwUXTE 1

n

LK
C O U N T R Y A C R E - J b d rm . w
w a llp a p e r, panelling. P O O L 4
h r t p f a c t on t p p r a i 1 a cre
F e n ce d w ig b a rn tfJ ,S 0 « ll

T rtE

PS ju'URMET
CMdWWTEe^EEM]

BATEMAN REALTY

lo v e ly yArd V ilu e * i t
117 SM t

k js it

SA V O N R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

------T

w intoin* T I. dm.ng rm **t

w t if

AJTEMJvr

, LET ME
MILE3 R TVylEN US I *MEIL 5CUf7

ITT

O W N E R F IN A N C IN G

M ODERN
g u e st
m o use
c o rn e l w this spacious ) b d rm ,

TMI*

S3- TV Radies Stereo

f ju

b u t

TIME i wCNCE HE
REALLY
HE fUT
D IP
IT CH
WANT
"XOO
7O BE
T H I^ K
HPME.

KEN AT THE

tim es j

I V I J H E P MnW

O n io n * i p f h r f L o l i t o n * , i
Bair. Cent MA f u l l , c a 'p e 'd
n i u m i t r " ) g * V '• &gt;M 5***

S A V -O N R E N T A L S R E A L T O R

S A N FO R D — 1 bdfrn, fgrn. 4,r,
I I » on M IS m o II* m o

J H liC W B

323-7832

Calf trt before you buy

SAN FO RD
A IR P O R T B L V O
- 7 bd rm 1700 mo 33* 7700

34—Mobile Homes

IIF y&lt;7U OHH KNEW

r e a l estate
r ea lt o r

Harold Hall Realty
INC. R E A L T O R S , M L S

RUPH1 IW E W J

CallBart

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
T l i l S F re nch
ITT ( H I
A fte r H our* It* *000,1)10)7*

.M A R T H A . P E T . LET
S i t F E A S T M V P E * . ',

irttfv Mutv

Evoning Herald. Sanford, F I . ____ Thursday, July 10. IH1-5B

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

41—Houses

!

~1-

ta * o u r b a p u lilu l n r * B B O A D
M O N E . frp M | rp p r B R ‘t.
G X E G O E V M O B IL E HO M ES
J W D O rlg n d o D r
111 ) » 0
V A &amp; F H A Fina ncing
R E A D T i l t , TW IC E
T ill*
C a n c o rd o* 11 ■}&gt;H a rt lo rd Both 1 bdrm . 1 B w
y h . n g lt ro o t, w ood a id in g ,
d r lu , * ( a r p t f . drapgy A *p
p lt a n c r y
Y g u r ( h g ic t *1
l l * , * t l O n ly a l U n cle Rg y k
M o b ile
Hem e
Sa l**
in
L M k b u r g N o down p * ,m * n f.
V A . a ll oth*r fina n cin g 10*.
down
S h o p U n c le l l y ' l
M o o ,i* H o m e Sal**. US a i l S
L r a y b u 'g I t o i l ' l l OITA Sun
d i r t IT * p m w k n ig M t - t 10
C t w c t r d t i , a i 1 or 1 bdrm . Id *
. r**iar*nt w a llt. wood yidutg A
ih m g j* roof o n ly 111,**!
11 • S i p m , i l l ygj
II i ' 0 ' . o n l , AIT VOS
N o m o ney dow n V A 1 0 / down,
F H A S h g p U n c le R o y t M e b . l*
H o rn *
S a le *
US i l l
1
L**M « .r* 1*0*1 T I ' 01)1 Op**l
Sunday* IT I p m w**k n.gniy
'•I » TO_____________________
A r t you a f u ll l.m * dr&lt;v*f w ith a
pa, 1 1,m * c a r* O ur c la itifig d *
a c t lo aded w ild good b uy lo*
you

O -U tv A c rv a g t
Shadow L t Woody L g wooded
k X .-o w n e r w ill la ia n c t below
C u rre n t Fat*, low dow n )T)

■1)0
t A c re * E a s t e* O range C .ly on
H o w la n d B ir d H i m
HI
I t A3 A lt 1

W h a l* u rr the o cca sio n , there t a
i l a i t i i u d ad ig t a lu t it Try
on* toon
Don i w in t e r * W hat h a r t y o u '
N eed 1 1 B d rm Hom e P r k t
and te rm * n e g n liib l* i l l m l
_ 4 ! L 2 -----------------------------------l a s h FO R E q u it y
W x a n c l o y t m i t hry
C a ll B a r i R e a l E t ia i* m i n t

47-A—Mortgages Bought
ftSold
Wt

p«v

cash

mut iy t g v l

tpr

1st 4

Jrvj

N 4f if f y ,

IL.

M ortg#g« B ro k e r

13* 77*f

SO—M iscellaneous lor Sale
1 tw m m a ltr e t* t , iy
lo r ta le
&gt;1)007)
T „ r * t H t la lS W h ile w a llt. 1
p lo t | B e lle d hr* * lit * new
HOD 111 1711

) p ie c e C o r n e r C o u c h **1
B e a u l.fv l. b*&lt;9* V ccy good
c o n d lu m » l » JT T T IM

COLOR TV SALE
T R C A * I* .nch P * n P an ato n ic
I* inch P o r t . Je n.tn I I m
C o m o le P h ik o IT in com et*
and som e B l. W hi P o r i a t law
ay S a l C l yn o r 110 per m e w ith
w a r r a n iy A lt o New Cato* S a fi
■n S lo c k T ra d e in a cce p ttd

H OO VER
C a n v e r t iB la d t lw i * v a c u u m
c le a n e r w it h a t t a c h m t n ii
L ik a new p a y be tenet le t e r 0
p a ym e n t* a , S I) A u in o r ilt d
D e a lt* to r " t n a t o n - c V acuu m
C le a n e r *
S»« a l S t n le r d
Sew.ng C m i t r Santord P in *
a c r o t l f r o m B u r g tr K ng

V * to » • to *

Cfcn* w ill H f . i t , A C '* , f» l,lg .
IrM |* Y * . w * !* f cooler*. mi*c
C a ll m * f ) l

Beauty Care
T O W E R 'l B E A U T Y S A L O N
F O R M E R L Y H A r n t t t * B ua ut,
Nook II* E H I S t, n i l ' l l

Boarding k Grooming
A n im a l H a r m
B o ard in g and
G r o o m in g K e n n o i* S h a d y ,
im u ia iu d u r * m * d . t i , prooi
inyto*. outyid* run*
Fan*
A iyo A C c * g * t W* c a l* r to
.o u r
p * l*
S U i H n g y lu d
r * g , t lr y fm n i l ' l l
Snow H ilt K a n n g l o il* ,* C a l A
Dog T i l l B a in * S! up 14
H our. F u ll S a w ic * M S 111)

Brush Cutting
C U ST O M W ORK
R t e io n a b l*
R a le *
Frg *
E a r im a it C a ll E g r ly A M er
E v« H I S H I o r IM SI 1*1)144

Ironworks

Concrete \Atork
C o rw r* !, W o rk. lo o ltY k . I lo o n A
p o o l!
L a n d y c a p m g A yod
w ork F ,* . * * * i l l n o i

A l y 0 « n a m * n ta l W ro u g fil Iron
Window B k ry a n d S k u i i ' y
Door* 411 144*. O rla n d o

I M A N g U A L t t V O F L R AT ION
» » f i , , p P iiio y , O fiv t w * ,* .
**c Afavn* B * a l ) ) ' | » |

Electrical

Landscaping
LARGE T H EE IN S T A L L* R
Lan d sca p ing . O ld L a w n s R t
placed 36$ $401

E L E C T R I C I A N 10 y n * , p A ll
ly p * * D l * T « ll , a l w ork a l 111,

Lawn &amp; Garden
Service

grl(*«. 11) 0 )4 .
O u a iil, r l r t i f -c ,1 w ork at a la .r
pner
71 y r*
t ,p * ,lg n &lt; * .
V m o r r r p j ir *
Ig com p l«fg
w ir.ng M l 0)1 1,

SALE
lu m m t f W o o d F e f ic t S a le 3$.900
tt of w o o d t e n e t a n d posts
m u ll be sotu* C a n be seen at
!i**Hry I r a t ns 731 M w y 17 f j
L o n g w o o d W td * s e le c t io n
Com e e a r ly S a le con tin u e s t ill
m e r c h a n d is e
ts a l l so ld
H u r r y 1 M u rry I B304777

Handyman

M o w in g .
e d g in g .
r u b b is h
rem oved
S ch e d u led to suit
ypuf needs 671 7 $44
Tom orrow m a y be the d a y you
sell th a t r o ll a w a y bed y o u 'v e
now here to r o ll a w # r
If you
pier# a C la s s ifie d Ad today

V

on -vkx j

t~ .9 T W f

e stim a te

h

t.la c k b y

" 74*41

OUR H A T E S A R E LO W ER
L ak t v ie w N u n log C e nte r
* t * E Second $f . S a nfo rd
377 4 707

Odd Jobs

377 lf / 1

m n rn
B ill C o r s e , S lg t g C g r M it d
B u ild in g
C o n n e c te r
R n t o o n lig l o r C o m m trc iA l.
N*w o r R w no d *r* d 11104*4
Kkry g o n e , but th e sw in g **r *y
tne b o c k y * rd u n i t So il d w ito
.« wan* a d C a ll I D i t n .

Car Repair
M in o r or M a| or R *p a i n
Lr*y w o r r y A m con»»n.*nce —
W e ll co m * to you 1)1 I M
H o b b y 's M a b il* Aut* l i m n

Carpet Claaning
J u ly
b o m b tn d l
F r« *
o to d o r i|*ng w tn o m p n o A d*tp
in * ™ l b d r m i r U 'K a t *a lr*«
w llv r m . d m r m . a n d n a il U S
O n ly t i l l to r **cn * d d il« n * l
room 111 001*

Ceramic TI la
M E I N T 1 E R T IL E
N r w o r r , p i , r . to aA rk1w **r*o u4
y p * c ,n iiy . IS y u k E * p R l B 4 1

Hauling*
Yard Work
H a u lin g 4 Y a r d W o rk i t % off
w t h A d ) I ) 1211 no arts 777
24?7 L a r r y , J o y c e B ry a n t
EVERY
DAY
1$ B A R G A I N
D A Y IN T H E W A N T A D S 371
M il or III f t f )

C E N T R A L F L O R ID A H O M I
IM P R O V E M l NTS
P a M ln g , R o o tin g . C a rp o n try
L k B o n d * d A G u a ra m o o d
F i n R t lim a l k t 1)71441

Home Repairs

je w e le r

I N I P a rk A ,*

» )* » •

Painting
ho use

L

p a in t in g

le lt r t o * B * i to r tor
H . T . L A C K E Y 11)1*11

H e ilm a n P a in t in g A R e p a ir*
Q u a lity w o rk F r e e E t i D ike
to S a m o rt 114 AatQ R t t o r .
you*# P a m la r -1*1 Cla y* W u iV
reayanabto p r ic t *
t ) yoar*
r .p
k ro n e n
Hoi*
1)1 SIS*

A f y lim t all** S
^ a l lp h a s e d o is it a ll a
Fan
in s t a lla t io n .
e ater *or
r e p a ir S .
ttu c ca .
f t l« 4 l.
re u r e e n tn g
A LL PH ASE CONTRACTORS

a m *isi or m u ss V
O U A L IT V AT A F A IR P R I C E l
O e n R r p a ir * A Im p ro v 17 y r t
J o c illy . S*n,or D i m I U I J U v

Clock Repair
g w a lt n e y

J A B M om * lm p ro v * m * n l
C a rp o n lry w ork o l * n y l,p *
Ron! r y p a if l. g u ilt , w ork,
p a m iin g ( in to rio r or ( it o r l o r j ,
p iv m b ,n g . t p u c ia iil* m m o b ile
hem * r t p a .r y A r e d c e e lin g .
and w ood p o lio deck* F r e e
r y iim e 'e II* 14a)

Horn* Improvement

U N C LU T T E R V O U R CLO SET
Sen lira * * l h&lt;ng* th * i a r t w t i
la k m g u p sp a c e w ilN a w a d ad
u i th# M r r t id 111 1411 e r 1)1

Pressure Cleaning
Mobil# H o m ry. H o u k o t, U uo tt.
Truck*. T ra ito r, d c X o r la b l*
Unit H a ro ld R a n k in H I 111).

Remodeling
Remodeling Specialist
W th a n d l* i n ,
w n o i. B a llo t w * .

B. E . Link Const.

322-7029

L a w * M o w in g

Nursing Center

home rep a irs. Calf for1 tree

R e p a ir* , f a u c e t s ,
W
C •
Sp rin k le rs 371 IS 10, $1)0706

F m in c in g A v O lla b l*
I.

Painting * c a r p e n tr y , a ll fyp e s of

Building Contractor

Plumbing

T E R R V 'I I N T E R I O R S
W a ilp a g a r in g , g i l d i n g
L o j«
( K K a t G u a r w o rk . 771 M M

PluirMng
FO N SECA P LU M A IN u
uu n
tffu e tto n . R t p a ,r t , E m a rg o n
:y L ie , B onded. I n i U l a g i l
P iu m b .n g r e p a d - a l l t y p a t
ria tu re ra p ta c * m « n t
w a it r n a t t a r t A pum p*

1)11*7)

Roofing
W ill* Way R o o tin g end P a in
ting G u a ra n te e d w o rk F r y *
E yi.m a i* * P i l m m i
R O O FS, i, ik t ( * M &gt; r * d . R e g la c *
r*n*a ,a ,* y and ktongto w o rk ,
l l o a i t d . in i u r e d . I * n d * d
M ik i 111 4111
t h r n t ia n R e e lin g 17 ,r * * , p
Sat S'SO. l i t * **l n „ o o lin g .
U M u t iil* m r a f M ir hw w k •

new rooting

Sandblasting
S A N D B L A tT IN O
O A V It W IL D IN G
n it o n * . S A M F O R D

Tree Service
h a r p b r -i t r r i i i r v i c i
T rim m ing , r e m e .in g A L arW
tc a p n g F r* » E » t. 1)1 Q N )

It you a r a n l u t.n g yo ur p o d
1*1Pa. lo k * a cu e . and k d l It
w,th a M rra id d a t t f i a d ad
C a ll H I 1*11

Uphohtery
IN F L A T I O N F I G H T E R
S P E C IA L
to O a r* only la b o r o n * d a and
cxa&gt;r l i t * P lu t o u r M a la r ia l
A ll w ork g u o r o d g e d . D ) '4 )1
tor tie * n i p ic k up* A d a lly
R O O B ry a n t

WlndtPM Repairs
A liw &lt; n d o w * itp a &gt; r* d G la t *

Raptor ad P o r c h R a te n e n .n g
111 1)41

k

�• • •

9

I / •

Scotty's Dollar Stretching Specials
DOORS

SHELF BRACKETS
and STANDARDS ^

MACCO

SUPER CAULK

Silver
DUCT TAPE

«

2" x 10 yard roll

Walnut, Gold or Alum inum finishes

I n t e r io r - e x t e r io r . In
White, Redwood, Brown
and Woodtone.

Bracket*

8

Each

107

j&gt; » j!

10'.. 1.1 4
Standards

| 11II ox. Cartridge

Each

Reg Price Icartridge)

R eg Price troll)

W hile......................... 2&lt;
C o lo rs .......................... 2 1

Natural IAUAN SHELVES

ENERGY SAVERS

Solid construction, warp-free shelf is
covered with a beautiful veneer.
Finely sanded, ready to be finished

h tfm /u W n r m i

Seasons 3
Pro Turf
LAWN FOOD

Powerlock*
Power Return TAPE RULE

8" x 2 4 " .....................

2 . 1 9

8" x 36” .......................3

Has belt clip, locking knob and
1 /2 " x 10' blade. No 33-210.

■1 9

8 ” x 4 8 ” .......................4 . 5 9

Reg Price le a c h ) ............................ 5.69

Covers 4,000 sq ft

GYPSUM ■
WALLBOARD

Each

10” x 24” ................... 2 . 7 9
1 0 " x 3 6 " .................... 3 . 9 9
10” x 4 8 ” ................... 5 . 4 9

Vinyl Fortified
t § ^
FLOOR TILE DD3DIC0 | £

12" x 36” .....................4 . 5 9
12” x 4 8 " ................... 6 . 4 9

Durable, 12" x 12" x 1.2 mm house­
hold gauge tile. Light marble vein in
Almond. M ocha and Butterscotch.

CEILING FAN
Four wood blades with infinite speed
control. In White or Brown. 36" die.
sweep. (Accepts optional light kit.)

I

,T

l.12" x

60" .................... B . 1 9

SCREWDRIVER
ASSORTMENT

OHanann

No-Wax Vinyl
SHEET FLOORING

In popular sizes.

Durable, Topthane sur­
face on a vinyl foam
cushion. In 6'-6" wide roll.

Sheathing PLYWOOD
CDX Sheets
Agency Approval

3 /8 "
1 /2 ”
1 /2 "
5 /8 ”

x4
x 4'
x 4'
x4

x 8 ' .................(
x 8' (3 ply)....... I
x 8' (4 ply)....... '
x 8 ' ................ I 1

l x 12 No. 3
PINE SHELVING ^
8' th ro u g h 16‘

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Plastic laminate. A
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Brass finish motor housing, canopy
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— opiH-merM—
SANFORD
700 French Ave.
Ph: 323-4700
ALTAMONTE SPRINGS
1029 E. Altamonte Dr.
(Hwy. 436)
Ph: 339-8311

ndSave!

tiU A W H S

FIBERGLASS
PANELS

Scotty's stores openat 7:30 a.m.
Monday thru Saturday
Closed Sunday

ora

a

UirruT a -------------ORANGE CITY
2323 S. Volusia Ave.
Hwy. 17 and 92
Ph: 775-7268
ALTAMONTE 8PRING8
875 W. Hwy. 438
Ph: 862-7254

Prices quotad in ihit ad aia
based on cuttomart pickmg up
marchandiaa at our store P a ­
lmary u available lor a small
charge

Management rasarvts the right
to limit Quantities on special

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                    <text>74th Y e ar, No. 38—Monday, October 5,1981—Sanford, Florida 32771

Evening Herald—(U SP S 481-280)—Price 20 Cents

U.S. Unemployment Up; Seminole Figures Not In Yet
While the nation's unemployment rate jumped to 7.5 percent
in September, its highest rate in five months, it will be another
month before labor department officials know if the rate in
Seminole County followed suit.
Statistics by counties won't be made available until Oct. 29,
said Sue German, statistician for the Florida Department of
Libor and Employment Security.
Meanwhile, a comparison of state and national unem­
ployment figures showed Florida with slightly less em­
ployment than nationwide — 7.3 percent compared to 7 5
percent, using the same seasonally adjusted figures.
Seasonally adjusted figures, German said, compensate for
employment fluctuations due to the time of year. Employment
usually is less in the summer in Florida, when agricultural
work falls off and other groups such as teachers are not
working. Hut in the fall, she said, agriculture picks up and
employment rises in other areas in anticipation of the
Christmas season
In comparing seasonally unadjusted rates, Seminole County

registered a 7 3 percent unemDloyment rate in August, com­
pared to the state's 6.7 percent.

The state's rate jumped to eight percent in September, but
the Seminole County figure isn't in yet. German said she could
not predict if Seminole will register a similar jump.
Both the state and Seminole County averaged a 6.3 percent
seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate between Sep­
tember 1980 and August 1981.
Nationally, U.S. I.abor Department figures for September
showed unemployment among blocks hitting a record high of
16.3 percent, but German said die Florida Department of
Libor keeps no separate tally of blacks or other groups.
The 16.3 percent national level fur blacks was up slightly
from the 16.2 percent figure for August, the U.S. Bureau of
I^ibor Statistics reported.
For black teen-agers 16 to 19, the September figure returned
to near the July level, dropping from August’s record of 50.7
percent to 40.2 percent.
Nationally, the overall unemployment rate of 7 5 percent in

September was .3 percent above August's 7.2 percent In
Florida, the state's 7.3 percent rate for September was up 1.3
percent from August’s 6 4 percent.
‘ That’s quite a jump," German said. "It's not the usual
jump."
In the same months last year, she said, the unemployment
increase was only .3 percent in the state.
She said this year's much higher jump between August and
September was large but it is too early to call it a trend
"Tilings like this have happened before," she said
“Unemployment has been known to jump one month and go
down the next.
"We have to wait at least two months before we can say
unemployment is on the rise."
Meanwhile, German said there are several possible reasons
for the large unemployment jump in Florida
"Some of the surveys may be starting to pick up some of the
refugees," she said. "There is also a lot of airline unem­
ployment in Florida due to the layoffs that followed the air

New Bank
Sought In
Longwood

Grand Jury May Get
Lake Mary Police Case

The city of longwood has accepted an
application from a group of persons
planning to organize a national bank at
502 N. Highway 17-92.
Upon acceptance of the application by
the city, the group will decide on naming
the bank either Liberty National Hank or
Allied National Bank. The former name
is the preferred one.
The bank, as proposed by the five
persjtfis interested in establishing it in
bin^iK id. will be a 9,000-square-faot
building with five teller lanes, according
to William B Gossett, representative for
the project.
"The Lmgwood area was chosen for
the bank because it lias a good central
location in the county and the area looks
like it is the leading edge of the county,"
said Gossett.
At some point, if the location is ac­
cepted by llie city, the bank will have 24hour service, but initially the service will
not be offered to custom en, said Gossett.
“The bank will have 24-hour service
sometime in the future, but first ii has to
build up a clientele that will use it," he
added.
Any person wishing to comment on the
application may file comments in writing
with the Comptroller of the Currency,
Administrator of National Bank’s Sixth
National Hank Itegion, Suite 2700,
Peachtree Cain Tower, 229 Peachtree St„
Atlanta. Ga 30303
Anyone wishing to protest has until
Oct. If! to contact the Comptroller of the
Currency to make his protest known.
The names of the bank's organizers
are: John Arthur Baldwin, Oviedo; Deno
P anayes Dikeou, O rlando; Eugene
Norwood F o rre ste r, W inter P ark;
William It Gossett, Maitland; and Lionel
J Raymond, Altamonte Springs.

Many Seek
Altamonte
Clerk Post
Over to persons have applied for the
city c le rk 's position for A ltamonte
Springs, according to city officials. The
position formerly was held by Phyllis
Jordahl, who left the city's employ on
Sept 11 to accept a position in private
industry.
The city commission is slated to
discuss the selection process for the
position at T uesday's com mission
meeting at 7 p.m. in City Hall, 225
Newburyport Ave.
The city clerk, with an annual salary
ranging from $15,700 to $22,300, is
primarily responsible for recording and
maintaining official records of the city
ami the City Commission. According to
Personnel Director Sam Frazee, the
person hired to fill the position will most
likely begin at the lower salary , unless
qualifications and experience warrant
additional pay.
The qualifications include knowledge
of city ordinances, policies and
procedures, and legal requirements;
ability to accurately prepare and report
die actions of the commission and
various boards; ability to work ef­
fectively with city officials, city em­
ployees and the public; ability to be
bonded for $50,000; and have speed­
writing or shorthand skills.
Tlie position also requires graduation
from an accredited high school and five
years of administrative-clerical and
municipal experience.
-

TENI YARBOROUGH

tratlic controller's strike. CETA layoffs are another
possibility."
Unemployment counts, German explained, are based on
random statew ide household surveys conducted by the federal
Bureau of the Census.
"We have to accept what they tell us," she said. "But for a
long time we've been fighting with the feds because we don't
think enough of the 90,000 Cubans and Haitians are being
counted.”
Unemployment counts also miss those who have quit seeking
work, she said
"Unemployment is the percentage of the civilian labor force
out of work," she said. "The civilian labor force is the total of
all those employed and unemployed. But to be considered
unemployed one has to be actively seeking work.
"Those who have given up and are staying home are not
counted as unemployed."
The Bureau of Libor Statistics, however, does try to keep
See JOBLESS. Page 2 4

M»r»ld Fhcto ty T*W Vlncw l

SCOUTS PADDLE

WAY TO AWARD

liny Scout Troop 5UH, sponsored by Ihe Salvation Army, San­
ford, launches canoes early Kuturday morning at Monroe
Harbour at the start of a two-day .'ill-mile canoe trip on the St.
Johns Itlvcr to Lake Harney. Accompanying the 14 boys were
Melvin Harris, assistant scoutmaster, lien Hendrix, scout­
master. and l-al (loodknight, troop committee chairman. Hie
scouts camped on the hanks of Deep Creek and enjoyed fishing,
swimming and rooking out. To qualify for their ail-Miler award
they also cleaned up litter along their route.

At County Commission Hearing

Park Fees May Be Hiked
By DARLENE JENNINGS
llrrald Stall Writer
A proposal to increase county park fees
and requests for public hearings on five
applications for rezoning will be
discussed at Tuesday's 9:30 a m. County
Commission public hearing at the county
courthouse in Sanford.
John Percy, director of public services
and development, plans to ask the board
to update fees for county park programs.
The increased fees, If accepted by the
board, will raise the fee for a softball
team to play in the county's league from
$160 to $180.
Ctianges in field rentals for day time
ami evening hours also are expected to be
considered by the board. Percy said he
will ask the commissioners to raise the
rental fees from $5 to $7.50 per hour for
day time rentals, and night rentals will go
up from $5 an hour, from $10 to $15 ac­
cording to the proposed resolution.
Increasing fees for tennis lessons given
at Sanlando and Bed Bug parks by the
county recreational technicians is also

part of Percy's announced presentation
lu the board. He said he will ask an in­
crease from $20 to $25 per 10-week
session.
Dennis Haines has a l l i e d to the board
for a specific amandmenl to the county's
Com prehensive Plan to rezone his
property from low-density to mediumdensity residential.
Karnes' property is described as u
portion of L&gt;ts 36, 37, and 38 in the
Sanlando the Suburb Beautiful, Palm
Springs Section, near Altamonte Springs.
Marion Development, Maitland, has
asked the board to consider rezoning the
592 feet of Lit D of Chase and Daniel's
Revision of the llseworth Grove Co.'s
First Addition to the Town of Geneva
from agriculture to p single-family­
dwelling district.
The land is described as approxunately
12 acres located in midtown Geneva,
near Geneva Elementary School.
Bruce J. Bressler's application is for a
specific amendment far changing from
low-intensity urban to low-density

resid en tial and to rezone from
agricultural to a single-family-dwelling
district his 6.7 acres abutting Ixmgwood
Hills Road.
A request to vacate the east 120 feel of
Misty Way and the north 50 feet of the
west 130 feet of the east 250 feet of Misty
Way also is scheduled for a request for a
public hearing on Tuesday.
Jordan Iserman and Ernest South­
ward's application asks the board to
consider vacating 30 feet of platted street
lying between north of State 46 and south
of Narcissus Avenue, near Sanford.
The board also is expected to sign the
lease agreement reached with the State
D epartm ent of H ealth and Human
Services for the new site for the animal
shelter during an August public hearing.
The three-acre site chosen for the
shelter is on the east side of U.S. High­
way 17-92 at County Home Road.
The board also will hear a report on the
proposed mental-health facility to be
built on Howell Road, north of the
Eastbrook subdivision.

By DIANE PETRYK
and
TOM GIORDANO
A Seminole County grand Jury may be
asked Wednesday to unravel the mystery
surrounding the resignation of a Like
Mary police lieutenant and subsequent
allegations that he stole several weapons
f|om an evidence locker and sold them.
The grand jury also may tie asked to
examine another allegation — that the
lieutenant deliberately shot himself just
prior to leaving the department
The officer, Lt. David Higginbotham,
34, rem ain s in Florida HospitalAltamonte recovering from his wound
And, as far as he's concerned, he says he
can't understand why anyone wants to
prosecute him in live stulen-guns in­
cident, asserting live m atter was resolved
weeks ago. He also flatly denies he shot
himself.
There are several other questions the
grand jury and the Seminole-Brevard
state attorney's office will be looking at:
— Why, after the L ike Mary Police
Department learned Higginbotham was
undergoing psychological counseling for
emotional stress, was he not relieved of
duty?
— Why did the la k e Mary Police
Department accept the return of one of
the stolen guns and agree to take $300
from Higginbotham's last paycheck to
pay for the rest of the weapons’’
— Why was Higginbotham allowed to
carry a gun and remain on duty almost
two weeks after he turned in his
resignation, citing job-related stress and
emotional strain and his adnussion that
he could no longer function as a police
officer7
— Was there an inventory list of
evidence contained m the evidence
locker which is now alleged to be
missing, or did such a list never exist, as
Higginbotham asserts'1
— Why did the state attorney's office
get involved if Sheriff John Polk, Like
Mary Police Chief Harry Benson, and the

Like Mary mayor and police com­
missioner. according to Higginbotham,
promised he would not be prosecuted as
long as he left the department after
making restitution7
S tate Attorney Douglas Cheshire
confirmed today that his office has been
mvestiuatine both allegations. He also
said there's a "99 9 percent chance" of
the shcxiting Incident's going to the grand
jury as a m atter of course, but declined
to comment on whether the stolen-guns
allegation also would go to the grand
Jury.
He said he is prohibited by law from
divulging such information. Seminole
County Sheriff John Polk, however, said
today it is his understanding the stolengun case will go to the grand jury
Wednesday.
The story began several weeks ago
when, according to the Sanford Police
Department, they got a Up Higginbotham
had sold some guns at a Sanford aticUon
house. That department notified Polk's
office, since lie is the county's chief lawenforcement officer.
Polk said he met with Higginbotham
and Benson sometime between Aug. 1
and 15 and said Higginbotham admitted
selling one gun.
"The chief came to my office with
David," Polk said, "and David admitted
he sold the gun.
"I told him I wanted it back and he
retrieved it."
The gun had been confiscated from a
juvenile, Polk said, and the parents later
identified it. The gun is being held at the
Sheriff's Department as evidence, Polk
said
Polk said Higginbotham then decided
to resign.
Polk said at the time that he knew of
only one gun. Since then the Sanford
Police Department confirmed Higgin­
botham is linked to the theft of five guns
from an evidence locker at the laike
Mary Police Department that were later
See GRAND JURY, Page 1A

State Prisons Overflowing
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Some state
prisons are crammed with twice the
inmates they were built to hold and other
states rely on local jails, or even tents, to
house a U.S prison population that rose
by more than 20,000 in the first half of
1981.
State and federal prisons added more
inmates during the first half of this year
than in all of the previous year, the
Justice Department said. If the trend
continues, the nation's prison population
will grow by more than 10 percent in 1961.
Most of the increase — nearly 19,000
inmates — occurred in state institutions,
forcing some states to use “ tents,
prefabricated buildings, double bunking
and early release" to cope with the
swelling prison population, the report
said.

The report said facilities in some states
held almost twice their rated capacities
and other states were relying heavily on
space in local jails. A department report
released Sunday said state and federal

prisons held almost 350,000 men and
women inmates on June 30, 1981, more
than 20,000 more than in 1980.
The number of federal prisoners rose
by 1,370 during the first half of this year.

TO D AY
Action Reports
Around The Clock
Bridge
Caltndar
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Editorial
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•»%yO# §•* '.m»

PROUD
PARENT '

Susan Peterson, of Winter
P ark, reads up on her
“ adopted" rhea, a South
American bird that resembles
Ihe African ostrich, during
Parents Day, held Saturday at
the Central Florida Zoo,
Sanford. Persons who have
"adopted" animals at the zoo
were invited to come for a visit.

�HaraM, $an4pft),FI.

Monday,Oct.$,mi

Legal Notice

Sanford Store Robbed Twice In 3 Days
The Eagle Family Discount Store, 2670 Orlando Drive,
Sanford, w ai robbed for the second time in three days Sunday
as an armed m an pointed a gun at a cashier's head and made
off with |91.
He also took some merchandise and left the store in an
unknown direction, according to police.
Cashier Elizabeth Chorpening, 52, of 407 Edilha Circle,
Sanford, was the clerk. She had also been on duty when the
store was robbed by an unidentified gunman at 7:43 p.m.
Friday.
The most recent Incident occurred Sunday at 11:11 a.m.
In conjunction with Friday's Incident, police are looking for
a black male, approximately six feet tall, 140 to 200 pounds,
who was wearing a flowered shirt, tan pants, sunglasses and
yellow Jungle hat and who had a mustache. He was described
by witnesses as having been calm. Ih e amount of money taken
in the robbery was not released.
The suspect in Sunday's holdup was described as a black
male approximately five, 6 Inches tall, 133 to 140 pounds, who
was wearing a black "muscle shirt," according to police.
CIRCUIT COURT SENTENCINGS
A 44-year-old Sanford man, committed to a state mental
hospital over two years ago for sexually assaulting a sevenyear-old girl, was returned to Seminole County last week and
sentenced to 10 years in prison.
William Coots will be given credit tor the time he has
served under Florida’s program for mentally disordered
sexual offenders.
On Jan. 8, 1979, Coots pleaded no contest to the November
1978 assault. He was committed to the state hospital at
Chattahoochee In April 1979 and released in December 1980.

Action Reports
★

Fires
it Courts
* Police

In other court action, 19 persons were sentenced lor crimes
t" vhVh they had earlier been convicted or pleaded guilty.
They i . i :
—Paul L. Milar, 20. of Kissimmee, 22 years, two counts of
burglary, aggravated assault, resisting arrest with violence
and fleeing a police officer.
—Richard J, Breyer, 22. Altamonte Springs, 90 days in jail,
$2,000 in lines, and $1,000 for the services of his public defen­
der. Breyer was charged with setting fires In the home of
Robert Mclllican, 1418 Croton Drive, Altamonte Springs, and
threatening him with a knife.
- J a m e s Ray Williams, 22, Salem, N.J., burglary, five
years, probation and $750 in court costs.
—Jam es T. Player, 30, Sanford, grand theft, five years,
probation and $500 for his public defender.
—Victor Ruskavich, 37, Casselberry, battery on a police
officer, three years, probation and $1,000 fine.
—Bonnie L. Strathdec, 39, Winter Springs, two counts of
forgery, five years, probation, $450 for Iter public defender and
$500 in court costs.
—Wayne Saunders, 30, Sanford, battery on a law en­
forcement officer, one years' probation.

—I«on Diwinan, 28, Oviedo, forgery, live years' probation
and u $450 public defender's lien.
-W illiam J. Neal, 19, Orlando, attempted robbery, six
months in jail and five years' probation.
-G eorge I^WTcnce Ford, 29, Oviedo, possession of
marijuana and driving while intoxicated, 10 weekends In the
county Jail, five years' probation, $1,000 in court costs and
attendance in a defensive-driving program.
—Marc K. Woodall, 19, Sanford, two counts of burglary, 7 4
years probation.
-M ichael J. Hornctt, 21, Osteen, grand theft, three years'
probation, a $400 public defender lien and $350 in court costs.
—Janice R. Martin, 22, Maitland, possession of Quaaludes,
three weekends in the county jail, three years' probation and a
$371 public defender lien.
—Charles I,. Warren, 19, Maitland, carrying a concealed
firearm and reckless driving, Iwo years’ probation, a $150 fine,
and $500 in court costs.
-N atiianiel Dailey, 33, Sanford, resisting arrest, one years'
probation and $500 public defender lien.
Frances E. Major, 32, Sanford, aggravated battery, five
years' probation and $750 for the services of the public
defender.
—Sternum Williams, 24, Sanford, assault and battery, five
weekends in tlie county Jail, one years' probation and a $1,000
public defender lien.
-R onald L Wells, 24, Altamonte Springs, battery to a law
enforcement officer, one years' probation and $200 in court
costa.
—Jerome Washington, 35, Sanford, unemployment com­
pensation fraud ($574), three y e a n ’ probation and $400 for the
services of the public defender.

■

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF
240 Doctors Begin Study
O f Battlefield Medicine
MIAMI (UPI) — In the wake of a warning from a
federal agency that America does not have enough
doctors versed In war medicine, more than 240
physicians have begun a course at a Miami hospital to
leant how to operate on a battlefield.
A majority of the doctors are Cubans and are being
Instructed by Cuban Vietnam veterans at American
Hospital.
Many of the doctors believe war Is Imminent In the
Caribbean or Central America, and some openly ad­
vocate It.
The General Accounting Office recently warned
Congress that if a war broke out tomorrow, the Pen­
tagon could not find enough doctors trained in war
medicine.

Volunteer Pirates Galore
KEY WEST, Fla. (UP1) — An attorney says since he
revealed hla dream to become e licensed privateer and
wage war on drug smugglers, he has been besieged by
offers from trained killers, spies and the "lunatic
fringe" who want to follow him Into battle.
In fact, Randy Ludacer says the calls from en­
thusiastic volunteers have become so annoying, he
sometimes wishes the entire Idea would quietly go
away and leave him alone. Unfortunately for Ludacer,
his would-be recruits won't.
la s t month, Ludacer asked Congress to grant him
letters of marque and reprisal, which would make him
a licensed privateer who could help the federal
government capture drug smugglers In the Caribbean
and Gulf of Mexico.

Got A Rhino For Sale ?
MIAMI (UPI) - Gorillas and H adrian camels are
not on every ordinary shopping list, but they are Bill
Zelgler's bread and butter.
Zelgler Is general curator at the new Metrozoo, and
his shopping list reads like the cast of a Tarzan movie.
Zelgler Is In the market for gorillas, chimpanzees,
two-humped camels and at least four Thomson's
gazelles. And he'd love to get his hands on a spare male
black rhinoceros or an African antelope.
Dade County's Metrozoo will have Its grand opening
Dec. 12, and Zelgler Is ready to make any deal he can
for the animals he wants.

Haitians May Be Replaced
CLEW1STON, Fla, (UPI) - United States Sugar
Corp. officials aald Sunday If 60 striking Haitians do not
return to their Jobs as cane cutters today, the firm
would hire Jam aicans to take their place.
The Haitians went on strike Friday In protest of the.
Importation of Jamaican cane cutters.
Company officials aald Sunday they would know
today U the strike Is still on. If so, they said they would
hire Jamaicans to replace the Haitians.
The strike was called at noon Friday by the Farm ­
workers Rights Organization, led by Jesus Romo, an
organizer of protests In Arizona. Romo, who moved to
Immokalee, in the heart of southwest Florida’s
vegetable growing belt, to sign up Haitian field
workers, charged U.S. Sugar with a "systematic,
purposeful Intent to discourage local workers so that
they can hire offshore workers. There Is a lot of
harassment."

'Escape A rtist ' Out Again
MIAMI (UPI) — Andrew Williams, who escaped
from the federal North Dade Detention Center by
holding a razor to a guard’s throat, remained at targe
today, a Jail spokesman said.
Williams, S3, once labeled a "teenage escape artist,"
fled the minimum security prison late Sunday holding
a razor to a guard's neck. Ih e guard was not Injured.
Williams had been held at the center on federal
robbery charges. He also is on probation for a robbery
conviction.

E v p n ln g H e r a ld

di
* t

»«*« « i m i

Monday, October *. INI— ’Vd. 74, No. N
Published Belly sett luaday, aicapt Saturday by The teeters

NereM, I « mW N. OreecaAve. leeiere. Ole. »n i.

thread Cieii Putt*** rit e at tellers. P tarid* Itt ii
ri wees, lt.M i m «* m . m u i « Mena*. IM -M i
Veer, to u t. By MeUi W e* 11.11/ Meats, t i l l / 4
tiees/ veer, ttr.ee_________________________________

JUST
TESTING

Brel Klnnry, field service engineer with Ladder Towers, Inc., of Ephrata,
Pa., was showing Sanford firemen how their new $300,000 ladder fire truck
works Friday afternoon when the vehicle was called away to a minor fire on
Rosalia Drive. The firefighters, apparently quick learners, put out the blaze
quickly and returned to the task of learning how to operate the truck's fancy
‘ equipment. Sanford Fire Chief William Galley was so impressed with the
' vehicle's performance that he said the truck is" the finest piece of equipment
we've ever had,"

1

...Jobless Rate Up
iContfourd From Page 1
track of what it calls "discouraged workers." Its quarterly
report showed 1.1 million people in that category.
Virtually all of September's employment decline, about
675,000 jobs, was attributed to white workers.
Employment in construction, which had shown some growth
In the latter part of 1980 and the early months of this year, fell
by another 20,000 jobs In September and has diopped 165,000
Jobs since April. The bureau said employment in mining rose
as a result of continued strength in oil and gas extraction.
The bureau reported the increase In unemployment was
concentrated among people 25 years and older, both men and
women.
Among major categories, only Hispanic workers showed a
decline in joblessness, dropping from 9.7 percent in August to
9.3 percent In September.
In a news conference Thursday, President Reagan Indicated
his new program, much of which went Into effect that day at
the start of the new fiscal year, will turn things around.
"In the next several years we can create 13 million Jobs and
reduce inflation," he said, but he cautioned, "Our programs
won't be instantaneous.
"Fluctuations In the various economic Indicators such as
employment and Inflation will probably continue for the next
several months," he said. “ But we will not be swayed from our
plan by every changing current, every passing trend or every
short-term fluctuation." - DUNE PETRYK

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Rain fell in the northern portion of
the nation early today, with scattered showers reported in the
Great Likes region, reaching west to the Dakotas and east to
New York and the mid-Atlantic states. Light rain and drizzle
was over the Dakotas and northern sections of Michigan.
AREA READINGS (I a.m.): temperature: 76; overnight
low: 66; Sunday’s high: 86; barometric pressure: 30.17;
relative humidity: 61 percent; winds: northeast at 5 mph.
TUESDAY' TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 2:02 a m .,
2:39 p.m.; lows, 7:53 a m ., 8:50 p m .; PORT CANAVERAL:
highs, 1:56 a.m., 2:31 p m .; lows, 7:44 a m ., 6:50 p.m.;
BAYPORT: highs, 6:19a.m., 9:54 p.m.; lows, 11:39 a m , 2:36
p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine te Jupiter Inlet, Out
■ Miles: Winds easterly 10 to 15 knots today becoming
southeast around 10 knots tonight and Tuesday. Seas 3 to 5 feet
decreasing tonight Partly cloudy.
AREA FORECAST: Generally fair weather through
Tuesday with warm afternoons and mild nights. Highs In the
upper 80s to near 90. Overnight lows in the upper 80s to near 70.
Winds east to southeast around 1ft mph today and variable leas
then 10 mph tonight.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Florida except northwest Mostly (air and mild. Lows near 60 north to the low 70s south.
Highs in tbs 88a

Pets Cart Do
Wonders For
Heart Patients
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - Pets, even a Unkful of fish,
can increase a heart diaeaie patient's chance of survival
and help lower a person's high blood pressure, researchers
said.
Results of research on the Influence pets have on people
were announced at the first International Conference on
Human-Companion Animal Bond.
The conference attracted more than 450 physicians,
psychologists, anthropologists and other acholan to tha
University of Pennsylvania Veterinary School’s Center for
the Interaction of Animals, the only such center in North
America,
"Psychologists began to realize that people who were
unwilling to make contact with other people ware willing to
make contact with animals," said Dr. Aaron Katchtr,
chairman of the conference.
Katcher's preliminary research has found that a pet can
increase the chances of survival for a heart patient and
lower high blood pressure In some cases
“ It was an accidental finding, but we found that even
watching a tankful of fish teem s to help," he laid.
Other research findings to be presented at the conference
Include a study that discovered 70 percent of a child’s
dreams are about animals and another that determined
many more women than men are Interested In horses as
peU.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Stmintlt Mamarlal Hospital
Oct*tor 1
ADMISSIONS
SANFORD
Ellis King
Hugh D Regan. Dalton*
DISCHARGES
SANFORD:
Ron* L Boom
Elliabefh M u nor
Ruth Randall
Ron M Rot undo
Adr*nm L Singletary A Body
g&lt;rl
Barbara u Bodmr, Gm avi
Oct*tor 4
ADMISSIONS
L*o C Jarrell, Ortngt city
DISCHARGES
SANFORD:
Nallt* Hagtn*
Catnarin* E VAllne
Cynthia B Brooks i baby boy
Daisy L Atwood, Drltom
Blanche H Ohlhausar, Drltom
John William Hadgts. Jr.,

G*nova
Jamas B Sermons, Holly Hill
Lamar I. Siokas. la s t Mary

lego! Notlca
FIC TITIO U S NAMB
Notlca Is haraby glean that wa
ara angagad in bwllnass at Boa r«]
Mimaela. FI W H Laka County,
Florida undar tha fictitious nemo
o&gt; HOME f l a n , and mat wa in
land loragisiar said m m a with Ihe
Clark of tha Circuit Court.
SamInula County, Florida M sccordanca with th* provision* et Ihe
FiclitimN Name Statute*. To Wit:
Section lass* Florida Statute*
t»».
Slg Guy Cltrkill*
S'O Donald Blach
Publish: Saptambar I I , a , Oc­
tober s, n , ttti
OEM we

legal Notice

ORDINANCE NO IIS
ORDINANCE N O .*17
AN O R D IN AN CEOF TH E C ITY
AN O R D IN AN C EO F THE C ITY
OF LONGW OOD. F LO R IO A .
OF CASSELBERRY, FLORIDA.
A N N E X IN G
TO
AN D
IN
A N N E X IN G
TO
'AND
IN
CLUDING WITHIN TH E COR
CLUOING W ITHIN TH E COR­
PORATE AREA OF THE C ITY
PORATE l i m i t s o f t h e c i t y
'OF LONGWOOD. FLORIDA, AN
OF CASSELBERRY. FLORIOA.
AREA OF LAND S ITU A TE ANO
AN AREA OF LAND SITU ATE
BEING IN SEMINOLE CO UN TY,AND B E IN G IN S E M IN O LE
AND M OR E P A R T IC U L A R L Y
COUNTY. FLORIOA. AND MORE
D E S C R IB E D AS FOLLO W S:;
PARTICULARLY
DESCRIBED
WEST I N I F E E T OF LOT 1.
AS FOLLOWS Tha North HO 00 LONGW OOD
H ILLS
SU E
(rat ot the Wait **i teal and the
DIVISION. SEMINOLE COUNTY,
Watt J** teat, last me North HO FLO R IO A . P L A T BOOK .4,'
tart and Ihe South ft* teat fharrol
PAGES IS AN D 14. R E D E '
ot ihe SE i,o f lha SW oi Section
FIN IN G
TH E
C O R P O R A TE
I*. Township II South. Range )0
LIM ITS OF THE CITY OF LONG .
East. Seminole County, Florida,
WOOD. FLORIDA. TO INCLUDE
Lass the South 1M teat of the North
SAID LAND W ITHIN THE MUNI
I I I leal ol tha Watt 110 teat. AND
CIPAL LIM ITS OF TH E C IT Y .
ALSO LESS that par* ot tha West
AUTHORIZING
AM EN D M EN T.
701 teat. Lass the Norm IIS leaf
TO CITY MAP TO IN CLUD Eand me South tta leal thereof,
SAID LAND AN N EXED ; PRO '
together with Ihe South H feet of
VIDING FOR TH E RIGHTS ANO'
me West IIS tret ol tha South •* of
P R IV IL E G E S FOR C IT IZ E N -'
me NE &lt;i ot me SW &lt;4 ot said
SHIP IN TH E C IT Y ; SEVER.,
Section It. ANO a l s o mat part ot
A B IL IT Y AND E F F E C T I V E
the South', of said NE &lt;*of lha SW
d ate
:*1
lass tha West US teat thereof.
WHEREAS, thrrehat barn tiled,
Said parcel contains tl fit acres,'
with the City Clark ot the City ot
DECLARING A V A ILA B ILITY OF
Longwood. Florida, a Petition'
M U N IC IP A L
S E R V IC E S :
containing tha names ot property'
D E F IN IN G C O N D ITIO N S OF
owners in lha area of Seminole
A N N E X A TIO N ,
P R O V ID IN G
Counly. Florida, datcrlbad *1 ,
ZONING CLASSIFICATION, RE
follows:
d e f in in g
th e co r p o r a te
West H o t leal ot Lol
L IM IT S OF C A S S E LB E R R Y .
LONGW OOD
H ILLS
SUB"'
FLORIOA, TO INCLUDE SAID
DIVISIO N , Seminole Counly,PARCEL o f l a n d IN Y h E
Florida. Plal Book 4. P*e*s IS end
MUNICIPAL LIM ITS OF i*|D
14
C ITY . AUTHORIZING AMENO
requesting inneiation lo tne&gt;
M EN T OF C ITY MAP TO IN
corporate area ol th* City of,
C LU D E TH E A N N E X A TIO N
Longwood,
Florida,
anj
HER EIN. PROVIDING FOR THE
requesting to be includrd therein."'
RIGHTS ANO PRIVILEGES FOR
and,
CITIZENSHIP IN TH E C IT Y ;
WHEREAS. Mid Petition was
PROVIDING
SEVER AB ILITY,
duly certified by lha Saminoif .
CONFLICTS AND E F F E C T IV E
County Property
Appraiser'*
DATE.
pursuant to th* Charter ol lha City,
WHEREAS, mere hat bean Iliad at Longwood. Florid*. Chapter 4f. j
with tha City Clark of tha City ot
1141. Laws Ol Florid*, 1f4t, *nd
Casselberry. Florida, a petition tor
Chapter IS-If!. Laws of Florld4, 1
annotation signed by tha land
1*75. and th* certification ot tho
owner ot tha area sought lo be
Seminole County Proparty A p -1
anneied consenting lo a n j
pralsar as lo th* sufficiency of J
requesting lha annotation and such Prtltlon pursuant lo that
zoning of that parcel specifically farms ol Mid Charier received, J
described her aln; and WHEREAS,
0TMJ,
•
lha City Council ol lha City ol
W H ER EAS, th* City Com I
Casselberry, Florida, therololoro mission ot th* City ot Longwood,;
at regular mealing of lha City
Florid*, has deemed it In th* bast.
Council has approved tha petition
interest ot lha City ot Longwood. j
signed by tha landowner ol lha
Florid*, to accept Mid Petition"
area sought to be anneied. con
and to annai said area,
sentlng lo and requesting lha
NOW, TH E R E FO R E , BE I T ‘
enneiatton ol said parcel and has O R D A IN E D BY T H E C IT Y ?
considered
thoroughly
tha
COMMISSION OF TH E C ITY OF feasibility ot such ermeiailon and LONGW OOD. F L O R ID A . A$!
toning lo lha Cily ol Casselberry,
FOLLOWS:
Florida. In accordance with
SECTION I That lha following;Chapter l/l ou, Laws ot Florida. described property, to w il:
t»7l: and
Wail lfO f leal of Lot I.i
WHEREAS, objections lo such Longwood Hills Subdivision,:
annotation and toning have bean
Seminol* County, Florida. Plal
considered and hearings held, and
Book a. Pages IS and 14.
It appearing in tha bast interest ot be and th* same ii haraby annaied ,
tha City ol Casselberry, Florida, to to and made a part ot th* City ot i
annei and ton# said propertyand
Longwood, Florid*, pursuant to:
WHEREAS, tha City Council Ol the term* otthe Charter of Ihe Cily !'
tha City ot Casselberry, Florida, ot LongwooJ, Florida, Chapter at (
has concluded from investigation
lit*. Laws ol Florida. Hat, j
that all municipal services will be Chapter 7SIT7, Laws ol Florida,1
available lb lha area lobe annaaad
1*75, and Florida Statute 171 Ota. '
on tha elleclive data ol Ihls or
SECTION 1: That lha corporate dinence.
limits ol lha City of Longwood,}
NOW. TH E R E FO R E , BE IT
Florida, b* and th* same ara,
EN AC TED
BY TH E
Q TY
hereby redefined so as to Include ;
COUNCIL OF TH E C ITY OF
Mid land herein described and'
CASSELBERRY. FLORIOA:
annaaad.
SECTION I - ANNEXATION
SECTION 1: That th* City Clark )
AND ZONING - Thai tha City ol is haraby authorftad lo amend.!
Caeselbtrry,
Florida,
does alter and supplement th* official J
herewith and haraby anna* and city map ot lha City ot Longwood. i
designate lonlng et a certain tract Florida, to Inctod* m* annaaatMn 1 A
at land lying In Semlnoli Counly, contained in Section 1 hereof
Florida, and mort particularly
SECTION J: That upon this!
described as lollows, te wit:
ordinance becoming affect Iv*. th* j
Tht North HO 00 teat ot tho West resident and property owners In »
m leal and tha West Stt teat, lass th* above described annaied area
tha North 110teat and lha South its shall ba entitled to all ot th* rights &lt;
leal thereol ol the SE
ot tha SW and privileges and Immunities as,
•aOt SectionII. Township It South, are, from time to lima, determined !
Range JO East. Seminole County, by th* governing authority ot the Florida. Lass lha South 1*1 leaf of Cityof Longwood, Florida, andth*
the North IIS feat ot tha WaSI 170 provisions of Mid Charter of tha,
leal, ANO ALSO LESS thl! part of City of Longwood, Florida.:
tha West 700 teat. Last the North Chapter a* Has. Laws ot Florida.}
IIS feat and lha South Me teat iftf. and Chapter IS 1*7, Laws ol
thereof, together with tha Soulh H
Florida, 1»7S
leal ol tha West IIS leal ot the
SECTION I: II any taction or
South &lt;4 ol tha NE &lt;4 ot tha SW &lt;4 portion ol a taction ol this Or !
ol said Section II. AND ALSO that dinanc* proves to b* invalid.;
part ot tha South of Mid NE &gt;, ol unlawful, or unconstitutional, It'
tha SW
lass tha Watt IIS feat shall not ba held lo Invalidate or ‘
thereol. Said parcel contains II li t
impair lha validity, tore* or attact ’
ot any other Mellon or part ot this!
S E C TIO N
II ZONING ordinance
D E S IG N A TIO N That lha
SECTION 4: All ordinances or:
properly described in Section l ol parts ot ordinance* in conflict J
mis ordinance shall nave tha herewith be and lha Mm* err following toning classification:
hereby repealed.
J
R 1 One and Two Family
SECTION 7: This ordinance1
Dwelling District
shall taka attact pursuant lb tha!
SECTION III - CONDITIONS provisions ol Florida Statute!
OF ANNEXATION - Nona
SI 7*.Odd.
SECTION IV - R ED EFIN IN G
PASSED AND AD O P TEO THIS!
LIM ITS OF DECLARATION ------ DAY OF --------- A O. If ll. •
That lha corporate limits ot tha
FIRST READING: September!
City ot Casselberry. Florida, ba It. m t
and it is herewith and haraby
SECOND READING: ------------- !
redefined so as to Include Mid
John F. Happ
;
tract ol land hartln described. Tha
Mayor
I
description herein contained shall
City ol Longwood,
Include all straats, roads, high
Florida
ways, allays and avenues located
A T T E S T:
within or between tha eslstlng
O L. Tarry
municipal limits and areas an
C ITY CLERK
rwied herein in Section I hereof. Publish: Saptambar It, M. Oc !
SECTION V - AM ENDM ENT lobar S. It. IH I
OF O FFIC IAL C ITY MAP - Thai DEM f]
lha Cily Clark Is haraby authoritad
to amend, altar and euppltment
me official City map of tha City ot
Casselberry. Florida, to include NOTICE OP INTBNTIOM TO
me annaaallan contained in REGISTER FIC TITIO U S TR A D «!
Section I hereof.
N AM I
S E C TIO N VI SEVER­
NOTICE IS H E R EB Y GIVEN,
A B IL ITY II any section ol lhat lha undersigned, MORSE]
portion et a section ot this or. SHOE, INC. intends to register lha"
dlnenca proves lo be invalid, fictitious trad*name FAVVA with!
unlawful, or unconstitutional, it lha Clark ot the Circuit Court olj
Shall not ba held to Invalidate or Seminol* County, Florid*, pur&lt;
Impair tha validity, force, or affect suant to Section 14} ot, Florida!
ot any other section or part ot this Statutes, l » } l : that th* u n !
ordinance
der signed inlands to *«g*S* in the,
SECTION VII ANN EXED business ol th* retail salt ot,
A R EA
R IO H TS
AN O footwear and related items at Hun*
PRIVILEGES - That upon lists Club Cornea, Slat* Read, 41* t!
ordinance becoming affective, tha SS4 Hunt Club Bouiavard. A pop* a,
property owner in lha abova Florida.
described anneied area Shall ba
Dated this Ind day ot Sap!
entitled to all ot tha rights and Iambar, IH I
privileges and Immunities as ara
MORSE SHOE. INC.
!
from tlmt to time determined by
By Kenneth C. Cummins
tha governing authority ol tho City
Its Sacralary
ol Cassalborrv. Florida, and tha Publish: Saptambar It, a , Oc!
provislena et tha Charter ot tho tobar ». 11, IM1
City 01 Casaatborry. Florida, in DEM to:
accordance with Chapter 111 04*.
Law* ol Florid*. If ll.
SECTION VIII - E F F E C T IV E
DATE — Thl* ordinance shall
bacomt effective thirty IN I day*
FICTITIO U S NAMB
attar passage and adoption.
Nolle* IS haraby given that
hat I arrf
FIRST READING thl* H it day angagad In business *1
cd August, A D IH I.
Baywood Av*. Longwood, Flai
SECOND
R E A D IN G
AN O Seminol* County, Florida undatj
A D O P TIO N this lath day el m t fictitious name ot R EP O
Saptambar, A O. IN I.
DEPOT, and that I Inland fci
APPROVED:
register Mid name with th* Clarq
OWEN It. SHEPPARD
Ol tho Circuit Court. Samlnotb
MAYOR
County. Florida M accordance
A T T E S T:
with tha provislena et tho Ficj
MARY W. HAW THORNE.
Ittleus Nam* Statutoo, T o w it i
C ITY CLERK
Section tu g s Florida Statutes
Publish: Saptambar 11, a , Oc­
ttn.
tober S, II. IN I
Slg. W. A. Hottman Jr.
DEM N
Publish: Saptambar X . Octoberr iSj
II, I*. IN I
|
D EM 117

1

*
‘J

I

-W
&gt;S^b- -mw*«*****,&gt; i

s-js £ /" »

�Evening Herald.Sanford,FI.

... Grand Jury May
{C m ttned From Page
sold at the same Sanford auction house.
"Since it was only one gun, I told
David I didn’t (eel any reason to file
charges," Polk said.
"We got the gun back and he was
leaving police work," he added,
r.lt's at this point that the story gets
controversial in term s of who knew what
and who said what to whom.
Higginbotham says Benson was fully
aware of his emotional problems and that
h i w as undergoing psychological
counseling, and that there was more than
one weapon involved. Higginbotham
further says Benson assured him that if
he agreed to continue getting counseling
and to leave the department, saying
that's what Polk wanted, he w u sure no
dim would want to prosecute him.
Higginbotham said he returned the one
weapon and also agreed to let the city
take (300 out of his paycheck to pay for
the other weapons, wMch he described as
"old and worth only |30 to MO each."
A memo from Benson to Lake Mary
City Treasurer Madeleine Papa confirms
MOO w u deducted from Higginbotham'!
last check to "assure all department
property Is turned in."
"They promised (here would be no
prosecution. They knew I w u under
severe emotional strain. Why are they
breaking their promise? They even gave
me a plaque and a party, and the plaque

lay s it's In honor of my ‘dedicated ser­
vice to the department.’ TWa la after they
knew everything," Higginbotham u id .
He said he didn't wish to comment
further on the lacUhot since he la
consulting a lawyer.
"I've already had sever operations,
I've lost about M pounds, I ’m on heavy
medication. I feel like my Ufe is ending,"
he said.
It w u only a short time after he an­
nounced his resignation when on Aug. 91
Higginbotham w u on routine patrol of
the Southward Orange Grove on County
Road 46-A when he radioed that he w u
checking out a suspicious-looking black
van parked In front of a firm-equipment
shed on the property.
Higginbotham reported he u w a man
at the shed and then radioed for
assistance. He said he ordered the man to
"freese" and when it looked like he w u
going to run, drew his weapon.
At that point, Higginbotham said,
another man came out of the shed and
attacked him from behind. In the
struggle, he u id , his J t caliber 397
magnum discharged, hitting him In the
leg.
The two men reportedly jumped Into
the black van and R »d off.
The day before the incident, Benson
had written a letter to the Police Stan­
dards and Training Commission In
T allahasne requesting that "a t no time

G et Lake Mary Probe

Higginbotham be reinstated on anothar
(police) department until they contact
me for clarification of his personal
problems."
In the letter, Benson quoted from
Higginbotham's resignation citing Ms
own emotional and mental problems and
the statement that he has no desire to go
back into police work.
Shortly after the shooting incident the
m s tier w u turned over to another
department, the Winter Springs Police
D epartm ent, because of " ru m o rs "
Higginbotham may have shot himself
deliberately.
The Winter Springs detective who
conducted the Investigation said he
would not disclose his findings but did
admit, “I lean both ways — that he did
not shoot himself deliberately and that he
did shoot himself deliberately."
His findings were turned over to the
state attorney's office.
While H igginbotham flatly denies
shooting himself, asserting, "There w u
no profit to be made," he h u been
collecting M percent of hi* salary from
Workmen’s Compensation, wMch also
will pay hla medical expenses.
Why was Higginbotham permitted to
carry a gun and remain on duty almost
two weeks after he resigned and while Ms
superiors knew of his psychological
stress?
"There w u no reason to believe David

w u a h a u n t to himself or anybody Higginbotham w asn 't replaced im ­
etee," Benson u id .
mediately.
Benson also u i d that during that
"The whole Police Department a year
period Higginbotham w u attempting to ago was gutted, with experienced men
reconstruct the Police Department's going to other areas (for more pay),"
evidence list, wMch had turned up the mayor u id . The 17-man department
missing. To reconstruct the list, Benson w u reduced to a nine-man force. He
explained, he w u having to go through added that the city lost CETA funding for
three file cabinets of reports. The reports police officers and voters turned down a
tall what evidence w u confiscated.
tax Increase for that purpose.
"B alo n e y ," Higginbotham u i d .
" I ’m sure Higginbotham isn't the first
“There never w u an evidence list to be police officer who had ever had marital
lo st The department didn't keep one. I and other difficulties and was still able to
w u simply putting one together after the function on their job," Sorenson added.
f a c t"
The state attorney's office became
Involved In the shooting, according to
Cheshire, because It's routine for his
office to look into such incidents, and
where there may be any doubt as to what
actually happened and why, it generally
goes to the grand jury.
Higginbotham m aintains, however,
lhat the case of the stolen guns has gotten
u far as It has "because of the many
enemies I've made as a policeman.”
At one point Higginbotham was asked
to take a lie-detector test, which he did.
He laid his successfully passing that test
Benson ateo u i d that since Higgliv is further evidence that everybody knew
botham w u Lake M ary's only detective, exactly what had been taken, since the
and hla second In command, he w u purpose of the test was to discover
needed to bring his replacem ent a whether he had taken any other property
sergeant being promoted, up to date on in addition to the weapons.
ongoing c u e s .
Benson would not comment on the lieLake Mary Mayor W ilier Sorenson
said there may be another reason detector test.

IV# already had seven
operaflont, I've lost about

40 pounds, I'm on heavy
medication, I feel like
my life Is ending.'

NATION
JN BRIEF
Oswald, Not Imposter

. Burled In Texas Grave
FORT WORTH, Texas (UP1) - After two years of
legal battles, pathologists needed only a few houn to
decide the body in Lee Harvey Oswald's grave was that
of the accused assassin of President John F. Kennedy
and not a Russian imposter.
"Beyond any doubt — and I mean absolutely any
doubt—the pereon burled under the name Lee Harvey
Oswald is, in fact, Lee Harvey Oswald," said Dr. Linda
Norton, head of the team of eight experts who
examined the body (or four hours Sunday at Baylor
University Medical Center.
She said the moat critical pieces of evidence were
dental records dating to Oswald's Marine Corps career
In the mid-1980s and e "bone depression" behind the
left ear consistent with a "mastoid operation" such as
, Oswald had in 1949 at age I.

It Looks Bad For AW ACS
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Saudi AWACS
package, still in deep trouble on Capitol Hill, faces Its
first key congressional tests this week, end the Initial
outlook is not good for President Reagan's B 5 billion
proposaL
The House Foreign Affaire and Senate Foreign
Relations committees a n planning to vote on
resolutions of disapproval Tuesday and Wednesday. A
majority in both panels is committed against the sate.

Hinckley: Lovelorn Gunman

-

NEW YORK (UPI) - John Hinckley J r , admitting
his Infatuation with actress Jodie Foster "sounds like
something from True Confetsions,” wants to “rescue”
her and is upset she has not shown Interest in him.
In letters to Time and Newsweek magaxinee,
President Reagan's would-be assassin said h i con­
siders Reagan the best president of the century and
that the "most Important thing in my Ilfs is Jodie
Foster's love and admiration.”

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Prison Reforms Pledged
: To A vert Hunger Strikes

'

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) - Britain’s
secretary to r Northern Ireland pledged prison reforms
to avoid a resumption of the IRA hunger strike but
faced demands for concessions that could (res mors
than 100 republican Inmatts.
Jam es Prior's visit to Northern Ireland on Sunday
came within U hours of the coUapae of the seveiwnenth
IRA campaign of death fasts at Maw Prison dam anding political prisoner status. Ten inmates died from
the fasts.
M a n chaplain the Rev. Denis Faid, who parauadsd
family members to preseure the remaining six fasSsn
to end thsir protest Saturday, urgsd Britain to restore
time-off far good behavior teat fay inmates. That
remission of eentencea waa a key demand of the faungar
strikers.

Iran Has New President
United Prtee latereatiewl
A yatollah Ruhollah K hom eini's m ilitan t aid s,
HaJJatoteslam Sayad All Khamenei, ted with an
. overwhelming 65 percent of counted votes bato n
today's nffiria) announcement of Ms election as Iran's
new rra id a a L
The hard-line leader of the Islamic Republican
Party, who ted last Friday's praysrs in Tehran white
holding an automatic gun a t Ms ride, awaited only the
formality of the final vote count and Khemshti'a ap­
proval.
The Interior Ministry said official results would be
announced today and that Khomeini could than H tew
with • decree giving K ham tnri's presidency a
I
revolutionary seal of approvaL

nieces and nephews.
B ro w n s'
P a ra d is e
Memorial Chapel la in charge
of arrangements.
MRS, CORA LEE HUGHES
Mrs. Cora Lee Hughes, 42,
of Geneva, died Saturday
night at Florida HoapitaL
Orlando. Born In Kissimmee
Dec. 16, 1I1L she moved to
Geneva in 1961 from Cocoa.
She w u a member of the
S a n fo rd C o n g re g a tio n a l
Church and the Veterans of
F oreign W are A uxiliary,
Golden. Colo.

S ept 4,1904, in Philadelphia,
be moved to la k e Mary from
Towanda, Pa., in 1975. He
matte X-reyi for DuPont and
w u a 32nd-degree M uon of
the Blue Lodge, Philadelphia.
Survivors Include his wife,
Blanche; a daughter, Mra.
M artha F au lk er, W inter
Park; and two grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
In charge of arrangements.

A LFRED
ANDREW
PETROSKY
Alfred Andrew Petroaky,
71, of 106 Cedarwood Circle,
S urvivors Include two Longwood, died Friday at
d au g h ters, Mra. Jo Ann F lorida Hoepltal, Orlando.
TurbarriBe, Melbourne, and Born Oct. 14, 1106, In
Mra. D elons Evsrly, Golden;
Mlnenvilte, Pa., he moved to
a alitar, Mra. Myitis Leech, Longwood from M iramar in
K lu lm m e e ;
a b ro th er, 1677. He w u a retired plant
Mariey Story, Keenanvtlte; w rite r and a Catholic.
two graoddiUdren, and three
■ w tr e r e include f a v eons,
great-grandchildren.
Robert, Longwood; Alfred,
Briaaon Funeral Home is in Hatefteld, Pa.. William and •
charge of arrangements.
John, both of Mioarevllte; a
Mra.
M a rg aret
MRS. CHELA HIGGIN­ ■later,
Draheim, Lanadate, Pa., and
BOTHAM
Graveside services were ■even grandchildren.
Baldwln-Fairchild Funeral
held Sunday in Galax, Van for
Home,
Altamonte Springs, is
Ckela Vlrgte Higginbotham,
67, of Galax, who died Friday. in charge of arrangements.
MRL JULIA C. COOLEY
Born in Madteon, Fla., Aug. 7,
Mra. Julia C. Cooky, Cl, of
1614, tew formerly worked In
the office of the d a rk of the 363 E. H ornbeam D rive,
circuit court and at Mary Longwood, died Friday at
F lo rid a H ospital, O rlando.
E sther's in Sanford.
She It survived by a Born Jan. II, 1610, In Bir­
moved to
dau g h ter,
Mrs.
Carol mingham, Ala.,
Boniface, G alas, a eon, Longwood in 1119. She w u a
William E arl Higginbotham, housewife and a member of
Jacksonville; her m other, the F irs t P resb y terian
Bertie Roberta, G ates; and Church of Maitland.
Survivors include two eons,
■even grandchildren.
V augh-G uynn F u n e r a l Mack D. Cooley J r„ Orlando,
Home, G a lu , w u In charge and J o u p h L. Cooley,
Sarasota; a daughter, Anita
of arrangements.
Ranee Cooky, Orlando; her
mother, Mrs. Mary F. Cooper,
WILLIAM J. ELLIOTT
William J. Elliott, 917 W. Longwood; a brother, J .L
Plantation Bivd.. Lake Mary, Cooper J r., Birmingham; and
died S atu rd ay a t F lorida one crandchild.
H oapltal-A ltam onte. Born
Pirn Hills Garden Chapel

M U MYRTLE L HOFF­
MAN
Mrs. Myrtle Lodte Hoff­
man, 18. of 300 Buttonwood
Court, Longwood, died Friday
at Orlando Regional Medical
Center. Bern O ct 23. 1919, in
Lewisville, Ohio, she moved
to Longwood ( to n Hackedatown, N.J., in 1073. She w u a
housewife.
Survivors Include her
husband, Duane A.; four
d au ghters, Lynn Tham es,
Susan A. Hoffman and Laura
J. Hoffman, all of Orlando,
and K athi L auer, W inter
Springs; a b ro th er, E.W.
Denbow, Houston; a lister,
H asel E udy, K errville,
T e x u ; and one grandchild.
Baldwin-Fatrchiid Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangements.
GRANT COWGILL
Grant Edward Cowgill, &gt;3, a
resident for many years of
Midway
T ra ile r
P ark ,
Longwood, died Saturday at
K lu lm m ee H ealth Care
Center. Bern July 33, IN I, in
Falrvtew, Ohio, he moved to
Longwood in 1999 from
Cleveland. He w u a long­
distance truck driver and a
member of Teamsters Local
3 « of Cleveland.
Survivors Include four
grandchildren, M rs. Ja n e t
Deaton, Friendly, W. Va.,
Mra. M artha H a rr, P itt­
sburgh, G srald Cowgill,
Miami and Adrian Cowgill,
Charteaton, W.Va.
Gramkow-Gtines Funeral
Home, Longwood, Is in charge
of arrangements.

Benson praised Higginbotham's work
as n police officer since he joined the
la k e Mary force as a patrolman in July
1977.
He said Higginbotham put in a
tremendous number of hours as Si
detective, as chief of patrol, and as his
second in command.
"He was on call seven days a week and
always responded well," Benson said.
Higginbotham was nominated for the
George Pfeil Annual Memorial Award in
March by Benson, who called him a
"highly dedicated professional and an
exceptional patrol officer."
Why was one gun returned and
Higginbotham allowed by Benson to pay
restitution for the others prior to any
charge or court action” Benson said he
would not comment because the case is
going to court. But he added:
"Obviously I must have had a reason,
and a good reason."
Polk would not say Higginbotham
committed theft but called his action "a
wrong-doing."
"He should have known better," Polk
said.
Polk admitted if Higginbotham had
been working for the Sheriff's depart­
ment he would have been fired as soon as
the gun-selling incident was revealed.
"II happened in my department a while
back," Polk said. "1 fired the man and
filed charges."

New Light On Old Spy Tale

AREA DEATHS
JAMES"JACX" SWINGLE
Jam es LJewellyn “ Jack"
Swingle, 71, of BM Mango
D rive, C asselb erry , died
Friday at Florida HospitsiAltamonte. Born Aug. 31,
1910,In Ivor, Vs., he moved to
Casselberry from Petersburg,
V s., in 1947. A form er
automobile salesman, he later
worked for Executive Livery
Service, Orlando. He w u s
m em ber of St. Albans
American Episcopal Church
and Orlando Lodge &gt;9,
Orlando Scottish Rite Bodies
and Bahia Temple, Orlando.
Survivors includs his wife,
Lillian; a daughter, Mrs.
Lynda Stephens, O rlando;
two sisters, Mrs. M yrtle
Straw, BrookneaL Vs., and
M rs.
L o rrain e
B ryant,
Jack so n v ille; and th ree
m m d ch U tan .
BeUwtfrFaircfalld Funeral
Home, Orlando, is In charge
of arrangements. 1

Monday,Oct.J.lfll-JA

Home for Funerals, Orlando,
is in charge of arrangements.

Fun#rol Notic#
S TA N TO N ,
MRS.
ED N A
PEARL — Funeral tervicet tor
Mrt Edo* P u rl Stanton. 11, ot
M Lak# Monro* Terrace. S«n
lord, who died Wednesday, will
k i l i p n Tuetday *1 New Ml
Calvary M m lo n a iy Baptitl
Church, with the Rev O C
Williams oMiciating Burial in
Rttllawn Carnal ary Browns'
Parodist Memorial Chapel &lt;* In
charge
HUO HEt, M R I. CORA LEE Funeral services lor Mrs. Cora
Lea Hughes, a). o&lt; Geneva, who
ditd Saturday mghl at Florid*
Hospital, Orlando, will be *1
10: JO a m, Tuesday *1 Ihe
grevesidt In Geneva Cemetery,
wim Ihe Rev Fred Neal ol
tidallng. Britton Funeral
Noma PA In charge

OSIjO, Norway i U P!) - A Norwegian who was a spy
for the Soviet Union says Gary Powers’ U-2 spy plane
was downed in 1960 by a saboteur's bomb and not by
Russian missiles, as Moscow reported.
Selmor Nilsen, sentenced in 1967 to seven and a half
years in prison In Norway for espionage, made the
assertion in a new book, "I Was a Russian Spy."
The Soviets reported that Powers was shot down by
anti-aircraft missiles over the city of Sverdlovsk in the
Ural mountains on May 1, 1960. TJie disclosure by
Moscow touched off a diplomatic furor that disrupted
die Paris summit talks between the Soviet Union, the
United Stales, France and Britain.

Wallpaper wai introduced in Europe in tha tally 16th
century at an alternative to txptntivt tapttuitt.

M U EDNA r . STANTON
lire. Edna P u r l Stanton,
77, of M Lake Monroe
T errace , Sanford, died
W ednesday a t Seminole
Memorial HoapitaL Born Jan.
1, 1904, in Lake City, aho
moved to Sanford in ML She
w u a member of New ML
Calvary Missionary Baptist
Church.
S urvivors Include her
husband,
Louis;
four
daughters, Mrs. UQte Rafoa,
PMladslphis, Pa., Mrs. WlDte
Mae W illiam s, St. P eterchurl, Mrs. Edna Watson,
Sanford, and Mra. Vivian
Jam as, Orlando; a son, Wlflte
B rak a , Winter P ark; a steUr,
Mrs. Mary Foater, Apopka; 11
g ran d ch ild ren , five g re a tgrandchildren, and aeveral
■*

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�' VI

* *

Evening Herald
cusps

Hunting season opened Saturday for doves
with the daily limit set at 13.
The eight public dove fields In the Central and
Northwest regions of the state will be open from
noon until sunset Oct. 3 to Nov. 1 Starting Nov. 14
and running to Nov. 29, hunters may hunt from
one-half of an hour before sunrise to sunset. The
same holds true for the third phase from Dec. 12
to Jan. 4.
In the Northwest Region, the Florida Game
and Fresh Water Fish Commission has opened
the following sites:
—Apalachicola Airport dove field In Franklin
County. Six hundred acres will be opened to
hunters on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and
Sundays during the season. A permit Is required
and may be received free from the office of the
Franklin County tax collector.
—Apalachee Wildlife Management Area In
Jackson County. To be opened Tuesdays,
Thursdays, Saturdays Bnd Sundays during the
dove season. All hunters are required to pur­

m\ wot

JOON. FRENCH AVE..SANFORD. FLA. 3J771
A rts Code MM2UM1 or 014993
M onday, O ctobar 5, 1981—4A
Wayne D. Doyle, Publbher
Thomai Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovonbury, Advarlltlngand Circulation Olractor
H a m D tU n ry : Week, 11.00; Month, 14.35; 6 Months. $34.00;
Y aw , MS.00. By Mall: Weak, $1.»; Month, $3.25; B Months,
IH .0I; Yaar. K7.00.

Deregulation
Long Overdue
For 32 years, the broadcasting of campaigns
and issues has been subject to the twin doctrines
of equal time and fairness.
Recently the Federal Communications Com­
mission recommended that Congress do away
with both rules—a bit of deregulation that is long
over-due.
Both equal time and fairness were parts of the
Communications Act of 1934, legislation that is as
outmoded as the technology of that age.
Satellites, transponders and transistors have
replaced the crystal sets and oversize radio
cabinets of almost 50 years ago. And the
corresponding maturity and diversity of today's
broadcasting industry makes the old rules equally
obsolete.
The so-called Fairness^ Doctrine required
broadcasters to serve the "public interest, con­
venience and necessity" by airing controversial
and diverse viewpoints.
In practice, the doctrine has proved to be dif­
ficult to define, impossible to enforce and often
unfair
Usually dissenting viewpoints are permitted
only in answer to on-the-air editorials. News,
documentary and public affairs programs—like
their counterparts in print journalism—almost
always are unchallenged on the air.
Sometimes the fairness doctrine works in
strange ways. Advertisers have had to submit to
dissenters. That’s one reason why manufacturers
of cigarettes may have been happy to quit ad­
vertising their products on television and radio.
Equal time has had equally strange con­
sequences.
Enacted to ensure that candidates had equal
access to the public airwaves, no matter how farout or unpopular their views were, the doctrine
was intended to enlarge the political arena.
Instead, it has had the opposite effect. Weary of
devoting hours of air time to minor parties and
their candidates, broadcasters have cut down on
the amount of political public service.
Political discussion now is handled for the most
part in regularly scheduled news programs,
which traditionally have been free from equal
time and fairness rules.
Ih e willingness of the majority of the FCC to
abandon rules it has tried to enforce for 32 years
can be attributed to three factors:
First is the attitude of a new Reagan com­
mission that Is more oriented to a free market
approach to broadcasting—something the in­
dustry itself has urged for years.
Second is the compelling argument by broad­
casters that they are entitled to the same First
Amendment guarantees and editorial judgements
as their print colleagues.
Third and perhaps most important is the
revolution within the industry itself. When the
fairness and equal time doctrines were adopted,
there were relatively few radio and no television
stations.
At that time, there may have been a need to
require these users of the public airwaves to
present a variety of views.
Today, there are 9,600 radio and television
stations in the United States and every week new
outlets are being added by broadcasters and cable
operators, who are not subject to FCC regulation.
The paucity of outlets has been replaced by a
multiplicity. The medium is presenting a
staggering variety of viewpoints—public
broadcasting, religious networks, foreign
language stations, sports networks, ev en -alas—
stations specializing in pornographic program­
ming.
Even the term broadcasting is being replaced
by a new and more relevant word—
narrowcasting.
TYtere Is a need for Congress and (he FCC to
remain alert to the changing nature of electronic
com m unications. Certainly the old Com­
munications Act needs rewriting and updating.
And the first things that should be scrapped,
like the vacuum tubes and rabbit cars of a bygone
era, are the outmoded and misnamed doctrines of
fairness and equal time.

BERRTS WORLD

"You poor Porting, your wife doesn't under
ttond you endyou’re drowning In the mlnutlee

chase a wildlife management area permit from
the office of the county tax collector or their
subagents.
- A designated field In the Liberty County
portion of the A palachicola Wildlife
Management Area. Opened throughout the dove
season. A wildlife management area permit Is
required.
—Joe Budd Wildlife Management Area In
Gadsden County. Open to dove hunting each
Wednesday of the three phases of the dove
season. A quota of 100 hunters will be filled on a
first come, first served basis at the check
station. A wildlife management area permit Is
required.
—The field portion In the Santa Rosa County
portion of the Blackwater Wildlife Management
Area will have designated dove fields which will
be open on Saturdays and Sundays during the
first phase of the dove season. A wildlife
management area permit Is required.
-T h e Point Washington Wildlife Management

Area. The management
area, located In
Okaloosa. Walton and Bay counties, will be open
during all phases of the dove season. A wildlife
management area permit is required.
In the Central Region, those areas which will
be opened are:
-Tri-C ity dove field In Lake County, en­
compassing 145 acres. Hunting will be allowed on
Wednesdays and Saturdays from noon until
sunset each of the three phases of the season. A
$2 dove field permit is required at the entrance to
the field. A quota of 100 hunters a day has been
set.
—Three Lakes Wildlife Management Area.
This Osceola County wildlife management area
will have a field open on Wednesdays and
Saturdays only, from noon until sunset during
each phase. A quota of 100 hunters will be ad­
mitted each day on the 120 acre site. A wildlife
management area permit is required to hunt the
field.

ROBERT WAG

DON GRAFF

Federal
Workers
In Middle

Two Sides
To Strong
Dollar
Every silver lining has its cloud, and one
appears to be fast developing f a the recently
strong U.S. dollar on International markets.
F a a number of reasons, Including most
prominently continuing high Interest rates
thathave been pulling billions of loose change
from abroad into American banks, the dollar
has been gaining value steadily In relation to
most other major currencies. Currently it has
been hitting levels against the yen, mark and
franc some 20 percent above Its low point of
three years ago.
That Is, of course, good news for American
tourists whose money goes further abroad
and for consum ers back home who
theaetlcally are buying faeig n goods f a
less.
But there is another side to the coin now
turning up and it is not such good news. The
strong dollar also means that U.S. goods cost
more abroad and our trading partners are
thus inclined to buy fewer of them.
This is already being reflected In the trade
balance that last year showed a deficit of
more than (20 billion. The 1961 deficit Is ex­
pected to be significantly more, possibly
setting an all-time record of |30 billion or
more.
In the past, shortfalls In merchandise ex­
changes have usually been m a e than
balanced by Income from Intangibles, the
return on investments and a wide range of
American services that earn money abroad.
But that balance la also shifting and Is ex­
pected to fall many billions s h a t of making
up f a this year’s trad* deficit.
So the price Americans are paying now and
possibly f a some years to come f a their
stronger dollar Is a mounting debt to the rest
of the w ald .
It Is In the s h a t term a no-way-out situation
that may make dealing with the budget
deficit look almost easy.
A m a ja contributor to American trade
deficits Is oil.
la s t year the nation paid nearly $60 billion
to fae ig n producers to meet Its needs. Those
needs ir e dropping as conservation efforts
and Increased fuel efficiency have their
combined effect, but not t u t enough to
balance the outflow of dollars.
Many of those dollars, however, are flowing
back Into the country In the form of In­
vestments In the American economy. The
treasury puts the OPEC Investment in 115.
government and Industrial securities and
stocks at some $70 billion as of mid-1981.
That estimate falls far short of the real
mark, according to non-government sources
who estimate total Saudi Arabian holdings In
securities and real estate at $100 million, with
Kuwait and some of the other better-heeled
OPEC members not too far behind.
Whatever, officially the treasury b saying
it b no cause f a alarm and that the govern­
ment continues to welcome foreign in­
vestment as a contribution to the growth of
the economy. N evertheless, the adm tnbtration b beginning a study of In­
vestment policy and b reviewing the powers
of a Committee on F aeig n Investment set up
in 1975 to keep tabs on the foreign stake In the
economy.
The situation bears some similarity to that
of a few decades back when American
business was buying heavily Into the
European economies to the concern of several
governments.

JEFFREY HART

Giamatti For President?
Yale University president A. Bartlett
Giamatti has h b eye on a U.S. Senate seat,
Democratic, In Connecticut. It has not
escaped him, either, that the Democratic
nomination for president in 1964 is wide open.
He b bored at Yale, according to talk round
the Yale campus, and w anb out and up.
These ambitions, and they alone, make
senae of Glamattl's wild attack on the M aal
Majority, delivered In a message to the fresh­
man class.
Bart Giamatti b a wit and a sophisticate as
well as a Renaissance scholar of national
standing. He has never been given to public
exhibitions of political feverishness. Yet In hb
message to the freshmen, he pretended to
believe that the Rev. Jerry Falwel) and hb
M a a l M ajaity are a real threat to the rest of
us and to the nation Itself.
“ A self-proclaimed ‘M a al M ajaity' and ib
satellite or client groups... threaten the
values (of the United Stales),.. The voices of
coercion speak not f a liberty but for license,
the license to divide in the name of
patricAbm, the license to deny In the name of
Christianity. And they have licensed a new
meanness of spirit In our land, a resurgent
bigotry that manifests Itself In rae b t and
discriminatory positions in threats of political
retaliation, in Injunctions of censorship, In
a c b of violence.”
These wild accusations about racism and
bigotry probably surprised the Rev. Falwell
during one of h b reg u b r phone conversations
wtth Menachem Begin. The M a al Majority
has not advocated bigotry, violence, a
censorship.
G bm atU's phrase "political rebliation"
seems to mean that Falwell votes against
politicians he objeeb to. A very subversive
practice.
But Yale's president had a lot m a e to
communicate to the freshmen: “ From the
maw of th b m aatlty come those who
presume to know what Justice for all b ; come
those who presume to know which books are
fit to read, which textbooks will serve f a all
the young; come spilling those who presume
to know what God alone knows, which b when
human life begins."
Bart Giamatti (ailed to explain how he
discerns what God In fact knows.
Moreover, general agreement exbls about
when human life sta rts: at conception. It's not

vegetable life. It’s not animal life. The whole
argument concerns public policy—what to do
about It. And where public policy b con­
cerned, Falwel] has as much right to an
opinion as anyone else.
Giamatti, so far, has refused a challenge to
debate a representative of the M aal
M ajaity.
Falderal aside, the interesting question
here remains one of why thb normally urbane
and Intelligent man should have exprened
himself so wildly and so loosely. It b widely
believed that Giamatti was constituency­
building. Here's the going hypothesb.
Chris Dodd holds one Connecticut Senate
seat; I&gt;owell Weicker the other. Welcker,
unpopular, faces primary opposition next
year. Welcker or some other Republican
looks to be beatable in the general election.
All Giamatti has to do to have a real shot at a
Senate seal b beat Rep, Tony Moffett In the
Democratic primary.
Glamatti’s M a al Majority tirade gained
him Instant vblbllity, page one of the New
York Times, as a m atter of fart. It also won
him friendly attention from the suburban
liberab who make up a substantial bloc In
Connecticut, the "M erritt Parkway liberab."
They also like h b Yale Identification.
Giamatti neatly turned himself into the
"E astern" and "liberal” spokesman against
the Sunbelt.
G bm alli's Italian name adds an Interesting
twbt to all thb. Connecticut has a Urge
Itallan-American population, l b last elected
g o v em a was EUa Grasao. Nationwide, the
Itallan-A m erican m inority has had
dbpropationately little political and cultural
clout — yet U b about as numerous as the
noisier black m inority. The ItalianAmericans might go f a Giamatti in Con­
necticut, and, who knows, In the nation.
For there b a big vacuum at the top of the
Democratic Party. Kennedy b a windbag and
a has-been, full of dated Ideas. He's the
William Jennings Bryan of the 1960s. Waller
Mondale b a snore. John Glenn b colaless.
Jerry Brown b a flake, and he's sinking in h b
Senate bid anyway.
But a Bart Gbmatti-Gary Hart ticket, say,
might have a lot of plxzazi. That’s what Bart
GUmalli was really telling h b freshmen. Too
bad it was a written message. They couldn't
see him winking.

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The Reagan
adm inbtratlon seems unsure of Ib policy
tow ard so-called "w h istle-blow ers," the
government employees who reveal waste and
wrongdoing In their agencies. At times the
adm inbtratlon b saying (hat they will be not
only protected but rewarded, while at other
times It b making whbtleblowlng more
difficult and possibly even dangerous.
President Reagan said during h b campaign
th a t governm ent em ployees "m u st be
assured that when they blow the whbtle that
they will be protected and their Information
properly Investigated."
The Office of Personnel Management has
encouraged bureaucrats to report on abuses
observed in the line of work. The personnel
agency has gone so far as to dbtribute to
government offices posters expblning the
righb and protections afforded employees
who come forward.
The Office of Management and Budget
recently announced the establishment of
"whistleblower hotlines" to enable govern­
ment employees to phone In reports on wrong­
doing in their agencies. Edwin Harper, the
deputy d ire c ta of the office, said that the
program had the full backing of the president
— who, Harper said, " b attempting to change
attitudes throughout government."
However, w histleblowing is being
discouraged — not encouraged — by other
segments of the Reagan adminbtratlon.
Attorney General William French Smith
recently announced the lifting of Carteradministration restrictions on the prosecution
of federal employees f a leaking information.
Those reg u latio n s essentially lim ited
prosecution to those who leaked classified
Information or whose dbclosures either
Jeopardized lives a “ substantially damaged
the United States."
A spokesman f a Smith said that the Carter
guidelines were being rescinded because they
were "vague" and "opened loopholes." But
a llie s — Including the American Civil
L ib erties Union and sev eral unions
rep resen tin g governm ent em ployees —
contend that Smith has made possible the
prosecution of whbtleblowers; they say that
employees now may be far more reluctant to
come forward with damaging information.
It was Smith's Justice Department (hat
earlier th b year held up already-announced
merit awards to three department lawyers
who had gone public with complaints about
(he conduct of their superiors.
Two of the lawyers were w aking on the
criminal prosecution of McDonnell-Douglas
executives who had been accused of bribing
faeig n o ffld ib . The pair complained when a
top department official discussed the case
without their knowledge with lawyers f a the
corpaation. The third lawyer wrote a memo
questioning the legal argum enb used by
Smith in a speech denouncing busing to
achieve racial babnee.
Meanwhile, the adminbtratlon came out
against the suggestion by Rep. Patricia
Schroeder, D-Colo., that whbtleblowers be
rewarded f a exposing government waste
with cash payments of up to 1 p a cent of the
resulting savings. "E nough incentives
already exbt f a whbtleblowers," asld a
spokesman f a the Office of Management and
Budget. "T hb type of compensation is not
necessary."

JACK ANDERSON

Pentagon Covered Up For Army
WASHINGTON - T h b might best be called
"The Anatomy of a Pentagon Lie." Six
months ago, I reported that U 5. Army troops
in Europe were In a pitiable state of rradlneai
— itt educated, Ill-trained and even Illiterate.
Nine out of 10 soldiers assigned to operate
and maintain nuclear weapons had flunked
te sb of their basic military skills, I reported.
The figures f a inadequate personnel were
almost as shocking in other areas, Including
■I percent of artillery crewmen, 77 percent of
com puter p ro g ra m m e r!, 69 p ercen t of
tracked-vehide mechanics and 13 percent of
Hawk surfsce-to-alr missile crews.
It was an appalling report, and the Army
responded with bowls of protest - and aoma
outright lies, which I can now doew nent
Here's what my April I report said, what the
Army replied, end what the Army knew the
truth to be — a s stated In a secret briefing
report f a the Army chief of staff obtained by
my associate Ron McRae;
- My report: "While the shocking details

* *

have been hidden from the American public,
our GU' Inadequacy b no secret to our
siliet.” Army response: a flat denial, coupled
with the boast that U 5 . troops were now the
pride of NATO fac es.

set about getting better resulb — not by
Improved training a recruitment, but by
changing the tesb! He ordered a new aet of
" u n b ia se d " teste, designed to avoid
"discrimination based on intelligence."

The facts: According to the secret briefing
document, the slUiatloi b "dangerous," and
has reached the point where, without sharp
improvement, "our Army will not be taken
seriously by our allies a our adversaries."
— My report: Most of our troops flunked
te sb o f their basic skills. Army response : The
test results I quoted were three years out of
data; since then, “numerous actions have
been taken which have corrected perceived
deficiencies."
Ths fa d s : Tasting continued, but the
resulb got worse instead of better. When
Army Secretary Clifford A lexanda saw the
frightening test results collated in Human
Readiness Report No. I in 1171, he w u un­
derstandably dismayed. He forbade any
disclosure a discussion of the report. Then be

—My report: Illiteracy b widespread In the
Army; many technical manuals have to be
put in comic-book format because the Army
recruiU men who can’t understand written
instructions. Army response: There b no
problem of quality among recruiU.
The farts; Continuing p o a test results of
military proficiency are a direct result of
recruiting p o aly educated personnel, the
secret briefing document states. "Although
(Secretary Alexander) declared that we haw
no manpower problems, the vast majority of
officers believe otherwise," ths r e p o t says.
More th in SOpercent of the Army's ofllcen
complained about tha low quality of their
troops. Incidentally, black
men aa a
group outacored whites; they tend to be better
educated and better motivated than white

*

“ • r r • m ♦ *

JT- *

recruiU, seeing the Army as a road to op­
portunity.
- My report : The dismal state of the Army
had led many profeasionab to conclude that
some form of tha draft would have to be instUuted to get better-educated soldiers. Army
re ip a ie t: No draft b needed, n a any drastic
change in manpower policy.
The facta: “At th b time (the Army) should
muster the courage to assort the obvious
about our manpower situation and act an it,"
the top-level briefing document state*.
consistent supporter of Pentagon bud*
requests, has warned ths generate that tf
public won’t stand for mulUbUUawloilj
expenditures an fancy waaporw our
can’t operate. Ha chad a report showing, h
nn rn p te, that more than 10 percent of ot
Unk gunners have no ides how to work tf
computerised, laser-assteted gunsight In tf
$1.75 million MX-1 tank.

-

�/

SPORTS
E v n ln g H entd, Sanford, FI.________ Monday, Oct, i, 1M1— SA

I

Briefly

Gantner Leads Strong UCF Defense

Montreal Re-Xrays Raines,
'Doubtful' For Mini Playoffs

Ryerson Kicks A w ay Miles, 6-0

Sanford's Tim Haines will be rc-Xrayed today to deter­
mine his availability to the Montreal Expos for the up! comini? mini-playoff with the Philadelphia Phillies.
Raines, a rookie leftfielder, broke the third finger on his
right hand sliding into home Sept. 13 against the Chicago
Cubs. Since then, he has been limited to pinch running
chores for Montreal.
*‘l doubt if I'm able to start the mlnl-playoffs," said
Raines Saturday night following the Expos’ divisionclinching 5-4 victory over the Meta. "But I hope 1 can play in
the regular playoffs, if we make it."
Montreal opens the playoffs at home Wednesday. Raines,
a switch hitter, who stole a league-leading 71 bases and
batted .304, Is considering batting right-handed only to
offset the problem with his hand.
"If I'm 80 percent. I think I'll try to play," said Raines.
■

Magdalene Tops All Souls
An injury-riddled All Souls soccer team dropped a 9-0
decision to St. Mary Magdalene Saturday in Altamonte
Springs.
All Souls, who was less than 100 percent with five players
sick or injured, plays, St. John's Vianny Wednesday at 5:15
. p.m. in Orlando.

Crowder Speaks On Drugs
Tampa Bay Buccaneer defensive tackle Randy Crowder
will speak about drug abuse Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the
ta k e Mary High School auditorium.
Crowder, who was convicted on drug trafficking charges
and spent time In Jail, gives similar lectures throughout the
state in an effort to help educate students to the dangers of
drugs.
Parents are asked to accompany their students to the
lecture said Patti Brantley, who was instrumental in setting
up the talk.

Baseball Organizes Tuesday
The annual election meeting of the Sanford Youth
Baseball Association, Inc., will be held at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the Sanford Recreation Department office at the Sanford
Civic Center.
Members will be electing a president, first vice president,
second vice president, secretary and treasurer to serve
during (he 1982 season.

Tribe Boosters M eet Tonight
Monday, Oct. 5, the Seminole High School Boosters Club
will meet In the school's teachers' lounge (room 1306) at
7:30 p.m. for the first gathering of Tribe supporters.
"All parents of students of Seminoles are cordially In­
vited to attend,” Seminole Business Manager Qay Ailing
said Thursday morning. "We are looking forward to
meeting out boosters and getting the club off on the right
foot."

Htral* Photo Br Bill Murphy

L'CF's giunt defensive tackle Ed (iuntner lakes a well-deserved rest after a
standout performance in the Knights' tl-lt victory over .Miles. Tin* tl-funt-ii, i»;»pouml Edgewater grad was voted IT'F Player of the (lame.

By JOE DfSANTIS
Herald Sports Writer
Saturday night's meeting between
the University of Central Florida
and Miles College of Birmingham.
Ala., wasn't really much to kick
about. Rut then again the kicking
game provided the only offensive
outburst in UCF’s 0-0 win that
boosted the Fighting Knights season
record to 2-2.
Don Jonas' Knights managed
more than enough offense against
the Golden Rears, but turnover after
turnover thwarted UCF touchdown
drives, forcing the Knights to settle
for a pair of second half field goals
from sophomore Scott Ryerson.
"We didn’t take advantage of field
position," agreed Jonas of the
Knights penchant for giveaway.
"We Just made a bunch of mistakes
on short yardage situations when we
had them in a hole."
The Knights managed a pair of
solid drives in the opening quarter
only to have both go awry thanks to
the defensive efforts of Miles' Eric
Phelps. The Golden Bear safety
swiped a Mike McCray (kiss at
Miles' 14-yard line and stopped the
second UCF drive at the close of the
quarter by batting away another
pass that forced UCF to settle for a
32-yard field goal try that missed.
UCF again penetrated deep into
Miles' territory in the second stanxa,
but u pair of fumbles killed both
opportunities.
Halfback John Muldoon* broke

K nights
away on a 29-yard scamper before
being brought down at the Golden
Rear's one-yard line, but babbled the
ball away.
Defensive standout Ed Gantner
reUiinitetl moments later by scoop­
ping up a Miles fumble to put the
Knights back in business at the
Miles 19.
Rut Muldoon again fumbled the
ball, sent both squads to in­
termission on the tall end of a
mistake-marred scoreless first half.
In the second half, the Knights’
Scott Ryerson booted field goals
from 28 and 13 yards to provide the
margin of difference. Ryerson tried
a UCF-record five field goals in the
game.
Former Edgewater standout Ed
Gantner earned the Knight Player of
the Game award. On successive
plays in Ihe second half, the 6-foot-5,
255-pound behemoth dropped Miles
running backs for losses of two and
five yards after Randell Evans had
given the Golden Rears excellent
field position ut Ihe 28-yard line of
UCF with an interception return of
27 yards.
"Gantner Just had a great game,"
raved Jonas. "Our defense was
super again. Ed gave us Die kind of
senior leadership we're looking for."
The Knights host tough Savannah
State Saturday at 7:30 p.m. in llte
Tangerine Bowl.

Seminoles Fifth, Raiders Fourth In Volleyball Tournaments
It was tournament time for two
Sanford volleyball squads over the
weekend.
Donalyn
K night's
Seminole High squad finished fifth In
the prestigious Colonel's Invitation
at F t. L auderdale and Ileana
Gallagher’s Seminole CC squad
place fourth In the Manatee Tour­
nament at Bradenton.
"I was real pleased with our
showing," said Knight. "This is one
of the toughest tournaments in the
state and we did real well."
The Lady Tribe highlighted the

trip with a victory over Plantation
Saturday afternoon, 14-16, 15-11, IS­
IS. “That's the first time anybody
had beaten them from this area,"
pointed out Knight. "They’ve been to
the slate tournament the last five
years."
Seminole opened the tournament
by whipping Palm Beach-Twin
tak es 15-8, 0-15, 15-8. "We played
well olfenstvely and attacked very
well," Knight said.
Fifteen minutes later, Sanford
took on perennial powerhouse Ft.

Myers-Cypress Lakes. Seminoles
won the first game 15-13, but then
bowed 15-13, 15-2. Cypress I-ikes
won 51 straight matches.
In the T rib es' third straight
match, it dropped a 12-15, 15-6, 15-2
decision to Miramar. "We Just tired
out," said Knight. "It was tough to
play three straight matches."
After the P lan tatio n victory,
Seminole lost two In n row to Ft.
Worth-John I. leonard 15-8, 15-10.
Tuesday, the Tribe returns to
action with a tri-match among

Seminoles, Spruce Creek and
Mainland at Daytona Beach
beginning at 3:30 p.m.
In the tad y Raiders tournament,
SCC used eight service points from
Fran Rhodes to drop Hillsborough
15-7,15-12. In the second match, the
Raiders ran into nemesis ta k e City
and lost 155, 9-15, 15-12.
Sanford's Patty Curso got llte
Haiders back on the winning track
with eight straight service points as
Seminole CC whipped Broward
Central 15-6, 154.
But after tripping Florida Junior

College 17-15, SCC lost successive
matches to FJC 15-9, t5-9.
In the tournament's last two
gam es, Seminole knocked ofr
Broward North 15-12, 15-11, M o re
losing the third place game to
Brevard CC 3-15, 15-7, 15-10.
"We looked sloppy In Use last
game," Gallagher said. "But this
was a very good tournam ent.
Twelve of the sU te'iT V leam a were
there, so we know whM ' to look
forward to later this year."
The Raiders play at Daytona
Reach Tuesday.

Scott Runs For 106 Yards To Lead Attack

Saints Stomp Heritage Prep For First Victory, 20-0
By BILLY STR1PP
Herald Sports Writer
It was a day for long gains when 1A
schools Trinity Prep and Heritage Prep
got together Saturday afternoon at the
Saints field with each team looking for its
first victory.
The Saints made better use of the tong
gains and earned their first win with a
handy 20-0 decision over Heritage before
200 fans at Trinity Prep.
Coach Ron Vierling's Saints are 1-2 for
the year, while the Praetorians dropped
to M . "It was a great victory. Mar­
velous," exclaimed Vierling after the
game with sweat dripping from his
forehead on the steamy afternoon.
Neither team could gel the ball in the

end tone during the flfit period, but
Rodney Scott provided some ground
game for the Praetorians as he pounded
out runs of four, two 16, and four yards.
Heritage took the ball over at their own
40 yard line as Saints punter Brian Butler
had trouble getting the ball away.
Q uarterback Randy E isen h arl hit
wideout Ulysses Bennett on a nice 52
yard gain. Bennett contributed to the
teem on three catches for 116 yards.The
catch brought Heritage threatening down
to the Prep 6-yard line.
However, the drive stalled as Rodney
Joseph was hit from behind and the bail
squirted out from his hands. Saints
linebacker Chris Lucas Jumped on the
ball.

Prep started from its own 10, and
moved the ball 90 yards in six plays to
give the Saints a 7-0 advantage. Tlte
touchdown was set up on a second down
and 10 pass. Quarterback Steve Philips
hit the graceful Senior, Stanley Fenner
on a fly pattern, the result a 71-ynrd gain
down to the Heritage 19.
Randy Scott pushed the ball down to
the 15. Then Junior Richard Milliman
went to work. The 5-foot-10, 179-pound
Halfback, burst around the corner
breaking several tackles racing for a 15yard touchdown. Stanley Fenner booted
the ball through to make the score 7-0
Trinity Prep with 5:57 remaining in the
half.
The Praetorians took a long 12-play

drive from their own 11-yard line, down
to tiie Trinity Prep 47. Heritage came
away on the drive with a 4th down and 10
call. Q uarterback Randy E isenhart
connected on u 25-yard pass to Ulysses
Bennett.
With time running nut in the half,
Heritage gambled again on 4th down hut
this time Eisenharts pass was in­
complete.
Saints Coach Ron Veirling said his
teams opening drive of the 2nd half "was
the key to our win." "We ran inside, and
our defense played splendid throughout
the gam e." "1 Just hope our guys found
out what they’re made of and continue to
win."
Prep had a 14 play touchdown drive

which look care of must of the 3rd
quarter. Randy Scott, who run for 106
yards on 14 carries, raced 15 yards
around the corner, us lie used speed and
nice outside movement to give TrinityPrep a 13-0 lead.
The 3rd quarter ended with TrinityPrep leading 13-0. The Praetorians would
hear again once more from the Saints, as
Randy Scott ran outside, spinning and
hurdling for the Saints final touchdown
with 4:29 left to play.
George DuBose, who failed on his first
PAT, connected on his next to give Prep a
20-0 victory, Tike touchdown was set up on
another gamble by Heritage. With 4th
down from their own 26 yard line, Chris
ta c a s sacked Randy Eisenhart for his

second sack of the day to extinguish the
Heritage hopes.
H ertljqt
17
1 74
JJ t s

wo
6 16 7
7V
70

F if*! Dowm
Prnally Yards
kuAtllWJ
Passing Yards
Passing

Pwiifimj
Fumble* Lost

Ht’fihttjr
Trimly Prep

Trim ly Prrp
6
4 SO
37 ISA

n
74 0
4W
11
0 0 0 0 0
0 J A 7 70

tMIN
Mailman, 14 run (Irn n rf kitk)
TWIN
Stoll. 14 run (kick lailedl
TWIN
Stoll, 77 run tOuRmr kick)
Kuching Hm lttgr Slough 1144. Stout 6 7f
frailty Prep
Scott 14 lot. Mtll.mar, It 71,
Crayton 10 It
Pasting IWilagtt
Elswiharl t It I I/O.
Trimly Prep
Phil.pt I I 0 /I. Crayton 17 0 4
Ppcr.r.ng Hrnlagr
Brnnttl ) tit. Slough
1 SC trimly Prrp — F m n rr I 71

Brantley Girls Run Second At Daytona Beach
Lake Brantley’s girls, cross county
team — sparked by the one-two punch of
Tracy Bonham and Ellen Stern —
grabbed second place In the Seabreexe
; InviU tion Beach Run S aturday a t
Daytona Besch.
Bonham ran an 11:55 for the two-mlle
■ course which was good for second place.
Stern, her Junior teammate, was one

second behind for eighth place.
team tibe.
Titusville Astronaut captured the meet
Titusville (104), Lyman (105), Oak
with 69 points, while the Patriots were Ridge (140), ta k e Howell (165) and ta k e
second with 96. Titusville was third and Brantley (206) completed the lop six.
ta k e Howell finished fourth.
Coach Ted Tombroi' Seminoles ran 14th.
In the boys half of the varsity com­
Junior Mike Wooten finished 46th for
petition, Winter Park's Brian Jaeger the Tribe with a time of 16:47.1. Senior
whizzed to a 14:33 three mile as the Tyler Johnson was just behind In 48th
Wildcats edged Astronaut, 65-96, for the place by .8 of a second.

Campbell's Touchdowns Pace Cowboys
Past Rams In Flag Football Action, 20-12
Kelvin Campbell scored a pair of
touchdown* S aturday to pace the
• Cowboys to a 20-12 win over the Ram* In
the Junior Divirion of the Sanford
Recreation Department Flag Football
League. Both team* were unbeaten
going into the game.
In the other Junior Divirion game, the
Bulldog* shutout the Wildcat* 214.
In the Midget Divirion, the Duct im. proved their record to 34 with an 16-12
overtime win over the Sleeler*.
The game between the Cowboy* and
the Ram* w a si’t even one minute old
when Campbell romped 40 yard* for a
. touchdown. The extra point try failed and
it was 64.
The second Cowboy* touchdown came
on a 40-yard punt return by David
Peterson. Campbell ran the ball into the
end tone for the extra point and the *core
stood 134 at the half.
The Ram* scored their first points of
the game when Oscar Merthie ran 40
yards for a touchdown. Their second

touchdown came when Merthie broke
loose on a 20 yard run and then toiaed the
ball to Bernard Mitchell who went
another 30 yard* for the TD. The extra
point try failed both times.
The Cowboy* iced the game with a 22yard touchdown run by Campbell.
The Bulldogs alto put Mine quick
points on the board when Kelvin Davis
took the opening kickoff and ran 45 yards
for a touchdown.
Bulldoga
q u arte rb a ck
P atrick
William* toaied a 46-yard TD paia to
R eginald Bellam y for the second
Bulldogs touchdown. The extra point
failed both times.
Early in the seen id half Peres Perry
■cored a safety for the Bulldogs and the
game was iced on another Williams to
Bellamy touchdown pass.
After a fine runbsck on the opening
kickoff, Buca q u arte rb a ck Calvin
Donaldson scored on a 10-yard run. On
the ensuing kickoff B u n kicker Brian
Grayson recovered and fumbled and

second* later Donaldson ran 20 yards for
another touchdown. The extra point
failed both time*.
The Steeler* finally got the ball on
offense and marched down the field,
scoring on a two-yard run by David
Roberta. On the final play of the first
half, Ronnie Miller broke loose on a 40y ird run down the right sideline and tied
the score at 12-11 The Steelers made one
of their two e itr a points, but a penalty
nullified the score and they were unable
to convert on the second attempt.
Defense dominated the second half as
neither team wax able to score.
On their second play of overtime,
Donaldson sprinted 20 yards around the
right side for h it third touchdown of the
game and a victory for the Bucs.
The Bulldogs play the Rams at 9 a.m.
Saturday at Chaae Park, while the
Cowboys tangle with the Wildcat* a t 10
a.m. The Bucs and the Sleelera play a t 11
a.m.

OPTlMJSf
WfNNERS

Sanford Optimist Club Incoming president John Blair (middle) presents the
Optimist Football Player of the Week award to Seminole High’s Lenny Sutton
(right) as Lake Mary High's winner Jeff Hopkins looks on. Sutton rambled for
HR) yards in X! carries when Seminole topped Edgewater, 41-38. la s t Friday, the
Tribe was idle. Sanford plays at Apopka this Friday. Hopkins has won the op­
timist award two weeks running. The Ham linebacker collected 14 solo tackles in
the l.ake Mary victory over Spruce Creek Sept. 23. The Hams open their new
football facility Thursday agulnst Bishop Moore, (lame time Is 7:30 p.m.

■* -

• - * •.

�*♦- • *

- •» •

4A—Evgnlng H«r«kJ, Sanford, PI.

Monday, Pel, s. m i

SPO R TS
THIS WEEK
TUESDAY
Volleyball...
Seminole, Spruce Creek, Mainland at Daytona Beach
3:30 p.m.
Lake Howell, Seabreeze, Lyman at Lyman 3:30 p.m.
Apopka, D etand, ta k e Brantley at ta k e Brantley 3:30
p.m.
Seminole CC, Daytona Beach CC, Florida JC ul
Daytona Beach 5 p.m.

Freshman football...
Lyman at ta k e Brantley

WEDNESDAY
Volleyball...
Oviedo, Colonial, ta k e Howell at ta k e Howell 3:30
p.m.
ta k e Brantley at Seminole
(Junior varsity only) 6 p.m.

Freahman football...
Osceola vs. Crooms at Seminole High School 7:30
p.m.
Bishop Moore at ta k e Howell 7:30 p.m.

TIIUHSDAY
Junior Varsity football...
Seminole at Lyman 7:30 p.m.
Bishop Moore at ta k e Mary 7:30 p.m.
ta k e Brantley at U etand 7:30 p.m.

Volleyball...
ta k e City CC at Seminole CC S p.m. — 6 p.m.

Fill DAY
Varsity football,..
Seminote at Apopka B p.m.
Colonial at Lyman 8 p.m.
ta k e Weir at Oviedo B p.m.
Winter Park at ta k e Brantley B p.m.

Puzzled Shula Wondering What It Takes
To Solve Jets' Jinx, Miami Ties, 28-28
MIAMI (UPI) - Miami Coach
Don Shula must be wondering what
it takes for him and his Dolphins to
beat the New York Jets. The
Dolphins didn’t have it again Sunday
— for the seventh straight time —
and were lucky to emerge with a 2828 overtime score.
“ Anyway, it’s a big step In the
right direction against the Jets," a
grlm-Jawed Shula said. "The way
we were hanging on In the overtime,
I'm happy with the tie. It's certainly
better than a loss."
The tie was the first blemish on
Miami's (4-0-1) record this season
and keeps the Dolphins atop the
American Conference East by one
and a half games over the Buffalo
Bills. The Jets are now 1-3-1, and 801 against the Dolphins over the past
3li seasons.
Jets quarterback diehard Todd,
who refuses to talk to reporters this
season, obviously has M iam i's
number. He engineered two vic­
tories over Miami last year — half of
the Jets’ 1980 wins — and threw four
touchdown passes Sunday. Con­
necting on 28 of 39 passes for 310
yards, Todd turned in his best
performance In four years.
The former Alabama star scored
on passes of IS yards to Jerome
Barkum, 9 and 14 yards to Wesley
Walker and 36 to Bobby Jones.
It was the pass to Jones, with only
1:09 left in the fourth period that (led
the Bcore at 2S-a!l and sent the game
into overtime.
Todd's heroics alm ost o v er­
shadowed the play of Miami wide
receiv er Nat Moore and the

Dolphins' veteran backup quar­
terback, DonStrock, who Shula calls
the "Goose Gossage relief pitcher"
of pro football.
Slrock, who relieved starter David
Woodley In the second half against
Houston to cement victory over the
Oilers, took over against the Jets at
the end of the first period when
Woodley went down with a sprained
back.
The B-year veteran hit I t of 29
passes for 279 yards without an
Interception. His favorite target was
Moore who caught 7 for 210 yards,
including touchdown throws of 6 and
23 yards. It was the Bth-year
receiver’s best showing In two years
and he became the first Miami pass
catcher to collect more than 200
yards In one game and more than
5,000 In a career.
"I can't say enough about Nat, the
way he was getting open and making
fantastic catches," Shula said.
Otherwise, the Miami coach said,
"I'm not happy with the way our
offense was playing."
New York, scoring 14 points In
each of the first and fourth periods,
dom inated everything but the
scoreboard, collecting a total of 546
yards to the Dolphins' 399, and 32-to17 first downs. A pair of mijcues and
Pat Leahy's miss of a 47-yard field
goal attempt as the overtime period
ended denied the Jets victory.
After the Jets took the lead on
their first possession with Barkum's
touchdown catch, Bruce Harper, bit
by one of his own blockers, fumbled
a Miami punt and the Dolphins'
Steve Hull recovered at the New

York 28. Woodley ran the option for
25 yards and rookie fullback Andra
Franklin carried the ball over from
the two.
Vikings 24, B ean 21
Minnesota bolted to an early 17-0
lead and held on as Chicago's Hans
Nielsen missed a 27-yard field goal
attempt with one second left that
would have sent the game into
overtime. Tommy Kramer threw for
223 yards and two TDs, a 15-yarder
to Ahmad Rashad and an U-yarder
to Joe Senser.
4 te n 30, Redskins 17
F ree safety Dwight Hicks
returned a fumble 80 yards for one
TD and ran an Interception back 32
yards for another score to spark San
Francisco as he became the first
49en' defensive player to score
twice in a game. Washington, 0-5, is
the only team In the league without a
victory and Is off to Its worst start In
16 years.
Packers 27, Giants 14
Tight end Paul Coffman caught a
1-yard TD pass and set up three
other scores with key receptions to
give Green Bay, 2-3, its victory.
Coffman, overshadow ed in the
Packers' offense by All-Pro wide
receivers John Jefferson and Jam es
Lofton, capitalized on single
coverage to catch six passes for 92
yards.
Patriots 33, Chiefs 17
New England won Its first game of
the season as Matt Cavanaugh
passed for one TD and ran for a
second and halfback Andy Johnson
threw a 66-yard scoring strike to
Stanley Morgan.

pleted 21-of-31 passes for 205 yards
and Cleveland's Brian Sipe hit on 14of-28 for 250 yards and one TD as the
Browns fell to 2-3.
Bills 23, Colts 11
Joe Cribbs ran for 159 yards on 17
carries, including dashes of 28,30,35
and i9 yards to set up four scores as
Buffalo bounced back after two
losses. Cribbs' runs set up a Joe
Ferguson-to-Jerry Butler 16-yard
TD pass, a 1-yard scoring run by
Roosevelt le a k s and two of Nick
Mlke-Mayer’s three field goals.
Baltimore fell to 1-4.

D olphlfif
Sleelers 20, Saints 8
Terry' Bradshaw threw for 276
yards, including TD passes to Lynn
Swann and John Stallworth, to lead
Pittsburgh to its third straight
victory. Bradshaw gave the Steelers
the lead on a 16-yard TD pass to
Swann In the first quarter and put
the game away in the fourth period
when he hit Stallworth with a 47yard score.

_

Oilers 17, Bengali 10
Earl Campbell ran for 182 yards,
including a 2-yard score, and Carl
Roaches returned a kickoff 96 yards
for a TD to spark Houston. Campbell
carried the ball 37 times as the
Oilers returned to the formation
with Tim Wilson serving as the
blocking back.
Chargers 24, Seahawki 10
Dan Fouls fired three TD passes
— two to Charlie Joiner and one to
Kellen Winslow — to give San Diego
its victory. Fouls, who hit on 3&amp;«f-41
passes for 303 yards, set a team
record for completions.
CardIns Is 20, Cowboys 17
Neil O’Donoghue kicked a 37-yard
field goal with 23 seconds left to lift
St. Louis and hand Dallas Its first
loss of the season. The victory was
the first for the Cardinals over
Dallas after seven straight losses.

» ’ •

Bronco* 17 Raiders 0
The explanation is easy enough,
but It's the Oakland Raiders failure
to execute that has left the Super
Bowl champions without a point in
their last two games.
"We're beating ourselves, plain
and simple," said Oakland Coach
Tom Flores following Denver's 17-0
triumph Sunday over the Raiders.
"We can't make as many mistakes
as we did against a good defensive
club like Denver.”
The Broncos took advantage of a
fumble recovery and Interception to
score 10 third-period points as thev
pulled into a first-place tie with San
Diego In the AFC West.
The Raiders, shut out 16-0 the
previous Sunday by Detroit, fell to 23 and Denver Improved to 4-1.
The last time the Raiders were
shut out on consecutive weeks was 20
years ago when they lost their first
two games. Before 1981, Oakland
had been shut out only four times In
21 years.

Rams 27, Browns It
Wendell Tyler ran for one TD and
scored another on a pass and Frank
Corral kicked two field goals to lead
ta s Angeles, 3-2. Pat Haden com­

Big Ten Tuneup? Seminoles Stun Ranked Buckeyes

Cross Country...
Seminole County Championships at Trinity Prep l p.m.

SATUHDAY
Varsity football...
Trinity Prep at Jacksonville Episcopal 2 p.m.

College football...
Savannah State vs. Central Florida al the Tangerine
Bowl

Volleyball...
Seminole CC, Brevard CC, Manatee CC, Valencia CC at
Valencia TBA 12 noon.

By United Press International
Coach Bobby Bowden had an
explanation for his Florida State
Seminoles’ 36-27 upset of seventh
ranked Ohio State.
"Ohio Slate wasn't mad. They'll
be mad next year," he said.
The Buckeyes had gone Inlo the
game at Columbus unbeaten in three
previous contests. Florida State was
coming in off of a trouncing by
Nebraska.

Bowden explained th at, too.
Nebraska played FSU after the
Corn hunkers were upset by Iowa.
"Nebraska was coming off a toss.
They were mad."
Whatever the reason, it was a
different Seminole team that went
up against Ohio State than the one
that crumbled In Lincoln, Neb., two
weeks before. They showed a
balanced air and ground attack tn
which quarterback Rick Stockstill

to a 31-7 victory over host Howard
University.
Bethune-Cookman com bined a
pair of field goals and a safety for an
8-0 win over Delaware State in a
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
game at Dover, Del.
Fullback Jam es Jones dove In for
two touchdowns and Brian Clark
kicked three field goals to set a
school career record of 34 In the
Gator victory.

smaller, produced victories.
Fifteenth ranked Miami showed
Its greatest offensive spark in years,
flattening an improving Vanderbilt
team in the Orange Bowl, 48-16.
Florida got on the track al Baton
Rouge and came in with a 24-10
victory over tauisiana State, the
Tigers’ second Southeastern Con­
ference loss (his year.
Florida A &amp; M romped in Robert
F. Kennedy Stadium in Washington

College Football
passed for 299 yards and a pair ot
touchdowns while Mike Whiting with
88 yards and Gary Williams with 74
paced a running offense that was
good for 197 yards.
Florida Slate’s triumph was the
highlight in an outstanding day for
Florida college football in which all
of the state's teams, major and

Doug Fires Four Touchdown Passes

Williams Wings Tampa Bay Past Detroit
"Yeh, the guy came up under and
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) —The Tampa Bay
should have been back and their people
Buccaneers disagree with the pass
rotated off. Nobody picked him up. We
coverage the Detroit lions used on them
Sunday but they loved the result.
Ihe second-year receiver from Southern lost and Just didn’t play anywhere near
Doug Williams threw two scoring Illinois. Asked what he would have the way we can," Clark said.
"I wouldn't blame the loss on the
passes to Kevin House, another ol 37 thought If officials called him out of
yards to Jam es Wilder and still another bounds, he said, "I would have token it quarterbacks," he said. "There were a
lot of people who weren't playing well."
of six to J 1m Obradovlch In a 28-10 victory for grunted that I was out."
The Uons were playing without Injured
over the Uons.
Thai touchdown made It 14-10 at the starter Gary Danielson. Kolmo started
“The coverage Detroit used dictated
who 1 threw to,” said WIDlains. "They half and it wasn't until the first two live game end was relieved In the second
were using signal coverage on House all minutes of the fourth quarter that Die half by Eric Hippie, a second-year man
Bucs finally clinched the win.
from Utah State, who is espected to open
day."
Ttuit came after defensive end Bill next week at Denver.
House w as delighted by that
The Bucs go on the road nexl week also
development, loo. “ I felt 1 was open all Hollar recovered the lentil fumble of his
day, but when they ure In single career on the 50-yurd line. The Bucs (at Green Bay) and Williams figures It Is
coverage, you are supposed to get open," moved the ball to the 37 In two [days and time lo start winning away from home.
on the nexl down, Wilder, a rookie
"The last two wins were big confidence
House said.
builders," Williams said of Ihe Detroit
Detroit had Jumped to a 104) lead In the fullback, lined up at flanker.
Williams spotted him alone behind game and a home victory over St. Louis a
first quarter on a 50-yard field goal by
Eddie Murray and a 5-yard scoring pass safety Elvin Hall down the right week ago. "But we know in order lo win
from Jeff Komlo to Freddie Scoll. But sidelines, where Wilder caught Williams' the division, we are going lo have to win
on the road. That now becomes our ob­
then the WIlUams-Housc combination throw and rolled Into the end zone.
"It was a new play," Wilder said. “ 1 jective."
began to heat up.
Tampa Bay Improved al 3-2 and
Williams looped a scoring toss from 17 think 1 caught the guy off guard."
He got no argument from Hall, or from remains in a tie for the lead of the NFC
yards out early In the second quarter,
Central Division with Minnesota. Detroit
then did it all over again in a disputed Uon Coach Monte Clark.
"1 blew It," Hall said. "I was supposed dropped to 2-3 and into second place.
play late tn the period. The Uons con­
To remain atop the division, Tampa
tended that Houae didn't get both feel to play deep In a zone. It was only one
down In the end zone before going out of play, but those are the ones that count." Coach John McKay has no plans to
Clark admitted there was a foul-up on change Williams' style, th e big quar­
bounds and House wasn't sure.
terback, who was still a Uttle woozy after
"I don't know i l l was In or not," said the play.

B uccaneers

the game from a forearm blow to the jaw,
completed only 13 of 29 passes for 168
yards. But the part McKay liked was the
touchdowns.
"He didn’t throw particularly well?"
he replied to a question. "I think he threw
four touchdown passes. I'll take that.
This 80 percent and no touchdowns Is a
bunch of manure. Thai's for people who
like statistics."
Detroit running bBck Billy Sims, who
was held lo 75 yards In 24 carries, said he
wasn't going to get down on himself or his
teammates because of dropping below
.500.
"In a way, It la a step back, yes, but in
the NFL you are up one day and down the
next. It's a long season and we'll win
some and lose some."

Herald Photos

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By Bill Murphy

Standing!
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United
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San Fran 30. Waih 17
St Lou&gt;* 70, Oatla! 17
Green Bay 77. NY Giant! 14
New England 33. Kan City it
Pilttbgh 70. New Orleani 6
Houston 17. Cmci 10
L ot Ang 77. Cleve It
Denver 17, Oakld 0
Tampa Bay 71. Detroit 10
NY jet! 71. Miami 71 (oil
San Diego 74. Seattle 10
Atlanta

Monday ‘ 1
Game
( All Times EDTJ
at Phile, ? p m

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Doug Williams flros on* of his four touchdown passes during tho Bucs victory.

Buccanoar linobockor Hugh Groon (loft) welcomes Billy Sims to Tampa Stadium.

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Evening Hsrald, Santord, FI.

Day Of 'Whine And Roses'
For Best-Record Cincinnati
By United P re « International
These are the days of wine and roses
for the Montreal Expos and Houston
Astros, but it’s strictly the days of whine
and supposes for the Cincinnati Reds.
The Expos and Astros clinched post­
season playoff berths over the weekend,
but the Reds, despite finishing with the
best record in baseball (66-42), were left
out of the postseason playoffs.
So while Expos’ manager Jim Fanning
and A stros' m anager Bill Virdon
presumably wined and dined, Reds'
m anager John M cN am ara m erely
whined.
“ I'm bitter, very bitter about what
happened to our team ," said McNamara
after Cincinnati's Mario Soto blanked the
Atlanta Braves 3-0 in Sunday’s regular
season finale. "We were cheated and we
were deprived."
In truth, though, the Reds had the
second half pennant in front of them over
the weekend. With luos Angeles taking
two of three from Houston, the Reds
could have won the NL West second half
pennant by sweeping the Atlanta Braves.
However, they lost the first two games of
the series and were eliminated Saturday.
The Astros will host the Dodgers In the
first game of a best-of-five series for the
NL West championship on Tuesdaynight. Houston, which will play three
games of the series at Dodger Stadium,
won its first game at Los Angeles this
season Sunday by trimming the Dodgers,
M.
Cincinnati, meanwhile, faces even
greater losses during the off-season.
Shortstop Dave Concepcion, outfielder
Ken Griffey and outfielder Dave Collins
all become free agents this winter and
figure to be playing for other teams next
season.
For Montreal, winning a championship
of any kind is heroic, considering the
Expos blew NL East pennants in the
previous two years. Montreal will meet
the world champion Philadelphia Phillies
in a bestof-five series, beginning Wed­
nesday afternoon at Montreal.

*

1 1-

Major League Roundup
ifn a sc o r e t
M i|O r League R flu ltt
National League
By United P r e t i International

ML Bagmball

St Louis

100 010 101- 4 S t

"Pitching will be the key to the series,"
said Expos’ manager Jim Fanning,
whose team lost Its season finale Sunday,
2-1, to the New York Mets. "We've got to
pitch well."

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Seurlev. Martinet 17). Sykev
(ft and Sanchei. Brummer (*|
Jones Lee (4). Tekulve 111 and
Prna
W -Shlrley
(6 41
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Jones (4 SI

Fanning said he would open the series
with his ace, Steve Rogers. Philadelphia
will counter with left-hander Steve
Carlton.
Reds 3, Braves 0
At Cincinnati, Soto allowed only a
second-inning single to Chris Chambliss
in pitching the Reds to victory. Soto, 12-9,
struck out nine and walked two in outpitching Tommy Boggs, 3-13.

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Davis M Davis. Ruthven 141,
Proty 161. Lyle (71. »
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LeSmith 0 6)

Astros 5, Dodgers 3
At Los Angeles, Alan Knicely's home
run in the eighth and key doubles byDickie Thon and Dave Roberts in the
ninth gave the Astros a victory over the
Dodgers. Ken U ndreaux homered for
I/&gt;s Angeles.
Mets 2, Expos 1
At New York, Joe Torre was fired as
Mets’ manager before the game and his
club sent him out a winner behind Pete
Falcone's seven-hitter. Dave Hostetler
homered for Montreal.
Cardinals I, Pirates 0
At Pittsburgh, Tom Herr scored a run
and drove in another and Bob Shirley and
two relievers combined on a four-hitter in
leading the Cardinals to victory. Shirley,
6-4, gave up three hits, walked none and
struck out three in six innings.
Phillies 2, Cubs 1
At Philadelphia, 1-onnle Smith doubled
to extend his hitting streak to 23 games,
tying the NL high for the season, and
highlighted a two-run third Inning that
carried the Phillies to victory.
Giants 4, Padres 3
At San Francisco, pinch hitter Milt
May's Infield out in the eighth inning
scored Gene Ransom with the winning
run and lifted the Giants to victory. —

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tier III

JO H N M cN A M A K A

...Irish (lamlrr flares
M ajor League Standings
By U nited P ress International
N ational League
(Second Half)
East
W L Pci. GB
30 23 .566 —
y-Montrel
29 23 .538
*x
St. Louis
23 27 .481 4&gt;x
x-Phila
24 28 .462 5‘»
New York
23 28 .451 6
ChicaKo
21 33 .389 9*7
P iltsbrgh
West
33 20 .623 —
y-Housln
31 21 .596 14
Cinci
29 23 .558 3 4
San F ran
27 26 .509 6
x-Los Ang
23 27 .481 7 4
A tlanta
18 36 .333 154
San Diego
x- F irst-half division w lnnrr
v-Serond-hatl division winner
Sunday's Results
St. liouis 4, Pittsburgh 0
Phila 2, Chicago 1
New York 2, Montreal 1
Cinci 3, Atlanta 0
San Fran 4, San Diego 3
Houston 5, Los Angeles 3
lend of regular season)

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Littlefield (SI and
Krnnedy G n o sd r (61
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Breining (SI. M inion (9 ) and
Ransom W Breining IS 71 L
Show It II
A m erican League
NY
OOO 700 OOO 7 7 0
Bait
003 101 0O&lt;
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Reuschel. M ay IJ I . Gossage
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Flanagan
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1131

Howser Happy Despite Indian Makeup

DICK IIOWSER
... Kansas C'ily joy
A m erican League
I Second Half)
East
W L Pet. GB
31 22 .585 —
y-Milwak
29 23 .558 1‘*
Detroit
29 23 .558 l ‘x
Boston
28 23 .549 2
Balti
26 26 .500 4‘»
Clevelnd
25 26 .490 5
x-New
Yrk
21 27 .438 I h
Toronto
West
29 23 .558 —
Kan City
‘a
27 22 .551
x-Oaklnd
24 26 .480 4
Texas
24 29 .453 5l*
Minn
23 29 .442 6
S eattle
23 30 .434 6 1j
Chicago
20 30 .400 8
Calif
x-FIrat-half division winner
y-Secood-balf division winner
S atu rd ay ’s Results
Milwaukee 2, Detroit 1
Boston 4, Cleveld 0
Chicago 5, Minn 4
Balti 3, New York 0
Oakland 8. Kan City 4
Texas I, Calif 0
Toronto 4, Seattle 3
Sunday's Results
Ball! 5, New York 2
Boston 6, Cleveland 2
Chicago 13, Minn 12
Detroit 3, Milwaukee 2
Oakland 4, Kan City 3
Calif 9, Texas 2
Seattle 2, Toronto 0
Monday’s Gaines
K ansas City (S pllttorff 4-3) at
Cleveland
(W alts
8-9),
(2nd
game If necessary)
(cad of re g a la r season)

By United Press International
Give Dick Howser credit.
Instead of complaining about haring to
make an extra road trip to Cleveland, the
Kansas City manager pointa out that the
Royals could easily be headed
somewhere else — vacation.
"I don’t see where anyone has anything
to complain about," Howser said alter
the Royals lost to Oakland 4-3 to force the
makeup of a doubleheader against the
Indians. "The split season has been good
to us. If It weren't for the split season,
we'd all be packing our bagi. I’ll take the
tradeoff."
Paul Spllttorff will oppose Cleveland's
Rick Walts and if the Royals prevail,
they become second-half champs In the
West and no second game will be played.
If they lose both games, Oakland finishes
first. But In the spirit of the entire season,
the process Involves controversy:
While re-schedullng the Indian doubleheader, the AL has also made the curious
decision to cancel another Kansas City
rainoul, this one against Toronto. This
cancelled game could have been the one
to decide the order of finish. Even If
Kansas City wins the first game today, a
loss In the second game and a loss to
Toronto would have made Oakland Ihe
champ of both halves and given them
four home games In the playoffs.
Question: If the Cleveland games must
be played, why Isn't the Toronto game?
"Because we've gotta start the division
series," said AL President l* e Macphail.
Another question: If the Toronto game
can be canceled, why not cancel the
Geveland games, let the Indians go
home, and let the Royals prepare for the
playoffa In peace?
"Because the Geveland games were
the first games canceled," said Macphall. "We’re playing thoae two games
and they will decide it. That's the
decision of the league."
Kansas G ty third baseman George
Brett criticized the decision, which will
force the Royals to fly to Cleveland and
then return home to open their best-offive series aglnsl firsth alf winner
Oakland on Tuesday.
" Il’a a Joke," said Bretl. “The whole
year's a Joke. We won our division. We've
played three more games than anybody
eUe In our division and now we've got to
play even more games. The whole thing
doesn't make any sense."
Dave McKay hit a solo homer off Larry
Gura, 114, In the seventh and snapped a
34 tie after the Royals had scored twice
In the sixth on tingles by Frank White,

Boston
lot 000 0T3— 6 14 0
Clevc
000 000 110 - 7 9 0
Torrei, B u r g m r i r r
(7).
Aponte
(SI
and
Grdman
Denny. Spdlner (91 and Hassfy.
Bando 171 W Torrei 110 Jl L
Denny (10 61 HRs Evans 7
(771

NEW YORK (UP1) - When you've
been around baseball u long as Joe
T o m has been, you get a certain feel
about things, a premonition you might
call it, and the Meta' manager had one
before leaving his home for the
ballpark Sunday morning.
"1 Imagine they’ll do ii today." be
said to hls wife, Dani.
She didn't need any explanation. She
knew what hs meant. He was telling her
he felt that this was the day he w u
going to be fired and he w u right.
T o rre, the seventh big league
manager to be let go this season, of­

m

"These things are never easy,"
began Cashen, who h u been In baseball
18 years, most of that time In an ad­
ministrative front office capadty with
the Baltimore Orioles, and had never
had any occasion to tell a manager he
w u fin d before.
Torre didn't really have to hear any
more than C u b an 's first five words. He
knew he w u through and u i son u he

V &gt;fS

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£7

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Stnkrouty

National
league
Valeo #
/urla I A 160 Carlton Phi 179;
Soto Cm 151. Ryan Mou laO !
Gutlickton Mtl 115
\
American league Barker*
Cle
127
Burnt.
Chi 106 !
Blyletrn Cle and Leonard KC*
107 Guidry. NY 104
Save t
National
league
SutterJ

•s’ l

Minton

s»

;i

Alien i

NY l| Camp, Atl 17 Mume.J
Cm and lucat SO IJ
American league
l mgert !
Mil 21
Gottage
NY
70. J
Ou tenher r t kC 16
Corbett •
Mm 17 Sauoer Oct 13

I

(bated on ) I appearancet ■
each teams garnet played)
National League
Q Jb r PCI
VadlOCk. P.»
17 779 IS 341
Ro%e. Phi
107 431 73 375
B«9h&lt;*f. L A
103 400 48 370
Schmidt Phi
107 354 ’6 316
BucKnrr Chi
106 471 JS 311
GMfey. C«n
131 396 65 311
97 316 70 310
May . SF
BrooK\ NY
96 358 34 307
Cone pen. Cn
106 471 57 306
NiTnndf Stl
103 376 65 306
American Leegur
9 4b f pet
LiinUd Bo\
107 399 At 336
P^c*orrk. Sr
104 405 50 376
Cooprr. M.l
106 416 69 370
Mrnortn UK
109 47J If Jiv
9) 318 44 318
H.irgrov Civ
/sK S«*.»
94 357 *1 311
G Bretl. KC
68 347 40 310
Olivrt Tr«
107 471 53 309
Rrmy. Bov
68 358 55 307
Mmphr v. NY
60 319 44 307
Home Runi
National League
Schmidt.
Mu )1 Da*ton Mil 74 Totter.
C»n and Kingman
NY 77.
Mcnirick Stl 16
American league
Armat.
Oak Evans. Bov Grich. Cal,
and Murray. Hal 11. Lufintki.
Ctu and Thomat. Mil 21

Auto-Insurance?
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TOTAL
ALIG N M EN T
HEADQUARTERS

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We II change oil perform
chassis lube and check
• Transmission lluid • Power
steering fluid • Brake lluid
• Bahofy *aiet level • Battery
cables • Air filter • Bells and
hosei • Differential level •
Tire pressure and condition

f i n a mrJM
Musi U S cars imprirts *.th
adjustable suspension In
eludes Iron) *neel drive
CheveBes Infit true*sarv! cars
ri-jj.ting MarlYiervin strut
correction e,tra

•Inspect all lour tires, cor­
rect air pressure • Sel Ironl
wheel easier camber, toe
lo proper alignment • In ­
spect steering and suspen­
sion systems

BRAKE
SERVICE
YOUR CHOICE

TRANSMISSION
MAINTENANCE

wpofltoo
DOUISIC
CARS
Additional parts and
trr«c «t otra il needed
Includes Install nr a lionl grease tra il pack lionl •fieri bearings
insert 1hydraulc system add hud road lest
7 Wheal From One Install re*
4Wtieal0r\aa Imieanr*brake
(run Uake |iads rrvx la ir kom OH lining and resurface all lour
rotors inspect calipers
drums

•RepUce transmission
fluid • Install new pan
gasket* Replace trana-

so equipped • Adjust
linkage and bands as
applicable

mason Nter on vnhdea
&gt;

12-MONTH TUNE-UP

442
'47 &lt;49

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get Ban MWStvtM or itplicratn(
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For M ore G ood Year s In Your Car, TURN IT OVER TO GOODYEAR
JustSoy 'Charge If
Goodyear Revolving
Charge Account

The Mets had Improved to some
degree in the second half, with 23 wins
and M losses before Sunday’s season
finale with the first place Montreal
Expoe at Shea Stadium, but that still
came out to a .392 percentage overall,
certainly nothing to cheer about.

* e- * w W «

nC

Betting

LUBE 41 O IL
CHANGE

heard Cashen go on to u y the club felt a
change w u In order, he cut In and said
"fine.” Torre w u completely aware
that the way the Meta had started out
this season, with only 17 victories and 34
defeats, he probably would've been
fired sometime in July had It not been
for the strike.

—

Leonard

Earned Run Average
(bated on 1 inning per eacK
team t qamet played)
J
National league
Ryan#
NOu *6* Knepper Mou ? .ll{
Mooton l A 119
Reutt. l At
1 29 Carlton Pm 2 42
American League McCat]
ty Oak 2 32 Stewart Bai 2 33 *
lam p Chi 1 41 John NY 2 s i
and Burnt Chi 2 64

SERVICE ^ S T O R E S

Willie Aikens, Amos Otis and Hal McRae
to deadlock the game.
Matt Keough, 104, scattered seven hits
over 7 14 Innings. He got relief help from
Tom Underwood and Dave Beard, who
got his third save.
CUnt Hurdle of the Royals tried to keep
a sense of humor about the trip to
Cleveland.
"Hey, things could be worse," said
Hurdle. "We could get rained out."
Well, G lnt, the chance of rain is 20 per
pent
In other gam es, Boston downed
Cleveland 6-2, Baltimore defeated New
York 3-2, Detroit edged Milwaukee 3-2,
California blasted Texas 9-2, Chicago
outslugged Minnesota 13-12 and Seattle
nipped Toronto 24.
Red Sox 8, Indians 2
At Geveland, Dwight Evans belted two
homers and scored three times to spark
the Red Sox. Boston starter Mike Torrez
picked up his 10th victory against three
losses with toils Aponte notching his first
save. John Denny, 104 was the loser.
Orioles 3, Yankees 2
At Baltimore, Eddie Murray blasted
his 22nd homer and Doug DeCinces
added a solo shot to lead the Orioles and
Mike Flanagan, 94. Flanagan pitched
seven innings and was aided by a threerun third inning. Rick Reuschel, 4-4 was
the loser.
Tigers 3, Brewers 2
At Milwaukee, Kirk Gibson's third
single of the game knocked in the win­
ning run in the ninth Inning Milt Wilcox
scattered eight hits in leading the Tigers.
Reliever Jerry Augustine, 2-2 took the
loss while Wilcox raised his record to 124
by hurling his eighth complete game.
Angels 9, Rangers 2
At Arlington, Tex., Don Baylor went 4for-5 and drove in two runs to pace a 13hit attack and lead the Angels. Mike Witt,
84, scattered 10 hits to record his seventh
complete game.
White Sox 13, Twins 12
At Chicago, Jerry Hairston, who hit a
grand slam in the eighth, capped a fourrun ninth Inning with an RBI single to lift
the White Sox and Dewey Robinson, 14.
Doug Corbett, 24, dropped the decision.
Mariners 2, Blue Jays •
At Seattle, solo homers by Terry
Bulling and Tom Padorek gave the
Mariners the victory. Floyd Bannister, 99, who pitched the first seven Innings,
•ltd Shane Rawley combined for the
shutout. It was Rawley's eighth save.

Y ■ -

Bai IJ 5

G O O D JY E A R

A i B a seb a ll

9

Runt Batted In
National League
Schmidt.
Ph»
§v t
To tte r
C«n
90
Buckner
Ch. IS
Carter
M tl
61
Concepoon
O n and Mat
thews Ph. 67

American league
Murray.
Bat 76 Armat Oak 76 Ogltv»e.
M'l
72
Evant
Hot
M
Detroit
TOO 000 0 0 1 -J 17 0 W-nlield NY 68
Stolen Batet
Mil*
000 007 000 7 I t
National Leaaue
wa net
sVilco« and Parrish
Lerch.
Slaton (61. C a l d w e l l (71. Mtl 71 Moreno P.t 39 Scott.
McClure III Augustine (9) and Mtl 30 Collins. Cm Da*ton
Yost
Moore (SI
SV Wilco« MU and North ST 26
American league
Mender
(17 91 L Augustine (7 71
ton. Oak 56 Cru/
S»*a 41
O.iMnd
701 000 100
4 1 0 IrTlore. Chi 36 Wilton KC 34
Kan City
010 007 000
3 1 1 D lone. Cle 19
Pitching
Keough U n d e r w o o d (SI.
Vicforirt
Beard (Si and Heath
Gura
N.tltonAl Lragur
Scaver
Ou'Senberry (Si and Walhan W
Carllon
Cn 117
Phi 13 4
Keough MO 61 L Gura III
V6»mfuri4 LA 13 7 Ruthvrn
61 HR Oakland McKay (41
Phi 17 7 Rogers. MU 17 8
So»o C*n 17 9
American League
v VC*
ov»ch Mil 14 4 O Marline/
Bai 14 5
Morns.
Del and
McCarty. Oak 14 7 McGregor.
Mj|or League Leaders
By Untied P ru t International

Mets' Torre Knew It Was Coming
ficially received word of hls dlsm laul
from Frank Cashen, the Mets' General
Manager and Chief Operating Officer,
shortly before 11 a.m. Torre got the
news in Cashen's office.

Monday, Oct, 3, 19SI-7A

UwncIMieoeicrtinioto OtfOMCuibwr
Crewksan•KasaaCard •Visa•Anncan I iprevs
•CaneU e b -O n s CM-Cask

Nationwide Auto Service Limited Warranty
All Goodyear service is warranted lor at
k ilt 90 dA/t Of 3 000 m ik i whichever
comes w it-m en y services much ionger
II wtrrtnty service » ever required, go to
the Goodyear Service Store where the

original work was peftormed and we II In
it. fret If however you re more thin W
miles Irom the original store go lo tny
ol Goodyears 1300 Servce Stores ruionwide
- i

GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE

e

■» • *•

•

T

t*

) M K ill* a

J * i R. Warder, Manager

SANFORD

$5$ W. F irst Stree
Mon F ri.8 6, Sal. I s
322 2*21

:

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�* rP*^ P p

6A— Evsnlng Herald, Sanford, Ft

Monday, Oct. S, Itll

Somoza Assassin Still

PSC Ready To Hear

Terrorist Tactics In Paraguay

Phone Rate Hike Plea
TALLAHASSEE, Flo. (UPI) - Public
Service Commissioners will hear two
discordant tunes this week — Southern Bell
will ask for phone rate Increases while a
consum er advocate suggests a ra te
reduction.
Southern Bell Telephone Co. will ask the
PSC Wednesday to Increase revenues by
S328 million, Its first rate hike since 1977.
Company officials say Inflation and federal
accounting changes necessitate the in­
crease.
But P ublic Counsel Jack Shreve,
Florida's official consumer advocate, plans
to tell commissioners that Southern Bell's
rates should be reduced by 659 million a
year.
Southern Bell’s request for a rate hike,
pending since January, has brought an
avalanche of opposition at public hearings
around the stale.
The telephone company, which serves 2.6
million customers from Jacksonville to Key
West and a portion of the Panhandle, took
In almost 11.5 billion this year from Florida
customers.
Southern Bell Officials claim the com­
pany keeps less than 13 cents of every

ASUNCION, P arag u ay (U P I) - P resident
Alfredo Stroessner’s security forces have not had
much luck during the past year in finding the
assassin s of form er N icaraguan president
Anastasio Somoza, but that has not stopped them
from looking.
Heavily armed police squads periodically upset
the morning calm with door-to-door search
operations, indiscriminately looking for clues or
culprits in the homes of Paraguayan citizens.
Everybody Is a suspect.
In a similar operation shortly after the Sept. 17,
I960, ambush In which Somoza's Mercedes Benz
was blown up by a bazooka shot, killing Somoza, his
chauffeur and a financial adviser, security forces
killed a suspect
But since then the results have been lean.
Pastor Coronel, chief of police investigations, said
In a recent Interview with an Asuncion newspaper
that the search operations "are something that help
to calm the people.
"We also try to make sure that our security
people stay In training," Coronel told ABC

dollar in profit and will ask the PSC to raise
their profit rate of 13 percent to 17 percent,
said company spokesman Walter H. Alford.
That accounts for the largest chunk of the
rate Increase — 9109.8 million.
Shreve wants Southern Bell to decrease
its current rates by 959 million, but is not
sure exactly where It would come.
"Obviously, rates would be a little less than
they are now,” said a spokesman for
Shreve.
The company also wants 631 million for
salary Increases, 626.3 million to cover
depreciation of equipm ent, and 62.25
million for long distance calls that involve
Independent Florida telephone companies.
Southern Bell’s rate request would raise
average charges for residential customers
by 63.60 a month. Cost of an average
business line would Jump from 629.75 to
636.05 a month.
Residential connection charges would
jump from 652 to 686.45 and business
connection charges from 663 to 6105.50.
C harges for optional residential and
business services such as Touch-Tone and
Trimline would also increase.

MIAMI (UPI) — The state of Florida has been
told to stop harassing a firm working the wreck of a
Spanish vessel that sank off the coast of Fort Pierce
in 1715.
The case Involves a ship called Corrigan’s Wreck,
a Spanish vessel that sank during a hurricane on
July 31, 1715, just seven days after sailing from
Havana Harbor. Cobb Coin Co. has been excavating
the wreck between the St. Lucie Inlet and the coast
of Fort Pierce for years.
In a 57-page opinion, UJ&gt;. District Judge James
Lawrence King granted on injunction that "enjoins
the state of Florida from arrests, harassing," and
other actions that would prevent the Key West-

2 Charged As ’Fences'

,

The Barkers were charged Saturday with
trafficking In stolen property, grand theft,
possession of illegal weapons and narcotics
and narcotics trafficking.
In their yellow concrete block house south­

west of Miami, police said they found a million
dollars worth of property officers believe to be
stolen.
Police Lt. Robert Rossman said, "This Is
probably the largest residential fence ever
arrested In Dade County."
The weapons charges stemmed from the
discovery of 40 rifles and shotguns, subma­
chine guns and pistols, " lie ’s got enough guns
to start a w ar," said Detective Barbara
Williams, estimating there were 650,000 worth
of guns in the house.
The narcotics charges stemmed from
discovery of an Ice chest filled with
marijuana, a refrigerator containing pills
suspected of being methaqualone, and a
cabinet with a small scale calibrated in grams
and a white powder thought to be cocaine.

(QCD) Le Plata Decor. Inc. lo
Richard E. Plymale 4 John R
’ DeLong 4 wt Cathy D . Lot M l,
Town ol Longwood. 1100
(QCD) Corot A. Hooker Me
Dermott to Donald M Hooker 4 wt
Betty. N 100- ot S 700' Ol SEl&lt; ol
NW'a ol Soc 1011 It E ol Creek.
M.tOQ
Equity Really tnc. to Shireen A.
Walker, sgl. Un. IUC Destiny
Sorirws. ITT. 100
Equity Realty Inc. to Jeffrey E
poltev. Ind 4 T r , un HOC
Destiny Spgs. UI.T00
Equity Realty Inc. lo Ronald F.
Klein 4 wl EUt. 4 Gary T. Klein,
sgt, Un I7D Destiny Springs,

I4I.T00

5
*9
V

t
*v
a

1

i

Equity Realty Inc. tg Ronald F.
Klein 4 wf Etlt., Un. MO Destiny
Spring*. W .T 00
Hunto Oil Co to Thomas I.
McDonald. Trustee U s of SW '. ot
Sec 510II. 4 SW of S £ '« of Sec 7
M i l , 4 SEle Of H E '. 4 E one
third Ot S W . at H E U of NE&gt;. ot
H E U Sac IS IB It, S7I7.IOO

t'g' ■**&lt;fh *■'»'*

A national security law prohibits citizens from
having "deposits of Marxist literature,"
Police asked Yore where he had obtained the
books. He told them that the books were the

U dalardo said police have attempted to fabricate
a case against Miss Yore.
Police slipped into her belongings a book on the
Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua and the over­
throw of Somoza, who later fled to Paraguay to live
in exile, he said. Police also claim that an address
book, which has an obscure notation allegedly about
a trip to Moscow, belongs to Miss Yore, he said.
"Their motive is not clear," U dalardo said,
referring to the police actions.

based Cobb Coin from continuing its salvaging
work.
“This court finds the actions of the agents and
employees of the state of Florida to be not only
unproductive but in the nature of undue harassment
and an impediment of this court’s exercise of its
admiralty jurisdiction," King wrote.
"The plaintiff (Cobb Coin) Is permitted to con­
tinue operations without the interference heretofore
caused by the state’s officers, agents and em­
ployees," King wrote.
Cobb Coin filed suit Aug. 17, 1979 against the
shipwreck to settle title claims, Horan said. The
salvage firm and the state have both claimed title to

For the LITTLE ADS
that MEASURE UP...
in Sales and Profits,

King did not establish title in his opinion, but said
Florida law cannot supercede federal laws allowing
Cobb Coin to salvage.

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"State law purports to give title of the ship to the
state," Horan said. "Tliat is not valid. They must
establish their title in a federal court of admirably.
They have failed. In effect, the ship belongs to Cobb
Coin."

$9 4 50

-■'V-'VI

■ I 'l ' M f* ’

. , ua.b

the wreck.
David Paul Horan, attorney for Cobb Coin, said
federal courts have insisted that the state establish
its right to title in an admiralty court, but have
failed to do that.

Efficiency Aetl Ayailable
At Site fitly Mif her Rate
• Special Disceunl On
Monthly Rales

i

(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(305)321-0690

CALENDAR

REALTY TRANSFERS
Greeter Constr Corp to Eugene
W. Domte A wl Margaret A . Lot
lit, Sous auto Cec Four, SiS.fOO
Snaodwbey, Lid. to Southland
- Ltd., portion of Sec *71 IT desc
; t U otre* m l„|taO&lt;MO.
- Otaie OIIC*. la Diane O.WaHen,
Lota I a Oracetme Court, srs.ooo
Stuart R. Goble A wf Peggy L. to
Rowland H Goble, Lots I S, Blk 77,
Crystal Lake Winter Homes sd.
,1100
• The Slovek Garden to F &amp; R
Builders Inc., from SW cor. of
SEU of NW U of Sec 14 91 SO etc..
17 acres m I, W01.000
(OCOi William C, McGee, sgl. to
' Renee A. McGee, sgl.. Lot I, Bits zl
| Ho Orlando ath Add, t i n
; Sabel Point Prop lo Beywood
Homes Inc., Lot 14, Timber Ridge
; el Sabel Point. Un. I, 177,S00
IOCD] i nomas A. Ferrente 4
Sharotyn M lo Herbert Goldstein,
a pert of Lot A, Blk I, Amended
•Piet ol Semlnota Perk, etc., 1
*.parcels, S in
, (QCD) Donald Golden 4 wl
Audrey R to Herbert Goldstein. 1
' parcels, same as about, tin
• Herbert Goldstein, sgl Ind 4
T r, to Ralph S Anderson.
| Bredgord L Harrell Sr., Janice R
McBroom 4 Grlllon G. Presnrll
. dbe 4SO Seminole Partnership, a
I part ot Lot A, Blk I, Amended Plat
j ot Seminole Park, etc ., 4115.000
t Equity Really Inc. to Richard H
Garland 4 wf Barbara 0 . Un 171
’ C. Destiny Springs. U7.000
Rie W. Orel, sgl to Clyde A
-Meiewski, sgl.. Lot IT*. Wlnsor
Manor, 1st Addn. I7T.OOO
(QCD) Edgewater Inv Prop Inc
to William L 4 Joan M Arm
strong. Lot IN . Lake Harriet
Ests. tin
Hettewey Ridge Assoc, to Ralph
S jHiian 4 wt Lorralnt. Condo
SOK, Hallaway Ridge Condo.
11*000
: Hettewey Ridge Assoc to Crow
. Childress Herrod dbe Trammell
' Crow C o . Un SIC. Hettewey
Ridge, U4.000
Hettewey Ridge Also to Alan N
Mortrnsen 4 wf Elaine. Un MB.
Hatlewey Ridge. SJ4.M0
Hettewey Ridge Assoc to Wm
G Frye 4 wf Carrie. Un t l J
Hettewey Ridge Condo , IU.000
Hettewey Ridge
Assoc, to
William G Frye etui Un I I K.
I US.000
Hettewey Ridge
Assoc to
Richard A. Plimpton 4 wl Mar
lortaJ . Un SIE Hettewey Ridge.
US.000
; Hstlewsy Ridge
Assoc, to
Richard A Plimpton. Un S4F
• Hattswey Ridge Condo. Ut.000
• Carroll K. Ferguson, wld lo
Andrew lyenclc 4 wl Evelyn. Lot
1. Blk B, Sterling Park Un 1.

Stroessner, who has been in power for 27 years in
this central South American republic, has made
anti-Communism the hallmark of his authoritarian
government, much as had the Somoza family in
their four-decade reign in Nicaragua.

property of his sister, Nadymy Yore, a psychology
student at the national university, Ladalardo said.
As a result of police investigations in the case of
the "Marxist books," security forces within hours
detained Yore, his wife, their 10-monlfH)ld son,
their maid, Nadymy Yore and another sister,
Miriam Yore, Nadymy Yore’s boyfriend, and a
sister-in-law of Yore.
After questioning police over a week s span
released most of the people who had been detained.
But Nadymy Yore is still in custody, facing a one-to
five-year prison sentence if she is found guilty.

Judge: Stop Harassing Salvage Firm

Huge Cache In Home

MIAMI (UPI) — To his suburban neighbors,
Ed Barker and his wife, Gloria, were quiet
people who didn’t have much to do with those
who lived near them.
They knew Barker had once owned a tool
business and later became a gun dealer. More
recently, he had become a buyer- of
"distressed merchandise," which he resold at
various flea markets In the area.
Dade County Metro police took a different
view of the activities of the 45-year-old Barker
and his 40-year-old wife.

newspaper.
But Alejandro I-adalardo, a lawyer for a churchbased human rights group, told United Press
International the search operations are aimed at
"terrorizing” the people, instead of calming them.
The search squads typically at the break of dawn
surround several residential areas in this peaceful
capital of 513,000 people, cutting off all traffic, and
from three to four hours go from house to house.
On July 30 police made a find. At the home of Luis
Yore police discovered a series of books of
"Marxist, Marxlst-Leninist and Maoist ideologies,”
a police bulletin said.

Olin Amer Homes to Joseph P
Zgodiinskl 4 wt Margaret Ann.
Lot J. Blk A, Sterling Oaks. SS7.400
Lee E. Muni ill, sgl to Allen R
Weiss 4 wf Doreen R. 4 Weller
Taylor 4 wl Ida. Lot 7 Springwood,
SJI.400.
I QCD) Oary M While 4 wf
Kathryn to Kathryn G While, Lot
77, Lakewood Shores. 1st Addn,
SIOO
(QCDI Kathryn G While to
Kathryn G While 4 Berber* S
Greer. Lot 17. Lakewood Shores
1st Addn. SIOO
Sentinel Bldg. Co to Gtren R.
Thomas 4 wf June S ., Lot i.
Delmar Estates, IN,TOO
(QCD) Sutenn* C Marcus lo
Pet tr A Marcus. Un 104A.
Altamonfa His . Condo, 1100
Guy E Walker 4 wl Maureen to
Louis C. Lively 4 wt Ellt. L „ Lot
170 4 N'y ot 177. Frank L.
Woodrulf’* S d. S7T.000
Hallaway Rldg* Assoc, to
Jerome Beniamin, sgl., Un. 74F
Hallaway Ridge Condo, tlt.OOO
Hallaway Ridge Alloc to
Jerome Beniamin, Un TIE Hal
laway Ridge. Condo . US.000
D L. Stevens 4 Ralph E Bmdrr
lo AmerIco Falcone 4 wl Xiomere
Q . Lott, Blk D. Columbus Harbor,
HOT .000
Murphy Prop Inc to David A
Perkins, sgl., Lot 10, Blk T Third
Sec Dreamwold. 177,500
Sam H Creech 4 wl Everal R to
Sally Hettewey (m err.l, beg SW
cor lot *70 Town of Longwood,
S7T.S00
Oviedo Lodge No 747 F 4 A M lo
Jones lor Loans. Inc . Lois 1 4 4
Oviedo School Trustees! s d.
140.000
Arrow White Homes. Inc lo
Stanley G Zorn 4 wl Cheryl L ,
Lot II, Sens Souci, SS1.S00
led Williams 4 wt Selma lo
James B Terwllleger 4 wl Linde
W . S' i ol Lot I I Senlord Celery
delta. SI00
Ted Williams 4 wf Selma to
Patrick L. Donaldson 4 wf Mary
Beth W , Lot IS. Peace Valtey
Miami Spot, SIOO
Ted Williams 4 wf Salma to
James C Williams 4 wf Beverly
B , N il ol Lot U , Sanford Celery
Delta. SIOO
Frank M Paiermltt! 4 wl Sara
to Milo M Gates 4 wt Marlon L .
Lot 74, Stoncwood 1st Addn.

MONDAY, OCTOBER 5
Free Blood pressure tells, 2-4 p.m., Adventist
Church, Seventh Street and Elm Avenue, Sanford.

It's som ething to be

i TUESDAY, OCTOBER I
Sanford Senior Citizens, noun, Civic Center. Dag
lunch followed by meeting at I p.m. and bingo. Banquet
tickets on sale.
Ualled Way of Semlaole County Report Ixinclieon,
noon, Sundance Inn, Altamonte Springs. Scrloma Gub
hast.
Sanford-Breakfast Rotary Club,
Airport Restaurant.

7 a m., Sanford

Daybreaken Toastmasters, 7:15 a m ., Sanford
House Restaurant.
Winter Spring! Scrtoma, 7:30 a.m., Big Cypress.
I-ongwood Rotary Gub, 7:30 a.m., Umgwood Village
Inn.
Sanford lions Gub, noon, Holiday Inn on l^ke
Monroe.
Longwood Scrtoma, noon, Duality Inn, 1-4 and State
Road 434.
A)-Anon, noon, Mental Health Center, Robin Road,
Altamonte Springs.

D O N 'T O A M B L I
with your In su ran ctl
-C A L L T
1/

t o n y

f t .

W

O U S tl

IN S U D A N C I

f

3 M -9 U I

MOBILE HOME INSURANCE

F R E E SPIN AL
EXAMINATION

it’s the newspaper habit!

staa.soo
19COI Kathleen H Arias, sgl to
Kathleen H Aries sgl 4 Karen
Arias Herlch (m err.l, Un I04B
Ashwood Condo, SIOO
(QCD) Georg* P McMahon 4
Wilma S lo Georg* P McMahon,
sgl. Lots 77 4 TS, Santo Pk. 1100
Allred G. D* Lettibeaudier* 4
wf Juanita L to Julia Mae Gunn,
sgl. Lot T, Florida Land 4
Cotonnatlon
Co. Addn to S
Sant, US.000
QEquIly Really Inc. to Lee
Dresiner 4 wf Mildred C , Un. t C.
Destiny Springs. 171.400
RCA to Stephen C. Trent* 4 wl
Nancy J . Lot I Hidden Lake, Ph
It. Un. I. S4T.100
FRC Inc. to S M. Topreni 4 wf
Usha S . Lot II, Cypress Lending
el label Point Repl. IU.000
Spring wood VIII Apt Corp to
Darlene L. Ne.ll. Un
I7ID
Springwood Village, I1T.S0Q
Craven Dev le David P. Milter
4 wf VlrginU K . Lot 4, Weklye
Club E lls , Sec 0, 1107,100
,
Gereidn O. Koonti 4 wf Ella L.
lo Robert E Beken 4 *»f Eleanor I
5 , Lot 14, Stenewood, tri.000
Hettewey Hidg* Assoc, to Jorgo
Maksimovich 4 wl Svetl4M,,l&gt;n.
17A Hatlewey Rldg* Condo.
Heiieway

Ridge

Assoc,

Herald r e a d e r s en/oyt
I ssedscites, ttu - s t. Ins it S—s
l Bed fkkL Tlfkl MwdN

6 Wi ll— few.

— r Pa—

L F—I

6 W— U— ILI
7. Lsev t a t F— M$ Ns. F— I n s lap
'Why FREE? Thousands of « rta residents havs spine
rgtatsd problems which usually rgspond to chiropractic
cars.
This is our way of encouraging you to find out If you have a
.problem that could be helped by chiropractic car*. It Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
faculties.
Exam (nation Includes a minimum of 10 standard fasts for
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
shown above.
While we are accepting new patients, no on* need feel any
obligation.
Moat Insurances Accepted

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC
I I 11 5

Avg &lt;A u m i H w h P ir n H u'

Vs^tcwd

323-5763

fo

■ronimir totic 4 wf Hello. Un.

• YOUR FAVORITE COMICS DAILY
and In full ester tabloid on 6unday

• COMPLETE AREA SPORTS COVERAGE DAILY AN D SUNDAY
ettlgh School *College •Little Loogue eBew lIngtH oc. league eHuntlng and Fishing

• A COMPLETE VARIETY OF GROCERY ADS
with valuable money aavlng coupons

Special Introductory
offer 3 months home
delivery for *10°°
Call or writ* the

E v e n in g H e r a ld
P.O . BOX 1*17
SANFORD, F L
034*11

ITC. Hettswey Ridge Condo,

'«t. •.* a * y .*r a *

i

*&gt;* t

.'e'**-P»

•a—.##,*•#-»*
•*
•R,faf |*

• OURSELVES
A R 0U T PEOPLE YOU KNOW

/ yt # -*• • 6 y If P V N M.gr

• LEISURE M AG AZINE

Consplots week’s TV listings svsry Frldoy

I

NAME
ADDRESS.

CITY
RHONE

Evening Herald
P.O. BOX 1417

Sinter*, FL SOT1

�t

OURSELVES
Evgning Herald, Sanlord, FI.

Monday, Oct. S, t f ll— IB

Briefly

TONIGHT S TV
t*Ne Ch.

San/ors Con Take The Cake
A t Country Time Jam boree
Central P ark Lodge, Orlando's newest retirement
community, Invite* senior adults, 50 years and older, to Join
the festivities at the “Country Time Jam boree," from noon
to 4 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 24.
The event, In conjunction with Senior Season, will include
an old-fashioned outdoor barbeque, live bluegraas music
and a drawing for a mini-vacation for two at the Lodge.
Highlighting the day wiD be the "You Take The Cake"
decorating competition-auction at 1 p.m. Decorated cakaa
submitted by attending guests must be registered a t the
Lodge between 11:00 — 1:20 p.m. and will be Judged by
popular vote on artistic, unique and humorous themes.
Seniors Interested In attending and participating in this
admlstion-free event should send a stamped, selfaddressed envelope to Barbara Adams, Central Park
Lodge, n o t South Orange Blossom Trail, Orlando, 31000, for
tickets and cake entry details.

Lupus Foundation Meeting
The Lupus Foundation of Florida, Inc., will hold a
meeting on Saturday, Oct. 10, at 1 p,m., at l i l t E. Nebraska
St., (Boy Scout Bldg.), Orlando.
The speaker will be Mr. Jam es Durand, MB. His topic is
"Stress".
The public is invited to attend this meeting. For in­
formation contact the Lupus Foundation of Florida, Inc.,
(305) 071-2304.

(D O

©o
©o

Birthday
Greetings
At 91

Investments Class
The Office of Community Services at Semlnoie Com­
munity College has scheduled a Personal Development
class on "Securities and Investments".
The course will include —r t —
of haw stock us*
changes operate and how they evotved, espianations of the
different typos of securities available today (common
stocks, preferred stocks, corporate bonds, govwwnont
bonds and municipal bonds) and the inbwsnt risks and
rewards of each type of investment
Other topics Included will be: how to reed the financial
page of the newepeper, bow to reed financial reports and
how to determine personal investment objectives.
David Zimmerman will bs the Instructor. O ess will begin
Oct. 6 and run through Nov. 10, from 7 to • p m . on Tawday
evenings. Registration will bs in dasa. Location: Exacutive
Point Office Building, Room 111, Wymers Road and SR 4JI,
Altamonte Spring*. F a t: HOB.
For information please contact tha Office of Comnamlty
Service* at SCC 313-1410, e x t 304.

Painter Speaks A t UCF
Bill Schaaf, well-known Florida painter, will speak at
UCF on Tuaaday, O c t I. Schaaf, who is the recipient of a
recent Florida Fine Aria Owned Individual Artist
Fellowship, will ghre a noon hour akde lactur* on Na work In
HFA room 315 on tha U C F --------From 3 p.m. to I p m ha will alao praaent a demon­
stration workshop on drawing In HFA 301.
Schaaf has held fellowship* at tha Univanity of DUnoia,
the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, and the O w ataw Island
project He has taught a t Penn 8tate Unlvarrity, the
University of OlinoU, Southern Illinois Univsntty, the
Uni vend ty of Florida, and Wayne gtala Univanity. He has
been visiting lecturer a t Princeton U atvanity, Memphis
State University and tha Unhrentty of Miami. Ha was
designated an attwnat* in painting for tha 1970 Amarican
Academy in Rome prise.

UDC Program
'Confederate
Treasures'

(CBS) Orlande
Orlande

, MOMMY,

One of the highlights of
Alma Neese'i 91st birthday
was
receiving
a
congratulatory card from
President Reagan and his
wife, Nancy.
Mrs. Neese, bom Sept. 29,
1090, came to Sanford in 1921
and still lives in the same
home located at 2706 Country
Club Road where her
children, grandchildren and
great grandchildren have all
shared happy tim es of
growing up.
A descendant of the original
Swedish aettlers in the Upsala
Community, on the present
Country Club Road, Mrs.
Neese retired from Southern
Bell as a telephone operator
after 25 y e a n service.

EVENING

6:00
•9 I T &lt; 1 ) 0 ( C O n e w s
T j 35 SANFORD ANO SON
03 (10 OCEANU3
I t (17) ANDY GRIFFITH

6:30
O © NBC NEWS
" n CBS NEWS
I ABC NEWS
I CARTER COUNTRY
) OCEANUS
) QOMER RYLE

7:00
0 © th e m u p p ets
© O P M. MAGAZINE Mm I Rob­
ert (laud, a Iton and tiger iratner. s
woman who baa collected over
1*00 Barb* dolt*. Linda Hama in*,
it* Prince William* Sound in Ala**a;
Chel Tell make* jellied oranges
(T) B JOKER'S WILD
1 1 (3 5 ) THE JEFFERSONS
Q ) (10) MACHEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
© (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS

7:30
© ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
F O YOU ASKED FOR IT
3 FAMILY FEUD
15) BARNEY MILLER
(10) DtCK CAVETT Quest
compoM-r Ned Roram (Part 1ol 2)

(«l

Alma Xrcsc shows card from President Keanan.

Reminders For Fire
Prevention Week
DEAR READERS: It's Fire Prevention
Week again, and t have had so many request*
to repeat my column on fire prevention that ll
has become a tradition. So here it is, with
updated figures:
Last year, 7,100 Americans died, and nearly
1)0^00 civilians, plus 100,000 firemen, were
seriously Injured in 3,000,000 fires.
The total fire lost last year In properly
aloue was f i h billion in the U.S.
The chief causes of tires, in order ol the loll
taken, were:
1, Smoking
t. Electrical wiring
3. Heating and cooking equipment
4. Children playing with matches
I. Open flames and sparks
I. Flammable liquids
7. Suspected arson
I. Chimneys and flues
f. lightning
10. Spontaneous Ignition
Now for tome tips that could save your lift*:
Be sure your cigarette Is out. Matches, loo.
Never leave matches and lighters within the
retch of children.
Don't ran cords under rugs or over
radiators where they may grt dam aged.
Replace a cord If It is frayed.
Never leave small children or invalids
alone in the house — not even for n lew
minutes.
Store oily rags and paints In a cool place in
tightly sealed metal containers.
Never use flammable liquids for drycleaning indoors.
Never smoke in bed.
Have a fire drill In your home to be sure
everyone knows what to do in cate of fire.
Designate a specific meeting place outside so
yon wtU all know who's outside of Ihe house.
Remember: Fire extinguishers pul out 97
percent of all fires on which they were used,
and meet large fires start as small fires. So,
lavest hi a compact, easy-to-use fire ex*
Uagnkkcr. Keep It handy in your kitchen, or
be prudent nod buy one for your rottngr, car,
beat aad the back bedroom.
Bay aad Ins tall a smoke detector and then
property maintain 11 It must be rleaned often
with the vacuum cleaner hose so that It Is
dastfree. It la estimated that I,0M lives could

have been saved last year had a smoke
detector been in service when the (Ire hap­
pened.
Now, In ease of (Ire:
II you suspect lire, alert (he rest nf the
huusclmhl. Hut first feel Ihc lop uf (he door. II
It's hot, don't open It. Escape through the
window.
If you can ! open the window, break It with a
chair. Cover the rough edges wIth a blanket,
sit on the window ledge with one leg hanging
outside and one bislde, and wall for help.
The phone number o! your lire department
should be taped on every telephone. IIII Isn’t,
don't (umldc around trying lo find It. Get out
und rail from n neighbor's house.
II you live in an apartment building, use the
stairway. Don't take a chance on the elevator.
II it fails, you’re trapped!
Once out, slay out. Nu treasure it worth
risking your life.
II look less than three minutes lo read this
column. Was It worth It? 1 hope so.
a

liny

I'.S. If you nre in a hotel and suspect there
is n lire, call Ihe fin1 department younelf.
Then alert the hotel telephone operator.
Believe II or not, most hotels will not roll the
fire department until their stuff verifies
whether or not there really Is a lire and have
tried to put It out themselves. Should n guest
rail to report n fire, the hotel will almost
always send n bellhop, security guard or
anyone else who's not busy to investigate.
Hotels are relurtant lo "disturb" their guests.
Fire engines In the street arc quite em­
barrassing and lend to draw crowds. The
hotel may be a Utile upset with you, but really
. . . who gives a damn? The fire department
will be glad you railed: you may have saved
many lives.
DEAR HEADERS: Join me on "Good
Morning, America," tomorrow, October I.

LIONS HELP
RM HOUSE
Wayne
Wetifmark,
president
uf
Ihe
Sanford Lions Club,
(right) presents check
for I43K lo Tom Hunt,
area vice president of
Friends of KMII, Inc.,
for the IH-bcdroom
Itnnald
.McDonald
House being built In
G a in esv ille .
The
$450,000 facility will be
a home away from
home for families of
young patients at the
Shands
T eaching
Hospital.
Ground*
breaking took place In
July.

Norman dtVare Reward Chapter *f «w IM tad D M gbtan of
the Confederacy held a memorial aerriot h r I k t Fred J.
Harria a t th* laat m atting. Tha aarriea waa cewdnelad by Ifra.

LD. Hastings, smisted by Mrs. Joe L (May, chaplain

iwnsrstn in tht dUlC MR
C o r K i, Mrs. Corky, m . D w U Dmm.M i Barttafa, Mm.
Charies Hobaon, Mrs. H A McCal, Hkl TTapr Ray, I
Strickland. Mrs. WJ . WaOac* mi Nn. Gttm J . 1

©(35)
©(17)
(10)09

Independent
Orlande
Independent
Atlanta, O i
Orlando Public
Breadcalling tyilem

In addillan lathe thann*lt listed, cibltvltlea subscriber* may tun# In la independent channel *4.
It Petersburg, by tuning te channel 11 tuning la channel 1), which carrltl (ports and th* Christian
Broadcasting Network ICBNI.

OH Painting, Quilting
The Leisure Time Program at Seminole Community
College is offering courses In "Oil Painting," and “QuiltingBeginners through Advanced," beginning this month.
"Oil Painting" is a series of lessens which will teach the
beginner itcpty-atep approaches to oil painting. The ad­
vanced students will learn various oil techniques. Cl is m s
will begLn O ct 0 from 10 a jn . to 11 noon.
“Quilting-Beginners through Advanced" will teach the
following patterns: Cathedral Window, Log Cabin, Grand­
mother’s Flower Garden, Sunbonnet Sue, plus many more.
From pillow shams, wall hangings, to full rise quilts.
Classes will begin O ct 13, from 7 to 1:00 p.m.
The |13 fee for each class provides for the instructional
cost For information, call the Leisure Tims Program at
SOC.

Cable Ch.
(ABC) Orlande

11(17) SANFORD ANO SON

6:00
f &gt; (J ) LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
PRAIRIE (S*a»on Premiere) Th*
Oieton* last m a pv1 from th*
orphanage to take (he place ot NetI*. who ha* moved to N*w York
(Pert t i g
(J ) O GREAT MOVIE STUNTS.
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK The
technique* behind th* apodal
effect! ot ItH* film a* well at other
mow* are aeon when Harttaon
Ford took* at Hunt* and Hunt man

01 lha cinema
(7) O
TH AT'S INCRIOtBLE
Featured ■ car that waa driven
non-atop 7.500 mttea, inptat broth­
er* reunited alter IS year*, a twoheaded Chines* men, ■ bar-tending
chimp
01 (35) CHARLIE'S ANGELS
• (10) GREAT PERFORMANCES
"Ormend* Conduct*: Picture* At
An Eihrbrtion" Maestro Eugene
Ormandy conduct* th* PMadelpMa
Orchestra tn work* by WoM-Ferrari.
Richard Slrauti and MueaergiSy
an (17) M O V*
Calamity Jane"
(1953) Dor it Day. Howard Kaai A
woman sharpshooter teti out lo
capture th* heart ot Wad Sr*
Hickofc

S

*00
(X)

MOVIE "Sidney Shan"

Sanford Rec
Plans
Activities
All of the following
programs will begin the week
ol October 12, 1961:
CERAMICS
Adults and Teens — 10 years
and up
Students will leam painting
techniques and proper ways
to apply paints. The adult
classes will also learn how to
pour molds. The children may
learn to pour molds as clsss
progresses. Adult classes will
be held on Tuesday mornings
from 9:00 • 12:00 Noon and on
Thursday evening* from 6:009:00 p.m. starting Tuesday,
Oct. 13 and Thursday, Oct. 15.
Adult classes will be limited
to 18 per class. There Is a
(10.00 material fee. The teen
class will be held on Saturday
mornings at 10:00 A.M. —
12:00 Noon starting Oct. 10.
Classes will be limited lo 12
students. There is a (5 00
material fee. All classes will
be held at the Cultural Arts
Building on the corner of 5th
Street and Oak Avenue. All
3tudenta will be required to
purchase their own paints and
tools, which will be available
at the class.
BATON
Children 6-14 years old
Instructions will be offered
at two locations: Tha Civic
Center — 401 Seminole
Boulevard — on Monday and
Wednesday from 4:1$ • 5:00
p.m. and at the Westside
Center — 919 Persimmon
Avenue — on Tuesday and
Thursday from .4:15 • 5:90
p.m. C lasses will begin
Monday, O ct. 12, 1961.
Students will be required to
furnish their own baton and
there Is a $3 Instructor fat.
WEIGHT LOTTING CLAM
Students 12 y e a n and up
Baric weight lifting
will be held Monday, Wtdnesday, and Friday a t tha
Westride Center - 919 P er­
simmon Ave. CUsaas wiD
meet from 4:00 • t:M p in .
Claaees will sta rt Monday,
Oct. 12. There will be a $1
Instructor fee.

(Premiere) Tony R*nd*«. Lorn*
PKiel son A lonely, middle-aged
New Yorker share* a non-tomanbe
but loving raiabonaftp with a young
woman had tn* ago and hat daugh-tar
(X) o
MOV* "Tha Muacla Ot
Kathy Millet' (Premier*) Sharon
Glaa*. Frank Convert# Th* true
ttory ot an Arttona laen-agar I
attorn to return lo a normal kta
attar a near fatal aceidanl 11 chroni­
cled
© B
NFL FOOTBALL Atlanta
FaiCu.it at Phladetphia Eagle* g
35) THE ROCKFORD F1LU
(10) THE GOLDEN AGE OF
TELEVISION "Requiem For A
Heavywetghl" Originally producad
a* part ot CBS'a Playhouse 90
•ana*, nut latadrama starring Jack
Pklanca gives ■ glimpse kilo th*
shabby world ol pritehghtmg.

7:30
© Q MORNING WITH CHARLES
KURALT
0 J (35) WOOOY WOODPECKER
■ (10) SESAME S T R C n g

8.00
OX (35) CASPER
© ( 17)1 DREAM OF JEANME

Q30
a t (35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
■ 10 MISTER ROGERS (R)
OX (17) MY THREE SONS

9:00
( f HOUR MAGAZINE
QDONAHUE
B I X (17) M O W
(35JOOMER PYLE
(10) SESAME STREET g

r

19:00

(U) (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NFVH1I

© (17) NEWS

10:30

9:30

0X&lt;35) ANOY GRIFFITH

88

10:30

5l LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
(10) W ODE HOUSE PLAY­
HOUSE

r

) BLOCKBUSTERS
) ALICE (R)
D(35) D CK VAN DYKE
ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

11:00
)B

10:00

) TIC TAC DOUGH
J WELCOME BACK. KOTTER
35) I LOVE LUCY
(10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMING

lltoj

news

11KXJ

) BENNY HILL

) POSTSCRIPTS
IALL IN THE FAMILY

11:30
• d ) THE BEST O f CARSON
Quests Bob Hop*. Requel Welch.
Carol Nebietl (R)

© Q M-A-S'M
OX (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
© (17) MOVIE "Undar Th* Yum
Yum Tree" (19U) Jack Itnunon.
Carol lynley To ansura a harmoni­
ous marriage, a coupta try kvmg
logalhar pialomealiy. but tha
arrangamant become* comical
when men landlord litas aadudng
lha young lady

WHEEL OF FORTUNE
THE PRICE IS RIGHT
I LOVE BOAT (R)
p ^ 5 ) SUO
“ 1 BREWER
) (10) EDUCATIONAL PRO­
GRAMMINO
© (1 7 ) M O W

11:30
■ r jl PASSWORD PLUS
ax (3511
I INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
AFTERNOON

12:00
CARO SHARKS
. _ BNEW S
5JRHOOA

11:46
© • new s

12:30

12:00

®
•
QUINCY A skyjacker'*
skeleton t* lound In tha loreat along
with daadty garm-conlaminalad
12:16
© B A*0 NEWS MQHTLMB

• © NEW S
© O THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
© ■ RYAN'S HOPE
Q t (35) MAUDE

1«0
B © D A Y S OF OUR U V U (MON,

rotTHU,FRD

12*0
• GD TOMORROW Ouaa
nardFerguaon. amber tuny Kaeay.

12:4*
© ■ MOVC "The Picture CK
Dorian Or ay" (B/W) (1*45) Hurd
HattMd. Georg* Bandars

1:10

0 (3 5 ) ©(17

1:30
© ■ M THE WORUITUR9M

2.-00
B

© ■ HARRY O An arcMtacl*
dog la nearly poisoned and Harry
suapacti Ihe mtarded victim waa
th* arctutact hatiaell (R)

©

ANOTHER WORLD (MON,

TUE.THU.FRn
© B ONE U F l TO U V «

2:30

© ■NEW S

© Q SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
© 7 3 5 ) YESTERDAY'S M W S R
CILS (TIME APPROXIMATE)
REELS
(MON, W ID)
_ (35) COSH
dx
com CLEAN (TRIE
APPROXIMATE) (TUE)
ax (3 5 ) H O O W ILD (TIM E
APPROXMATf) (FRI)

3:1 0
© O M O W "kn Broad DeykghC'
(C) (1*71) Richard Boon*. Suiann*

m

1:48
32 (17) M O W "The Strangtr
Wot* A Gun" (tt S l) Randolph
Scott. Oak* Trevor.
2 :4 0

3:30
OX (17) M O W
Edge Ot Eterni­
ty" (li s t ) Cornel Wade, victoria
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7 B— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

leg al Notice

Monday, Oct. S, i f l l

Legal Notice

FIC TITIO US NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
NOTICE IS H E P LB V GIVEN engaged In business *1 SIT Vihlen
lli*l Me undersiqned, desiring to Road Santord Seminole County,
•nqiiqe if* business under in* flot'da under the fictitious name
of OMEGA TRUCKING, and that I
Uditfout name of EL TORITO
CJUtANDO at number 77) W intend lo register said name with
thqhwoy *3*. in the CD* ol Ihe Clerk ol Ihe Circuit Courl,
Sem.nole County, Florida in ac
Altamonte Sprinqs. florid*, .n
lend* to regular me **&gt;d n*me tordance with the provisions ol Ihe
n *h Me Clerk ol the Circuit Courl fictitious Name Statutes, To Wit:
Section Its 09 Florida Statutes
of Seminole County, florid*
Dated *1 tryme, Cllilornl*, Mis 19S7
Sig Robin W. Starnes
I7M day of August, 1911
Publish. September 7t, 71, Oc
E l TORITO LA
lober S, 17, 1911
H E S T A RESTAURANTS, INC
PCM 101______________|_________
Ity Marlin M Casey,
Vue President
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINO
Attorney tor Applicant
TO CONSIDER A CONDITIONAL
USE
KATZ. GBANOf A PALARZ.
A Prolessional Corporal ion
Notice is hereby given that a
»I00 W.lshtr* niyd . Suite ISO
Public Hearing will be held by the
Beverly Mills, Ca 90717
Planning and Zon.ng Commission
Publish September I*. J|, 71.
■nine City Commission Room. City
October s. i n i
Hall. Santord. Florida at 7 » P V
OEM 59
on Thursday, October IS, 1911, lo
consider a request tor a Con
d tlonal Use in a GC 7, General
Commercial district
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
Legal description Lots a 10.
HEARINO
Blk I, Tier 9, according to E.R
The Board ot Courtly Com
Trattords Map ol Sanford, ac
mission*'t ul Seminole County,
cording lo Plat tnereol as recorded
florid* will conduct * public
m P B I.P g 54 44 and Ihe east 17’ ot
nearing in the Commissioners'
Maple Avenue lying west ol and
meeting room Seminole County
adjacent to Blk 1, Tier 9
Courthouse on Tuesday, October
Address 701 N Maple Avenue
ID. IWI at ID 00 A M or as soon
Conditional Use requested Auto
thereafter as possible lo consider
Repa.r and Body Shop
an application lor a shoreline
All parties In interest and
modification project *1 the
oliiens shall have an opportunity
following described properly
The Last 4)01eel of the West 751 to be heard at said hearing
By order ol the Planning A
teel ol the South II7S leel ol the
Jon.ng Commission ot Ihe City ol
t asl 1 &gt; ol Ihe NW
ot Section I,
township 70 South, Range 11 East, Santord. Florida this )lh day ot
Seminole County, florid*. Less October. 1911
J O Galloway,
Ihe South 107) teet ot the West 77)
Chairman
leet thereol and Less the South 7)
teet tor Marguetle Avenue
City ot Santord Planning
If reygangl
and Zoning Commission
further described as being Publish October S, 1911
located on Marguelte Avenue, DEN ?■
Sanford, florid* R a te Uoideni
m y ol Santord. Fiona*
Persons are advised lhal, It they
IN VITATIO N TO BID
decide lo appeal any decision
Sealed bids will be received in
made at tnls hearing, they will theotfitcoHhc City Manager, City
need a record ol Ibe proceedings, Hall. Sanlord, Florida lor
and, lor such purpose, they may
1000’ Large Diameter (4’*l Fire
need to ensure that a verbatim Hose and Other Related Con
tiuordol Ihe proceedings is made, neclion Adapters and Accessories
which record includes the
Detailed specifications are
testimony and evidence upon available m the olllce ol the City
winch the appeal i* to be based
Manager. City Mall, Sanlord,
As a properly owner wilhln XX) Florida
leel ol Ihe pro pened protect you
The sealed bids will be received
may etlher attend Ihe public in Iheolliceol Ihe City Manager,
hearing or submit any comments, Room 70), City Mall, Sanlord,
either lor or aga.nst in writing to Honda no! later lhan I W PM.
the Division ol Environmental I riday, October 9, 1991 The bids
Services, P O Do* 74*9 Sanford, will be publicly opened laler that
i lortda 37771 Written comments same date al 7 PM in Ih* Cily
will lie submitted al Ihe public Commission Chambers, Room 117,
hearing A lack ot response will be City Mall. Sanlord, Florlda
regarded as your not being op
Ihe City ol Sanlord reserves Ihe
posed lo Ihe project
right lo accept or reject all or any
Arthur It Beckwith Jr
portion ot any and all bids in Ihe
Clerk ot County Court
ties! interest ol Ihe Cily.
Seminole County, florlda
CITY O f SANFORD
Publish October S, 1911
W E Knowles
DEN S
Cily Manager
Publish October $. 1911
OEN 79
LEG AL NOTICE
APPLICATION TO ORGANIZE A NATION AL BANK
Dated September IT, 1991
APPLICATION ACCEPTED FOR FILIN O O N
September IS. 1991
THE COMPTROLLER OF TH E CURRENCY
WASHINGTON, OISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
APPLICATION
YE* 1HE, UMSBRkiGNED. Wtlenamg la oeganlia and operate a
WE
N»f,o
fional Bank in accordance with Ihe provisions ot Ihe Nelional Sank
A J tas iinimded. da lirrebv make application lo Ihe Complrojler ot the
Cilr&lt;
Irene y Idt permission lo organur said National Bank, and propos*
as lollows
I that the main office ol said National Bank be located al 5C1 N
Highway 17 97. mlhecltyol longwood. Seminole County, Florida
7 that, in order ol preference, said National Bank have one ol Ihe
tollowmq lilies
L IB E R TY NATIONAL BANK
a l l iE o n a t io n a l han k
7 Thai Ihe total capilalljalion lo be rrcrlved by said National Bank
lor Ihe shares issued by ll be alloc aled as lollows
c epital
i 175 000 00
Surplus
1 97) 000 00
Total Capilanrallon
S 1.7)0.000 00
Number ol shares lo be auBiorired
iw.ooo
Par value per share
S
9 7)
Sale Price per share
t
17 W
I that William It Gossett ol SOD Highway 17 97. Fern Park, Florida
177)0 ad as sole and reclusive agent lo represent and appear lor the
undersigned belore Ihe Comptroller ol Ihe Currency.
) Any person wishing lo comment on this application may file hit
comments in writing with Ihe Comptroller ol Ihe Currrncy, Ad
mlnttlritlor ul National Banks, Sttlh National Bank Region, Suite 7700,
Peacltlrre Cam lower. 779 Peachtree Stieet. N E , Atlanta. Georgia,
JUKI) II any person desires lo protest the granting ot this application he
has a tight to do so it he liles a written notice ol his ntenl with Ihe
Comptroller ol Ihe Currency wilhin 71 days ot the dale ol this
.Hibl,cation The nonconhtlenlial portions ol the application are on lile
with llie Comptroller ot Ihe Currency as part ol I lie public Me This die
is available lor public invited ion during regular be slnest hours
IN W itN tSS W ittR t o r . the undersigned have hereunto srt our
hands on the rta'c srt lorth above
NOTICE

u n o e r f ic t it io u s

N A M E LAW

Fach Organlier s Name and City
ot Residence

lolin Arthur Baldwin
Detui Pattayes D'keou
I ugene Norwood Forrester
William fl Gusscll
l i.vtel J Hayttiund
Publish Oc totter S, 17. IVHI
Dt N 70

Oviedo. FL
Orlando, f L
Winter Park, FL
Maitland, FL
Altamonte Springs, FL

JO IN THE

F lC TI f lOUS NAME
Notice is hereby given that I am
engaged &gt;n business at 9)0 W State
Road 4)9. Altamonte Springs. Fla
Seminole County. Florida under
the fictitious name ot SUN
CASUAL F U R N ITU R E , and that I
intend to register said name with
the Clerk ol the Circuit Courl.
Seminole County. Florida in ac
cordance with the provisions ot the
Fictitious Name Statutes. To Wit
Section 99) 09 Florida Statutes
19S7
Sig Harry E Fletcher
Publish September 79, October S,
17. 19. 1991
OEM 171

FICTITIO US NAME
Notice is hereby given thai we
are engaged in business at SID N
17 A 97 Longwood Seminole
County, Florida under me tic
tdlous name ot PERSONALIZE
AUTO SALES, and tbal we Intend
to register said name with the
Clerk ol ihe Circuit Courl,
Seminole County, Florida in ac
cordancewithlhe provisions ot lhe
Ficlitious Name Statute). To Wit:
Section 94) 09 Florid* Statutes
19)7
Sig Lloyd A Story
Larry Lacaillade
Publish September 14, 71, 71,
October 5. 1991
DEM -S)----------------------IN THE CIRCUIT COURT. IN
ANO FOR SEMINOLE COUNTY.
FLORIDA
CIVIL ACTION NO
It 7174 CA 09 K
HOSCOE E O T I and
SARAH f OT T. his wife.
Plaintiffs
vs
w i l l i a m o M c Cl e l l a n d and
JANE M M cCLELLANO. his wile
Defendants
NOTICE OF ACTION
TO WILLIAM U MCCLELLAND
Easl McDowell
Mesa. Arizona 9S707
j a n e m M c Cl e l l a n d
9001 East McOowell
Mesa, Anton* 9)707
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O TIFIE D that an action lo
toreclose a mortgage on the
following properly in Seminole
County, f lorida
Easl SOleft ol Lott 4 and 7. Block
17 Tier 4, TOWN OF SANFORD.
Plat Book I, Pages St throuqh 44.
Poblic Records ol Seminole
County. F lor Ida, suhiecl to
easement 14 teel wide lying 7 leel
either side ol centerline ol ousting
sewer line across sa.d properly
servicing
duplex
dwelling
designated as IOOIA 1001B Elm
Avenue, Sanlord. Florida
has been hied agamsl you and you
are required lo serve a copr ot
rour wrdlen defenses, il any, to it
on HARRY G RE ID. Ill ot SHIN
MOLSER, LOGAN AND MON
CRlEF. Attorneys lor Plaintiff,
Post Office Bot 7779, Sanlord.
f loud,t 37771, and lile Ihe original
with Ihe Clerk ot the above Court
on or heture November 7. 1911.
otherwise, a Judgment mav be
entered agamsl you tor the rebel
demanded in the Complaint
WITNTSS my hand and the seal
ot this Court on this 7Slh day ol
September. 1991
Arthur M Beckwith, it
Clerk ol Ihe Circuit
Courl
llv Susan E labor
Deputy Clerk
(SEAL I
Publish September 79. October S,
17. 19 1991
OEM 179
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION
File Number 91 449 CP
Oivision
IN RE ESTA TE OF
RANDALL H ROWE,
Dec rased
NOTICE OF AOM INI1TRATION
IO ALL PERSONS HAVING
CLAIM S
OR
DEM ANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTA TE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
IN TE R E S TE D IN THE ESTA TE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
that
Ihe
ad
ministration ol the estate ol
RANDALL H ROWE, deceased.
» ile Number 91 449 CP. Is pending
m the Circuit Court tor Seminole
County. Florida Probate Division,
the address ot which Is Seminole
County Courthouse, Sanlord,
Florida 1777 1 The personal
repieseniativr ol the estate is
CAULEY C COPELAND, whole
address is P O Drawer Q. Cross
City. Florida )7979 The name and
address
ol
Ihe
personal
representative's attorney ate set
tor tit tielow
All persons having claims or
demands against Ihe estate are
required.
W ITH IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE I IRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, lo Me with the
clem ol the above court a written
statement ol any clamt or demand
they may have Each claim must
be m writing and must indicate Ihe
bain lor the claim, the name and
addressotltie creditor or hi* agent
or attorney, and Ihe amount
Claimed II the claim n not yet
due. ttie date when it wilt become
due shall be staled II the claim ll
contingent or unliquidated, the
nature ul Ihe uncertainly shall be
staled ll the claim is secured, the
security shall tie described The
claimant shall deliver suflicient
cop.es ot the claim lo the clerk to
&lt;nable Ihe clerk lo mail one copy
to each personal representative
All prisons mterrsled in the
•■state to whom a copy pi this
Notice ol Administration has been
•nailed ar* required W ITHIN
th r ee

EVERYDAY IN
WANT AD SECTION
fo

H Vm

BALD i NfltALD

TMK

ADVERTISER
CLASSIFIED SECTION —

I
1
is

jJ

MIRCHANDIfE FOR M IR

10

i?
L* iiM IH O il

[ j 222 2*11
Lf

OR LAN DO-WINTER PARK •

Call to4«yl

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

U l- t H K
•

H 9 tt9 9 tl9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 t.9 «»».«* »9 J»/

m o n th s

fr om

th e

D A TE
OF
TH E
FIR S T
P U B L IC A TIO N
OF
TH IS
NOTICE, lo lilt any obltctioni
they may have that challenges the
validity ot the decedenl t will. Iht
quallllcalions ol the personal
representative, or ihe venue or
lurisd'Clion ol the court
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANOS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE FO R EV ER BARRED
Date ot Ihe lirsl publication ot
this Notice ol JLdminlstretion
September 71. til I
Cauley C Copeland
As Personal Representative
of lire Estate ol
RANDALL H ROWE
Ore eased
A TTO R N EY FOR PERSONAL
R EP R ESEN TA TIV E
J Doyle Thomas
P O Bo* 1)9
Crow City. Florid* 77971
Trlrphune (9041 491 3900
Publish September 79 A October 1
1991
DEM 179

NOTICE
UNDER FIC TITIO U S
NAME S TA TU TE
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN
Notice is hereby given that the
undersigned pursuant to the
"Fictitious Name Statute,"
Chapter 14)09, Florlda Statutes,
will register with Ihe Clerk ot the
Circuit Courl. in end lor Seminole
County, Florida, upon receipt ol
proof ot the publication of this
notice, the fictitious name, to wit:
TRAVEL WORLD, under which
Ihe undrrsigned corporation it
engaged in business at 74)1 Lee
Road, Winter Park, Florida
That the party Interested In said
business enterprise is as follows
TRAVEL WORLD OF ORLANDO.
INC
Oaled at Orlando, Orange
County, Florida. September 9.
1911
TRAVEL WORLD
OF ORLANDO. INC
BY CHARLEN E F A U LE Y ,
Assistant Secretary
Publish September 14, 71, 7|,
October J, 1991
OEM SI

M

18—Help Wanted

Legal Notice
F IC TITIO U S NAME
Notic* is hereby given that I am
engaged in business al Rt 1, Bo*
)9 B Richmond Ave, Sanlord,
Seminole County, Florida under
the lldihoul name of P A IN TE D
PLEASURES, and that l intend lo
regilter said name with tht Clerk
ol the Circuit Court, Seminole
County, Florid* in accordance
with ihe provisions ot the Fic
tihous Name Statutes. To Wit:
Section 94) 09 Florida Statutes
1957
Sig Joan L Buchanan
Publish October S, 17. lf. 74. 1991
OCN 7)

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

322-2611
CLASSIFIED DEPT.

Orlando - Winter Park

831-9993
RATES

HOURS

» t l m t ......................... * # tA n »§
J contecuflv* tlm w . SB&lt; a Dm

I N A.M . - 5:70 P M
M O N D AY ttiru F R ID A Y
S A TU R D A Y f Noon

7 conaBCuttyatliMB .......... 41c
I I CdRMCUtiv* tllMS . 17c « lift*
11.00 Minimum
] Linos Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

COUPLE wonted to manage »
units Outlet includt C lM -'-j
maintenance. 1 managing
Eiperienct helplul, Bui not
necessary ■'No_children, turn
house provided plus salary.
Call Marion Cameron 777 KOI
R EG IS TER ED nurtt position
aveilaeio with home health
agency. A t part time nuns
excffltnt tolory. days only lor
appointment call 771 0900 or
134 1707

21— Situations M in te d

I WOULD like lo
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT OF
clean olficet or yards
THE E IG H TE E N TH JU D IC IAL
Evenings 111 1709.
Sunday - Noon Friday
C IR C U IT .
IN
ANO
FOR
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
14-B u s in e ss Opportunities
CIVIL ACTION
CASE NO. IM 4 II CA ( f K
FIRST FED E R A L SAVINGS AND
LOAN
ASSO CIATIO N
OF
HER ALD PAPER ROUTE
IB— Help Wanted
1—C ord of T h in k s
ORLANDO, a corporation.
FOR SALE
Plaint III.
371 1133
TRUCK
Mechanic
—
All
around
vs
I w u ' questions w m yuu “
t h e family ot the late Allred
Mechanic
Excellent
Pay.
ALBER T
G
CICHR A
and
tinancitlly Indrpendml in 7 to
Blair withes to thank their
Good Benetils. Apply In
ROBERTA I CICHRA. his wit*.
friends tor all acts ot kindness
) years? A rt you paid what
Person only. Smith'* Union 7*.
Defendants.
lhown
during
their
you ar* worth? If not call 717
7700 S Orange Blossom Trail,
N O TICE OF SALE
bereavement
Orlando. I l l 15*0_____________
Notice is hereby given that
N OTICE OF PUBLIC
MAID — lor small condo, I day
pursuant to the F inal Judgment ot
HEARINO
per wrek. flexible hours 111
Foreclosure end sal* entered In
♦—P
erso
n
als
The Board ot County Com
0109 alter 1 p.m.
the cause pending in the Circuit
muiloners of Seminole County, Court m and for Seminole Counly,
AGGRESSIVE INDIVIDUAL
Florida will conduct a public riond*. being Civil Number l l
VOUNG Christian Man to share
WHY BE L O N E L Y 7 Writ* "Get
PART TIM E
iiearing In the Commissioners'
1991 CA 09 K, Ihe undersigned
my J Bdrm House with lame
A Mete" Deling Service. All
SALARY 4 BONUS
meeting room, Seminole County Clerk will sell tne properly
' i rent is )? ) 441 *344
eg** P O Box 4071, Clear
P E R F EC T FOR
Courthouse on Tuesday, October Sltul'ed in Seminole Counly,
water, FI 71)11,
CO LLEGE S TU D EN T
70. 1911 al 10 00 A M or as soon Fiord*, described as
LO NELY
Writ* "B ringin g
28— Rooms
thereafter at possible lo consider
Lot
47,
LA K E
S YLVAN
People
Together
Dating
Circulation Dept
an application lor installing m
ESTATES, according lo Ihe Plat
Service!"
All
ages
4
Senior
Evening
Herald
formation signs walrrward al the iherrol as recorded in Plat Book
SANFORD — Real, wkly 4
Citlrens P O. Bom 14)1, Winter
317 7411 or 111 99*3
following described properly
monthly rates. Util Inc. Kll
17, Pages I] and 14. Public
Haven. FI*. 1)410____________
Begin al Ihe NE Corner ol Ihe SE
100 Oak Adults 9417193
Records al Seminole County,
AVON R EP R ES EN TATIVES
'4 ol the SE '4 ol Section 77,
Florida.
The Part Tim*Career
~
V
Child
O
re
Township 71 South, Range )1 East,
LARGE sleeping rooms
al public sat*, to the highest bidder
444 y p * _ rolled 019970*
run West along Ihe North line ot
apply evenings 1741
lor cash at II 00 A M on Ihe 791h
said SE &lt;4 ot SE &gt;4 1170 44 feet,
Celery
Ave. Rtasoneble
FOR me Ultimate in
day ol October. 1991. al the West
I
B
B
I
H
B
I
B
B
B
B
I
I
IB
IB
B
thence S 40 deg Id- SO" E 570 0)
From Door ol the Seminole Counly
Child Car* A Child's
teet, thence S 91 deg IS' 77" E
LARGE spacious turn, wkly
World 17) 1474________
Courthouse in Sanlcrd. Florid*
77S 00 leet to the center line ol a SO
maid service, wkly rates 417
D ATED Ibis Jnd day ol October,
EVENING
car*
S
P
m
to
7
a
m
loot road easement, thence N II
Palmetto Avt. 713 **41
1911
STORE
CASHIERS
Casselberry
ere*
deg 17' 40" W along said cen
(Seal)
Call evenings *717)*4
Good salory. hotpitaliratlon, I
C
A
S S E LB E R R Y Nicely Fur
ter line 17114 teel. Ihence East
ARTHUR M BECKW ITH. JR .
weak paid vacation every *
nished House privileges.
391 it feet lo Ihe East line ot said
CLERK
Babysitting
month*
Experience not
Senior Citliens Welcome.
SE '40l SE
thenceN 00deg 14'
By Cynthia Proctor
My home Eaperienced
nectitory. For interview
Clot* to churches, shopping
0)" E 700 00 leel lo Ihe Point ol
__________ 1711797__________
OC
phone Me manager at:
Transportation if necessary.'
Beginning Located in Seminole
Carry L Hill, ot the llrm
County, Florida and containing
731 0531.
GILES. HEDRICK 1 ROBINSON, BABYSIT in our country home
Airport Blvd. 4*
77741)1
4*4 acres more or let*
Mother ot tour grown children
PA
Casselberry
44
779-171)
I Whitaker)
Ret Deltona Jrd area
109 Easl Church Street. Suite 301
»-A p * r1 merits Unfurnished
Celery Ave. 4*
7)14111
Further described a* being
371 0744
Orlando. Florida 37901
Lake Mary 44 ■
1114)41
located on the East Chapman
Telephone No (7 SI 47) 3)91
SPUR OF TH E M OM ENT
Road E (tension in Seminole
t B B B It B M B B B B B IlIB B I
Attorneys for Pleintill
l u x u r y * a P a r t m e m Brb
BABYSITTING
County, Florida (Lake Bathl
Publish October ). 17, 1991
l a y o u t , Filter, Welder. Shear
Fam ily 4 Adults section:
777 9)44
Persons are advised Inal, it they
P
E
f
i
J
J
____
L
Brake
Operator),
First
and
Pootstd* 1 Bdrm*. Master's
decide to appeal any decision n o t i c e o f p u b l i c h e a r i n g
Second
Shifts,
Top
Pay,
Good
C
oy * Apts 1 11 7900. OpM on
made al Ihls hearing, they will t o c o n s i d e r a c o n d i t i o n a l
.
weakonot
Brnellts,
Call
Florida
Iron
8—
Good
Things
to
E*t
need a record ol the proceeding*,
use
Works Inc 377 0700
and. lor such purpose, they may
Notice il hereby given Met e
J Bdrm U j bath. Flrtplace.
need to ensure that a verbatim
PART - F U L L T IM E
Public Hearing will be held by Ihe
Jibs 100
Bananas
Formal Dinlnu R . Modern
record ot the proceedings is made,
RN L P N -A ID E S
) tor 1 00
Planning and Zoning Commission
Cukes
Kitchen, Cent HA. Ouiei and
which record Includes the in Me City Commission Room. City
Quality Professional* Needed to
Peppers, Large
Stor 1.00
wooded 17) Sail all )
testimony and evidence upon
meet help needs of Seminole
Hall. Sanlord. Florida at 7 70 P M
W Lopes
each 79c
which Ihe appeal n to be based
Counly Hospital* ■Nursing
WE
HAVE
Apartments.
on Thursday, October 1$. 1941. to
Green Onion*
lia r 79c
As a properly owner within 300 consider a request tor a Con
Homes
Duplexesand Houses tor Rent.
Pie Pumpkins
each 79c
teet ol the proposed project you dit'onal Use in a SR 1, Single
HIGHEST
PAY
—
June
Poriig
Realty
3711*71
Beet Slake tomatoes
lb 49c
may either allend Ihe public
IM M ED IATE PAY
Family Residential Dwelling
Big Rome Applet
libs t 00
Iiearing or submit any comments,
On Call Mtdical Services
BAMBOO COVE 7 bedroom
Gold Del Apples
lib* 100
district
either tor or against in writing, to
Call 471 7447
apt*. Available. Manager on
Mutru Apples
7 lbs. 1 00
Legal description Lot W, South
Ihe Division ot Environmental
premises. 773 IW .
4 lbs 1 00
Red Del Applet
Pmecresl 7nd Addition. PB 10. PG
Services, P O Bov 7449, Sanlord,
Fresh Apple
* * * * * * * *
99
Florida 17771 Wrdlen comment*
Cider
i , 9*1 199
Address 109 Westwood Court
Ridgewood Artpt. T Bdrm:
will be submitted al Ibe public
AN EW W EEK
99c
Greens
a bunch
Conditional Us* Requested:
Apts from *7*1 7 Bdrm also
Iiearing A lack ot response will be
Celery
7 lor 1 00
Home Occupation
A N EW CAREER
avail. Pool, tennis court. 777
regarded as your not being op
each 1.49
Watermelons
All parties in interest and
*4)0
P E O P L E H E LP IN G
posed lo the project
Swt Potatoes
lb.79c
citliens shall have an opportunity
Arthur H Beckwith, Jr,
P
E
O
P
L
E
a tor 79c
Tim Buc Toe Com
lo be heard al said hearing
EN JO Y country living? &gt; Bdrm
Clerk ot County Court
) Lbs. Potatoes
(9c
By order of Ihe Planning A
Apt*. Olympic )&gt;. Pool.
W E CAN H E L P
Seminole County, Florid*
Zoning Commission ol the City ol
SAonandaoH Villa##. OpM f t.
Publish October 1, 1991
YO U TOO.
W# T « k t Food Stamps
Sanlord. Florida Mis )M day ot
713 791*.____________________
OEN 4
October. 1991
C A LL E A R L Y
L E R O Y FARM S
JQ Galloway. Chairman
Metlorivlllo
Troc*
Apt*.
S R 44
32S-S17B
City ol Santord Planning
Spacious, modem 1 Bdrm. !•
and Zoning Commission
Watson's Old Farm
T H E LOW
Bath apt. Carpaltd, kit
Publish October S. 1991
•quipped.
C H 4A .
Near
BLUE CRARS LIVE
FEE AGENCY
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
DEN 30
hospital
4 take. Adults, no
OR
DRCSSEO
SEMINOLE CO UN TY. FLORIDA
T H A T CARES
-nets. 1770 U l tia .________ _
7 D A Y S 94. 449-1)74.
PROBATE OIVISION
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR
A B O U T YO U
Manner's VdiagoonLoka Ado. t
File Number II 443 CP
SEMINOLE COUNTY. FLORIDA
Med Asst............................ SJOC
txfrm from SD0. 1 bdrm tram
Sicilian PROBATE
PROBATE OIVISION
11—In stru ctio n s
Secretary ............................ 17*0
STM. Located 17 *1 lust South
IN R E: E S TA TE OF
Ftlt Number 41 794 CP
at Airport Bled, in Santord All
Typist ................................ 1*50
PETER DAWSON OWENS.
Division
Adults. T il **70______________
Auditor
ISSS
Tennis Instruction — U.S.P.T.A
Dec rased IN RE: E S TA TE OF
PT Legal Sec......................... ttst
Certified. Group or Private
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
Santord ) bdrm + *Mi
E TH E L M PRESCOTT.
Commercial Artist ........ Open
lessons Children a specially.
ctram lc bath, lu rn ltu rr
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
Deceased
CM
id
C
a
r
e
.........................
sttS
Deug
Malic
tetrskl
11117(7.
CLAIMS
OR
DEM AN OS
available, adults, t i l ) mo. 1NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
Housekeeper
.................9(41
AGAINST THE ABOVE ES TA TE
B4VTBM____________ .
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
Cashier* ........ ................ ..S M I
ANO ALL OTHER PERSONS CLAIM S
OR
DEM AN OS
w -H H p W h m a
SANDALWOOD Villas Airport
Electrician
...............
IMS
IN TE R E S TE D IN THE ESTA TE
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTA TE
Machinist ....................'..M00
Blvd., Sanlord. 1 Bdrm. 1 B*
PONY ride eltendant wanted to
YOU
ARE
H E R E B Y AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
Mechanic.
11170 The Really Store. R»o«or*
wrk lull part tlma, wkands A
N O T IF IE D
that
Ihe
ad
IN T E R E S TE D IN THE ESTA TE
i *7 t m i
Gas Station
Open
holidays *»p. perferred Call
ministration ol Ihe estate ol
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
Assembler
1441
Sharon lor appl 773 *471.
P E TE R
DAWSON
OW ENS, N O T IF IE D
that
the
ad
Car Rental Agent.................9*40
deceased. File Number 91 447 CP. ministration ol Me estate ol Ethel
31— A p a r tm e n ts F u rn is h e d
Too Many ToLItt
HO USEKEEPER Lak* Mary
is pending in the Circuit Court tor M Prescott, deceesed. File
Come In Early
Home 1*0. 3 Mrs J Day Wk
Seminole County. Florida. Probate Number 91 394 CP. is pending in
Own Transportation 371 7)tf
C U TE ElfIctoncy.tlfOmo.
Division, Ihe address ot which Is Me Circuit Court for Seminote
AA A E M P L O Y M E N T
Evenings
Utilities not indudod.
Seminole County Courthouse. Counly, Florida. Probate Division,
WE H E L P - W E PROVE IT
1004*971
Probate Division. Sanlord. FL. ihe addrni ot which is Seminole
IM PORTANT
191? Preock
nun*
17771 Ihe pertonal repretenlatlve Counlv Courthouse. Post Otlice
Wt need mechanics. One
ot Ihe estate It ROSSlE RUTH Orawer C. Sanlord. FL 77771 The
Apartment ForRint
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
★
automatic transmission man
OWENS ANDRE W. whose address personal representative ol Me
1 Bedroom Fum .
Two
line
mechanics
E
»
d P O Bon 407. Dillard, Oregon. estate is Edwin Leroy Prescott,
71) 111 1
per
fenced
only.
777
1411
Ekt
974)7 The name and address ot Iht whose address is Post Olllce Bo*
WOMAN Riggtr In a Wood
734 ask lor Bob Good
personal representative's attorney S3. Longwood. FL 317S9 The name
working Shop. Some ex31A — Ouptexes
are set lorth below
perttnea preferred. Seaworthy
and address ol Me personel
M E C H A N IC
excellent op
All persons having claims or representatives attorney are set
Wood Product*. Inc. lilt State
porlunlty Immediate opening
demands against Ihe estate are forth below
St lacing Santord Plata
SANFORDipociOullbdr,
Must
have
experience
required,
W IT H IN
TH R EE
behind Robson Marine
All persons having claims or
1 btlLOlr, drapes,
rebuilding
carburetors,
know*
M O N TH ) FROM THE DATE OF demand'- against the rslate are
STM) mo * dep 1)91141
A C 4 electrical, need good
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF required.
W ITH IN
TH R EE
E
LD
E
R
L
Y
lady
to
care
diagnostic men Top wages,
THIS NOTICE, to Me with the MONTHS FROM THE D ATE OF
lor Ismail children In
paid vacation, excellent
7 nOR, air ww carpet, stove,
clrrk ol the above court a written THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
my home. 1710*71.
working conditions. Only
rtfrig w d hook up, no pet*
statement ot any claim or demand THIS NO TICE, lo tile with lb*
S77) with It*** 4 sac 7171997
eiperienct need apply
they may have Each claim mutt clerk ol Ihe ebove court a written
m
a
i
d
t
day
a
week
must
have
)74 5794.
tie m writing and mull indicate trie statement ol any claim or demand
references 4 Iran*. Call eve 4
1
BOR.,
1 bth isat Ridgewood
basil lor the claim, tht name and they may have Each claim must
------AN OR LPN ' all day weekends 111 7174.
Ave Sanford, kit turn, *371
address oltJte creditor or ms agent be inwritmg and mutt indicate Ih*
a t ) and 1)4 Shift. Full lima.
me. 9 d t p . no pets, call
or attorney, and the amount bant lor the claim, tb* name and
D ELIVERY janitor at laost )
Apply In ptrton Sanlord
colled 799 1777 Ovt) 79)0077
claimed It Iht claim is not yet address ot Ihe creditor or his agent
years taperianct in main
Nursing Convalescent Center,
day).
due. the date when it will becomt or attorney, end the amount
lananci. Ability to tallow In9)0 Mtftonvllle Av*.
Ate shall be staled ll the claim is claimed II Ihe claim it not yet
si ructions, ability to read and
RI6 HT now we need a tew good
contingent or unliquidated, the dur. the dale when it will become
write Chaullaurs license
salt* people who havt the
nature ot the uncertainly shall be due shall be slated It the claim ll
32— Houses Unfurnished
required Salary rang* SSfao
ambition and dedication to
siaied It Ihe claim is secured, the contingent or unliquidated, the
Sait) Apply at Stminol* Comsucceed it that's you. than
security snail be described The nature ot the uncertainly shall be
munlty Action, Hoadttart
we're prepared to otter you
i U r m , 7 B. with
claimant shall deliver suflicient staled II the claim is secured, the
oftlco, HOI Pino Avo., Santord.
real rewards and M* methods
doubt* car garog*. in
copies ol the claim to the clrrk lo security shall be described The
Closing dot* Oct. I, t m , 1 Q I .
to get them. For interview,
Oottonp can B a t o r
enable the clrrk lo mell one copy claimant shall deliver sufficient
pit*** cell Century It, Hayes
AT Ittll 1 years txporlonci
lo each personal representative
copies ol Me claim lo tht clerk lo
quantity cooking Ability to
Really Services, Inc., Santord
) BDRM. 1 Bath, Doubt* Gar ago.
All persons interested in Ihe enetale Ih* clerk lo mail on* copy
read and writ*, tolary rang*
J7J7CM
Kitchen
lutly
equipped,
estate lo whom a copy of this to each personal representative.
ssiao
to
U
N
)
Apply
at
SamiEnergy efficient. 7 » SOM.
Nolle* ot Administration has been
Ail persons interested in the
M
E
T
A
L
worker*
4
general
nolo
Community
Action
mailed are required. W ITHIN
estele lo whom a copy ol this
helpers. Apply In person
Pro|*d Hoadttart, send
THR EE MONTHS FROM THE
NEW EN ER GY
Notic* ot Administration has been
Starlln* Enterprises Inc.,
return* to Portia O. Spencer,
E F F IC IE N T HOME
D A TE
OF
TH E
F IR S T
melted ar* required, W ITHIN
Bktg 7H. Sanford. Airport.
P.O Drowtr 17*9 Sanford,
11
Built
in erorgy severs, attic
P U B L IC A TIO N
OF
THIS
THR EE MONTHS FROM TH E
Flo. 31771. Closing dot* Oct. t
NOTICE, to III* any objections D A TE
storage. Deltona Aroa
OF
TH E
F IR S T
M O TH ER LY Type to Cere tor
1911 EOE.
they may havt that challenge Ih* P U B L IC A TIO N
113 3310__________
OF
TH IS
Infonl In our Homo. Wllh light
velldlty of Ih* decedent's will, the N OTICE, lo til* any object tons
housework Belore I p.m. Call
&gt;90*
Country
cottage, caniroJ
■
qualifications ol Ihe personal
they may havt that challtngt Ih*
179 7071 AH. S. i n *779.
heot ttM mo Include* water.
Seminole Memorial Hospital
representative, or the venue or validity ol the decedent's will, the
over looking Beautiful Lak*
Older only need to apply.
iwriidictlon ol the court
Refrigeration
qualifications ol the personal COMMERCIAL
Monro* Is currently stalling *.
__________ 373 0797__________
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS. AND
Mon.
Must
Bo
Exrepresentative, or the venue or
Stan#
by
Poet
lor
RN1
and
O B JEC TIO N ! NOT SO F IL E D
p tritnetd. Apply In Person
jurisdiction ol the court.
1 BDR, 7 Wh. txtr# largo great
LPN'9. You will receive lull
WILL BE FOR EVER BARRED.
7SM and Park Avt. Food Born.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND
room, dining rm „ hug*
day during orientation and will
Dale ot the lirsl publication ot OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
modem kit., wood burning
Men be placed on P R N statu*
EARN 110 lo Sit per hr. with
Ihls Notic* of Administration:
WILL BE FO R EV ER BARRED
sign* firtpleco, emir# house
Rowtolgh in your homo. Coll
andcaiiadlnatnoodod. This Is
Oclubrr S. 1991.
Dale ot the lirsl publication at
carpeted 4 draped, screened
174 70S* lor oppt.
a great opportunity ip join ■
Rossi* Ruth Oweni Andrew
Mis Notic* ot Administration:
porch, largo lot, guM neigh
•rowing orgonliollpn, and
As Personal Representative
September 11. I9BI
bprtwod, close to schoet Rtf 4
work •with a highly dodlcotod
ot ih* Estate ol
W A R EH O U S EM A N
lACtory
Edwin Leroy Prescott
deg. 133 IBM_______________
loom ot professIonaJs.
nporionct o must. Haavy
PE TE R DAWSON OWENS
As Personal Representative
titling
requited
Full
benefits,
Deceased
ol the Estate ol
SANFORD 3 bdr, 7 Mh, oppitc..
W* offer on exceitant salary and
apply in ptrton, Unltod
A T T O R N E Y FOR P ER S O N AL
Ethel M. Prescott
Including w f , m pets f i l l .
bansllll, pack ago. 1| In
Solvents
1407
Air
p
in
Bled.
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
Deceased
° * » ?*t. 373 O H , 333 IM9.
torostad pie**# canted our
FR AN K
C.
W H IO H A M ,
a tto r n e y fo r per so n al
Personnel director at:
ESOUIRE,
3 BORM. tv, Rath Kltcfwn Fum
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
D EN TIS T tor primary health
ol S TE N S TR O M . M d N T O S H ,
carpeted. Fenced In Btckytrd
K EN N E TH M. B EAN E.
car* lecility. Contact per
H
I
M
A
B
U
I
JULIAN,
P*f*T •* ****** trots Near
ESOUIRE
sonnet manager P.O. Baa IB77.
COLBERT A WHIOHAM, P.JL
«*»••• In Ravenna Pam. si7i
Post Office Drawer On*
Sanlord. Florida 1)771. EOE.
P O Bo* 17)0
mo. StM 9mask. OT 1413.
Casselberry. FL J7707
Sanlord, F L. 77771
tilt ■.tut*,
LOOKING tor Someone who Is
Telephone 170)1 719 7SSS
Teelpnont 1)0$) 777 1171
LOCH ARBOR 33. CHA, carpet,
toolerd. Plortda W7t
willing la spend • tittle, to
Publish September 714 October S.
Publish October S. II, 1MI
fBrogp porch, fanes shat*
MS-M14t110(1791
moke o lot. Coll 777*407 tor
1911
DEN It
M l + deposit Phone l i t MBs
appointment
Equal Opportunity E mployer
DEM 174

w

r

m u

■«

l i

t :&gt; "

-* * saugsv m

#w * M ) f

f t )

• Y 'd r-P

l

�i

* \

F

I

I • • •

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

22— Houses Unfurnished

41— Houses

Altordablr
SjnlOfd
Homes lor Rem See Now
Brond New 7Z17 Marshall SI
ills mo
J Bdrm. t 'i Bam Fenced 1131
Elliott S17S mo
3 Bdrm, l ' i Bath Fenced tMt
Montehjma S330 mo
M O R EA L TY INC
"E A L TO R
I3 M IN

L *•l A : ■ y t
f ,n a n i m g 1
Academy Manor 1 Bdrm. I'y
Ba New carpel 3 oa.nt.
carport Rear trnced Big lot
13»»nn

I

with Major Hoople

you are having difficulty'
Imd ng a place, to live, car to
drive, a job. or some service
you have need of. read alt our
, warn ads every day

REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
3301 S French
Suite 4
Sanford

S A N E O R D O P T TO B U Y I
3 bdr c a ro p rt.k .d so k S330
Cottaoe. turn nodep 3 3 3 s
SAN EO RD U N FU RN APT

:rm s. apphc .kids.3333
SANFORD Apartmen*
3 Bdrm. Porch. K.ds.S330

STENSTR0M

S A V O N -R E N T A L S
|]«

REALTY - REALTORS

3300

SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR

Sanford's Sales Leader

24— Mobile Homes
3 BDRM Mouse Trailer Partly
lurmshed with air. tenced
patio 333 3439
35 FT MOBILE Home on St
Johns Riyer Near Geneva
Scenic Location Semi Private
Drive All utilities paid
Adults only 3330 Mo My sal)

J

37— Business Property
For rent or lease - 10 130 sq 11
Industrial or warehouse 910
W. 1st SI . Sanlord 333 IIOO
B E A U TY Shop for rent
French Aye
371SIO*___________

37-B— Rental Offices
Office Space
For Lease
130 7333

37D-Industrial
__ for Rent
LEASE — SANFORD
3.000 Sq FI
Prime 17 97
Location ,
Ideal
light
Manufacturing
or
Com
mercial Full Air conditioned
Plenty Olllce space, and
parking Call Mr Buie
377 SS10

40— Condominiums
. Ml *1 *
CONDO turn I bdr. fully
equipped k it, pool. 1st A last
plus lease 574 13S3
ti 1

4t— Houses

WC LIST AND S IL L
M O R I H O M ISTM A N
A N Y O N IIN T N I
SANFORD A H A
EXTRAS GALORE I Bdrm 3
Bath Home Eat in Kit., Ommg
Rm . Cent Air, New Carpet.
Large screened porch Math
Dry Fenced and Morel 1)9,900
B E A U TIF U L 3 Bdrm I Bath
Home on Landscaped Lot with
cent HA. Dm Rm . Eat in Kit..
I arge Utility Maih Dry M W
Carpet Many Eilrast H I.900
FANTASTIC 3 Bdrm I Bath
FRPL m Fla Rm . Panelling
w w carpet. Equip Kit..
Utility, workshop. Fenced
Yard!
Assumable
Mtg
S49.300
JUST FOR YOU! Custom Built 3
Bdrm 7 Bath home in Loch
Arbor, on wooded Lott Energy
Saving Feature, Stone FRPL
and lots morel SSt.tOO
ASSOCIATES N E ED E D ! New
or eaprriented Call Herb
Slenstrom or Lee Albright
today A discover success!

C A L L A N Y T IM E
1S4S
Park

322-2420

COUNTRY LIVING
Yet date in.
Beautiful 3 Bdrm, 7 Bath. 7 Story
Home Large Eat In Kitchen.
Fireplace. Dual Zoned Air
Conditioning Tastefully and
completely redecorated
Situated on I Acre ol Land
with several large shade *• s
Priced right at S79.S00
M AK E ROOM TO STORE
YOUR W INTER ITEMS
S ELL " D O N 'T
NEEDS"
FAST WITH A WANT AD
Phone 177 3411 or 111 999) and
a friendly Ad Visor wilt help
you

Assooatri Inc Realtors
m ••SO

42— Mobile Homes

CHECK THISOUT
B E A U TIFU L 1997 Royal Oaks 71
wide 1 bdr ) bth. garden tub.
delure carpet, cathedral
ceilings brick fireplace wood
Mdmg shingle root, paddle
Ian and many more eitras
Only S74 900 VA financing nb
money down
10 *• down
conventional See .it Uncle
Roys Mobile Home Sales ot
Leesburg U S Hwy 441 S 901
717 01)4 Open weekdays 1
7 10. Sun 17 4
CHECK OUT UNCLE ROYS
LARGE selection ol 14 wides
prices start 18995 VA tman
ong no money down. 10%
conventional

REALTY, INC.
NEW LAKE MARY — High
School area 7 Bdrm 1 Bath
home with tenced yard
Perfect starter home, with
owner financing Low down
payment S34.900

M O B ILE h o m e
— Furn.
doublewide and lot with dock
St Johns River S1S.S0O 00
DESIRABLE LOCH ARBOR - 3
Bdrm 3 Bath on large corner
lot 547.304 00
COMMERCIAL — Slate Read 4*
t plus acres clast l* new
hospital Owner financing

mm

Get

plen ty- ol
prospects
Advertise your product or
service m the Classified Ads..

See our beautiful new BROAD
MORE, tront A rear BR's
GREGOR V M OBILE HOMES
MO)Orlande Dr i
333 3700
VA A F HA f manring
NEW Nobility. 3 bdr. 7 bln. dbl
wide, shingle root, wood
siding Oct special S1I.99S
delivered 1 set up
Open Sundays
Uncle Roys Mobile
Home Sales Ot
Leesburg904 717 0374

323 5324

Eicellenl Business opportunity
m good locelion Complete
stock included in this priced
educed to SHOO

1977 M ASTE Office Trailer I7i$0
It Central Air Heal New
carpet and paml Eicellenl
condition Ready lor im
mediate use 14995 3371100

7344 S French 337 43)1
Alter Hours; 34M044. 3)3 0719

Harold H all

PARK PLACE
Associates Inc Realtors
331 |9M

8

^

THE C E N TU R Y 71 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else in America Call lu.-py
and let it work tor you Call
37) 3030
Hayes Real Estate
Services. Inc
4)5 W 7Sth St
Sanford
Each office is independently
owned and operated
NO LOAN COSTS
NOCLOSINGCOSTS
NEAT Brick ) Bdrm I* j Bath
Split plan Freshly painted
home on tree shaded corner
lot Owner financing Total
Price 1)1 900 S7500 Down 14
percent 73 yrs 5177 91 PI

CallBart
REAL ES TA TE
, n jjitf

r ea lto r

S TE M P E R A G E N C Y
BUILDING IN FERN PARK
Zoned At Nice Wooded lot
Many trees. Central location,
owner will assist StS 000
OWNER SAYS SELL 1 Bdrm I
bath on large lot Hat wwc
Fireplace. *aove ground poo&gt;
Owner motivated 5)7.300
COUNTRY LIVIN G 3 Bdrm '
Bath Low dewn payment, and
owner will Mienci 117.100
}

BDRM R EN TA L Escellenl
location.' new car pel mg. nice
tot. 5170 Mo plus security

R V A L T O I 131-4911 Dayer Night

Garage sales are in season Tell
the people about it with a
Classified Ad in the Herald
177 7411. 1)1
9V9I

RUMMAGC Sale at the Gene.j
Methodist Churrh on Isl
Street Friday A Saturday.
Oct 9ih A lOlh 9 a m lo S p m
Lois ol slull very reasonable
Cotlee S. sandwiches lor sale
STORING IT MAKES W ASTESELLING IT MAKES CASH
PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD
NOW Call 377 7411 or 111 9991

57A-Gons 4 Ammo
GUN Auction SundAy Nov
SAnford Auction
I 7I 5S F r m c h A v e
M o r r m fo 373 7340

59— Musical Merchandise

LAKE V A R Y 4 large
lots nice trees
Sllooonach 377 4117

REALTY, INC.
R EA LTO R

323-5774

6 Sold
We pay cash lor Isl A 7nd
mortgages Ray Lrgg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 339 7749

50— Miscellaneous for Sale

C L E A N . C L E A N . C LE A N .
Describes this easy living
Htme and its neighborhood
Panelled Fam Rm. Rat In
Kitchen with Range end
Refrigerator. Big terms I
Utility Bldgs, f 9«il)S Land
scaped let ter 119.3401 1
N EEO PRIME EXPO SURES! I
Zoned RC I, IIS Ft Frontage
on Hwy. Escotlont location.
Priced at S44.0M
OVER IM0 sg It in this 4 I with
new Cen Heal big bedrooms.
Fam Rm. lle ll scr perch 4-.
brevity Irted let fee only
344 10011

CA LL HALL

HAl c o u s n IIA IT T
lac.

SANFORD Prime 14 Sf Acres w
options lor zoning S43.SOO w
Teems W Maliczowthl 37)
7913. Eves 37) 31*7_________

3 BDR . I blh. assume FHA mtg
S3.300 dn S37 300 total, esc
cund move right in 37) 7174
D E L IG ItT ru L D e l ary - tatfd
large 1 bdr. } bth noma with
lots of dot eft. on 'a acre
wooded, lake Ironl lot Dream
kit, relrig, island tlbve,
washer A dryer, cent, vac
sy-.'en.. w w carpet. 14x10
screened porch, patip. and
closed garage. 447.500
FOUR TOWNES
R E A L TY INC BROKER
M l *310 anytime

SA N FO R D R EA LTY
R EALTOR
3)11134
*

OA « N.C. M TN L O T I SCENIC V IE W A LAKE*
FRONT. SOME MORTOAOES
«S LOW AS 7». PER CEN T.

Looking ior a iob» The Classified
Ads will help you Imd that fob *

75— Recreational Vehicles

H E C IS T E H E D red A gray
horses for sale
Monet
boarded 595 mo Hobby Horte
Hanch S mi wett of Wekiva
Hiver on Hwy 46

73 GEM 1711 travel trailer, very
dean Must see to appreciate
Call alter 4 p m weekdays,
anytime on wrrkenos 173 5711

Have tome camping equipment
you no longer use’ Sell it all
with a Ciattified Ad in The
Herald Call 322 7611 or 831
9993 and a friendly ad vtor
will help you

75A-Vam

1973 CADILLAC Coupe Devllle
Full Power. AC. low mileage.
AM FM Asking SI730
__________ 173 OIH
FOR SALE lo dose estate, 1*77 4
door Oldtmobile. 47.000 mile*
Cash required Call * a m S
pm 37) 1741

* B 6 H A u to S a l t s *
1971 FORO Step van.
new tires. new motor
17500 cASh 37)7)49

* 3 3 9 -7 9 8 9 *

67— Livestock- Poultry
76— Auto Parts
WILCOSALES
NUTREN A FEEDS
Hwy It W - III 4110
CASH A CARRY PRICEI
Hog f inuhrr Pellets
3340
Layer C
S3»0
Rabbit Pellet
1413
Hrrthwik
3481
14 % Vitality Horse
Pellets
5*10
4! Corn
55 10
SLIM
B U D G ETS
ARE
BOI STER ED W ITH VALUES
FROM
THE
WANT AD
COLUMNS

68— Wanted to Buy
Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
33)7(01

Used Car Parts all makes and
models 177 7497 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks
TIR ES4G 7li 14
Whitewall Belted Like New
SIS.III 1774

77— Junk Cars Removed
BL Y JUNK CARS1TRUCKS
f tom 510 to ISO or more
Caii 377 1674 377 4460
it s like pennies from heevrn
when you sell “ Don't Needs"
With A WAnl Ad
________
CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
U9 1968

lit* Buick Rivera
197* Olds Cutlets
Supreme Brgkm
1979 Chevretel Camera
1974 Rabbit 4 Or
19*0 Pantile

ttt.N*
54,44*
(S.I77
97,377

Bonniville Erghm
1979 Chevralet

54,344

Caprice 4 Dr.

U.9M

Bank financing available
13N Hwy. 17*3
Caisalborry
TONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 97. I mile west at Spaad
way. Daytona Beach, will hold
a public AU TO AUCTION
every Wednesday at * p.m. It'S
the only one m Florida You sat
the reserved price Call 904
7351)11 tar further details.
1974 OLDS Delta ( (. 1 Door V*
Automatic. Air, power win
dows. steering and brake*
Runs ascatlant. needs paint
SS9S (11 1)34

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Your Business...
Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

Additions A
Remodeling

TWIN BED
and girls bicycle
1)9 4734

BATHS, kitchens, rooting, block,
concrete, windows. Add a
room, tree estimAte 37)866)

50-A— Jewelry
WEDDING ring set site 7
(130 or best otter
574 3*7*

A ir Conditioning

Chris will service AC'S, relrig,
treeiers. water coolers, mlsc
Call 37) 4777

Cleaning
B E TT Y HOOPS
C LEAN IN G SERVICE
Janitorial. Painting. Yardwork
CALL FOR ESTIM ATE
A FTER 5p m 377 *3)5
V DAY IS BARGAIN
DAY IN THE WANT AOS 377
7411 or *31 9993

ever

Landscaping

Plumbing

LAROE TR E E INSTALLER
Landscaping. Old Lawns •*
placed MS SS0I

•SETS Custom Made Drapery 4)
m long Cost SHOO Sell lor
1700 Double Bed new. S100.
Color TV Antenna 530
171 573*

51-A— Furniture
★ A T T E N T IO N *
BIO F U R N IT U R E
L IQ U ID A TIO N SALE
Overstocked, must dispose ol all
kmds pi furniture at reduced
prices All top grad* and in
good condition Dining Rm,
and Dinettt Sets Bedroom
Sets and odd pieces Living
Room sots and Hide A Beds
and entars plus all accessories
places Open daily 10S pm

D E L L S A U C TIO N
*
CEN TER
it
323-5620
1 PIECE sectional sola ISO
Swivel chair 17S Colonial
chandelier SIS Cot U
Call 373 4591
ROUND dining table S30 Sq end
table 1)0 » pc broom velvet
sofa 1)30 173 31(0
WILSON M AlER F U R N ITU R E
111 U S E .F IR S T ST.
131 3477

W ANTEO 100 to 300 acres In
Orange or Seminole Count its.
coned fay mobile home tub
division. Sand all dttail* In
eluding location, te P O Box
Flo 1M7S.

52— Appliances
SIDE by tide
Am analllS.
)*0l Cypres* Ave

.v;’...
I

je w e l e r

Baauty Car*

304 5 Park Ave
373 *309

TOWER'S B E A U TY SALON
FORM ERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook SI* E 1st SI . 377 5747

concrete w x k

La ndc tearing
A&lt;r rage 4 lot ctear ing
Fill d*rt topsoil
for sale 372 343)

Remodeling Specie Hat

Lawn Maintenance
DUNN R I T E Lawn Service
Mow, edge, trim, vacuum,
mulch. \od Reas 333 759*

wfoia Ballot Wax

B. E. Link Cenat.
322-7029
Financing Available

Roofing

Concrete Work, foolers, floors *
pools Landscaping 1 sod
work Fretest 377 710)

Boarding 6 Grooming
Animal Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kanntls Shady,
insulated, screened, fly proof
inside, outside runs Fans
Also AC cages Wa cater to
your pats
Starting stud
registry Ph 17) S7J7
Make your Budget go further,
shop the Classified Ads every
day

I MAN Q U A LITY OPERATION
9 yrs e&gt;p Patios. Driveways.
H I Wayne Brat 3)7 11)1

Electrical

Quality electrical work 3) yrs
experience Minor repairs lo
complete wiring 137 0714

Snow Hill Kennel otters Cat A
Dog Flea Baths IS up &gt;4
Hour. Full Service. MSS7I3

Hendymen

Building Contractor

Painting, carpentry, all types ot
home repair* Call for tree
tttim a tr » &gt; |*7S

'Bill Corse. Slate Certified
B u i ld i n g
C o n tra c to r.
Residential or Commercial.
New or Remodeled 137 0494

Core m k Tile
Complete Ceramic Tile Sere,
wells. Boors, countertops, r t
model, repair F r . n l 13*0711.
M ElN TZER TILE
Nrw or repair leak y showers our
specially. IS yrs Exp (of *641

IF rftlS IS THE DAY lo buy *
new car. see today's Classified
ani Igr pest buys

C EN TR AL FLORIDA NOME
IM PROVEM ENTS
Painting. Rooming, Carpentry
Lie B'ltded 1 Guaranteed
Fret Estimates 1)13*4*
J A B Horn* Improvement
Carpentry work at any typo
Real repair*, gutter work,
painting (interior ar oxter lor),
plumbing, ipoclaliza in mobile
home repair* A root cpat mg.
and wood patio dock* Free
ntimata m aos*

* i e

ROOFS, taeb* repaired. Replace
rattaa eaves and shingle work.
Ilcansaid, Insured, banded
Mika I U 071.
Christian Rooting 17 yrs tip
14* 3730. tree *M It proofing,
specialize in repair work A
now rooting

Nursing Center

SOUTHERN ROOFING IS yr»
exp . re rooting, leak special
ist Dependable A honest
prica Day or mghl » ) IM ).

OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakaviaw Nursing Cantor
91* E Second S t, Sanford
137*707

Feinting
Mailman Painting A Repair*
Quality work. Fro* EM, Disc,
te Seniors (14 *490 tutor.

Painting 6 or
Preeeura Cleaning

Home Improvement

•» •
r
*r.v5*&gt;Y**

FONSECA PLUMRING. Con
struct ton, Repblri. Emorgon
cy lie .. Bonded. Ins. U14E7I

We handle the

Clock Repair
g w a ltn ey

GENEVA 7 '. ACRES WOODED
ZONEO M OBILE SI7.S00

323 7132
Eves 337 041)
303 E . 7Sin SI

66— Horses

SEW AND SAVE

OSTEEN 17 ACRES WOODEO
PAVED ROAD FRONTAGE
514.000

S E IG L E R R E A L T Y
BROKER
3745 H W Y . 17-92
321-0640

1979 DODGE Oiplomal SX)0 dn.
and take over payment! Set
al 303 Holly Ave

Somebody it looking lot your
barge n Oiler il today in the
Classified Ads

51— Household Goods

COMMERCIAL 1 ACRESON 17
97 NEAR LA K E M AR Y
BOULEVARD S130.000

7) T BIRD Loaded. New Tires.»
Blue with While Top. or 74
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 573 mo 179 9100 134 4403
Dealer_____

BUSINESS SERVICE USTIN6

3' 4

GENEVA 70 ACRES WOOOED.
COCHRAN ROAD 53.300 PER
ACRE M AY DIVIDE

80— Autos (o r Sale

CONSULT OUR

SINGER Zig Zag and cabinet
Pay balance t4l
or 10
paymentsS7 30 See al Sanlord
Sewing Center. Sanlord Plata

A R EA .
FR O N T

O S TE E N S ACR ES TA L L
PINES. SCRUB OAK SU.300
TERMS

C O M P LETE LY R EM O DELED
3 Unit Apartment House with
large rooms, paddle ltds.
tmeke alarm s, carpal +
Positive cask llaaet 117,00011

SAXAPMONE And Clarinet,
For Sale
371 09)8

19)0 CMC 1» topn pickup 4. »
topper, p s . PB. air, cruise.
a m FM. low mil. very dean
54700 333 *33*

For Estate. Commercial ur
Residential Auctions 1
praitalt Call Dells Auction
1311410.__ ;_________________

O A ME H SI AN S Adult
Females White. Black
It SO 1250 J2J JSiS

SNAKE PROOF BOOTS S69 99
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanford Ave
377 5791

LARGE mountain lot.
near lake, covered
with trees 171 174)

O S TE E N
W O OD ED
A IR ES 117 300 TERMS

Auto 101 W 1st SAnford

C 3 35 mm camera Atgus, w
case, eiposurr meter, table,
screen previewer slide sorter,
protector, trI pod. batteries,
flash bulbs, f 100 373 7X6

it you aren't using your pool
table, lake a cue. and tell il
with a Herald classified ad
Call 1311411

W E K IV A
FALLS
W OODED R IV E R
ACRE S7S0U)

Ha i I M umc Cittirr &amp; Western

SET OF Wrought Iron Tablet
SS0 Compound Bow, wihitt
Tail 110 Sears Frost Free
Refrigerator 1150 Utility
Building t100 Phone 37) 8787

h o u s e y o u r f a m il y

EASY
ASSUM PTIO N
Law
payments 7 Bdrm Near new
Hospital.
ZONED
COM
MERCIAL Super potential
Only I37.3M
COUNTRY ATMOSPHERE in
town Pinecretl area 3 Bdrm
Large Living Rm
Only
517.304

Ml A NO* Ik trtg.tns Mfqr 4 viftaill
.hiring
low t»\ 1149 95 Bob

197) CHEVY CIO Pick Up Long
Wheel Base VI. 1 Speed Suck
Runs Eicellenl. Looks Fair.
3993 dll 1)74

1)13S French
More into 17) 7)40

F HE E male Chihuahua t &gt;r
old shots. to a
good home 661 H6»

Dun t Despair Or Pull Your Hair
use A Wanl Ad 377 2611 or
83 1999)

43—Lots-Acreage
Make room in your allit, garage
Sell idle Hems with a
Classified Ad Call a friendly
ad taker at 1)7 7411or 1)1 999)

CALL

R EA LTO R S

TRADE seasoned SI0.100 1st
mortgage paying 1301 m o .
1979 Grand Pri« some cash lor
equity in house or duple- 37)
0104 or 131 7347

Shop Uncle Rovs Mobile Home
Sales. Leesburg. U S Hwy 441
S 904 747 0174 Open 7 days

VA REPO 3 Bdrm 1 Bath home
with carport utility rm Cent
AH Only 1)1,000

323-7843

Kids outgrow me swing sel or
small bicycle? Sell these idle
items with a want ad To place
your ad. call your friendly
Classified gal al The Herald.
177 7411. or 111 9991

54— Garage Sales

TV— Trucks-Trailers

•SANFORD AUCTION*

K ITTE N all black beautiful A
playful female Free to a good
A lovng home Call after 7
p m J?) 1681

Good Used TV s. 175 A up
MILLERS
74l90rlando Fr
Ph)77 013J

47-A — M o rtg a g e s Bough t

A L L F L O R ID A R E A L T Y
O F SANFO RD R E A LTO R

Alger &amp; Pond

RENT A Washer. Dryer.
Refrigerator, or TV
904 773 4993

53—TV-Radio-Stereo

W A N TE D budget prices 5
bedroom house lor senior
ciliientlobuy P O B01 114 C
O Evening Herald. P O Boi
1457. Sanlord. Fla 37771

ATLAS IO144
I bedroom S3300
149 5734

ken more parts, service, uteu
washers MOONEY APPLI
ANCES 4)3 0497

47— Re*I Estate Wanted
CASH FOR E Q U ITY
W tcanclm tln 40hrt
CallBart Real Estate 333 ;&lt;ei
We buy equity In Houses,
apartments, vacant land and
Acreage LUCK Y INVEST
M ENTS. P O Bo&gt; 7300. San
lord. Fla 37771 377 4741

PARK PLACE

ANIMAL Haven Kennels hoard
•ng K Qroonvnu Needed
Pftnnqete A small Silver
ivodie tof stud Male Owner*
call 372 575?

Property
IN V E STO R S
PLEASE!
7
Triplet units lust arrived
Purchase separately or both
lor SIO.OOO with owner holding
Call on this one! June Porug
Really Realtors. 373 **/*

1910
SUSUKI 330
177)715

PARTIAL listing ot highlights,
include Oak dinmq suitf,
oak Hoosier cabinet I ranch
walnut
bedroom
suite,
mahogany bedroom suite oak
chests wrought iron sard sel.
lai ge 1910 s din.ng room suite,
lots ol odd lamps A occasional
tables cha rs beds, dressers
Plus nice
selection ol
decorator A accent pieces
Como early and look around
Open Irom 10 A M
CASH VISAMCAM EXPRESS

PUPPIES
F rre to a good home
J?) 756t

44B- Investment

730 HONDA K 1 34 000 mi org.
ric cond 1930 or best oiler.
171751)

• BIG AUCTION •

CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES
f OR SALE
337 171)

BATEM AN’R E A L TY

78-M otorcycles

Monday Oct i. 7 I’ M Sharp

65—Pets-Supplies

24 HOUR ffl 322-9283

J BOR. central air. fenced
yard, doselo
town 1330 mo 331 0395

Seminole

‘ ILL OIRT a TOPSOIL
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark a M.rt 171 7340

R O B B ir s

Dollar Paid for junk a
used cars, trucks 4 heavy
equipment ) ) ) 3990

to p

72— Auction

62— Law n-Garden

i r t h A c I i vfc | bdr , ||, oth.

Lie Real Estate Broker
?M0 Sanford Ave

77— Junk Cars Removed

A IU M IN U M . cans, copper,
lead brass Silver gold Week
days t 4 30 Sat 9 1 K0K0M4
Tool Co 9lt W 1st St 37) noo

The sooner you place your
classified ad. the sooner you'
get result!

If

7 BORM, I bth newly decorated
inside A out. fenced yard,
water, relrlge. stove tur
n.yhed Near New Bayhead
Tennis Club o'l Lake Mary
Blvd
1)15 first &amp; last
references Available Oct 1st
call 333 3333

Monday. Oct. 1,

68— Wanted to Buy
GARAGE door cyprrst.
Like new
377 7116 or 3)9 1305

&lt;110011

CMA
washer dryer. con
vemently located H 7S
J) *3/0

Evtning Herald. Sanford, FI.
61— Building Materials

No lob loo large or small
Ouallty a must Call 171 0071
References Fr Est

tAN O R LAITIM R
DAVIS WELOINR

tiM j*t, tAMPoee

Smell Heme Repair
SM ALL home repairs, real
rtpair. tree etl All work
guaranteed UII4SS.

Tree Service

Plumbing

Jim Troa Ig r...
Trimming, topping A removal.
Ira* oMIntel* (also rubbttn
removal I 114 70**

ju n g le

Freddie Robinson Plumbing.
Repair*,* laucais. W. C.
Sprinkler* IT ) *310. D I B 70*
Plumbing r*p*ir - *11type*
war or htatar* A pump*
111 **71

i

»

5 t.

NARPeft'iTeae lea vice
Trimming, ramoving A Latm

»mp*b Erg# e*t. mam.

�&gt; *

B L O N D IE

Herald, lanHr-d, FI.

•

« «

Monday, Oct. 5 , i m

b y C hic Y o u n g

f

»

• » • r ,

r •

•

.

ACROSS

f r • / ✓

r' I

39 Plecs to tit
41 Fut aircraft

IIB U

1 Be adjacent
to
S Sprtidi

B EETLE

Answer to Previous PuzW

n ln n c i

im r-in n
gsrsllt
□ D ll
iptrmgly
44 Agsin
u LJ
9 Common
46 Proclwity
n
E rtf n
49 Whinny
E »n
12 Desn Miftin i 53 Actrni
a
t 0 PLHlE
nicknimt
Southern
3 * [T
13 Oil eiportsf 54 Cm bo told
------ 1
14 Former
5 6 P h y t ic iln ( | l )
u 2
MxMstt
57 Ahoiyi
f U
llliinct
56 Scono
0JB. 1
(»bbr|
59 Compiu
0uT
15 Formilitm
point
lOPniM
40 To^dollor
17 Hebrew Isttir 60 Record
I I Orgimistion 61 Firttgirdm II Pott
19C«yt
16 Muticil torm 43 Midi public
21 Rsctdsi
20 Autpicot
DOWN
45 Intorlico
23 Wreith
22 Wool
46 Boyt
24 Sunihins
Orinki
24 Friudulont
47 Adimi'
ttata (abbr)
Ocdution
25 Tailor of tall
grind ion
27 Food
Entity
itonot
29 Anncying
48 Birthmorki
Bonnot
26 Hiughtinoti
iniott
Eipiro
26 Msphittophe- 50 In tho timo
32 Pilot
llluitntor
plico (abbr.)
lot
34 Eich
StKki
51 Morrimont
30 Onupotl
36 Hird hsndsd
Fnhhook
52 Shipod with
31 Provo
dslsnts
loadar
on i t
33 Stonocuttor
37 Hurli
9 Dsgrss ol
55 Circle part
35 Powerful
31 GrMk cup*d
humor

B A IL E Y

Gallstone Surgery
Not Always A nsw er

DEAR DR. LAMB—I have
been told th at I have
gallstones. These showed up
Incidentally In another X-ray.
To date I have had no par­
ticular symptoms, except an
occasional nagging pain for a
short time In my right side.
I'm 61, not fussy about going
through an operation, and
been dissolved by new
b y M o rt W a lk e r
considered in fairly good
medicines, still In the testing
health . I did have a
hysterectomy and a couple of
stage. As promising as this
minor operations. Is it
development is, it is used onlypossible for me to get along
in small stones in people who
the rest of my life with the
have
no
associated
gallstones or am I apt to have
g allb lad d er d isease. Not
trouble?
everyone can use these pills
DEAR R E A D E R -T h e
because some stones are too
answer depends a lot on what
large, others are of bile
type of stones you have, how
pigm ents, not cholesterol.
big they are and whether your
Still other patien ts have
t
g a l l b l a d d e r f u n c ti o n s
2
4
3
5
6
7
6
9
g allb lad d er disease that
li
ti
properly or not. The oc­
prevents concentrating the
12
13
14
casional pain in your right
medicine in the gallbladder to
side may not even be related
dissolve the stones.
IS
16
17
to your gallstones but may be
from colon spasms or gas,
DEAR DR. LAMB—I’m a
11
19
20
17-year-old girl, under 5 feet
which are so common.
tall. Do 1still have a d u n c e to
In general, If a person is In
21
22
23
get taller? What do I need to
good health the risk of
eat to grow?
gallbladder surgery Is slight.
24 2$
29
30 kl
For
that
reason
having
such
"
Il|
DEAR
READER-Chro­
an operation before age 50 is
32
33
35
nological
age
and
usually not a great risk. After
physiological age are not
36
age 60, it Is usually all right
37
necessarily- the same. Some
u n le u th ere a re other
31
39~ 40
people mature fast and others
illn e u e s , such as h eart
disease and then the risk goes slow. Doctors separate the
43
42
44
48
difference by bone-age
up sharply.
studies using X-rays. Your
46 47
48
49
60 ki 62
Yes, many people who have growth in height is largely
silent gallstones go through dependent upon the continued
53
54
65
life with a minimal amount of growth of your long bones,
b y Bob M o nta n e
difficulty w ithout surgery. such as the thigh bone. Near
56
57
56
But others develop com ­ the ends of the shaft is a zone
plications of g allbladder of cartilage, which continues
51
60
61
disease that require surgery, to grow, unlike solid bone.
som etim es alm ost on an New bone continues to form at
emergency basis. To give you the edges of the cartilaue.
a better understanding of the
Eventually the cartilage is
problem I am sending you The
Health Letter number 4-9, calcified and becomes mature
Gallstones and Gallbladder bone. By seeing how much
cartilage you still have, if
Diaeaae.
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL
any, your chances of con­
Others who want this Issue tinued growth can be
can send 75 cents with a long, estimated.
For Tuosday, October 6, 1981
stam ped,
self-addressed
If you are healthy there is
envelope for It to me, in care
YOUR BIRTHDAY
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) of this newspaper, P.O. Box little you can do to increase
Octobers, 1961
Try to be realistic today 1561, Radio City Station, New your growth, other than eat an
This coming year you are
where your hopes and wishes
adequate well-balenced diet.
likely to get m ore op­ are concerned. If you prime York, NY 10011.
That includes enough protein,
portunities and breaks than
yourself for something too
Gallstones are mainly of but excess protein will not
you have in the past. Take
optimistically you could be let two types, those composed of help. Your own biological
nothing (or granted or you down.
bile pigments and thoee of clock and hormones deter­
may (ail to act on situations
ARIES (March 21-April 19) cholesterol. The latter have mine growth rate.
which could be fruitful.
Don't rely too heavily on Lady
LIBRA (Sept 230ct. 23)
Luck today w here your
For the sake of expedency
ambitions are concerned. She
you may make promises to a
may be betting her chips on
family member today which
one who opposes you.
you may not be able to fulfill
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
later. Both will be disap­
Oswald: "Here't one from
This is one of those days when
a recent rubber bridge game
pointed. Find out more of
at New York's Cavendish
you are apt to focus on the
what lies ahead for you In the
Gab. I w u North and Paul
IS-S-SI
smaller picture and obscure
year following your birthday
Trent South. Both ades were
♦ 41
the la ;er view. Try to keep
by sending for your copy of
vulnerable and we had a
♦A
perspectives
in
proportion.
AstroGraph. Mall 91 for each
41)1111
pari score of 40.”
♦ A Q JI
Alan: "I see you have
to A stro-G raph, Box 489,
written down the bidding. It
GEMINI (May 21-June IB)
BA IT
Radio City Station, N.Y.
looks as if that 40 part score
♦ iQ ttlll
♦ J IT
You could experience temp­
10019. Be sure to specify birth
actually helped you bid the
VKQ
V lllT llli
tations
today
to
try
your
luck
date.
♦I
♦»
In areas where the odds are
♦ 1714
♦ill
Oswald: “It certainly did.
SCORPIO (Oct. 34-Nov. 22)
stacked against you. Heed
After Paul's dismood open­
• o ura
Exaggerations or boasts you
ing snd the spade overcall I
common sense, not hunches.
♦Kl
make today will have a hollow
was worried about two los­
♦ JI4
ring. No one Is likely to
ing spades, but Paul Is a
♦ A Q 1171
CANCER (June 21-July 23)
believe them but yourself.
rosily fine player and 1 had
♦Ml
Normally you’re a pretty
just the bid lo leave the slam
TeU it like it is.
Vulaarabir Both
decision up to him. I jumped
shrew d h o rsetra d er, but
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23(North-South 46 part score)
to five dlamoods."
today
you
might
make
an
D
m
Mr
Booth
Dec. 21) A w ell-m eaning
Alan: “The bid had to have
agreement which benefits the
acquaintance may give you
a d e a r meaning in that it
other party far more than
b y Stoflel ft H t im o a h ;
told your partner that your
1#
tips today on ways to make or
you.
only worries were about
!♦
It
Pass 16
save money. The Intent will be
W-WI-W.fyaVIUtfrfc
Pass Pass Pass
spades and really demanded
worthy, but the information
that be bid sis if be could
WHAT5|/HV, &lt;IND
L E O 'July 23-Aug. 22) Duties
faulty.
handle the second round of
Opening toad. YK
LU?DOC?/ /OPALlEM.
and responsibilities should not
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2Wan.
•
"
be rationalised away today.
Oawald: “There w u a lit­
19) Allow yourself time and
Whay you put off now may
tle more to IL If be didn't
space to maneuver in today.
bold the king of dubs, the
further complicate what you
Things which usually come
By Oswald Jaeaty
d u b fineoss w u more than
have to do later.
asd Alaa Baatag
easy for you could have some
likely to be a winner. W a t
had overtoiled."
unexpected
complications.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22)
Alan; ‘1 have noticed that
Alan: "You were a trifle
AQUARIUS (Jan. SO-Feb.
hridfa w ritan don’t ipand lucky. Give Paul one more
T em porarily postpone the
19(Treat serious m atters with
purchase of luxury items if any time dieruufag part- spads and one Mas heart and
the resp ect they deserve
they don’t fit comfortably Into score bidding. I gwas tho the slam might bava been
subject Is too tough, but why sot. Still, fortune seems to
today. Don't let them become
your budget They'll still be can't we uos an occasional favor the brave In war and
oppressive, but also don't take
there when your purse is hand whare there Is a pari almost everything else!"
them for granted.
fatter.
(N x w sp a m orrenpursE assn )
acorar

■

■

A R C H IE

HOROSCOPE

WIN A T BRIDGE

BUGS BUN N Y

AND“THE POT VS5P0HSE
15 03MING SACK NOW
PBOM MILLIONS OP
MILES AWAY

MESSAGES K E P W lO S a C E

FRAN K AND ER N EST

b y B ob T h a v e i

by U n a r d Starr
H O W ? -U rt-Y B ,H O W ?
-JU S T A LUCKY 6UES6,
I SUPPOSE-

4

l

Lfrt

&gt; y*

B**

tit*

n»-f r a n

• N •T

• I

f r *• •• #

•r

if f | | | |

f I-* r ~

~ 1

�</text>
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                    <text>Super Seminole Probe Continues...But M um 's The Word
B) BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff W riter
An investigation Into nossible art.
m ln iitra tlv e I r r e g u la r it ie s at Super
Seminoie Greyhound P a rk . Casselberry,
ctiered its x t x j
u
track personnel and several dog trainers
went behind closed doors at the Seminole
County Courthouse to talk to in­
vestigators for the state Division of Panmutuel Wagering.
The areas of questioning are unknown
since witnesses have been instructed not
to talk to the news media. And neither

D an Hardin, chief investigator w ith the
pari-m utuel division, nor agency at­
torney Jim Wa'nfi would dl*'*'*** the
probe.
“ I can't discuss the case," H ardin said
h i agency poucy.
Me a id
say,
however, that the query should be
com pleted within two weeks, adding that
m ore subpoenas may be issued.
W hile the investigation la cloaked in
s ile n c e , a source close to the inquiry
confirm ed reports that the controversial
m uscle regenerator DMSO — dim ethyl
sulfoxide — is one of the state's are as of

concern.
According to the source, the heavy use
of DMSO by trainers ru nning dcga at the
Casselberry track becam e widespread
when track officials experienced dif­
ficulty in finding enough "marathon
dogs” to run se v e n -slxte e n th s-m ile
races. Friday's ninth race - was a
marathon event.
"W ith so few marathon dogs, the ones
that were available had to run too often,"
the source said. "T h e y got sore and
without DMSO they would never have
been able to compete. A lot of kennels

would have been hurt.
"It's 0 h *o use DMSO in sm all
quantities, but ti.* state frowns on
overuse because tlie s iu ii Nuids up in a
dog's blood am i
mp«k tbs «w »n f *,y *o
that he runs so much that he hutts
him self," he said.
Track officials, who had been tight­
lipped follow ing an unannounced Fridaynight check by pari-mutuel officials of
several dogs which ran in the ninth race
at Super Seminole. Tuesday broke their
silence and issued a statement on the
probe T ra ck publicity director Jim

Haynes said, "We still m aintain our
o rig inal position of not discussing an an
going investigation bv the state of
Flo rid a. We have, however, conducted
uui un ii iiitesiitiaiion unit nave tounj no
evidence of any irregularities or race
f ix in g . We c a te g o ric a lly de n y that
any thing unethical or detrim ental to the
pub lic Interest has transpired."
P a ri-m u tu e l d ivisio n Inve stiga to rs,
acco m p a n ie d by o ffic e rs fro m the
F lo rid a Department of ta w F.nforcement, a rm e d at the track around 10
p m . F rid a y and took blood and urine

For $ 1

tests from dogs in the ninth race
The result* of those tests have not been
revealed
ItfG C U s U f)ir &gt; g befiae investigators
Tuesday include llay-nes, track racing
secretary R ichard O'Dowd, maitre d'
Ken Reed, dog trainers Paul Arruda and
Paul Pclrone, maintenance supervisor
Fred Mann, paddock Judge Chris Bowlin,
and chief racing Judge M urray Cooper.
Hardin said more witnesses are espeeled to testify this afternoon and
perhaps Thursday.

Year

Humane
Society
G ets Land
H tr a lg Photo I , Tom V iiK tn l

RIGHT O N

W ilh c o n s t r u c t io n rig h t o n s c h e d u le I h r th re e s t o r y s t e e l s k e le to n of th e $25 m i l lio n C e n t r a l

d u e to o|&gt;rn in

f t e g io n a l H o s p it a l s t a n d s o n t h e s i t r at

S e p t e m b e r , 1982 r e p la c in g S e m in o le M e m o r ia l
H o s p it a l. T h e 226-bed h o s p it a l w i l l be o w n e d a n d

M a n g o u s t ln e A v e n u e an d S e m in o le B o u le v a r d in
S a n fo rd .
In fa c t it m a y l i e a lit t le ah e a d of

o p e r a t e d b y H o s p it a l C o r p . o f A m e r i c a of N a s h ­
v i l l e , T e n n . P a t ie n t r o o m s w i l l he lo c a te d on th e

s c h e d u le . " s a id

t w o t o p f lo o r s an d a ll o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t s w ill be o n
t h e f i r s t f lo o r .

F lo r id a

SCHEDULE

$ 2 5 m i l l i o n h e a lt h c a r e f a c i l i t y

h o s p ita l s p o k e s m a n

Kay

lia r -

I h o lo m e v s . C o n s tr u c tio n b e g a n in m id - J u ly on the

S a n fo rd E ye s C o n d e m n in g 'F ilth y ' H o m e
Sanford City Commissioner* have
begun the process of condemning a house
at 110 S. la u re l Ave. a lte r neighboring
property owners petitioned lor the ac­
tion, saying the Raym ond King family Is
keeping a " f ilt h y " home and their

vhllwfer* a rc te rro riz in g the neigh­
borhood.
The city comm ission gave the Kings 90
days to complete re p a irs of the dwelling
end to dean up the property. And M ajor
tee P. Moore warned the couple, present
at the city comm ission meeting, to bring
the property up to code or the city will
demolish the house at the Kings' ex­
pense
He also admonished the couple to
“ control" their children. M r. and Mrs.
King said they have eight children.
City ConuiUisloner D avid F a n . who
with other com m issioners listened to
neighbors' com plaints for 30 minutes,
instructed all the pa rtie s to refrain from
aggravating one another He said the

Trash and garbage were
scattered throughout the
house...There was animal
waste In tho mlddl• of
the bedroom floor.'
situation appears to be a volatile one.
C ity Building Inspector taah Rogers
inspected the house after receiving a
petition signed by nearby property
owners complaining that the residents of
the property had subjected the neigh­
borhood to " f ilt h , terrorism , f ilt h y
language, loudness at all hours of the day
and night and destruction of personal
property and city property." The petition
also said the fam ily had threatened
neighbors with violence and terrorism
and to bum neighbors' homes.
“ We feel unsafe and uncomfortable In
our hom es," the petitioners said.

M rs. Juna Jones of 200 S. la u re l said
the yard of the King home w ill be cleaned
up one day and dirty ag ain the next.
Ja ck Brmtng of 206 S. l-aurel said the
children tn the fam ily throw rocks and
other debris at cars owned by neighbors
and use vulgar language.
C ity Building O fficial G a ry Winn said
today the property needs a lot of cleaning
up. “ If nothing is done in a week or so we
will find out what their Intentions are,"
he said.
Building Inspector ( r a h Rogers told
commissioners she inspected the King
house mi Aug. t and found unsanitary
conditions in violation of city law. She
said trash and garbage was scattered
throughout the house and that five dogs
and five cats were being kept at the
house.
"There was animal waste tn the middle
ol the bedroom floor." she said.
tn an earlier inspection she noted that
with the couple and their cnildren living

i t the house, the required amount ol
4&gt;atc lo r sleeping d id not appear to be
avatbble. M u s Hogcrs also aaid ahe
found no screen on the front door, two
screen* which needed repair; clutter
and debris on the front porch; wood
Mooring and Joists on the Iron! porch
were rotting and decayed; no source of
hot water and no means of space heating.
"E le c tric a l needs upgrading," she
said, adding one leg of the service drop
was disconnected, making the wiring
unsafe and a potential fire hazard She
said there was alao exposed and un­
protected w irin g on the ratters in the
kitchen and the floor tn the bathroom was
rotted and decayed from water leaking
Ironi the toilet and bathtub "There were
large piles of clothes and rags in the
bathroom,” she said.
King said he has repaired the front
porch and cleaned up around the house,
lie said there ts a place to put a space
heater tn the h o use.-D O N N A ESTES

Herald Stall Wlite r
The Seminole County Commission has
agreed to lease lo the Seminole County
Humane Society county-owned land for
It per year for 30 years The three-acre
site located on the east side of U S. 17-92
at County Home Road w ill be used for an
iintm nl shelter.
The decision came on a 3-2 vote
following a public hearing Tuesday right.
C o m m is sio n e rs Robert F e a th e r and
W illia m Kirchhofl voted against the
proposal.
Joanne leather, president of the
humane society, said she ts pleased with
the comm ission's decision to lease the
land located in Five P o in b and she says
she expects Uw oltes made by Thomas
Van Zamlt of Maitland to donate *200.000
toward the shelter's construction is still
good.
The commission split on the decision
by the same 3-2 vote as it did when It
ccr-sidcrrd the propc**! a r v n a i weeks
ago. Since that time, citizens living near
the proposed site filed an appeal against
the Board of Adjustment for approving
the Special Exception (or construction
of the shelter.
Some adjacent land owners lo the
county's land, represented by K irb y
M oncrief, urged the commissioners not
tn allow the society to build the shelter
next lo their properties. Rattier, they
argued, it should be constructed on a 1.2
acre parcel located on the west side of 17­
92 and nest to the county's animal control
center.
The land west ol 17-92 was considered
to be a possible site, along with two other
a rra s for the shelter, but the society
didn't feel the alternative locations could

Thrown From Car, Woman Hangs
From Drawbridge For 2 Hours
B A B Y U JN . N .Y . ( U P t l - A young
woman, hurled through the windshield of
a van onto the edge of a rising
drawbridge, dangled 100 feel above the
water with a broken leg for two houn
before rescuers saved her.
“ I didn't want to check out at 24,”
Deborah Sozio told hospital officials
later.
Three y o u th i w ere a rre ste d and
charged with raising the bridge in the
predawn hours Tuesday, apparently as a
prank.
M iss Sozio and two friends w en
d riv in g across the R o b e rt Moses
Causeway, which connects the beaches of
F ire Island to Long Island, when their
van crashed Into the edge of the tilin g
bridge.
She w u catapulted through the wind­

shield and landed on the edge of the
draw bridge, which carried her 100 feet
into the a ir on a 70-degree angle over the
Great South Bay, authorities said.
" I Just grabbed onto it. I knew If I
didn't. I'd be dead," she told doctors at
Good Sam aritan Hospital “ It was sca ry
and te rrib le .”
Rescue w orkers refused to lower the
bridge (or (ear Miss Sozio would be
crushed or fall Into the 2Moot-deep
water, which runs at 14 knots.
A n E m e rg e n c y M e dical S e rv ic e
technician gave M iss Sozio first aid until
a crane from the West lalip F ire
Department removed her about two
hours after the accident
M is s Sozio, a resident of West b lip on
l&gt;ong Island, was reported In stable
condition with a broken leg and bruises

Her companions in the van, Raymond
M ills, 25, ol blip , and Steven Russo, 27, of
Bay Shore, wtre treated fa r m inor in­
Juries and released. They were
thrown from the vehicle.
“ I am very lucky to be a liv e ," the told
hospital officials. "I alw ays thought
there was a God, now I believe it
strongly."

Sex Bias
Charge To
Be Heard

“ I didn't want to check out at 24," she
told one doctor.
State Police said the span was opened
by three vandals who broke Into one of
the control towers on the bndge.
Normally, when the bridge Is opened
warning UghU go Ml and w uudrn barriers
come down on the 3-m ile-long causeway,
but authorities said the lights and
barriers were not used in the incident.

TODAY
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Seminole's Broncos' aspirations to World
Series championship were dashed
Tuesday night when they lost to Richmond,
Cal., 13-3. Details, Pago 9A.

Diaper Bag Caper
SWA1NSBORO, Ga. (U P I) — Authorities say a pregnant 27year-old woman walked into a bank with a gun, forced em­
ployees to BU a diaper bag with money and fled tn a black
C a dilbc with two of her children tn the back seat.
Emanuel County Sheriff James B. Mason said P h y llis S.
Kirkland was charged Tuesday with armed robbery and her
husband, although he did not accompany her, was charged as
an accessory.
Mrs. K irk la n d was arrested Monday I m ile s south of
Swsiniboro a lte r a police officer forced her C a d ilb c off the
roaa
Mason said M rs . K irk la n d , a self-employed oeauucian with
(our children, was in her seventh month of pregnancy.

suit their needs Prather said the shelter,
if located near the anim al control renter,
would also be detrim ental for the
shelter's image.
Prather says that placing the Animal
Shelter near the A nim al Control Center
would be damaging to the shelter's
Image because the C o n tro l Center
destroys homeless anim als, while the
shelter tries to nurse sick anim als bark
to health and to find them homes
M m rrief argued that leasing land for
t l a year, which is valued at 1100,000, w ai
a foolish investment for the county as
well as the tax payers.
"Tying up this property like this is
loollsh. in 2) years your return U going to
be 123 w a 1100,000 piece of property."
"We Just don't think this ts the beet
•lie,” he added.
Edna Swlgonski, a south Sanford land
owner, told the comm ission she would
prefer to see the land zoned commercial
rather than have the shelter nesr her
home,
"A t least a business rloaes at 3:00 p m
Anim als howl In the night and I’ ll be able
In hear them."
Swlgonski and other residents of the
area also (om plainrd that the value (4
their property would fa ll if the facility Is
built near them because of the noise from
the site, the sm ell, added traffic and
puasible drainage problems.
However, donor Van Zandt asserted
that the facility might even Improve the
property value In the area.
" I l ' i going to be a modern architecture
with natural wood on the outside ol the
building, with 16 inch thick walls and
some air conditioned pens for sick and
abused anim als."
Feather said h r felt the lease
agreement was not in the best interest of
the county's taxpayers "because by
virtue of the 30 year lease, this property
is going to be off the tax role*." This
means the land w ill not ra m the county
any revenues more than the f l per year
commitment.
Kirchholl indicated he believed the
humane society's Intentions (or a better
shelter wtre good, but he added that he
ran ice problems ahead (or the shelter
when growth In the area in the next ten
y e a n might prompt the society to want
to move the shelter's location.

SWIM CHAMP

*•* * T#" v‘~~’

David Bandy ol Cub Scout Pack 237, Altamonte Spring, displays
first place pride as e winner in the Scouts' Central Florida District
Swim Meet held recently in l-ake Mary. David took first place in the
competition for eight year olds. Kris Keene and Terry Arndt of Pack
6W took second and third place respectively. About 2M hoys p ar­
ticipated. O ther winners' pictures will appear in the Herald Sunday.

Race and sex discrim ination charges
filed by a form er Sanford Housing
Authority employee with the U S Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission
w ill be discussed by the housing
authority board of com m issioners at a 7
p m. meeting today at Redding Gardens
Two weeks ago, M n . Ernestine Price,
who was fired from the Job she had held
as a painter and apartment cleaner for
five yean, told commissioner* she had
file d the c o m p la in t a g a in s t th t
organization.
She said she was told when she was
fired In June that her Job had been
eUnunited and site could accept another
position s i a ditch digger. She said
however alter she was fired a man was
hired as a painter.
E . Wain Cummings, a Seminoie County
building inspector appointed to the board
by the Sanford C ity Com mission Monday
night w ill take his seat tonight. Cum­
mings rrplaces Zonnye Dixon, who
resigned several weeks ago.
-

D O N N A ESTES

�tA -E vening Herald, Sswford.FI.

Wednetday, A in -24- tttl

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
Iran Executes 41 More;
Death Toll Nears 600
By 1'nltrd Press International
Iran has passed a sweeping anti-dissident law and
e xf* ti* H 41 mere cppcAc.'.U uf Ayatollah hnornemi,
ra ising the total number of firing squad deaths to near
600 in a two-month reign ol terror.
Tehran Radio, monitored In A n k ara, Turkey, also
reported Tuesday, Iran's Revolutionary Guards
arrested some 300 opponents, bringing the total ol
g u e rrilla s Imprisoned to near 3,000 this summer.
In a legislative move to root out more opponents and
stifle opposition, Iran's parliament, the M sjlis, passed
a law Tuesday making acts dating back to the shah's
rule crim es.
Under the law, provincial governors w Ik&gt;served the
m onarchy could be punished.
Because o l the law's vague and loose description ol
opposition "crim e s," observers said the measure
aim ed to frighten suspected dissidents Inside the ad­
m inistration Into silence.

Sadat, Begin Resume Talks
A I.E X A N D R 1 A , F-gypt ( U P ll — President Anwar
Sadat and Prim e Minister Menachem Begin an­
nounced today they w ill resume the deadlocked talks
on Palestinian autonomy late next month.
The form al announcement was made tn a news
conference ending two days o l sum m it talks between
(he Egyptian and Israeli leaders In Alexandria.
"T h e highlight o l our talks wax our agreement that
we renew the talks (or the lu ll autonomy Issue,” Sadat
told reporter! at a Joint news conference.
Begin, In his opening comments, lavished praise on
Sadat, called the twoday summ it a "v e ry fruitful
discussion" and said he understood the talks would
resume on the ministerial level on Sept. 23 and 34.
II the talks take place during tlioae days, they may do
so In the United States, since Egyptian Foreign
M ln lite r K a m e l llasaan A ll U due In New Y ork SepL 22
to address the U.N. General Assem bly that week.

Goat Saga M a y Be Coming To Close
By B R IT T SM ITH
Herald S U II W riter
The saga o l Ingeborg M o rris, the Forest Q ty woman who
has waged legal war (or more then a year tn an effort to keep a
sm a ll herd of miniature goaU at her Lake Brantley Shores
home, m ay be coming to a close.
Follow ing a recent rash o l ad vene court rulings, M n .
M orris has apparently relocated the last ol her II goats, ac­
cording to Assistant Sem inole County Attorney Robert
M cM illa n .

home to find someone had broken into her home snd stolen 4133
worth o l property.
Roberts told Seminole County sh e riffs deputies that the
burglary occurred between 9 snd 11 p.m. when someone
removed a plastic panel and squeezed through the opening
between a window s ir conditioning unit snd the window frame.
Once inside, the dim inutive thief stole a watch, various
pieces o l Jewelry, and 413 in change from a piggy bank,
deputies said.

Action Reports
★ Fires
★

Courts
it Police

CO U R T SEN T EN CIN G S, P L E A S
Four persons were sentenced In Circuit Court in Sanford
Tuesday (or crim es to which they had earlier y leaded guilty.
Also, two Seminole County men pleaded guilty to burglary
charges. Defendants and their offenses follow:
Tommy Lew is Grady, 36, Sorrento, Fla., battery on a law
enforcement officer, three years probation snd the 472 cost ol
his prosecution. G rady was arrested Feb. 19 after he shoved
and punched Sanford policeman Je rry Gongwer who was in­
vestigating a domestic disturbance at 147 Bethune C ircle.
-R o b e rt Lewis Gothelf, 26, Forest Q ty , possession ol
marijuana, five y e a n probation and V days In the county Jail.
Gothelf was charged on M arch 2 after he sold 20 pounds of
marijuana to county undercover agents tn the parking lot of an
Altamonte Springs hardware store.
—Lynn Ann Holstrom , 23, 416 George Ave., Long wood,
resisting arrest with violence, three y e a n probation and 4300
for the services of her public defender. Holstrom was accused
of kicking sheriff's deputies after being stopped for suspicion
of drunk driving.
- K e it h Jerome Harvey, 21, 704 Brentwood Ave., Altamonte
Springs, grand theft, five y e a n probation. On M arch 9, Harvey
sold a clarinet to a M aitland music store for 410. The in­
strument had been stolen from Lyman High School a month
before.
Also Tuesday, Nicholas Dukes, 19, of 211 Satsums Drive,
Sanford, pleaded guilty to a burglary charge In connection
with the June 14 break-in at the Melodee Skating Rink, 2700 W.
23th S t , Sanford.
—Jeffrey D. H alter, 20, 0 6 Orange St., Altamonte Springs,
burglary. H alter was accused of breaking into the St. M arks
Presbyterian Church, 1021 Palm Springs Drive, Altamonte
Springs.

C O K E AN D W ATER
No, that's not a new d rin k. It's what the (oiks In the Sanora
residential ares In Sar.lcrd got when someone dumped (he
clubhouse Coke m achine Into the swimming pool.
According to a Sanford police report, the Incident orrttrred
sometime late M onday night o r early Tuesday morning.
Damage It the m achine was estimated at $300.

“ M rs. M orris' attorney ( R ich ard M a n ic) Informed me that
a ll o l the goats were gone. Other sources have confirmed
that," M cM illa n said. " O l course, how long they sU y gone Is
another matter, but as o l now, there are no got is out there.
Maybe this Is the end c l Use goat story. We’ll see."
M r r r is has bar. unde*’ court order since June I to remove
the animals. However, through a series ol legal maneuvers,
she managed to keep her gnaU until Monday.
On June 1, Circuit Court Judge Vernon M ite Jr. gave Mrs.
M o rris 20 days to get rid o l the goaU, ruling that the anim als
are livestock and as such are prohibited by county law from
being kept tn a residential area. Claim ing her goaU are peU,
not livestock, Mrs. M orris defied M ize's order and was later
held in contempt ol court

TWO J A I L E D FO R USD S A L E
A Mlssissinol truck d riv e r and an Arizona student were in
the Seminole County J a il charged with drug taw violations
after they allegedly sold county undercover agents 230 USD
tablets.
Ja iled were Duke Raym ond Ramage Jr., 20, ol Columbus,
M iss., snd 21-year-old college student Terry Wayne Howard ol
Chandler, Arizona. R a m a g f was charged with possession,
sale and delivery o l a controlled substance. Howard was
charged with conspiracy to deliver a controlled substance.
Both men were being held under 44,000 bond.
According to a Seminole County sh eriffs report, the men
were arrested about 4:20 p.m. Monday tn the parking lot ol
Sanford Plaza, U 3 . Highw ay 17-92.

On Ju ly 23, the goaU s till had not been moved and Circuit
Judge Joseph DavU Jr., sitting tn lo r a vacationing Mize, gave
M rs. M orris another legs) ultim atum —get rid ol the goaU
within 10 days or risk county anim al control officers seizing the
anim aU and putting them up (or adoption.
M ize later refused to reverse his earlier order and M rs.
M o rris appealed to the F ilth D istric t Court ol Appeals. On
Monday, the Daytona Beach-baaed court denied Mrs. M o rris'
request that Mize’s order, In effect, be overturned.

H O M E BU R G LAR Y
A set ol radio headphones and 4440 cash was taken Irotn an
Altamonte Springs home over the weekend.
Betty Drury, 22, ol 10113 Colsenta Way, reported that her
property was taken sometime between 9 a.m and I p.m.
Saturday. Deputies said there was no sign ol forced entry to
the house.
G O N E SH O PPIN G
Iris Dean Roberts, 31, oi 304 Teakwood lan e, Altamonte
Springs, took her fam ily shopping Tuesday night and came

M rs. M o rris suffered another legal setback last week when
C ircu it Judge Kenneth U f f le r dismissed a lawsuit (lied by
M rs. M o rris against the county which sought to have that
portion o l the county's land development ordinance prohibiting
the keeping o l livestock In a residential area declared un­
constitutional.
Saying "the goat saga has gone on long enough," U lf le r
dismissed the suit with prejudice, meaning It can't be reflled.

Pope Holds Audience
C A S T E L G A N D O IJO , lU ly (U P I) - Pope John
P a u l II, overriding the wishes o l hU doctors slid
protected by exceptional aecurity measures, today
held his first general audience since he was shot In St.
P e ter's Square 14 weeks ago.
"T oday, Wednesday, there U a tradition of general
audiences," the ll-year-old pope fold a crowd of 4,000
gathered In the courtyard ol hU 17th century hilltop
v illa 13 m iles south of Home.
"T h e last (general audience) was supposed to have
been M ay 13lh," he said. "That audience aUrted
reg ularly, but then we a ll know what happened."
The pope went ahead with the 34-minute general
audience despite advice from hU doctors that he use
hU six -w e e k slay at the summer v tlU for complete
real
When he left (he hospital Aug. 14, hU doctors said
John Paul should not hold public m eetings any more
U s in g than hU brief Sunday prayer appearances.
A s a measure o l the pope's Impatience to resume hU
usual busy schedule, the audience r a n * a day after
John Paul hosted a (oik music and dancing (estival
with 2,300 Irish vlaltori at the villa.

You Think R ates
Come Down Soon
READ THIS
Many people believe rates are at on all time high and are likely to begin falling soon.
If you agree, it makes sense to lock-in your investment at a guaranteed interest rate
while rates are high.
A t First Federal of Mid-Florida you can. Our Money Market Certificates offer you a

WEATHER

guaranteed future return set at today's high money market rates.

NATION R E T O R T : Scattered showers and thunderstorms
dotted the M ississippi River Valley today Iron) Wisconsin and
southern Minnesota to northern Arkansas, and the West
prepared (or more itillin g heat. Springfield, Mo., was splashed
with nearly 2 Inches of rain In an hour. Thunderstorms con­
tinued across eastern portions o( the G re at Plains from
Nebraska to Oklahoma and showers and thundershowers
lingered over the G u ll Coast. Skies were clea r this morning
over the Northeast and the West, loe Angeles sweltered In 100degree heal Tuesday. The high today was expected to be 102, &amp;
degrees above the record (or the dale.
A R E A R E A D IN G S | l a m.i; temperature: II; overnight
low: 79; Tuesday's high: 12; barom etric pressure: 29.97;
relative hum idity: 77 percent; winds: north east at I mph.
T H U R S D A Y ’ S TID ES: DAYTONA R E A C H : highs. 7:07
a m , 7:27 p in .; lows, 12:47 a m , 12:11 p in .; PORT
C A N A V E R A L : highs, 1:39 a.m., 7:29 p.m.; lows. 12:31 a.m.,
12:44p.m.; B A Y P O R T : highs, 1:24a.m . 12:27p.m ; lows. 1:44
a m., 7:94 p.m.
BOATING FO R E C A S T : SI Augustine to Jupiter Inlet, Out
» Miles: Wind northeast to east 10 to II knots today becoming
southeasterly tonight and Thursday. Seas m ostly 1 to 4 (eet
Winds and seas higher near scattered thunderstorm*, more
ndherous south today.
A R E A F O R E C A S T : Partly cloudy today with a chance of
allrm oon thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday
with scattered showers and thunderstorms. Highs mostly
upper 90s and around 90. U w s tonight low to ntid 7th. Wind
easterly around 10 mph but stronger near thunderstorms. Rain
probability 40 percent today, 40 percent tonight, 30 percent
Thursday.
E X T E N D E D FO R EC AST: Partly cloudy with widely
scattered m ostly afternoon and evening thunderstorms. U w s
In the low to m id 70s north to near M south. High* from the mid
90s to lower 90a.

FICTITIOUS MSSSI
MWlet IS KsveSv fliw n Ihsl I sm
snestsS In kvtm sts s i V}&gt; 1* CM
C sn iff I s n t w s s S . F I s
JIM S
Ism m sif County. FIFTHS vndsr
in slk lllw u s n sm ssS S H O w riM I
DANCI STUD IO , snd tost I misns
Is rsfiu se m u « sm * with Itw
Clerk sf i k s C ircu it C tu rl,
Sswlnsls County. FHTM t m SC
csrssncs ysitN IDs provisions ss Ihs
Fictitious N u n s S lt t u f v Tow n
Isclitn M l OS Flee Ms S lsM ss
ISV.
SM Cstny J O 'lissp s
PuWISK August I. It. II SS. INI

Ssmmols County, SIMMs undsf
IKSllcllllsut name ol F I a AUTO
S A LC S .sn a IKSI I in tsns Is
ngtstss MM n sm s »itK IKs C lsrt
m IKS Circuit Court. Ssminsls
County. Florida In sccorSsncs
•UK IKS prov,lions f* IKs PK
lilioul N sm s SIslut ft. Town
SfOtfn SSI OS » torts* Slslvlts
ISV
I f Ann H u

D ll

DCl MS

»

E vening Ik n u k l
Wednesday.

Don’t speculate on investments with fluctuating returns. Open an insured account with
guaranteed interest at First Federal of Mid-Florida.
30 M O N T H
M O N EY M A R K E T C E R T IF IC A T E

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15.90

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Federal regulation prohibits
compounding on this account.

Effective Annual Yield
• *10,000 m inim um d e p o sit

• *500 m inim um d e p o s it
• Rate e ffe c tiv e through A u g . 31, 1981

• Rate effective through Aug. 31,1981

Interest Penalty is required for early withdrawal

F IR S T
FEDERAL
MID-FLORIDA

PvMilK Au«ulI IS. H Sfprymbsr
I. t, INI

w

»m

“We’re here to help'

n i in i

24. INI—Vel. 74. No. 4
TKs tsslsre

Sanford Offlca 3090 S. O rlando Drivo (305) 323-3770
fr * * : r .

lessee CUst FsUsts FsM ft IssMre. FIffMs JJMI
L
II week. II N i Mm *. M M i t Mm M . IM.Ni
Year, IN .« . &gt;r SOaMi
II H i M M i IS-IIj a M*«I»V
uaatj Year, ui.aa

i

�»

Evening H trjld . Sanford FI.

Wednesday, Aug. 7*. 1*11—1*

Altamonte Sew age Treatment Plant OK'd

NATION
IN BRIEF
*4

Voyager Survives
Journey Beyond Saturn
P A S A D E N A , C alif. MJPI) — Voyager 2 flashed past
Saturn today, sending so*ntisls their closest look at its
stormy gas clouds and whirling snowball rtngs, and
, providing a triumphant last hurrah for what may be a
j, dying era of U.S. space exploration.
• We have again threaded the needle in space,"
exulted Project Manager E sker D avis as the nuclearpowered spacecraft soared on through Saturn's
system, clim axing a four-year Journey with pinpoint
accuracy,
,
At 11:11 p m. E D T Tuesday, Voyager 2 sped Just
63,000 milea above Saturn’s yellowish cloud tops — only
, 1.7 seconds and 30 m iles off perfect targeting, after a
•» looping l.VbUlion-m lle Journey to the planet.
It m ay have been the last such spectacle until
Voyager 2 reaches the outskirts of the solar system,
passing Uranus in 1988 and Neptune in 1989. In an era of
shrinking budgets, no new planetary exploration
missions have been given final approval.

California's Med fly Setback
By United Press International
California today faced two new setbacks In its war
against the Mediterranean fruit fly — the discovery of
five flies near l/ts Angeles, 300 m iles from Use m ain
infestation, and a Japanese refusal to ease restrictions
on fruit imports.
The flies, found Tuesday at a private residence in
eastern Los Angeles County, were shipped to
Sacramento to determine if they were fertile. If they
are — as o fficials suspect — pesticide spraying w ill
begin tonight in the area, which serves as California’s
leading produce distribution center.
Initial "m icroscopic tests indicate (the flies I were
fertile," Ijat Angeles County Agriculture Com­
missioner Paul Engler said Tuesday.

By BARBARA FEARS
Herald Stall Writer
A ltam onte Springs City Com ­
m is sio n e rs
adopted both
a
w astew ater treatm ent charge and
established a wastewater treatm ent
facility fund during their meeting
Tuesday night.
The commission also ordered
Jackson Street (Pleasure Island
D riv e ) clo sed , term ing t( a
"sw am p".
U nanim ously
passed,
a
w a ste w a te r tre a t men I I act lily
charge will be adopted to "properly

fund" the anticipated expansion of
the city
sewage
tr e a tm e n t
capability.
According to Director of Public
Works Don Newnhant, the com­
mission expects to collect 880,000 in
fees from each new developm ent lo
help Itnance the project. The plan! is
expected tucost between $10 million
and $17 million.
Newnhant said the plant is needed
because of recent and planned ex­
pansion in the Central Florida area.
"W’e provide sendee to unin­
c o rp o ra ted Sem inole C ounty,

Sanlando Utilities, Southern Slate
U tilities, U tilitie s Inc., city of
Maitland, city of Eatonville, and
north Orange County.
A construction tim etable hasn't
been set,
"We have
th re e
possible
schedules,”
N ew nhant
said.
"Cuiutniclion nuiy begin on Jan. 1,
1983,1984. or 1983 Expansion should
lie completed Ju ly 1. 1984. 1985. or
198ft,"
Other monies will be gained ironi
lees collected when a contractor
receives a penult.

The sewage fee is $300 for each
house or equivalent built, $421 for
w ater inside the city limits and $525
for w ater ouLside oi the city limits.
These fees a re usually put into a
m iscellaneous improvements turn!
thal last year helped lo finance an
elevated w ater tank.
Amendments will be added lo the
water, sew er and drainage trust
fund In order to assure funds for Utc
plant. Ttiese amendm ents will in­
clude th e se w e r assessm ent
re c e iv a b le s ,
18,579 and the
a sse ssm e n t of the Montgomery

Itoad sewer, $8,579,
C alling ii a sw am p , com
m issioners closed Jackson Slrec
(P leasure Island Drive).
"W e’re going lo let It re tu rn b a d
to natu ral land," Commisslonet
Dolores Vickers said. "T he roai
leads right into Prairie I-ake st
there won't be any (raffle cut off
There is just so much sw antp a w
m uck lu c k liter*,"
The city lias given up all claim to
the land, which is owned by Con-so lld a te d Resources C o rp . of
A m erica in Atlanta.

Great Buys
We’re your Nike
headquarters.

Sportswear styled to
g o the distance.

Sale 6.39 ea

Rag. 7.M. Haayywaighi swaalshiria and swaatpania
a rt grtat tor a is ic n a . sports or Just plain running
around Shirt hat a crewnack collar and aa im long
siaevas Pants havt a drawstring waist Cotlon/acryiic
In navy or gray, liza s XS to XL

Sale 4.79

Men i lo-cut leather basketball shoe
constructed tor rough play and minmum
comlott Polyloam longue, padded collar,
arch support Sizes 6 lo 12.13

Reg. I.M . Heavywwght tweatshort has elastic waistband
and notched park legs in navy cotton/acrytc or
gunmstai.cotlorVacrykc/potyester Sites XS to XL

Reg. 8.99. Football|»rsey has quarter sleeve, with
crossover V-neck styling Polyesier/colton. Fashion
colors Sizes S lo XL

Thousands Evacuated
SAN F R A N C IS C O lU P I) - A contractor's d rill
pierced a gas m ain and sent a "w hirlw in d" of choking
yellow-brown gas laced with cancer-Unked PCBs
through the heart of the city’s financial district, forcing
the evacuations of tens of thousands of office workers
and shoppers.
The gas shot like a geyser from a 18-inch pipeline fur
2W hours Tuesday before Pa cific G as &amp; E le ctric Co.
crtw s were able to stem the flow. Traces of the gas,
however, continued to leak Into the a ir until shortly
after 11 p.m. when the leak was finally scaled.
One worker was overcome by fumes and
hospitalized, and many of the evacuees from 20
buildings left coughing with their ryes tearing.

Nixon Payoff Confirmed
W ASHINGTON lU P I ) — Form er President Richard
Nixon last year paid a fired Pentagon o fficial SH2,000
to avoid a tria l in a lawsuit the ex-whistleblower
brought against him , Nixon’s lawyers confirm.
The payment was part of an out-of-court settlement
between Nixon and A. Ernest Fitzgerald, who charged
he was fired by Nixon (or disclosing coat overruns cm
the C 8 A transport plane. He had sought $3.5 m illion.
Confimation of the payment came Tuesday in legal
papers filed by Nixon’s lawyers in an effort lo keep
alive his appeal of the case to the Supreme Court,
despite the out-of-court settlement.
Nixon’s attorneys want the court to rule on whether
he is protected from suits brought for acts he may have
committed as president.

HOSPITAL NOTES
Emjnurt A Dune Alhford A
bJOr 9 &lt;rl
OISCHAAOI!

Stm iM W M e ie e rla l M . t j . t . i
A w fu l! IS
ADM ISSIONS
SAN FO AD

V AN FO AD
Hinton* Brtda*»

frtnd* A SUIT

Otborjn C C irrrr

l l t h f f A H d*» ll
Gordon L B rM !* v
T r i m 0 Dudltv
Ammw M m M o*»rd
»nn W G r,n « .
AilA V S*Al. D l l i r y
Andrew J Sul*!. 0 * o o n i
Suisn M a j r r t n . O rs n « j City

• tjm jrin * E

G o tti

VH*n J*ct»
Cnjrit* V Mod Iocs
Ad* E Thomot. DoBory
W Herd H Ouprt! Oollono
Wfilicn McBurnoy. Enttrpriw
B tsirlc* A Vsndt*. N*w
Smyrno B*#cn
Flnlty M Muller. Omtda

BIRTHS
SAN FO AO

Ths Suprjfrw Court hat rultd that a stata cannot control
tha ratal cabla T V oparaton eharga for tha comm«real
f l i t movlas and s n lirta in m a n l sptdals they offer.

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

PRICES
SM ASHED
O N ALL
CONCORDS

W ACONEERS

EAGLES

CHEROKEES

SCRAMBLERS
SP IR IT S
COME

CJs
PIC K U P S

SEE - D R IV E

ONE

AW AY.'

5ANF0RD MOTOR CO.
AMC
5 0 0 S. F R E N C H

;

JE E P
AV.

322-4382

Womens Lady Brum basketball shoe H is
lull leather upper, polyloam longue, to ll
padded collar and arch support
Sizes S lo 10

Reg. 3 49. Basic athletic short with elastic waist and
vented leg Assorted solid colors with contrast trim
Sizes XS to XL

Sa
le 7.19
R e g . I M . Heck endCourr* athletic Jarseyam great
style* like V-neck, button front baseball look and t.
length Jersey Po-Vester/cotton Assorted color*
and sizes

Sale 4.39

Reg. 8.48. Gym short with notched leg.
elastic waist and navy stripe trim down
aides Polyester/cotton Qrty Assorted sizes

Boy's Burt Bruin lo-cut leather basketball
shoe fashioned alter the men's Bruin
Polytoem tongue, padded collar and arch
support Sizes 12.13.1 to 5

Sale 4 for

$172

JCPenn

i

SO O XP

Battery

Mileagem aker’P lu s
steel-belted radials.

Reg. 884 ea plus led la»* size P15S/80R-13
B/W The Miieegemasar* Plus steel belted
radial has ■ polyester cord body with
2 steel belt*
Sue_______________Reg 8*1e
$54 843
Pl55/BOR-t3B/W
P165/80R-13W/W
64 St
88 84
PI75/80R-13
PI85/B0R-13
71 88
P195/75R-14
79 63
P205/74R-15
87 89
94 78
P215/75R-1S
P225/75R-15
99 78
104 83
P235/75R-15

Rag. 179. The JCPenney 800 XP Ballary
provide! estra power for dependable
stertt tor your car or truck II I
maintenance tree and ia available In group
sizaa lor moat American cart

•Plus. ted. u s Item 1 U lo 1 OSetch lire.
Mo trede-ln required.
Tire* mounted at no tstrt charge

Sale 6.99

Sale $38

Rag. 10 .n . Heavy duty shocks with
t-3/16 " piston provide a firmer, more
stable nd* with greater rattstanct lo
wheel bounce Installation available at
additional charge

E IT lg re p o ly
belted tires.
Rag. 851 plus fed las* size A78-13
W/W E l Tigra 278s have a 2 ply
polyester body with 2 fiberglass baits
Whitewall
Sue
A78-13W/W
B78-13
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SANFORD PLAZA
OPEN 10a.ni.-f p.m. MON.SAT.
SUNDAY 11i)0-SiM

&lt;

�Evening Herald
IUSPS 4 I W I

3C0 N. F R E N C H A V E ., SAN FO RD . F L A . J7771
Area Code M i- in - 2611 or B 1-9992
W e d n e sd ay , August 36, 1981— 4A
Wayne 0 Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano, Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home D elivery: Week. 11.00; Month, 34.23 ; 6 Months, 124.00;
Year. 34300. By M ail: Week, 11.23; Month, 33.23; 6 Months,
00.00; Y ea r. 07.00.

Support For
By J A N E C A S S E !.B E R R Y

Salvador
Freedom House, the New York-based human
rights organization, has been promoting the cause
of liberty for 40 years. During all of that time, it
has remained studiously non partisan, fiercely
independent, and uncompromising in its ad­
vocacy of fundamental civil and political rights
throughout the world.
It is, therefore, especially significant that
Freedom House’s board of trustees has issued an
emphatic, 2,500-word statement of support for the
beleaguered government of El Salvador. The
Freedom House trustees archnrdly unaware that
much of the criticism directed at U.S. aid to the
Salvadoran government comes from those who
base their opposition on human rights” grounds.
Hut Freedom House was championing human
rights before some critics of the Keagan ad­
ministration's policy in El Salvador were born.
Thus, its determination that the government of
President Jose Napoleon Duarte represents the
best possibility for that nation to continue to move
toward democratic institutions" carries not only
moral authority, but reasoned historical
judgment as well.
Freedom House readily concedes, ns have other
observers of the Salvadoran conflict, that not all
of those supporting the guerrilla campaign to
overthrow the Duarte government are MarxistLeninists. Hut the statement notes, quite
correctly, that the guerrilla leadership is solidly
communist and that, should the left win, power in
El Salvador would rest in the hands of those
committed to an irreversible totalitarianism."
Moreover, the Freedom House trustees found
abundant evidence to support the Reagan ad­
ministration's charges that the Marxist in­
surgency in El Salvador is receiving significant
assistance.. . from the Soviet Union, Cuba. East
Germany, Czechoslovakia, Ethiopia, the
Palestine Liberation Organization, and Viet­
nam."
Freedom House cites this Soviet-bloc sub­
version together with the ideological cast of the
Salvadoran insurgents as reason enough to
support the Reagan administration's policy of
providing both military and economic assistance
to the Duarte government.
What gives the Freedom House statement
added credibility is that it doesn't gloss over the
undeniable fact that extreme rightists, who op­
pose the Duarte government's agenda of political
and economic reform, still cling to positions of
influence in some Salvadoran military and police
units. Hut the trustees credit the Duarte govern­
ment for similarly undeniable progress in
diminishing the power of the extreme right and
acting against those in the security forces who
commit excesses that are morally reprehensible
and politically counterproductive.
In truth, the Duarte government is beset from
both the extreme right and the extreme left. And
without the active American assistance endorsed
by Freedom House, it couldn’t possibly hope to
survive long enough to offer the people of E)
Salvador an alternative to cither rightist
repression or Marxist chain gangs.

Please Write
Letters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mailing address and, if possible, a
telephone number so the Identity of (he
wrller.may be verified. The Evening Herald
will respect the wishes of writers who do not
want their names In print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters
to eliminate libel or to conform to space
requirements.

BERRY'S WORLD

A comprehensive assessment of Seminole
County citizen needs and problems ts now un­
derway. The project ts being conducted by the
Florida Cooperative Extension Service — the
local office in Sanford and the state office at the
University of F lo rid a in Gainesville — in
cooperation with the Seminole County Board of
County Commissioners.
During the week of Sept. 21. 2,200 citizens in
Seminole County w ill receive a questionnaire
which lists some potential problems and needs of
the general com m unity, home and family, youth,
and home gardening and horticulture. They w ill
be asked to indicate tf they believe the items
U«ted are in fact im portant to Seminole County
and to identify others that were not included.
These 2,200 I n d iv id u a ls w ere random ly
selected m such a w ay as to provide a
representative cross section of the adult
population in Seminole County. Because a
sample of citizens and not the total population Is
being contacted (to keep the costs down), it la
very Important that each person return his or

her questionnaire.
Information from the survey w ill be used by
the Seminole County Extension Office to make
sure its programs address the most pressing
problems or needs, as identified by the citizens.
The information w ill also be made available to
the County Commission and other agencies for
use in their decisions about priorities for use of
resources.
U C F — It's a whole new ba ll game this (all tor
students at the U niversity of Central Florida,
who are the first to attend U C F under the
recently adopted semester plan that replaces the
quarterly system at all nine state universities.
As a result of the sw itchover, a number of
chances are In order. M ost concern course
requirements and adm inistrative matters.
A prime feature of the new system is the
decision to opt for the “ e arly sem ester" sy stem
Students who began classes at U C F August 24
w ill complete the fall term Dec. 21. The spring
semester begins January c and ends with

commencement on A pril 30
And for the first time, placement testa in
E nglish and math have been given a ll incom ing
Ireshmen In order to gauge each student's
capabilities and subsequent course assignments.
Guaranteed Student Ir a n deadlines are Nov
20, for the spring semester 1982, and M arch 26.
1982 for those planning to attend next summ er.
Most financial aid programs require full-tim e
attendance. Under the semester system , that
means 12 credit hours for undergraduates, and
nine hours for graduate students.
A Sertom a Club for civic-minded business and
professional men is bring organized in Sanford.
X chart«■ organizational meeting is scheduled
( jr noon. Scot. 3 at the Cavalier M otor Inn
restaurant. Anyone interested tn team ing more
about the organization may contact t a r r y Hayes
at the F lo rid a Power It U ght office in Sanford by
calling 322-5381. Hayes is a member of the Apopka
Sertoma G u b , which is sponsoring the new club
here.

JEFFREY HART

DICK WEST

EUREKA! A Toxic

M o re
P ro b le m s
In T h e A i r

CH EM ICAL CONTAMINANT
WHICH HARMS ONLY
Environmentalists ?

Rocnv
mtnnew s

NLA
•81

W ASHINGTON (UPI&gt; Yet another
round-up o( ae rial Incidents that apparently
were unrelated to the atr controllers' strike:
Tinker's D im , Calif.;
Two hang gliders cam e within Inches ol
colliding today, Just seconds after they had
pushed off from the top of 26-foot-high
Tinker's Dam.
A F e d e ra l A v ia tio n A d m in istra tio n
spokesman said the "n e ar m ill" was caused
by tricky wind currents that forced one ol the
hang gliders to veer and wobble rather than
straighten up and fly right.
The F A A said neither glider was in radio
communication with any a ir traffic control
point.

Octaadrop, Fla.:
A large box kite being (town on Oceandrop
Beach by 10-year-cid Sidney Ploughfoot of
Mount Molehill, Ala., crashed about five
yards offshore today, narrow ly missing two
surfers.

ROBERT WAITERS

S h a r e h o ld e r C o n tro l M y th

Eyewitness sunbathers said the kite had
been flying e rratica lly for several minutes,
now swooping abruptly downward, now
suddenly darting back skyward. They said
young Ploughfoot seemed to be having
trouble getting the hang of it.

W ILM IN G T O N , Del. — Those who were
surprised by the success of this city 's E .L du
Pont de Nemours Co. In the highly publicized
recent struggle for control of Conoco Inc.
probably haven't met Michael Locker.

An F A A spokesman said the kite was not
occup ying any a tr space under the
Jurisdiction ot either the m ilita ry or civilian
traffic control system.

D icke r, is president of Corporate Data
Exchange Inc., a New York-baaed research
o rg a n is a tio n that sp e cia lise s tn p u b lic
dissemination of Information about who
really controls the fate of the nation’s largest
corporations.
Its most recent publication, coedited by
liocker and Stephen Abrechl, ts the C D E
Stock Ownership Directory, covering cor­
porations included in the Fortune M0 list.

Chin Strap. W.Va.:
A paper airplane launched from a second
floor window of the Chin Strop Intermediate
School landed safely on the softball field
today after skim m ing over the heads of a
group of mothers arrivin g lor a P T A meeting.

That directory discloses that an elite group
of 34 wealthy institutions — banks, Insurance
companies, pension liin d i and investment
management firm s — controls substantial
portions of both Du Pont and Conoco stock.

Although tta exact departure point coukl not
be traced, authorities who studied its flight
path M id the plane appeared to come from
the room where M ias tab elia Pringle, a
member ol the lu n u n e r faculty, was teaching
a m akeup class in beginning algebra.

When Du Pont offered to purchase Conocn's
stock, thus rescuing Conoco from hostile
takeover efforts mounted by two other firm s,
those powerful financial institutions were
m erely trading the stock among themselves
and their clients.

Thia theory waa reinforced by the findings
of Ernest "W ham bo" McNuke, the gym
teacher, who unfolded the plane and
discovered It had been constructed from a
sheet of notebook paper containing several
algebra problems — a ll of them wrong.
An F A A spokesman said the incident In no
way reflected adversely on the competence of
supervisors in charge of atr u fe ty .

Upper Iota, Iowa:
A string gust of wind yanked an umbrella
out o l the hands of M rs. Ow ly Sue Cranny on a
downtown s t m t today. It was blown almost
half a block before tta handle snagged the
awning of Torporbolt's Notions.
Fortunately, It was raining at the time and
few people were about. Otherwise, somebody
might have been hit by the airborne bumbershoot.
Asked if the Incident had any bearing on the
atr controllers' strike, an F A A spokesman
threw up his bands and declined comm ent

F o r example, Capital Group Inc., a
relatively obscure to e Angeles-based in­
vestment management firm , is the nation's
third largest holder ol Du Pont stock, con­
trolling more than 2 S million shares.
C apital Group also ts the country's third
largest bolder ol Conoco stock, with Just
under 3.3 m illion shares valued at 1307.9
m illion in l u portfolio.
Others tn the same category Include the
Prudential and Metropolitan l i f e Insurance
companies as well as several ol New Y ork
C ity 's biggest bantu — Chase Manhattan,
C itic o rp , M a n u fa ctu re rs H ano ver an d
Bankers Trust.
The 34 financial Institutions collectively
control more than 11 1 percent of Du Pant’ s
stock and almost I I I percent of Conoco's
stock, according to the C D E directory.
T h a t co n ce n tra tio n of pow er Is a
phenomenon most corporate executives don't
like to d is c u s publicly. Indeed, the business
comm unity continually attempts to per­
petuate the myth of corporate control held by

middle-class citizens investing their savings
in common stocks
The New Y o rk Stock Exchange, for
example, last year completed Its eighth
Survey of Shareownerahlp tn Am erica, which
showed that more than 29.8 m illion people
owned stock in various publicly traded cor­
porations.
More than IS 7 m illio n households — one out
of every live in the country — Include “ at
least one sliareholder," boasted the study,
which claimed that “ we can look forward to
having a much stronger cadre ol private
enterprise capitalists."
Conoco had an estimated 72,000 “ private
enterprise capitalists," a ll of whom were
eligible In choose among Du Pont and two
firm s attempting unfriendly takeovers ol
their company, the Seagram Co. and the
Mobil Corp.
But those 72,000 individuals own only 21
million shares, w hile 611 financial Institutions
exercise more than twice as much financial
power through their control ot 34 million
shares.
Virtually all of the m aterial in the
m eticulously re s e a rc h e d C D E directory
comes from the public tiles ot frd e ril
agencies, n o ta b ly the S e cu ritie s and
Exchange Ccenmiasion, the Federal Reserve
Board and the Com ptroller of the Currency.
But that inform ation ts never publicized
and few citizens have the resources to
examine that data to discover that the five
largest shareholders control 82.4 percent of
all Ford Motor Co. stock, 86.9 percent of
Standard Oil of Ohio.
Sim ilarly, I D E 's study shows that J.P.
Morgan and Co., the parent company of New
York'* Morgan G uaranty Trust Co., Is the
largest shareholder in no fewer than 13 major
corporations, including Bethlehem Steel,
E astm an K o d ak , In te rn a tio n a l Business
Machines and Untied Technologies.
C D E studiously avoids commenting upon
its findings, but the conclusion is inescapable:
The widely touted concept of broad-based
shareholder control of the country's largest
corporations ts a fraud.

F X -1 6 s
For
T a iw a n

C IA Plan W ould

"Excuse me/ Mind It I HI next to you end ten
you my who** We story?"

W ASHINGTON - The Central Intelligence
Agency is preparing to Join forces with
totalitarian regimes and anti-communist
factions tn the conduct of covert operations
around the world.
Thia could open up a Pandora's box of CIAsponsored coups and revolutions. It could
throw us Into an uncomfortable embrace with
extremists who a r r m orally obJecUcnablr.
with dictators who oppose U.S. principles,
even with terrorists whom we d a lin to abhor.
C IA chief W illiam Caaey ti eager to stir up
mischief for such unfriendly regimes as
Libya, Iran, Cuba and Angola. And he Isn't
too particular whom the C IA finds to do the
dirty work.
In a lopaecret planning document, he
recommends "that consideration be given to
improving the capability of the agency to
rapidly escalate existing aid to anti­
communist forces."
Am erica's allies r n epprehe.aive about
CIA meddling in the w orld's trouble spots. To
.
"•

Not only allied leaden but A m erican
p o lic y m a k e ra are concerned about the
clandestine activities that Caaey advocates.
They w arn that the CIA w ill wind up sup­
porting revolutionary lorces and exile group*,
with no control over what these groups do.
Caaey argues that the dismantling of the
C I A 's c o v e rt c a p a b ilitie s now le av e s
President Reagan "w ith no reasonable option
other than Increased cooperation w ith anti­
comm unist forces abroad."
This was tried by ex-President Jim m y
C arter in an undercover effort to bring down
Ayatollah Khom eini In Iran. It was a hit-andmiss operation that la described In secret
papers as clum sy and "chaotic," lacking

central control and policy objectives, b u ie
Department strategist! were moved to send
Carter's Nstional Security Adviser Zbigniew
B rzeiinski a blistering secret memo.
The clandestine operation, they wrote, was
“ clinically schizophrenic, withdrawn, con­
fused and characterized by bizarre fantasy."
The CIA has been especially inept at
staging covert m ilita ry operations. The
agency sponsored an Invasion of Cuba that
ended in the Bay of P ig s fiasco. In lao s, the
C IA recruited an a rm y of Meo tribesmen to
harass the communists and thea abandoned
them to be slaughtered. S im ila rly , the CIA
arm ed Kurdish m ountain tribes and en­
couraged them to attack Iraqi forces — only
to withdrew support after the political signals
w e n chtngtd and lo a v i them to the mercy of
the Iraqi army.
Y et CIA strategists are eagerly planning to
invest in new m ilita ry adventures and other
clandestine projects that once again would
employ surrogates of dubious reliability- As

/ ■ - : .•»
-

'4# 8* k. ^J

.

overcome this problem, Caaey urges "that
increased conditioning of allies to the
necessity (and, Indeed, the opportunity) for
covert operations against Soviet surrogates
and revolutionary forces be coordinated by
the N S C (National Security Council)."

I &lt;• eagtl »e&gt; w 4 4«6

W-«

n -U

!

|

In his presidential cam paign, Ronald,
Iteagan expressed strong support lo r the;
R epublic ol China on Taiwan, and though he;
moderated his language in some respects
there is no reason to believe that he is any less!
com m itted to the independence of O ut island ■
He therefore should take a serious look at thei
developing strategic situation over the 100m lle-wide Formosa Strait separating Taiwan
fro m m a in la n d China, w ith p a rtic u la r
reference to Taiwan’s request to buy FX-16
advanced Jet fighters from the United States
Since the communist trium ph of 1919.
m ainland forces have not possessed the
capa bility ot mounting an am phibious in­
vasion across the strait. A successful invasion
would require control ol the a ir, plus a sub­
stantial amphibious capability- both of which
have been beyond the capacity of Peking.
Rut things are changing. Peking and Great
B rita in have been cooperating on the
development of a new Jet fighter, equipped
w ith the high performance Spey engines
These planes w ill be comparable tn per­
form ance to our new FX-16. They w ill
operate witn tne support ot advanced
ground-control and radar systems which the
U.S. is already selling to m ainland China.
Certainly, given the realilieg of balance-ofpo w e r p o litic s vis-a-vis the S o v iets,
strengthening the m ilitary capabilities of the
People's Republic can be in the U.S. interest.
But there’s a kicker involved here.
As U.S. officials are aware, Peking has
been esploring the possibility o l purchasing
fro m a New Orleans firm am phibious vessels
of the sort used for troop landings. That, plus
the new aircraft, would change the balance of
power in the Formosa Strait.
Now, there might well be a good U.S.
argum ent lo r selling the landing a aft to
Peking, even though you don't need them (or
a Chinese operation against Siberia. Such
landing craft would be very useful, on the
other hand, in a Chinese war against the
S o v ie t’s Vietnam ese s a te llite . W hat ts
required, however, ts that the security of
Taiw an not be Jeopardized In the process.
Without atr superiority, Peking lacks an
am phibious rapacity against Taiwan. The
A m e r ic a n FX-16 would ru le out a ir
superiority.
Rut tim e is important. In the absence of the
FX-16, the balance of power in the stra it could
change drastically by 1963. The FX-16s cannot
be delivered before 1963, and It would take
two years to complete the necessary training
and integrate them Into the Taiwan a ir force,
There Is no doubt whatsoever that Peking
would protest loudly if we went ahead with the
FX-16 sale to Taiwan, but that la a ll it could
amount to, verbal protest. The current
leadership tn Peking is nothing if not realistic,
and it has a keen sense of Ita own strategic
priorities. It is not threatened tn any way by
Taiw an — though it la by the Soviets and their
clients in Hanoi.
F a r off down the road one can envision
some accommodation between Taiw an and
the mainland. The mainland could evolve
aw ay from M ao’s dogmatic centralism
There are signs, already, that Peking values
T aiw an's economic success. Both sides view
Taiw an as a province of China. Econom ic
cooperation, cultural ties, perhaps eventually
some kind of federal solution are certainly
im aginable.
What has to be ruled out la a m ainland in­
vasion across the 100 miles of water, and for
that reason we should Immediately authorize
the sale of the FX-16 to Taiwan.

JA C K A N D ER SO N

•WWW*

1
(

(sr back as last May, Casey began his
secret planning, with sights on A fric a and
M iddle E a s t M y associate Ron M cR a e
uncovered &gt; document, dated M a y 9, I
labeled “ D ra fl Covert Operations
Document Africa-M iddle East."
Casey contended that Sovle enroachmcn
A fric a can be reversed. "The supply
Cubans available as trained surrogate fore
he wrote, "has probably teen optim ized."
argued, therefore, that the Sovlels-would
unable to supply any more Cubarw to ce
teract a clandestine U.S. offensive.
"T h e end of requirements tn either An[
or E th io p ia could release tip to 10
Cubans," he wrote, “ but the outlook lo r i
a v a ila b ility appears slight, even In the
sence of covert Interventions by UJs. o r
powers."
Casey asked lor "im proved
capabilities," meanwhile, to support
com m unist forces, calling this a
n e e d .. . especially tn Angola."

�Evtnlng H*rxM. S*nterd. FI.

Wednttdxy.Aug It. IUI—5A
-----------------------------------------------------------

“

Longwood Commission Approves New Fees Schedule
I

Bjf J A N E CASSKt JIKH R V
Herald Staff Writer

The 1.on gw nod City Commission has
unanimously approved new fee schedules
that will increase the rest of building,
plumbing and electrical permits.
The commission acted in response to a
request by the City Building Official
R.A. B ryant, who said present fees were
set Aug. 14. 1978
"A s you know," Bryant stated in his
m em o !n City .‘ ■‘.•mnirtrator David

Chacey, "in the three subsequent years,
the cost of building has increased more
than 30 percent. In order to m aintain and
improve the present high degree of in­
spection and record-keeping, it is felt the
accom panying schedule should be
considered for adoption a t the earliest
date possible ”
The new schedules double the base
inspection and reinspection fees from 15
tt&gt; 110. The base fee applies to perm its for
i in u t i v &gt;*»*■ valued up to ail including

11,000 fo r all construction valued at
more than 11,000 up to 1100,000 the fee
will be (5 per 11,000 or fraction thereof.

$1,875 for the first million, plus 50 cents
for each additional thousand or fraction
thereof. O ther fees include: demolition
p e rm it, $25; m oving p e rm it, $50;
swim m ing pool, minimum, $25, $5 per
$1,000 and $5 for electrical inspection;
and schools, $25.
Valuation is established on the basts of
$15 per square foot living area; $850 for
each bath over one; $500 [or each half
bath; $10 a square foot for closed
garages; $15 per square foot or contract

Valuation over f 100,000 up to 1500,000,
the fee is 1500 [or the first 1100,000 plus
$150 for each additional thousand or
fraction thereof. F or valuation over
$500,000 up to $1 million, the fee is $1,500
for the fust $500,000 plus 75 cents for each
additional thousand or fraction thereof.
For valuation over $1 million, the fee is

price, w hichever is g realer for sm all nonresidential buildings under 5,00 square
feet; contract price for multi-family
dwellings; and Urge non-residential
buildings over 5,000 square feel.
Minimum plumbing perm it fee is $10
with $3 charged (it each Installation such
ns bathtub, hot water heater, and floor
drains.
Minimum fee for electrical perm its is
$10 with a 15-cent rharo.e for miUei*.
lighting fu tu res and 50 cents each outlet

controlling window type air conditioner.
Fees tor electrical sendee installations
range from $2 to $12; motors and
generators, 50 cents to $10; appliances, 15
rents to $6 ; neon, $10 for first tran­
sformer. 50 cents for each additional one;
electric welder, $1 to $2 ; power tran­
sformer in building, $1; electric elevator,
$7.50; display case 10 lights or less $1*
Inspection- ,nr electrical equipment {&lt;3
which no («• is set, *lh per hour.
,

In Longwood

T h e W o r ld ’s L a r g e s t
I n d u s t r ia l C o r p o r a t io n s

City Hall Expansion Work Gets Go-Ahead

B y C o u n t r y o f O r ig in
'Includes two co*owned with Netherlands interests
$olxc* TNiCont*r«nc«El0tt&lt;)

Uwgwwnl City Administrator David Charey has
been given the go-ahead by Cily Com missioners to
begin work on the city hall expansion project.

donate concrete blocks. Be also said prison labor
could be used to dig around the area to prepare for
the addition's foundation.

Plans call for converting the form er fire station
adjoining city hall a t 175 W. Warren Ave., into a
public m eeting hall with offices for the m ayor and
com m issioners, a s well as rest rooms.

Chacey said he expects blocks to be up, roof on
and windows and partitions in by (he end of the
year.

The company with headquarters In Londun and
Ontario, Canada, plans to build and sell window
fram es at its Longwood facility.

In other business Monday night, the commission
passed a resolution requesting financial assistance
under the F lo rid a H e cre a tio n Developm ent
Assistance P rogram for developing ihc city's Belter
Park. Die city is seeking $25.(100 to match funds in

Included in the proposed budget for the 1981-82
fiscal y e ar Is $15,000 for funding the first phase of
the project. Chacey said he wants to get started with
the expansion because someone had offered to

i

The commission also approved a site plan lor the
Hubert Hunt Ctirp. building to be constructed on thd
southwest corner ol West la k e Street and State
Road 434. The plan was approved only after Darrell
Haas*, vice president of Bowest Realty, culled Hunt,
long distance to get his com m itm ent to pave tho
street as far as the first entrance to his property.

The vole for approving the project was 4-1 with
Commissioner Steven Uskcrt voting against giving
C hatty permission to begin. He said he felt the
plans need further study.

Chacey said he has consulted an architect on
plans for the project, which will eventually include
remodeling the exterior to m ike it blend-in with
other buildings In the laxigwood Historical District

■I I mi •

the city budget.

Purchase of a $5,000 Minolta copy machine lor
city hall was also approved by the commission.—
JANK CASSF.l.BKHHY

F A IR W A Y P LA Z A ...1 7 -9 2 ...S A N F O R P

THE BIGGEST BUSINESS
A l m o s t h a l f o f th e w o r ld 's Uto la r g e s t c o r p o r a t io n s , th e m u lt in a t io n a ls

J a p a n e s e in t e r e s t s . T h e r a n k in g is b a s e d on b u s in e s s s t a t is t ic s f o r 1979,
th e la t e s t y e a r fo r c o m p le te f ig u r e s f r o m a ll c o u n t r ie s . O t h e r n a tio n s
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�*A— E vening Herald, Santord^Fl.

Wednesday, Aug. ]|, m i

Woman Miner

PEOPLE

The Work Is A Piece O f Cake, Despite Rats, Pits, Pinches From Co-Workers
S A IN T C L A I R S V I L L E . O h io
( U P I) — After waiting on tables,
U ndo Sabo has found coal m ining a
piece of cake - despite the pits, the
rats and the pinches from coworkers.
A veteran of more than three
years at Saginaw Mines, Mrs. Sabo,
38, is now the only woman at that
mine and one of the few women
m iners in Ohio. She hasi.'t Just
adjusted to the grimy, back-bending
work 4 4 m iles underground. She
likes it.
"W aitCuM tig U much h a u le r,"
ih e in y s. "Y o u have to take a W of
abuse from the customers and the
boss. They make you week overtime
a ll the tim e, for no estra m oney."

IN BRIEF
There's One In Every Crowd,
But More In Wetumka, Okla,
United I'reis International
S U C K E R D AY: They still celebrate Sucker Days In
Wetumka, Okla. It's In memory of the August day in
1950 when con man F. Bam M orrison w hirled Into town
from Chicago and talked local businessmen Into buying
tickets to a circus. The merchants stocked up on bread,
hot dogs and even hay for the circus anim als "On the
day the ctrcua was to be here, F . B am M onison was
nunc ami iiic town was iuii of peopie and there was no
c irru a ," said Ga5 Fata, u w irw M iia n of the five-day
1M1 Sucker Days festivities. Later, M orrison went to
Jail, and Sucker Days became an annual event Alter
hla release he returned once as guest of honor at a
Sucker D ay celebration. One change this year — in­
stead of a Sucker Queen, a local g ir l w ill be named
M iss Wetumka Teenager. "The title of Sucker Queen
got too many Jokes about II," Ms. Pack said.

A s a waitress, Mrs. Sabo says, she
cleared Jf-5 every two weeks, plus
m aybe another !1M in Ups. M ining
six days a week, she takes home |72S
every two weeks
There’s the sense of pioneering
too. " I t ’s funny how people re a ct,"
she says. "I had to f ill out some
papers for a loan and the guy goes,
■What do you do?' I said, T m a coal
m iner,' arid he says, ‘No, not what
your husband does Y o u !" ’
M rs. Sabo m*i the m an who
became her third husband al the
mine, bhe sayi meeting K a y Sabo
was one of the fringe bene m s.
" I had to win him over," she s a y s
"The first time we met he told the
boss, 'Don’t ever put me with her

By the Editors of Psychology Today
Roughly 98 percent of Am ericans never cgt beyond me tirst
two y ears of studying ■ foreign language? The reason for the
high drop-out rale, ■ccdrdtng to a psychologist at California’s
San Jose Stale University, is that conventional language
teaching methods "thoroughly traum atize most beginners."

M O R E M EM O RIES: Bab Hope la about to chalk up
another memory to be thankful for — a two-hour TV
special In connection with the new Gerald R. Ford
Presidential Museum in Grant Rapids, Mich. Hope
says he considers this one of the most prestigious
events of his life. The sold-out show w ill be taped Sept.
17, for airin g Oct. 28 on NBC. The guest list includes
l« r ille Ball. Sammy Davis J r ., Foster Brooks, Tony
Orlando, Danny Thomas, M ark Russell, Susan Anton
and Glen Campbell. Prrtldrn t and M rs. Reagan head
the list of dignitaries to attend the dedication of Uw 111
m illion museum. Speaker of the House T ip O'Neill and
Senate M ajority lead er Howard R aker are honorary
co-chairmen.

The traum a is needless, says the psychologist, James J.
Asher. Over the last 20 years, he has developed an alternative
teaching method. It seems to show that learning a language
can be, as Asher puts It, "stressfree."
He believes conventional teaching forces students to speak
and m em orize words that their experience tells them are
meaningless. If an Instructor of Japanese tells students that
"su w are" means "sit," Asher says "the students know from
long personal eaperlence that sit m eans a ll.”

D ow n 's Syndrom e C h ild In Lead

Beau Bridges Takes A Chance
O n 'The Kid From N ow here'
By D ICK K L E IN E R
H O U Y W O O D (N E A ) - In the past,
movies on T V have I tad real handicapped
people — paraplegics, blind or deaf
people — In the roles of characters with
those handicaps. But when Beau Bridges
wanted to use a mentally retarded child
to play a m entally retarded child, most
people told him he was craiy.
Apparently, he wasn't: lie 's done It
Bridges directed (as well as acted In) a
TV movie called "The Kit
Kid from
Nowhere," which w ill be shown on N B C
sometime this (all. It ta about a (Ingle
parent with a m entally retarded son —
and a m enially reterdad tx&gt;y named
R icky W lltm an plays Uie leading role.
The background of this project is a
ilo
ry of coincidences, and ot men and
•lory
women taking chances.

The F a r r e lls ' ch ild re n and B ea u
Bridges' children go to the same school
(the first coincidence). Beau read the
screenplay and showed It to producer GU
Cates. Cates had produced something six
years before with Brldgts (second
coincidence) and had recognized Beau's
Innate lee ling (or direction.
"1 read the sc rip t,” Bridges says, "and
I wanted to direct It. I told G il that I
would only play the lead If I could also be
the director. And he went along with
me."
At about that time, Bridges happened
to read a story in the Los Angeles Tim es
about a m an named P h il Brody. (That
was another coincidence.) Brody has
long taught the m entally retarded in the
lo o Angeles school system, and Ihe
newspaper story told of his newly
d tv iio p e d m ethod of teaching the
retarded to read through sign language.
Another coincidence came to light
later. It seems that Judy Farrell, when
she was researching her story, had gone
to P h il B rody’s class, and Brody had
referred her to some tingle parents with
retarded children.
We come
Mrs.

to
to

Menu Bridges (left) stars with
Kicky tsm nun and Susan Saint
Janies In a TV movie called
The

K id

again.'
"It w is a Saturday and we were
doing dead work, cleanup. It was my
first time and the boss was overly
protective. You have to lift these
heavy bagi of rock dust and throw It
around, but he told m e to Just sit
down and have some coffee.
"I kept saying ‘Shouldn’t I be
doing something?' and he said. ‘No.
no.’ So, Pm sittin g ."
M rs Sabo, the m other of six
children, has gotten good at coping
with rude behavior. She laughs
about "dirty old co al m iners" and
shakes her head over the men who
"turn off the lam ps on their hats so
you can't see who it I s Then they run
up behind and pinch you on the

" I t is tough. But women can do the
w ork w ith a ll the automation th e y .
have. In the pick and shovel days,
m aybe not."
&amp;
" I 'v e got muscles," she says,
ro llin g up a sleeve. “ At first 1 had to |&gt;
d rag the 50-pound bags of rock dust,
because I didn't like to ssk for help.
N ow 1 can Just chuck them up under .
m y arm and throw It out. I can carry
tw o on m y back."
n
She Is practica l about other In- /
conveniences in the mine too — the
ra ts, for exam ple, "some of them
the sire of sm all pups." She feeds
them m eat out of her lunch sandwich- ^
"F ia ts mean the area is safe. I'm ;
happy to see them. It you see rats *
running, you better get going, too.'

breast o r the re a r."
When a m iner on an earlier shift
hung a nude pinup in the shuttle car,
Mrs. Sabo just penciled In a dress.
She nicknam ed the m iner who in­
sisted on c a llin g h e r " P u t s ,"
"B o o ts"
" A t f ir s t It bothered me,
especially the language," Mrs. Sabo
says. " B u i you got to let It pass. If
you called a m an out every time
something happened, the mine'd be
down all the tim e. I laughed U off or
stayed aw a y."
she added, “ Y o u can understand it
l the harassm ent). Coal mining is
known as a tough Job. When a
woman is doing it, that makes the
men look less tough.

Learn A Language By Doing, Expert Says

Hope Plans 'M useum *Special

It began w ith Judy Fa rre ll I the wife of
"M-A-S-H” star M ike Farrell) who wrote
the story In the first place. It was her first
attempt at a m ovie screen-play.

)

fro m

N o w h e re ."

"I

h a d seen a p ic t u r e , "
says
B r id g e s , w h o a ls o d ir e c t s t h is
t n o v le ,
In w h ic h a n o r m a l k id
p la y e d a re t a r d e d k id . I f e lt ( h a t
w a s In t e r r ib le t a s t e a n d I w a s
d e t e r m in e d lo u se
a
r e a lly
m e n la llv re t a r d e d k i d . "
Bridges and back to Brody.
Bridges decided early on to use a
retarded child, U he possibly could.
" I had seen a picture,” he says, "in
which a normal kid played a retarded
kid. I felt that w u In terrible (sate, and I
was determined lo use a re a lly mentally
retarded kid."
He told Cates of his Idea. Cates told him
it would be risky because they had only a
19-day shooting schedule, and If the boy
turned out lobs i problem, that could pul
(he whole project In Jeopardy.
It was Brody who recommended R icky
W lltm an to Bridges.
" R ic k y w u a former pupil of m ine,"
Brody says. "H s's now E .M .R . cducabie mentally retarded. He can read
a l the beginning first-grade leveL I knew
that he would be able to concentrate,
which Is rare In people of this sort
I R ick y h u Down's Syndrome.) And I fell
he wouldn't be distracted by the
cam era."

(One more coincidence: Susan Salnl
James, who plays Um) child's mother in
this movie, once did a T V program shout
the Special O lym pics
pics, an even! lor the
mentally retarded. On that show, she
interviewed a ty p ica l entrant: Ricky
Wlttman.)
Brody brought Bridges and Picky
together,
"As toon as I met R ick y ," Bridges
says, "1 w u attracted to him as a person.
G il met him. And GU u id , ‘He's char­
ming and I love h im — but you're c ra iy !'
So I asked R ic k y to go down the field
from where we were and pick up a hose
that was there and hold U up and then tell
mo, ‘I'm the best runner.'
"And ho did just what I had told him to
do — although, as I later found out he
always does, he said m ore than I'd told
him to u y . "
Ricky, as you watch him work during
the shooting, aeema to be having fun. Ilia
duticult to decide whether or not he
knows w h it he is doing, whether he can
make the connection between w h it he is
doing and the things he sees at home on
N s TV set.
"1 think he'U gel ■ great kick out of
seeing him self,” Brody u y a , "but It
won't be like the kick ordinary actors
get.”
Aida W lltm an, R ick y '* mother, u y s
that every night he comes home after a
day cn the set and repeats the lines he
has u id during the day.
"He realizes what hie Is doing," she
u y s . "F o r a m entally retarded boy, he's
very smart. He la h a rin g a good Urns —
everybody is spoiling him .
"1 consider that In many, many ways
he's normal. He rem em bers a lot of
things He teaches me things I think
someday he could be an assistant
swimming coach; he's a fine swimmer.
He can teach children to swim.
"The one thing I don't want D for him
to not do anything and receive money for
th a t"
When Bridges decided to use Ricky, he
convinced his producer, GU Cates, but
then he a lio had to convince NBC. He
took Ricky to N B C and introduced him to
Joan B arn ett, the n e tw o rk 's vice
president (or m ovies for television.
“ Ricky kissed her hand,” Bridgte
u y s “ And then he ordered everybody
else to k iu her hand, too."
And he got the part.

They then "evaluate the utterances as noises (hit have no
v a lid ity ." The sounds may be stored in short-term memory,
but ra re ly enter into permanent m em ory.
In A sher's method, students le a m to comprehend a foreign
language visrerally, before they speak It, just u they learned
their own language u infants. Asher c a lls his method the Total
Physica l Response technique, or T P R .
A t home, Asher points out, Parra’s and caretaken typically
do not m ake children speak right sw a y, but let them show they
understand language when they follow a command or request.
F o r exam ple, a parent may u y , "W here is your teddy bear?
G o find your teddy bear." The c h ild soon attaches concrete,
physical meanings to words.
A sher's students also learn by acting on a series ot com­
mands.
A lesson in Japanese, for exam ple, starts with students
seated on either side of the instructor. The instructor u y s
"ta te " (stand up), but Ihe students. Instead of repeating the
word after him , as conventional language lessons require,
follow his example and stand.
Then the Instructor u y s "suw are" ( sit down) and sits down,
again followed by the students.
Soon the clam is following comm ands such as "haihlre"
(run) and ,Tomare"(stop). "W ithin m inutes." Asher u y s , "a
sk illfu l Instructor can achieve near-perfect, long-term com­
prehension for utterances such as, Stand. W alk to the chalk­
board and write your name'."
T o keep the sessions Interesting, Instructors try to vary the
comm ands lo make them playful, bizarre and silly: "Put the
chalk on your head and walk to the door;'' "G ive me your
w rtstw alch, walk around the table and scream ."
A s the sessions go on, the comm ands become more
sophisticated. Rut not until alte r 20 hours of training does
Asher let h is students speak. A t that point they reverse roles
with the instructor, uttering com m ands to manipulate hla
behavior and that of other students.
" A s with an Infant learning a firs t language," Asher u y s ,
"pronunciation Is far from perfect,” but like parents, the in­
structors do not correct it tl the meaning ta intelligible.
G rad u ally , Asher h u found, the pronunciation improve*.
Asher tested his method against techniques in which
students heard Japanese words and either (1) Just watched the
instructor obey the commands; (1) heard Its E n g M i tran­

CHEROKEES

T P R w as developed with the support of the State of
C a lifo rn ia and such federal n g m rie s as the U.S. Office of
Education and the Office of N a v a l Research. It Is now being
used by several thousand language teachers In the United
States and elsewhere around the world.

ATTENTION
K mart SHOPPERS
In our August 26, 1981 "8ack*To*
S c h o o l Extra S a v in g s " C o lo r Insert
Section, the p rices sh o w n by the
c a lc u la to r Illu stratio ns are not
m atch e d properly with the cal*
culators shown. P rices show n next
to the descriptive c o p y of the
calculators are correct. For the cor*
rect price refer to the descriptive
c o p y olthe calculators.
W e regret any In co n v e n ie n ce this
m a y have cause o u r custom ers.

Hidden

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testa have shown the method w orks w el' with school children.

T H E % 'A N N U A L

PRICES_
SM ASHED
W AGONEERS

Students learning by all four methods came back in two
w eeks for a revest. Members of the T P R group were able lo
understand and act out M percent of the single words they had
learned and 91 percent of the short sentences. In contrast, the
other three groups ranged fro m 86 to S5 percent recall for
sin gle words, and from 60 to 81 percent for short sentences.

HOWE'S Glass, Screen &amp; Hardware

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

CONCORDS

slation; o r (1) read the translation in a booklet.

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Cellmate O f Hanging Victim Contradicts Police
LOS A N G E L E S (U P I) — A man who
spent several hours in an adjoining cell
with former Long Beach State football
star Bon Settles, who suburban police
u id hanged him self w ith a Jail mattress
cover, has testified at a coroner's inquest
the cells didn't have m attress covers.
Settles was arrested June 1 and
charged with assault with a deadly
weapon on a police officer, possession of
cocaine and refusing to identify himself.
Three hours after he w as booked, he was
found hanging in his ce ll with a mattress
cover around his neck, police said.
Bernard P ra d lry , arrested on M arch K

- three days before Settles — M id
M onday he d istin c tly rem em bered
having a conversation with a man who
was released from ceil No. J in the
suburban Signal Hill Jail — the same cell
in which Settles was found hanging — the
day before Settles arrived.
•'! w as talking with the guy and 1 told
him there w asn'l a m attress pad or a
blanket in my cell," M id Bradley. "He
told me there w asn't a cover or blanket in
his cell either. None of us were ever
issued m attress covers. I never saw one
in that Jail."
Bradley was taken out of the police

11 Plead Guilty

sidered taking h is own life.
"He was asking me about how to get
out of Jail, posting b a il and all that,"
Bradley M id. "H e said he'd never been in
Jail before and he was scared. He wanted
to get cut of Jail. He sure never talked
about killing h im se lf."
D urin g h is b o o k in g , Settles was
severely beaten about the head and neck
by at least two Signal K ill policemen.
Chief Gaylord Wort in itia lly M id Settles
had only been struck on his thigh with a
nightstick when lie becam* violent inside
the police stationJbut later tenanted the
story and admitted the beating oc-urred.

station and into a Long Beach court for
arraignm ent about 1 p.m. on June L
Settles was found dead, police said, about
3 p.m.
"O n m y way out 1 walked past Settles'
c e ll," Bradley M id , "and he was sitting
on his bunk, leaning back against the
wall. I looked in and talked to him for a
minute, and I'm absolutely sure there
was no mattress pad on that bunk. There
was nothing on that bunk."
Bradley also supported claim s of
Settles' relatives and friends the 21-yearold football star would never have con­

E a rlie r in the day, a witness to Settles'
arrest M id two police officers put their
guns to Settles' head while picking him
up for a m inor traffic violation.
G loria Zabala M id she witnessed
Settles' arrest while waiting for a bus on
a busy street. She M id Officer Je rry fe e
Brown, the m ain arresting officer, asked
Settles for his driver's license and ca r
registration but the football star refused
to give him either.
An argument then ensued, Mrs. Zabala
•ski,, w ith B ff r m a! esc point caHLig
Settles an “ »« KnU " Momenta later.

another patrol ca r arrived at the scene
and two more officers w alked to Settles
car. ABer a brief “ tug-of-war" with
Settles try ing to keep his car door closed
and the officers trying to pull It open, she
said, Settles was dragged out of his car.
"Then the two officers drew their guns
and placed them on either side of his
head," Mrs. Zabala continued. "The
guns were right against the man's
temples."
Settles was then handcuffed, put tn
tlw rM X u d putice car and taken away,
oho M id.

G a s G u zzlers

In Circuit Court
B y B R n T SMITH
H erald Staff Writer
Eleven persons pleaded guilty in Circuit Court in Sanford
Monday to crim es ranging from attempted welfare fraud to
battery on a police officer. Defendants and their offenses
follow:
—Connie J . Pow ell, 21, address unknown, retail m en. Pow ell
was accused of stealing a 1190 automatic telephone answering
system from Fiurdmes in the Altamonte M all on June 10.
- P o lly Ann Huggins, 21, Welsh Road, Apopka, grand theft.
The charge against Huggins stemmed from a June 23 Incident
at the Casselberry K -M a rt tn which she stole 1160 worth of auto
parts and clothing.

R e tu rn
D ETRO IT (U P II — One auto Industry
nightm are— that people w ill again demand
big c ir s when the current sales slump ends
— appears unlikely lo become a reality.
There's a precedent for that fear; it
happened when the Industry pulled out of
its 1974-75 recession.
Forces also are developing in the car
market that m ight be interpreted as setting
the stage for a big c a r resurgence.

To

B ig

C a r

But so far, there is no sign large numbers
of consumers want to abandon the sm all
cars they abruptly turned to in A p r il of 1979
when the Iranian revolution provoked
gasoline supply shortages and huge price
Increases in the United States.
Through the first seven months of 1981,
sm all cars accounted for a larger share of
overall U N . auto sales than ever before.
Com part, subcompact and sm a ll, sporty

D e m a n d

S e e n

models, including im parts, accounted tor
61.2 percent ot the m arket in that period, up
from 61.3 percent in the Jantiary-July
period of 1980. B y contrast, sm all cars in
1970 were 32.8 percent of the car market.
Sales statistics like those have prompted
UN. automakers to concentrate most of
their resources In sm a ll car development,
in some cases, the big car market has been
abandoned.

U n lik e ly

C hrysler Corp. no longer builds standardsized cars. The Pontiac Division of general
Motors Corp. w ill drop its large models for
the 1982 year, Chevrolet is planning a
sim ila r action in 1983.
Consequently, It could be something of a
disaster if Americans abandoned sm all
cars, the way they did in 1976-77 when
m em ories of the 1973 oil embargo and its
gasoline lines faded.

—Beverly Branch, 21, 816 Valencia Court, Sanford, no
contest, attempted w e lfa rt fraud. On June 21, 1979, Branch
reportedly told w elfare officials that she was unemployed
when in (act she was w orking for Rocal Industries on Airp ort
Boulevard.
—William 1.00,22,214 Tem ple A v e , Fern Park, no contest,
battery. Lee was accused of breaking into the home of his ex­
girlfriend Sandra C o llins, 2961 Bed Bug Road, Casselberry, on
April 27 and beat her.
- K e it h E llio tt H asty, 18, 836 Church A v e , lavtgwood, bat­
tery on ■ police officer. H asty reportedly choked and punched
a Longwood policeman who was investigating a possible
burglary.
—Jeffrey M. Dunn, 19,2630 Oak Ave., Sanford, possession of
marijuana. Dunn was arrested June 12 after police officers
found several dozen m arijuana plants growing In h is yard.
-K e ith Alan Andre, 21, 1110 W. Tulane Drive, Altam onte
Springs, petty theft of a case of pastry from Kentucky F rie d
Chicken on State Road 436 and Interstate 4, Altamonte Springs.
- M a r k Paul Engelkins, 21, 610 Haywood Drive, Sanford,
petty theft. Engelkins w as accused of breaking Into Ute San­
ford Garden Club building on U.S. Highway 17-92 on M ay 19
and spraying paint on the interior and s eating an Am erican
flag.
—Jack Donald White, 18. 802 U tile Wekiva T ra il,
Altamonte Springs, unauthorized temporary use of a vehicle.
White attempted to steal a boat motor belonging to Charles
Morse, Altamonte Springs, on M ay 4.
-'Sherri Ford. 23, Del-and, attempted forgery. On S e p t 5,
Ford allegedly used a stolen check In the amount of (236.08 to
make a purchase at the Zayre’s department store, Sanford.
- E lm o Dean Goodson, 19, of 900 N. la k e T riplett D rive,
Casselberry, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
GouL*.. was Hopped by Casselberry pu iu w ia n Ogle Dam ron
on June 13 far suspicion of drunk driving. During an ensuing
investigation, a pistol w as found on the floorboard of the car.
The pistol had been stolen from a Winter Springs home three
days before, according to court records.
Sentencing for a ll 11 defendants was deferred pending
completion of Investigations into their backgrounds.

IN THE SERVICE
O M IV H . VRAN KS
St At I Sgi Omb» H Frank*. ion
* M r. am) Mrs O m br H F ran k*
Sr K MO I S Santoro A r t . S in
tors, K«s ow n d»for*t«J » » tn*
U $ A rm y Cem m tndAlion M t d t l
a) Nttltngtn, W rit O rrm tn y
T M Arm * Cam mandat ion Manat
** aw rrdro to (hot# individual*
• n o d r m o n ilra to o u ts ta n d in g
a c h ita tm a n l o r m trtto rlo u *
io ryteototh o pofto rm antaot tnoir
dutkot on b re n t ot mo A rm y
Frank* is 0 motor targtan* with
tha Jnd Support Command
Hi« w itt. J r it x a . w m a d aughttf
or Bobart T. p w ilip t at *1 Proaprct
St . Miltbury. M ats
Frank* i i a to n gradual# at
S a m to M*gn School. Sanford
JA M I s t o I I I a SON
Sot jam as l G.barson. to n of
lo on G.brrton «f Panntaukan.
N J . and Joan O ib t r t o n ot
longwood. hat barn nam ad out
Standing norKOm m lttibntd o il it rr
ot tha Stnottoid B arracks. H aw aii
Tha targtan! was Sal at I rd tor

p ro la ssio n a l s k ill, d u ty par
lo rm an ca
and
t it m p la r y
bahaytor
Gibtrson. an instructor. Is a I ff S
gradual* gI ly m a n H ig h School,
longwood

Arm y Pyt Kavin » P a rk a r, ton
ot W illiam C Parkar of Hanford,
and Shir lay W Cos* ot *M1 Hays
Road. Matey. N V . has com plain)
a lr a t k r d yahiela machanic cow s*
at tha U S Arm y A rm or School.
Fort K noi. ky
During tha covrsa, ttudantt
war a tramad to rre a lr angmas.
tran sm ission s, and in * l u t l .
a lr c t r lc a l and a ir h y d ra u lic
tystams ot tn* A rm y's Irtc k td
van lefts Thty alto ita rn a o to
par form r t io . t r r o p tratw n t tor
•bandonad. damagad. ditabtad or
m .rtd v th ic ltl
Parkar t wit*. Carol, t Iha
daughter of Mr and M r* Chart**
Sm ith ot Sri E Oib*on SI.,
Canandigua. N V.

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Quint as tha roiling fogt quiet as the fallen snow.
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Energy-etllclent models, 3.000 to 9,100 Bhj hr. Three
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OF SANFORD INC.

Doing Business In $**3ord Aroe Since test

Southeast BankPresents

18%Interest
WhileYouWait.
While you're waiting for your October 1
TaxSheltered Certificate to begin,well pay
you aful118% right now.
In ihe interest of your interest, Southeast Bank will
pay you at an annual rate of 18% if you invest from
$2,500 to $25,000 from now until October 1,1981.
Your investment must be in increments of $500.
Then, on October 1, Southeast Bank guarantees
to redeem this investment and will automatically
deposit your m oney in our new one year Tax Sheltered
Certificate.
This Certificate will pay the highest rate allowed
by law for qualified tax exempt savings certificates.
And the first $1,000 of interest you get will be tax free.
(If you file jointly, $2,000 is tax free.)
Check the chart below to see what this means to
you in your tax bracket.
Equivalent Yields at
Taxable Income Levels**

Tax Sheltered

Certificate Riles
9.0%
11.0%

13.0%

$30,000

$50,000

$75,000

12.7%
15.5%
18.3%

14.8%
18.0%
21.3%

17.6%
21.6%
25.5%

i j u i Mh

I

Your initial investment is backed by Southeast
Bank, the state's largest banking organization with over
$6 billion in assets.
Your initial investment is not a deposit, and is not
insured by the FDIC, the U.S. Government or any
of its agencies. It is, however, secured by a short term
U.S. Government security.
The Tax Sheltered Certificate you get on October 1
is a deposit and is insured for up to $100,000 by
the F D IC
Com e in or call your nearest Southeast
Banking Center today and take advantage of this
high interest rate.

©Southeast Bank
You can count on us:

M m A n fD C

••Awunr* *rmt/rd drikatum ri|iul to 15%an S jou* itlum
Ih n utfn it u iq r t I hi irgulMium to br piijlishrd on

A High Degree of Safety

r u n * * uwngi ( rrliln Jtev

■g a r H i* * I to i h jf* r

fn k til Uw requiri** a udnlintijl penihy il Any portion d J (jua/ifnif Ln ru-mpt u v u ip
l i f M m J f r »l roiA vrm if b rttx v m A tunty

PH. 322-8321
1*1 N. M APLE AVI.
SANFORD

/#

*4 -*l

j

4f i V i i

�- / **

* »V I***

IA — Evening H trakl, Sanford, FI,

Says Millionaire Oilman

Photos Show Titanic's Propeller
A B ILE N E , Texas (U P 1) M illionaire oilman J a c k G rim m u id
today that color photographs taken
of the North Atlantic ocean floor this
sum m er " d e f in it e ly
show
a
propeller of the T ita n ic ."
G rim m u i d he b e lie v e s the
propeller is still attached to Ihe
wreckage of the White Star Liner
which struck an iceberg and sank
A p ril H . 1911, killing m ore than 1.50C
people.
Tl&gt;e pictures indicate the propeller
L «ip roxim altly 18 feet in diam eter

'T h e y

W a n t

T o

— the u m e size of the Titanic’s
propellers, he said.
" ] ’m c e rta in we lo ca te d the
Titanic. The propeller blades art
suspended w ell above the ocean
floor and that m eans to me and my
associates that the propeller Is still
attached to the shaft.
"The blades are definitely not
rusting on the ocean bottom and it's
cbricus thi&gt; Lave lo be suspended
from som ething."..............
Grimm emphasized that his team
of experts agrees with him in his

conclusion that the blades are part
of the propeller.
"Tw o blades In particular are
visible," he u id . "They are sticking
up (off the ocean bottomi and are
quite easily identifiable.
The color photos, taken i t a depth
of m ore than 12,000 feet with exotic
new deep-sea photo equipment, have
been «tn(ii*d irtc e the second phase
of G rim m ’ s two-year expedition
concluded in July.
The pictures were taken s i IS-

second intervals for several days In
the course of dragging operations
over the area where the ship wer.t
down.
G rim m charted the T r ia s A A M
Research Vessel Gyre this summer
for h is second attempt to locate the
sunken luxury liner snd recover the
fortune in gold and Jewels believed
to be in (he safe in the purser's
cabin
G rim m a*iu Uie photo studies are
now encourag ing him and his

a sso cia te s to consider another
venture next summer in ihe hope of
actually boarding the wreckage
through the use of a deep-sea sub­
mersible known i s the A lu m ln a u l.
The cra ft carries a crew of tw i
and has already been tested sut
crssfuliy at ocean depths of 15,001
feet.
" I'm more confident
the i
ever that we can accom plish ou r
objective now that we have locate I
the sh ip," G rim m u id .

H o m e '

G o

'F r e e C u b a ' G r o u p R e p o rte d ly D e m o ra liz e d

CHARLTON COLLEY

Rotary District
Governor To Visit

B L U E H1U.S, T u rk s and C aicos islands lU P I) — A group of
57 Cubans whose plan to set up a "Free Cuba" government In
Guantanamo Bay was dashed when their boat ran aground on
a bny British Island are reportedly "demoralized" and “ want
to go home."
"They've been sleeping on the lawn in the back of the police
station for a week now,” u i d Sgt. Don Grant, head of the sm all
police contingent in B lu e HiUs on the tiny British Colony Island
of ProvtdencUles.
"They're demoralized and they want lo go home," he u id .
The Cubans, he and other witnesses u id , h iv e frequently
engsged in fist-fights among themselves and are regular
customers at the bar at the Island's tiny airport term inal.

located near the docks and the police station.
"They're selling their w itch e s to buy drinks," observed one
bemused local resident.
Amid much fanfare and publicity, Ihe Cubans had left M iam i
and headed toward the U.5. bate a l Guantanamo B ay, on
Cuba's eastern tip, where they planned lo set up a "g o vern­
ment in exile" even though the Navy u id It would arrest and
send back anyone who tries to land there.
Their boat hit a reef last Tuesday off this 15-by-llve m ile
Island 100 miles from the B ritish Coast and have been aw aiting
another Cuban-chartered boat to come and pick them up ever
since.
Watergate burglar F ra n k Sturgla, a Cuban who flew In last

week after the Cubans' 73-foot fishing boat ran aground am I
eventually broke up, left Monday for an undisclosed
destination on a plane, u y ln g another boat was on its way t
Lake the group to Guantanamo.
The boat, called the Captain Jack, was due Monday m o m in i:
but was delayed by bad weather and la expected today.
G rin t, who u id " I'm getting very tired of it a ll," report*
that he had not been able to find a single witness who herd wha
some of the Cubans called an explosion that they cla im *
destroyed their boat as it u t on the reef.
Wilfredo Navarro, head of Cubans United who has bee:
directing the whole operation from M iam i, claim ed tha
Castro's commandos bombed the wreck.

Sanford O n Monday
The District Governor of R otary District No. 698 w ill visit the
Sanford Rotary Club and address the club luncheon on M on­
day, Aug. 31. lie w ill also conduct a club assembly In the C iv ic
Center at 8 p.m. that day.
Charlton Colley was elected Governor of the newly-formed
District (98 al the International Convention In Soo Paulo,
llra ril. He first joined the Rotary at the Ilialeah-M iam i
Springs club in 1963 and served that club as secretary and
director.
In 1971, Colley m ovtd to W inter Park and Joined the Orange
County East club. He ha s served as secretary, director and
extension counselor. He became a Paul Hants Fellow In 1979.
Colley has worked for 11 y ears in the usings and loan in­
dustry and 10 years in the mortgage banking field. He has been
president of the Florid a H om e Mortgage Company since 1971.
He and his wife, Pat, have a daughter, Dcreen.

✓

/

u s v

i v

-c j c j

v

i v

v

u

t v it y * s u ^ u i m m *

'

a

12• W eatherstrip windows and doors, and seal
cracks with caulking.

2 * It you h aw window units, use “low ctx)l" and
th e lower numbered settings.

t

3 * T urn your air conditioner off completely w h en
you’re away from hom e for a few hours or longer.
4 * C lean or chance your air conditioner filters
m onthly

1

- 1-3* Install flow restrictors in your showers to hold
down the use of hot water.
-* a
^
^ lin V'H,r washer or dishwasher only with
lull loads.
1

C

5 . Use fans-ceiling, box or o scillatin g -an d set
iz
your air conditioner th erm ostat even higher Inr
greater savings.

T
»,
-rw
i
him on appliances, I Vs, stereos, etc. w hen
not in use.
n .

. ,
.
!’cvcra ,tcm s at once* aru‘ ,n l ” u a K ,*cr
part of the day - morning or evening.

17* Use a microwave oven instead o f a conventional

6 . U se fans whenever you can instead of air
conditioning.

o w n w henever possible.

It you Have a swimming pool, use an automatic
7* ,Install ceiling insulation o f at least R19 value. 18.timcr
ro operate your pool pum p m ore
,

8* W ith the circuit breaker off, lower the therm ostat i hi your water h eater to 140 it you have a
dishwasher, 120° if you don’t
9 * Install a water heater insulation blanket
10

\

• If you're away from hom e for more than
4 8 hours, shut off your w ater heater.

1 1 • Put solar film on all windows exposed
to direct sunlight.

V

\

economically.
J 9 * Clean thecondensercoilson the back or bottom
of your refrigerator twice a year.

I
I

2 0 * Keep refrigerator door openings to a minimum.
2 1 • Keep your refrigerator temperature a t 38-40
degrees. Set your freezer at 0 degrees.
2 2 # There are m any o th er ways to save.
G m tact your local FPL office.

»

/
/

S I S A V E I I F L O R ID A .

MEDCO D RU G S

I

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

PRICES
SMASHED
ON
CONCORDS
EAGLES

A LL

Cut a fewcorners
and save electricity.

WAGONEERS

T h e

CHEROKEES

b y c o n s e r v in g e le c t r ic it y .

lis t a b o v e s h o w s y o u h o w

C u t

SCRAMBLERS

to save m o n e y

it c a n h e lp r e m in d y o u a n d y o u r f a m ily

PICKUPS

SPIRITS

h o w

e a s y i t is t o c u t a f e w c o m e r s e l e c t r i c a l l y .

B e c a u s e a k i l o w a t t y o u d o n ’t u s e is o n e y o u

C O M E SEE - D R I V E O N E 1A W A Y!

d o n ’t p a y fo r.

SANFORD MOTOR CO.
50b S. F R E N C H

AV.

F o r m o re c o n s e r v a t io n in f o r m a t io n ,
c a ll y o u r lo c a l F P L o f f ic e . A ls o , a s k a b o u t
o u r new

b r o c h u r e e x p la in in g h o w

a n

F P L

h o m e e n e rg y ' a u d it c o u ld h e lp y o u c u t e v e n
m o re c o m e rs .

:'V.i
• V-,-. * ■ .

*

-

-

\* r?4 . z
J k

JE E P

AM C

M o re a n d m o re o f o u r c u s to m e rs a re
d is c o v e r in g t h a t e v e r y d a y.

it o u t a n d p u t it s o m e p la c e h a n d y .

W h e re

.t

y v ru v a n

1 • Set your central air th erm ostat at 78° or above.

Controllers' Hours Cut
T A M P A , F la . (U P I&gt; — exclusive military use and
Work hours ol a ir tra ffic
th o u flight arc handled by
conlroltara
at
Tam pa
m ilita r y
co n tro lle rs
al
International Airport w ill be MacDtU.
n i l tram M hunt* la IS I w u ll
Sunday, lower chief R ic h a rd
Allen u id today.
Supervisors and controllers
P r e s c r ib e d
who remained on the job when
the nationwide walkout began
P p a d in g
Aug. 3 had Iwen on a 10-hsurday, aii-day work week.
By MEDCO
Hut A llen said enough
M
any
people
have learned
personnel are on the job and
ihe simple procedure of
a ir traffic Is moving sm oothly
In kin g
I heir aw n
b lo o d
enough to cut back In the w ork
pressure. However, d o cto rs
schedule, luiving controllers
and p h a rm aclita s t r e s s
work (our 10-hour days and
cheeking the reading you get
w ith your own e quipm ent
une 8-hour day each week.
against another re a d in g
"We know eiactly what we
inte rm illrntly. There ia •
have to work with now," A lle n
possibility that quite a few
u id
"We know that we
may tie obtaining ina ccura te
need."
readings. Incorrect re a d in g s
He u id about 33 people now
may occur either because of
are handling the a ir tra ffic
control work, compared to 61 because the in s tru m e n ts
have Income Inaccurate,
before the walkout. A llen u i d
W hrn buying blood p ressu re
18 are regular controllers, 17
reading apparatus, a lw a y s
of them members of the
m akt sure Ihe cuff is apunion, and Ihe re st a re
proprisle for the person w ho
supervisory personnel.
w ill use it. There are cuff*
for newborns, c h ild r e n ,
Allen u id some controllers
adults and ths very obese.
also are being sent hom e
Secondly, your Instrum ent
early (ran (heir 10-hours
should oe checked for a c ­
j shifts a l times when there are
curacy and adjusted a l le ast
1enough personnel on hand to
once a year, more often If the
[handle the traffic.
Instrument is used once or
twice a day. II the ep p a ra tu s
The contrullera at T am pa
is dropped It Is im port
&gt;rtant to
l IntematlonJl art handling a
im h a v e ’ It c h r c a r d
a reduced commercial schedule
mediately
and m ilitary (lights to and
• from M acDill Air Force Rase
nn longer ir e handled by the
17-91 AT Dth ST.
Tam pa tower.
SANFORD
Alien u id m ilitary flig h ts
Rare assigned certain sectors
of T am pa 's airsp ace fo r

\

22w a y s y o u c a n use less electricity.Right now.

t it * T r a y s

312-4382

FLORIDA POWER &amp; LIGHT COMPANY

)
V

ft
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»

■A- J f ’ * * ■~-i-V- ♦

**•sifk ** *♦ .

■ » r&gt;—'

■

�SPO RTS
Second Best
Richmond Scorches Seminole For World Series Crown
B y S A M COOK
Herald Sports editor
‘ ‘ It should have been a one, two, three
inning."
R ichard Colley rntionally pointed
this out Wednesday morning when
trying to put Tuesday night's Bronco
World Series championship game in
Lafayette, l a . in perspective.
What should have been and what
really happens, however, are usually
two different things, which is why R ich­
mond, Cal. hung a 13-3 beating on
Seminole Tuesday lo r the Bronco title.
“ We lost the game In the first in ­
ning," muttered Coffey. "A lte r that we
couldn't play our game. It just psyched
the kids out."
The inning started sim ply enough
with a ground ball back to starting
pitcher T erry M iller. The Sanlord
righthander, though, booted the ball lor

an error.
A fly ball lo right fielder Tracy
Turner also was dropped and the
Broncos were in real trouble. R ich ­
mond went on to score five runs to
command a lead it never relinquished.
The Broncos bucked back in their half
of the inning. Shortstop K ir k Roiek
singled and stole second base. He ad­
vanced to third base when Jim m y
W aring grounded out to the pitcher.
F irst baseman Mark Coffey followed
with a single to left field to chase home
Coffey with Seminole's first run.
Coffey the manager, had yanked
M ille r in the first inning in (aver of
K e lly tly s e ll. The hard throw ing
righthander lim ited Ihe Californians to
a single run in the second, but the
Broncos s till trailed, 6-1,
flyse ll helped himself by drawing a

'* 0 4 * . ’ 4.f

RUNNING RAMS
la k e M a r v ’ s M a t t P a lu m b o R e ts In a lit t le w o r k p r io r to S a t u r d a y ’ s
n li A n n u a l S e m in o le C o m m u n it y C o lle g e C r o s s C o u n t r y J a m b o r e e ,
[•a lu m h o a n d t e a m m a t e M a r k l l i v l h e j r e a r ) a r e T w o o f C o a c h M ik e
iib s o n ’s y o u n g r u n n e r s f o r th e n e w h ig h s c h o o l w h ic h o p e n s M o n la y . S e e T h u r s d a y ’ s E v e n in g H e r a ld f u r c o m p lr t e d e t a ils o n t h e
s e a s o n 's f i r s t m e e t w h ic h is a ls o o p e n to th e c o m m u n it y ._____________

walk in the bottom of the second. He
stole second base and went to third two
outs lale r on a ground ball lo third base
by Dale Stevens.
le f t fielder Mickey Helm s was then
nailed by a pitch. H elm s broke for
second base on Ihe next pitch and
lly se ll alertly streaked home with the
second Seminole run It was his second
steal of home In two days.
R oiek then rapped h it second of three
hits for the night— a double—to right
center to score Helms and pud the
Broncos within 6-3 after Just two In­
nings.
“ We had Ihe momentum alter the
second," said Colfey. “ B ui then we go
out and make simple, routine mistakes
to give them Ihe ballgam e." Waring
misjudged a fly ball in the third Inning
and California went on lo score four

more runs to post a 10-3 bulge
Center fielder Bernard le e washed a
three-run home run in ihe frame for the
big blow, fe e had ihree hits and drove
in five runs for Richmond. Seminole
helped the Californians with seven
errors, while Richmond didn't commit
a mistake.

squeeie-bunl attempt, got Coffey &lt;&gt;n an
easy pop fly to third base and induced
Taubensee lo ground out lo second
base.
Coffey conceded Richmond the hit­
ting edge as the California sluggers
piled two ru n s in the fourth and one
m ore in the fifth inning to halt ihe game
by the 10-run rule, bul still fe ll his team
was better.
"T h e y
were
better
h itte rs,
definitely," assertrd Coffey. "They
were Iree-swmgers. They got up there
and didn't worry about anything. If you
threw them a fastball, they'd cream it.
" B u i that lousy firs t
Inning
psychologically took us out of tin1game.
It should have been a one, two

To further dampen the Seminole
spirits, the Broncos loaded the bases in
the fourth inning, but tailed to dent the
scoring column against starter Fred
Bryan i
Stevens rapped a single lo open the
fram e and H e lm s re a che d when
shortstop Charlotte Wiley came across
second base too early to take the lorceout throw, R oiek then dropped a bunt
single to fill the bags.
Bryant, however, wriggled off ihe
hook when he struck out Waring no a

S rm m o lf
HortA, t t
W « rln g.(|
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Wiley. l%
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ref&lt; *r.c
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Seminole

3 0 1 0
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0 1 0 0
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■ r* jM m m F rid e f,. M iller, H y te ll 111,
Cbbert 111 *nd Ti u d o i i m

Rookies

Seahawks Scratch

Revive
Broncos

Toward Better '81

COACH D AN R E E V E S : "C m an
optim istic person. Since we were 84
last year, realistically 1 (eel we can
Improve with the addition of some
rookies. Denver kicked our tails (when
I was with the Cowboys) at D allas last
year, so t know we have the talent.
Attitude plays a big part I 'll con­
centrate on offense."
O FFENSE
PASSING Craig Morton has 18 years
In the N F L but he still rates first shut
at Ihe QB job because M att Robinson
faltered and rookie M ark Herrmann
needs to beef up a little. B ig problem is
finding competent set of receivers.
Haven Moses is fading al 36. R ick
U p church w as m ore dangerous
re tu rn in g k ick s . R ile y Odom s le i
himself get pudgy. F A IR to POOR
R U N N IN G No more shuttling of
whole crew of backs in and out like
before. Reeves wants to settle on two
starters, visualises ex-Oitef Tony Reed
as one. R ick Parros, hurt In *80, could
surprise at fullback, pushing Jim
Jensen. Rob L y tle w ill probably
emerge as swing man. F A IR lo POOR
B LO C K IN G One of the more stable
areas on Bronco squad They have
tliree good tackles in Claudie Minor,
Dave Studdard and Kelvin C la rk and
have added rooklrd Ken lard e r. B ill
Bryan Is solid center. One change
might find Keith Biahop pushing Paul
Howard out of guard position, but Tom
C la ssic sticks staunchly at other guard.
Watch L a n ir r 'i development. GOOD
DEFENSE
L IN E The 34 alignment rem ains In
force, and strategist Joel Collier wiU
■ till alternate units. Rulon Young, who

came strong as rookie, could Jump into
starting role. They have two lough
cookies (or nose guard in Rubin Carter
and Don Latim er. The mass rush Is Just
fine. GOOD
L IN F .B A C K IN G
T hey
were
devastated by injuries in '60, with Bob
Swenson lost and Randy Gradishar
gimpy. But it wasn't a ll a loss since Bob
Naim e and L a rry F.i ans got chance to
develop s k ills . Now Swenson has
returned, and he’s one of finest outside
backers in game. G radishar is tn all-pro
class, and Tom Jackson remains an
exuberant force on defense. GOOD
S E C O N D A R Y W hat used lo be
strength ol Bronco defense has become
suspect. All-pro laiu is Wright on left
comer slipped a notch, but hc'a young
enough (26l to regain tonn. Aaron Kyle
might not be able lo hold off I’erry
Smith at other comer. And 36-year-old
H ill Thompson finds him self hounded
by top draftee Dennis Smith, strong
safety of future. F A IR .

CO ACH JA C K PA T E R A : "W e are
nut a championship learn, so we have lo
scratch for what we get. It's im portant
lo know not only ilia I we lost, but why
we lost. We lost five games in the last
three minutes. To turn this around, we
have to learn how lo win, to perform
consistently,"
O FFENSE
P A S S IN G The bloom is slightly otf
J im Zorn, who was running for h is life
in '60 146 sacks). II lie showed a ten­
dency to settle in the pockel, there was
no pocket. Rig year by Zorn Is a must,
He lia s fine outside receivers in Steve
lu irg e n l and Sam McCullum. B ria n
Peels, who broke leg, rejoins T E corps
of John Sawyer and mark Bell. Steve
H aib le is spare. GOOD
R U N N IN G Rhenium Sm ith's low*
a lte r three games last season changed
character of Seahawks. Dan Doernink
and J im Jodat were Just stopgaps —
three yards and cloud of sweat (on
a rtlc lflc a l turf). One of them w ill line
up along Smith, who carries m ain
threat, unless rookie David Hughes
surprises. F A IR
RM&gt;CK1NG Failu re to hold out pass
rushers put offense nut of kilte r. So
th e re 'll be big concentration on sealing
off protection. It may result In rookie
guard B ill Dugan pushing out veteran
Bob Newton at right guard. The solid
guys up front are Tom Lynch a l other
guard and center John Yam u. Bon
E ss ink has been pleasant surprise at
tackle. F A IR
D EFENSE
L I N E Cast Is pretty much the same,
except that Jacob Green, with year
under his belt and coming back from

S P E C IA L T E A M S
K IC K IN G New coaching staff is
perfectly satisfied with stdcwlnding
Fred Steinlort as placeklcker — he was
JS-for-34 on field goals — and luke
Prestridge, A F C punting leader. V E R Y
GOOD
PRO SPECTUS
Too many question m arks on that
offensive unit and introduction of a new
style (including shotgun formation on
passing downs) w ill bog Broncos down,
at least in ’l l . T h e y'll have to rely as
always too heavily on the defense.
P R E D IC T IO N la s t tn A F C West, but
not hopeless.

knee injury, could develop Into a
p re m ie r pa ss-ru sh m a ra u d e r.
GOOD
L IN E H A C K IN G Again, tile same
people figure to get most of the action.
That means steady T erry Beeson in ihe
middle, with Joe Norm an, a little m ice
agile, replacing him on passing downs.
Michael Jackson and K eith Butler are
both swift pursuers and good hitters,
F A IR to GOOD
S E C O N D A R Y Ken Easley, the prime
prospect of the 1980 college (T o p , is Ihe
big news. Niche has already been
carved out for him at free safety, If hr
lives up to billing, Seahawks w ill thrive
on pass coverage. H is n triv a l means
John R a n is m oves to strong lately,
Keith Btirpeon W k tn ■ m n w r op­
posite Dave Brown, and K e rry Justin in
reserve. GOOD
S P E C IA L TEA M S
K ICKIN G E fren H erre ra Is doing Just
tine, thank you, as competent f ield-gnal
bootcr and even catching a pass now
and then. H e rm a n " T h u m ie rfo o t"
Weaver keeps w arding olf punting
rivals. GOOD
R E T U R N S W ill fo w ls , u spare
comerback, did a good job as m ain man
on bulh punt ami kickoff returns.
F A IR TO GOOD
PROSPECTUS
la is l year's dropoff to 4-12 was
completely unexpected. Team Just got
into losing syndrome and couldn't snap
out of it. If Sherman Sm ith stays whole,
it’ll mean a lot. P a te ra and s la lf are
definitely on the spot.
PR ED ICT IO N F o u rth in A F C West,
bul closer to .600.

Knights' One-Two Punch
Readies For Presbyterian
The University of Centra! Florida's
ne-two punch of Don Jonas and Sam
Veir has been running the Knights
hrough the paces in preparation for Ihe
,961 gridiron campaign.
Jonas, who has piloted the Knight ship

for two seasons, was joined by his old
Orlando Panther buddy Weir aa a co­
coach for the upcoming year.
The season opens on September 11
against tough NA1A power Presbyterian
College (South C a ro lin a ) In tha

T a n g e rin e B ow l, and conclud es on
Novembe. 21 with the tlrs l UCF-BethuneCookman dash, also set for the T-Bowl.
Knights Coach Jonas, who has led
the learn since U C F started football play
in 1171, calls this "easily the toughest
schedule we've faced yet," wtlh other
gam es against D iv is io n II team s
Alabam a A A M and M ille r svtlie State,
and Divlalon III opponent! E lixabelh City
Slate, Hampden-Sydney, Milea, MiUaapa,
Savannah Stale and West Georgia.
Presbyterian Is In NA1A D ivision II and
Bcthunc-Cookman Is in the N C A A ’s
D ivision l-AA.
Last year's U C F team went 64-1,
concluding the season with a tremendous
comeback victory against E m ory and
Henry. U C F scored U points In the final
quarter for the victory. The first year’s
team enjoyed a 6-2 season In 1179,
T hlriy-aU lettermen return this year.
Including 12 starters from the 1960 squad.

Leading returning piayera include Jeff
FroehUch (Winter Park), who caught 26
passes for 272 yards last aeaaon; Mike
C a rte r (M e lb o u rn e ), a D is t r ic t III
Academ ic All-Am erican who led the
team 's tight ends in receptions; Turner
D a v it (S a n fo rd ), a ta ilb a c k who
averaged 4.5 yards per carry in 1980; Bob
Burkhart (M aitland), who is expected lo
start at quarterback alter seeing lim ited
playing time in past aeasons because of
injuries, senior tackles E d G artner
MriM S M tor t i l l fMlM (O rla n d o ) and M ik e S o m m e rfltld
( H ia le a h ), and lin e b a ck e rs
B ill
Central Florida's one-two punch of jam Weir (left) and Don Jonas Giovanetti (Casselberry), E ddie James
will guide the Knights against their toughest schedule ever begin­ (La ke Worth) and R ick M aynard (St.
ning Sept. 12 against Presbyterian at the Tangerine Bowl.
Petersburg).

hMr

1^ rnfut 1hVWkf~ 4 eeiaf***

IP*M »• *'4 • -*t •* 4 L

•

* * ♦ * **

These (our Central Florida high cchool graduate* are expected to play key rolea
again thta year for the UCF Knight*. From left are Jeff FroehUch ( no. 16, a wide
receiver from Bishop Moore), Ed Oantner (no. 75, a defensive tackle from
Kdgcwafer), Billy Giovuntll (no. 18, a linebacker from Lyman), and Bob
Solomon (no. 46, a fullback from Lake Howell). UCF opens Ihe 1981 season
September 12 against P resbyterian College in the Tangerine Bowl.

Aspesi Named
Wrestling Coach
Michael Aspesi, a three-lime Florida
State Freestyle W restling Champion
while a student at the U niversity ol
Centra) Florid a, has been named U C F 's
New Wrestling Coach. He replaces Joe
Cor so, who resigned tor personal reasons

a lte r serving as Coach (or Ihe past three
years.
Aspesi, Associate Coach o( the K n ig h ts'
team last year and Assistant Coach the
two y e a n before, was a star athlete tn
junior high school and high schuol in
Cent ere ach. New York. He earned
recognition for football, soccer, baseball,
tra ck and gym nastics. In addition to
• in n in g m any wrestling honors. H e was
named to the All-Long Island News
Football Team as a defensive beck and

% «v» J f M l I

•• 46 .14* tot W
to*4t 6 U

was Suffolk County W restling Champion.
He wrestled (or Suffolk County (N Y.)
Community College, where he earned his
A .A S Degree, and w as named New
Y o rk Junior College Cham pion and Long
[aland Freestyle Cham pion. He received
widespread recognition while wrestling
for U C F , and was alao named the I MO
O rla n d o G olden G lo v e s (B o x in g )
C l tampion.
Aspesi is m arried to the form er Janet
Davenport of T itusville .

�■*1►

' »*— k*«T»m HsraM. Iswfgrd, PI.

W*dn*4dBr,Au|.li. )t*l

O ne-Leg C a rte r Rips Reds,
R aines Slaps Single, D ouble

DARRELL JACKSON
.. .handles Yankees

LENBARKER
.. .thrrr-hitter

FERGIE JENKINS
.. .four-hitter

Lamp's One-Hitter Lights Up White Sox
By United Press International
: M ilw aukee shortstop Robin Yount
spoiled Chicago hurier Dennis Lam p’s
bid (or a no-hitter Thursday night, hitting
a 3-2 sinker into shallow left-center.
la m p pitched hitless ball right up to
the ninth Inning (or a White Sox S-l
victory, Yount scored on a pair ri( Infield
outs (or the only Brewer run In the game.
Afterw ard. Lamp said at first he could
only ride with each pitch.
" I Just told myself I was going to take
them one at a time,” he said. "Tonight f
just went after them as hard as 1 could,
as long as 1 could. I Just went out there
with the Idea of challenging them.”
But then he became Intently aw are of
the poalblllty of a no-hltter. ” 1 felt I was
going to get It after the fifth inning."
Yount said he went to die plate "Just
trying to make contact. The guy struck

me out twice before. I was Just trying to
hit the ball."

Twins J, Yankees 0
John Cast (no socked an K B I triple in
New Y ork, in a two-run second inning as
D arre ll Jackson, 2-2, and Jerry Kossman
combined on a seven-hitter.

Chicago Manager Tony la K u ss a was
happy for Lamp.
“ Against any club that’s good," the
manager said. "Ag ainst this club (M il­
waukee!, It's an achievem ent.”

Indians I, A 's 0
te n B arke r tired a three-hitter and
Duane K uip er drove in two runs to lead
the Indians over the A's, In Oakland.

Hangers I, Blue Jays 1
In Toronto, Ferguson Jenkins, W , held
the Blue Jays to four hits in notching his
2Mlh career victory - his first complete
game of the season. Buddy B ell blasted a
solo homer In the sixth.

Angela I, Bed Sox 7
In Anaheim , C a lil., Bobby Grtch looped
a broken-bat single io led Held with one
out in the 10th to lead California from
behind and lilt Don Aase, 4-3.

Tigers f, Royals J
A t Detroit, 1-ance P a rrish lined a one- Orioles f, M ariners S
At Seattle, Jose Morales hit a pinch-hit.
out single In the bottom of the 10th to
score ptnrh-runner M tck Kelleher and three-run homer with two out In the 12th,
give the Tigers their 10th wtn In their last Ttm Stoddard, 2-1, earned the victory
with two Innings of one-hit relief.
It games

liy Lotted I’m i International
G a ry Carter loves playing ball so much
he’d probably do It on one leg. In fact,
that’s exaclly what he’* doing.
" l l w ill cause some pa in ," Carter said
Tuesday night after driving in six runs,
four with a grand slam , to lead the
Montreal Expos to a 2-1 rout of Ihe
Cincinnati Reds. "But. 1 w ill keep on
playing. It will be some lim e before it’*
healed, though.”
C arter suffered whal turned out to be a
tom ligament in his right ankle last week
when Tony Scott crashed Into him at
home plate in Houston. He sat out two
games then decided helping the Expos
wtn the lecond half should put him in the
lineup.
" I t ’s an injury lhat doesn't require
surgery or anything like that,” he said.
" I'm Just very happy I was able to play
tonight."
So are the E ipos. Hi* fust-inning

M a io r league liin d m g i
B r United P i r n Intern* llano I
I I ria n d H ill!
National League

lilt
Si Louis
New York
Montreal
Chicago
Ptnia
Pittsburgh

W l Wet
OS
I S 411 —

I » 000 •t S IN I
i i sn i

4
4
W rit
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t
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• an
14 SIS

SCi

Atlanta
4 4IS —
L o t Ang
4 400
V|
San F ra n
I
SSS |U»
Houston
1 too S
C insl
1 1 too S
ta n D iego
S IS III 1
T u t t d a r t Basalts
Chicago 4. tan 0&gt;«go S
Los Ang 4, n tlib g h I, II wns
Atlanta IS. Philodaighio t
M ontreal S, Cincinnati 1
*
Haw York I. Houston 1
v*n tra n c h e * a, st. L w a s
T p J t r t Ft aka ala Pittlw rs
(A ll Trm tt SOTI
Lo t Angolai IMavsl 111 at
P i Its Our no (Phodan H I , l i s t
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tan Francisco I Hue 41) al
it
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Chicago I B ird 111. S SO pm
Atlanta (P a rry 4 41 at Ptuta
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(H u lh v m
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Cincinnati
I Solo
401
41
M ontreal lO u llik to n S4I, I SO
pm
Houston I Sutton 111 al Now
York lia c h ry a i l . I p m
Atttartcaa lia g u a
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Detroit
1! 4 w
Ball
t 4 400 2
Mitwauke
10 1 M
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Boston
1 1 ni 4
Toronto
1 1 nr 4
New Vork
8 t 400 I
Clevel DO
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1 4 111
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Kan Cltv
1 t 4 * &gt;'i
Minn
4 10 -2H I^T
Tuesday's B etal's
Tasas 4. Toronto I
C ln t U n d S. Oakland 0

Detroit 4. a an Cily S. 10 inns
Minnesota I. Nan York 0
Chicago 1. Milwaukee I
Baltimore 4, taatlla S. IS
Inns
C a lifo rn ia I.
Boston S, to
inns
Today ) Prekakle Pitchers
( A ll Timas ( O i l
Kansas City lO ura 1 Jl at
O otro il ILo p o i I I I . I p *
Minnesota (W illiam s S SI al
Haw York (R ig h etli i l l . 4 p m
Chicago (Beum garten 1 41 a l
M ilw aukee (Caldwell 4 41. 4 &gt;0
pm

Unescores
M a lta LeagtM Basotts
By United P ra tt lalaraatianal
Natianal Laatua
San Ogo
000 000 101- S 4 0
Chi
001 OlOOOu-4 TO
Lotlar, L lttla lla ltf (SI, Boona
(41.
Eictialbargar
III
and
Kennedy; K r a r K . Tidrow III,
Harnandat t i l and Davit Wn re u tc It II L - S a lla r o n

(11 li
LA
014 401 H I *)— I 14 0
Ptsto
010 000 S04 00 - 7 14 I
C o n i. Howe i n . tiaw arl ( tl,
A Pane It), Niedenfuer (III
and Yeager P a r t i, Remo III,
Jackson III, Takulvt 1101 W
A Pena 1101 L -T e k u lv a 14 SI
MR — Pittsburgh. P a rk tr III
A tlanta
410 SOS0 0 0 -I! IS I
P tilla
000 OOO 0 0 ) - ) SO
N ltk ro . Hanna III, Bradford
III and Benedict. Owen I lly
M D a vit. Holes (SI. Proly III.
L y le III and Boona. Moreland
III
W - N io k r o
1141
lM D avik
10 II.
MRt —Atlanta,
Benedict (4), Cham W nt (Tl
Cine I
OOOOOOOIO- I 1 0
M il
SOS 400 00a— 0 1 0
LaCoot. M oskau III, P rk d
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Brown
III and Nolan,
tandorton. La a III and C a rltr,
Ram os III W - ia n d t r to n IT 41.
L - LaCota IS SI MR Montreal,
C a rte r (101

nous
NY

410 0M 300 | I 1
000 014Ola— I 10

R yan.
la m b ilo
111
and
Ashby.
H a n ts , Searao* III.
M a rsh a ll 141 and S ita rn t W—
M a rsh a ll M S I L -S a m b tla (&gt;
II H f l - N i w York, W ilton | ) l
ta n F rn
t l Louis

030 010 0IB— 4 I S

000)00 000- s 10

C rltfln .
Holland
IS)
and
m a n ly .
M a rlin .
Littell
III.
Shirley III and Tanat a W —
Gr.H.n 114) L M a il.n 14)1.
H R - tt Louis. Hendrick &lt;141
A m erican league
Tests
000 114 000 I IS I
Toronto
000 001 000- I 4 I
Jenkins and Sundkrro Stieu.
G arvin
III.
Jackson
IS).
M cL a u g h lin III and Whin W Jank.ns
I t 41
L SliaO 14*1
H R —Taras. B B all MSI

P H IL A D E L P H IA
(U P I)
Philadelphia Manager D allas Green
says acting "a little bit like a fool" is
part of baseball.
A* of Tuesday night's game between
the P h ila d e lp h ia P h illie s and the
Atlanta Braves, Green was suspended
indefinitely because of his decision to
(jut hi* words into action during

Goodman Here Thursday

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VIVA.. .True Radial
Performance In A Fiberglass
Belted Tire
• Chosen by Detroit tor use on tome 1961
new cat models
• The g a v u vin g economy ot Goodyear
Radial construction

5 9 95 * 6 8 4 0

* 5 6 39
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into Ml D i li 14
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♦

D O N ’T WAIT.. S A L E E N D S SEPT. 5.
Raw CHIC* - X *&lt;U4 M 01FM tut *« a* i s m |0&lt; t tea (MOL

asw ag W t Orinw) a M ahtitisao pne*

STEELRADIALS
SALE For Pitkups/
FORIMPORTS
Vans, Campers &amp; R V ’s

A irty a -E v a n l it Footprint
Tails YOU Itt Ditfaranl

3 2 2 -0 1 8 3

F -145,404)1) I
Ptua t t SO FET No h a le neertud

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

PRICES
SMASHED

K in k t r hat helped the development o l Sanford'*
p ro fe n io n a l baseball players T im Raines and David
W iggins through hi* d lr m ille d program which in­
cludes video taping usd one-on-one instruction.

B onn
piB s/ecflti
P10S,BORIS
P irs / ro H ii
pi«s,roH U
P1BS/TOR14
p is s

ON ALL

The fee is t t t. The It isssia n i w ill bs a preluck to the
annual fa ll league which Includes teams from Rollinx
College, Seminole Community College and Blnker's
own Bed and Blue learn*.

u*o
H i

"to * -

1BSD 13
I65HU
lesnts
m rout)
is s r o n t i
IM/rORI4

12

F lo rid a B ru e b ill School*’ Wes fUnker ha* *chedut*d
It Saturday clastet for boyx age* 14 and up beglnung
SepL II at Sanford Memorial Stadium.

•4ISS
M ilt
44*11
• 4**4
III *4
U4M

SURE FOOTED TRACTION
ALL TEAR ROUND TRACTION SURE DRIP

FOR HEAVY DUTY
STRENGTH, LOW COST
MILEAGE-E

iw r n
INbati

1\

IS 61
11 M
II B2
IIS )
17 03
118)

•I
ft

OTMIH IMFOftT SIXES
ALSO ON SALE

\I

0a*T RN N -Sak EaOl Sapt 5.

CONCORDS

W AGONEERS

*19

m o t o n o tine lir e a c o s r

EAGLES

The fa ll league w ill begin SepL 23 and be played on
Tuesday and Thursday night* a* w e ll a* Saturday and
Sundav afternoon*. SCO i* defending champion.

CHEROKCES

SCRAMBLERS
SP IR IT S

R in k e r’s "Dugoul H u b " w ill m eet Thursday night at
6:30. Scheduled guciU are Pittsburgh P irate icoul
F re d Goodman and Philadelphia Phllii# scout Andy
Sem inick. C a ll J2J-1W4 (or Information.

PICK U P S

C O M E SEE - D R I V E O N E A W A Y *

Men's Softball Organizes

SANFORD MOTOR CO.

T h e n w ill be an organisational meeting for anycne
interested In playing In the Sanford M en's Softball
League, W cdnesdiy st the Sanford Recreation
D epartm ent offica at 7 p m.
P a rtid p a n U wishing to pUy “ A " and “ B ” division
w sflhall should attend.

V A* -

-s
%
sj
K
m

P155/80R13 FITS S O M E M O D ELS OF:
Chevette
V olksw ag en
Toyota
O m ni
Oatsun
H onda

LOW COST A U T O IN S U R A N C E

RInker Schedules Fall Class,

4' 4 &gt;*• * «6 S* V

National le ag ue President Chub
Feeney suspended G re en , pending
fu rth e r in v e s tig a tio n , Including a
review of the game films.
Green and shortstop L a rry Bowa
were ejected tn the ninth inning of

F t lJ . B O n il b&lt;a c tu a l
(AltoM i ISS tl)
Dim It 4 1 FET
No trail# needed

T O N Y R U tS I
IN S U R A N C E

I If
’J &gt;

Monday’s game by second-base umpire
Steve F ie ld s after he ruled Bowa
missed second base during an apparent
inning-ending double play.
Bow? was ejected for slamming his
glove to the ground and bumping Fields
tn contesting the c a ll. Green was
ejected for bumping Fields, knocking
off hts l F ie ld s'I hat.

Monday night's game in Philadelphia
with the Braves.

RadialSale

w ith y o u r In s u ra n c tl
-C A L L -

T

Dodgers 9, P tra le i 7
P in c h -h itte r R ic k M onday tin g le d ^
home Dusty B aker with the winning r u iu
and B ill Russell drove in insurance run t n ,
a Iw w u n llt h inning, at Pittsburgh.
)

G O O D FYEAR

IS

le a d e r s

Giant* 4, Cardinals 2
In S t I-mils, Enos Cabell's RBI single
tn the fifth snapped a 2-2 tie. It drove In
Joe Petttni who had doubled and moved
to third on a sacrifice by Tom Griffin.

Cubs 4, Padre* I

D O N 'T G A M B L E

IN BRIEF

* * *

Aase t a l l L -B u rg m tie r
H R Boston. Rice MSI

M ajor League Leaders
By United F re ts tntem atianal
Bamag
N atianal lia g u a
g ab k pet
Mad lock, P il
tt 1*1 4* SSI
Dawson. M il
44 14S 41 H I
Roto. P h il
49 St) t l SS4
45 S4I I* 1)4
Guerraeg. L A
4S )S4 S* SO*
Clave
OOO 000 101 - 1 10 S G eittty. Cm
Baker LA
SOSfl 44 S04
Oaklnd
000 000 OOO- 0 S I
Wilson. N Y
It TOO II SOS
B arker and H a tsry. M tC a lty
Brooks. NY
41 M l 44 MS
and Meath w Barker IS II L
►osier. C!n
50 S44 II 101
Mk C a tty 1001
Schm idt. P h il
44S4S S4 SOS
American Ltatw t
I I I im ingt)
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K C
M l OMDOOB- S * I
s in s ss u*
Dr)
111 IMOOOI- I II I Sisk. Sea
S.ngltln. Bal
kt 344 IS 1)1
Leonard. Quikenberry I f l and
4SS*0 M 111
Ou-rk.
Walhan
(II.
Morrlk. Oliver. Sea
so i l l l i n i
Rorama I I I , Saucitr IS) and P tc o r t * . Sea
Handersn. Ok
S ) ) l l 14 3)4
Parrish W Saucier (SOI. L Mm(Uiry, NY
s* m ss sit
Q u nnU ivtri
(0 4)
HRs
Aim on. Chl
M ill V n c
Kansas
Cliy.
Alkans
M*l.
Money tW
nw rii*. B»oe**ere la n te o rd Bos
si m v» sts
Carew,
Cal
(SI
n m n j is
Hargrove. Cl*
M n s ss m
Mum
n ) ooo ooo- j a o
Hama Runt
n v
ooo mo ooo o s o
Natianal League
Schmidt,
s i;
k.ngman,
NY
1*1
O Jackson, Kootman (41 and PM
Bulara.
May.
Davit
(SI, Dawson. M il If. Foilae. Cm 14.
Hendrick. t i l l i
LaRocha 1*1 and Crront W
D Jackson (S II L M a r (441
A m erican L ttg u e
Thomas.
M il and Arm as. Oak IS; Evans.
Chi
S IO IO U O O -S *0 Dos. M u rra y. Bal and Ford. C a l
M ilw
OQOOOOOOI- I I I &gt;4
R u n t B a tltd In
Lam p
and
Fisk
SLalon. a N ational League
F a tter.
Phi St.
R ation 141. Easterly III and Cm and Schmidt.
S.mmons W - L a m p 14 l|. I —
Buckner, Chl 4f. mngman. N Y
and Concepcion, Cln 44
Staton ( a l l H R
Chicago.
A m erican League
Arm as.
Bam at ( t l
Oak 14. Boll. Tae SS. Oglivlo,
M il SI;
Thomas.
M il a);
I I I nm lngsl
P a ou re k. Sea aa
Ban,m ore
Stolen Batts
000 ISOOOOOOS- 4 ISO
N atianal le agu e
Ram**.
to an la
M l m i ooo m s - t II i M il 14. North. SF. Moreno, p il
Palm er. T M artinet (41. Sled
I* Sc o il. M il &gt;1. Collins. C ln
Hard
M SI,
S i t w a r I M l) , n
A m erican le a tu a — Mender
tchn oldar MSI and Dempsey
C ru l
Soa SS.
Abbott. Rawtey M l. Drago M l) ton. Oak 11
and N arron. Bulling (S)
w — Ddono. Cla and L e F lo rt. Chl
SI; Bum bry. B al 14
tid d d a id IS II L - D r a g o 14 11
H R s- Baltim ora, OeCinteS IS),
Pitching
Singleton
MSI, M ottles M i l
Victories
t« a tilt. 2ish MSI
National Liagua
Carlton,
pm
101 vaiantuaia. la io a
( I I IMiingi)
Hoot on L A I t Ruthven. Phi *
Bostn
400 000 000 1 - S 10 I
S le a ve r. Cln • I. Rogers. M il
CaH
004 ooo Oil I I I S )
end Solo. C ln t t
C fk rr s le y Clear IS), Burg
A m en caa League
Forsch.
mmer
( t l.
tla nla y It) and Cal 101
Vuchoulch.
M il t ) ;
A Hanson
la im .
Klson
M l, N o rm . Oak O M arlm ai. Bal.
Frost III. Aas* MO! and On W and M o rn s. Del 0 a

SPORTS

Aw tern '*** %J* *

II

Braves 11, Phillies 2
A l Philadelphia, Bruce Betsdlct hit a
first-in n in g grand sla m and C h ris
Chamblias drove in five runs to back Phil
N le k ro ’s 239th c a re e r v ic to ry . The
Phillies were playing their first game
without Manager D alla s Green, who was
suspended Indefinitely over Monday
night’s bumping, incident with umpire
Steve Fields.

In Chicago, B ill Buckner s (wo-run
single clim axed a ihree-run fifth to help
Ken Kravec, who pitched a n o h lttcr for
the first five innings. It was his first win
since June 11,1980, when he was with the
Chicago White Sox.
Mets 2, Astros I
Mookte Wilson greeted reliever Joe
Sambtto with a tie-breaking borne run in
the eighth, at home. M ike Marshall, 1-0,
gained his first victory since being signed
by the Meta last week.

'Little Bit A Fool' Green Suspended

Major-League Roundup
Standings

double produced two runs and keyed a
three-run outburit in support of Scott
Sanderson, 7-4.
"It was nice to get that early lead,"
said Sanderson. " I have to give the
hitters full credit for the victo ry."
Cincinnati starter M ike U C o s s was
rocked for seven run* in three inning*
and felt to 2-7.
"I have nothing to sa y," said Cin­
cinnati Manager John M cN am ara.

11

mho

it

11
It

FRONT END ALIGNMENT

Paw
• Inspect all lo ur tires •
Correct air pressure • Set
Ironl w heel camber, ca s­
ter, an d lo e to p ro pe r
alignm ent • Inspect su s­
p e n s io n and s fe e nring
n
system s • U S cars and

ureas &lt;i*i I m M
im ports with adjustable
su sp e n sio n s • Includes
tront-w heol drive Chevettes. trucks, and cars
re q u irin g M a c P h e rs o n
Strut co rre ctio n extra

J u s t S a y • C h a rg e I t *

*f

Oeoeyesi
Use any oT these ortwr Wtyt lo buy U ttlerCard
Heeohnne
*v«s •American ExpreM Card • Cart# Bts/Kh*
Charge Account . Diners Club •Cash
•fo a tta n tu :

AMC

4

John W. Wardar, Manager

SOS S. FREN CH A V .

•

__________
$8NFOBD

322-4382

-* - M *

o il S tSBSB 3 u w -

’

Manner! FrtMu tab I t » l
2 2 2 -2 8 2 1

�Evtnlnq Htr»M, Sanford. FI.

WedneLdey, Aug,IS, U ll—IIA'

R o yals Frey Exp lain s A ll-Star M ista k e
NEW Y O R K I U P 1 I - You can week
30 year* to earn a reputation and lose It
in less than 30 seconds.

th in g s

th e y

w e re

s a y in g

about

made one or two m istakes in his time.
Nobody enjoys being second-guessed.
F re y is no exception, but he takes it
better than most people I know.
"Sometimes when you’re secondguessed. there's, basis for,
be agrees, "but a lot of tim es those jw w l«
who second-guess you don't have a ll the
information that we, as managers,
have out there on the field.
"One of the biggest lessons I've
learned in this business is that if you
make a mistake, you'd better fare up to
iL I ’ve always told that to m y children
and I tell my ballplayers the same
thing."
F re y admits he was at fault for
running out of players in the All-Star
loss to the National le ag ue, but if you
listen to his entire explanation, it comes
out be wasn’t as much at fault as he

h is

a b i li t y to m a n a g e .
S u d d e n ly , h o w e v e r, w ith the R o y a ls
f in is h in g fifth t h is y e a r, 12 g a m e s o u t In

Or. putting It another way, Isn’t It
tunny how people can pat you on the
back for being a near genius one day
and write you off as some kind ot
dimwit th: next.

th e f ir s t h a lf, a n d s tru g g lin g s o m e w h a t
in th e s e c o n d , he is g ettin g th e o lh e r
s id e of I h t c o in .
H e ’s

c a tc h in g

c r it ic is m

Jim m y F re y , the manager of the
Kansas City R oyals who has been In pro
baseball more than 30 y e a n , has been
second-guessed probably more than
any other m anager in the past few
months.

a

about

gre a t
h is

deal

ol

m a n a g e r ia l

s t r a t e g y . Me h e a rd it a fte r the A D - S la r
g a m e w h e n , a s th e A m e ric a n le a g u e
m a n a g e r , he r a n o u t o f p la y e rs in th e
n in th in n in g , a n d w a s rip p e d a g a in on
T V th e o th e r d a y b y R o n L u c ia n o , the
f o r m e r u m p ir e , w h o h it below the b e lt
b y s a y in g , " I f it 's tru e a m an le a r n s b y

It was F re y who guided the Royals
into their first World Series and when
his team ran away with the Western
Division title by 13 games, you un­
doubtedly heard a ll the wonderful

G reyhounds

h is m is ta k e s , J im

F r e y should b e the

g r e a te s t m a n a g e r in h is to ry in a few
y e a rs ."
T h a t w a s a lo w blow that w a s u n ­
c a lle d f o r . la j d a n o , I 'm sure, a ls o h a s

WONICOW

4 to } |o

7 00

too t 00 S 00

ialin g Oust

6000 WED.. AU6. n ~

le f t S in g le to n in the g a m e . W e h a d n 't

co u ld n 't a v o id h im a n y m o r e and he s a l

a n n o u n c e d the change y e t s o h e w a s n 't

dow n next to m e .

o f f ic i a ll y o u t of the g a m e . I c o u ld ’ v e

" Y o u k n o w ,’ h e s a id to m e , ’ th e re 's

w a ite d a m in u te o r so, b u t I p u t A r m a s

one fellow in lit is c a r w h o h a sn 't got a

in le ft a n d th a t w a s m y m is t a k e . Y e s , I

t ic k e t ' ‘ N o k id d in g ! ' I s a id to h im . ‘ I

at som e p o in t tn th e g a m e , then pu t h im

w a s e m b a r ra s s e d ."

w as ju st tra d e d b y th e A u s t in clu b to

in center f ie ld a n d m o v e D a t e W in fie ld

fr o m

F o rt W orth a n d I ’ m g o in g b a c k th ere to

In F r e y ’ s

A u s t in to F o r t W o rth in 1956 a n d n ot

get m y g e a r .’ H e s a id , ‘ lf h , huh, but I

m in d , th a t w o u ld g iv e the A m e ric a n s a

h a v in g the tr a in f i r e to g o b a c k to F o r t

ju st w a n n a t e ll y o u s o m e th in g . In the

s tro n g e r

L y n n , h o w e v e r,

W o rth to p ic k up h is b e lo n g in g s . F r e y

fu tu re , y o u n g

(sille d h im s e lf f r o m th e g am e a n d w ent

h a p p e n e d to be in D a lla s a t th e tim e .

about the w a y y o u t r a v e l on tra in s .' 1

to the c lu b h o u s e . W h e n S in g le to n c a m e

Jo e

sa id , 'th a n k y o u , s i r . ' H e n e v e r sa id a

b a c k to th e d u g o u t, I to ld h im , 'T h a t's

A n to n io c lu b w h ic h w a s g o in g h o m e to

w ord to m e a b o u t m y

It, I'm g o n n a p u t W in fie ld in le ft fie ld

S a n A n to n io and Invited F r e y to c o m e

tic k e t.”

o v e r fr o m

c e n t e r to le ft.
o u t f ie ld .

^

M e re m e m b e rs bein g

tra d e d

S c h u ltx w a s m a n a g in g

L

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^

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LIQUEUR A 9 9
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J(m I n n Brfc* 66.95
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Cohrart Extra Hand71 *50
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SAVE 25% ON FtlNCH

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�11A— EvenlngHer •Id. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Aug. 24. Ittt

FLORIDA

M IAM I ( U P !) —J e ri Eichenbaum explained that her
bosses at the telephone company in Coral Gables sim ply
don't provide enough employee parking spaces.
County Judge H arvey B axter said that was her problem,
not his and fined her S1.42S (or 111 parking tickets covering
the last three years.
"B u y yourself a lot in Coral Gables next to the phone
company or get yourself a bike or a moped or a skateboard.
It's going to be a lot cheaper," the judge told M iss
Eichenbaum.
He ordered her to pay 1200 Immediately and 1300 a month
until the fine is paid off. If it isn't paid, he warned her she
w ill be held in contempt of court.

I N B R IE F
Five Children Perish
In South Dade Home Fire
H O M E S T E A D . F la . (UP1| - F iv e children - including
two o( a set of 3-year-old trip lets — died in a fire that swept
through a suburban home early this morning.
The children perished as John and Barbara Dixon,
parents of four of them and grandparents of the other, and
neighbors tried unsuccessfully to get back into the flam ing
house to save them.
The fam ily's two watchdogs, a btrddag and a boxer, kept
one neighbor, Herman M cC ra ry , away (ram windows at the
back of the house. M cC ra ry said he could hear the children
screaming.
The Dixons and two other cfuldren escaped and were
taken to James Archer Hospital. Their injuries did not
appear serious, neighbors said.
Dade Metro fire investigators said the fire may have
started in a living room a ir conditioner. Smoke awoke the
Dixons, who apparently believed it was not spreading
rapidly and went outside.
W hile D u on was trying to move his van Ira n the
driveway, flames burst through the windows and he,
M cC rary and Mrs. Dixon tried but failed to get hack into the
house to save the o lh rr children, M cCrary said.

Plan Given The Once-Over
By D A R I X N E JE N N IN G S
Herald Staff W riter
"When H urricane D avid hit in 1979 we
didn't know until six hours into the
critical storm period what our problems
were going to be," said Public Safety
Director Gary K a ise r at Tuesday's
Sem inole C o u n ty C o m m issio n work
session.

Students Feeling Pinch

Now, after the result of several months
work, the public safety director has
presented
an
e m erg en cy
com­
munications plan which would alert and
prepare the county for a disaster.

T A IJ.A H A &amp; S E E , F la ( U P I ) - A state education of (ids)
says Florida schools haven't been hurt by federal funding
cutbacks yet, but students seeking college loans are already
being affected.
M arshall F rin k, director of the Department of
Education's State and Federal fil iations Office, told the
Board of Regents Tuesday that (or the 1961-12 school year,
federal education support w ill drop * percent — about 1114
m illion dollars.
"The future is dim . We know additional ruts are coming,
but thev haven't hit us yet" F rin k said.

Pair Has Biting Problem
filed a $330,000 lawsuit against Brookover.
M rs. Stoval claim ed Brookover threw her to
the ground, punched her on both sides of the
head and "dug” her teeth out of her mouth,
bruising her only kidney in the process.
“ He came up here and attacked me
viciou sly," she said.
Brookover said he sim ply reached fur the
dentures, which were in Mrs. Stuval's mouth
at the time, and she bit him.
“ She bit as hard as she could," he said.
"When I pulled m y finger back out, the teeth
came out."

TAKI

A

F ro m this point, the Public Safety
D e p a rtm e n t would then n o tify the
Seminole County Commission chairm an
and the county administrator.

“ Also, the crisis relocation plan doesn't
consider people flooded out of their
homes in Seminole County, let alone
people that would be coming in from the
coast."

Phase five of the plan Is described as
norm al working conditions with phase
one being the most crucial step in the
plan. It is at this point that the county is
actually operating within the emergency
with as little as 0 to 12 hours prior
notification.

The county com m ission w ill now study
the document to determ ine whether the
department head roles overlap, and if so.
how they can consolidate the respmaibtlities.

Somewhere out there is an escape
artU -m ag ld a n looking for a place to try
to break the tw o day world record (or
continuous m agic tricks.
So Tim B e ll, manager of the A ll
American R oller R in k on Douglas Road
went in front of the Altamonte Springs
City Commissioners to ask lor per­
mission to stay open (or an all-nighter for
the planned record breaking attempt.
B e ll’s rink is zoned by the city to close
before or at 11 p.m.
Bell proposed that on Oct. 31, the rink
be allowed to rem ain open from II p.m.
until 7 a.m. on Nov. 1. He told com­
missioners that off-duty police officers

FLORIDA

0RANGEJUICE
B R E A K

However, Kaiser says the plan is not
Yrithstl! Its pf^blfTTV1. " F W H *
th* only
Mate which does not provide for direct
m onetary state a s s is ta n c e for the
program. Any assistance must be taken
care of at the local le v e l," K aiser said.

A ll-N ight Event G ets Tentative Approval

T A M P A , Fla. ( U P !) —Hillsborough County deputies were
looking today for M ilton C a rr, who was mistakenly released
from the county ja il Monday in a mix up over names.
Sheriff's MaJ. D avid P a rrish said Louis Carr, 29, was to
have been transferred from the stockade to the ja il where
he was to be released on his own recognizance while
awaiting tria l on several traffic charges.
Rut instead of U u ta C a rr, M ilton Carr was transferred to
the Jail and was signed out.
Carr, who was serving a one-year sentence for violation
of parole, apparently did not intentionally mislead officers
because he signed his real name when checking out.

in effect.

made emergency.
B a sica lly, the plan calls for
fivephase operating conditions with the chain
of action beginning from an alert up to 72
hours in advance of a storm — for
exam ple, from the National Weather
Service. M iam i, or the National W arning
Netw ork. Denver, or from the State
Network in Tallahassee.

The document w as designed by Kaiser,
Deputy C iv il Defense Director Chuck
Swanson and D isaster Preparedness

Jail Mlxup: Inmate Sought

PA I.M B E A C H , Fla. I U P ! (-T o p le ss Jogging lor men is
in again in the affluent Oceanside community of P a lm
Beach, maybe for once and for all
U.S. D istrict Judge Norm an C. Roettger ruled Tuesday
that an ordinance banning sIJrtless Joggers in the town is
unconstitutional. The ruling means that both a law used to
ticket attorney Allen DeWecse Nov. II, 1979, and a new one
passed after the first statute was struck down w e no longer

Throughout the five phases, respon­
sibilities or a check list of duties and a
course of action, are suggested to
coordinate the police, c iv il defense, and
other agencies so the county is operating
efficiently.

Coordinator H a iry Pinkman. D etails of
each individual's responsibilities are also
defined in the event of a natural orm an-

The communication system described
in a document as the Seminole County
Emergency Operation Conditions, was
passed out to most of the county's
department heads.

Many students seeking a Guaranteed Student U a n won't
receive one because of the “ sweeping changes" in financial
aid following the budget cuts, Ernest Smith, director of the
Student Financial Assistance Commission, told the board.

M en Can Jog Topless Again

ID A B E I., Okla. IU P I ) — A woman has filed
assault and battery charges against her
dentist, who she claim s forcibly removed her
dentures from her mouth.
Dr. Curtis Brookover, 38, said patient le e
Ann Stnval refused to pay fur a p a ir of Swiss
porcelain dentures, so he went to her home in
Bethel and pulled them out of the 33-year-old
woman's mouth.
Brookover was charged late Monday with
assault and battery in the unorthodox
repossession, a spokeswoman for the district
attorney's office said. M rs. Stoval also has

Seminole County Disaster

$1,425 In Parking Tickets

M e a n w h ile , Robert L a b b y , the
If police okay the event, at 7 a.m. on
m agician, w ill be doing tricks to try to Oct. 30 the roller rin k w ill open with
beat the record and set a new one. R oller
1jb b y starting his m agic tricks. The rink
rin k personnel w ill keep an eye on him
itself w ill not be open for skating or
w hile the skaters are gone.
anything else — just as a vehicle for
The commissioners voted 4 to 1 to allow
Labby, Bell said. R egular hours of 7 p.m.
B e ll to stage his Halloween special,
to II p.m. will be honored on Friday.
subject to piolice approval. The com- During the lim e the rink is not in
m iaslin ers want to be assured by police operation, concessions w ill not be
lhat the event w ill not be a hindrance to operating, skates not rented and music
residents nearby or the skaters them­ not played. Bell added.
selves.
Commissioner Robert Reis said he
B e ll said he's sure the evening w ill be a
voted against the proposal because of the
success.
lack of assurance that the police them­
" I t m ay help to get kids off the street
selves w ill not be understaffed and
and into the rink. That should m ake it overworked that night causing u break­
down in police protection. He also asked
w ill be present tat the rin k's expense I easier on the police that night._
A ll proceeds from the event w ill go to (or a survey of area neighbors to see if
and that the parking lot adjacent to a
residential area w ill be kept under the le u k e m ia Foundation, according to they w ill be affected by the all-night
event. - B A R B A R A F E A R N
control at a ll times.
Bell.

AREA DEATHS
PAUL E l AKA
P a u l Kuatnr Klara, St, o(
190 K a n ta k e Drive, Osteen.
died Monday evening at his
residence after a long illness
Born on Dec. 30, 1919. in
Sullivan County, Trnn., he
moved to Deltona In 1960 from
B ristol, Trnn. H r was a
Baptist, a veteran of U S .
Navy in World War II and
m em ber of the D isa b le d
Am erican Veterans Chapter
X of Sanford. He was a heavy
construction superintendent.
Survivors include his wife,
M rs. Bertha Eden ELsea,
O steen, daughter,
M rs .
P a u le tte Dando M u lle r,
Sanford; son. Eugene Elaea,
Wolf Creek, Ore.; two sisters,
M rs. Ann Wagner, Blountsville, T rnn and Mrs. OUie
B a rto n ,
Saraso ta;
fo u r
brothers. Claude Elsea, U s
V e g a s, N cv. J a c k E ls e a ,
Danbury Conn.; Sam E lsea.

Casselberry, Robert Elaea,
B lu ff C ity , Tenn. Seven
Krimdehiidren
Body was sent to Blountsville Trnn. for funeral ser­
vices and burial by Gram kow
Funeral Home, Sanford.
MRS. M il JJ R E D M U R P H Y
Mrs. Mildred E. Murphy,
82, lit . 2, State Road 436.
Forest City, died F rid a y after
a long illness. Bom Nov. 20,
1696, in Havana, IU., the
moved to Orlando f r a il there
in 1930. She formerly taught at
Roane High School, was a
I’ rolestant and member of the
Retired Teachers Association
and the Thespians.
Survivors include nieces.
M rs. Joyce Janovec, Melrose,
III., and Mrs. Jennie Fanella,
Illinois.

A R N O LD IIA V E H L E F .
Arnold lU u e rsle v Ha verba,
78. 330 Florida Ave., Oviedo
died Tuesday at his residence
after a long illness Born In
Brooklyn, N . Y . Feb. 22. 1909,
he moved to Oviedo in 1988
from West Nyack, N .Y . He
was a journalist, an explorer
and an artist and a m em ber of
the Fellow Explorers Club of
New York and the Sons of
Norway Lodge 301 of Orlando.
He is survived by his wife,
Madeleine, Oviedo.
Garden Chapel Home for
F u n e ra ls, O rla n d o is In
charge of arrangements.

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RENT TO OWN-T’ WEEK 99

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G R A M K O W
FUN ERAL HOME
130 WEST AIRPORT BO U LtVARD
SANFORD. FLORIDA

m tP M O N I 322 3213
WILLIAM l , GRAMKOW

111 ■ «a■a
■Si-1 a

USD

«

M ill

�OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Senford, FL

Wednesday, Aug. II. 1MI-18

I.V. Additive Program:
Cancer Patients N o w G et
Chemotherapy A t SM H

Judy Evans:
1 am vary
fortunate to
have a family
that's so
cooperative.
We share.'
M#f»M PhoH If Lett tm.f*

Cook O f The W eek

Household Runs Smoothly
O n Combined Effort Plan
By LOIS SM ITH
Herald Carrw pendent
"W e have, w hat I refer to as a combined effort household,"
u y i Jud y E vans. “ A combined effort household Is one In
which a ll persons are actively Involved w ith the routine of
accomplishing tasks which make a home run smoothly,” she
said.
Judy and her husband Mike art newlyweds. They have been
married I I months. Judy has three children, Candy, 22,
Richard, It, A m y, U and two grandchildren, Koleen and
Stephanie. She la a Summa Cum Laude graduate of Seminole
Community College.
Currently, she Is employed, part-time, by the Metropglltan
l i f t Insurance Company u a clerical aales assistant. Mike Is a
citrus and produce broker with the C entral Flo rid a Produce
Company.
While In college and when she was w orking fulltim e, Judy
and the children a ll pitched In to cook, wash dishes, clean and
do a ll the m any things Involved In keeping a home running
smoothly.
" I felt and s t ill do feel It's Important for children to learn
rtsponalbllty from an early agt. They need to receive a ll the
preparation they can for adult life," said Judy.
"When M ik e and I married, the routine rem ained the same
and he too aha res In the "combined effort" plan. It works well
(or our fa m ily ,” Judy says.
"I like to cook, but for many years I had to re ly on “ anyonecan-cook" recipes. Often, the children would prepare dinner
and I felt com plicated recipes would not be (air to them. 1 am
very fortunate to have a family that's so cooperative,” Judy
smiled. "W e sh are."
“ I (eel I now have the best of both w orld s." Judy explained,
"I work In the m ornings and I am home when the fam ily gets
there In the evenings." "It's really a very nice arrangement,"
she u ld .
M ARINATIN G S A L 'C E
gallon soy mucc
4 gallon w ater
4 tablespoons vinegar
1 tablespoon ginger powder
I tablespoons Crlaco oil
lemon o r lim e slices, fresh garlic and onion to your taste

4

(chopped).
S tir Ingredients together In a large container that has a lid.
Place the m eat o r cut up chicken In It and let marinate over­
night In the refrigerator, turning occasionally. This recipe
makes enough sauce to use when cooking for a large group.
C H O CO LAT E PO U ND C A K E
v* pound butter
4 cup C risc o shortening

tv teaspoon baking
4 tablespoons cocoa
1 cup m ilk
1 tablespoon vanilla
Cream butter, ahurtenin* and « « * . Add eggs and v&amp;nCte
and m ix thoroughly. S ift together dry Ingredients and blend
them w ith the creamed mixture, alternating with m ilk,
beginning and ending with flour. Bake In a tubs pan for 1 4
hours In a I S degree oyen. Baking tim e m ay be leas, depen­
ding on oven. If using a'teflon linsd tube pan, no need to grease
U, If not then grease and flour the pan lightly.
C H E R R Y -N U T CO O KIES
2 4 cups flour
4 leeipoon salt
1 teaspoon baking aoda
1 cup bolter
1 cup brown sugar (packed)
4 cup w hite sugar

M CI
1 4 te**xx&gt;a v an illa
I cup chocolate chips

■
|

4 exp nuts
4 cup chopped maraschino cherries
SIR the firs t throe Ingredients together. C rea m butter and
■M ars th o ro ^ h ly . Blend In egg and v an illa and beat weiL Add
floor, (git and NiMng soda and blend. S tir In chocolate chips,
rails and chortle*. Drop « : greased cookie sheet and bake In a
m degree oven fo r 19-12 minutes or until brown.

NO B A K E P E A N U T B U T T E R CO O KIES
Chocolate
2 cups sugar
4 cup m ilk
2 4 tea poons cocoa
1 stick butter or oleo
OR
Plate
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
4 cup m ilk
/ I stick butter or oleo

J .

r t "1

Ja

M is above Ingredients In pan and bring to a boil Remove
from heat and add 1 teaspoon vanilla, 4 cup peanut butter and
I cups of quick oats. Drop by teaspoon on wax paper.
BBt) M E A T B A 1 X S
2 pounds ground beef
1 cup Ice water
4 cup soy sauce
4 teaspoon pepper
M ix together and shape Into sm a ll balls. Bake on an
ungreased pan for 30 minutes st 273 degrees.
S A U C E FOR BRtf M E A T B A L L S
1 10 ounce bottle of chill m u c c
4 cup grspe Jelly
Juice of 1 U nion
M ls together and heat. Pour over cooked meatballs and keep
warm In oven or crockpot.
VEG ETABLE SA LA D
2-3 cups vinegar
1 cup sugar
4 cup salad oil
B ring to boll! Remove from beat and cool.
M U and drain:
1 can Fre n ch style green beans
1 can white shoe peg com
I can peas
1 can kidney beans
1 Jar punentoes (chopped)
1 green pepper (chopped)
1 cup celery • sliced thin
M green onions - chopped
4 teaspoon sa il
pepper to taste
M U w ell and add cooled vinegar m U ture. Cover and let
stand In refrigerator to blend flavors. Keeps well in (he
refrigerator.
'
F R E N C H PE A SA N T O M E I X T
4 slices bacon
1 cup tiny potato cubes
* eggs
4 tablespoons m ilk or water
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon pepper
14 cup chopped onion (optional)
4 cup chopped green pepper (optional)
Cut bacon In sm all squares; fry crisp. Rem ove from pan and
keep w arm . Add potatoes, onion and green pepper and brown
in hot U L Beat eggs unul creamy and add the m ilk or water,
salt and pepper. Pour the egg m U ture over cooked potatoes,
onion and green pepper and cook over low heat until omelet Is
puffed. Sprinkle h a ll the omelet with bacon. Fold omelet over,
remove to a warm ed platter.
Y ield: 4 servings
O V E N E A S Y C H IU B E E F B A K E
1 4 pounds ground chuck
I cup chopped onion
4 cup chopped green pepper
I I ounce can tomato sauce
113 ounce can c h ill beans
I 2t« ounce can ripe olives (drained k sliced)
1 cup undiluted evaporated m ilk
4 teaspoons chib powder
1 4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoons flour
3 cups com chips
Brow n ground chuck, onion and green pepper. Pour off
t x c e u fs L S tir In salt, flour, chib powder, tomato Moce, chib
beam, d iv e s and evaporated m ilk. C over bottom of buttered 2
quart casserole w ith 1 cup of com chips. P o u r in meat mixture
and top w ith rem aining 2 cups of com chips. Bake In 330 degree
oven 33b&gt; 40 minutes. Serve Immediately. Y ie ld : U servings.

" In s te a d of o ffering a
cru m b to our patients and our
nurses, I want to offer them
the whole cake".
Sharon Smith, registered
p h a rm a c is t, spoke com ­
passionately — yet were a
determ ined expression as the
talked about the first phase of
S e m in o le
M e m o r ia l
H ospital's new I.V. Additive
P ro g ra m Just completed
“ O u r cancer patients no
longer have to drive to Orange
County to get chemotherapy.
O ur nurses are freed to spend
m ore tim e with patients, and
the patients are assured that
a ll drugs are mixed In an
a s e p tic environm ent. W ith
th is p ro g ra m and new
equipment, there Is a built-in
q u a lity control.
The
new additive or
“ piggyback” program Is an
advanced and cost effective
p a t ie n t
m e d ic a t io n
d is trib u tio n system w hich
fe a tu re s two components.
There Is the unit dose aspect
an d the intravenous ad­
m ixtu re service.
It Is the great potential of
the latte r which truly excites
Sharon, along with her Job of
doing the actual mixing. She
Is a m em ber of a new phar­
m acist-nursing team which Is
blending the traditional roles
of each discipline to ensure
the best patient care possible.
In the past, the pharmacy
supplied nursing units with
m edication, while the nursing
s ta ff w as responsible for
m easuring the drugs and
adm inistering
medication.
N o w , l( Is prem easured,
m ix e d
Into
ready-toadm lntster packages In (he
p h a rm a c y and then ad­
m inistered by nursaa who
have undergone hours of In­
service training to pul the new
concept Into practice.
And that Is where the other
m em ber of the team becomes
so Important. Claire Poulin la
designated the I.V. nurse. She
Is m uch more than that A
"trou ble shooter” , she han­
dles most of the difficult
cases, oversees the starting
and re -sta rtin g o( I.V .'s,
trains current as well s i new
nursing staff members and
w o rk s w ith patients to
alle viate their (ears.
" T h e pe rso n a l (ouch Is
worth more than 23 pills",
C la ire stated. She went on to
u y how Important It Is to see
and care (or the tote! patient.
Both of these profeMionala
strongly believe In this ap­
proach. Although Claire deals
d ire ctly w ith patients, Sharon
M y s site Is not Just mixing
solutions. “ It Is not Just an
I.V . bag
they are m y
patients. I am personalising

S h a r o n S m it h a d d s m i x t u r e to in t r a v e n o u s b a g w h ic h w i l l a llo w p a t ie n t s
r e q u i r i n g c h e m o t h e r a p y to r e c e iv e t r e a t m e n t a t S e m in o le . M e m o r ia l
H o s p it a l r a t h e r t h a n t r a v e l i n g to n e ig h b o r in g c o u n t ie s .
their medication, a vital part
of the tailor-m ade care
developed for each person".
Both became excited and
downright Impassioned when
the Intravenous admixture
service x u explored. They
alm ost spoke in unison when
they Indicated, "a stitch In
tim e M ves nine". The m ix­
tu re co n tain s substance

been for Randy
K is e r
(D irector of Pharm acy) we
wouldn't be at this point” .
T his spirited team flatly
Mys their work Is a v ital link
tn the health of their patients,
p a r t ic u la r ly
since
the
bloodstream Is lite rally a

PRICES OOOD AU0.1S THRU SEPT. I, tf«t

essential to Uie: proteins,

OPEN

calories, vitamins, minerals,
electrolytes — everything a
person needs. The liquid can
be Injected directly Into a
patient's arm or in very
serious esses where there Is
no p e rip h e ra l access, a
s u b c la v ia n
catheter
Is
utilised.

7

DAYS
A
WEEK
.

The sUtch In time refers to
the great potential of com­
p le te Intravenous feeding.
They would like (o see more
n u t r it io n a l
a sse ssm e n t
carrie d out by a team com­
posed
of
t
d ie ticia n ,
physician, pharmacist, and
nurse.

^

U

« -» * • •

Owenttty
Righto
Reserved

PASS AVE. A 25th ST., S A N N ID

Tke Pfoce

W ith Ufeglvlng additives,
the patient would heal faster,
ensuring a shorter hospital
stay. "Patients w ill feel better
as their bodies will be In
balance. We haven't gotten as
fa r along with the program as
we would Uke, but we are
getting there” , Sharon M id,
referring to phase one. C laire
chim ed in, "and If It hadn't

cV « r SIRLOIN
T-BONE STEAK

CLUB
STEAK
E conom y

BEEF

SAVE up to *2.00 per lb.

extra lean
uvda

impeded

EX TR A LEAN

CHUCK

The original Morgan horse was a mutation owned
by Justin Morgen in 1789 in Rendolph, Vermont.

SHOULDER

RO UND ROAST

STEAK

1

68

H yew want to
ha "wltra tomlalne"
came tee ear
new select ten ef

Lb.

Lb.

18 8

SHOULDER

Xucgette

Round Steak

Vanity P a ir
01 toad
lily Of Fraaca
Iris
OllHgan 8 OMally
Blush
Bab Mickle

Sirloin and T-Bone

CENTER CUT

p si l ll n wxappi d M i l l

n t a u

special

Front Quarter

U.S.D.A. ORADE A

_ __

u l

lean country style

PORK RIBS
IA H P IO C ID
Wllh Purchase gf Earrings

» 6 8 ‘

CUT-UP

£m ' Place
Untold's Newest And
Met) Unique Beuttqwe

FRYERS
COMBINATION
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PM. 321-4121

Lb.

IME.tstST.
DOWNTOWN SANFORD

LO IID Y C U tO w w ir-LIU BARKER. M r-

48'

Sliced Bacon
* 9 8 *

FROIEN

I LB. BOH

FILLETS ef BONELESS

JQ Q

SEA TROUT or WHITING

4

I

JL

person's lifeline.
They both believe in what
they are doing. They liv e their
beliefs. Read the bum per
sticker on Claire's car. It says
tn bold letters, "E x p e c t a
M ira cle ” . They are helping
those m iracles to happen.

- « • ‘ ■w. —

�3R -C v«nlng H oratd.Santocd,FI.

W odnttdsy, Agg.14, Ittt

C A LE N D A R

TROOP 832 ATTENDS
FIRST ANNUAL CAM P

W E D N E S D A Y , A U G U S T 28
Sanford Serrnaden ir n lo r rlU ie tu danrr, 2:30 pm .,
Citric Center.
Sanford A A Beginners. 8:30 p m., 1201 W. First St.

Scouting—The Better Life Troop No. H32, sp on
sored by the Sanford Housing Authority, attendee
Its first annual camp at Camp La-No-Che, held iij
the Ocala National Forest. Sixteen scouts at]
tended with their scoutmaster, William L. Lonfj
Jr. and assistants, Thomas Chisholm and Mose^
Brown J r. Troop committee chairmen are Joseph
Caldwell and E'hvllis Richardson. Coordinator is
Leroy Johnson, Betty Long and Maurice Parks
are scout workers.

Starlight Prom rtudrre, 8 p.m., D eBary Community
Center, Shell Road.
Ov r r r a t r n Ancaymoai, 7:30 p.m., Altamonte M all,
S e an .
Alcoholics Anonymous. 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Hoad 138 at Hermits Trail.
Closed.
Born to Win AA group, 8 p.m., Ravenna Park Baptist
Church, 2713 Country Club Road, Sanford. Closed.

ir M W ky M*rv* H a w tla b

Casselberry A A, I p.m.. Ascension lailheran Church,
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry. Closed except second
and last Wednesdays when open.
Ilrboa and liv e Oak R rb o s G o b AA, 220 Live Oak
Center, Casselberry, noon and 8 p.m.
Wednesday Step AA, 8 p.m., Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, C rane's Roost, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
T H U R SD A Y , A U G U S T 27
Sanfnrd AA, 8 p.m., 1201 W. F irs t St., Sanford. Open.
F rlrn d t of the lib ra ry of Seminole County quarterly
m ee tin g , 7 p.m., C ounty A g r ic u ltu r a l Center
Auditorium, Highway 17-92, Sanford. County lib ra ria n
Jean Rheim w ill ipeak on the county library system
and future plans. New m em bers welcome.
Senior titlie n s tour to St. Augustine for "Cross snd
Sw ord," bus leaves le c d s at Seminole Plata,
Casselberry, 3 p.m. ; pick up Sanford C iv ic Center, 1:30
p.m. C a ll 323-7131 for reservations.
Soundof-.Sunshlne Chapter Sweet Adelines, 8 p ro.
St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Bear la k e Road,
Forest City,
Breakfast and Fashion Show for county art teachers
to kickoff Scholastic Art Program , 8:30 a.m., Robin­
son’s, Altamonte M all. Designer Jewelry and ISth to
17lh century art to be displayed.
Ktnder|srtn&gt; oprn bouse for IdyOwllde School
kindergarten students (new or registered) between
hours of 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
FR ID AY , A U G U S T 21
17-12 Rig Rook AA, 8 p m. M essiah 1.utherm Church,
17-02 and Dnt Track Road. Closed.
Tang lew nod AA, 8 p,m „ St. R ich ard 's Church, la k e
Howell ltd. Closed.
SUNDAY, A U G U S T 30
Second Annual Winter P n rk M all Gymnastics
tin llatl»nal, 1 to 1:30 p.m. F re e to the public.
TH U R SD AY , S E P T . 18
Philippine Folk Arts Tbentre Group to perform, 8
p.m., Valencia Community College East Campus
Theatre, 701 N. Kconlockhatchee T ra il, Orlando. Open
to public. Call 8M-9070

IOWA

MEATS

Ws to ll Only
U S.D A. Choice
Naturally Agod
Western Beef

U.S.D.A. Choice

ado ■

CHUCK
ROAST

&gt; 1

U.S.D.A, Cholct

ffc ■

CHUCK
STEAK

51

I?

1

1?

1

U.S.D.A. Choico

ENGLISH
ROAST

&lt;1
^ |

1??
$1

U.S.D.A. Choico

_

SWISS
STEAK
Froth Oaily

GROUND
CHUCK

|&lt;?
SI I®9
|

gk, _

3 Lbs. Or Mora

1

Georgia Orado "A"

WHOLE

59?

2108 S. FRENCH A V I . (17-92)
N IX T TO MR. C'S F R IE D CHICKEN

PHONE ORDER AHEAD

323452ft

Its Rsady Whoa You'ra ttoadv

D E A R A B B Y : The recent
letter In your column from
C yd Ha saner, whose 18-yea rold daughter was killed by a
drunk driver, reminded me
that drunk d riv en have Just
about been eliminated from
the roads of Norway because
of mandatory Jail sentences
snd revocation ot driving
licenses. I have often won­
dered why we, as Am ericans,
co n tin u e to tolerate th ia
needless slaughter on our
highways.
O ur state legislature Just
reform ed Maryland's drunkdriving laws on July 1. Now
our congressman, Michael D.
Barnes, has Introduced in the
House of Representatives B ill
H.R. 2188, for legislation to
co m b a t
the
nationw ide
epidem ic of drunk driving.
Identical legislation in (he
Senate IS. 871) is being
sponsored by Rhode Island
Sen. Claiborne Pell.
If you agree that such
legislation Is a step In the
right direction, please bring
these b ills to the attention of
your readers. If they are
seriously Interested In saving
lives and reducing injuries on
our highways. I'm sure they
wouldn't mind spending a few
m inutes writing post cards lo
th e ir
congressm en
and
senators in support of these
bills.
G E R A LD IN E
N O H liY ,
B E T H E S D A .
M D.
DEAR
G E R A LD IN E !
F ir s t .
some
it a llit le s
p ro v id e d by the N a tio n a l
H ig h w a y T ro lfle Safety
A d m in is tra tio n
and the
National Safety Council:
— One quarter ol a million
Am ericans lost their lives In
alcoh ol related outo crashes
over the past decade.
— About 28,000 ettiirna are
killed In drunk-driving In­
cidents yearly.
—N early 70 Americana are
killed In drunk-driving In­
cidents every day.
— O ver
oae
m illio n
Am ericans sutler crippling
and other serious Injuries
every year la drunk-driving
lucid euls.
— F a r Americans up to age
IS, the No. 1 cause o l death Is
motor vehicle accidents, and
m ore than half of highway
dratha are caused by drunk
drivers.
— On an average weekend
night, one out ol every 10
d r iv e n on the road is drank.
—81 perreat at d riv en who
k ill themselves la single-car
w recks are drank.
— Of every tjM* drunken
drivers, ealy one Is arrested.
Now, BUI a R IU8:
— F o r l i n t offraden, would
p n v ld e mandatory sentence
of at least II days al com­
m unity service, la addition la
tines and participation In
a k o h o l treatment or traffic
safety programs.
— F o r repeat offenders
I persons convicted of drank
d riv in g twa or more times

within a five-year period),
w ould provide m a n d a to ry

sentence of at least I I days*
Imprisonment, In addition lo
fines and participation la
alcohol treatment programs.
— F o r first offenders, would
p r o v id e
m a n d a to ry
suspension of the d r iv in g
privilege by the state licen­
sing agency for up U oae year
with provision for a restricted
license.

Chase*

LOOSELEAF
FILLER PAPER

cum

NAIL
ENAMEL
»tm t

C|

ttuviMthddll

BUFFERIN
TABLETS
•em iot'M J

it t u r t
court-

4. pro-sent race screening of
offenders fo r sanctioning
purposes.

DUO-TANG
WIREBOUND
REPORT COVERS NOTEBOOK

You're g o in g to like our

Backto

09

IS *

MEAD ORGANIZER

NOTEBOOKS

SH A W or BLUNT
SCHOOL SCISSO RS

COMPARE O S D AND SAVE
ECKERD PENCILS

ECKERD
COSMETIC
PUFFS
SMoent

-h

SAVE U8
Rap. 1788
Limited Quantity
lea Makar Extra

1. m onitoring to
co m p lian ce
w ith
ordered sanctions;

AIM

If.M Cu. Ft. No Frost
Low Operating Cast.

• ln*rgy savor awtlcb in normal ptniU
h*lp* cut opanung ou*t
• Oovorod dairy ooropartroont.
• JtolL* out on wheels

and public Information ef­
forts;
2. efficient ir r e s t and ad­
judication procedures;

TOOTHPASTE

REFRIGERATOR

• Booled snack pock tor unwrapped mat

—A u n ifo rm
standard
definition of driving while
into bested shall be set at a
blood-alcohol
concentration
le ve l no h ig h e r than .18
perreat
- P r o v id e s a program
eaordlaated
la
close
cooperstioa with the local
communities that Includes:
I. adequate enforcement

ECK ERD

fO O D SAVER

• Adjustable s p lit I m l su ol ahelve*
• TWO removable ogg irojr*

— Fo r re p ea t offenders,
would p ro vide m a n d a to ry
suspension of the d r iv in g
p rivileg e by the
state
licensing agency for not less
than one year.
-E stab lish e s a statewide
driver record-keeping system
ropable of Identifying repeat
offenders that is easily ac­
cessible to the courts.

You're Going to Like Eckerd's
Pharmacy Service.

* » t t « “ ’* * • *

fi

�Evening Hers Id, Sanford. F t

In And Around Geneva

Wednesday. Aug, 24. 1981—]B

N ew Principal O n School Staff
-•in
the school doors open at Geneva Elemenij.,1 U r y School Monday, the students w ill be meeting
jj. jto e lr new principal, M rs. Nancy M cN am ara.
‘ ' M rs. M cN am ara and her husband, Joe, live in
U ngw ood with their children, K e lli and Kevin,
v - 'v She received her teaching degree Irom Kansas
State U niversity at Manhattan In 1958, and her
if'] M aster of Education degree from R ollins College,
A W inter Park, In 1971.
f'

Befcre Joining the Seminole County School
System in 1967, Mrs. M cN am ara taught In the
elementary school at Hobbs, N.M., and in the Junior
high and high schools o l Iavem e, Oklahoma.
H er local teaching experiences Include: guidance
counselor at English Estates Elem entary, where
she also taught, and adm inistrative trainee at
Forest City and South Side Elem entary schools.

M rs. M cN am ara is currently president ol the
Beta Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Gam m a, InterA national Society ol Women Educators, and is vice- chairm an of the Seminole County School Advisory
v&gt; Committee.
W hile visiting with the new principal ol Geneva
Elem entary School, I learned there w ill be open
house (or kindergarten students and their parents
on F rid a y between 1 and 1.30 p.m.
Students w ill meet their teacher and see the
classroom. Parents are requested to bring Iroij-it m uniiation records and m edical forms If they have
not previously done so.
'

k A ll children in Seminole County are required to
3 ‘,t have started their immunization program s before

During the day, fa m ily pictures were taken, a
business meeting held and historical volumes sold.
Before saying their goodbyes, the fam ily
gathered to sing the traditional fam ily song, penned
years ago by a Roush, and sung to the tune of:
"C a rry Me Back To O ld V irg in ia ."
It was announced that next year's assembly w ill
be in Belifounlaine, Ohio.

Lou

Childers
Geneva
Correspondent
349-5790

enrolling in public school. If you have not started
your child's shots, the Seminole County Health
Department's free clinic Is open Frid ay , from 8
a.m. until noon.
The clinic, sponsored In association with the
Geneva Citizens Association, is held at the Geneva
Community Center on F irst Street.
M is. Florence Wallace, a 25-year Geneva
resident, and her daughter, Mrs. C.W. (D oris)
Lewts and grandchildren, Mike, Peggy and
Frankie, attended the 279th Roush fam ily reunion
Aug. 15 at the Ocala C ity Auditorium.
Mrs. Wallace and her fam ily are branches of the
Roush fam ily tree through her late grandfather,
S.A. Stevens.
After being greeted at the door by Ralph Roush,
the coordinator of the reunion, a catered m eal
which included Southern fried chicken was served
to the over 300 [sm ily members who hailed from as
far away as Barbersville, West Va., home of
Sheldon Roush, the fam ily historian.
This was the llr s l lim e ever for the fam ily to meet
In the Sunshine State, even though S3 of them liv e in
Florida.

UM*S
itu iu t

It's time once again for the Cub Scouts of Pack 837
to resume their Monday meetings at the Geneva
United Methodist Church in the fellowship hall.
According to Cub M aster Stuart Anderson and his
wife Donna, Den Mother of Den 2 (8 and 9 year
olds |, the pack has been on a short vacation this
summer, and w ill begin meeting again Aug. 31.
The Cubs meet each Monday at 7 p.m. for their
individual den meetings, coming together the last
Monday of each month for the Pack meeting.
Other leaders of the Geneva Pack are Joy Keith,
Den Mother lor the 7-year-old’s, D e n i; Jean Mellor,
assistant for Den 2; Roy M ellor, assistant to Stuart
Anderson for the Weblos Den I tO-years-oid and up);
SharonC tin e r,secretary; M rs. Sinl, treasurer; and
Buddy Long, chairm an.
For information, c a ll the Andersens at 3t9-5888,
before the '81-’82 registration rush.
I would like to add a special note of thanks this
week to Traders of "In And Around Geneva" for
their warm encouragement and participation In
coming forth with the "goodies" that make this
column possible.
Please continue to keep m y telephone line bur­
ning.

units
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SCOTCHTAPE

0 '8 U L U V A N
HOME
EN T ER T A IN M E N T
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M IT E R TAB/
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ELMER’S
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MISSES'KNEE-NI

A n n iversary
Swanns Honored A t Reception
By DORIS D IE T R IC H
O U R S E L V E S E ditor
Although the 50th wedding anniversary is
the golden milestone in a m arried couple's
life, it came up diamonds for Ora Mae
Swann — a gift of diamonds from her
husband of 50 yrsrs, George I- Swann Sr.
The Swanns were m arrie d on Aug. 23,1931
in Grand Field, Okla. They moved to San­
ford In 1936 and to l.ake M ary in 1972.
George retired lo a n the United States
Postal Service in 1973. The couple say "they
ure taking life easy."
On Sunday, their children honored them
with a reception at the home of a son and his
wife, M r. and Mrs. Charles Swann, 175 S. 5th
St., laike Mary,
T heir children include: George I . Swann
Jr., Sanford; Charlotte Wilke, Houston,
Texas; d ia rie s Swann, la ik e M ary; Mary
Frances Ice, AM l, Texas; ami Richard
Swann, Sanford.
They have nine grandchildren and one
great grandchild.

Ora M ae greeted the reception guests
wearing a blue dress enhanced with a yellow
rose corsage. George wore a yellow rose
boutonniere in the lapel of his suit.
A color scheme of gold and white w as
carried out In the home decor and re fre sh­
ments. The daughters and daughters-ln-law
rut and served the gold and white tiered
anniversary cake. Granddaughter S h e rry
le e kept the guest registry.
Ora M ae said one of the highlights of the
anniversary celebration was receiving a
congratulatory card from President and
Mrs. Heagnn.
Another surprise, she said, w as an
arrangement of flowers from Sanfurd
Attorney Douglas Strenstroni,
“ We had a great time, a fantastic tim e ,"
Ora M ae said. Friends came that we had not
seen In years. There were nice friends.. .nice
neighbors. ..gtfU... cards..."
The happy event ended with 23 fa m ily
members a ll having dinner together at an
area restaurant.

Red Cross Conference

CON-TACT VINYL
COVERING
Nyriw iN “J A 19

QLADESOLID
A IR FR ESH EN ER

MR. AND MRS. GEOIKlK I,. SWANN SR.

The C entrul
F lo r id a
Chapter of the American Red
C ro ss
w ill
host
the
Southeastern Red C ro ss
Management Conference at
the Hilton Inn Florida Center,
7400 International D riv e ,
O rla n d o , today through
Friday.

Also featured will be a
presentation by M rs. P a tty
A b ra h a m of the N a t io n a l
Board of Governors on the
future thrust of Red Crosa Into
the health services field . The
conference is expected to
close at noon Friday.

the N a tio n a l H u rr ic a n e
C e n te r . In M iam i,
The
T h u rsd a y m orning se s sio n
w ill begin wilh a presentation
by the National D irector of
Am erican lied Cross D isaster
Services, Robert D .Vessey, of
Washington, D.C.

Managers and key volun­
teers from all major Red
Cross chapters In the 10
southeastern states w ill be in
attendance, as well as staff
fro m Red Cross N atio nal
Headquarters in Washington,
D.C. and members ol the
National Board ol Governors.
S p e a ke r for
tonight's
opening dinner session w ill tie
D r. N e ll Frank. Director of

COAST
BATH SOAP l a t t
NW
l ‘M ■ V
U n ty ri u g
•k * ¥ HI wow urn M&gt;
IM IW l

NYLON SOCKS

O U RACELL

CRICKET
UGHTERS

LADIES’
SPORTSOCKS

SILVER
QUEEN

(Aglaonema)
Gorgeous tow light
house plant
mk

You're G o in g to Like
SANDWICH BAGS
51400

TABLETOP
IRONING BOARD

Eckert's Famous
Photo O f ted

■ o r M w O la x i
IW

TIMEX
WATCHES
WOOD-TONE
BOOKCASE .

METAL
WASTEBASKET

A C O /

OFF
D ra c a e n a £
M a r g in a ta 9

moo
flatm ate

ICECHEST

3 G a l. Reg. *16.99
STORAGE
CHESTS

S A N FO R D : 9)0 S lA ll SI. Sanford P lo w
LO N G W O O D ; Hwy. U I2 at S R. 0 4
434 C e n ltr. 941 S R. 434
C A S S E L B E R R Y : SammoH Plata 14)1 Sam oran Blvd
A L T A M O N T E S P R IN G S : 974 W att S.R. 4 U . 414 E. A ltam ontt Drive
O R A N G E C IT Y : Four Townes Shopping Center
wx A iM e rt t m MOMt TouauTogAam at

BOTH NURSERIES
NOW OPEN SUNDAY 11 S
OPEN DAILY 9:30-5:30

2JI W. UL MARYIIVO.
LAKE MARY
323.fi m

�I

BLONDIE

4&gt;—Evening Hersld. Sanford, FI.

Wednesday, Am . 14, Ittl

42 Medieval
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41 Bntith inturtr

ACROSS

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t Gtnstic

48 M ounlum

malarial

Iibbr |
47 V llt period Of
timt
41 Of God (Lit)
50 Plltry
52 Gnrt birth to
SB Drift in im ili
51 Vtmtiuti
60 Sptnith
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81 Securing
device
B2 Vermin
7 Predict
63 Child
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64 Dimin-itive lu f
prefn
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65 Beverege
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61 Compel!
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point
11 Fretemel
DOWN
member
31 Proper
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tnveiion dey 24 Reiound

(abb*)
4 Dopnvf of
sensation
8 Story point!
12 Detective
bomb
13 Cllrform*
county
14 No mote than
15 Oklahoma
town
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IT Nobit g t i
11 Aitb country
20 Roly
22 - ..... Lincoln
23 Stont Iprtfu)
25 Egypt iibbr)
27 RtmifktWt
ptrwn ( it}
30 S K n ity
33 EicUmstion
of disgust
34 Fodder towtr
38 Brogin
37 Am from
39 Supermens

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GOOOMOffwiNON S om e
W f s A n d r e w s ,) F ilet o f
WHAT C AN 1
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61

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H O R O SC O P E
By B E R N I C E B E D E OSOL

for Thursday, August 27, 1981

P R IS C IL L A 'S POP
EV E R V 0C PV H O LLER S
AT M E .' T H E R E 'S N O
PO LIT EN ESS A R C X IN P
TMtS F C U S E . '

I'M N O T A L U M P .' I'M
A PER SO N W HO
R E S T O N P S TO
K JN PN ESS/

BUGS B U N N Y

U S P O S T O FFICE

JU S T R E M E M B E R A K IN D W O R P B E G E T S
A KIN O W O R P .' T R Y
IT S O M E T I M E

by Stoftdl * H tim dahl
STAM P M M

S IS■ sK S

Still A G ood Idea

■

40

42

A n Apple A Day

D E A R DR . L A M B - 1 read
your column on the lady who
suffered from constipation for
10 years. What a pity there
was no mention of eating
apples to break the laxative
32 Evergreens
habit. M y experience has
35 Inttrfection
been to eat as m any as needed
31 Insecticide
of whole apples to keep In
40 Slsvtr
good condition. I w ill be 90
43 S o ils
years of age soon and I need
45 tndnnduSl
only a few apples that I enjoy
47 Bud i horns
46 Bird of psscs to keep fit. It is important to
49 Dootwiy Sign eat the entire apple. Too
many people peel the apple
6 1 Mstnc fool
vib rantly
and throw the best part sway.
63 Brevsdo
Unclothed
26
Ounderheed
54 Seth a too
It ts im portant to thoroughly
Common
27 Slep
inceltor
55 Csrry on tht cleanse the apple because of
21
Amorouf
loot
Foots
bock
spray residue.
Fetne Qutene 21 Molt like cold
57 Bom
30
Sheer
fibric
AromibC gum
59 Ttnnit pro
renn
31 Boulevird
D E A R R E A D E R - Thank
9 9 to 11 you (o r y o u r thoughtful
4 5 6 7
comment. It is true that fresh
fru tt la often helpful tn
14
13
promoting good bowel func­
tion. Why? F o r one reason It
17
16
contains bulk and, as I usually
21
mention. It Is Important to
"
colon function to Include bulk
■ 25 29
tn your diet. Studies have
%
shown that cereal fiber ts one
31 32 of the m ore effective sources
of bulk and that ts why most
35
people usually mention bran.

37

A R C H IE

Aniwer to Previous Purrle

1• T A i c 8 A u f
c • A * 0 i A T A II 0
1 A It UH0 ft Oc ft t O
&gt; M 1 A ft T A u f A 0
t 1 ? Ho D
0 n• k TA i 8 110 8
1 0 U 1 A | 0 MA MA
Hu l l I A ft ‘■ U HN
Ki 0 A ■ ft £ T y D 1 O
wCi
O
A AHs
1A M f V A
* U wT ft 1 C A l 1 C (
Af 1 K c 1 Di c A N
1 • 8 1 f A0 0 1 A T

Your Birthday
August 27, i n i
Enterprises or ventures In
which you become Involved
this coming year are Ukeiy to
be rather grand in scope.
Your participation could yield
a U rge return, even 11 the role
you pU y Is a sm all one.
VIR G O (Aug 23-Sept. 22) A
surprising twist could be In
the offing for you today
regarding a situation where
you begin as the giver and end
up being the re ce iv e r.
R om ance,
tra v e l,
lu c k,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career foe the coming
months are a ll discussed in
your A stro -G ra p h w hich
begins with your birthday.
Mat) 51 lo r each to AstroGrsph, Bos 449, Radio City
Station, N .Y. 10019. Be sure to
ipectly birth date.
IJ B R A I Sept. 230ct. 23)
Y o u 'll do w e ll w ith new
ventures at this time, but
don't d is c a rd tra d itio n a l
methods just because the
enterprise la fresh. Old ways
still work.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Keep In touch today with
persona important to your
m aterial welfare, even though
they may be distant. Rearing
from you w ill reinforce their
support.
S A G IT T A R IU S (Nov. 23Dec. 21) Because you have the
ability to build upon that
which others start, you may
take a s o an situation today
and turn into something very
opportune.
C A P R IC O R N (Dec. 23dan.
191 S m a ll thoughts brin g
meager rewards, so don’t
think tn petty terms today.

Your grandiose ideas may
surprise others with the sire
of ihctr harvest.
A Q U A R IU S (Jan. 20-Feb
19) You're the type wtu
always tries to be helpful, and
today w ill not be an eiceptlon.
However, the rew ards for
your good deeds might.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 2D)
Others w ill want to cooperate
today because you know how
to make what you are doing
seem lu n an d im p o rta n t.
They'll be eager to hop on the
bandwagon.
A R IE S (M arch 21-April 19)
U se
q u a lity
m a te ria ls ,
merchandise o r furnishings It
you are refurbishing your
surroundings a t this time. The
splendor w ill have a favorable
and lasting effect.
T A U R U S (A p ril 20-May 30)
Unattached G em inis who are
seeking a new relationship
would be wise to lake ad­
vantage of any social In­
vitations today. M r. or Mra.
Right might also attend!
G E M IN I (M ay Il-June 20)
A shopping excursion to the
right places could turn out to
be profitable today. There's a
possibility you m ay acquire
an Item which w ill appreciate
in value.
C A N C E H (June 2I-July 22)
Compliments from you carry
consid erab le w eight w ith
friends today. When you see a
pal do something worthy, be
lavish in your praise.
L E O (Ju ly 23-A'ig. 211Your
possibilities for success are
better than u s u a l today,
because you m igh t have
persons w orking behind the
scenes who are as capable as
you.

Raw apples do contain a lot
of bulk and that slows the
absorption of the sugar In the
apple to the point that the
blood sugar doesn't even tend
tn rise after eating a raw
apple. M any other fruits also
contain bulk.
Now I can see that you are a
firm believer tn the old adage
that an apple a day keeps the
doctor away — and perhaps
the Idea that If a little Is good,
more is better. But I must say
that not everyone with colon
pro ble m s to le ra te s apples
well. F o r some people they
a rt gas form ers. But so ts
bran. A person sometimes has
to find out what works best for
him o r her as an Individual.
A proper diet, adequate
bulk and reg ular habits helps
to relieve m any of the bowel
com plaints that people have.
These aspects are discussed
in The Health f e lle r number
16-4,
S p a s tic
Colon,
Irregularity and Constipation,
which I am sending you.

NORTH
S t ill
41)101
VAII4
♦ ill
♦ Q61
WEST
EAST
♦75
4111
VQJIS1
♦ K 1 52
4 K 5J
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SOUTH
♦ AKJI4
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♦ J 187
♦ A K 51
Vulnerable; Both
Dealer. South
Wtsl

Sons

C a ll

Pan
Pan
Pus

]♦
&lt;♦

Pass
Pass

So*Ik
14
14
P in

Opening lead VQ

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Soatig
South took dummy's ace
of hearts and quickly played
two roundi of trump* Tarn
he went after club*
E u i trumped the third

Dr.
Lamb

Others who want this issue
can send 73 cents with a long,
stam ped,
self-addressed
envelope for It to me, in cart
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1561, Radio City Station, New
York. N Y 10019.
A spastic colon often causes
frequent sm all stools rather
than absence of a bowel
movement. And alcohol ts one
hidden cause lo r bowel
complaints m those who use
too m uch of It.
D E A R DR. L A M B - W o u ld
you kindly explain what a
Cotie* fracture of the wrist Is?
W ill It affect the fingers and
what are some of the alter
effects one can espect from
this? I am 66 years old and
fra c tu re d m y w rist. The
fingers seem very weak. Is
there some therapy 1 can take
to help the strength come
back tn my hand?
D EAR READ ER A
C o lie s fra c tu re m eans a
fracture of the distal end of
the radius, the bone tn the
forearm that joins the hand
region near the thumb. The
tip (styloid process) of the
ulnar bone ( the other forearm
hope) m ay also be broken.
The displaced bone gives the
wrist a typical “ silve r fork"
shape. It is named after the
doctor who first described it
in 1114, Abraham CoQes.
The swelling during the
acute injury can put pressure
on the nerves that go through
the w rist area (carpal tunnel)
to the fingers. This may cause
a variety of symptoms in­
cluding tingling. Rut II you
can move all your fingers and
use your hand, you are doing
well. A sk your doctor what
exercises are best (or you In
view of your stage of
recovery. But l should think
you can expect good recovery
In your case.

the defense got three dia­
mond! tric k i
South was quite proud of
hi! play and eiplained that
If clubs had broken 3-3. be
would have pulled the last
trump and nad 10 tricks
while if East had not held
the ta il trump, be. South,
would have been able to
cash his top three clubs and
then ruff hit last little club
In dummy.
South has used a "book"
play with the clubs, but he
also had butchered the hand
He had overlooked a dummy
reversal play that would
have Insured hts contract
(gainst any 3-3 trump break
end would not lose it against
a 4-1 trum p split If clubs
would run three times
At trick two South should
ruff a heart with his ace of
trumps Back to dummy
with the four to dummy s
eight and ruff another heart
high. Back to dummy with
another trum p lead and then
raff the last heart with hts
own last trum p Back to
dummy once more with
queen of clubs to play
dummy's queen of trumps
ind then go after the rest of
the clubs He would make
hts game against a 4-2 break
and an o vrrtrick against a 33 break

(KiwsFArnt BvnjtfKOE assn i

by Leonard Starr

sr S'*

•* *

'm rr't&gt;"#* *1"#

�Evtnmg Herald. Sanford. FI.

Wednetday. Aug. It, 1*11—18

M a cT A V lS H !

T O N IG H T 'S TV
WEDNESDAY ^
EVTS1HQ
600
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S)A N O Y GAlFFTTH
8:05
I t (17) FATHER KNOWS REST
8:30
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f l l T S ) CARTER COUKTBr
( 3 ( 10) JULIA CHILD AND C C U
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6:35
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D IS C O U N T C A R P E T S
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1 O THE ORMTEST AM W CJLN
HERO IVjSMn Bgonlt tttnap Pam
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197 M A G N O L I A A V E ,

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f t (35) BCCRENOeNT NETWORK

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making or t h e

WIZARD OR OX Uargarsl Mammon
(Tha W e isd wachl Raj Borgs'
(Tha Sea aero*} and Jack HaMy
(Tha Tm Man) rsmmiacs about tha*
)own*y doan tha yk*«&gt; Pack road

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10:30
}HASHVXi.E MUSIC
I ( Id) TO NORWAY: HOME O f
GIANTS Monty Python a John
Craaaa dona a raportar» cap in
March ot h* Norwagun roots and
Id rnvast-gaia tha graat via mg Ktrrrt

MO
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11:00
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group o« Amarican lo w * ti Ir among
5) BENNY H«X
logathar through Europa art tudtO) ROSTSCAJRT8
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11:03
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pan lo Iham Starring la a
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11:35
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LAwonity ot Nm Tort at Buffalo
f t ( 3 5 ) j e j iA K X f R

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a ru a ify taadt NataM. «ho la
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raatparanta |R|

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ABOUT BOOKS
R e v ie w s p re p a re d by
D

the A m e ric a n Library Assn .

■ ® OAA.Y DCVOTKMAl

2:10
ft

(1 7 )

(Z )D

S A IE B A LL
3:10

4:50
0 1 1 7 ) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
10:30
f t (35) FORI 00E3 TMf COUN­
TRY

Commit Suicide
ny C A R O L F E L S E N T H A L
A m rrlran L ib ra ry A sia.
Chicago paychiatrUt Peter Glovscchin) opens "The
Urge lo D i e W hy Young People Commit Suicide"
( M acm illan, 218 pages, 112.95) with a newspaper account
of Jeffrey Hunter, an outgoing, athletic 18-year-old from
the affluent tuburb of Ridgewood, New Jersey. In 1171, to
everyone's surprise, he hanged himself.
Hours after Jeffrey's burial, the mother of 18-year-old
Christopher Malhleson, a moody loner and a classmate of
Hunter's, found her ion hanging tn a stairway closet.
Jeffrey and Christopher were the third and fourth suicides
at the Ridgewood High School In a yrar-and-a-half.
The rate of teen suicide has tripled since 1155, making It
the second greatest k ille r of 13- lo 19-year-olds. The
adolescent suicide rate Is nearly 33 percent higher than
that of the overall population. A n sversge of 13 teens k ill
themselves every day.
What's wrong? The teenage y e a n are supposed to be
Joyful and carefree, the best y e a n of a person's life.
A ren't they? Absolutely not, says D r. Giovacchlnl, who
describes them as the most stressful, often the most
downright awful of a person's life. After all, the
adolescent has a monumental task to complete. He must
establish an Individual, separate Identity, he must
develop the capacity to function Independently, be must
learn how to become Involved in healthy, intimate love
relationships, he must learn lo trust and think well of
him self, he must develop an appetite for growth, for new
experiences, for work that Is both gratifying and
meaningful. "It is an enormous task even In the roost
supportive and stable environments.'*

1100

T h e n a n . says Giovacchlnl. no sim ple reason* why.
But be does make some generalisations and In hie most
useful chapter, describes the sort of parent who Is moet
lik ely to raise a suicidal teen-ager. One example of many
is the mother who hates herself. "Nothing connected with
m e Is any good," she reasons, "a n d since my children a n
indisputably fW h «f m y flesh they cannot be any good
e ith er." Often parents such as theae "appear to c a n
diligently lo r their c h lld n n but the children themselves,
through hearing a steady litany of their shortcomings,
learn instead that nothing about the way they look or act l l
attractive ." Theae a n the adolescent! who do not hellers
th e n Is any reason why anyone should Ilka them.

5:40
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A gain generalizing, G iovacchlnl Isolates some reasons
why leens k ill themselves. Separation Is tha major one.
The adolescent can become ln ctw o la b le when a best
friend moves away, when a boyfriend breaks off the
n la lio n sh lp , when a mother dies or when a lather moves
out of the house. The toes of a fam iliar environment Is
another type of traumatic separation — graduation from
high school being the moat common example.
A x tim ely and important as G io va cch tn l'i book is. It's
questionable whether it w ill reach Its intended audience parent*. The book is too theoretical, even philosophical for
nervous parents. They would probably prefer more of a
how-to-prevent-suldde a p p ro a c h -U a ta o f warning signs,
advice on exactly what to do should a child threaten
suicide, etc. But still, every parent of a teenager should
re a d this book. Before It's too late.

5:25
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Landon Snath. Tma Turmi
m n M 'A 'S 'H
U A8C NEWS FRQKTLINI
I t (35) WANTED DEAD OR AUVE

Unfortunately, many home environments these days
are neither supportive nor lia b le . The rise In teen suicide,
experts believe, is directly related to escalating divorce
rates, to the enormous Increase in working mothers, to the
disintegrating of strong neighborhoods, churches, and
extended fam ilie s
..........................
Interestingly, the rase studies from Gtovacchini's file*,
w ith which the book Is generously supplied, a n children
from affluent, tweapannt fam ilies. These a n not teens
who have suffered physical abuse, or Incest, or even
divorce. Y et these children of sutxirbU a n killing
them selvei at an alarm ing rate.

9 ’3 5
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N O TICE OF S H E R IF F S S A L E
v
n o t ic e is h e h e e y g i v e n
V that by virtue ol that certain W rit
A 04 e .rc v l'O ii Ittued out ot and
n wider tha M a i ot iho C O U N T Y
v*. Cout lo t Sanhnoia County, Florida,
upon A final lodgem ent rendered
in the etoreM id court on the 14th
day o4 M atch. A D 1**t. In Ihet
carlain case anlitlad, Roba*t M
M orrit, Plaint HI, &lt;1 Jotapn u
Sapp. Dei end a nt wench aloresaid
M in o l B ta c v tio n w a ld a ilv a y o d io
me at Snarill el Saminpla Counly,
Florida , and I have levied upon the
toltew ing d e s c rib e d p ro p e rly
owned by Jotrph R Sapp, said
properly being located n Seminole
| County. F lo rid a , m o re par
ticularly described a t toilow t
A ll ot (he interest, title, and
ownership oI Jotapn R Sapp in
and to the re a l property and
dwelling localyd o l 7104 W illow
Avynue. Sanford. F lorida, mot#
parl&gt;cMarry datcrlb od a t i An
undividad '1 m laresl M in* s &gt;, el
lot j&gt; en d eiieiino Lo &lt; &gt; 7 , S A N FO
P A R K . Plat Book L Page 4).
P u b lic B a co rd s b l S em inole
Counly. F lorid a
and ike undersigned a t thee ill ol
Sommeie County. F lo rid a , w ill Al
II 00 A M on lno l l l l t dAy ol
August, a d i m i , on er ig r sale
and sail to the highest bidder, lor
task, tu b itc i lb any end All
a im in g Hans, a l m e F ro m
iW e illO o o r s i "ha Sem inole
Counly Courthouse ik Sanlord.
F lo rid a . Ike above d r ie r ,b e d
R E A L properly
Thai M id tala u M in g m ade &gt;o
satisfy Iho term s c l ta w WN4 ol
Elocution
John E . Polk, S h e rill
Seminole Counly, F lo rid a
Publish August S. II, IF. 74. with
mo sale on August 77. IM I
DEL M

-T lqr7 d a m

H I E ALIVE
-S U N S H IN I S 1 M I

.
•fc

Col 322-2611
C IR C U L A T IO N O E P T

Evening Herald
if
S e cre ta ria t
W
Several Positions tor Iho carear
minded
A AA E M P L O Y M E N T
lo m lo w f e e i- ter m i
t u t Franck Ava
MS Ilf*
AVON R E P R E S E N T A T I V E S
Tha P a rt T im e Caraar
444 M ia - C o iia c t m i toe
Nradtd Shop I or amen O r ie l
But macnanic
M u tt have
tem plate knowledge ol CM C
Eaglet, and M C I butat OMy
qualified par ton with ta la
charge o b ilitv need apptv For
Appomtmtnt C o ll i l l &gt;110 Ath
tar M r Oeorgo Kona
)* Full Charge Bookkeeper J f
Cood pav good banetitt
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
LO W EST F E B - T E R M S
HIT French A va
111 l i l t
Equipm ent Operator IV
Starling celery S1I0 w kly Itn
grade and ) y rs aaperlanca.
operating heavy cpntlruction
equipm ent
M u tt p o t ta tt
ta p t n a n c *
In
o p a ta lm g
d ra g lin e a n d n a v e v a lid
F lo rid a C h a u ltu e r iic v n tr
A pply
S e m in o le
C eg nly
P erson n el, C o u rln o u te . N
Park Ava . Sanlord by August
71 IN I Application* accepted
Monday thru F rid a y • M a m
till Noon E q u a l Opportunity
Em plorer. M F . M V
every

day

is

I w ill do nouldkraping, errands
and cooking for Iho disabled
m o w s _________ __________
I w ill da housework every
day e a ttp i Thursday
II)7A7F

M— Business
Opportunities

Work al homa Jobs ovalloblol
Substantial earnings possibla
Call SP4 441 100) E H 1ST lor
intor motion
E X E C U T I V E D IR E C T O R
Responsible lor adm inistration
ol a ll phases ot public hous ing
in clu d in g p la n n in g , fis c a l
management, super v is on. co
ordmalion ot 4W conventional
u n its Im p le m e n t p o lic ie s
adapted by li v e m em ber
board Managem ent r ip e n
ante College degree prefer
red. P H M
ce H itica le re
q u irt) w ithin ih o llr s l yoar.
lim ite rIty with government
regulations h elpful Salary ne
gollabtt Sand tasum a to P O
Boa )0U. Sanlord. F la » t l l .

A

bmww*w

30-Apart mtfifi
UnfurnWnd
x p a r t m e n y b .
F a m ily A A d u lts section.
Pools ids l Bdrm s M ister s
Cove Apts I D 7400 open on

l u x u r y

3T-Apartn»n»i Furnished
I bdrm . sieve A rrfrig , no pels
440 wk ♦ 4700 sac 4)1
Palm etto A v e . )))B44I

S A N FO R D
Irm . au . u til inc ,
4100 dn. USD mo )) f n x
t a v O N R E N T A L S R E A LT O R
fu rn ish e d apartm ents lor Smior
Cif.jens 111 Palmetto Avy , J
Cowan No phone calls
SANF P K A V E - 1 bdrm, tpl.
1700 nd. t) ) S mo 77? 7700.
SAV O N R E N T A L S R E A LT O R
Completely turn I bdrm apt
Hardwood Doors, i.replace.
. no pets U7S mo e 4700 tec
F ? 4 ? S M .___________________
A partm e n t lo r rent 1700
per month li t
A last. 77) 4411
Looking F o r a New Hom a) —
Check the Want AOs lor houses
id every s u e and price

SANFO RD - Reas. w kly. A
monthly rates U til use tc,l
UP Oak A d u lts 141 JN 1
l i a l r y lu rm th e d M a ld se rv lc e .
wkly rental a v a il now a))
Palmetto 17)1441
C O M M U N IT Y
S U LL E T IN
BOARDI A R E
OREATC L A IS IF IE D
AOS
ARE
EVEN b e t t e r

J0-Ap*rtrmnti
Unfunthhad
y have ap4rtm ants io rani
Juno P o r n g Rao Ity
B aaitor 171 B an
Ba|oy faetrtry liv in g t ) Bdrm
Apia
O ly m p ia s i. Peal.
SkanandoAk V illa g e Opart l l
U lt f ll.
M tiio n v .lie
tra c e
wpts
Spacious, m odern ) Bdrm . I
Bath apt
C a rp e la d . k ll
equipped
CHBA
N ear
hosptel A lake Adults, no
pets. » 7B )))F1 S I._________

34— Mobile Homes

“ For

c ld u itld d dd Cat! 372 7611 or

ni m i

p re ltrrrd

perrenced gel coal sprayer,
but w ill c o n s id e r tra in in g
someone w ith other spray
painting e x p e rie n c e . M u st
have a good work record
E iceilen t benefits A par tor
real producer
Night s h ill
Cobra Boat Co S ilve r Lake Nd,
Ssnlord F la

i

■

Bank Tellers
Caper lesscod only

JL

A A A IM P L O V M E N T
LOW LOW F E B - T E R M *
t i l l FreacB Avtt
11)1111

D IR E C T l A L t k
people can add IP th ru incom e
ter nest 11 week* by adding
toe s A gift* Id th eir in home
sailing k a tio n A i cbmpany No m veslm enl — W eekly pay.
C a ll C A id l 7 d b d l 1 1 ) A JII
Sanlord A lter W a r n B arbara
))? 144? D a rt, E M l i t ? E v e
Altamonte Area

tw.ssstt

C A L L 323-3774
) Hr Pool 10a country Club
O riva V A . F H A Conv I7S.X0
New Root 44) 1400 Broker
Owner

NEW LOG HOME
B y O w n g r-B u ltd c r
2 B R - W i t h Lo ft T h a t C a n Ba
Used at 3rd B R O r D e n
»a A C R E L O T

L O C A T I O N S m a lt bu ildin g
Situated ,n high Iretllc arte
Zoned G C 7 only 4 7M M

FO R A P P O IN T M E N T C A L L :
M SS74-17H • )0J-1 2 1 -D B )

R E A L T O R i n a t t i OeyorN.ght

CONSULT OUR

To List Your Business...
Diol 322-2611 or 831-9993

Tarrant — n ic e r at If tenant home
w ith a n tla t a d g q r tg e in
d e lig h tfu l O e B a r r A ls o )
bdrm. 7 B m obile home HI
Meodowieo B y the River. Four
Tonnes R t a lly Inc. Broktr
4*4 47)0
Cassttbarry ) bdrm , im
m aculate. C H A . tons. Super
local .on No pets, eacont. 1)4)
m o, lease advance, deposit
m s i t t ____________________

Air Conditioning
O w ls W ill s x v lc d AC'S, retrig,
h e e le rs , w ater coolers, m iu
C a ll 17)4)77

Baauty Cara
t o w e r 's b e a u t y s a l o n
F O R M E R L Y H arriett s Beauty
Nook S it E 1st I f , D7 414)

Electrical
hi yrs ta p aii
types ot tto c ln a l work o l lair
pr.ces ) ) ) D M

O ueiilS od len on ti w oiling
No l x D S 7100
lA V -O tl R B N T A 1 4 . R I A L T O !
1 Br, In G round P x t Country
Club M anor Sanlord I anew
S7W mo H i. test and 1104
Depot it sal M X
W IM A N A O I RENTALS
HARO LD H A L L E I A L T Y ,
IN C . R E A L TOR 1)74714

Maid Servlet

e le c t r ic ia n

QuaMy e le ctrica l wore 77 ,r t
t i p t n t n c a M .nor repairs la
cam plata van mg 7)7 0114
Pa dd le Ians metalled,
ree td en tia lete clrice lw o rt.
c a ll) ) ) n o

LANDLORDS

E ip e r ift t c t d m u d w ill do «lt
VOUf h o u w c lf dn.ng work
C o v M ro u i Prom pt if f y if f
C a ll ta to iM ftlf M il

Remodeling
When you place a CLastilird Ad
In Tha E v e n in g Herald, slay
c lo w to your phone because
som ething wonderful it about
_to happen _ ________________
l i t easy to pleca a Classified Ad
W e 'll even help you word
It C a ll i n M i l

Nursing Canfar
R*m od«llng Specialist
We handle tha
W h o ta R a llo t waa

O U R R A T t S A R C LOWER

Boarding A Grooming
Anim al H aven Boarding and
O room lisg K t n n t l i Shady,
insulated, screened lly print
im ide. outside runs F in s
A IM A C cages We cater to
your pets
S ta rtin g stud
registry Pn 71)174)
Snow H ill Keren*I otters Cat B
Dog Ftoa Baths I ) up 14
Hour. F u ll Soevlco MS 111)

Handyman
Painting, c a r x n t r y . a ll trP a to f
horn* re p a irs C a ll tor Irto
estim ate 1)7 1474

Hauling A
Yard Wbrh
Hauling L Yard Work IF S sft
with Ad I l l - l i l t no ans Tij
IFF) L a rry , Joyta Bryant

L aatv.ew N ursing Center
F I F E Sacond S t . U n tord
m A707

B

E. Link Cons!.
333-7039

Financing Available

Odd Jobs
J A B H om a Improvement —
Carp en try work ot ony r/pe
Root rep a irs, gutter work,
painting (in te rio r or enter lor I.
plum b mg. s c r o l l, i t in mobilt
hom a re p a irs A root cosing,
and wood pat io docks F r x
estim ate 17S1M1

C L A S S IF IE D A O S A R E FUN
ADS R E A D A USE THEM
O FT E N Y O U 'L L L IK E THE
RESULTS

Roofing
B IL L EVA N S

11 rearstipenanct

1)1411)

Building Contractor

CtoekRapoir
o w altn ey

SALES ASSOCIATES

je w e le r

I M S P a rk Ava
n iiiM

Custom Built B rick On IV*
Acres Gniat Room. Fireplace,
island Kitchen. 1 Bdrms. }
Baths keduced Ta 4X 400
Coder
C o n te m p o ra ry
On
A p p ro i 1 A c r x . ) Bdrm . 1
Bath, Largo K it th a n W Island.
Stona Fpl, Lga Porch, Assume
11 Pet M lg

C E N T R A L F L O R I D A HOME
IM P R O V E M E N T !
Pam tm g. to o lin g . Carpentry
I k Bonpod 1 Guaranteed
F r x E m m e tts 11)144*
RaSCTOeninq, Pa.m .ng quality
w ork, low prices
B e y s Pam Img 11) N)a.

Painting
Heilm an Pam tm g A Repairs
D u a lity w ork F r e t E it , Dttc
ta Seniors l i e Base Rater
T E R R Y S IN T E R IO R S
W a llp a p e rin g , p a in tin g Low
p r k a s G u a r w ork H i M ia

u-*

M E lN T Z E R TILE
New ar re p a ir. le a k , sn o w x s ou(
4Pt&lt; salty.)Syvt t i p i*FRSA7’

atvg
JN OR IF TW OOO V IL L A G E
’ ‘ V -rJl-iv
w
*v
Attractive ) Barm . It s Bath
For Small Fa m ily la rg e Yard
With P rivacy Kane* Clean
And Pretty S4F.FX

Home Improvement

Call Frank

!» J N 0

Ch ristian Rooting |) yrs eip
MS 5140. t r x e tl R e fu tin g ,
s p e cia ln a in repair work A
new rooting

*. m — I.
L O n c rtw w o rk

G n cre ta W ork. lo o te rL lioors i
boon la n d s c a p in g A sod
work F ra * e s i 7)7 n g )
Sqrnabody is looking lo r yOwf
bargain O ttar l&gt; today in the
Classified Ads

Q U A L IT Y AT A P A I R p a ik U l
Can R r p a ir i A Im proy. |) y rv
kcA lty Sam ar O 'U H I Ik)I

Hypnosis
H Y P N O S lS t t
Stop Sm oking
Lose We&gt;ghl,
Build Confidences, improve
R e la tio n s h ip s , a n d m uck
m o re l I
A lt e r
y a a rs
ol
re x a rc h . O r Casey, one o l the
itAdert m hypnosis, hat oratt
me E vans A w a rd tec Ms
preven te c h n iq u e s O t lic t
downtown Sanford t l i n t
pm
C a ll n i U M
tar a»
p o n lm e n l o r inter motion

. ■ -t

No tob too ta rs t or small
Q u ality a must C a ll 1)100)1
(triera n ce s F r. E t l

man

q u a l i f y o p e r a s io n

,* yrs f t p F ilm s , Driveways.
*tc W arn* B aal ))» t j j j

StndblMting
SANDBLASTI NO
OAVII WELDING

Plumbing
F re d d ie R o b in s o n Plum bing
Repairs.", lavcati, w C
SpetnkJtrs 7)11410, DIPTO*

n i am .

sanfo ro

TrwStrvic*
MARFIR'S T R E E

SER VIC

YrtmmrfFg. re ro v M f ft La
FONSECA PLU M R IN G Cat
structlan. Repairs, i margin
ty L i e . BandedL I n t D le W l
FSgmb&lt;ng re p a ir — a illy p e s

fr —

Eu

JB 4

Uphohtery

w ater hea le rs A pumps

TO 147)
Toni's Craft L
N Y a a rs taper

Landscaping

P rtu u r* Ctoaning

NEEDED
3 opanlngs fatt.

RO O FS, leaks re w ire d , ty p is ts
rettea t a e e t and shingly work,
lic e n s e d , in te r# * . B x d a g .
M ik e 1M Ain.

Hom aRtpain

323-89*8
ta*W. LakaAAant

11) 4111
U S I ll s
1 04 1)7
&gt; Z )tU )

I

32-Houses Unfurnished

LAKE MARY

Airport R lvd
C a u H k a rry
C M ry A v t
L i U M ary

C O M P A R E P R IC I1 1 Orer Ida!
sq l l in I N I a bdrm . 7 balk « ly
F am Rm , Dining Rm. Ng
tcraan ad porch. Can M at ♦
new ro a ti Owner unit http w
th is aasy assumption Only

REALTO RS

b u s in e s s

Nt w 1 bdrm , I 0 m •tr. Ava tidbit
now Idly IdUtf t Itc u filv
Shown by tp p ' I tlh Rite*.
Sanford 111 )t«» V p m II
p m . 7)7 dtdS 10 • m ) p m ,
*%ft tor ( X v id

U O it k e t Thraughout
Central FlarM a

Good salary, h o sp d a liia tw n . I
week paid vacation every A
m onies
E ip e r ir n c t
not
n ecy sta ry . F o r
in te rv ie w
phone the m anager al;

ui,teat i

v ie w

A T 4 E N T IO N IN V E S T O R S 17?
A cres w ith frontage on Hwy aa
M Owner fin ancin g available
Only l i e e x

ASSOCIATE! IN C . RIALTORSW

CASHIERS

la k e

SAN FO R D
7.M0 sq t l 71 industrial or
C o m m ercia l B uilding on 17 t l
i x o ft in g it lea space Can
m s s i s o r 1)4 414)

D E L T O N A V IL L A S

STORE

a

B eautiful wooded tot. in ev
C flte n t lo c a tio n and easy
Item s O n ly Slt.SCO
e x c e l l e n t

Commie H it

CONVENIENCE

S T E M P E R AGENCY

For rent o r tease — 10.170 so It
industrial o r warehouse SIS
M III SI . Sanlord 77) 1100

l i l t C a rs a . S ta |e C t r f iH M
B u ild in g
C o n tra c to r
Residential tr C om m ercial
New tr Remodeled 711 M l*

Mariner's V illa g e on L a ke Ada I
bdrm from D M . ) bd rm from
S)N Located II t l |usl Scum
14 Auport Bled, in Sanlord. A ll
hduitk U )IA 7 «

P R IC E D BELO W M A R KE T ! I
bd rm C B heme x l y 1 yrs etd
in good neighXfheed. priced
thousands lest than market tor
a q u ic k sal* U nketrd t l it

A N D LET AN E X P E R T D O T H E J O B

Sanlord — I bdrm ♦ dan.
c tte m ic
b a th ,
fu rn itu re
ay41table, adultk. UTS mn T
|H im i
_________

r.

m id d lo
ot
m ushroom ing
X w n lo w n busmottos Sups'
term s! I M S N I t

3 2 3 -7 8 4 3
e n jo y

37— Business Property

w ith g re a t grow th potential in

CALL

|

down ft run •

Tha weather is pee led tor a
b e ik y e td
s a le
se ll
eeerything last with a want ad
Call t ) ) » M or a ll *»?1

—

By ow ner - ) bdrm . I a. lutly
carpeted, low down payment,
only 117.MW 1)4 7171

P R I C E D TO S E L L I Restaurant

can m i?oe

A AA B M P L O V M lN T
LOW LOW P E I S — T B B M S
n ilF r iM A lf .
777-1114

PAlhlgf

s tA ).a u

T H E P R I C E II RIO HTI I bdrm
w b ric k F irtp la c t. Dining Rm.
wood fix e s , largo tc rn n rd
porch ♦ fenced yord in greet
a rea tar only ITF.SSFIt

4AV ON R E N T A L S R E A LT O R

Accountant
Jt
Greet sa la ry N ice Boos

P a rt lim a m a n ic u r is t Ip '
. ja U d iillie v l i i t o s its v o le
Mare » ) ASH. eves AU S TII

S 'T E I S A cre s * or minus
w ith frontage on Lako Mary
B lvd S e ilsu b le c t to toning, tor

7M 4S F r t f u h
I tld / J t
After H o u fi U f M M , )11 *771

G E N E V A - la c r r t . lb d f m , §W.
d.dt. pott. U30 JJ» 7)00
1AV ON R E N T A L S R E A LT O R

UffT'tllll *«tw»ur» ■ i« n IN I

Eve 1))I?S4

E 'C tlte n f Buitrttftt opportunity
•n bood location Cdm plrtf
itocft inctudod m IW» pr&lt;* o«
I7*&gt;0

7) 7?

B E I T P R IC E IN TOMNI Would
you believe enly 417.4*0 ter a 1
bdrm w drapes. r|e. rot a
huge fenced yard » trae tl
O w ner w ill hold mfg or toll
F H A V A II

LO TS
W A T E R F R O N T LOT at low at
ii.m
tA C R fc
BW
lak e
M A R Y S A N F O R O Area
lot
s iu m
C A N A L FR O N T LOT
4I4.S00
M A R K H A M R D A R E A 1)0000
C O M M E R C IA L
) Buildings toned Commercial! 1
F ra m e I B lock situated 4*5 &lt;n
n u o k a M a ry This myeslmynt
won t be available lor long’
sot.soo
L A K E M A R Y B L V O ) Bdrm, ]
Bain house with poet toned tor
protessionol oth er use. Largo
t o tw iih io a tt trentage Owner
w ill a s s is t w ith financing
41SFX0
L A K E M A R Y B L V O 4 Acres v
or m .nus bordering 7 pared
roads Owner w-ll consider
m ortgage S I4 S X 0

A LL FLO R ID A REALTY
OF SANFO RD REALTOR

7 Single Bedroom s 1)0 week and
I B o rm suite SIX) mo )1)

H IG H R A T C S G O f
V O U DOWN?
C a ll tit tar Owner
Financed Names

E N J O Y Y O U " o w t: N ATURE
p R f c S E R V E I L ik e new a
B d rm ,
1
Bam
home
surrounded By 4 wooded seres
Double c a r garage, liryplace,
screened pal .os, W s ol eslras
Otters entertained at S'Tt.TW

N E W L IS T IN G 1414 Elm Av*
Sim ply lovely This 7 Bdrm
home has Central HAA and
screened porch Great nei»&gt;
to r hood Ido Possible owner
financing sat.e x

S A N F O R D — COTV collaqa. a r.
sun . no d a p . 1)74 U ? 1700
SA V ON R E N T A L S R E A LT O R

INC. REALTORS, MLS
323-5774 Day or Night

IN T E R E S T RATES
with awner financing this 1
S p rm hem * in Sanlord At
lached workroom, utility and
fenced ?a rd
M ill consider
F H A V A too* 474 TOO

lo w er

Houses

171 4471

31A— Duplexes

Dupiva(of rant 7 berm
I B. C arp etin g epp l.en crt

29— Rooms

Jl

' Bet trees only A 1 Bedroom order
home w ith large lleing and
fa m ily rooms, eat in k.tchen
Iront porch, and carport Attic
I fan Located near grocery,
laundrom at, and restaurant
Owner m aireains yard Other
re n te rs on p rp p e rtr ate
retired W rite Boa No l l l . e e
The E v en in g H erald P O Boa
1447. Sardord. F la . 71771

Sanlord 1 B drm . Kids. P i t t 1100
Down 4)00 Mo « ? 7)00
4AV O N R E N T A L S R E A LT O R

pium b n j D IV Hardw are and
U m n t a l re fe ll and f e w '
M m t u VI WO B a a l Eslefe
h i t 1 w in * . SUJ0O0 M m
W a ix n a lil
-m
m l Eves H U M )

E ip a ria n ctd Real E sta le In ert
lor o lt t r i Joint P a n ic ipalion
to sm all M v r t io r t M t o e ff

&amp;• *im

iu w

__

Harold Hall Realty

r e s id e n t ia l

33— Houses Furnished

t room apt 4100mo 1100 Deposit P a t4 0 X.
n iw

IO N G W O O D L K F R N T
In *
kids 1100d n .U 0 0 mo 77?7)00

IMnvestment Opportunities

.iw

vw

^..e no iBnger

pH#________

R E A L T Y , IN C

Classified ads serve the buying A
selling co m m u n ily every day
Read A use them t r im

to * g ie n &lt;;e « ,

nother m a r t y r

Tun questions
W ill you be
financially independent in } to
I years? A re you paid what
you are w orth? II not c a ll )))

b a r g a in

DAY IN T H E M A N T AOS )1)
7411 or 1)1 M f )

jk

Mould do general housework,
cleaning or baby sitting In
yout hom a by the hour In tha
S a n lo rd a ra o
H a v a awn
transportation C a ll between S
and 4 p m ) » 7SSS

Alger &amp;

C o m m ercia l B uno ng for rent
MOO to It StOOma.
1st 1 MSt 77)1411

i f D ental H ygen isl M
G re at
S a la r y
portunity

Don t

SAN FO R D
7000 so If it Industrial or
C o m m ercia l Bu'tdusgon 17?)
1.000 It in O ilica space Call
171 S lid or B)4 4147

BN F u ll Time 7 ) Shift Apply at
la k e view N u rtm g Canter l i t
E 7nd S I . Sanlord
Housewives. G randm others lor
p a rt lim e a n d lu l l lim e
tetepaione sales No experience
necessary H arbor ligh tin g,
abl C o rn w a ll B d 17) 107

E v e s )])M 1 I
707 E Ilth S t

5 T r» v Y

Hey Kk h - lo o k in g tor an e itrg
dollar? a sk M om A Dad to let
you h a v e a c la s s ifie d ad
garage sale

K— B» to Whirled

la c

313 7832

H ave a room to rent) l e i a
c la ssifie d ad Hnd a tenant tor

C a rp a l M e c h a n ic ar H elpar
wanted No phene celts Apply
Sanlord C a rp el IIS S Park
A re In person

DEADLINES

H A L COLBERT REALTY

O ffice Space
F o r le a s e
l) d 77})

Needed - Assistant manager,
Super rn a -kel eager lence Also
stockmen A pply Food Barn.
})lh S&lt; l P a rk Aye . Sanlord

It c o m acu IIvb llm t i ))c a lln*

71— Houses

)1 -Houses

O R A N G E C I T Y - IT f). tOM to
It b u s in e s s condo New.
beautiful, &lt;n Whispering Pines
id ea l lo r professional ofticet
or restau ran t (70S! T ti l i l t

e x p e r im e n t * u p s e t

PAILY CWUBLE
WITHIN Y&lt;51

I need tom tone with large
mower to mow overgrown
yerd 1)7 417} A lte r 7

5(c a lint
sOcallne

-----37— Business Property

T0 BENEFIT MANKIND TifcajJH
S jf? TR£7TTER 6 0
ER 1WE VM-ldUyT1 AN ADVANCE IN FOOV TECH­
WHEN *3U HAD "ME NOLOGY’ A LA *. MY
(S R A S P f

CLASSIFIED DEPT.

with Major Hoople

OUR BOARDINQ HOUSE

II— Help Wanted

LARQI TREE INSTAUIV
LAngstapIng. OM Lawn Ra
peaC M M S S S I

Trucks. Trailer. E?c. Fviable
Ur II HFrol^ Ranker) » 1)SL

• e tl leave it in
Call free t t l i n
l i t A M I F l i p hi

DON'T S T O R E IT , S I L L IT with
a lew cast C 'est died Ad

�41— Houses

Evening Herald. Sin lord. FI.

41— Houses

U fJ N
SMCtOUl 1 BR. IV, B H h. „
N r» Boot. N e w ly (K in tM .
"• •r P m ecreil School. U rge
'« &lt; M bock yard
* * M c C L lN A H . N
l « t i t l E m t , B roker
in Ittl
New ] bdrm. 2 B to m e in
OeBery C H I A. carpel, ip pi.
M ium e mtg* Johnny W e lte r
Reel t u n e Inc B rm e r m
0051. m e r e 004 O M l
*&gt;ger end Pood R e n iy Inc
IN W L ik e M i r y B ird
Proper!, Management H u p ]
OWNER W IL L F I N A N C E
uptr or M l y l u r
L lc a lls n
M ig h e il q u l l l l y .
ro o m y ,
gr i c Out living lo r Ihot# who
• e p re tm t the l. n e il T h il 1
BR, It, B. tte c u liw e hom e l i
priced right i t til.SCO C lll

tt-Mnc»IUneous for Sals

Siorom — A ttra c tiv e Tf yr old
tome on 1*3 or L i k e O ncra ]
M rm , 1 B. 1 porches. Property
(*" t t Split U lO O O term ,.
•°» W e n t By owner t j »j

II you .tren'l u ung your pool
lim e, lik e i eve. tn o ,e ii ,i
with • H e ru d d i u l l i e d i d
c m m io n
For t i le by owner 1 Bdrm . I
Beth M etonery hom e Lerge
•a* wdh Iruit tre e t In Country
Include! M obile Hom e l i t IS
l ' i Bern on H w y « / H I )IIS
Ml 1

BATEMAN R E A L T Y
Lie R o ll E m i t B roker
1000 S in lo rd A v e
Hondy W on't P i n d i i e , A p ir l
m m l Bldg E i t r a lot P riced
under t o d iy t m o rk e l tW.400

REAL ES T A T E
R E A LT O R . H l l o e i
Lerge Nome home In L i t e M ir y
on bee u llu l wooded le r o )
bdrm. F l i r m s r om bdrm , tv,
B. C H A , c ir p e t . o n p e t .
girege. c irp o rl l i t too i l l
lllo

321-0759

M I N I L A D I I T A N D CHIUD R I N ’t I I S e ll 111 Bhte
D eal* Je a m . L ib erty BIRR
O te ro lli I M B u t t , a i r l y b ird
get* i P e r t lew tt H IM
WILCO t A L I t H W Y 01 W 0 M l
W OP 14 t AN F O R D *114171
Cer nope. R iv e r roeb.
Poiio lio n et, G r e w traps.
P ti dun kin g bowl. Slept.
Song CefnenI, H e e l bloc hi.
Mifocie Concrete Cempeoy

M gylng to • n e w e r hom e,
apartment? Sell "d o n t need*'
•ait with 1 went i d

★

Complete tw in bed w to iid o ik
•rim e, new double bed w bom
ip rin g t never v ie d , cotter
note, 1 t w ig u m p i A l e e
c iu o n il c h u r l H U M ;

A n tiq u e!
O llm o n d t
O il
Pem tlngi O r ie n lil Rugt
Bridget Antlguet_______ H i 1401

ACRES,
, h

24 HOUR LB 322-9283

t a ll
p in e i
u m . l o w in

NEW
WINN D IX IE C E N T E R COM
ING AT L A K E M A R Y B LV O
ZONED
C O M M E R C IA L ,
tiia.oo

o

h o m ESiT E I in
orange
G R OVE a t U M A T I L L A 17100
each, crazy t e r m s

CONCORDS

W AGONEERS

EAGLES

CHEROKEES

SCRAMBLERS

C J ’s

S P IR IT S

PIC K U P S

SANFORD MOTOR CO

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER

,

MT ON 11*1. N E A R

if.

JIM LASH'S

or l i l o l * . C o m m e r e ill'R e
Retldentlil Auctiom A Ap
p rl t l l l C l l l D e ll ! Auction
H I SOTO

1 A C R E S C L E A R E D L A N D IN
PAO LA 131,000

321-0041

D a y t o n a a u t o a u c t io n
Hwy 17 I m ile w r it ot Speed
■ a t, Deytone Beech, w ill hold
I public A U T O AU CTION
every W e d n e td iy H I p m II I
the only one in F lor id i You tel
the tn e r v e d p rice C m too
l i t t i l I lo r lurthee d e t illt

M it lC ir t A
i Ton P ick Upt

tE r es t
a s s u m a b l e
m ortgage.

S C L E a r EO D U P L E X L O T S IN
sanforo
t u .t o o E a c h .
ZONED FOR Q U A D S OR OF.
p ic e s

PRICES

TRANSM ISSION SERVICE

10 ACRES W O O D E D R O L L IN G
H ILLS IN G E N E V A A R E A
USCd P E R A C R E . S E L L E R
FINANCING. M A Y D IV ID E

geneva

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

11 Monte C in o E ic con Low
mileage A skin g SJOOO Cell
between e L 2 p m H I ooto

) f 20Hr W re cker S ervice Y
H igheii p r lc e i p o d lo r iu n k or
Utrd c o n A tru c k !
u i mo

I t lt F o rd F i n i n g ip o rf coupe, t
t rlin d er A u tO m illc. rvni
good tWO 3JJ loot

Dune Buggv
ii p r r g lm body,
lu ll lop. 1000 VW eng 11 ISO or
b e ll o ile r H U M *

C L A S SIF IE D A O S DO A JOB
W HICH CAN BE DONE NO
o t h e r w a y c a l l h i io n

M
B o n n e v ille
B ro u g h im .
O r ie l, to ld fd . tte e t
11 Ponilec S unblrd L ik e new.
t llt l
'70 Ford Ven. *. ton. toM I
M Pont lic F ire b ird , e c lin ic .
t lM I
• S in k h n in c ln g iv n ie o I R »
ttN Hwy. l i t ]
C iu M b e r ry

-fc

C e n e c io r'i tlem -- m u ll tell —
tt K a rm a nn Ghia. E tc , contj
S U M Eve* only MS S it)

7$ P « # f la ir condition
1895
77 Aspen Station Wagon
87695
H I iw e e r 1121170

B &amp; H A u t o S a le s *

68— Wanted to Buy

m in t

t pm tet F in te i Pm tet I
■7] Automatic
S7U
'71 Autom atic, n r
SIMS
71 A c ia m il.c
SP4S
7e a Speed, lie
sm s
Tf Auto, e lf
uan
M l U J4

★ 339 7989*

67— Livestock Pou Itry

rrnlei

le w

t t l t C m il llc Coupe D e V ille Full

4J— Lotv Acreage

l'i

tor « V 5 I« U

I lls M u llin g II O h il Yellow
mth white v in y l lo p A M F M .I
tpeed 1H IM S

123-7M1

S ACRES. T ALL P I N E S . SOME
PASTU RE. R O A D F R O N T
AGE. R IV E R A C C E S S . G E N
E v a t i t ooo

&gt;i C ip rlc e A ll power f 0v pprO

74 CediMec C P E D e V ille B u n d
N e w p e m t.e ice lle n t conct.imri
Sell m n w eek li k in g U P )
HI MM

FO O TLO CKERS
1 II4 4 U P
ARM Y N A V Y SURPLUS
J U Senior a A v e
H I Ittl

Wednnd i*. Awg. » , )»ll—?B

80-Autos

80-Autos

(S— Petv Supplies

Clottilied A d i w ill e iw iy t give
you more
M uch . Much
More men yma aspect

W— Appliances

7S—Recreational Vahicles

Krnmore p e ril, te ru ic t, uted
w im e n m o o n E y a p p l i .
ANCES H i ate?

BACKTO &amp; KXX

SO—TV Radio-Stereo

l e A C R E S W O O O ED L I K E A
PA R K , ON TOP OP A H I L L IN
G E N E V A tlO.OOO. t e r m s
a v a il a b l e

f&gt; ACRES w o o d e d r o a d
P K O N T A O E IN O S T E E N
111.104
t A C R E S W OOOEO JA C K S O N
BAY
AREA.
OSTEEN
H4.100. s e l l e r
f in a n
CING
S t lO L I R R E A L T Y B R O K E R
HI-4440
W ANTED - IOO 1C r e t o r m o rt
with good e■p o tu n . c l o u to or
cm i l i l t in Seminole County
Center I June P o rH g R e illy
Reel!orl. H I 1471

Mite turn — M a yin g te le to be
held trom new until T h u n d e r
111 Wynn Dr , S in lo rd
Yerd Seif 1 F 4m ily Com er
Shannon Dr in d P ln e c re tl D r
14 leturtfev only O icytlet.
elum.num g r ill, b04t motor
end frin ge end m ore

4J—Mobile Homes

REALTY - REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader
W l LIST A N D t a r L
MORE H O M It T H AN
A N T O N I IN T H B
SANFORO A B B A

Fem ily Living! 1 bdrm. I Beth
heme w CM AC. WWC, F R .
l e t W Kithcen, perch a I me id
yd.I C t iv e ile e l L a c it le n l
SS4.4W.

See our booulilul new B R O X D
M O R E. Nerd 4 r o le 1 4 1
G R E G O R Y M O B IL E h o m e s
NO] Or Undo Dr
m iM
VA 1 FMA Financing

77—Junk Cars Removed

'" lO Y J U J f iR ll i i t r u c k T
From i n t o I D o r m ore
c iii ns m e, h i m m

FIRST 2 PAYMENTS!!!

This is truly the time to buy...
1474 Ford pick U p R in g e r L in e !
F ISO Deluie tu pe r cab F u lly
equipped, h e iv y du ty low ing
p ic t t g e
D e iu v e S co rp io n
cempor to* no window* 17 OO0
with lop 14100 w ithout lop H I
Seta t v t t D o m e

Smile your way back to school!!!
RIGHT NOW WE ALSO HAVE SUPER DEALS ON
PRE-OWNED CARS AND TRUCKS...

J»-MjbJc»I Instmments

1980

Recently Tuned
upright Plano 1)00
n sm i

i i —Building Materials

1476

Z -2 8

T lap. law m iles, lu te .
H id e d , black

V an
1979

GARAGE

1910

D o ts u n

CALL ANYTIME

47-Real Estate Wanted

F I L L DIET S T O P S O ll
YELLO W SA N D
Call Clark B H lr t H 2 7MB

°""

CASH FOR E Q U IT Y
W tc e n c M u M e B tir i.
C e ll Bart Real E tlk te H I 1444

1979 Concord
(J-P*ts Supplies
RA M B LEW O O O - New U ltim o
- e bdrm. 1 B. split p la n witfi
pool. V 11 e ll'o n c la tu re Thl*
cu tiem liod heme it located on
the prime lot In R a m b le wood
Many emtret included in Ifw
purchete ern e
Shown by
appoint m m l
F R A N K D A L E Y ,I N C
R E A L ESTATE
U S 1 II1

fj

SA N TO R O
M O TO R CO
We buy equity In H o u se s,
apartmenti, vacant land and
Acreage
L U C K Y IN V E S T
M E N U . P O So. 3300. San
tgrd. t U H77I SH 4241.

AMC

1

P ic k u p

M 5 0

B u ic k

1979

4x4

7 4 9 5

F -3 5 0

$4795

1979

C a p r ic e

1978

-

-

C la n k

-

V W

le p e r Beetle
• tpeed. u r . U,IBB m ile*

*2 5 9 5

C a lic o

Slender*, 5 speed
ItPO O m ilai

$4995

*5 9 9 5
1974

*5 7 9 5

1980 T o y o ta

B ro n co
Ranger X L T
V I. lu te , u r

7 deer, low m ilt a,
Show roam new

t T u Picku p
V I. t tpeed, air.
Only

C a r lo

°*'*

*8 9 9 5

1 cylin der

S47.IW B up!

F o rd

M o n t*

L in d iu
Leaded, veleur interior

R iv ie re Landau
1 tin e nteee. atl th eep tien i

*5 8 9 5

1980

1978

*3495

1979

B -2 1 0

ll it i e n W ig a n
Law m lle t. l i t r e clean

-*

C h e v r o le t

*3795

*8 9 9 5

( 2-Lawn-Cardan
ASSOCIATES N I I O B O l New
er tiperienced C e ll Nee*
S tw itre m I f Lee A lb rig h t
la d e i t diKdver H K C M II

^

7S— TruckvTrailes

New le ■ 70 R o y e iO e k t 1 bdrm ,
1 B. i n eel or K 1 4e 2 bdrm .
IW B. S U M S delivered 4 le t
up with in IM m ile* W e h iv *
V A Hninclng. no m oney down
or conventional 10 \ down
E l l y financing only i t U n c le
R o y* Mobile Horn* S ite * U .t
u l leetburg (We) riT O n e .
open w e ik n ig h l* ‘ 111 1:10,
Sundlyt 1)4 p m
TM ISISNO M l S P R IN T
New le 1 40 R e y il 04k* 1 b d rm . 1
B. tireplic*. le ih e d re i celling,
grekt r u m . g ir d e n tub.
completely Iurruined a many
m ore e a lr u . o n ly S21.1SB
delivered 1 le t up w ith in ISO
mile* V A no money down,
comwVionel 10 \ dow n Shop
Uncle R o y s M o bile Hom e
tile * In Leetburg. on 44)
South IWei 7»7 0He
Open
weeknightt ‘til 1:10. S u n d ly t
114 p m

ON
NEW CARS

74— Auto Parts

*6 4 9 5

1980

C a p ri

H e ic k td ik
AT, AC. Law m iles

|

-

*6 4 9 5

s JACK PRIDSSER FORD!
(BKlI 322-1481j
OPEN SUNDAY

1:00- 5:00

LAKE M A R Y BLVD. 4 HWY. 17 9:

JEEP

L o n g w a o d L in c o ln

C n n tra l F lo r id a * 8 1 V o lu m e L in c o ln M e rc u ry C
SU N

T IL 8 P M

• O P I.N S U N

11 6

Your Neighbors Say
Dewey Reedy
SANFORD HBSIOINT
SIN CE Its;
LONOWOOO LINCOLNM8RCURY EMPLOY11
S IN C I i«7

IT PAYS TO BUY AT HOME

FM CC

1

BELOW PRIME RATE!

�t&gt;—Evening Herald, fan toed, FL

H eld

10

Wednesday, Aug. H, HI!

F R E E S P IN A L

D a y s In C e l l a r

E X A M IN A T IO N

Elderly Kidnap Victim Recalls Ordeal
M IA M I ( U P I i - One of five
elderly women taken from Ihetr
nursing home and taken to Detroit
where they were held for 10 days In a
cold, dank cella r said she was
terrified that they were stuck there
"for the rest of our lives."
“ It was terrible. There was water
on the floor so bad that toadstools
were g r o w in g ," sa id G race
Cham berlain, 62. “ It was really cold
and there no way to get warm. The
only window was at ground level so

no sun could get in. There was a light
but It wasn't really bright.
"I asked for sweaters but they
wouldn't give them to us. When we
asked for more blankets, we only got
one for four beds."
M iss Chamberlain and the four
older women, ranging in age up to
91, were flown back to M ia m i
Monday by authorities whoe cared
for them after they were abandoned
on a street near Detroit Receiving
Hospital.

In Detroit, Lucille W alker, also
known as Cora G a lv in , the M iam i
nursing home operator accused of
kidnapping the five women and
taking their life savings, failed to
surrender to police Monday as she
had promised.
Attorney Edward B e ll had told the
Oakland County prosecutor's office
during the weekend Ms. W alker had
telephoned him "out of the clear
blue” to say she would turn herself
in befere noon Monday.

She and others are accused of
taking Social Security checks and
other financial assets of their elderly
roomers at a string of boarding
houses.
Ms. W alker's daughter, Lidra, 22,
am* granddaughter, Teresa, 23,
were arrested last Frid ay at a
Detroit motel on charges of par­
ticipating In the scheme.
Authorities in M iam i were still
trying to account for 14 other
patients who had stayed at one of

D anger S ignals of
Plnchad Nerve*:
I X itS itSw OUi Im

Ms. W alker's nursing homes. Ray
Havens of the State Attorney's
Office said, however, the niixslng
patients could be in another home,
back with relatives or deceased.
M iss Cham berlain said she thinks
Ms. W alker stole $450 from her bank
account, but she wasn't sure.
"I have no w ay of knowing," she
said. “ A ll m y identification and
bank becks were stolen and I don't
know where anything Is,"

Cops Miss Cue In Effort To Arrest Punk Rocker
D A L L A S ( U P I i — Punk rocker
R ick Ja m e s ditched his trademark
shoulder length braided wig at the
end of a packed concert and ran,
bald pate ahlrung, from Reunion
Arena to s lip past the 10 constables
who'd been w aiting to arTest him.
The constables had been tent to
the concert in connection with a civil
suit filed by a Denver production
firm , w hich claim ed James owed the

company $250,000.
K .C . Productions Inc. filed the suit
F rid a y in Dallas County district
court in anticipation of Jam es'
concert appearance Sunday. The
firm alleged James had violated a
contract.
The constables had been waiting
until the concert ended to move in on
Jam es.
"W e had checked him out prettv

Expense Reporting Changed
The Sanford C ity Commlsaion w ill attain amend its or­
dinance setting expenses which city o ffic ia ls m ay receive for
traveling out of town on d ty business.
The new ordinance, to be adopted, w ill no longer state the
exact expense allowance which the employees can collect,
however. C ity Manager W E. "P e te " Knowles has recom­
mended the new d ly law state that the allowance to be paid
w ill be in accordance with state law.
New state law c a lls for dty o llid a li tra ve l allowances to be
increased from 17 cents per mile to 20 cents when they use
their own vehicles. The law also allows the officials to spend up
to $21 for three meals daily rather than $12 95 per day.
Allowable costa of rooms when the o fficials must stay away
from home overnight have been increased from $40 per day to
$50.
The last time the allowances were changed by the d ty was In
July, 1979.

well before Sunday and heard that
he's a very tempermental person,
that anything can throw him into a
frenzy," said deputy constable Jo
DeWitty. "We were trying to keep a
low profile.
"A nd It wouldn't have been smart
to issue it (the w arrant) before the
show. We're talking about thousands
of loyal fans sitting In the audien­
c e .”

WakpeenvCoupon

Ms. DeWitty said that shortly
before the concert, lawyers for the
production company tried to settle
the suit with Jam es' manager.
"But 1 don't think Jam es actually
believed we were there, at least not
until the end. We heard ... the group
does one encore, but last night
i Sunday) they d id two long ones to
sweat us out," she said.
Although Ja m e s escaped capture,

W.UfjicersCoupon

$50,000 worth of his equipment —
pianos, p e rcu ssio n Instrum ents,
am plifiers and a stage sound system
- did not. The constables seized the
equipment early Monda;.
The five other member* of Jam es'
band left D allas Monday, but Jam es'
agents said they were unsure If they
would rejoin him for a scheduled
concert In St. Petersburg, Fla.
Thursday.

Im i K I i h i

1
4
1
l

P in Of** Srwt UaxISar P M
te a tu m la Pm e * Fm
P ill Iste w t tM SJ M ie n
P iM k l M i l l lrr» &gt; .i*ni

t I n * I k * P M It* PM. PM Dial l i p
Why F R E t f Thousands ot area residents have spine
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
care.
This Is our way of encouraging you to find out If you have a
problem that could be helped by chiropractic care It Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff arxJ
facilities
Examination Includes a m inim um of 10 standard tests for
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
shown above
Whil* we are accepting new patients, no one need teel any
obligation.
Most Insurances Accepted

SANFORD PA IN CONTROL
CLINIC
HIM. French Ave (Acreel tram Ptna Hvt) fanfare

323-5763

U

Prescription
Center

WE R f HARO TO BEAT
»•*
^
9*4

W jiq t r m C o u p w

WjkjrpcnsCoupon

Walgreen* Coupon

Walgreens Coupon

The
Bock to School
Center

WalgreensCoupon

PRICES 0 0 0 0 AUO. H THRU SEPT. I, ITS!
Q u an tity Rights
R ese rve d

Open
7

Days
A
Week

• O X &gt;0 o r 100
IN V H O F IS

leg tfr l»|

MON.-THURS.f-?

I l M l w S S CH O O L
G lU lo f G IU I A l l
4 oi
l» | •»«

FRI.-SAT.M
SUN.S-4

P A C K o f 10
CA M P U S F IN C H S
Beg t ic

SANFORD AVE. IN DOWNTOWN SANFORD

_e #

I •

'

• O N D P A P IN
1 0 0 1 M IIT PA O
■•g •»« r**.* .w«94

BEEF
SALE

W O M IN 'S
B O O TH S O X
•»| »|« (»U««

TEXAS

N tw l Delicious I
Guaranteed Tender I

H efty

BABY BEEF

knn«»r

If you'vw never tried (tils delicious beef. TAKE THIS
O P P O RTU N ITY NOWI TRULY OELICIO US. well
trimmed — no excess bone or fsl, EXTRA LEAN —
perfect for low fel low cholesterol diets
YOUR
CHOICE

SSl ROUND STEAK
AND CLUB STEAK

WakyreensCoupon

;:r*T -B 0 N E AND „
SIRLOIN STEAK tfH1
SPECIAL FR EEZE R PROORAM . . . ASK USI
COUNTRY ST v is

68*

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PICNIC
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mm

WHOLE or CUT UP

S IN D T O U R T U N S

FRYERS (CembiMtlen Pak)

B IT IIH L O O K I N G S K IN

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T-BONE STEAK
CLUB STEAK

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Voting Delegate Named
Sanford C ity Commissioner Milton Sm ith w ill be the d t y 'i
voting delegate at the Florida league of Citie s meeting on Oct.
22 and 23 in Orlando.
The annual meeting is to be held at the Sheraton Twin
Towers. Sm ith, elected to the d ty com m ission last December,
has o ffic ia lly represented (he d ty on several occasions since
that time.
Other Sanford commissioners including D avid F a rr, Eddie
Keith and M ayor 1-ee P. Moore w ill be attending several
sessions a l the statewide meeting.
The F lo rid a le ag u e of Cities' m eetings usually have
workshops and lectures on various subjects of interest and
assistance to d ty officials.

u

i tact re*. r*|Me.irn

W .lkyi e e n s C o u p o n

�Evening Herald, U nlord. FI.

Bl.T, left. Deluxe Turkey Croissanl, lower, and Bologna Apple Wrap

YOUR SAVINGS
A

R

M

W

S H

!

YOU DON’T HAVE TO TAKE INFLATION WITHOUT A FIGHT.
WE’RE NOT!
PANTRY PRIDE HAS BEEN FLORIDA’S LOW PRICE LEADER FOR
15 YEARS. WE’RE GOING TO CONTINUE TO SAVE FLORIDA
SHOPPERS MONEY ON THEIR TOTAL FOOD BILL WE THINK
EVERYDAY LOW PENNY PINCHER PRICES ARE MORE IMPORTANT
THAN A FEW WEEKLY SPECIALS.

Count on us
“

Count on us

s t o p w o r r y in g w h e t h e r o r

FOR A LOWER FOOD BILL.
EVERYDAY LOWER PENNY
PINCHER PRICES ARE LOWER
THAN MOST SUPERMARKETS
WEEKLY SPECIALS.

NOT YOG OOT THE BEST DEAL.
WE’LL GIVE YOU THOUSANDS O F
EVERYDAY LOW PENNY PINCHER
PRICES... EVERYDAY.
BOLOGNA A P I 'li. WRAP
I cup chopped apple
4 cup raisins
4 cup chopped peanuts
Salad dressing
6 frankfurter buns, split
lettuce
6 bologna s lic e s

Combine apple, raisins, peanuts and 4 cup salad dressing;
m ix lightly. Fo r each sandwich, spread bun with salad
dressing; till with lettuce, bologna and apple m ixture. Fold
edges of bologna over apple m ixture; secure with wooden pick.
6 sandwiches.
D E L U X E T V R K E Y CROISSANT
One-thtrd cup aalad dreasing
1 tablespoon prepared m ustard
t croissants, split
lettuce
Tomato slices
Natural Swiss cheese slices
Cooked turkey slices
Artichoke heart slices

Count on us

Count on us

Count on us

Count on us

FOR BONUS BUYS. TOOL..
LIMITED TIME O FFE R S FROM
OUR SUPPLIERS THAT WE PA SS
O N TO YOU. WE MAKE THE
BUY... YOU GET THE BONUS.

NO STAM PS, NO GAMES, NO
GIMMICKS. WE’RE GOING TO
CONTINUE TO GIVE YOU U.S.D.A
CHOICE B E E F, TOP QUALITY
GROCERIES AND FRESH
PRODUCE.

YOU DON’T HAVE TO WAIT FOR
WEEKLY SPECIA LS. WE LL GIVE
YOU LOW PRICES ANY DAY
OF THE WEEK, EVERYDAY OF
THE WEEK.

(1 .8 .D A . G R A D E A I A K M I R G R A Y

FRESH CALIFORNIA

YOUNG
TURKEYS

SWEET

NECTARINES

NORTHERN
BATHROOM

TISSUE
• Mill ON ASM)NI| D

Combine salad dreaaing and mustard; mix lightly. For each
sandwich, spread croissant with salad dressing m ixture; fill
with lettuce, tomato, cheese, turkey and artichoke hearts. 4
sandwiches.*
M E A T A N D PO TATO CARRYO UT
Salad dressing
1 tablespoon horseradish sauce
3 cups cooked potato slices
12 rye bread slices
Roast beef or pastram i slices
Red onion rings

ALL PURPOSE

SANWA
RAMEN PRIDE

POTATOES

NOODLES

FRESH U.S. NO. 1

Combine 4 cup salad dressing, horseradish sauce and
potatoes; toss lightly. F o r each sandwich, spread one bread
slice with potato m ixture and one with salad dressing; fill with
meat and onion. I sandwiches.

©

io
LB BAG

A S S O H M !&gt;

$ " 1 3 8
A

2 cups chopped cooked chicken
1 avocado peeled, chopped
4 cup salad dressing
2 tablespoens chopped ptmlento
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon ch ill powder
2 cups shredded Iceberg lettuce
For each tortilla, presa Into deep oil at ITS degtees with ladle
until submerged. F ry 2 to 3 minutes until light brawn. D rain on
absorbant paper. Combine chicken, olives, avocado, salad
dressing, plmienlo and aeaaonlngs; toss lightly. F o r each
tortilla, (111 wlLh lettuce and chicken mixture. I servings,
a is o

( B U L L E D B R U N C H SANDWICHES
f hard-cooked eggs, chopped
1 cup ham cubes
I cup (4 ota.) shredded sharp natural chedddr cheese
Salad dressing
Dash of pepper
12 whole-wheat bread slices
Combine eggs, ham, cheese, 4 cup salad dressing u d
pepper; mix lightly. F o r each sandwich (111 two bread slices

C ount t h .
Count th e
Savings!

^

I

It’s Your Total Food Bill That Counts!

�7C— C v tn ln q Ha raid, Sarrford, FI.

W a d ra id iy , Aug. It, m i

Befog a successful host or hostess requires some versatile skills In the kitchen.
A capable cook can move from one type of cooking to another when the
situation — or weather — colls for It.

Hot A nd Cold Foods
There'll Be A C hange In The W eather
One tim e of year that presents challenges to even the most
skillfu l chef is autumn — one (lay it’s crisp and cool and the
next It's hot and muggy.
Because you have to flex your culinary muscles accordingly,
it's a good Idea to have a repertoire of hot and cold food and
drinks at hand that are easy to prepare.
And that's why delicious, sophisticated liqueur fits so neatly
into this changeable scheme — it's versatile coconut rum taste
enhances hot or cold dishes, desserts or drinks.
One winning entree for cool weather Is Due kiln Beatrice, an
im pressive dish with prunes and bananas that's flamed with
liqueur at the table.
When temperatures soar, top off a light repast with Frozen
Dessert, a melt-in-the-mouth, cream y refresher made with
crushed pineapple, grated chocolate and a subtle touch of
coconut rum.
Four delectable beverages that run the temperature gamut
are a cooling, fruity punch, a creamy-coconut Ice cream drink,
a m inty hot chocolate and a heated egg nog-based beverage
with the arousing flavor of cider and liqueur.
D U C K L IN G BF.ATHICF.
I duckling, I to 3 pounds
1 teaspoon salt, divided
' i cup coconut rum liqueur, divided
1 tablespoon butter
1 medium sized union, chopped
J -h cups water, divided
2 teaspoons sugar
*4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons cornstarch
1 cup cooked, pitted prunes
2 firm , ripe bananas, peeled, cut into chunks
Rinse duckling and pat dry; reserve giblets and neck.
Sprinkle duckling inside and out with l i teaspoon salt. Brush
duckling inside and out with 2 tablespoons liqueur. Close cavity
with skewers; truss legs. Pierce duckling skin with a fork In
several places around the perimeter of the breast and on the
back. Place In roasting pan (do not use a rack); add 1 inch hot
water. Piercing and steaming are important to eliminate fat.
Roast in a ISO degree F. oven 30 minutes; pour off liquid. Place
duckling on rack; pierce skin again. Roast 1 hour and 45
minutes longer or until done i meat thermometer Inserted on
inside of thigh should read 170 degrees F. when done). Pierce
skin every half hour to let fat run oft. Meanwhile, melt butter
in medium saucepan; brown reserved giblets, neck, and
chopped onion over moderate heal. Add I -l 4cups water, sugar
and remaining
leaspooti salt. Cover. Sinuner 1 hour. Strain
broth. Add water if neerssary (o equal 1-14cups or reduce to 1&gt;4 cups. Add cinnamon M ix cornstarch with 2 tablespoons
liqueur. Add to broth. Heat broth m ixture to boiling; boil 1
minute. Add prunes and bananas; heat through. Glaze
duckling with sauce; arru-ne p » v tr. and bananas around
duckling. Warm the rem aining *4 cup i.'w u r ; ignite and pour
over the duckling (do this at the serving table for effect). Serve
duckling with extra sauce in gravy boat.
Remove duckling to serving platter; keep warm. Skim off
fat from roasting pan. Degtaia pan wtlh remaining *« cup
water; add to broth. Y I K I J ) ■ 4 servings.
FROZEN DESSERT

2 egg whites
1 cup heavy cream
*4 cup confectioners' sugar
6 tablespoons coconut rum liqueur
** cup toasted, Flaked coconut
1 can (S ounces) crushed pineapple, drained
*4 cup grated sweet chocolate
Beat egg whites until stiff but not d ry; set aside. In sm all
bowl of electric m ixer bent cream until foamy. Gradually add
confectioners' sugar and liqueur, beating until cream la stiff.
Fold in coconut, pineapple chocolate and egg whites. Spoon
Into 1 paper cupcake liners or sherbet glasses. Freeze 4 hours
or overnight. Y IE L D : E ight Jounce servings.
C R E A M Y COCONUT CASSIS
3 tablespoons softened vanilla ice cream
2 ounces coconut rum liqueur
1 ounce Creme dc Casals
Combine all ingredients In container of electric blender.
Cover. Rlend ig itil smooth. Serve In un old-fashioned glass.
Y E I I J ) : 1 serving.
ROT C H O C O R 1 B E

6 ounces m ilk
2 ounces chocolate syrup
2 counces coconut rum liqueur
• i ounce peppermint schnapps
In sm all saucepan, combine m ilk and chocolate syrup. Heat
to below boiling (scalded.) Add coconut rum liqueur and
peppermint schnapps. Serve In mugs. Y IE L D : 2 servings (S
ounces each).

COCONUT CIDER NOG

2 ounces coconut rum liqueur
1 egg
) ounce m ilk
1 tablespoon xugsr
■4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
‘ i teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 ounces hot apple cider
1 cinnamon stick, optional
In container of electric blender combine liqueur, egg, m ilk,
sugar, nutmeg and cinnamon. Cover. Process 10 seconds. Add
hot cider. Serve immediately In a mug. Use a cinnamon stick
for a stirter. Y IE L D : 1 serving.

Impressive Duckling Beatrice is flamed at the table.

TOTAL
IT UP!

PT
cP fid e

We’re fighting back with Penny Pincher Prices!
CLOROX
BLEACH
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I HI Ml CAI IIOWNIA

TOMATO
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SWEET JUICY
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Paper Plates__8 9 c 0
SU N SM lN t

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Cheez-lt______ 69* 0
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COM PARE!

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Oranges_____ 2/® l 0
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Kosher Spears_9 9* 0
l«Qt lOHut M(i i l l burt oa i i i t s H i n
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Apple Juice___6 9 * 0
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Sliced Beets 3 /8 9 * 0

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44 m ROX

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AjaX D E T E R G E N T ,______ 11169 0

PANTRY PRIDE 2 W it *

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S odas _______ 89* 0

Baking S o d a2 /4 9 * 0

O E N t a K 1*0 COURT

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Cotton Swabs—4 9 * 0

G EO R G IA R E O S W E E T

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Marshmallows-63* 0
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Fla. Avocados (4.78* 0

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Rum Mqueitr adds a delightful punch to
refreshing cool beverages ns well as steaming hot
drinks when the u ra ilin ' Is cool.

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Sweet Peas___ 38* 0

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9 9 *
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�Evening Heraid. S t nlord. FI.

Microwave Magic

Wednesday, Aug. ] i, 1f||—]C

Energy-Saving Appliance Has Injury-Free Record
Sum mertim e. . . and the living is easy if ymi have a
microwave oven.

which have been implanted in a person to regulate heart ac­
tivity.
Pacem aker manufacturers are aw are of this problem and
have shielded their devices to protect them from outside in­
terference. A person who wears a pacem aker should check
with th e ir physician concerning problem s with microwaves.
For assurance of safety, the Food and Drug Administration
has recommended the following safety tips:
1. Check for damage in shipping.
2. Follow the manufacturers instruction on care and use of
the o v e a
3. Clean the door, seals, and inside of the oven with water and
m ild detergent. Don't use scouring pads.
4. D on't insert objects through the g r ill or door seal.
5. N e ve r tam per with or inactivate the safety interlocks.
t. N e ve r operate the oven when empty.
7. Have your oven checked by a qualified technician for wear
damage and radiation emission.
Follow ing this advice w ill v irtu a lly guarantee a safe
oven.
F o r some cool summer cooking try this German

M id g e

Statistics te ll us that more than 20 m illion m icrowave ovens
are in use in this country. This means that one kitchen in every
four is equipped with this time and energy saving appliance.
Most of us accept technical advances, such as the TV,
without re a lly understanding them, but w ith the microwave
oven people want to know how it works and if it Is safe.
To put It sim p ly: a magnetron tube inside the microwave
oven converts ordinary household current into microwaves.
Microwaves are electromagnetic energy s im ila r to those of
Infra-red lig h t and radio waves. The food in the oven absorbs
the m icrowaves. When this happens, moisture, sugar, and fat
molecules are vibrated. The vibration causes friction. The
friction causes heat. The heat cooks the food.
Are m icrow ave ovens safe’
The fact is that the microwave oven is as safe as any other
appliance in your home. Government regulations require
m anufacturers to build In safety features. Double seal doors

M y c o ff
Home Economist
Seminole Com munity College

and protective interlock systems that turn off the power when
the door is opened protect the user from exposure to
microwaves. The safety of the microwave oven is shown by
arte (act: there lias not been a single in ju ry attributed to them
in the 28 years they have been In use.
This docs not im ply that your oven does not require proper
care and common sense in Us use. It should be kept clean and
free from food particles and should never be operated empty.
Although it Is very rare, there have been some Incidences of
m icrowaves affecting the operation of some pacemakers

CHECK**
IT OUT!

PT

cP tld e

PORK
RIBLETS

SLICED
BACON
B Q Q i

I Ml SM H A ON CA M l
GRAM
1 M il A M O T R S R lf H H A f k h M I C U t R *
* 1 ! It H A C K S I h | f k s I G I I t m r * G *

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DINNERS

$158

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PKG.
ELSEW HERE *1.88

E L S E W H E R E *2 98 PER LB

COMPARE

—

Beef Chuck__

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Next weeks column w ill be on M icrowave cooking equipment
and sum m er cnoking-hors d'oeuvres.
Midge My ( off it u home economist at Seminole Community
Co Urge where the tra rh r i home ten-Ires and mlrntwaving,
She received a ILS. degree from Carnegie-Mellon C n h e n ilv .
P illtb u rg h . She and her husband, Robert, have Ured in
Maitland for 12 years. They are the parents of two grown
children.

BEEF PATTIE M IX

OVER
3 LBS

LI

B O N E L E S S B EE F BOTTOM

O D

GREAT
GROUND

M A N B t lS T V L t

SPICY A P P L E C R IS P
4 large baking apples, peeled and sliced
&gt;3 cup brown sugar
one-third cup raisins
1 teaspoon cinnamon
■« teaspoon nutmeg
&gt;3 cup butter or margarine (soft)
l i cup flour
*3 cup rolled oats
Set power at high. U y e r l i apples in an 8 or 9 inch round
baking dish. Combine sugar, raisins, cinnamon, nutmeg, and
oats. S prinkle 4 sugar mixture over apples. Top with
rem aining apples. Blend the butter in the rem aining sugar
mixture and sprinkle over apples. M-W 4 to S minutes or until
apples are tender, lx-t stand 5 minutes. Serve wann.

We're fighting back with Bonus Buys!

LOTS OF
CHICKEN

Potato Salad with Knockwunit and Spicy Apple Crisp.
K N O C K WHILST AND IU1T G E U M A N PO T A T O SALAD
3 m edium ptoatocs
3 slice s bacon, diced
3 sm a ll onions, diced
1 tablespoon flour
l tablespoon sugar
1 teaspoon, dry mustard
t teaspoon salt
l t cup vinegar
•t cup water
' i teaspoon celery seeds
1 Knockw urst
I tablespoon finely chopped parsley
Wash potaotes; dry and rut into half. P la ce In plastic bag,
.cut side down, le a v e ends of bag open. Cook by microwave for
10 m inutes on high or until tender. Remove skin and slice. Cook
bacon and onion in 4-cup measure for 4 minutes. S tir in flour:
sugar m ustard, salt and pepper; m ix well. Add vinegar, water
and celery' seeds. Cook another 4 min., stirrin g once. Set aside.
Make several cuts in plastic bag holding knockw unt. Cook 3
minutes. Cut Into 6 pieces. Arrange meat and cooked p&lt;- does
in shallow bowl. I’our hot sauce over, toss to coal evenly.
Sprinkle with chopped parsley. Serve im m ediately. Makes 4
servings.

Crab

A u ( i r a l i n is lo w in c a lo r ie s .

Microwaving
Keeps Seafood
Tender, Moist
Seafood is the answer to a dieter's prayer — but can
sometimes be a problem with the chef. Cooking in your
m icrowave oven keeps fish moist, tender and flaky.
C R A B AU GILA TIN
I Total cooking lime: II min., 30 see. |
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
'• cup fine dry bread crumbs
't cup (2 ounces) shredded jirocess Sw iss cheese
cup sliced almonds
4 tablespoons butter or margarine
One-third cup all-purpose flour
&gt;3 teaspoon grated lemon peel
&gt;3 teaspoon salt
‘ t teaspoon dry mustard
Dash white pepper
2 cups lig h t (ream
1 slightly beaten egg
2‘x cups flaked d ungen ess crab U S ounces)
3 tablespoons sliced green onion
Snipped parsley
In sm a ll bowl, melt the 2 tablespoons butter at HIGH (or X
seconds. Tosa crum bs and cheese with butter; act aside.
Spread atinands in pie plate. Cook at H IG H for 3 to 4 minute*
or till golden, stirrin g once. Stir almonds into crum b mixture,
set aside.
In 2-quart glass measure, melt the 4 tablespoons butter at
HIGH (nr 1 minute. S tir in flour, lemon peel, aalt, dry mustard,
and pepper. Add cream. Cook at HIGH for t to 7 minutes or Ull
thickened and bubbly, stirring often.
Stir 1 cup of cream mixture Into egg. Return to cream
mixture. Cook at M E D IU M for 1 to 2 minutes. S tir In crab and
union. Po ur into 4 individual casseroles or large baking shells
Cook at H IG H for 4 to 3 minutes or U ll heated through. Top
with crum b m ixture. Cook at HIGH for 1 minute. Garnish with
snipped parsley and lemon slices. M akes 4 servings.
H A LIB U T IN W IN E
(TolalrookingU m t: II minutes)
4 halibut steaks ( I I ounces)
4 teaspoon valt
Dash pepper
One-third cup dry white wine
4 onion, sliced
4 cup slice d celery
4 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 tablespoon snipped parsley
1 teaspoon W urchestenhlre sauce
4 teaspoon dried basil, crushed
I cup c h e rry tomatoes, halved
Sprinkle flth with aalt and pepper. P la ce fish in 10 x I x 14inch baking Utah. Add wine. Cover and marinate In
rtfrig e rn to r for 2 hours. In 1-quart bowl, cook onion and celery
in butter, covered at HIGH for 4 to I minutes o r Ull tender,
stirring once. S tir In parsley, Worcestershire sauce, and basil.
Spoon over fish.
Cook covered, at M E D IU M HIGH for 3 minutes. Add cherry
tomatoes. Cook, covered, at M E D IU M H IG H for 1 minute or
till fish flakes s u l l y with a fork so d tom atoes s n h ttla d
through. M akes 4 servings.
M IC R O T IP : M ix and chill your fruit-flavored gelatin In Just
i&lt;
m bowl. F irs t, heat the 1 cup water in a bowl, uncovered, at
HJGII lo r 2 4 minutes. Stir in geUUn t ill dissolved; and l h ip
cold w ater. C hill.

�• •

4C— Evening Herald, lenfoed, FI.

f

Wednetday, A m .» . 'M l
*

«■ —

~
L .

RECIPE
Content
for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual
Special Edition o f the

Heritage COOKBOOK
★ SEVENTH WEEK’S CO N TEST*
Recipes for...

Ambrosial offering is something magnificent, supremely

g o o d .. , .

Della Robbia Am brosia
Is A 'Divine' Dessert
"A m b ro sU " , In the food sense, generally refers to a
compote ot orange*, coconut and pineapple.
According to the dictionary, "ainbroaia" can be anything
with MpecUUy •getlctou* llavor or Iragranre. The word
uetgtnaled In day* at mythology, when ambrmta meant "food
ot the gods" aw l wax thought to Impart Immortality.
lienee, an "am b rosial ottering" has come to be something
magnificent, suprem ely good, or simply divine.
This delicious dessert could refer to any ot those definitions,
except (or the Im m ortality claim ! Della Kobbla A m brosia la a
refrigerator dessert m olded In a sprlngtorm pan lined with
lady finger*. The fillin g La a creamy combination ot canned
vanilla pudding, gtlatln, and fruits.
This refresh!
company meal.

1

pkg.

(F o l)

light dessert Is the perfect grand Imale to a

DFXLA KOBUIA AMBROSIA
orange-pineapple gelatin

I can lll- o t .) M andarin oranges
I can (ITH-oz.) va n illa pudding
I can (1‘ fr-cs.) crushed pineapple
I carton (Foz.) Iroten whipped topping, thawed
144 pkg. Udylingen
Touted coconut
Drain m andarin oranges; reserve liquid. Add water to n u k e
I cup Heal Juice-water to boiling, then add gelatin, stirrin g to
dissolve. Cool and refrigerate Just until the thickness of un­
beaten egg white. Blend In pudding until smooth. Add drained
Mandarin oranges (save a few (or garnish) and untrained
pineapple. G ently fold in whipped topping. U n e bottom and
sides of Fin ch springferm pan with ladyflngers. P ile gelatin
mlature Into mold. C h ill for several hours until firm . Before
serving, garnish with reserved orange sections and toasted
coconut. To serve, rem ove sides o l pan and slice Into slim
wedges Yield 12-14 servings.

S U M M ER S IZZLE R

ONLY 2 WEEKS...2 CATEGORIES LEFT
Don't Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

PRICES 0 0 0 0 THRU SEPT. 1. It!)

V 2 7 D [T lg

H AM BU RG ER
S lb».
Or More

1st • 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
NO LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED

PORK CHinERLING 10 *. *5.99
Chicken Bocks *8!!° 5 l*. *1«

48'

TURKEY NECKS OR WINOS

PICNIC
T.O. LEE

Pack A Salad
In Lunch Box
The start of the school year Is quickly spprosetung, and with
it ermea the question, "W h a t's for lunch?" Here's a delicious
sandwich filling which w ill please even your most finicky
eater. "Schoolbo* S ala d " combines the goodness of cut-up
cooked chicken, celery, pickles and olives, a ll easily seasoned
with Creamy Italian D ressing
The salad can be prepared the night before, elim inating the
usual early morning rush. Pack along cookies or fruit for a
school box lunch your k id s w ill rate A + l

4 cup
I cups
4* cup
U cup
4* cup

SC1IOOLBOX SA LA D
O e am y Italian Dressing
finely chopped cooked chicken
sliced celery
sliced d ill pickle
sliced pitted rip e olives (optional)

In medium bowl, com bine a ll Ingredients; ch ill Serve, If
t a ir e d . with driRiy s lic e d rooked ham as a sandwich fillin g .
M akes about I servings.

DESSERTS — MICROWAVE
An.

1W

Dot.

Armix SHORTENING
Purex Washing Powder

4] Os.
Cant

~

So send In that special rec/pe your family and friondt like so w ell
.~ff could bo a wlnnorl

LAROE

99

Eggs

M l

$1

White POTATOES

R U LES:
No limit to number ot recipe* tubmltted but each
recipe mutt Include your name, address and
telephone. .

5 i*.

TYPE or PRlMT your raclpa Giving full In­
struction* fur preparation, cooking time and
temperature. (Approximate number ol serving*
alto helpful.)

4 lb,

BANANAS

«M
II O i C .n t

SCHLITZ BEER

Anyone can enter except Evening Herald em­
ployees and their Immediate family.

HERITAGE
Ci .

mi

U in

Ml

M
JJU U L

EVER CAN E,
I LA I n

F Irst, Second and Third prises will be awarded In
each of lha nine food categories. You may enter
as many of the weekly categories as you Ilka.
A panel of throe expert |udget will review all
antriat and winner* will be notified at tha and of
the contest In September lor a taste off' to
select the Grand Prise winner. Decision of the
ludges Is final.
All raclpes received will be published In October
for the Evening Herald’s (irst annual cookbook
contest.

Cm

wtoWKwiwI Cm

sugar

Food Catogorios Coming Up In Th* Ntx1 2 Wookt Of Tho Contest:

LYKES

SHOULDER SM0" °

School box Salad ra in A plus.

YOU M AY ENTER AS MANY WEEKS AS YOU LIKE

AA(

99

HEdTAOE

'

rm O rtw

Cm

3/*l

Mall E litlies to: EVENINO H E R A L D
c-e COOK ROOK
P.O. SOX 1AS7
SANFORD, FLA. 8771

1100 W e st 13th St., S a n fo rd

TIP-TOP
S U P E R M A R K E T

DEADLINE FOR
MEATS...

Or Drop ON At Our Offlet:
100 N. FRENCH AVE.
(Ry ths laksfront In downtown Sanford)
MON. FRI. I:3S-S:M - SAT. |:»-NOON
Entries must be postmarked by midnight

SUNDAY, AUGUST 30

NUT

MODC A T E G O R Y

—

�W td n ttd iy , Aug. 14. I W l - i C

Evtning Hrvatd, Sanfwd, FL

Mind Your M easures

Kids Learn
At Hom e O n
The Range

P A R T I IN A S E R IE S
N O TE TO P A R E N T S : The article below explains the
art ol measuring and why careful measuring is important
in cooking. The act of m easuring, however, can lead to
more than tasty m eals — it can be instrumental In helping
a child understand fractions. It is so much easier to leam
by seeing and doing than just by reading. We a ll know that
4 p lu s 11equals 4 , but such things are often difficult for a
youngster to grasp.
l« t your youngster experiment to find out how many
ways there are to m ake 1 whole cu p -u sin g halves, thirds
and quarters. And how m any cups it takes to fill h is m ilk
glass, his cocoa cup, a sauce pan. With this sort of lear*
ning through experimentation, your child w ill team to
understand fractions...in a fraction of the time It might
normally take.
_____

use Ihe cups m arked 4 and 4 , because 4 plus 4 equals
4.
l i l n g M easuring Spoons. When sm all amounts of
ingredients are needed, measuring spoons are used.
These, like m easuring cups usually come in sets of four: 1
tablespoon, 1 teaspoon, 4 teaspoon, and 4 teaspoon.
Measuring spoons can be used both (or liquid ingredients
and dry ingredients. If you use them for liquids, pour very
carefully to avoid spills. If you use them for dry
ingredients, heap them full and then level them off, Just as
you do when you use a measuring cup fer dry Ingredients.
And If a recipe calls for 4 teaspoon, use the 4 teaspoon
and the 4 teaspoon. It works just lik e adding fractions.
T ricky Stuff. Some ingredients are not liquids, and they
are nol d ry either. How do you measure them? Let's use
margarine as an example. If you are m aking a M acaroni1
and Cheese D inner you need 4 cup margarine. Stick
margarine usually has markings on the wrapper tfuit w ill
tell how much w ill equal 4 cup.
Rut If it comes in a plastic tub, you w ill need to measure
it yourself. It's easy if you remember that *4 cup plus 4
cup equals 1 cup. A il you need to do is fill a liquid
measuring cup to the &gt;4 mark with water, and then drop In
spoonfuls o l m argarine until the water level rises lo the )
cup m ark; when that happens, you know you have 4 cup
ol the m argarine. L ift it out with a slotted spoon so the
water can run off, and add it to your other ingredients.

To help you, there are many standard measuring toots.
There are cups made especially for measuring liquids,
and others that are best for dry ingredients, and there are
spoons to measure sm all amounts of things. If you use the
right tool, m easuring is easy.
Measuring liq u id s . Measuring cups for liquids are
usually glass or plastic so you can see through them, and
they have a spout (or easy pouring. The measurements
are marked on the side. If a recipe calls for l-3rd cup of
milk, slowly pour m ilk into the measuring cup until II
comes up to ihe l-3rd m ark. | Bend down so your eye is at
the same level as the m ark you need to reach. I
Measuring D ry Ingredients. Measuring cups for dry
Ingredients are usually m etal nr plastic and they usually
come in sets of four. These are used to measure
ingredients like (tour and sugar. The largest holds exactly
1 cup, the next w ill hold 4 cup, the next l-3ni cup, and the
smallest 4 cup The cups are usually marked, so it w ill be
easy lo tell which is which.
To measure dry ingredients exactly, select the proper
site measuring cup (If you need ' i cup of sugar, use the
cup marked 4 ) and fill it heaping full. Now lake a tool
with a very straight edge Ispatula or the straight btade of
a table knife) and level off the Ingredients, so they come to
the top of the cup. If a recipe calls (or 2-3ril cup of
something, yo u'll need to use the cup marked 1-3, but use
it twice. If the recipe calls for 4 cup of something, you can

The people who create recipes experiment a lot to get
them to taste Just right. They try a ll sorts of Ingredients,
in many different quantities, before they are satisfied.
When a recipe finally la printed in a newspaper, m agailnc
or book, it contains just exactly what is needed...Just
enough salt, just enough sugar. Just enough m ilk, just
enough everything.
So when you follow a recipe to make a meal, you have lo
be careful to add the rig ht amounts, too. Not too much, not
too little, but Just enough. Measuring correctly is one of
the most important parts of cooking.

A t
P e o p l e

M

P u b lix ,

a k e

" W

e

T h e

w

D if f e r e n c e .

a n t

T o

D o

B o r d e n 's E ls ie B ra n d
A ss o rte d

IceC ream ....r* *1”

Potato
C h ip s....x

Do-Ahead
Brunch

When a relaxing Sunday afternoon is what you are looking
(or, try this easy menu. Do m ost of your meal preparation the
night before and be a guest at your own brunch.
The casserole and flavored butter can be prepared the night
before. While the casserole bakes the next morning, set out the
flavored butter to soften. W arm the Danish Just before serving.
Add orange Juice, fruit and a hot beverage lo complete the
m eal Serve bugget style — and enjoy.
M END
Chilled Orange Juice
Overnight Egg Casserole
Warm Individual Danish
Flavored Butter
Fresh Fruit
Coffeee, Tea or M ilk

OVERNIGHT EGG CASSEROLE
1 slices white bread
2 cups m ilk
• eggs, beaten
1 tcaspom salt
1 teaspoon dry mustard
4 teaspoon ground pepper
2 cups grated Cheddar cheese
1 cup cubed ham
Cut crusts off bread; cut each slice into cubes, set aside.
Combine m ilk, eggs, salt, m ustard and pepper. Lightly stir
together m ilk mixture, bread cubes, cheese and ham. Pour
m ixture Into 818x2 Inch glass baking dish. Cover and
refrigerate at Ifast 4 hours o r overnight. Bake in prehealed 323
degrees F. oven about 1 hour or until knife inserted near center
comes out clean. Cool 10 m inutes before serving. M akes 9
serving l
DANISH W m i F I J t V O R E D B U T T E R S P R E A D
4 cup butter, softened
1 teaspoons grated orange peel O R 2 tablespoons pineapple
preserves
6 fro ten individual Danish, any flavor
Prepare flavored butter by whipping together butler and
orange reel. Refrigerate overnlle. Set out butter to soften 1
hour. Warm Danish. Serve w ith flavored butler. Makes B
servings.
F L A K Y C H E E S E STICKS
1 4 cups unsifted, all-purpose flour
*4 teaspoon salt
*4 teaspoon dried diU weed
1 4 cups shredded Cheddar cheese
4 cup cold butter or m argarine
3 tablespoons cold water
In medium m ixing bowl com bine flour, sail, d ill weed and
cheese; m ix well. With a pastry blender or 1 table knives cut in
butler until mixture resem bles r o a m crumbs. M ix in water
w tti a fork. Shape dough into a ball; roU out about 4 Inch
thick. Cutlnto strips 4 inches w ide and 2 inches long. Plaos on
ungreased rookie sheet. B ake in a 330 degree P. oven 11
minutes or until golden. Cool on w ire racks. Store In a plastic
container with seal. Serve hot or a t room temperature. Y ield ;

Seedless
Grapes......

C R A B S T U F F E D AVOCADOS
3 ripe avocados, cut into halves and seeded
2 tablespoons pure, im ported olive oil
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
2 packages (I ounces each) froxen king crab meat, thawed
and drained
2 cups shredded green cabbage
2 carrots, shredded
1 cup pineapple tidbits
4 cup pure, imported olive oil
4 cup orange Juice
S alt and pepper
Cover cut surface of avocado w ith m ixture of olive o il and
lemon Juice. ChlU. Combine cra b meat, cabbage, cam **,
p | n « ppu M U olive oil and orange and pour over crab. Season
lo taste with salt and pepper. Let m arinate h j several hours.
When ready to serve, use cra b m ixture to stuff avocados.
(Serves I)
Send stamped self-addressed envelope (or more recipes few
salads, vegetables and other foods,^nd a Kkent-off coupon,
for Pompeian Olive O il, to- Pom peian, Inc., 420] Pulaski High­
way, Baltim ore. Md. 21224.

H u n t 's

99*

T e n d e r, F r e s h

Broccoli...

99*

Put! 2 0 0 -c l W h ite or A sso rte d ,
or 175-ct P rin le d

Facial Tissue., ,ft 79*
Penny S a v e r Lau n d ry

R IP E J U I C Y

Detergent...... mV *119

S U N N Y S L O P E F A R M S ''

(Lirmt I P le a t* . With Other Purchases of
f&amp; or More Excluding All TobiCCO H#miJ

Fresh
Peaches

70c O ff L a b e l, H e a v y Duty
Laundry D e te rg e n t

10.$1

Wlsk Liquid.... ’OV *5“*
Mr. C le a n ...... ( f t *1”
6 c O ff La b e l,

Cornel
Cleanser.......2

Squash...... 7

39*

G o o d Raw or C o o k e d ,
F re e h

Carrots ... 2
Green
Beans........ 7

SAVE 30c. ASSORTED
DAIRI FRESH

49*

Ice
Milk

K IN G O F T H E W E S T "
SW EET. TASTY

Lemons.. 12 *

99*

Assorted Foliage, 5 4 -Inch
H a n g in g

Baskets......r

*4”

Corn.......... 3 ’£V«1
Hungry Jack Instant

Mashed
Potatoes.... »1«

Pork A
Beans......... 3

9

*1

Pater Pan Smooth or
Crunchy

Peanut
Butter........ V
THE PLA C E FO R
H E A L T H &amp; B E A U T Y A ID S

•1”

Publix

Grap* Jelly..

W

89*

Easy-to-Use Jiffy

SAVE 8tC,

Corn Muffin
Mix.........

A lk a S e lt z e r ... S l L
&lt;lw.t 7 V ia Olhw Pureft. M l)

•VM.
* *9

Make learning fun for
your children with Tho

G e l R id o f P e s ls Ihe E a s y W a y

Holiday
Fogger........f t *2”

[L ilia n
$929

Oet Volume 2 '
this week for Justi m m

W isco nsin C h e e s e B a r
S hredded S h a rp C h e d d a r o r

69*

69*
»3»

W isco n sin C h e e s e B a r S lic e d
Natural M id C heddar or D ic k or

Muenster.......f t

99*

W isco nsin C h e e s e B a r
M o zza re lla, M ild C h e d d a r
Horn or S ha rp

Cottage
C h e e se .........

Vi

M T#

restoring the l vaenC an] D

SAVf .10&lt;
FROZEN SHOCPEG
CORN nRO CCOUSPIARS
lE SUEUR BABV PE AS
CA U llElO W ER A C H fl V

anr rw M m to rZ
ilW I I n t a m iR N iM W ilM
■H N M I .

SAVE ?0c A S S O R T E D
D U N C A N MINES D E L U X E
II OR PU D D IN G R E C I P E

Cake ,
Mixes

THE PLACE FOR
FROZEHFOODS

G r e e n G ia n t
V e g e t a b le s

T re e T o p C oncentrate

10'

Apple Juice....’f t 99*

o r pkq

79

Lemonade...... ’f t 59*
G re e n G ianl

L a s a g n e ......... ’ft* * 1 ”
B an qu et

WITH T ACO F IX IN 'S
FROM ORTEGA
10-Ct. Taco Shells.... 4*71,
16-CI. Taco Shells....
Taco Dinners............
r.t
Mild Taco Sauce....... n \
Hot Taco Sauce........
.nv
Taco Seasoning Mix.

69*
99*
»1«

69*
69*
39*

AND FROM PUBLIX
Jimmy Dean
Taco Filling.... f t * 1 "

F rie d
C h ic k e n .......... f t

* 2 4»

R u s e tle s

S h o e s tr in g
P o t a t o e s ... X , 79*

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURSDAY, AUGUST 27
THRU WEDNESDAY
SEPTEMBER 2, 1 9 6 1 ...
CLOSED SUNOAY. . .

aueux Mtcnvia th c rig h t
TO UtUT QUANTITIES SOLO

G re e n G iant R-ce M e d le y or

R ic e P ila f........f t *

69*

McCall's ]

G re e n G iant C h in e se S ty le o r

Jap an ese
V e g e t a b le s .... ’ft* 7 9 *

COOKBOOK COLLECTIONl

G re e n G iant Nibbier

This week's feature!

C o b C o r n ......»

F is h S t i c k s ....* 1 "

Chsddar........f t »1”

S h r i m p ......... 'i V

»1«

1i

cups

Cheddar........f t

Wisconsin Cheese Bar
Mtfd Cheddar Horn or Sharp

Cat Food. ... £

*

4

D am F re sh S m all C u rd , L a rg e
Curd. S c h m ie rk a se o r L o w fa t

89*

Ultra B a n ...

« ■** f

*2»

Gorton

Penny Saver Fish or Ideal
Blend Dry

- q I

mm

Tomatoes..... tT 39*

SAVE 70c, Roll-On
Anb-Per spirant

M et

2»®

*

Swiss
C h e ese ......... 7

R iitp jte r

29*

a unit I ■&lt;!* Ol*wr

•1"

99*

W isco nsin C h e e s e B a r

53.

Green Grant Broccoli 4
Cauliflower Medley or

Kosher
D ills.....

K eri Lotion

quart
ctn

Am erican...... f t
i| 5 f 'V

From Produce, YeBow
Cooking
Onions........3 Z, 89*
From Produce, Large Size

Vlask Pick lea

SAVES! 00

69*

M ozzarella.... f t

39*
69*

#•04414#

W isconsin C h e e s e B a r
Individually-W rapped
C h e e se F o o d S lic e d

^ 6 9

Van Camp’s

6 o x jar

89*

Colony
W ine......... U T *3M

&lt;l-«M 4H tiir e ts on&lt;«
*«*•»«««• •• I* •«

M A K E -A TACO TIME!!

Tomato
Paata....

Coffee

C h e e z - l t s ...... f t *

M inute M aid Pink or R e g u la r

Contadina

In s t a n t

Cream
Cheese .......

Dairi-Fresh

G o ld C h a b lls , E m e r a ld
C h a b lls , C h a b lls o r
R h ln e s k e lla r

10 (1/ pfcrj

Green Giant Cut or French
Style

Green
B eans........ tT

FOIGFR S

5

89*

F4P Whole Kernel or Craam
Style Golden

89*

S u n s h in e S n a c k C r a c k e r a

59

M&amp;M’s ..........

69*

Fruit
C ocktail.....

"Florida" Fresh (200-slxe)

...a $ 4

can

D airi F re sh

Y o gu rt

Plain or w ith Peanuts

F4P (Mix In Gelatin)

69*

Colombian
Coffee

7 ©«

SA V E 56e, ASSO RTED
S W IS S - S T Y L E

1

SAVE 30t PUHlIX
AUTOMATIC OltlPOR

Candy Bars.... ’mV *2”

• 1«

Peaches.....

A v o c a d o s .... *.«“

32 -o r |ar

Fun S iz e M a rs S nicke rs. M ilk y
W a y, 3 M usketeen-

F4P Halved or Stlcad

Florida Large Size

i

|

(liMil 1Pleat* BMB Olfce*
P tP ik im a ftta r Bara,

THE PLACE FOR
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

Appla
Juice......

$1

__ .
I*

THE PLACE FOR
CANDY TREATS

Motts Natural

39

Tomato
J u ic e ........

89*

Cheese
Spread.......... f t

C rem o ra....H "

99i

•I**

e a c h lo r

Waves

P u b lix H e a lth fu l

cant

W isconsin C h e e s e B ar

B o r d e n 's N o n -D a iry C o f f e e
C re a m e r

h a lf g a llo n c ln

Honeydew s

1

•»ei

Trash Bags.... f t *15#

P u b lix B ra n d U n a w e a t a n a d

0

» i«

49*

Jum bo

Honey Wheat
B re a d ........ 2

Whipped
Topping......

Half &amp; H alf....

Miracle
Whip
$ 4 09

P u b lix S p e c ia l R e c ip e

b,.g

Penny S a v e r 3 M il

Fresh Crisp

Grapefruit
Juice......... S

*1

Trash B a g s ..

9

Biscuits......2

D a m F re s h

SAVE 30&lt;

W esson Oil

79*

D airi F re s h C re a m

■ A l l PU R P O S E IM l

2 5 c Off L a b e l, Liq u id Cleaner

Penny S a v e r

F r e s h T e n d e r Y e llo w o r
Z u c c h in i

$

89*

69*

S n o -W h ile W e s t e r n
l«|«
Cauliflower Mae

About 3 4 cups.

Spread..........ft.

Oreo
Cookies..... 'ft* *1*B

C a lifo r n ia T h o m p s o n

B ro ah ta sl C lu b
Pillsbury'a B ig C o untry
Butterm ilk or B uttery
10-&lt;t

N a b is c o C h o c o la t e
S a n d w ic h

THE PLACE FOR
PRODUCE
Kg)* c a s s e r o le , D a n is h s t a r a t b r u n c h .

ft

o r e . "

TH E P L A C E FO R
D A IR Y F R E S H N E S S

L a y 's R e g u la r, B a r- B - O , o r
S o u r C r e a m A O n io n
(6 l o 7 -o z.)

P u b lix t k ^

M

B r o c c o li
F a n f a r e ........

99*

79*

S m g ie to n 's B re a d e d B u tte rfly

'**. tm*

\u Time lb Cook
r r .\

t

VgtUbfoMoZ |
*»■■*««* ■wwx.au/
• **--&gt;m&amp;mwi mmm &lt;*•
•H M

SB29
1|

�«C-Ev»nlnq Haretd, Sanford, FI.

W xjm idiy. Aug. 21. 1H1

M a k e Conserve The Easy Way

Potpourri

It you’ re searching for new ways to add excitem ent to the
fam ily's eating enjoyment, consider a delicious Plum Nutty
Conserve. Jot down “ fresh plums" on your m arketing list. Be
sure to include a. package of powered fru it pectin. Promise
yourself to prepare this easy conserve recipe that w ill com­
plement a good many meals.

R I P E O L I V E M ACARONI S A LA D
1 pa A t Re || on.) salad macaroni
I quarU boiling w ater
I tablespoon sa lt
14 cups pitted rip e olives
4 cup sliced c e le ry
‘ i cup diced Rreen pepper
1 ]ar
chopped plm lrnU u
1 green onions, chopped
4 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoons tarragon vinegar
2 teaspoons prepared mustard
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon w hite pepper
Cook m acaroni In boiling w atrr with one tablespoon salt,
about 10 minutes or Just until tender. Drain w ell; rinse with
cold water. Add o liv e s, celery, green pepper, ptmientos, and
onions. Blend m ayonnaise with vinegar, m ustard, salt and
pepper. Pour over salad m ixture and mis well. M akes about
14 quarts.

Fruit in this freezer recipe isn't cooked — Just m ixed with
sugar, chopped walnuts and powdered fru it pectin. B y not
cooking the fruit, the flavor stays much fresher, closer to
nature.
That's a m ajor reason why commercial pectin is added, it
helps capture fresh flavor and assures a good "Jet." Keep in
mind that natural fruit pectin decreasis as fruit ripens.
Because pectin helps a mixture to "Jell,” It’s necessary to
supplement natural pectin with the com m ercial variety.
Refrain from making any recipe changes. A t the lim e you
purchase powdered fruit pectin, it's lik e ly you w ill see
packages of liquid fruit pectin. Do not use liquid and powdered
fruit pectins interchangeably. While both bring successful
results, rem em ber that recipes are developed for a specific
type of pectin.

LETTU CE CON tJUESO
2 tablespoon butter or margarine
4 cup chopped fresh onion
2 large tomatoes, peeled, seeded and chopped
1 bay le al
2 tablespoons flour
4 cup m ilk
2 fresh green c h llle s , seeded, and chopped
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon liq u id hot pepper su e s
3 cups 14 pound) shredded Monterey Jack or m ild Cheddar
cheese divided
1 cups shredded Iceberg lettuce
Com bread squares
Melt butter In saucepan; add onion, tomatoes and bay leaf.
Cook, a lin in g frequently, until onion la tender. M ake a paste of
the flour and m ilk . Add to saucepan. Sim mer 10 minutes.
Remove bay leaf. Add green chllles, salt, pepper sauce and 2 4
cups cheese. SUr un til cheese W it s . To serve, place shredded
lettuce over split co m bread squares. Top with cheese m ixture
and remaining shredded cheese. This kitchen-tested recipe
makes 1 servings.
G R E E N C H E R R Y TOMATO P IC K L E S
14 pounds sm all green cherry tomatoes
4 cup light com syrup
4 cup rid e r vinegar
4 cup sugar
1 tablespoon m ixed p icklin g spice
4 teaspoon salt
1 sn a il cloves g a rlic
Wash, dry and rem ove stem s of cherry tomatoes. Pierce
each 2 or 3 lim es w ith a sm a ll skewer or wooden pick. In 2quart saucepan, a tlr together com syrup, vinegar, sugar,
pickling spice and salt. SUrrtng constantly, bring to boil over
medium heat; reduce heat. Stirring frequently, aimxner 10
minutes. Immediately pack cherry tomatoes and 1 g a rlic clove
Into each clean, hot 4 pint Jar. Pour boiling ayrup Into each Jar
covering tomatoes and leaving 4-inch headspace. Rem ove air
bubbles. Wipe top edge with dam p towtl. Seal according to Jar
manufacturer's directions. Process to boiling water bath IS
minutes. Cool on w ire ra c k or folded towel. This kitchen-tea led
recipe makes 1 ( 4 pint) tars.
V I E N N E S E GOULASH
I onions, thinly s lic e d and peeled
1 Tbsp butler
* Tb»p oil
Vt cup vinegar
4 cup paprika
Beef broth
3 4 lbs. chuck o r rum p, cubed
Salt &amp; pepper

Homemade conserve Is easy to make. By not
cooking the fruits, the flavor stays much fre sh e rcloser (o nature.

Before you begin to prepare the conserve, read the recipe
insert tucked inside the package of powdered fruit pectin.
Follow directions for preparing sm all freezer containers, of

not over a pint capacity, with tight-fitting lids. Containers as
well as glass Jars should be dishwasher safe.
P L U M NU TTY C O N S E R V E
24 cups prepared Irutt (about 2 lb. fu lly ripe plums and 1
orangel
one-third cup finely chopped walnuts
34 cups (2 lb. 6 ox.I sugar
*i cup water
I box fruit pectin
First prepare the fruit. P it about 2 pounds plums; do not
peel Cut in sm all pieces; then chop very fine. Measure 2 4
cups into large bowl or pan. Grate the rind from orange;
measure 1 teaspoon. Squeeze the Juice fro m 1 orange; measure
1 teaspoon. Squeeze the juice from 1 orange; measure 4 cup.
Add orange rind, orange juice and walnuts to plums.
Then m ake the conserve. Thoroughly m ix sugar into fruit
mixture; let stand 10 minutes. M ix water and fruit pectin in
small saucepan. Bring to a full boil and boil 1 minute, stirring
constantly. S tir Into fruit. Continue stirrin g 3 minutest (A few
sugar c ry sta ls w ill remain.) la d ! / q u ic k ly into scalded con­
tainers. Cover at once with tight lids, la t stand at room
temperature 21 hours; then store tn freezer. Sm all amounts
may be covered and stored in refrigerator up to 3 weeks.
Makes about 7 cups or about 8 (8 fl. ox.) containers.

"At Publix, We want To Do More.1

Stamp Price
Specials

T H IS A D
E F F E C T IV E
TH U RSD A Y,
A U G U S T 27TH
THRU
W EDN ESD A Y,
S E P T E M B E R 2,

rv iu i
n u m i

1901 . . .
CLO SED
S U N D A Y ...

THU XiCMT
TO n u n

- '.vW\\

d\W

G R E E N
STA M PS

Gourmet
Kitchenware
*Dr%^Ax^tf2&gt;«t1
tlflt Afterglow*

This w e e k 's fe a tu re
o n ly $ g 9 9 N&amp; MxNrxj

It'* easy!
H o le 's how it work*:
I.

1

Pick up PuM l Sixmo Prtc#
SeoclxV Book M i it PuMl check­
out CO U llH i

).

PM * K h Book o ilh S*H C c m «
SI m o i th it com* with •*•**
P u M l p u c c h iti
I ISO IWi on* book).
Rodoom to* tiTtnga on ■ Htt*
foxtuvod Monti at PuMl.

pureNon wxMMRl

I*r%aw*t nu
I■w ■"* 1 up 1.4 &gt;it
» Irm%v&lt;4u i m j m i U "

'.*W* *«|-o «n

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4

6VOZ.CAN
IN WATER Oft OIL.
B U M B LE BEE LIGHT

0*0* t*Hh Pubkl Sl*m)l Pt k *
S p it i il BooiW II

MINUTE MAID C O N C E N T R A T E

24-OZ. B O T T LE
D E L M O NTE

Chunk

Orange
Juice

Tomato
Catsup

With One Publn S u m p
Price Sever Booklet

With One Publix Stam p
Price Saver B o o k le t. .

With One Pu b ln Stamp
Price Sever B o o k le t.

1 tap. marjoram
4 cup tomato puree
2-3 Tbsp. flour
2 garlic cloves, m inced
I’eel of I lemon
1 Tbsp. caraway seed
Simmer onions in the butter and oil until golden. Add vinegar
and paprika. Brow n the m eat in this mixture, toaitng well. Add
salt and pepper to taste, m arjoram and tomato puree. Sim m er
14 htxirs until liqu id la greatly reduced (alm ost a glare).
Sprinkle mixture w ith flour, add (he garlic and enough broth to
Just cover the meat. Sim m er 30 minutes. M ix lemon peel and
caraway seed In a blend er and add to the sauce. Stir and s e n e.
Z U C C H IN I S T U F F E D H AM B U R G E R
2 pounds ground chuck
I cup tomato paste
1 cup dry b rt(d crum bs (flavored)
1 cups succhlnl (unpeeled and cut In 4 Inch slices)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon pepper
1 cup finely chopped onions
1 cup finely sliced sweet peppers
14 tablespoons olive oil
Garnish: bacon, mushrooms, panley and tomatoes
2 cups shredded sh arp cheddar cheese
In a large aklUet saute zucchini, onions, peppers In o il Just to
make them lim p. Then add bread crumb*, enough to m ake a
dry mixture. Remove from heat to rooL
In a bow fm lx ground chuck, salt, tomato p a ile , pepper and
thyme very w e ll
On a piece of waxed paper or foil about II inches long, spread
4 beef m ixture about *« inch in the shape of a rectangle.
Spread 4 the cheese on tup of the beef evenly, leaving about
a 4 Inch clean border a ll around.
Spread 4 the succhlnl m ixture on top of the cheese.
Hoi) as In Jelly r o ll faih io n and place In a baking dish with
seam on bottom (rem oving the paper as you roll.) Repeat as
above for second ro ll.

118 OZ. SIZE
PUflLIX

Ift-O Z. CAN
CONTAOINA

32-OZ. BOTTLE.
O RANG E OR LE WON LIME

128-OZ. SIZE
PENNY SAVER

1-LB.CTN.
BREAKFAST CLUB

Drinking
Water

Tomato
Sauce

Stokely
Gatorade

Liquid

Corn Oil
Margarine

With One P u b ln Stamp
Price Se ve r Booklet

Bleach

W ith One Publix Stamp
P rice Saver B o o klit ..

With One Publn Stamp
Price Sa«er B o o kle t. , .

1-LB .P K O .
O LD E SMITHFIELD

F R E S H FROM THE DELI!
1-LB. OF ZESTY

2S-OZ. JA R
M OTT'S

128-OZ. SIZE
ASSORTED F L A V O R P E R F E C T

Flour

Sliced
Bacon

Cole
Slaw

Apple
Sauce

Fruit
Drinks

With O ne P u b ln Stamp
Price Save r Booklet

W ith One Publix Stamp
P ric e Saver Booklet

With One Publix Stamp
P rice Saver B o o kle t. . .

24-OZ. JAR, SUGAR
4 LEMON FLAVORED

11-OZ. PKO „ FROZEN MORTON
CHICKEN, TURKEY, SALISBURY
STEAK, VEAL PARVIGIANA,
OR MEATLOAF

frL B ,B A G .U N B L E A C H E D
SELF RISING, U N B LE A C H ED ,
PLAIN, SELF-R ISIN O , BREAD

Pillsbury

With One Publn Stam p
Price Saver Booklet

With One Publix Stamp
Price Saver Booklet

With One Publn Stam p
Price Sever Booklet

With One Publix Stamp
Price Saver Booklet

Place 3 stripe of bacon about 1 1nches long across the top.
Place 3 whole m ushroom s on each side of (he r o ll Cover each
roil with toll and bake In pre-heated oven at 323 degrees for
about 1 hour. Rem ove fo il and place under broiler Just long
enough to brown bacon.
Remove from pan and slice between bacon slices.
Garnish roll with ha lve d cherry tomatoes and fresh parsley.

SATURDAY NITE SKILLET DINNER
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
14 cups uncooked, long-grain rice
1 cup chopped onion
1 4 pounds ground beef
2 teaspoons flavor enhancer
1 cans (114 ounces each) beef broth, divided
1 4 teaspoons dried le af Ihyme
I teaspoon g a rlic powder
4 teaspoon ground allspice
4 teaspoon pepper
4 teaspoon ground clove*
1 4 cups shredded Cheddar cheese, divided
1 cup sliced pim ienlo
I cup chopped fresh parsley
In Urge skillet, heal o il; saute rice and onion over m edium
heat until rice U golden. Add ground beef, cook un til evenly
browned, stirring occasionally. Sprinkle flavor enhancer over
beef as It cooks. Reserve 1 cup beef broth. SU r la rem aining
broth, thyme, g a rlic powder, allspice, pepper and dovea.
Bring to boiling. Reduce heat. Cover. Sim m er 20 minutes,
stirring occasionally. S tir In reserved 1 cup broth. 1 cup
cheese, ptm Unln an d p a n le y . Heal until cheese melts.
Sprinkle with rem aining 4 cup cheeae. Yield: 4 servings.

Nestea
Tea Mix
With One Publix Stamp
Price Save r B ooklet . .

Regular
Dinners
W ith One P u b k i Stamp
P ric e S ave r B o o kle t. ..

tWFCT.PKQ.
FAMILY PACK

1S-CT.PKO.
COMPARTMENT DISPOSABLE

3 1-OZ. SIZE (MAKES 10
QUARTS) RE 0 . OR PINK

Scott
Napkins

Chine!

Country Time
Lemonade

Plates

With Ono Publn Stamp
Price Saver Booklet.

With One Pwbkx Stam p
Price Saver Booklet

With One Publix Stamp
Price Saver Booklet.

^GreenStamps^Rl JwGrWnStamps|jfl1111&lt;1^WGreenStampsH[[ilfl^GrWnttanipsH ^^GreenStampsQ
m. « . i &lt;
Morion Lit* Salt
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14-01. too.

■W* I

tOOnt Pk*

*

2000 Fluehee
Toilet Bowl Ckeener

Sw eet 'n Low
S t gar Bubetltute

1 X l u M U f U l I t lu U i Ov 1 tool)

t X im iw io ii i t ■livnmim v. Mill

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14-01. 1-..
Coo,

—“ " S 3

Hot Shot
Roach A Ant KUIer
f t IX H M Iv o M II

V. Mill

�Evening H e rild . Sanford FI.

Roquefort:
Bread O r
Spread

There are many ways to enjoy
Roquefort cheese. Many dishes, salads,
or even desserts can be enhanced by
the unique savor and taste of
Roquefort, Of course, everyone is
familiar with the famous Roquefort
salad dressing, but you should
experiment! Vegetable sandwiches,
right, pick up flavor when a bit of
Roquefort cheese Is added
to the spread.

"At Publix, w e want To Do More."

Meat Department Sale

THIS AD EFFECTIVE:
THURSDAY, AUGUST 27
THRU W EDN ESD AY
SEPT. 2, 1 93 1...
CLOSED S U N D A Y . . .

U.S.D.A. Choice
Government-Inspected
Heavy Western Beef
At Publix wo know how important quality beef is to you If you
don t see what you want, just ask Our m eat cutters will be
happy to custom-cut bee! to fill your needs

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF BONELESS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF BONELESS

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF
(WHOLE IN THE BAG)

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF
(WHOLE IN THE BAG)

Chuck
Steak

Rib Eye
per lb.

per lb.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BEEF BONELESS

Top Round
Steak
per lb.

^399
per lb.

S -|9 9

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Sliced

Beef Liver.............
Beef Cube Steaks
Beef for S te w ......
Short R ib s............
T H E P L A C E FOR
DELI D ELIGH TS
Swi« Pierm/n Blown N Sff *0

Regular P ic * 99c etch. Bw&lt;
or Pork

(All V a # * l * t )

Tasty P c hi* A Pimento Loaf.
G«flc Bologna or German

Bologna ..... 7 M 1*
FlavorW

Sweet Munchee
Cheese......... 7 M**

B u d w e is e r
Beer
•I *. «•»»$ 4 9 9

Assorted

Gelatin
Desserts

«V 79*
*3”
»1“

Fresh Made

Dinner Roils...«... 79*

Tamow Wrote Hog MJd
Medium Hoi

Franks........ «* *1”

Hi

Sausage...... «*

Swill Premiisn 5i*c«J
(A l Vine!**)

Seafood Tiaal

Deli Thin

Snow Crab
Clusters...... 7

M»

R O Q U E F O R T C O G N A C DIP
^ 4 to. Roquefort cheese, crumbled: 4 cup finely chopped.

M eals..............«;* 49*

Seafood Tteal.

SurmyUnd Steed Meal
Beel or ThCk

Grouper Fillet 7

Bologna

Ofr“» i Ou

... ■ »

Movie Flm

h u

Color Slide Processing

T UP on OUT T UP OR
T H E S E C A N A D A DRV,
o n i N N S G IN G E R A L E .
S U d A R FREE G IN G ER
ALE. CLUB S O D A
OR CO LLIN S M IX E R

1 pkg. (I ox.) cream cheese, softened
1 cup cognac
Combine a ll Ingredients, blending well by hand or w hip with
an electric m ixer un til smooth and Ruffy. Serve with crackers,
rye toast, or wedges of unpeeled apples and pears. M akes
about 1 4 cups.
R O Q U E F O R T SOUR C R E A M D IP
Combine I cup d a iry sour cream, 4 cup crumbled
Roquefort, 1 scant tablespoon prepared m ustard and 1
tablespoon capers; m ix well. Makes over 1 cup of basic dip.

BUY ONE,
GET ONE FREE!

S o f t D r in k s

Dehoou»Fu*y Cooked

Glazed Ham

Swill Ptemnrn (AJ V#i*twi)

**•*8*9 late IM

FiexN Baked

Coconut
Custard Pie . r

Sausage

Sliced Bacon . «*

net u&gt; i m i c i m m tie rouowwo count**

Ready To-Tak»Out Soutnern

Fried
Chicken...... t t

Kahn *

Once early man learned how to raise grain he pounded It in a
mortar, added a little water to form a juste, la id it on a hot
stone amt ended up with edible unleavened bread. Appetising
when fresh and hot, it became heavy and indigestibhLWhen
cold.
®
Egypt is credited with the discovery of raised bread.
Perhaps some favorable micro-organisms drifted into a dough
made from new wheat. Dread got lighter when grape Ju k F ,
amt later white wine, w as kneaded in the dough and allowed to
ferment. A piece from Ihe previous day’ s baking was in­
corporated Into the new m ix, thus making a sour dough
•’starter.”
Plain bread becam e flavored with the addition of cheese,
Poppy semis, honey, suet or anise to the dough. Spreads were
made of olives, ra w berms, figs, fish, sweet potatoes, peanuts,
tomatoes ami avocados, depending on the ingredients
available. Chunks of bread were used lo dunk in stews, wine,
goat ur stm -p'l m ilk.
Roquefort cheese am id well have been part of these early
diets because between I00 to 250 A.IV, Pliny the Roman,
described It as "th e cheese that bears away the p rize .” While
the Romans raised the status of cheese to a high level, they
thought butter w as the tood of barbarian cattle herders and
wouldn't spread it on their bread!
Roquefort Cheese Dread wit) win first prize In many
households today. It’s sim ple to make and during the baking
process a delicious odor permeates the kitchen. T ry It with a
spread nude with equal parts o( Hushed avocado and solicited
cream cheese that has been seasoned with lim e Juice, grated
onion, pepper and if needed, salt.
RO Q UEFO RT CH EESE BREAD
14 cups m ilk
one-third cup sugar
4 cup butter
4 tsp. salt
2 juckages compressed or active dry yeast
4 cup water
14 cups crum bled Roquefort cheese
I egg, well-beaten
6 to 8 cups of sifted all-purpose flour
Melted butter
Allow all of (tie ingredients to reach room temperature.
Scald the milk. A d d it to the sugar, butter and satt. Cool the
m ature to 85 degrees K. Dissolve the yeast in 4 cup 85 degrees
F . water tor 10 minutes. Blend with the cooled m ilk mixture in
u m ixer bowl. A d d tla- Roquefort cheese and beaten egg,
beating until smooth.
Add 1 cups of sifted (lour, beating well alter each addition.
Continue adding another 3 cups of flour, beating well aftrr
each addition. Add the remaining flour only until the dough is
not overly sticky and il begins to leave the sides of the bowl
You may not need the total two last cups.
Now live kneading begins. On a lightly floured board, fold die
dough over toward you. l*ress i l with the heel ot the hand, give
tt a slight turn, told it and p re s s tt a g a in . R e p e a l IhU p ro c e s s
until the dough becomes smooth, elastic and satiny. The dough
should no longer be sticky.
Grease a targe bowl; pul die dough in It turning it so that all
sides are lightly greased. Dampen and wring out a cloth, reiver
die bowl and set the dough In a w snti (75 degree F.-80 degree
F.) place to rise until it Is double in bulk, about 2 hours. Don't
let II rise further than that or the bread may turn out coarse
and dry.
Punch down the dough. Knead die bread for 2-3 minutes.
Shape it Into two loaves to fit greased ix9-lnch pans. Brush
melted butter on die top. Cover the pans with a dam p cloth;
allow to rise until doubled In bulk. Rake In a preheated 175
degree F. oven for about 30 minutes. The loaves should have
shrunk from the sides of the pan and have a hollow sound when
you tap die bottom of each loaf. Let the bread cool completely,
wrap and store U In a covered container diat has few tiny
openings (or ventilation. Makes 2 5x9-inch loaves.
Roquefort spreads can enhance a variety of other breads.
We seldom consider raw or blanched vegetables as an
Ingredient for a spread ur a decoration fur an open-faced
sandwich. Vegetables are nutritious and possess eye-appeal
with their bright, interesting colors and contours. A m ixture of
chopped cabbage, crum bled Roquefort cheese and sour cream
spread on a slice of rye bread and lopped with some apple
i tires dipped in lemon Juice is a delicious cotnbinadon. If a
party is in the offing utilize cookie cutters to m ake some
unusual bread shapes that can be beautifully decorated with
bits of colorful vegetables. Here a rt some Interesting flavor
combinations to try ;
A very basic spread can be made by blending 3 ozs. of
crumbled Roquefort with 3 or more tablespoons of so il butter
until It Is smooth. The vegetables you'd like to add w ill decide it
any additional seasoning is needed. It la a good m atch for
celery, onions, carrots and mushrooms dccurativrly arranged
on an open-laced sandwich. Chopped watercress Is a delightful
addition fur lea sandwiches or hors d'otuvres.
CH EESESAVO RY
4 lb. Roquefort cheese
4 cup sweet butter
4 teaspoon dry m ustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
10 anchovy filets, finely chopped
4 cup whipped cream
Saltines
Paprika
Mash Roquefort w ith butter until smooth. Add dry mustard,
Worcestershire sauce, anchovies, and whipped cream . M ix
ingredients well. Spread on saltlne about a quarter of an inch
thick, covering entire surface of cracker. Sprinkle ligh tly with
paprika. Place under broiler until lightly browned and puffy.
Serve. Makes about 3 dozen.

U.S.D.A. Choice Beef

Bar-B-Que
Sandwich. S!', FREE!

Wednesday, Aug. IS, 1H1—&gt;C

7 *1“

Hot From the De*'

Baef
StroganoH
7 *3”
YarrisA
Applas......... 7 »1«

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ROQUEFORT SHERRY DIP
2 pkgs. (1 ox. each) cream cheese
1 4 ox. Roquefort cheese
1 tablespoon sherry wine
1 tablespoon heavy cream
V« teaspoon onion Juice
Mash cream cheese until soft and fluffy. Beat in Roquefort
cheese. Best in remaining Ingredient!. Chill lor several ho u rs
Serve with potato chips or crackers. Makes about 1 cup.

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Judge Orders
City Chemicals Co. ol Orlando must
remove more than 3,000 barrels of
hazardous chemical waste that have
been stored on a two-acre site at Airport
Boulevard and Jew ett Lane since
November.
Seminole Circuit Court Judge Kenneth
M. I-effler signed a court order forcing
City Chemicals to remove the barrels
because he said the site presents an
imminent hazard. According to lioffler,
the barrels of waste are exposed to
severe weather conditions and some
barrels show signs of leakage.

CityChemicals To Remove To

The order includes the following term­

submit financial statements for the most
recent fiscal year.
— Beginning Sept. 15 the company
must furnish financial statements
showing profits and losses.
City Chemicals, according to the court
order, must submit a removal plan
within five days to the Department of
Environmental Regulation iDF.Hi. If
that plan is not deemed adequate b) tlie
department, the state agency will sub­
stitute its own plan in 10 days.
Also, within 90 days, the chemicals
must be removed and the site must be

S:
— City Chemicals must submit a
removal plan in five days
— Tlie chemicals must be removed in
90 days.
— Forty-eight hours after the plan is
approved, work must begin on the two
staging areas on site
— All barrels will be tested to meet
transportation standards.
— City Chemicals must pay for all
costs.
— Within 15 days the company must

restored to “substantially the same well. However, if the compay cannot
condition as it was just prior to tlie time" meet all costs the DER, through the
Hazardous Waste Management Trust
the first wastes were brought in.
The chemical company is also charged Fund, will spend up to $50,000 Hus is ilkwith the responsibility, beginning 48 amount set aside by the Florida
hours after the plan is accepted by DEH. legislature for the Orange-Seminole
to begin working on two staging and area. Another court order will be
repackaging areas, and this construction required if additional trust fund money is
needed.
must be complete in two weeks
The court order also requires that City
Transportation of the chemicals, ac­
cording to the court order must also meet Chemicals and its president, Arthur
all local, state, and federal regulations. Greer, must submit complete and ac­
City Chemicals must pay for all costs curate financial statements to the court
involved in removing the chemicals as covering the most recent fiscal year.

Lake Mary
Eyes Tax
Increase

t
t

Herald Photo by Tom Vincont

REACHING FOR THE
. STARS (&amp; STRIPES)

(■ listin g w in d s m a k e it d if fic u lt to r e t i r e th e c o lo rs la te
T h u r s d a y a f te rn o o n fo r J o h n ( lliv e n s , le ft, a n d M e lv in
V e llin e s of th e S a n fo rd P a r k s D e p a r t m e n t. T h e la r g e fla g
H ies in V e te r a n s M e m o ria l P a r k on L a k e M o n ro e .

See I.AKK MAItY, Page 12A

Sanford Airport Gets New Terminal Manager

IM C II M A R T I N

Retired Navy Cmdr. Rich Martin of
Sanford is to become terminal manager
at the Sanford-Central Florida Airport
when current manager Bill Stead retires
Nov. 5.
Airport Manager J.S. “Red" Cleveland
said today he and Martin were "ship­
mates" for some years in the Navy and
Martin was maintenance officer at the
former Sanford Naval Air Station before
the base closed. Martin was also tlie
officer in charge of the terminal building,
which he will begin managing.
Martin retired about Uiree years ago
from tlie Navy, Cleveland said. “He has
lots of experience in Hircraft operations,
fuels maintenance, and electronics and
cane up through tlie ranks. He and Stead
are carved out of the same mold,
Cleveland said, adding he is delighted
that Martin accepted the Job.
Salary for tlie position ranges from

I

2A
4A
IA
3A
I0A-11A
IA
IA
JA
12A
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4A
Editorial ..................
12A
Florida
IA
Horoscope
Hospital
3A
Nation
9A
Ourselsrs
Sports
5A-7A
Television
leisure
2A
Weather .....................
World
........ 2A

llfo Is wondorful — just wondorful' —
h r William A. Lofflor Sr. of Sanhrd.
Th&amp; 95y oar-old formtr Sanford mayor,

mado a living on tho sldo, drifts back

m

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who says ho daneod and frollckod and

&gt;»«■» -•
'9 •* »*

$16,000 to $17,000, Cleveland said.
Stead has been terminal manager
since the airport authority took over that
function from a private company in 1977.
Prior to that time, Stead was director of
operations at Page Airways He served in
tlie Navy for 30 years.
During the time Stead was away from
his job recuperating from open heart
surgery in June, Martin filled in for him,
Cleveland said.
In other business, the Sanford Airport
Authority agreed Thursday to employ a
fourth air traffic controller to alleviate
some of tlie pressure in tlie airport's
tower.
Cleveland said Hie controllers work
directly for the airport authority and are
not affected by tlie current Professional
Air Traffic Controllers (PATCO) strike.
They are certified by the Federal
Aviation Administration. With the ad­

dition of the fourth position, tlie con­
trollers will be working a 33-hour week.
Salary range is from $12,000 to $16,000
annually.
Cleveland said there are several ap­
plicants for the position, two of whom are
especially well qualified. Tlie new con­
troller will be hired within the next twoto-three weeks, he said.
Tlie current controllers are mostly
retired military.
The authority also awarded a contract
to lx Roy C. Robb Construction Co. to
build a 1,624 square foot maintenance
building for the terminal. Aviation
support equipment, engines, air starts
und powers units, currently stored in the
terminal, will be moved into tlie main­
tenance building when construction is
complete, Cleveland said. Cost of con­
struction will be about $19,000 for the
metal building. - DONNA ESTES

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Wrlter
Negotiators for the Seminole
Education Association i SEA i teachers'
organization and the Seminole County
School administration settled differences
Thursday night giving tentative approval
too new contract. A contract agreement
was also reached for nun-instructional
personnel.
With the assistance of a federal
mediator and after 106*2 hours of
negotiations, agreement was reached on
a contract providing $3.8 million in pay
raises and additional benefits to the
school district's 2,000 teachers.
Pay raises ranged from 8.49 percent
for beginning teachers i $10,600 annually
to $11,500) to 42 percent for one teacher.
That teacher, who was not identified by
either the school administration or tlie
teachers' union, will receive a pay raise
from $15,526 annually to $21,735 because
of her 15 years plus service in tlie school
district and her qualifications.
The teachers' union originally asked
for a base salary for beginning teachers
of $12,417 and a complete change in the
administration's pay plan for (eachers.
Tlie increases arc to be retroactive to
Aug. 24, the first day of the new school
year for teachers.
"It's a good contract for the teachers
and allows tlie school administration to
manage the school system in the best
interests of the student," said Ernest
Cowley, tlie school administration's chief
negotiator.
SEA Executive Director Ron Boeth,
(lie teachers' union chief negotiator, said
some "good gains were made in the
contract for the teachers. The Lise
salary was increased 8.49 percent plus
additional money for years of experience
to bring the overall increase to 12 percent
to 14 percent. For the first time there is a
contract that will beat inflation,” Boeth
said.
He said the teachers will meet in about
a month to consider ratifying tlie pact.
Agreement was reached at midnight
Thursday . Federal mediator Dick Deem
assisted both sides.
After negotiating sessions between tlie
school administration and represen­
tatives of the Non-lnstructional Per­
sonnel Inc. iNIPSCO) earlier Thursday,
a contract agreement for those school
board employees was also reached. Tlie
contract calls for an 8.49 percent annual
pay raise plus incremental yearly in­
creases and other benefits totaling
$660,858 annually, Cowley said.
About 600 school personnel including
custodians, maintenance workers and
others are represented by NIPSCO.

A breakdown of the added costs of tlie
NIPSCl) contract is as follows: salary
increases, $369,693; fixed costs (social
security, retirem ent! $64,431; in­
cremental increases cost $144,635 with
fixed costs of $21,300, additional in­
surance costs $55,800 and additional
uniform costs $5,000
The Nil’SCO contract is retroactive to
July 16. Cowley said settlement of the two
contracts means that the disputes will
not have to go to a special master which
would have been costly.
Concerning the teachers' contract,
Cowley said the average salary and
benefit cost for each teacher is about
$1,600 more unnually.
lie said tlie base salary for new
teachers was increased 8.49 percent and
annual increments were increased by 4 to
8 percent.
He said the contract grants teachers an
additional day of personal leave. They
were getting three days personal leave.
Cowley said a commitment was made to
limit class sizes In kindergarten to third
grade to 25 district-wide. The average
class in those grades is now 27. The
contract is for a three-year period, but
each side is given the right to reopen
three articles annually.
BoeUi said tlie new contract is a victory
for the teachers because it staved off an
attempt by tlie administration to gut
teacher-student rights. He said this was
accomplished by keeping language In the
contract requiring principals to
recommend ways teachers should im­
prove.
"We tried to assure the best teachers
possible in the rontract," he said. Boeth
insisted as well the administration tried
to gut the reduction in personnel policy
and this was also staved off.
He said the contract grants teachers
job protection.
"We are satisfied with the agreement.
Today begins a new era in the
relationship between the teachers and
the school administration in the district
Tlie administration's paternalistic at­
titude, its feeling of being big father to all
teachers and other employees is In
serious trouble. Thai attitude is going out
the window," Boeth said.
He said during the coming year, SEA
will be putting forth a concerted effort to
bring about improvements in the school
adm inistration's insensitivity to the
needs of teachers. "We will bring about
improvement. Morale is at an all-time
low," lie said.
Boothe said SEA proposed that a
committee lie established to study class
room size in Seminole, but ad­
m inistration negotiators refused.

But Water, Sewer Rates Likely To Rise

TODAY
Action Reports
Around The Clock
Bridge
Calendar
Classified Ads
Comics- .. •
Crossword
Dear Abb)
Deaths
........
Dr. 1.atnb

Finally the company, beginning
September 15 and on the same day of
each month after that, must furnish
financial statements showing profits and
losses, changes in capital and names and
addresses of any people to whom assets
have been transferred. However, no
assets may be transferred without prior
court approval unless the transfers are in
the normal course of business. —
DARLENE JENNINGS

Teachers'
Pay Hike
$3.8 Million

The I.ike Mary City Council ten­
tatively approved a budget for fiscal
1981-02 Thursday night, totaling nearly
1800,000 and set a tax rate of $4.35 per
$1,000 assessed valuation, an increase of
13 percent
Tie council action was taken on a 4-1
vote with Councilman Hay Fox casting
the only negative vote. Fox said lie
believed the tentative budget could have
been cut more to allow a lower tax rate.
Only two citizens and the wife of one of
the councilmen were present at the
hearing. The citizens, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Bacon Sr., were on hand to
present the city with a Bacon painting of
old Iiike Mary, which will be displayed in
the city hall.
Final approval of the budget is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m., Sept. 24.
Tlie general operating budget totals
$580,543, up from the current year’s
$496,542 while tlie water anil sewer utility
budget totals $211,905, up from the
current year's $148,815.
The city anticipates revenues of
$336,529 from property taxes, up from tlie
this year's $251,592. Other revenues In­
clude building permits, occupational
licenses, state and federal revenue
sharing and police fines.
Department allocations In the general
fund are as follows: public works $62,965,
up from $56,576; (ire $49,142, up from
$34,526; communications $44,026, up from
$38,184; building and zoning $4,850, up
from $5,525; parks and summer
recreation $22,729, up from $14,152;
administration $110,850, up from $93,752;
central services $46,431, down from
$66,195; police $202,632, up from $166,971;
transfer to public projects fund $35,918,
up from $20,661.
Major increases in the public works

Supplements must also be furnished fo.
each quarterly report.

sovoral docadot In tho
OURSELVES soctlon Sunday.

- .*« •*•* -5 i •

r i f f ? ? - * -r

rTr*

Governments Agree On Pact To Open Iron Bridge
ByTENI YARBOROUGH

Herald Staff Writer
"We tiave arrived!" exclaimed Pat West following Thur­
sday’s signing of an interlocal agreement facilitating sewer
transmission line hook-up to Hie Iron Bridge regional sewage
treatment plant.
But the news was not all good. West said water and sewer
rates "could double or triple" for residents of cities and
counties using Iron Bridge because of the expense of im­
plementing the facility.
West, executive director of tlie South Seminole-Orange
County Transmission Authority, said the "next step" is to liave
the $8 million bond program validated and to proceed with tho
line hook-up.
The bond validation hearing is set fur 4 p.m., today before
Circuit Court Judge KenneHi I^effler.
Tlie interlocal agreement between Maitland, Casselberry,
Winter Park. Winter Springs and Seminole County has been
"in the works" since April, 1979, West said.
The bond validation hearing was previously scheduled for
August 28. but Casselberry, Seminole County and Winter Park

-sV

balked at the agreement in "the final hour" causing Hie
postponement.
Casselberry balked at Hie agreement due to its penalty
clause for excess usage, Casselberry Mayor Owen Sheppard
said. Tlie clause allows for a penalty of one month's operation
and maintenance costa per-day for any excess usage. Shep­
pard called the penalty, "too severe and punitive."
Casselberry was expected to easily exceed its allocated
capacity because of infiltration o' rainwater into its tran­
smission lines and would incur tremendous "penalty" costs for
excess usage.

city officials said.
Winter Park refused to sign Hie previous agreement saying
they “did not want to pay for someone else's growth."
However, with the kian of Hie county's reserve capacity to
Casselberry, Casselberry will assume a portion of Winter
Park's debt service due to the additional usage, offering some
financial relief to Winter Park.
If Hie bonds are validated today, it will be approximately 15
months before Hie hook-up can be completed, West said.
"If we get validation, and if there are no problems with
contracts and construction, we should be hooked-up to Iron
Bridge sometime between January and March, 1963," West
said.
Although the Iron Bridge hook-up means taxpayers will
likely pay higher water and sewer rates, West said Use hook-up
is vital. Without it, Hie involved governments would not be able
lo liandle the waste water disposal needs of their areas.
Tie Iron Bridge facility, owned and operated by Orlando, is
located in Oviedo und lias capacity to Heat 24 million gallons of
waste water per day, according to Raymond Hodell, con­
struction project coordinator.

However, this problem was resolved, at least temporarily,
with a one-year grace period (or Casselberry to repair its lines
without penalty for excess use.
According to Casselberry Utility Director Ed Keuling, Hie
present sewer transmission lines, many made of clay, are
cracked allowing rainwater to infiltrate.
Also, Seminole County has agreed to loan Casselberry a
portion of Hie county’s reserve capacity for three years. This
loan will provide Casselberry with sufficient capacity to ac­
commodate sewage usage while Hie lines are being repaired,

- f C ' f V f * I * '* * * * • -i

* •* '* * * ■**

J

. i.

�lA -iv n iIn g Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Igpt, 11, m i

WORLD
IN BRIEF

Man Scampers For Life
While Chased By Car
A Sanford man was arrested and charged with attempted
murder early this morning, according to Seminole County
deputies.
Stephen Ray Mooney, 26,101 Anthony Drive, Sanford, was
arrested and charged with attempted murder at ap­
proximately 5:39 a.m., today, after he allegedly attempted to
run over a man with his vehicle on State Road 436 (SR 434),
deputies said.
Mooney was traveling with two women and two men, one of
which was his brother Mark, when, according to passengers in
the car, he started driving erratically through a church yard
near the intersection of SR 434 and Raymond Avenue,
Lnngwood. The passengers also reported Mooney had struck
two of them and his brother earlier and had threatened to kill
the passengers with a gun he said was under the car seat. No
gun was found in the car, deputies said.
According to deputies Mooney ordered the passengers out of
the car and upon exiting, one of the men argued with Mooney.
Mooney then allegedly attempted to run over the man with
the vehicle as the man fled toward SR 434 to flag down a police
vehicle deputies said.
Witnesses told deputies Mooney chased the man with the
vehicle westbound on SR 434, over a curb, through the grass,
across a sidewalk and into a hedge.
Then, witnesses said, the vehicle turned and headed toward
and onto Interstate 4 via SR 434. Deputies apprehended
Mooney on 1-4 about three miles from the reported incident and
asked Mooney to return to the 7-11 store with them.
After advising Mooney of his rights, deputies said Mooney
said several times that he veiled at the man he allegedly at­
tempted to run over: 'T in going to run over you. I’m going to
kill you." Mooney also said he was mad enough to kill the man,
deputies
The names of the other passengers in the vehicle were not

GDANSK, Poland IU P I) — Solidarity ended Its first
national convention with a call for free elections that
could undermine the Communist system and vowed not
to be intimidated by Soviet or Polish government
threats of military intervention.
The proposals of the independent labor union were
angrily termed “blarkm ;!' and political terror" by
Polish Communist officials Thursday. Moscow ac­
cused the 1-year-old union of an "anti-socialist, antiSoviet orgy."
In Washington, the State Department said it was
watching "closely and with concern" the 100,000-man
Soviet maneuvers on Poland’s borders and said
Moscow "appears intent on reminding Its allies and
Poland in particular about its military might."

Exiled Iranian: Revolt
United Press International
The exiled head of the Mojahldeen guerrillas called
on his followers to seise Iran's cities, and members of
the underground army battled Ayatollah Ruholiah
Khomeini's revolutionary guards in lire bazaar and
streets of Tehran.
Mojahldeen leader Massoud Kajavl said from his
Paris exile Thursday the Islamic regime was nearing
collapse and urged his guerrillas — estimated to
number as many bs 60,000 — to seise each d ty to
replace local clerical administration with "national
popular councils."
Witnesses said revolutionary guards and guerrillas
dashed for the second day in a row Thursday in the
bazaar, Tehran's commercial center, and Al Shariat)
Avenue, which connects south and north Tehran.

Sadat Purge Endorsed
CAIRO, Egypt (U PI) — The government announced
before today's final count that more than 09 percent of
Egypt's voters were backing President Anwar Sadat in
a national referendum on his sweeping crackdown on
religious and political opponents.
But the Egyptian government, angered by American
news coverage of the arrests of nearly 1,600 people,
Thursday expelled ABC news correspondent Chris
Harper in what the American television network called
an "unprecedented" action.

available.
Mooney was transported to the Seminole County Jail and
bond has been set at 110,000.

ByTENIYARBOROUGH
Herald Staff Writer

Solidarity Vows To Ignore
Soviet Military Threats

4.V

I
I

Seminole County Mental Health Center
Inc., has announced the initiation of a
Family Therapy Institute with workshop
classes to begin Oct. 14 for clinicians and
therapists.
This training program is designed to
provide 10 sessions of intensive in­
struction and practice in techniques of
structural family therapy. Applicants
must apply to Dr. George Undenfeld,

a
m

Boating Is one of the most popular recreational acUviDes
in central Florida. Unfortunately every year we read of
incident alter incident of boating accidents, Seminole
Power Squadron spokesman Russell J . Crouse J r. said.
The tragedy is, most of those accidents could have been
avoided, tie said. United Slates Power Squsdrons, of
which the Seminole Power Squadron is a part, have been
working for over 50 years to prevent boating accidents. One
way in which they do this is to offer Safe Boating Courses.
The Orlando Power Squadron lias one beginning this
month and the Seminole Power Squadron begins Dielri In
February 1982.
Anyone age 12 or older is eligible to enroll in a course and
families arc urged to take the course together, Crouse said.
Instruction is free; however, there is a small fee charged
for materials.
Both squadrons are one o( more than 450 units of United
States Power Squadrons (USPS), a private, selfsupporting, non-proilt, nation-wide fraternity of boatman.
USPS repreients both sail and power boating. The Safe
Boating Course covers all types of boating.
If you own a boat, are thinking about getting a boat or are
going to be Just a passenger in a boat, power squadron
members urge you to take une of the Sale Boating Courses
being offered by Die two Squadrons this year, Crouse said.
"Boating accidents can be prevented. Boating is fun;
Safe Boating is more iun," he said.

f fi* HOSPITAL NOTES
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T r r r u L Turner. Orenge City

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•JWthW W. McCormick
fcperbere L Powell
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Evening HrtukJ
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Sanford:
joiepn F Behan Sr
Sandy Colorrt
Della E Galloway
Monro* Smith
Richard L William*
Miriam L Lopono, Catwlbrrry
jam rt Ellit SayiM. D r Bar y
Leona A. Sack, Dallona
M Lloyd Young, Dallorn
■III L Wilton, Orlando

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Friday, Ssptombgr II, lM I-V ol. 74. No. II
SMy asS SeeOtii aacagf la toeday ky Tha
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Year. H i St. by Mall: Weak It Hi Meats, t i l l : «
ISMS: veer, tl&gt; M___________________________

* Fires
* Courts
it Police
"PLUM " PUZZLING
No doubt, Valerie Rumpell Orr, 209 Brombones Lane,
lnngwood, upon her return home was surprised to find her
home had been burglarized Wednesday evening. But, she was
probably more surprised to find that the thieves had only taken
seven plums.
According to the Seminole County Sheriff's Department, the
burglars entered O rr's home through an east side garage door
and rummaged through her drawers. However, deputies said
the thieves only took seven plums.
No arrests have been made.
MONEY BAGGED
Three men entered the Daisy Gas station, 2543 S. French
Ave., Sanford, and took a bag containing approximately 1200,
at approximately 3:18 p.m., Tuesday, according to Sanford
police.
The station owner, Thomas B. Nulty, reported no other
property appeared to have been taken, police said.
No arrests have been m ade; however, witnesses can identify
the three robbers, police said.

Suite 377, Crane's Roost Office Park,
Altamonte Springs, Fla. 32701.
Family Therapy is a generic term for a
number of treatment approaches which
include the family of a client and which
arc based on the concept that an in­
dividual is not Isolated from the society
in which she or he lives, but is a part of a
system which must be examined in order
to understand and treat the individual.

The purpose of the institute is to
provide an educational setting in which
to introduce concepts of structural
family therapy, provide opportunities for
professional growth and acquisition of
new skills and techniques to practicing
and teaching clinicians.
A videotape library of actual family
therapy cases will be used tor in­
structional purposes.

Bus fares in Seminole County will go up 20 percent
beginning Oct. 1 according to recent action by the OrangeSeminole-Osceola Transportation Authority (OSOTA).
The basic fare will be raised from 50 cents to 60 cents and
the elderly and handicapped passengers will be paying 30
cents instead of the present 25-cent fee.
Even with Die increase the estimated 81.65 million in
fares make up only 47 percent of 84.3 million needed to
operate the system according to Darrel Feasel, Osota
director of planning and development. The balance will be
made up by an anticipated 81.26 million federal grant and
subsidies from the participating counties.
Seminole County has included for OSOTA in its 1981-82
budget 8200,000 including 894,350 in property tax revenue
and $105,650 in federal funds allocated to the county for bus
transportation.That's 81,700 less than the county ear­
marked for the organization in Its 198081 budget.
Feasel said the fare increase was necessary to make up
the system's 8260,000 deficit. Alternatives were to ask the
counties for more money or reduce service, he said.
"We haven’t had a fare increase since July 1, 1979 and we
have to keep our house in order," he added.
Feasel said he docs not expect any problem in getting the
needed federal money for the system in 1962, but an­
ticipates a cutback in 1983 and 1984.
OSOTA operates three of its 47 buses in Seminole County
(two in Sanford and one serving South Seminole). Feasel
said Improvements have been made this year on routes and
the service has been “ vastly improved In the Sanford
area." He pointed to new runs to Casselberry and Seminole
Community College (SCC) from Sanford.
Ridershlp is up considerably to SCC, Feasel said—from
30-W riders per day last year to 100-140 now that the fall
term has started. Route 14 from Orlando now goes to
Brantley Square as well as Altamonte Mall.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Showers and thunderstorms scat­
tered across Florida Into New England and parts of Die Ohio
Valley today. The second tornado in as many days reportedly
touched down In Florida, but no damages or injuries were
reported. A few showers doused Die SouDiern Plateau,
SouDiern and Central Rockies, Central High Plains and South­
west Texas. A thunderstorm dumped an inch of rain in
Hanksville, Utah, and a flash-flood warning was posted over
Die area late Thursday. Some rain also developed from northe astern Minnesota to central South Dakota. Hurricane Gert
that threatened the Bahamas Islands earlier was reported
about 180 miles east of Nassau Thursday. Forecasters said Die
hurricane was moving northeast at about 16 mph and all storm
warnings in Die area had been canceled.
AREA READINGS (I a.m .): temperature: 73; overnight
low: 69; Thursday's high; 90; barometric pressure: 30.05:
relative humidity: 93 percent; winds; NorDi at 6 mph. 1.05
Inches of rain was recorded during Die night.

Fine,County Tells Contractor

needs to proceed with the In­
— extend the contract ume by 13
stallation and complete the 870,000 working days.
project so it can gain access to fuel
— If not completed within 13
already stored in underground working days, 8500.00 per day
storage taks. The new fuel system is liquidating d am ag es will be
designed to save the county money assessed for each day beyond that
and record a detailed usage of fuel. time.
— Work will begin on September 9,
It is located at the county’s storage
facility off UB. Highway 17-92 in 1981, and be com plete, and
operational by 5:00 p.m. September
South Sanford.
Blackmon agreed with Public 25, 1981.
— The county wilt furnish names
Works Director Jack Schuder to
enter Into litigation wlUi Die con­ of the employees to be trained in
tractor would only delay the project operating the facility.
—The county will alao withdraw
even further.
A letter from the contractor to demand (or call on a 872,000 bond for
Blackmon on September 2 outlining the contractor’s delay in finishing
the contractor's "best offer" to the project by August 10, 1981.
County officials were also alar­
complete the Job stipulated the
following five provisions to which med by a fire that apparently broke
out due to faulty installation of
the county agreed:

Power Squadron Offers
Courses In Safe Boating

Action Reports

Family Therapy Workshop Set

Finish Job Or Pay
An Orlando contractor installing
gas pumps al Seminole County's
Central Fuel Facility has been given
on ultim atum to com plete the
project by September 15 or face a
8500 dollar-a-day penalty tor each
day past the deadline. August 1,
1981, was the scheduled completion
date.
The ultimatum is part of a com­
prom ise agreem ent the county
entered into with Don Wood, Inc.,
after the assistant county attorney
and county purchasing director
asked the H artford Insurance
Company of Die Southeast, the
firm’s surety, and the contractor to
submit a completion proposal.
Calling the agreement a "no-win"
situation, P urchasing D irector
JoAnn Blackmon said the county

Bus Fares Go Up
Beginning Oct. 1

equipment on August 10, 1911, and
Blackmon expressed the county’s
concerns. According to le tte r
written by Blackmon on August 13 to
the firm:
"Seminole County has rvX only
been placed tn Die position of not
having the system contracted for;
but also a very serious safety hazard
due to apparent faulty installation
which has already resulted in a fire
on August 10, 1911."
Don Wood, president of Don Wood,
Inc. was not available for comment
today on the board's decision to
compromise with him on further
development of the facility, or to
respond to sllegstion Dial faulty
Installation caused Die fire.
Ed Landers, vice-president tor Die
firm, however, said the fire was not

due to faulty Installation of equip­
ment, but rather, was caused by an
“There was a small leak on the
d i^ ttn sar and a ipark from an
electrical line caused the xeentine to
ignite. The men at the site (ailed to
turn off the electricity immediately.
Because of the nature of the safety
provisions, the fire only burned a
small amount of gas," Landers said.
Landers also maintained that
delay in completing the facility was
the contracting firm went as far as It
could to finish the project without
buying new equipment. "We only
lacked a couple of days to finish the
the facility," U n d era said. Landers
says he expects the project will be
completed by the end of this week. —
DARLENE JENNINGS

SATURDAY’S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs, 7:22
a.m., 7:50 p.m.; lows, 1:03 a.m., 1:09 p.m.; PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 7:14 a.m., 7:42 p.m.; lows, 12:54 a.m.,
1:00 p.m.s BAYPORT highs, 1:M e.m.. 1:01 p.m.; lows, 7:21
e.m., 7:84 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: St. Augustine (a Jupiter Inlet, Out
I I Miles: Winds mostly norliieast 10 knots today becoming
variable tonight and Saturday. Seas 2 to 4 feet. Winds and seas
higher near scattered thunderstorms, mostly souUi portion.
AREA FORECAST: Sunny and warm today and Saturday.
High in upper 80s. Fair and mild tonight. I a w tn upper 60s.
Winda light and variable. Zones 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 — Partly cloudy
Uirough Saturday. Highs near 90. liiws near 70. Winds mostly
east 10 to 15 mph today diminishing tonight. Zones 10, 13 —
Partly cloudy through Saturday. A chance of thunderstorms.
Highs near 90. Lows in Die low 70s. Winds variable 10 knots or
less. Rain probability 30 percent today, 20 percent tonight and
30 percent Saturday.

College Offers 'Leisure Time' Courses
The Seminole Community College Leisure
Time Program will offer Die following classes
beginning the week of September 14,1981. For
enrollment information contact Fay Brake al
the college.
CHRISTMAS ARRANGEMENT AND
WREATH WORKSHOP - (morning and
evening lasses) - These classes consist of
m aking and coordinating C h ristin as
arrangements, wreaths, mantle pieces, and
other holiday pieces for the home or as gifts.
ADVANCED FLOWER ARRANGEMENTS
— (evening e ta s ) — Floral designs r ill be at
choice of Die class.
PHOTO-CAMERA AND IMAGE - (evening
class) - A basic study of photography.
Camera and Image teaches exposure, com­
position, lighting, cam era typea, and equip­
ment. The course provides help (or new
photographers and answers question* that
may have come up for Die veteran
photographer. Camera and Image teaches you
to control your cam era more effecUvely.
COLOR DARKROOM - (evening c la n ) Introduces the photographer to color printing
widi diclaric and gelatin filter pack enlargers.
Color films, color papers, development, and
color printing systems will be covered.
COLOR PRINTING - (evening class) Further concentrates on intermediate and
advanced color processing and color printing
techniques. Individualised in struction is
directed toward student work.
PO R T R A IT
PHOTOGRAPHY
•PHOTOGRAPHING TH E MODEL (evening d a is ) - A study of candid and posed
photography of Die model. Areas of con­
centration will include working wIDi live
models to study Dtp effects of lighting, make­
up and backgrounds on the finished
photograph. The student should have ■ basic
working knowledge of photography and Die
purchiM of color slide film for d a a work and
assignment! will be required.
AEROBIC DANCE-EXERCISE— ( morning
and evening ciaseee) — A physical fitness
course involving vigorous exercise to music.
Different routines are taught with Dm em ­
phasis on dandng (or movement and exsrdse.
SUM ’N TRIM - (morning and evening
ctae ea ) - An exercise program involving aD
types of exercise-catetthcnks, slow stretches.

barre excises and oDiers - designed to increase
flexibility, endurance, energy, to become
more aware of proper diet, to lose Inches, and
Improve posture. Diets, nutrition and exercise
information will be provided by Instructor.
YOGA - (evening classes) - Techniques
are taught (or development and maintenance
o( physical and mental health through exer­
cise and meditation.
ADVANCED WU SHU RUNG FU (evening d a is ) — Before a student Joins Dili
d a n , he-shc must have taken beginning Wu
Shu Kung Fu. Advanced techniques will be
taught.
BEGINNING BALLROOM DANCING (evening claaa) — Instruction in social level
ballroom dancing. Foxtrot, Waltz, Rumba,
Swing, Cha-Cha, and choices of the class will
be taught.
INTERMEDIATE BALLROOM DANCING
(ev en in g etas) — Instruction in aodal level
dandng. More extensive work in Foxtrot,
Waltz, Swing, Cha-Cha, Rumba and if desired
by e t a s , Tango.
DRAWING AND SKETCHING - (evening
c la n ) — Emphasis on fundamentals and
charcoal sketching in preparation for painting
and working in color. Students will work from
still life, landscapes and live models.
FABRIC PAINTING - (evening c ta a ) The application of be Me art principles to
textile design. Student! will be designing Dieir
own patterns using existing fabric designs,
magazines Illustrations or photographs as
Inspirational material. Emphasis will be
placed on a naturalistic and Dirte-deminaiaiai
quality.
WATERCOLORS AND OIL PAINTING (evening d a is ) — Designed to in stru d the
student in Die basic concepts of walercolors or
oil painting. Advanced students are welcome,
and will be taught more advanced technique*
BEGINNING STAINED GLAIR - (evening
d e s s) — A beginner's course in Die cupper foil
technique of stained glass. Students will be
instructed in the tools and
necessary
to cut glass and Action small objects.
M inimum in v estm en t will be stre sse d .
Students must furnish their own i
WOOD SCULPTURE - (evening e t a s ) —

- r*

m a*

Teaches Die different kinds of wood to use, the
use of the wood sculpture tools, and different
cuts of wood to make a variety of articles. The
wood and tools may be purchased from Die
Initructor In c ta a U the student wishes.
HOME "FIX-IT" COURSE - (evening
e t a s ) — Teaches Die student how to repair,
d ean and replace leaky faucets, lights Dial
flicker, curtains Dial fall, paneling, doors,
floor tile, hot water heaters, Die correct way to
reed a ruler, figure square footage and
measuring in general.
WORKING WITH WOOD - (evening c ta a )
— Students will learn how to manipulate hand
and power tools and build xhelves, cabinets,
flower benches or any other Item of wood.
Students will pick Dieir own projects and
furnish their own supplies.
CONVERSATIONAL FRENCH I (evening c ta a ) — The claae will be geared
toward the beginner wtUi no previous French
study and M pedally Die traveler, wiUi
v ocabulary and g ram m atic al stru ctu re
focusing on transportation, meeting needs in
hotels, asking direction, (hoping and ordering
food.
INSTRUMENT PILOT GROUND SCHOOL
— (evening e t a s ) — Designed to prepare Die
student to cope with various weather changes
and control the aircraft solely by reference to
instruments. The course will review Private
Pilot regulations and prepare students to
successfully complete the Instrument Pilot or
Instructor examination.

STAGE DANCE (evening class) —
Involves barre and floor exercises, im­
provisation in ;m ovem ent, and stage
choreography, using music from several
Broadway musicals.
MICROCOMPUTER PROGRAMMING
USING "BASIC" - (evening c la n ) - An
introduction lo program m ing language
"BASIC" at a level of Die first Ime user;
assumes no background In either computers or
programming. In addition to lecture hours, the
students will be expected lo spend additional
hours developing and testing "BA SIC"
programs on microcomputers available at
home, work, or on SCC's mini-computer
lyatem.
IKEBANA: THE ART OF JAPANSESE
FLOWER ARRANGING - (morning e ta s ) designed to teach the students Die fun­
d am en tal concept! o( Ja p an e se (lower
arranging. Students must furnish their own
supplies.
The following classes begin during Die
weeks of September 21 and 28, INI.
BREAD DOUGH ORNAMENTS - (evening
e v ta re s) — Involves making bread dough
Christinas ornaments, bread baskets and
decorative fruits, unique plaques and novelty
items for Die kitchen and bathroom. The or­
naments will be made and baked in class.
Painting and dipping techniques will be
taught; however, all painting and dipping will
be performed at home.
BASIC DOG OBEDIENCE TRAINING
(evening c ta a ) - A basic c t a a which will
teach Die dog owner to teach his animal to
heel, heel and sit, sit and stay, down and stay,
recall, respect (or the word "NO", problem
solving and other basic skills. Dogs must be
three-months or older and on a leash s t all
Umes.

PRIVATE PILOT GROUND SCHOOL (evening daze) — This course will cover
principles of (tight, function of controls, air­
craft and engine operation, flight Instruments,
aircraft performance, weather information,
radio navigation, and PAA regulation, SucWRITING FOR FUN A PROFIT — ( mor­
ceasful completion of the c o u n t will enable ning and evening classes) _ Both beginners
s tu d n ts to apply for Die P rivate Pilot Written
and published writers are encouraged to Join
or BaMc Ground Instructor examination which
this e t a s for guidance In developing, editing,
will be administered a t the tn d of aach course.
rewriting, marketing, and preparation of
C U M PIANO (evening c ta e ) manuscripts.
Instruction win be given to beginners cn Die
KARATE - (evening e t a s ) - Designed to
keyboard. Ability to read music, perform easy
teach Dm fundamentals of the Japanese style
pieces, harm onist sim ple m r Indies. and gain
Q iitw y u : baric exercises, kicks, punches,
Increased enjoym ent through m usical
and blocks. The d a s i is open to beginners, as
background will be tau g h t
well as advanced students.

**. &lt;■*

**r

�•n

Evening Herald. Ssnford, FI.

IN BRIEF
$74 Billion More Slashed

By A Determined Reagan
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Reagan, vowing
to stick to his long-term economic recovery plan rather
than being "stampeded by frustration or fear," is
ordering $74 billion In new budget cuts, but opposes
more drastic cures.
The new reductions in spending could force in­
dividual agancles to cut their proposed budgets by 2500
million to &gt;4 billion in 1983 and again in 1984, aides said.
At a Cabinet meeting Thursday, the president look
note of "the nervousness on Wall Street and Capitol
Hill," attributing it to unrealistic hopes of “instant
recovery" from his policies.
But he pledged to resist pressure from political and
financial circles that has intensified as interest rates
have refused to drop.

O'Connor Strolls Toward Confirmation
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Deftlyfielding questions ranging from
abortion to busing, from women in
combat In cameras in courtrooms,
Sandra Day O’Connor Is strolling
toward continuation as the Supreme
Court's first woman justice.
The Senate Judiciary Committee
was to complete three days of
confirmation hearings today and it
seemed certain the panel would send
her nomination to the full Senate for
final approval.
By the first Monday in October,
the day the Supreme Court returns
from its summer recess, Mrs.
O’Connor will likely be a member of

the 191-year-old branch of govern­ all."
Sen. Jeremiah H. Denton, RAla.,
ment.
In testimony prepared lor today's one of Mrs. O’Connor’s sharpest
i(earing, Eleanor Smeal, president critics, today planned to pose a
o( the National Organization for number of questions to her — most
Women, called President Reagan's about abortion.
nomination of Mrs. O'Connor "a
Despite repeated attempts to pin
victory lor women’s rights."
down her abortion views, Mrs.
Ms. Smeal said opponents of the O'Connor evaded any outright
nomination, are primarily foes of declarations of her legal position on
abortion and the Equal Rights the Inflamatory subject. She said
Amendment.
she would not have an abortion, but
Ms. Smeal said, "We believe ... approves of the procedure to save a
she represents the best of American woman's life.
traditions which for too long have
Denton, pressing for more
been ignored when it comes to specifics, wants to know If Reagan
females — equality and justice for was unaware of her abortion

position when he nominated her to
the court.
Reagan has said he is satisfied she
personally opposes abortion despite
votes cast as an Arizona legislator
lliat have been questioned by the
anti-abortion movement.
During the first two days of
hearings, anti-abortion protesters
marched outside the Senate office
building in opposition to Mrs.
O'Connor’s nomination.
During Thursday’s session, Mrs.
O'Connor commented on a number
of topics, including:
—Women in military combat: She
opposes women being shot at on a

battlefield, but said "pushing a
button" behind the lines would be
different.
I
—Forced busing: As an Arizona
legislator she voted for a proposal
urging federal officials to end forced
busing in desegregation cases. ;

—Judges' memberships in priVate
clubs that discriminate: Shedi&lt;J not
feel the memberships "should,
necessarily be dropped because of
going on the federal bench." 1
-C am eras in courtrooms: She did
not exclude cameras from her trial
court and thought it had worked
well.

Save 25%

Chevy Leads In Long Mileage
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Good old American
ingenuity, coupled with a Japanese engine, have
produced the first U.S. automobile to hit the 40-mileper-gallon mark,
It’s the Chevrolet Chevette diesel government fuel
economy figures show leads a growing pack of new
U.S. cars to lop the 30 mpg level. Detroit Iwpes they
will give foreign automakers a run for the U.S. car
dollar.
The top fuel economy honors for 1982 model cars
went for the fifth straight year to the Volkswagen
Rabbit diesel, a car the government considers an
import even though it is partially assembled in the
United States.
It had a rating of 45 mpg, the highest recorded since
the Environmental Protection Agency began its fuel
economy tests. In EPA’s 1981 model ratings, the
manual four-speed transmission Rabbit diesel got 42
mpg.

c

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y

Military Links Finalising

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WASHINGTON (UPI) - With the groundwork
established for their nations' leaders, it was up to
American and Israeli officials today to begin filling in
the details of plans for stronger military links between
the two countries.
Their discussions follow the two-day summit bet­
ween President Reagan and Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin during which an agreement in
principal to establish "strategic cooperation" was
forged.
American and Israeli officials — including Secretary
of State Alexander Haig and Israeli Defense Minister
Ariel Sharon — are to take the agreement a practical
step further.
Begin described the new military relationship as
"strategic cooperation" against the "forces of
totalitarianism and aggression.”

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NATION

Friday, Sopt. II.1W 1-JA

Cardinal Denies Charges
CHICAGO (UPI) - Cardinal John Patrick Cody,
head of the largest Roman Catholic Archdiocese in the
nation, isn't talking about charges he diverted church
funds for the benefit of a woman who was a childhood
friend.
The nearly 70-year friendship between Cody and
Helen Dolan Wilson, 74, of St. Louis, is the subject of a
federal grand jury investigation into the possible
misuse by Cody of up to (1 million in tax-exempt
church funds.
Acting U.S. Attorney Dan K. Webb Thursday issued
a statement confirming his office was investigating the
allegations against Cody. The allegations were
revealed in a copyright story by The Giicago SunTimes.
Mrs. Wilson, who has been divorced since 1939, said
the Sun-Times account was intended to hurt Cody.
"Evidently he has many enemies for someone to do
this to him," she said, adding, "This will be his death."

CALENDAR
FRIDAY, SEPT. II
Cast call* for Central Florida Civic Theatre Guild's
Children’s Theatre play, "Baba Yaga, die Witch," for 5
adults and three young people 7th grade and up, 7:30
p.m. Tupperware Children’s Theatre annex to Edyth
Bush Theatre, 1010 E. Princeton, l-och Haven Park,
Orlando. Call 896-7365.
17-B BJf Book AA, 0 p.m. Messiah talheran Church,
17-92 and Dog Track Road. Closed.
Tauglewood AA, 8 p.m.,‘St. Richard's Churcn, take
Howell Rd. Closed
South Seminole Family AA (no smoking), 8 p.m.,
Community United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Open discussion.

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SATURDAY, SEPT. It
Cast calls (or Central Florida Civic Theatre Guild's
Children's Theatre play, "Baba Yaga, the Witch", for
adults and young people 7th grade and up, 2 p.m.,
Children'! Theatre Annex to Edyth Bush Theatre, 1010
E. Princeton, Orlando.
Hospice of Central Florida information meeting,
7:30-9 p jn ., Hospice office, 359 E. Fairbanks Ave.,
Winter Park. General information on home care for
terminally ill people and their families and the Hospice
para-professional volunteer training program. Call
647-2523 for details.
Spanish-American Festival, noon to 6 p.m., Orange
City Recreation Hall at University and N. Holly
Avenue sponsored by the F irst Spanish Baptist Church
of Deltona far the building fund. Admission free to the
public. Hispanic food, music and entertainment.

ra»'d

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.
m i

■

Florida Symphony Youth Orchestra final audition,
Bob C arr Auditorium Rehearsal Hall. For musicians
elementary through high school. Cali 862-7(34 for
appointment.

Upas FoaadXloa of Florida, LFA, 2 p.m., 1215 E.
Nebraska Ave., Orlando &lt;Boy Scout building) SpeakerKaren McKenzie, teacher a t Valencia Community
Collage, an "Relaxation Technique*."

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E v e n in g H e r a ld

It was actually a relief (or a man coming to
Tuesday night'* Seminole County Commission
meeting to protest a specific amendment from
general rural to low density and a request to
rexone from ag ric u ltu re to single-fam ily
dwelling-district for a 19-acre parcel near the
intersection of Lake Hayes and State Rond 920.

(U t P I « l « l

»
*T‘

N. FRENCH A V E, SANFORD, FLA. 22771
Area Code 20M23-2I11 or I31-M93

FrldAy, September 11,1M1-4A

But, it was not unUl he Jumped up from Ills seat
in a bolt of energy and approached the com­
missioner* that the real reason he decided to
speak in protest rather than be a symbol of
protest came to light.

Wayne D. Doyle, Publlsher
Thomei Giordano, Managing Editor
John Toen|e», Advertising Director

f l n a Delivery: Week, 91.00; Month, 94.39; I Month*, 934.00;
| 0 i r , 9M.00. By MaU: Week, 91.20; Month, 90.29; • Month*,
f M 9 ; Year. 007.00.

But In The

By DARLENE JENNINGS

and then a small voice from the back of room
said, "Oh, I forgot to clap." Laughter came from
all sides.
After hearing proposals and the like during the
10 a.m. public hearing for several hours, the
commission chairman asked at the end of the
meeting If anyone had anymore questions or
comments to make during the session.
Bob Sturm asked the people in the audience as
well if they had anything to ask the commission.
Finally, he turned to the board of com­
missioners and asked in a questioning tone,
“board?"
"Y es," came the response from the audience.
"Yes, what?", asked Sturm. "Yes, we're
bored,” came the answer. On that good-humored
note, the public hearing ended.

EDUCATION WOULD

W
o
rld
. ..

Real

“ I didn’t come hear here prepared to say
anything about this," he began slowly, "but my
wife keeps poking me in the back to speak up, ...
and so do three other women I don't even know."

The audience in the commission chambers
gave the man a round of applause for his ab­
solute honesty.
Commissioner Bud Feather also got some
mileage out of the same specific amendment and
retoning request, however his statement was
actually an observation — that worked out okay.
"I want to commend you all for coming out here
tonight and showing an interest in your com­
munity," Feather said. Pause. "By the way, I'm
not running for re-election."
One little girl also stole the show when, after a
toning request was defeated, and the 50 persons
in attendance to protest the county's possible
acceptance of the toning request showed ap­
preciation for the board's decision by ap­
plauding. There was a brief moment of silence,

Billy Carter chanced recently to make an
oually sharp perception about a littledied presidential pitfall. When asked
; a nationally televised interview what he
ered to be his brother’s biggest mistake as
president of the United States, Billy replied that it
was to confuse Washington with the real world.

The
Cost Of
Education

DON GRAFF

Some
Old, And
Some New

haw about this one...
ibedroom, IV2 bath

If Washington is the universe and the president
M the god of the universe, then it follows that he
must be a sleepless omnipotence who decides
everything. This analogy, even if exaggerated,
dramatises the relaxed presidential style of
Bonald Reagan, which has become the subject of
critical comment, and that of his taut
jr.

B r PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Education Editor
Parents with kids in playpens and students
angling (or college In a few years are entitled
to go Into shock over the new College Board
report showing all-time high college bills for
the new school year.
For example, there are 13 schools where the
coming year's costs will be over 911,000 — the
most expensive, Bennington in Bennington,
Jimmy Carter routinely worked from sun-up V
I, will poke a 912,030 hole in the family
until past midnight and, as former HEW pocketbook.
Secretary Joseph Califano observed, became so
The report said costs have doubled in 10
aown in trivialities he could not tell the years with all signs indicating higher rates to
Ke between major decisions and minor come.
e tried to decide everything. AU the bucks, That kid in the playpen, for example, may
find a 9200,000 price tag on a bachelor's degree
oc-nearly all, stopped at his desk. Moreover,
President Carter was able to reel off details on II years from now if costs continue up. That
is, if the kid opts for the most expensive
almost any question put to him in a press con­ school.
ference because he was expected to be omThe sltuaUon, however, is not as depressing
nkcient.Therefore, he devoted an inordinate as it appears — even in this era of Uncle Sam
effort toward mastering the whole spectrum of tightening up on some govemment-subsldlzed
budgets, foreign affairs and pending legislation. college loans.
In fact, the best attitude is: never say
But Mr. Carter could not translate his "never" when planning for a college educa­
exhausting exertions into achievement. His ad­ tion.
Here’s why:

S

ministration will be remembered for its drift and
vacillation that magnified nearly every U. S.
problem..
Ain

•

‘By vivid contrast, President Reagan relies on a
more able staff and Cabinet than President Carter
knew to dispose of the endless nitty-gritty of a
gargantuan government. He has liberated himself
(or broad policy making. He's on the bridge of the
ship, not in the engine room. Insulated
Washington is not the real world for him.
And that is why Mr. Reagan was able to master
the potentially crippling strike of air traffic
controllers in one swift stroke and depart in
confidence for a month-long vacation at his
beloved Rancho del Cielo, leaving the details to
his tough Secretary of Transportation, Andrew L.
Lewis, Jr. Indeed, Mr. Reagan is bo sure of
himself that he doesn't pretend to be the in­
dispensable center of things. He doesn’t even
pretend that he carried any official business up
the mountain. No working holiday for him.
^Unable to attack this popular President head' : liberal critics havq lately seized upon his work
&gt;its In a sly effort to denigrate him. A
Monally
published
article
quotes
nymous and, if true, treacherous — White
aides as criticizing the President for not
hard enough and for not educating
sufficiently on all the issues. This is a
ip shot that misses the mark even if Mr.
igan has, on occasion, failed to answer perit questions in press conferences in the way
would have liked.
. suits, of course, are what really count. And
;that ultimate measure, Ronald Reagan is the
effective President since Franklin D.
velt rallied the nation to a different kind of
is almost half century ago. During his first
months in office, he has reversed a 50-year
»of liberalism and changed the nation's course
what has been described as the Reagan
volution", summoning the nation with him and
itering Congress along the way.
nit is a supreme irony, therefore, that
ra ts, who have been shattered by suelive Reagan triumphs, should be whining now
a lazy president.

1. A Job on the side plus getting into a lowcost public university or college, many with
tuition and fees for a full year hovering
around I t,000 a year, living on campus costa
mors, but an antorprtatng student who works
a Job on the side, even half a work-week's
worth, at the minimum wage can earn better
than that.
2. Taking the first two years at a com­
munity college where tuition and fees are
absolutely cheap — lota In the 9500 a year
range. These are for live-at-home students.
Working during the two years, they can pile
up bucks for the room and board bill during
the next two years on the way to a bachelor’s
degree. So many students are doing this, It's
trendy. A caveat for these dollar-wise con­
sumers of higher education: make sure the
community college of your choice is ac­
credited and that credits earned may be
transferred or put toward a four-year degree.
3. Holding a full-time Job and going to
college In evening. Another option is to search
for a college near you that runs a weekend
degree program. These are spreading. So are
the evening degree programs. And there will
be many more In the years ahead as the
private schools, especially, beat the bushes In
this era of a decline In the college-age
population, hoping to sign up more what they
call "non-traditlonal" students. The nontrsdltlonals do not fit the stereotype of the
preppy Joe or Jane College. Many work,
Including a lot helping out their needy fami­
lies.

•

ES ■F
*'

"Sony to bo laaving tho ranch, bou. But I'm
going toappty tor an ak controlbr'a/ob. "

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The Democratic
Party’s most recent effort to examine the
rules and procedures governing selection of
its presidential nominees threatens to negate
more than a decade of progressive structural
reform.
For the fifth time in 12 years, the party has
assembled a special commission to analyze
the efficacy of its process of selecting
presidential nom inees and recom m end
revisions to the Democratic National Com­
mittee.
Unlike most of the previous pa nets, however,
the new commission already is being sub­
jected to considerable pressure from the
party's leadership to accept ill-advised rules
revisions even before it has an opportunity to
seriously consider the merits — or lack
thereof — of the proposed changes.
Atop the leaders' hidden agenda is a
scheme to grant all Democratic senators,
rep resen tativ es and governors — and
possibly other elected officials — automatic
delegate status and full voting rights at all
future presidential nominating conventions of
their party.
When the commission held its first meeting
here in late August, the “party line" was laid
down by Democratic National Chairman
Charles T. Manatt, who touted “The im­
portant role of the elected politician in the
selection of the party (p resid en tial)
nominee."
While Manatt was promoting that concept
as "a very vital part of the process," North
Carolina Gov. Jam es B. Hunt Jr., chairman
of the 69-member commission, was offering a
similar paean to his fellow office holders.
"I think it is essential that we Include these
elected officials," said Hunt. "It would begin
that building, that broadening that is so
essential if we are going to win.”
Thus, the die was cast even before llie
commission began to solicit the opinions of
grass-roots Democrats at a series of regional
hearings to be held this autumn in Des
Moines, Iowa; Chattanooga,Tenn.; Anaheim,
Calif., and Washington.
In (act, the current rules, in force during
the I960 Democratic National Convention,
already grant to all senators, represen­
tatives, governors and DNC members ex
officio delegate status with all privileges

except the right to vote.
In addition, the present system authorizes a
special 10 percent expansion of each stale’s
delegation to the quadrenial nominating
conventions for the express purpose of
granting full voting rights to "party leaders
and elected officials.”
An elaborate survey conducted by CBS
News showed that there were no fewer than
798 public officials at the party's 1980 con­
vention — including senators, represen­
tatives, governors, state legislators, mayors,
city council members and county commbsioners — who comprised 24 percent of all
voting delegates.
An additional 1,763 delegates 152 percent of
those voting) were national, state or local
party officials. Even when the overlap bet­
ween the two categories is eliminated, 2,168
delegates (64 percent of those voting) were
public or party officials.
Many politicians are reluctant to run for
election as convention delegates because that
course of action often requires a preconvention public commitment to a candidate
for the party's presidential nomination.

The mullahs are responding to the
Mujahedeen's wholesale assassinations of Ihc
religious leadership will) repression that
increasingly not only resembles but exceeds
that of the reviled shah.
Savak, the dreaded secret police, has been
reconstituted with a thinly cosmetic name
change. Family members are Instructed to
Inform upon each other. Suspected dissidents
are being arrested wholesale. Firing squads,
already working overtime, are exhorted to
greater efforts. There have been an
acknowledged 500 executions and very likely
many more in the few months since the ouster
of former President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr.

T hat decision invariably ^involves The terror is here and the Iranian
alienating constituents and fellow politicians,
revolution devours its children.
thus unnecessarily endangering the office
So far, so true to the pattern. But there is
holder's popularity and chances (or reone Important respect In which this revolution
election
does not resemble the French — or the
Hunt would resolve that sticky problem by
Russian, Mexican or Chinese among the great
allowing the politician-delegates to remain
social upheavals of recent centuries.
uncommitted to any presidential candidate —
Each and every one of the above examples
but they inevitably would displace party
was characterized by a similar goal — to
activists who are willing to pledge their
sweep away an unjust, decayed old order and
support to a candidate.
replace it with a new and better social
Among the most significant post-1969
organization responsive to the realities and
reforms instituted by the earlier party
requirements of the future. Despite the ex­
commissions were rules changes that allowed
cesses in its pursuit, and in some cases
rank-and-file Democrats and citizen activists
failu res in achievem ent, revolution's
to participate fully, for the first time, in their
essential motivation remained constant.
party's presidential selection process.
In the case of the French, achievement was
Impressive U short of to ta l The revolution
But Die proposals advanced by Manatt,
(hat erupted in France rapidly became on
Hunt and others would undermine those
international conflict between the old and the
reforms by concentrating convention votes
new. Its impact has been universal, a fun­
within an elite group of politicians whose
damental restructuring of all of civilized
principal interest is the preservation of their
society that continues to this day.
own power.

Justice Stage-Managed Senate Hearing
WASHINGTON - The Justice Depart­
ment's pursuit of Sen. Harrison Williams, DN J., led the prosecutors to commit a long list
of Improprieties. Not the least among them
was the stage-managing of the Senate in­
vestigation Into his ethics.

Williams wanted,the Senate Ethics Com­
mittee to conduct a full Investigation, not Just
rely on the government's tainted evidence.
Instead, Justice Department officials were
allowed to guide the committee from
They consulted with staff In­
vestigator* and briefed the senators inclosed
Long before Williams was found guilty,

e

'Reform' Takes Elitist Turn

JACK ANDERSON

In effect, they tried him tvHce on the same
dubious evidence. The Senate ahould have
mads Us own Independent determination of
Williams' guilt in the ABSCAM case. The
preeence of the ubiquitous prosecutors in the
Senate wings raises a troubling question:
How far should the executive branch be
allowed to go In Its efforts to drive a United
States senator out of office?

&gt;rS w o r ld

•

It is sUU possible to get a college degree
without putting family or student in hock or
depleting the family nestegg (if the family
has one.) Just follow the loan-free trail to a
college degree.
Formulas for a loan-free college degree
goes like this;

ROBERT WALTERS

There is a more or less classic pattern for
descent into revolutionary terror that was cut
in France almost 300 years ago.
First the relatively moderate leadership,
those who would temper revolutionary
fervor with reason, are swept away by the
fanatics. The Mirabeaus and Dantons give
way to the Robesplerres and Marats.
Factional differences erupt into factional
warfare and rule by Instituatlons is replaced
by the merciless tyranny of the mob, or those
able to dominate the mob. The executioner
becomes for a time the supreme authority as
the revolution devours its children by live
hundreds and thousands.
It is a pattern that is being followed with
precision so far in Iran.
The Bakhtiars and Banl-Sadrs are gone.
The foreign war against the Iraqi invader and
quarrels with the Kurds and othe rebellious
m inorities have been push J to the
background by the escalating internal con­
flict. The fundamentalist mullahs have
trium phed over the m oderate political
opposition only to face what is proving itself
as an even more formidable foe in the
Mujahedeen, young leftists who share the
Islamic zeal but not the commitment to 0
dead past of the mullahs and are, if anything,
even more ruthless.

visitor huddling with ABSCAM prosecutor
Thomas Puccio during the trial The
mysterious stranger was Identified by wit­
nesses as the Ethics Committee's c"une»l.
Donald Sanders. This hardly reflects an in­
dependent investigation by the legislative
branch.
The senator requested extra time to
prepare his case and present it at a public

hearing. He was turned down. Yet (lie com­
mittee granted the Juatlce Department
months to prepare its case against Williams
— which was presented to the senators behind
closed doors.
This S tar Cham ber presen tatio n —
Williams was not allowed to be on hand to
confront his accusers — did not persuade all
the members that Williams was guilty of
wrongdoing. Several were convinced the
Justice Department didn't have a case
against him.
In (act, a source close to the committee told
my associate Indy Badhwar that at one of the
dosed sessions a Justice Department official
conceded that the facts did not match the law.
The committee should have subpoenaed the
prosecution records immediately. Instead,
then-chairman Howell Heflin, D-Ala., gave
the department an additional three months to
make a case against Williams.
In earlier columns, I have cited strong
evidence of governm ent m isconduct in
Williams' prosecution. Here are Just a few of
the Improprieties that I can document:
— Williams had an unblemished record
when the Justice Department set out to get
. him. By the FB I's own admission, the agents
began their investigation "with a clean

• Despite a total absence of any reason to
Williams, the FBI unleashed a con­
victed con man, Mel Weinberg, to lure the
senator into the ABSCAM trap. The FBI knew
Weinberg was a liar, cheat and criminal Yet

he was given virtually a free hand to weave a
web of lies in order to entrap a U.S. senator.
— This closely coincided with word to
Williams that he could get In trouble if he
supported Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass., in the
crucial New Jersey primary. Williams told
me the warning was carefully worded and
would have to be described more as a hint
than a threat. Yet It’s no secret that thenPresident Jimmy Carter, who controlled the
Justice Department, felt menaced by Ken­
nedy.
— Weinberg kept raising the bait in the
ABSCAM trap until it reached a staggering
9100 million As the agent of a phony Arab
sheik. Weinberg promised Williams a 9100
million loan to develop a titanium mine that
belonged to two friends. Even chief FBI agent
John Good acknowledged the sum “was
almost an Irresistible Inducement far any
normal human being."

—In any event, It la not illegal (or a senator
to negotiate a business loan from a wealthy
Arab. Williams and his friends were seeking
financing for a legitimate business venture.
— The senator Indicated he might acquire
an Interest In the mine. But he made U dear
that he planned to put the stock in his own
name and disclose his interest in the mine.
Such open ownership would have made it
impossible for him to sari; government
contracts for the mine.
— Thus the FBI agents dearly were falling
in their effort to Induce Williams to engage In
criminal activity. So they Instructed Wein­

berg to encourage the senator to solicit
government contracts. The suggestion that he
commit a crime positively originated with the
government, with high-level approval.
—Williams never committed the crime that
the FBI minions urged upon him. But he
allowed Weinberg to persuade him — In
return for the dangled 9100 million loan — to
impress upon the fake sheik that once the
mine was working, that would "guarantee"
getting government contracts. Weinberg
carefully coached the senator what to say.
— Thus Weinberg fed the senator the in­
criminating statements and choreographed
his performance before the hidden FBI
cameras. The unsuspecting Williams was
assured that he could be loose with his
statements because, as Weinberg put it, “ it's
all talk, all baloney."
— The senator still held back; he never
offered to seek government contracts. But he
either kept his mouth shut or indicated
agree* hility when others suggested he'd go
after government contracts. He went along
with this because he had been told it was

- The prosecutors admitted in their con­
fidential papers that they had no case against
Williams. So they triad to trap him into taking
a cash bribe, but the acnator turned it down
with an emphatic “No, no, no, no.”
Nevertheless, he was subsequently tried on
the very charges the prosecutors had decided
would not stand up.

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Seminole High School’s football team leaps into the 1901 season tonight at 8 when it hosts east coast powerhouse Titusville Astronaut.

S t r o n g - W in g e d W a r E a g le s S o a r In to S a n f o r d :
HySAM COOK
Herald Sports Editor
The birds are coming.
Not the 99th remake of Alfred Hit­
chcock's thriller, but big football birds,
whose reputation will follow them from
the east coast whence they came.
Jay Donnelly’s Titusville Astronaut
War Engles soar into the Seminole
High Stadium tonight at 8 to kickoff the
1981 football campaign against Jerry
Posey's Fighting Scminoles.
With Donnelly's big birds come a
preseason seventh-place position in the
3A rankings. But don’t let the 3A status
pull the wings over your eyes, these birds
can play football and play it well.
"We've got a senior-dominated offense
and defense," said Donnelly Thursday
morning uboul his veteran outfit.
Astronaut returns ala starters on both
teams.
leading the way Is the War Eagles'
strongest wing — senior quarterback
Donnie Whiting. The 6-foot-l, 173 pounder
threw for 1600 yards last year and 11
touchdowns.
Whiting's prime receivers are gigantic
tight end Kenny Parker. The converted
offensive tackle tips the scales at 220
pounds on his 6-foot-3 frame. He strolls
the 40-yard dash in 5.1.
The wide receivers are Mike
McCartney and Billy King. McCartney

Jacksonville Raines, lakeland Kathleen,
Preseaton Prep Poll
CUSS 4A
Sarasota.
CUSS3A
1. Gonzalex Tate
1. Gainesville
2. Lauderdale U kes Boyd Anderson
2. Tallahassee I .eon
3. Clearwater
3. Titusville
4. Merritt Island
4. Palalka
5. Jacksonville Fletcher
3. U ke Wales
6. Winter Park
6.
Aubumdale
7. Miami Killian
7. Titusville Astronaut
8. For Walton Beach Choctawhatchee
8. Fort Uuderdale Aquinas
9. Tampa Plant
9. Belle Glade Glades Central
10. Orlando Evans
10. South Dade
Also receiving votes: Hialeah-Miami
Also receiving votes: Key West,
U kes, Miami Columbus, Boca Raton, Brooksvllle Hernando County, St.
played junior varsity football last year,
while King was a backup quarterback.
“We have an excellent group of
receivers," assessed Donnelly. "We’re
not afraid to throw the ball.”
Astronaut b I so returns nil of Its of­
fensive line except the center. "They
know what they're doing," pointed out
Donnelly ubout the veteran group.
"They'll give Whiling the time he
needs,"
Junior Chris Henschel has taken over
the center Job and is flanked by strong
guard Art Beasley (6-foot-l. 2001 and
quick guard Rick Schreiver (5-foot-10,
203).
The strong tackle is Steve Fenton (6fool-2, 205). Sean Bower (6-foot-l, 213) is

Petersburg Ukewood, I-ike Gibson,
North Fort Myers.
CUSS 2A
1. Crawfordvllle Wakulla County
2. Fort 1-iuderdale Pinecrcst
3. Wildwood
4. Jasper Hamilton County
5. Montlcello Jefferson County
6. Williston
7. Clcwlston
8. Graceville
9. Dunnellon
10. Jacksonville Rolles
Also receiving votes: Clermont, Mount
Dora, Tavernier Coral Stores, Port St.

Joe. Mulberry, Pierson Taylor.
CUSS 1A
1. Belle Glades Glades Day
2. Tallahassee Florida A&amp;M
3. Miami Palmer Prep
4. Century
5. Frostprool
6. Sneads
7. Hastings
8. North Palm Beach Benjamin
9. Cottondalc
10. Greensboro
Also receiving votes: Aucllla
Christian, Wewahltchka.

Seminole Ians will remember last
year's game us a punting marathon
between Whiling and the Tribe’s Jeff
"They seem a little quicker than last Litton. Thirteen times Die two signal
year," said Donnelly who exchanged callers exchanged punla In a night-long
spring Jamboree dims with the Tribe. detective struggle.
"They aren't as big, but they have some
Astronaut finally pushed across two
kids that can fly."
touchdowns In the final four minutes —
The Fighting Semlnolea will hope to one helped by a disputed sideline catdi —
match Astronaut speed for speed with for a 14-0 victory,
fullback tanny Sutton along with half­
Posey will remember Die game for
backs Victor Williams and Johnnie another reason, since it saddled the
Uttles. Junior Dion Jackson adds some likable Scminotc boss with his first losing
more quickness.
season with u 1-6 record at that juncture
“That fullback (Sutton) is a solid of the season.
player and the big lineman (6-foot-3, 245Litton, who split time with Clarance
pound Issac Williams) is definitely a Sippio during last year's gome, will be at
player,” observed Donnelly.
tfic controls for Sanford. Center Jay

Tltusvlffu A stronaut vs. Ssminols
(Ik: quick tackle.
Behind llw impressive Une, Donnelly
has fullback Robert Whitney 16-foot-l,
197) and Scotty McConico (6-foot-2, 170).
"McConlco is the real burner," said
Donnelly about his 4.6 40-yard dash
tailback's speed.
"We have the same team os a year ago,
they’re Just a year older," said Donnelly.
"Without a doubt our offense should be
pretty good.”
While Donnelly feels his own offense is
pretty quick, the successful veteran is
just as impressed with Sanford's speed, If
not their size.

Hnurk, guards Donald Croylyn and Dolljj*
Sanders along with tackles I. William^'
and David Williams or Aubrey KcmUtfr
man the line.
•!
Senior light cm! Frank Ruwo, who taut.!
a big cnlrii against the War Eagles last
year, is a threat short am) deep. Freddie
Howard and Joe Calloway, a backpji
quarterback, arc the wideouts.
Defensively, the Seminoles are led by tftrin ot tough senior linebackers. Greg*
Register, Antonin Davis and Byi*cMB
Washington will try to keep McConico
from turning Die comer and stipe
Whiting's super aerial attack.
,,to
Defensive tackles Bill Painter and
Williams will put the pressure off
Whiting, while defensive backs MtfctJ
Apple, Ed Jones and speedy Vlntfc*
Edwards try to pick off a few War Ea&amp;tb*
lin n s

1

: - ’ll

Lightning
Strikes Out
Lake Mary Grand Opening
By GEOFFREY GIORDANO
Herald Sports Writer
The beginning of the best It wasn’t.
U ke Mary High School's Junior var­
sity baptism into high school football
competition against tak e Howell's junior
varsity Thursday night at I.yman High
School seemed to have a curse on it from
the beginning.
Scheduled for 7:30 p.m., the game was
initially delayed by the late arrival of the
Silver Hawks because of a bus break­
down before finally being canceled for
excessive lightning.
The story goes like this.
At 6:13. the l&lt;ake Howell bus left
en route to Lyman but,near the Seminole
Greyhound Park on Lake Avenue In

R om

was made: the game would be played a(
7:30 p.m. Saturday.
"I've never had a game canceled,"
Casselberry, the bus stalled, and had to staled Roger Bcathard, lake Mary head
coach. “I liavc been delayed by snow and
be pushed to the nearby 7-11 store.
After the bus was filled with gas and rain, but 1 guess there is a first time for
numerous attempts to start it were everything."
As the sky was continually filled with
made, but to no avail. Finally, they
abandoned Ihe bus near live Post Time electric charges, tlie estimated crowd of
lounge. This caused a delay of 15 1,000 received full refunds and Don
Reynolds, la k e Mary Principal,
minutes.
After tak e Howell did arrive, they remarked tmit, "It's too bad that it was
practiced and wanned up In preparation our first game. We had a real good
for the start of Ihe game, but the an­ crowd. But it wouldn't have mattered if it
nouncement was made a 17:50 p.m. that a was our 81st game. The lightning was too
decision was to be made in 10 minutes bad. The officials and 1 made the
whether or not the game would be played decision."
or rescheduled. And at 8:00 (he decision
Harry Drives, take Howell bead
coach, added, “This is the first time this
has ever happened to me. And lliat's the
first time a bus ever quit on inc, either.”
So, it looks like everything will have to
be started just a little later, and maybe
then, weather permitting, we will find out
if lake Mary will actually be "The
beginning of the best."
RAMMING - It was an electrifying
atmosphere in more ways than one as
the new lak e Mary' JV football team
prepared to do battle with the Lake
Howell Silver Hawks.
The crowd of approximately 1,000
strong was ready for an exciting game
despite the rain, and aubsequent
lighting which finally forced the can­
cellation of the game.
The fans’ excitement was fired by the
Ram mascot, a brilliantly designed
likeness, plus the two cheerleading
squads of both schools.
Also on debul was the lake Mary
11arching band which added a general
feeling of happiness. This feeling didn't
last, however, when the lightning con­
tinued to flutter all around the area and
the game was called at 8 p.m. by Prin­
cipal Reynolds and the officials.
The Rams try it again Saturday al 7:30
p.m. al Lyman against the same Silver
Hawks.

* .va- v r . .. • ***y32. •t *-. .

—

* ■ * •/&gt; -•* * •

I

At the left, Lake Mary cheerleader Cheryl Knight knows what to do on a rainy
night, she finds a dry spot underneath a tabic stationed on the Lyman High
School track. Above, Sonya KrankUu (left) and the Ham mascot (Mlndl Everett)
share an umbrella while walling out the storm. The rain ceased once In awhile,
but the lightning never stopped, so the baptism, al least the football portion of U
against the Lake llowrll junior varsity, was postponed until Saturday at 7:38
p.m. at Lyman.

’c *w T W '^

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Donnelly U leery ot Seminole's borne
field advantage. “It sure would be nice* to
play this one at home instead *«£
somebody elae's backyard," offered KVr
War Eagle boss. "Seminole la known f a
their unusual formations.
"It's quite a task for the kids to adjqib
to this in their first game. We’v e'X
veteran team, but we have veteraifer
playing at different positions t t w
they’re used to," conduiied Donnelly?^
Just iiow big of a readjusting task wilt;
be determined tonight.
.*,(J

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SA^Evenlwe Herald, Sswtord, PI.

*&gt;t' » V

.1

Friday, loot. 1LW01

Goodyear Rolls 7, Hoping 11
For Saturday
'KnSuccess
By SAM COOK
I f f f
said Weir. "H e's got great quickness."
Herald Sperts Editor
Sanford's E n g le s Grigley will see
Florida defendvt coordinator linebackers.
some action at fullback, but the Knights
year would Uke to roll seven
At linebacker, Goodyear feels he haa loaf their top running beck when New
up with 11 Saturday when the two of the beet. Casselberry's Billy Smryne Beach’s Greg FuQlngton was
Knights host Presbyterian College
at 7
Giovanetti
la a two-year starter and the m e hour abort of the n ec esn ry M to be
p m at the Tangerine Bowl.
leader of the defense. Scott Reddittm ana eligible. Fullington received an inThe second-year UCF coach haa seven the other spot and la called e "great complete during summ er school,
solid defenders on the defensive line and hitter" by Coach Sam Weir. Eddie
Tbe tight end Is Ken Carpenter (6-footat linebacker, but admlta the defensive Jam es, a starter from last year, is still I . IN ) from Boone. Bishop Moore's Jeff
backfield Is a big question m ark due to nursing an Injury.
Froehlich will split time a t wide re c e iv e
inexperience.
_____ „
with Gainesville's Jim my Tsylor.
“Talent-wise It’s probably better than • n ^ u / w *
Line Coach Tom Murphy returns for
W^ ler
“ J* Heckman. Wj
m uon ^
^
Knights.
last y ear," said the 23-year-old former
Knight tight end. "But they just haven't Brth are sophomores. "B ray took Ws Muiphy looks for a shift to the wtng-T
bolster the UCF running game.
played together long enough. We won't fr«hrnsm lump* last year, directed
know how they 11 play until they get into a 9°***
" S , 1*
"L ast year we were running more of a
should really help us this year.
power offtru e with inferior size and
game situation."
The secondary was further weakened
The note guard Is Rick Maynard (A- inferior strength people," pointed out the
by ithe loss of senior Ron Johnson, who foot-2, 1M) from 8 t. P etersb u rg . ex-Purdue University center, who was on
hyperextended his elbow and bruised his Maynard is a junior who Jonas calls "the the Boilermakers' 1M7 Roee Bowl squad,
knee. Johnson was scheduled to start at strongest player on the team ." The "The implementation of the weight
weak cornerback. He will be replaced by tackles will be former Lyman gridder program plus the angle blocking should
Doug Gatewood.
D snny Allen (l-foot-3, 220) end help considersbly."
Clearwater senior John Scargie Is Bradenton's Darrell Rudd (Moot-1, 220)
Jacksonville's Kendall Nixon (Woot-6,
op«ilng at strong com er back and
271) returns at right tackle, while Winter
Goodyear hopes he will provide the
Ed Gantncr (l-foot-3, MS), a two-year P ark's Randy High (tfoot-0, 240) a t the
leadership which was lost when Tim anchor In the defensive line, is hurting left tackle. "Our phUoeophy Is block
Kigglns graduated last year. Kigflna was from bruised ribs, but will se t action, down and kick out a t ths point of attack,
the first Knight signed by a professional Another ex-starter, Mike Sommerfleld to we’re alwaya Mocking a t angles," said
football team, but was released.
(O-foot-4, 240) was beaten out by Allen. Murphy. " I think It will make us a lot
"We really miss Kigglns because we
Offensively, freshman Mike Wood will more explosive this year."
don't have anybody to take control In the get the nod from Weir at quarterback.
Murphy’s guard tandem Is Mlrto
se co n d a ry ," pointed out Goodyear. "Mora mobility," said Weir simply. Calaxxo (Woot-2,21S) from Miami South
Palmetto freshman Glen Whelpley la "Mike really ran the (wing-T) offense and Pablo Vers (Woot-2, 240) also from
slated for strong safety with another well Monday and Tuesday after (Bob) Miami South. Vara Is a letterman. In
between tbs two is Dsn Burke, who has
freshman - Jeff Bolle — holding down Burkhart got hurt Saturday."
Burkhart, who prepped s t Lyman, will bean a solid starter for the p u t two
the.free safely.
"That's two freshmen starting. It's a see const do-able time Weir points out. years. Burke Is Woot-3 and 219 pounds
little shaky, but 1 feel If we can contain Nate Butter wtU join Wood, who played from Melbourne,
Weir has ths films of Presbyterian’s
their quarterback (Paul Scott) from under Weir at Lake Howell two years ago
rsUlng out and trapping us Inside we'll be before moving to Tampa Plant, in the l u t two games and la Impressed with its
backfield.
execution and defense. "They run the
a n i g h t ," observed Goodyear,
m uch of the burden of containing Scott,
Butter (Wool-11,110) la a sophomore option real well with a quick tailback,"
vJfjk is trying (o fill the shoes of All-South from Cincinnati. Greg Atterberry and said Weir. "They also Uke to trap and are
q g rte rb a rk Jimmy Spence, will fall on John Muldoon will fill out the remainder strong defensively. It should be a great
tiff shoulders of the Knight ends and of the backfield. "Muldoon la a blink," gam e."

E

University of Central Florida's Mike Wood (left) seems to ke say lag who, mo?"
to Coach Don Jonas prior to a Knight practice last week. Offensive coordinator
Bam Weir tabbed the versatile qaarterhack to start 8aturday'i opener against
Presbyterian College at the Tangerine Bowl at 7 p.m. Freshman Wood, wko
played at Lake Howell as a junior for Weir before transferring to Tampa Plant
last year, got the starting nod for Us mobility over ex-Lymsa standout Bob
Burkhart.

for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual
Special Edition of the

H e rita g e C O O K B O O K
★

NINTH WEEK'S CONTEST ★
Recipes for...

Delay...One of YO U R Recipes Could

It's Grand Irish Debut
By M sjar A— B. Haapte
P e e rte u Pragsaaticater
gad, friends, the footbaU spotlight
I shine fuU force on the great state of
tens this weekend,
ccupylng center state, so to speak,
I be the Notre Dame-L£U conitetlon In South Bend where Gerry
ist will unveil his “ first edition" of
re Dame's Fighting Irish,
ha mucM tcraklsd Faust — making
big jump from high school to N.D.,
of the nation's faiggast pressure
tors — is expected to feature a widen offense and a typically strong Irish

fetch for tailback PhU Carter to get a
assist in ths running dspartnwnt
m freshmen fullback Mark Brooks
I for Tony Hunter end Dean Masstek
gal plenty of work on tha receiving
1*
xmtetena Stole has seasoned QB Aten
ther and 204-pound running back Jude

i r a ’s c s E v ’M

r in&gt; ou uucago Dears, um-eumpnt

SU's Fighting Ttgars will give the

V G i&amp; s ? is ti? &amp;

W M k ly winners ore eligible for the G R AN D PRIZE
N O LIMIT T O NUMBER O F RECIPES SUBMITTED
Y O U M A Y ENTER AS M A N Y WEEKS AS Y O U UKE

So send In that special recipe your family and

friends like so well

First, Second and Third p r im wl libs awarded In
•och of tha nine food categories. You may enter
as many of the weekly categories as you like.

1 ' Football Farm**

•

^ abetting Ehray will be his favorite
receivers, Darrin Nelson and Andre _
Tyter. This gens will be writ worth “ ktem
seeing. KefMCafl!

^
southern

.. w m
Oklahoma Wyoming, Wtepb
Cal-Tsnnesetc, Georgia- ^danst

s s

Uge victory, 11-17. Har-nanphl

East Cantina.

teanwhlte, test down the road to Vast
ayette, tod., the Invading limited
■dtoela wiU most Purdue in a
loMUy leteviaed contest.

And bow about these confsnare state U
dadwa: to tia Big IS, Michigan maete Indian
wiwnmln. Uktekau State jswte with M i
Ulteste, red Inflare takas m Iter*

lie Cardinals stand 0-2 against tbs

^ M ^ jw ia Kt
^ e b r a ^ a p te e tle i^ ln te P k ISUdWtor, oCIA masts Arisons.
.jaiw Cfm torm Tm M VS.W re.1ka
western Athletic rare opens with
dsfsodlng champ Brigham Young m -

lermaksrs. But the Hoopla hunch to
r'U better that record as QB Jack
ay ( r TD pease in INS) stops an
el blits, leading hte dub to a SMI
cry over a floe Purdue team. Aiding

It could be a w Innerl

h a-

tokasel
baotetoi
Caret*
ow kg
amprite

T Y P E or PRlMT your recipe giving full In­
structions tor preparation, cooking time and
temperature. (Approximate number of servings
also helpful.)
Anyone can sntor except Evening Herald em­
ployees and their Immediate family.

A panel of three expert |udges will review all
entries and winners will be notified at the end of
the contest In September for a teste off' to
select the Grand Prize winner. Decision of the
lodges Is final.
All recipes received will be published in October
for the Evening Herald's first annuel cookbook
contest.

�1 ‘I

I. *. 1.

Friday, Sept.lt, 1941-78'

Evening Here Id, Sanford, FI.

SPORTS Denny Dazzles Baltimore Bats

I IN BRIEF

*

\ Seminole Pony Baseball
: Holds Saturday Registration
TV final registration for Seminole pony Baseball'*
baseball anil softball fall programs will be held from ll
a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at the Five Points Complex in
Winter Springs.
Boys (ages seven to 14) and girls (ages seven to 15)
may sign up for the 10-week program for $20. The instructlonal league begins Sept. 19.

‘
;
-

County Bowlers Meet Sunday
\
j
’
;
I

Seminole County’s Men's Bowling Association will
hold a joint league secretary school Sunday, Sept. 13 at
Fair 1-anes-lndian Hills in Casselberry at 1 p.m.
The orientation will be followed by a meeting for
delegates, alternatives and associate members.

! NASCAR 400 Favors Waltrlp
RICHMOND, Vn. i UPI) — It's been three months —
1 and seven NASCAR Grand National races — since
I Bobby Allison crossed the finish line before Darrell
; Waltrip.
Allison leads Waltrip by 18 points, but the Franklin,
Tenn., driver hopes to pass Allison during Sunday's
$150,000 NASCAR 400 event at Fairgrounds Raceway.
The race Is sponsored by Wrangler and Sanfor-Set.
Pole position qualifying runs begin at 3 p.m. today.
Two years ago, It was Waltrip who appeared to be
running away with the points championship. But he
finished weakly and lost the championship to Richard
Petty in the final race of the season.
This year, Waltrip finds himself In Petty's position —
his feet pushing the accelerator through the floorboard
and Allison’s rear bumper straight ahead.
“(Bobby) is still in the catbird seat, but we're closing
In," Waltrip said after finishing second at last
weekend’s Southern 500 in Darlington, S.C. "There’s
got to be a lot of pressure ‘cause I think this is about Die
fifth straight race we've finished in front of him."

M a jo r League Roundup
By Unittd Pr*i* International
( Second Halt)
Nltl4n(l L44QU4
East
GB
w L Pel
IS 17 5S6 —
SI Louis
15 15 soo t 'l
New York
15 15 500 I 'j
Chicago
14 14 soo 1 *t
Montreal
Phil a
1? 17 414 4
P.lltbrgti
17 N 37S S' i
Well
19 11 a)) —
Houston
11 n 600 1
Los Ang
1/ 17 544 i 'j
San Fran
16 ij 557 7'.
Atlanta
One!
tl 14 517 J'y
t 77 770 10’s
San Diego
Thvrtday't .D am n
(No g#m«* scheduled!
Today'* Praha bit POchart
Montreal
(Burn*
7 SI
at
Chicago (Bird a lt , J IS pm .
Philadelphia (Carlton H ]) at
Pittsburgh (Rhoden I D . 7:35
pm
San Diego (Mura S It) at
Atlanta (Perry 44). M S p.m
Lot Angelet (Reuse • )) at
Cincinnati (Soto 4 1 ), 7.IS pm
New York (lachry 7 101 at
St Louit (Fortch 7 SI. I IS
pm
San Francltco (Blue I S ) at
Houtton (Sutton 7 I I . 4 IS pm

Americjn Leaggr
East
w L Pet. GB
It 11 «)3 —
Detroit
17 1) 567 1
Ball
New York
17 I] S67 7
18 14 S6) 7
Boston
16 13 SS7 7')
17 IS S3I )
Clevetnd
14 IS 41) 4'r
Toronto
Weil
Kan City
16 14 .515 —
14 14 SOO 1
Oakland
Chicago
13 17 4)) )
(eras
17 16 477 j
Minn
13 i i 419 ) ' .
Calil
it 17 )7) 4
Scant*
i i It 767
Thursday'* 1Kesultl
Toronto 7, Seam* 0
Cleveland 4, Baltimore I
Chicago tZ. Milwaukee 4
Today'* Probable Pitcher*
(All Timet E O T )
Seattle IA odoII 2 41 el Toron
to IBerenguer 71), J 30 p m
Boston (Eckersley 1 5) at
New York IR.ghettl S 71. I pm
Cleveland
(Wail*
4 11
at
Detroit
(Cappunrllo 0 01. I
pm
Baltimore ID Martinet 10 41
at Milwaukee (Haas 4 SI, 4 JO
pm
Chicago
I Burnt
1)1
al
Mmnetola (William* I I I , I ) )
pm

Tonight's Football Coverage
Astronaut-Seminole............................................... Sam Cook
Colonial-Lake Brantley ................
Joe DeSantis
Bishop Moore-Lake Howell ..................................Billy Stripp
Lyman-Boone
................................................. Jeff Kerr
Oviedo-Umalilla......................................Herald Wire Service!

By United P r n i International
All he did was strike out a careerhigh 10 batters and stand one of the
finest offensive teams in the game
on its collective ear. But to listen to
John Denny you’d think he just got
bombed.
Denny recorded his fifth straight
victory Thursday night and brought
his consecutive scoreless string to 34
innings before surrendering an
eighth-inning run in Cleveland's 4-1
triumph over the Baltimore Orioles.
"I'm thankful I got as far as I
did," Denny said. “I didn't have the
snap on my curve ball In the eighth
inning that I had earlier. It was a
good idea to gel a fresh arm in there.
I’m not disappointed about the
streak ending. My tiredness coin­
cided with not getting any more
strikeouts."
While Denny's ERA dropped to
2.68, Orioles' starter Sammy
Stewart moved Into the league lead
in ERA with a 1.94 figure, allowing
19 earned runs in 88 Innings.

A l Baseball

singled across a run and Eddie
Murray came to the plate
representing the tying run.
"Denny is a tough kid and he
didn't want to come out," said
Garcia. "But I wanted a fresh pit­
cher who could throw strikes. The
inning before he said his elbow was
tightening up and Murray lias
scared me for yean, so it was

With Cleveland leading 3-0,
Indians' Manager Dave Garda took
Denny out after Ken Singleton had

decision lime."
Relief pitcher Dan Spillner came
on to earn his fifth save by nllowing
only one hit over the Inst 1 1-3 in­
nings.
In other AL games, Chicago
thumped Milwaukee, 12-G, and

Toronto blanked Seattle, 2-0.
There were no games scheduled In
the National league.
White Sox II, Brewers 6
At Milwaukee, the White Sox
capitalized on tour Brewer errors in
a tour-run seventh inning and a 4for-1 performance by Greg loizinski
and four RBI by Bill Almon for the
win.

MIAMI (UPI) - Evidence that
the Pittsburgh Steeler dynasty Is
aging its way out of existence Is
mounting.
The four-time Super Bowl
champions lost their second game of
the season, 30-10, to the Miami
Dolphins Thursday night and con­

cern for the Steelers is deepening,
Not only did the Dolphins win
impressively as they did in their 20-7
win over St. Louis In their opener
Sunday, they did it In the most en­
tertaining way possible.
"We went for ll — for the big plays
— ligurlng that was the only way to

Pro football
win a game like this. Wc didn't hold
back and we got some big plays,"
said Coach Don Shulu.
Most of the big gainers were
served up Southern style by quar­

terback David Woodley, the second passes for 161 yards.
year pro from Ixmisiana Stale, and
Tony Nathan, the running back from
Nathan had a dream night,
Alabama.
rusfting for 77 yards and catching
Woodley scored one touchdown Woodley passes for another 84. The
himself by sneaking from one yard pair even combined on a couple of
out ami passed 13 yards to Nathan cullegc-option plays that rolled up
for another while completing 14 of 34 important yardage.

Borg Overcomes Tanner
NEW YOHK lUPI) - Wlien Tracy Austin
meets Barbara Poller today In the U.S. Open
tennis championships, there will be more at
stake than Just a berth in the women's singles
final.
Potter, the 11th seed in the tournament, has
said it was the third-seeded Austin's success at
a young age that influenced her to turn
professional at 18. Now, Potter has a diance to
score her first victory over a top player — and
if she does, It will be over her Idol.
"I’ve never beaten a real good, lop player,"
said Potter, of Woodbury, Conn. "I don’t know
if I'll beat her, but 1 know I finally feel like I
belong here."
Austin, nonetheless, is heavily favored to
advance to Saturday's (Inal. The other finalist
will be determined Immediately after the
Austin-Pntter match this afternoon, when topseed Chris Evert Lloyd takes on long-time
rival Martina Navratilova, seeded fourth.
The matchups for the men's semifinals, to
be contested Saturday sandwiched around the
women's final, were completed Thursday.
Second-seeded Bjorn Borg overcame ninth
seed Roscoe Tanner, 7-6,6-3,6-7,74, and No. 4
Jimmy Connors obliterated No. 8 Eliot Tellscher, 6-3, 6-1, 6-2.
Borg will play Connors in one semi, and topseeded John McEnroe lakes on fellow New
Yorker Vilas Gerulaltls, the 15th seed, In the
other.
The Connors-Borg match will renew an old
rivalry. The series between the two now stands
at 14-8 Borg, but all of Connors' victories came
when he was the No. 1-ranked player In the
world; since then Borg has won nine straight.
Connors, who won this tournament three
times while al his pesk, seemed to be retur-

THE S001H S IAR&amp;CST P5SS1SMA TINE MCAPPtSS

Pro TonnJs
nlng to htsold form In taking out Teltscher. His
former penchant for on-court shenanigans also
returned, and he drew a $400 fine (or making
an obscene gesture with his racket before a
record crowd of 18,805.
“I’ve been stuck on three a few years," said
Connor*, who has reached Ihe Open semifinals
eight straight years, "Bnd three Isn't really
my favorite number. I'd like to get off it."
Borg, in reaching the semis for the fifth
time, had to sweat out three lie-breaks against
the hard-serving Tanner, winning two and
losing one.
"It wasn't my serve that hurt inc today,"
Tanner said. "He wasn't hitting my second
serve. My plan waa to try and come In on his
second serve, but he was passing well, par­
ticularly In the first two sets."
Borg won the final set tlebreak 9-7 on a
backhand pass off his first volley.
It was the third consecutive year the two had
ntet In the quarter-finals-of the Open, after
splitting the first two.
Meanwhile, amid all the seriousness of the
singles play, some comic relief was provided
by the veteran doubles team of John
Newcombe and Fred Stolle, who extended the
world's No. 1 team of McEnroe and Peter
Fleming to five sets before losing, 6-2,6-2,5-7,
6-7, 7-6, In a semifinal match.
At one point, after nuking a bad shot, Stolle
ran around to the other side of the net and
pretended to be playing with McEnroe and
Fleming. Another time Stolle and Newcombe
reached (or a shot simultaneously and when it
went for a winner, they argued over who had
hit It.

P

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INCLUDES ROAD HAZARDS

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profile Plus old tire off car

Seminole High's girls
cross country team
steps into its first fullfledged
competition
Saturday morning at 9
when it competes in
th e
Greyhound
Invitational at Lyman
High S c h o o l/ All
county schools will
lake part In the year’s
second
big meet
following Seminole
Community College’s
Jam boree of two
weeks ago. In the front
row (left to right) are
Lori Kckler, Susan
N’eiswender, Crystal
Caldwell and Subrena
Cashe. In the back
row, (left to right), are
Sharon
Jenkins.
Brenda Davis, lYaci
Brown,
Barbara
Crain, Monica Kelley
'and Coach
Nate
Perkins.

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Blue Jays 2, Mariners 0
At Toronto, Jesse Barfield belted a
solo home run to back the-combined
six-hit pitching of Luis tucal and Joey ■McLaughlin. Leal, who was
removed after seven inning! •
because of a pulled stomach muscle,
earned his sixth triumph against 10
losses. Mcl-nughiln finished up to
register his sixth save.

Dolphins Drive Stake Into Dying Steeler Dynasty

RUNNING
SEMINOLBS

|

BILL ALMON
...d riv e s in four

GIIKG l.l'ZINSKI
. . . l-for-l performance

DANSIMI.I.NKK
. . . notches save

JOHN DENNY
. . . career-high lOK's

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IA— Evening Herald. Sanford, FI.

BLO N D IE

Frldiy.Sopt.il, Ittl

^-V*

by Chic Young

' Cr

acr oss

1 Poet***

loweii
4 G'tenblut
colot
8 Plant part
12 Author o&lt;
The Haven'
13 Group of
points
1« Egg (Ft)
15 Noun suffn
16 Elide
17
_ _ Disney
18 Marini sight
20 Weiring
apparel
22 Eighth month
(abbr)
24 Timber tree
25 Guiltr person
29 Money
33 Arib garment
34 Epochs
36 Heroine of A
Doll's House
37 In cise that
39 Leak
4 1 Work at
42 Unspoiled
44 Gulches
48 Basebell
official (sbbr |
1

2

Answer to Previous Purrte

48 Orgin fo'
hearing
4B Advice
S3 Body

57 Edible green
pod
SB Membranous
pouch
60 Police alert
61 Biblical land
62 Spoken eiem
63 For
64 Contemporary
painter
65 Auction
66 Observe

DDO0OEJ
□□DP □□□

■ H U
□ □ □ □ Id

Bind up
Pert of the leg
Over (Ger |
1 Chimps
Emit coherent
2
________Lis*.
light
painting
28 Scarlett
3 Abominable
0 Hera t
snowman
home
Clasp
Day (Heb)
30 Mime
Tart
31 Folktmger
Esplosiv* (si)
Guthrie
Placet
Positive word* 32
3S Term of royal
10 Shoe
address
11 Newts
38 Tidal wave
19 Lick up
40 Babble
21 Dm*

DOWN

4

3

5

6

8

7

12

13

14

IS

16

17

18

Heart Rate
A Guide

JlbOf|
51
52
54
55
56

Russien river
Constellation
Assault
Limber
Woodwind
instrument
59 Actor Mmeo
9

10

11

30

31

32

21

20

19

43 Her Majesty's
ship (ebbr)
45 Gold (Sp)
47 River in Tests
49 Female
student
(comp wd)
50 Sooner ttite

■
22
”
26

25

■

27
"

33

•

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38

37

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51

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"

by Bob Montana

AR C H IE
HOW DID YOUR SESSION
WITH TOUR GUIDANCE
COUNSELOR GO, JUGHEAD ?

HE SAID 1 WAS AN
INCURABLE DREAMER
WHO HAS LOST AIL TOUCH
WITH REALITY *

WHAT KIND OF JO B j ONLY
DOES THAT QUALIFY/ ONE
ME FOR.

SB

60

57

58

61

62

63

64

65

66
//

MR ANDREWS

HOROSCOPE
By BERNICE BEDE OSOL

For Saturday, September 12, 1981

E E K A M EEK

by Howie Schneider

MV WIFE. KEEPS 5WIUG
THAT MARRIAGE AUD
DflNWUB DOUTMIX
“ X

PRISCILLA'S POP
V

_________ by Ed Sullivan

I HEARD 5TUART ^
INVITED VOU T D HIS
HOUSE FOR LUNCH '
WHAT PIP SOU H*VE? ,

EVERYTHING WWS
FINE EXCEPT THE
SALAD- IT V&amp;O HC7T'

BUGS BUNNY

'NO. STUART TO SSES^
ALL HI5 SALADS IN
THE CLOTHES PR Y W /A

by Stolid A Heimdahl
J P ID N T M E A N 7 W
KINP 0 F 5 T K I k E . „
N O T AGAIN/

Your Birthday
AQUARIUS I Jan. 20-Fcb.
September 12, 1981
19) Your artful, creative
This coming year, greater- approach is a major reason
than-usual strides can be • why others embrace your
made in areas Involving your ideas or plans today, but it's
work or career. The benefits your expansive outlook that
will also be extraordinarily seals their interest.
profitable.
PISCES I Feb. 20-March 20)
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22» A personal relationship could
Influences are at work today take on an extra-special
that should help eaae any meaning today because you’ll
financial discomfort you may get the chance to gel off by
have felt lately. You’ll have yourselves. You’ve both
earned the good break that needed this seclusion.
cornea your way. Find out
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
more of what ties ahead for You’ll make a big hit today
you In the year following your with someone -who is quite
birthday by sending for your necessary to putting together
copy of Astro-Graph. Mail $1 a deal you'd like to formulate.
for each to Astro-Graph, Box The meeting is fortunate for
489, Radio City Station, N.Y. him, as well as you.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
dale.
Finding a door open today
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23) that till now has been closed
Everything good should be mighl be just the break you've
coming up roses for you been looking for. Success is
socially today. In (act, this yours once you cross the
day could mark the beginning threshold.
of a very pleasant new
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
relationship.
SCORPIO I Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Something big could be in
People behind the scene arc store in the romance
bestowing large benefits on department today. II you
you today. What they’re doing don't already have somebody
for ymi could make a pleasant dear to you, this might be the
difference in your lifestyle. day you’ll meet him or Iter.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Dec. 21) Solid friendships are A joint effort today will work
your most valuable asset out with amazing smoothness.
today and could contribute to Tfte person behind this suc­
advancing your high hopes. cessful enterprise is lady
You’ll find pals quite willing Luck herself.
lo help where thev can.
CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
19) Devote all yuur attention Being In the right place at the
to developing an important right time is only half the
goal today. Your chances for reason for your good fortune
success are much greater now today. The other: You'll say
titan they've been fur some all tfte proper things lo the one
who can ntake it all happen.
time.

DEAH DR. 1-AMB - A
friend of mine recently had a
heart attack. He is home now
from the hospital and he has
started a walking program.
His doctor has him taking his
heart rate to tell how much
exercise he should do. Is this a
good way to tell how much a
person is doing? What about
using it to monitor yourself if
you have not had a heart
attack? His attack has got me
thinking and 1 thought it
would be a good idea for me to
get a lillle more active now
instead of waiting until after I
had mine. If I do this, what
guidelines should I follow?
DEAR HEADER - The
heart rate is one of the best
guides an individual can use
during routine daily activities
to tell how hard he is working
his heart. Heart rate can be
affected by other things such
as excitement, anxiety,
cigarettes, coffee but all of
lliese responses really in­
dicate how a person’s life
style aflects his heart work.
Tie work of the heart
depends upon how much blood
pressure. The heart rate is a
good indicator, within limits,
of how much blood Ihe heart is
pumping. And you would be
smart to use it. As a general
rule you might want to take
your heart rate when you
wake up before you get out of
bed or get involved. That Is
your base line. Hopefully it
will be below 70 a minute.
Take it again before you
start walking. While you are
walking you can check it
again. U you are a person in
good health, a rate of 120
beats a minute is adequate to
cause some training of your
heart. As you progress you
may be able to walk faster
anti achieve a heart rate of 140
a minute. For older people or
those with heart disease, this
may be more than your doctor
would like. So you should
check with him if you go (or
higher rales. To give you
more information on lieart

rates and their meaning I am
sending you The Health letter
number 9-8, Your Heart Rate:
What It Meaas.
Others who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stamped,
self-addressed
envelope for It to me, in car*
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York. NY 10019.
You can also use Ihe heart
rate as an Indicator of what
you are doing that may not be
' good for you. If you get ex­
cited and your heart rate
Jumps up, you might think
about avoiding those stressful
situations. And if your resting
rate is on the high side, think
about eliminating cigarettes,
coffee and habits that cause
this.
DEAR DR. 1-AMB - 1 am
22 years old and still have the
foreskin on my penis. Because
of it I am having trouble with
sexual intercourse Bnd would
like to have It removed. Could
you please give me some
information on It and the kind
of doctor to consult?
DEAR READER - If you
want a circumcision see a
urologist However, I have
grave doubts tliat is the cause
of any sexual problems that
you may be having. After all,
there are a large number of
men — In some countries, all
men — who are not cir­
cumcised and who function
perfectly normally. You
would have lo have a rather
severe mechanical problem
for it to be causing a
limitation in that regard.
I know you won't be
satisfied
without
an
examination, though. And you
mighl do better If all you need
is some confidence and Ihe
surgery made you feel you
would do better.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH
♦ 171

&gt;11-41

♦ 71
♦ AKI M
♦ a ji
WEST
EAST
♦ KI05
♦ QM
*•••*
VAQ11
♦ 10 3
♦ Q J 71
♦ K10 7 1
♦ Oil tt I
SOUTH
♦ AJ 41

♦ KJ101til
♦ 14

♦ ....

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
Pm
Pm

North East
1*
Pm
1 NT Pots
Pm
Pass

Sooth
19
4V

Opening lead: ♦lO

By Oewald Jacoby
aed AlaaSaaUg
South won the diamond
lead In dummy and led the
seven of trum ps. E ast
showed out and prospects of
making four hearts were
dim indeed. The only legiti­
mate play would be to

a doubleton king-queen of
spades. South didn’t like that
chance and Instead decided
to keep dummy's ace of
club* u a threat card,
rather than use it to discard
a potential spade loaer.
West ducked the first
trump, but South continued.
West won and led hla second
and last diamond. South won
in dummy and ruffed a dia­
mond on which card West
chucked hla deuce of cluba.
Another trump went to
Weat'a ace and West led his
last trump back. Now South
cashed his next to last trump
to come down to a five-card
ending. Dummy's last five
cards were a spade, a dia­
mond and three dub*.
On that next to last trump
West felt that be had to keep
three cluba and chucked a
spade. E ast, who h id
already jettisoned four
dubs, also discarded a spade
to hang on to his high
diamond.
Now South limply played
ace end deuce of ipadee to
&gt;et up his jack ana four as
winners.
His failure to take a dis­
card on the ace of cluba bed
paid off. Either East or West
should have seen what was
going on, but when you jgive
a man a chance to mane a
mistake be may oblige.
(NEWSPAPOt ENTERPRISE ASSN)

ANNIE
FR AN K AND E R N E S T

by Leonard Starr

C£"

&lt;HHOO! THERE GOES

WtALESS tfORMALLY
OPERATE IH THESE
THEM BEIN’ A rtW
HATERS, SO THEY
V FOLLOW US
CARRY SOPHISTICATE?
THROUGH THOSE
SURFACE AND UNPER*
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HATER DETECTION
EQUIPMENT-

HY THEORY 'BOUT

JTAPT PtAYitfG DUMB... HERE
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by Bob T f w v s

£

T H E H U M A N F A C T **.

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-BUT EVEN SO, FOOLING (W
AROUNO HITH ICEBERGS LOOK- i
fit
IS MN6 EK0 U$.'~ $0 TH’ FOGS
THEY MUST REALLY UFTtfQRUNT US/

1
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FLE TC H ER 'S LANDING

by Dawflag Caffin

■THINGS lU lN Q S T H IN G S !

vfcO‘R6 066656t-D D lT H

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OURSELVES
Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sept. 11, W l - t A

Gardening

Ancient Art Of Espalier Popular In Landscapes

l»'h

An ancient horticultural art is finding
new popularity in landscaping all over
Florida and it's called espaliered
planting.
Simply put, espalier is the practice of
controlling a plant's growth so that it
runs along a flat surface. Usually a free­
standing wall or the side of a building.
It’s especially effective in confined areas
of the landscape, where you don’t have
room for spreading trees and large
shrubs.
Espalier is used as a decorative accent
! in modern landscapes, and it's often

V rb m

Horticulturist
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referred to as “Living Sculpture."
In its early days, however, espalier
was used for much more practical
reasons. The Romans developed espalier
to conserve space in their small orchards
and gardens. The English refined the

practice and began using espalier as cold
protection. They discovered that
espaliered fruit trees tolerated cold
temperatures better than fruit trees
grown in the open.
Espaliers are especially effective
along blank walls where you need a
special interest plant to relieve
monotony. And, as landscape spaces
become smaller for single family homes,
and more people choose to live in
apartments or mobile homes, espaliered
plants will have considerable appeal.
There is one point of caution Don't use

loo many espaliered plants around your
home. As attractive as they are, one is
about all landscape designs need.
There is no end to the espalier patterns
you might choose. They range from a
very formal checkerboard design to
informal patterns following the natural
growth spread of the plants. Just
remember that the simpler the design
the easier your espalier will be to
maintain.
If you’ve seen elaborate espalier
designs you may think it's difficult to
train the plant. Actually, it's fairly easy.

Begin with a young tree or shrub that has maintenance each season. The main Jobs
several well balanced limbs off the main are pruning away stray branches that
trunk. In many nurseries you can buy grow straight out from the wall, and
young, pruned plants on supports which fastening new shoots.
liave already been established for certain
You can use a variety of plants for an
growth patterns.
espatier. Citrus, ligustrum, confederate
Set the plant in the soil six to eight Jasmine, podocarpus, holly, pyracantha
inches front the wall. Fasten the desired and loquat do well throughout Florida.
branches to the wall using any of a
An espalier plant is Just as easy to
variety of anchoring devices available at
nursery and garden centers. Prune away establish ond maintain os any other
branches that don't fit the espaliered landscape plant. With Just a little bit of
work it will contribute beauty and
design you have in mind.
Once established, your espalier tree or distinction to your landscape throughout
shrub will need only a few hours of the year.

Briefly
Nominations Wanted For
Louella Dlrksen Award

PIONEERS
ON PARADE

If you know a senior citizen volunteer S3 years and older
who provides services to any non-profit organisation, he or
she may be eligible for the "Ixmella Dlrksen Community
Service Award," co-sponsored by Sea World of Florida and
Eastern Airlines.
Community service groups, churches and individuals
from around the state are asked to submit nominations no
later than Oct. 12. Nomination forms are available through
Joe Werner,senior marketing representative,Sea World of
Florida, 7007 Sea World Drive, Orlando, Fla., 32809 or by
calling 1305 ) 855-7773 in Orlando or (800H32-1178 statewide.
Nominees will receive their honors during the seventh
annual Senior Awards and Recognition Breakfast at Sea
World's laiau Terrace at 9 a.m., Oct. 24. The Honorable
Claude Pepper, Congressman, 14th District, and former
U.S. Senator, will address the 300 invited guests who include
local, state and national officeholders and representatives
of various senior citizen organizations. U.S. Congressman
Pepper will discuss important issues concerning older
Americans.

It was 60 years ago—
Armistice Day, in fact,,
in 1921, that this photo
was snapped during a
S a n f o rd
p a ra d e .
Itepresenting Chase A
Co. are T.W . Jones,
left, and William A.
LefflerSr. l-cffler, who
later
became
president
of
the
company and mayor of
the City of Sanford,
will be featured with
his wife, Itenie, in the
OURSELVES section
Sunday.

Interior Decorating Course
Two noncredit short courses in Housing and Home
Decoration (interior decorating) will begin in late Sep­
tember at Seminole Community College. These classes will
meet in the fully equipped Interior Design facilities for
eight weeks. The cost of each class is 111.
The day class will meet Tuesday mornings, beginning
'Sept. 29, from t to noon. The Instructor will be Alice Drib­
ble.
The evening class will meet Thursday evenings, begin­
ning Sept. 24, from 7 to 10. The instructor will be Sandy
Snipes.
; Register at the admissions office in the administration
btiilding. For information call 323-1450 (843-7001 from
Orlando), ext. 423 or 227.

CPR Course Offered
' The office of Community Services at Seminole Com­
munity College Is offering a class in a revolutionary life­
saving technique, "Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation"
(CPR). The course teaches combined techniques of mouthto-mouth resuscitation and external cardiac massage.
Class will meet from 6 to 10 p.m. on Sept. 13 and 22.
Enrollment Is limited to 18 people with a $3.00 registration
fee.

In And Around W inter Springs

Couples Mark Wedding Anniversaries
There are several couples in Hacienda Village who are
celebrating wedding anniversaries of long standing.
To the following couples we send a hearty congratulations:
VI and Bemie Bierman, 42 years; May and Russell Tryon, 41
years; Jane and John Ridenour, 46 years; and Marie and Ed
Coster, 46 years.
May all of you have many more happy years.
Ruthy leather recently visited with friends, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Howard, of Herndon, Va. Ruthy said they visited the
United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md., where Jack
Howard and Ruthy's husband, Dave, were graduated. They
reminisced about old times.

. For information, call the Office of Community Services at
Seminole Community College, 323-1450, ext. 304.

Marion Glannlnl, Principal of Sterling Park Elementary,
invites all parents interested in becoming a school Dividend
(parent volunteer) to a tea at the school on September 16, at 10

Speed Reading Class

a.m.

The Office of Community Services at Seminole Comipunity College will offer a "Speed Reading" class to begin
Sept. 14. Class will meet each Monday evening for 8 weeks
from 7 to 10:00 p.m. on the Adult Education Campus,
Building no. 38.
Enrollment is limited to 20 people, with a $12.00
registration fee.
-For Information, please call the Office of Community
Services at Seminole Community College, 323-1430, ext. 304.

Community Reading Lab
The Community Reading Lab is open at Seminole College
for adults wanting to improve their reading skills.
Vocabulary development and comprehension techniques
are stressed in the free lab. Morning and evening classes
are available on the Adult Education campus.
. ‘ For information on the free service, call Seminole
Community College, 323-1430, Ext. 444.

Self-Directed Career Choices
The Office of Community Services at Seminole Com­
munity College is offering a "Self-Directed Career Choices
and Changes" class to begin Sept. 22. Class will meet from 7
.to 10 p.m. in room 1,600 for six weeks on Tuesday evenings.
This course is to assist women who are actively Involved
in the process of making career choices or changing an
established career. Registration Fee $8.00.
For further information, call the Office of Community
Sendees at Seminole Community College, 323-1430, Ext.
:304.

Beta Sigma Phi
Beginning Day Luncheon

|
.
I
•

Xi Beta Eta had their "Beginning Day" at Casa
Gallardo in Altamonte Springs on August X8th. “Circle
the World with Yellow Roses" was the theme carried
out.
President Eva Rogero spent some time during th the
summer putting together the current yearbook.
Members attending were: Charlotte Bladas, Marion
Fare 11a, Cathy McNabb, Dot Raines, Eva Rogero,
Carol Smith, Kathy Wallace, Lesla Wright and traxv
sfree Fran Morton.

On the 8 of September there will be a PTA Open House. This
year’s open house will be a little different from other years
Kindergarten through the second grade will meet with their
teachers from 7-7:30 p.m. Then there will be a general PTA
meeting. Immediately following the meeting the third through
fifth grade teachers and parents will meet.
The Winter Springs Elementary PTO will have its first

Dee
Gatrell
Whiter Sprtags
Correspondent

87417$
meeting on Sept. 22 ut 7:30 p.m. Several speakers will start the
year by giving informative information to the parents.
They Include: Barbara Howell, prepatory curriculum
specialist, who will speak on primary education; Beverly
Perroult, assistant principal, will speak on Pupil progression
and grading; Dr. Mark Barron, school psychologist for
Seminole County, will talk about what meaning there is to test
scores; and Marilyn Denton, Dividends secretary, will speak
on "Dividends—A Way To Help."
I recently attended my first professional football game and
watched the Tampa Bay Bucs defeat the Minnesota Vikings. I
now know why it's been so many years since I attended a
football game — the weather.
Up north you have to sit in the snow. Here it was the rain
which started IS minutes into the game. All 1 could see were
63,000 orange shirts all crowded together on hard, steel,

Crusade Against Smoking
Lets Offended Speak Up
DEAR ABBY: Everybody lias an
Achilles heel. Yours, Dear Abby, is other
people's smoking. Please be fair and give
equal time to smokers.
When I entered the service In 1942, 1
smoked my first cigarette. When I quit in
1971,1 was smoking 2' j packs a day plus
6 or 7 cigars. In all that time, only one
person complained about my smoking.
She was a pretty young thing who asked
me not to smoke around her because
smoke "irritated" her eyes and made
them itch and water. (Request granted.)
Now that the crusade against smokers
has become popular, everywhere you go,
people are complaining about smoke.
Recently in a fine restaurant, a rude
woman yelled at me across two tables,
"Put out that cigar - you are In a public
place!"
Abby, since smoke is the same as it
was 30 y ean ago, it's obvious that people
have changed. Therefore, I can only infer
that M percent of the so-called
"irritation” must be psychosomatic,
MORT1NN.J.
DEAR MORT: Psychosomatic, my
eye! However, you're right aa two
counts. Smoke Is the same (It's still aa
Irrltaat) a ad people have indeed
changed. When they're denied dean air
by smokers, they speak up. Fifty yean
ago they were too Umid to say anything.
DEAR ABBY: Why do all thoae

I

exercise programs on TV have trim,
muscular men and thin women with
beautiful figures leading the exercises?
We fatties would feel more like exer­
cising right along with them if they were
overweight and out of shape like we are.
Obviously, those beautiful people were
never fat, so what's the point? It's a lot
easier to stay thin when you've been that
way all your life.
I would like to see a woman who is 40
pounds overweight | like me) doing those
exercises! II would give me hope. And if
after a couple of months I could see some
improvement in her, I would be Inspired
to follow her example.
Phooey on these skin-and-bone
beauties! I don't even turn on the TV to
watch them anymore!
CHUNKY IN CHARLESTON
DEAR CHUNKY: I see your point.
Now Ill's hope some sharp ad ageary
picks up the cac. Of course it would meaa
■ limited career far the overweight
exercise stars, who would have to be

replaced by a new "fatso" every year.
DEAR ABBY: When I was about 8, a
cousin of mine who was about 13 at the
time asked me to mess around with him.
I didn't know anything about sex then,
and we fooled around for about IS
minutes a couple of times. We also did
some heavy petting, I guess you would
call it.
I am now 13 and have not done any
messing around since then. My cousin,
who is now in 11th grade, said he learned
all about sex in biology class. He said he
can tell if a girl is a virgin or not by
feeling her left thumb. He felt mine and
said I was not a virgin. He said he is
worried for me and, since he is respon­
sible, he advised me not to go swimming
-in a public pool. He said I might get
pregnant. Is he a liar or what? Am I still
a virgin? How can I tell for sure?
I hope you won't think my questions
are stupid.
DESPERATE AND WORRIED IN
ALABAMA
DEAR DESPERATE: Na question is
stupid. I would guess that you are still a
virgin, but you would need a physical
examiaatiow by a doctor to confirm U.
However, whether a girt Is a virgin or
not, she is la no danger of becoming
pregnant by merely swimming In i
public pool.

backless benches with barely enough room to put your legs in
front of you.
I did enjoy going to the game, though. Mostly because half
my neighborhood was there, also. And because It was the first
time in a year we all had a chance to see our former Winter
Springs neighbors, IJnda and Randy Butkus, who moved to
Palm Harbor.
Besides my husband Larry and me, others attending the
football game were Mr. and Mrs. Curt Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
Chuck Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Bear Bails, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
I«athen and U. Jim Peterson, all of Winter Springs.
Also Mr. and Mrs. Ted Worsham, friends of the Balias
played host to the Balias and attended the game. Ruth
leather's father, Bill Ripley, of Tampa, and Randy and Linda
Butkus also attended the game.
On Sunday the Butkus had a brunch (or all their old neigh­
bors
My in-laws, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Gatrell of Cape Coral came
up and stayed with our four children, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Moore watched their five grandchildren and a dog, so their
sons and daughters-in-law could get away for the week-end.

M0NEY...M0NEY
EVERYWHERE!
o

o o o o o

for your power mower.

Lm J

0

o o o o o

for your musical instrument.

o o o o o

for your color television.

o o o o o

for your dinette set.

KKsrniV

OOOOO
It's easy to come by when you use

THE EVENRIG HERALD A HERALD

ADVERTISER
CLASSIFIED SECTION

SKMINOLI

322*2611

ORLANDO-WINTIR PARK

Call to d a y !

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HA-gvsfilfUBfBlCSdfrtdrt.EL

legal Notice

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IN T M I C IR C U IT C O U R T.
■ I4 M T R D M T M
J U N IC IA L
C IR C U IT ,
IN
ANN
FOR
SEMINOLE CO UNTY, FLORIOA
CASH NO. IM f S M A M -R
IN T H I M A T T R R OP T H I
ADOPTION O F:
JONATHAN RYAN BURNHAM,
a minor.
NOTICROP ACTION
TO: JOHN T . WORTHY
whose Iasi known address and
residanc* was
*0)4 Highway *
Apartment 170*
Houston, Texas iro n
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O TIFIEO TH A T enaction lor Iho
adoption ol JONATHAN RYAN
BURNHAM has bean Iliad against
you in Ih* Circuit Court pi
Seminole County, Florida, Casa
No l l 110* CA 70 E, and you art
required to serve a copy of your
written defenses, ll any, to II, an
JACK T BRIDGES, ESQUIRE, ot
CLEVELAND A BRIDGES. Pool
OfltctOrower l , Sanford. Florida.
12771. on or before September It,
A D . IN I. ond til* Ih* original
with the Clark ol this Court otthor
before service on Petitioners
Attorney,
or
Im m tdlaltly
Iher ratter, other w Is* a default and
ultimata lodgment will be entered
■gilnsl you lor Ih* relief
demanded in Ih* Petition
WITNESS my hand and Ih* seal
ol IMS court on this l$th day ol
August. A .D . IN I
(SEAL)
ARTHUR H. BECKW ITH, JR
Clark ol tha Circuit Court
BY: Susan E Tabor
Oepuly Clerk
Publish August M. September a,
II. II. IN I
DEL 144 ____________ ______

Th* World Almanac"

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t. N im e Ih* composer
h o le w orks inclu d e
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"Salome." "ElektrB.” "Der
h Rosenkavalier" and "Thus
Spake Z arath u itra." (a)
• Bedrich SmeUna (b) Rich*."S ard S trauu (c) Fronds
V * Poulenc
1. The enerfy needed to lilt
k&amp;d pound! ope root In one
aecond
la com m only
(a)nhorsereierreo to
so as i ooe
on* ta
S T, referred
* power (b) watt (c)btu.
. rW h a t cause*itlde*?(*}voltides? (i
_____activity on tbsi oi
ocean's
'•&gt; , canlc
floor (b) constantly dunging
&amp; barometric pressure (c) the
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g ra v ita tio n s]
• • attraction of Use sun and
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ANSWERS

A &gt; ----------------------------------i l t 'M

W -H rtp W h n ta d

C L A S S IF IE D A D S

U f j l M o fic t

IN T N I CIRCUIT COURT FOR
IC M IN O L i CO UNTY, FLORIOA
FRO RAT I DIVISION
FIN Nvmber II-4M-CF
Division
IN R t : I S T A T I OF
OESIREE RUBY BASHERC.
D ftw rt
NOTICE OF ADM INISTRATION
TO ALL PERSONS MAVINO
CLAIM S
ON
DEM ANDS
AGAINST THE ABOVE ESTATE
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
INTER ESTED IN TH E ESTATE
YO U
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IF IE D
I h i!
IM
*4
ministration ol th# «*«*• el
O E S IR E E R UBY B E S H ER E .
N ( N I M . F i N Number I I t A CP.
H pending In IN* C&lt;ftvT Courf lor
Seminole County. Florid*. Pretal*
Division. Ih# M d r m ot which &gt;1
Sim mol* Count* Court a o u m .
Sanford. Florid* II77I
Th* person*! representative e*
III* oslot* It SAWAYA A
BESHERE. what* M d m t &gt;1 ISIS
Weverly Wo*. Longwood. Florida
777M Tn* n*m#*nd address o* in*
personal representative's attorney
or* tft forth below
All ptriant U m t ttoimt or
demands agano* IM estate or*
required.
W ITH IN
TH R EE
MONTHS FROM THE DATE OF
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
THIS NOTICE, to I IN with th*
clerk ol tho obov* court * written
statement ol on* tlolm or demand
iho* mo* nor* Each claim mutt
bo in writing and mull md&gt;c*t*tht
basis tor tho claim, IM noma and
oddrm ol tho croditor or Mt agent
or (Horn**, ond tho amount
claimed II iho claim it nol rot
duo. th* dal* amen it will extern*
Out than be stated ll th* claim It
contingent or unltqutdattd. Iho
nature ol th* uncertainty Shall bo
Stated. Ilth* claim It secured, th*
securit* shall be described Th*
claimant shall deliver sutlkiont
copies ol th* claim to tho dork to
tnoblt th* clerk to mall on* cop*
to each porsonal represent ally*
Ail portent lnttr*tl*d in Iho
eslal* lo whom a cop* of this
None* ol Administration hat boon
mailod are required, W ITHIN
THR EE MONTHS FROM THE
D A TE
OF
TH E
FIR S T
P U B LIC A TIO N
OF
TH IS
NOTICE, lo III* an* bblacttons
tho* ma* have that challenge th*
valldit* ol the decendenrt will, Iho
qualifications ol Iho personal
represent*!!**, or th* v*nu* or
luHtditlion ol th* court.
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS. AND
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E D
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
Dal* ol th* llrst publication ol
this Nolle* ol Administration:
September II. IN I
SAWAYA A BESHERE
As Personal R (presently*
ol Ihe Estata ol
DESIREE RUBY BESHERE
Boosted
A TTO R N EY FOR PERSONAL
R EP R ES E N TA TIV E :
James P Panico ol
James P. Panico, Professional
Association
III South Maitland Ay mu*
Maitland, Florida 1)111
Telephone: I10SI *47 7)00
Publish September II. II. IN I
DEM It

r

9rtiiy,»E »t.H , m i

'l

Serum la tha clear, rel' lowiah fluid ol the bbod
- which la laft after blood
XV- clots In th* tast tube. Seram
- cootaini anUbodtaa which
form in rspo—« to tha proa. v cnce of bacteria, toains and
V ' other foreign subsuaces

FIC TITIO US N A M I
Hotel i* hereby given Ihat I am
engaged m business *l p o. Boa
If f ). Lengwood. F I* , ItTSO.
Semmoi* count*. Florida under
m* lit'lM uS n*ma oI ACCURATE
MAILINO SERVICE, and Ihat I
mend tg register said name with
•n* C&gt;*rk o&lt; th* Circuit Court,
Sem.not* Count*. Florida In occerdonce with th* provisions ol th*
■•*f.t&lt;ous Nam* Statutes. To Wit:
S*&lt;t&gt;gn MS00 Florida Statutes

toy
Vq C POSEY
Publish September It. II, IS, A
October l 10*1
DEM IS
FICTITIO US N A M I
Note* is hereby given that I am
engaged wt business at 100 Nation
Avenue Lon*wood, Fla 11T10
SommoM Count*. Florid* under
the fictitious n*ma ol JA CK
FLANAGAN SALES, ond that I
■rrend to ragisttr said name with
m* Clerk ot th* Circuit Court,
Seminole Count*. Florida in *c
conunce wtththa provision* oI th#
Fictitious Nam* Statutes. To WIT:
section (ASM Florida Statutes
tas)
S&gt;g Jack L. Flanagan
Publish: September a. It, l|, is,
IN I
DEM-IT

Seminole

Orlando-Winter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

0 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT.
RATES
................. sacs Hits
HOURS
I cs no#evttvo limes Me a ling
SO A M. - J:M P.M. TCMBRCUtlvatimM .......... 4Jc
MONDAY M ru FRIDAY II CMSRaittvs Hums . ITc s Una
SATURDAY f
11.40 Minimum

N E E D Live In Companion
Housekeeper lor Dlobellc
Lady In Sanford Mutt have
car and be able to give insulin
shots Salary 4 room and
board Pleas# call 12) SSS7.
COOK Full lime, with knowledge
ol special diet. Apply at
Lakeview Nursing Center (If
E 2nd SI

..

P LU M B IN G D lY Hardware
and Electrical retail and
repair Business W WO Real
Estate Best Terms. IliJ.OOO
Wm Malicrowski REALTOR
127 7(13 Eves 122 1)17

29—Rooms

I

■

) Lines Minimum

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

4-Child Cara

I WILL NOT BE R ESPON'
SIBLE FOR ANY DEBTS BY
A N Y O N E O T H E R TH A N
M YSELF AS OF f 1011
Jig Dolores L. Mac*
WrfV BE LO N E L Y T Writ# "Get
A M att" Dating Servlet. All
ago*. P.O. Bos M7I, Clear.
water. FI. M ill.____________

4 12 and 111 Shill. Full lima.
Apply In person Sanlord
Nursing Convalescent Center,
*M Mellonvillf Ave
SECRETARIAL
CLERICAL A
R EC O R D KEEP IN G
SKILLS
For growing llrm in Sanlord
Must be able to type 51 words
per minute Write Bo« 111 C O
Evening Herald P O Boi 1057
Sanlord. Fla 11771

Sunday-Noon Friday

4—Personals

RN OR LPN

Daytime Babysitting tn
my home No Weekends
Havtreferences. SSI OtS!

SPUR OF THE MOMENT
BABYSITTING
SSSSSM
Will keep children In my home
day. hr. or week. Monday thru
Friday 7 a m i pm . Hot
lunches, S snacks SllStlS

Lonely i Writ* "Bringing Ptoplt
IN TH* CIRCUIT COURT OP
Together Dating Sarvlcal" All
ages A Senior Cltliwu. P.D.
T H I I I 0 H T I I N T H JUDICIAL
CIRCUIT IIM IN O L I COUNTY,
U41, WbttenHavsni Fla.
11— Instructions
PLORIDA
Civil ActtSR Ne.i H M H-CA-M K
4—C hild Caro
SUN BANK MORTOAGE COM
Tennis instruction — U.S F.T.JC.
PANY,
Certified Group er Prlvoto
* Florida corporation.
lessons. Children a ipaclajty.
W ILL Babysit Inyevr
Plaintiff,
home or min*. Day
Doug Mtiictawtkl. 222 )3*7:
vt.
er night. Dl-SSI 1 WILLIAM HENRY ITENSON
a single parson,
ALL or Pari ot th* Day.
13-SpadalNo4icas
Defendants.
School Pick up
NOTICROP ACTION
available. US SS4S.
TO WILLIAM HENR Y IT E N SON
W ILL babysit children in my
Residence: 1 » Ter Iwood Street:
hem# In Debar* Have *•
OAK HAVEN REST
Fern Pork, Florid* D IM
parlance. Constant sim*rHOME D ELAND
Mailing Addrass: Halmtladl
v III on, quality car#, good
Small
horn* like ACLF ladllty
Support Dot 1*7410127; APO, New
moats and reasonable rates.
situated very pleasant location
York Of?42
Call 44* Sftt attar S p m.
short distance Irom city. 14
YOU ARE N O TIFIE O Ihat an
hour supervision meal*,
action to foreclose o mortgage on
laundry, asiistanc* with bath
th* following preparty in Seminole
4— Good Things lo E it
A personal grooming Lorga
County, Florid*,
lanced in yard, air con
Lot IS. LAKE OF THE WOODS
dlltonlng
Privalt A semi
Bananas
JIB S 1100
TOWNHOUSE, "SECTION O NE",
private rooms. Call 734 04SI
Cukot
10 FOR I 00
according lo Ih* plat I hereof. *1
Peppers
to FOR too
recorded in Plat Book It, Pago SOi
IC# Co Id Water m t Ion*
S 00
★ ★ ★ A * * * *
Public Records ol Semlnola
WfSttrn Lopes
EACH
.7*
County, Florid*
GreenOnlons
IF O R 7)
has bawl Iliad against you
Regular Tomato** a LBS 100
and you art required to serve t
Jumbo Boot Slake
copy ol your written defenses. If
Tomatoes
.!f LB
140.000 150.000 per year National
any. to It on PAUL F. BRYAN.
Peaches
.41Lb.
Company
looking
lor
Plaintiff's attorney, whose od3 LBS. 100
Distributor* in It Florida
dress is MO Court land Street, tuna Jonathan Applts
Countlt* Part Time ol Full
MO. Orlando. Florid* DSOf, on or Rad Delicious Apples 4 LBS. 100
SLBS. 100
Tima Call Bob McNeill, l soo
batora th* lath day ol October, Golden Del Applet
SIS } » f
Muthi Apple*
SLBS. 100
IN I, and lit* th* original with tha
M
LB.
Boa
Ot
Swf.
Potaloesf
50
Clark ot this Court either before
RIGHT now wt need a lew good
Swi. Potatoes
4LBS. 100
service on Plaintiff's attorney or
sales people who have Ih*
Blu# Rldg* Apple*. SB LB. Boi
immediately thereafter? other­
ambition and dedication la
All Kinds
EACH I SO
wise * default will be entered
succeed If that’s you. then
against you lor tho rtllef
we're prepared to oiler you
demanded In Ih* comp*Ini or
W« Takt Food Stamps
real rewards and Ih* methods
pet It Ion.
lo gel them For Interview,
LER O Y FARMS
WITNESS my hand and Ih* m l
pleos* call Cenlury 11, Hayes
SR 44
ol this Court on M B !
Really Services. Inc , Sanford
(SEAL)
Watbon'i
Otd
Farm
SIS SOSO
ARTHUR H BECKW ITH, JR.
CLERK OF TH E COURT
IVON r r p r r i r n t a t i v r i
Moving ts s newer horn#,
Iher in* m . t a n
By: Catharl
Th* Port Tim* Career
Oepuly uerk
4*4 Mr* —collect m s roe
Swann and
nd Haddock, P.A
00* Court land Street
N EED several Individual* to call
lull* OSD
and Invite people to join a new
Orlando, Florida UBBf
Dinner Club. No experience
Publish. Saptambar II, IS, IS.
necessary. Day or Evening
October 1. IN I
NOTICE UNDER FICTITIO US
hours Salary + Commission
D E M IT
NAM E S TA TU TE
Also I person for special
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
delivery work Apply lo Mrs
IN TH E CIRCUIT COURT FOR
Nolle# IS hereby glvon that Ih*
Adkins Monday and Tuesday
IIM IN O L I COUNTY, PLORIDA
undtrtlinad, pursuant to tho
at tha Days Inn 4* A I 4
P R O IA TR d i v i s i o n
"Fictitious
Nam* Slatula".
PIN Number II 243CP
Seel Ion St) Of. Florida Statwta*. . It‘» easy te plot* * C lastil led Ad
Division
will register with Ih* Clark gt th*
. .. We’ll even help you word
IN R Ei E S TA TE OP
Circuit Court. In and tor lomlnoi*
It Coll IS] M il
LEO N C. LOWDER. JR.,
County, Florida, upon roctlpt ot
Deceased
proa* of iho publication ol this
LPN 7 1 pari lime, 117 part
NOTICR OP ADM INISTRATION
Notlco. th* I let Ittous name, to wit:
lima Apply Lakeview Nursing
TO ALL PERSONS HAVING
M EDICARE EQUIPM EN T AND
Cantor, t lf E 2nd SI., Sanford
CLAIM S
OR
DEM ANDS
SUPPLY CO., located at SSS
AGAINST TH E ABOVE ESTA TE
Alltmerd# Commerce Boulevard,
AND ALL OTHER PERSONS
TELEPHONE SOLICITORS
Altamonte Spring*. County ol
IN TE R E S TE D IN TH E E S TA TE :
Seminole, Hate of Florida.
YO U
ARE
HEREBY
Thai ih* part!** interested in
N O T IF IE O
Ihat
tha
ad
u ld business are as follow*:
ministration ol Ih* oslot* of Loon
Wslkor's IGA Foadllnar, Inc
Hourly W ap plus Borws
C. Lowder, Jr., deceased. File
By Robert H. Walker
Number SI D ) CP, Is ponding In
Secretary-Treasurer
the Circuit Court lor Semlnola
Dated at Font Park, Seminole
Cal 122-2611
County, Florid*. Probata Division,
County, Florid*. August Ilth, Ifll.
CIRCULATION
D EPT,
th* address of which is Seminole
Publish: August SI, IS, September
County Courthouta, Sanford,
4, u, test
Florida u r n
DELHI?
The personal representative ol
Ih* eslala ll Shirlav A. Lewder,
whose address Is 111 Jay Drive,
Altamonte Springs, Florida D7SI
The name and address of Ih*
NOTICE OP PUBLIC MB ARINO
personal representative s attorney
TO C O N IIO IR ADOPTION OF BUOOBT
are set forth below.
AND CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS
All persons having claims of
PROGRAM FOR TH E
demands against iht estate art
C ITY OP LONOWOOD. PLORIDA
required,
W IT H IN
TH R EE
Th# City Commission ol the City ol Longwood. Florida will hold public
MONTHS FROM THE D A TE OF
htarlngs on Ih* proposed Ifll let) budget lor th* City ot Longwood,
THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF
Florid* and tha proposed Capital Improvement Program lor Iftl 1st)
THIS NOTICE, lo III* with Iho
lor Ih* City Ol Longwood. Florid* St 2:10 p m. on Monday, September
Clark ol tha above court a written
2f. Ifll.
statement ol any claim or demand
Tit# public hearings will b* held al Longwood City Hall. 175 West
they may have. Each claim mu*I
Warren Avenue, Longwood. Florida Copies ol Ih# proposed budget and
be In writing and must Indicat* th*
capital improvement program are available tor inspection*! City Hall
basis for Ih* claim, tha name and
175 Weal Warren Avanu* between the hours al 1:00 a m and 5 04 p m
addrass ol Iht creditor or his agent
A summary ol the proposed budget ond capital Improvement
or allornay, and Ih* amount
program is as follow*.
claimed II Ih* claim Is not yet
G ENERAL FUND
due. Ih* dale when II will become
Anticipated Revenue
11.577.000 00
due shall b* slated II th* claim Is
Police Department
119,417 00
contingent or unliquidated, th*
Fir# Department
117.140 00
nature of IM uncertainty shall be
Admlnlitratlon
210.174 00
titled II th* claim Is stctrtd. Ih*
Perks and Ret reel ion
I4.S47 00
security shall be described Th*
Street Department
171,111 00
claimant shall deliver sufficient
Contingency
copies ot ih* claim lo ih* clerk lo
(Operating Expenses)
70.000 00
■noble Ih* dark lo mall on* copy
Contingency
K .000 00
to each personal representative. Anticipated Surplus
10.504 00
All person* Intfrotlad In th*
lu m s m
itiata lo whom o copy ol this
U T IL IT Y FUND
Nolle* ol Ad mini it rot Ion has boon Anticipated Revenue
57*5,000 00
mailed art required. W ITHIN
Administration
0.751 00
TH R EE MONTHS FROM THE
Water Department
141,474 00
D A TE
OF
TH E
FIR S T
Sower Department
74.024 34
P U B L IC A TIO N
OP
TH IS
Debt Service
14.145 00
NOTICE, lo lit* ony obl act ions Contingency
they may have that challenge I he
(Operating Expenses!
15.000 00
validity ot th* decadent's will, Ih* Contingency
10.000 00
qualification* ol th* personal
Total Utility
represent*live, or the venue or
Fund Expenses
s » . m la
jurisdiction ol Iho court.
Anticipated Surplus
1744014*
ALL CLAIMS. DEMANDS, AND
ffTSiooB
OBJECTIONS NOT SO F IL E O
C E M E TE R Y PUNO
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
Anticipated Revenue
51.000 00
Dot* o! Ih* lirsl publication ot Surplus carried forward
sii.moo
this Nolle# of Administration:
Hi .'Hi M
September a, IN I.
Shirley A. Lowder
Eapanias
5JIOOO
As Personal Raprasantativ*
Anticipated Surplus
14.414 00
of th* fstatt of
sti.iUoo
Loon C Lowder, Jr.
CAPITAL IM P R O V IM E N TI P R M R A M
Paving (Oring* A y *, from
P tciitid
A T T O R N E Y FOR PERSONAL
Grant St. lo CR 412)
150.000 00
R E P R E S E N TA TIV E :
Drainage (Mud Lot* —
Michael L. Marlow.
island Lak* i
150.000 00
Parks and Racr **1ion
GRAHAM. M AR KEL, SCOTT.
115.000 00
MARLOWE. APPLETO N 4
City Hail (Eipansion ot
MCDONOUGH, P.A.
Pubfk Mooting Facility)
S15400 00
P.0 Drawer ION
Sowar Service
115.000 00
Winter Park, Florid# 1DM
Wafer Sarvkf
Tslsphant: IMS) *47 4011
Tofat
Publish: Saptambar 4, II, IM I
Publish: Saptambar It. Ifll
DEM 14
O EM If

COMMERCIAL
Refrigeration
Man Mutt Br Evperienced
Write United Food Protestor
P O Bov 7500 Sanlord, Fla
A I MECH., honett. bondable.
tober, family man Exp in
imports, domestic tuneupt.
brakes, air cond . carb.
capable mgmg shop Auto
Elec exp helpful, salary L
bonus lo right man Need help
lo get shop In operation in So
Sanlord 24* 5011 Geneva

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVE.
CALL 123-5170
CORNER OF 10th
ANDFRSHCM
Yaur future our cencern

* * * *

*

*

*

*

HAIRSTYLIST wanted
with following Immed
Call Delores 225 75TO

21— Situations Wanted
I will do housework, cooking and
driving lor th* disabled 221
0*05
BAB Y S ITTIN G My home
Day* by experienced
mother 121 2471

32— Houses Unfurnished

31-Apartmefrts Furnished

24-Business
Opportunities

LARGE Airy Furnished rooms
Maid service 471 Palmetto
Ave 3711441

SAN FOR O DUPLEX

2 bdr kids, pels S300 mo
Lake Mary 2 bdr. kids. 5750
CasSrlberfv 2 bdr. kids. SOSO
SANFORD UNFURHOUSES
) bdr, lam rm 1375
Lake Mary ) bdr. 5)50 Kids
Deltona 4 bdr, kids 5400

SAV-ON -RENTALS

WANT

AOS ARE BLACK L
w h it e
and r eao all
OVER.

» - Apartments
Unfurnished

SANFORD FUR APT
I bdr, utl. 160 dn 5190 mo
1 bdr. utl. 140 dn 540 wk

RIVERFRONT FUR HOUSE
Wekiya 2 bdr, a.r 5)00

SANFORD
Reas wkly. A
monthly rales Util me Kit
SOO Oak Adults 141 711) . *

’

Seminole
))f 7200
5AV ON R tN IA u S R E A L TO R
N EED A SERVICEM AN ) You’ll
find him listed in our Business
Directory
Furnished apartments lor Senior
Cititens 311 Palmetto Ave . J
Cowan No phone calls.

Rn|*y ceuntry living) ) Bdrm
Aptft. Olympic if . Peol.
Shen*nd**h Village. Open (-1.
m in i

_
■
i1
DEBARY j Bdrm. 2 Bain CMA
Close lo l 4. 17 (2 oil Dirksen
Dr 5)00 mo ISl, last. IKKI
Security 8)4 4776

nor rent - nicerrtleemenl home
with enclosed garage In
delighllul DeBary A lio 2
bdrm. 2 B mobile- home In
Meedowlea By th* River. Four
Townes Really Inc Broker
644 47)0_ ________ _
SANFORD
Idyllwilde School
Newly painted in A oul 3
q r . i B. fam rm CHA a ig
lenced yd no pels 5175 mo +
&lt;.-C 37) 4)77 Or 122 244(
2 BR. In Ground Pool Country
Club Manor, Sanlord Fenced.
5)50 mo 1st, Iasi and 1100
Deposit 647 8600
7 BDRM Fenced rrt yard 5)50 mo
• ‘ Security 1350 No pets
Children are line Day )27 0630
Alt 7 37) 6441
_____

SENIOR CITIZENS

2 BDRM Furn Apt Adults only,
no pets S215 mo includes
water 5100 dep 32) 754)

Sanlord — I odrm ♦ den,
ceramic
bath, lurnlture
available, adults, t i l l ma 1
44171*1_____________ ____
1 BDRM. I Bath. Large Living
Rm , corner llh and Elm 1)50
mo 4 5)50 drp ) ) ( 75)0 days
or 111 5145 evenings
Ridgewood Arms 2 Bdrm
Apts Irom *775 2 Bdrm also
avail Pool, tennis court 37)
4420
Beautiful large 7 Bdrm in city,
quiet area 5745 mo
*
Security I Ilk 4171
Mariner'* VIII40f On Lake Ada. I
bdrm front 1250. 2 bdrm from
1)40 Located 12 *2 just South
ol Airport Blvd In Sanlord All
Adults 1)21470
■— -------- . — . . .
f
Mellonvillf
Trace
Apis
Spacious, modern. 2 Bdrm, l
Bath apt. Carpeted, kit
equipped.
CHSA
Near
hospital A lake. Adulls. no

4XtS 1)7 0 222 #25)
I BDRM Wall lo wall carpet,
Cent MA Convenient lo
downtown 11(5 mo 322 7747 or
.13 144)______________ ______
v ttJ tO R Y
R ^ a r t m e n f-%.Fam ily A Adults saetton.
Poolside 7 Bdrms. Master's
Cove Apts SSS 7(00 Open on
weekend

EVER Y DAY 15 BARGAIN
DAY IN TH E WANT ADS 272
M il or 1)1 ftf)

1 BDRM Private yard Near
Yankee Lake, W ol I 4 on 46
51(0 mo includes elect &amp; wa
ter Adulls 122 7477 eve

two questions Will you be
linancially independent in 2 to
5 years) Are you peld what
you are worth) it not cell 111

BAMBOO COVE 7 bedroom
apts Available Manager on
premises. 213 1)40

Two bed, two bath
New home in Deltona

Lake Mary Clean Furn Apt
Reliabled Man only
No
children, pels 377 300

$325 Monthly
Call Linda Jo,
574-6080

O l A—D uplexes
WHY SAVE IT
SELL IT
QUICKLY with a Fast Acting,
low Cost Classified Ad
SANFORD new 2 bdr, I b'h. all
kit appl. I mo rent, sec dep
] ) ( 1542
SAN F OR O new 2bdrm,
2 bth
Lake Ave B4( 1124
2 bdrm, 2 B 2541 Ridgewood
Ave , Sanford Kit furn.. 5)35
mo + dep. No pets 7(8 1723
eves 2(5 0072 days Call
Colled

O E l TONA nearly new 7 bdr
Microwave sell dean ovrns
Discount to qualified party
305 S6( 64(7

36— Resort Property
New Smyrna Beach Luxurious 2
Bdrm 3 Bath Townhouse, Pool,
Tennis. Sundeck. Color TV
Low oil season rates 2(8 3064

37— Business Property
For rent or lease — 10,320 sq II
industrial or warehouse (14
W 1st S t. Sanford 373 UOO

~g-Vfcxjses Unfurnished

CONVENIENCE
STORE
CASHIERS

2 BR. I B. no air. lor 5150 mo +
Sec dep
I BR. Ml B w Cert H A lor 5)75
mg t Dep
) BR, 1 B w Cen H A, lurn or
unturn. lor 5450 mo + Oep
, HAROLD HALL R E A L TY . INC
R E A L T Y ,INC
REALTOR
22) 5774
3bdrm, 2 B wilh
double car garage. In
Deltona Call 574 14)7

Good salary, hosp'talijation. I
week paid vacation every 4
months
Experience
not
necessary
For interview
phone the manager at
Airport Blvd
Casselberry
Celery Ave.
Lake Mary

12)4)11
l » 1715
271411)

m lias

CONSULT OUR

A N D L E T AN E X P E R T D O T H E J O B

Ug«l Wofict~

Ltgol Notice

T o L is t Y o u r B u s i n e s s D ia l 3 2 2 - 2 6 1 1 o r 8 3 1 - 9 9 9 3

Air Gondtloning
Chris will service AC'S, retrls,
•retiers, water coolen, mlsc.
Call 322 *777.

. - a . i n ----a.
loncrere wont
1 MAN Q U A LITY OPERATION
( yrs exp Polios, Driveways
etc Wayne Beal 17? Ijd

Alton tions

Mini-U-Lock
Somebody is looking lor your
hargen Offer it today in the
Classified Ads

B M u ty C tro

TOW ER’S B E A U TY SALON
FORM ERLY Harriett's Beauty
Nook Stf E 1st S»„ 327 57*1

E LECTR IC IAN 10 yrs exp All
lype* ol electrlal work at fair
price* 22) 02)4

Snow Hill Kennel alien Cat l
Dog Flea Baths 55 up 24
Hour. Full Service M 1 S7I 2

Building Contractor
am Corso. Slot* Certified
B u i ld i n g
C o n tra c to r.
Residential or Commercial.
New or Romodalfd 3710444

CaramicTlli
Complete Ceramic Tile lerv.
walls. Ilocrs. countertops, re
model, repair Fr esi. 13(0111
M E IN T IE R TILE
New or repair, leaky shower*our
specialty.75yrk Exp 54(9547

Clock Rsfwlr

Paddle Ians installed,
residential electrical work
call 277 *745

Painting, carpentry, all typpy 0?
homa repair* Call tor tree
estimate 377 iy?j

Hauling A
Yard Work
Little want ads bring big. big
results Just try one 337 7611
or 4)1 ( ( ( )

Homt Improvtmtfit
C EN TR AL FLORIOA HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Painting. Rooting. Carpentry
Lie Bonded B Guaranteed
Free Estimates 321 764t
J l B Homt Improvement —_
Carpentry work at any type
Roof repairs, gutter wort,
painting (interior or exterior),
plumbing, speclalltt in mobile
home repairs I roof coating,
and wood polio decks Free
estimate 22) 6056

v B H C T iw T W m

■*, w

m

f

Acrtuge i tot clearing
rill dirt top soil
tor sal* 3121433

• » » I ». - - ■

We handle the
Whole Ballot Wax

B. E. Link Const.
322-7039
Financing Available

you are having difficulty
finding a pi*Ce to live, car to
drive, a 10b, or some service
vou hive need ot. read all our
•
a a ml1 ads every 04 if

Painting

Roofing

Hallman Pamlmg t Repairs
Quality work Fre* E it, Dike
lo Seniors *14 S4f0. Refer.

ROOFS, laaki repaired. Replace
rattan tayet ond sMugla work,
llctnia'd. IMured, beaded.
Mike 113 *271.

TER R Y ‘S IN TER lORS
W allpjpanng, painting Low
prices Guar work 321 0434

Christian Rooting 17 yrs exp
14( 5750. tret est Reroofing,
specialil* in repair work A
new roofing________________

ClAttited Ad% Are It* trnAlletf
Ihq newt ifemii you will find
ArtyMitre
II

Painting 4 or
Pressure Cleaning
No job loo large or small
Quality a must Call 377 0071
References Fr Esi

Plumbing

Landscaping

Re mod* ling Specialist

•Oak Haven Rest Home*
•DeLande
Small home like ACLF facility
situated very pleasant location
short distance Irom cily &gt;4
hour supervision, meals,
laundry, assistance with bath
A personal grooming Large
lenced In yard, air con
dttlonmg Private A semi
private rooms Call 7)64451

HomaRapaira
Did Tatfty have a m i i , ot kit
tens? Set; them with a fait
action Cla kill ted Ad Call i n
2*11 or 111 ftf)

Remodeling

Rest Homos

HBndymin

l a r o e t r e e IN S TA LLER
LfftMcoping. Old Lawn* R*
BMcad J4S5JB1

(- n-v_- v • *

N EED A SERVICEM AN’ You'll
img him listed m our Business
Directory

Odd Jobs

G W A L T N E Y JE W E L E R
K a S P o rk A v t
33)4S0f

Concrete Work, footers, floors A
pool* Landscaping 4 tod
work F r to rs i 322 7W3

OUR RATES ARE LOWER
Lakeview Nursing Center
( H E Second SI . Sanlord
317 *707

Quality electrical work 77 yrs
| axprrience Minor repairs to
complete wiring 27) 021*

Boarding A Grooming
Animal Haven Boarding and
Grooming Kenntls Shady,
insulated, screened, tty proof
inside, outside runs Fans'.
Also AC cages We caler lo
your pels
Starling stud
registry Ph 12) 5752

Vacation time Is here get what
you need lor a happy time with
a Classified Ad

E Metrical
Nursing Center

ALTER ATION S by Loll 775
Flamingo
Dr
Sunland
Estate*, Sanlord. Call 222 5141

Prtuur* Cleaning

Freddie Robinson Plumbing.
Repairs.' laucals. W
C.
Sprinklers 12) ASIO. &gt;7)4/04
FONSECA PLUM BING Can
struct ion, Repair*. E morgen
cy. Lie . Bonded, In* ] ) j *0)5

SOUTHERN ROOFING 15 yrt
exp, re roofing, leak special
ill Dependable A honest
price Day or night 221 111 )

Sandblasting
SANDBLAITINO
DAVIS W ELDING
M M Itt, SANFORD

Trw S a rvia

Trimming, removing 4 Land
scaping Fro# Est. » ) S a ]

Plumbing repair all types
water heatrts A pumps
111 147)
CLASSIFIED AOS ARE FUN
AOS READ A USE THEM
O FTEN YO U ’LL LIK E T H f
RESULTS

if you a rt having ditticul
finding a place, lo live, car
drive, a job. or soma sorvl
you have need pi, read all o
want ads every day,

-*&gt; .*&gt;

�.u

I 1

37— Business Property
SANFORD
t.000 *q (t If, Industriil or
Commercial Building on 17 v;
1,000 II in office space. Coll
377 5510 or 114 4147_________
o r a n g e c i t y - It 43, lOOO sq
It business condo New,
beautiful. inWhIspering Pinet
Ideal lor professional otlices
or restaurant (MSI 7»3 i f ).

41— Houses

41— Houses

HAl COLBERT REALTY

ASSUMABLE - No qualifying
14*. 3nd mtg can be held by
owner S4S.000 7 br, 1ba. eat in
kit family room A reading
room
Micnatl R Capko
Broker Owner
444 I7l40r 373 MSS

Inc.

313-7132
Eves 377 041*
707 E . 75th St
CUSTOM
built
homes,
remodeling l
additions
Johnny Walker Const L TD
377 *457

r o b b i i ’s

37-B— Rental Offices
SANFORD
7000 sq It. II IndullriAl or
Commercial Building on 17 43
1.000 ll. in office space Call
377 SSI0 or 134 4141
Ofllce Sp«ce
For Lease
430 7737
O FFICE Spare carpeted and air
conditioned Ideal lor lawyers,
doctors and realtors Small or
large Up lo 1.000 sq II
Centrally
located
near
Sambos 373 ft SO or *34 SSO*

38— Wanted to Rent
COUPLE, no children, need 3
Bdrm house by Nov 1st Good
location in Sanford 3*51353
3 RESPONSIBLE Gentlemen
want apartment or house lor
the month ol Feb References
available 333 0(3* alt 5 p m

40— Condominiums

R IA L T Y
REALTOR . MLS
7341 S. French
Suite 4
Santard

24 HOUR m 322-9283

NEW LY turn I Bdrm Full
equip Kit, Pool. 1st. last &gt;150
Security I yr lease Sf4 3353

41— Houses

Alger &amp; Pond
REALTY, INC.
V A REPOS t Only &gt;3000 dn to
assume mortgage on 3 bdr. I
bath home With utility room,
carport, cent H A A buy at
&gt;13 000
LOW M ONTHLY PAYM ENTS
with owner financing' 3 bdr,
split plan home, includes wrh
r m . utility A fenced yard
Take a look tor )3*.f00
CALL

323-7843
R E A LTO R S
ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
Eicellent Business opportunity
in good location Complete
stock included in this price ol
&gt;teoo
354* &gt;. French m a i n
Altar Haurti &gt;4* f«0«, 313 «77»
FOR SALE by Builder. 3 Bdrm. 3
Bath Home Call evenings S t
331 0507

Rag. Real Bilal* BraAar '
117 4471
■ « 113-1H4
A TTEN TIO N GOLFERSI II you
want lo live close to the
Beaulllul
M aylair ,Golf
Course, this 1 Bdrm, 3 Bath
Spacious home is the location
lor you Large fenced yard.
Family Rm. Cent HA arc
some ol the lectures Add the
assumable mortgage and
tdyllwilde Elementary for the
children and you've got a
,
Super buy at &gt;53.700 HAA
buyer* warranty.
OS1EEN Small 7 bdrm home
Newly remodeled, new ap
pliances Fenced lot 77i1St 5
___I IASOO 33tlll7. 34* 5451___
Large Iram i home in Lake Mary
on beautiful wooded acre 1
bdrm. Fla rm or 4lh bdrm. I&lt; y
6 , CHA. carpet, drape*,
garage carport &gt;lf.«00 131
It
Alger and Poncf Really Inc
If* W. Lake Mary Blvd
Associate* Wanted
373 7*43

ASSOCIATES^ INC. REALTORS*
17 unices Throu^wut
Central Florid*

L A K E MARY

‘1

~r

C allB art

kjsit
l{l

\l

I V I

7 BR.. Pool 104 country Club
Drive VA, FHA Conv 134.000
New Roof *47 MOO Broker
Owner.

\ 11

MLS

121-0041

LOCH ARBOR 3 Br. 3 B Is. Fern
Rm. wet bar, FPL. privacy
fence *41.5*0

STENSTROM
REALTY- REALTORS
Sanford's Sales Leader

321-0041
REALTOR
Alter hr* 337-4413 and 331 7154
OPEN HOUSE 10 4
Osceola A El Portal 3 br. 3 ba
cent air heat, eat In kit,
144 500 Owner will carry mtg
with &gt;10.000 down at 13 •» in
terest tor 13 mo or F HA. VA
Michael R Capko
Lie Real Estate Broker
M« 1714. 333 7155
LOOKING FOR ACREAGE We
have it From 1 to 5 Acres
Easy Terms Priced Irom
if .000
A T T E N T IO N IN V E STO R S 3
Story Block Building Toned
GC7 Upstairs is Rented
apartment Downstairs has
enclosed 3 car garage stall
Owner will assist. IM .000
MOBILE HOME with Guest
collage 3 Bdrm 3 Bath Fur
n&lt;shed Mobile Home with t
Bdrm 1 Bath Furnished col
tape Located on 5 lots Et
cellent location &gt;45.000

S TEM P ER A O EN C Y
REALTOR »77 4tti Day or Night

H a ro ld H a ll

WE LIST AND S IL L
MORE HOMES THAN
ANYONE IN TH E
SANFORD AREA
JUST FOR YOU! 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
home on a lovely landscaped
loti Eliras include Cent HA.
Wall to Wall carpal, eat in
kitchen, dining rm. washer,
dryer, storage building and
more Price It &gt;*3.44*.
3 Bdrm. I Bath ham*
in Sunland with equipped
kitchen, panelled living rmDA. Florida rm with lirtplaca.
wall t* wll carpal and much
mart. Assumable mortgage.
Price It *44.304.

lo vely

JUST LISTE D 3 Bdrm. 1 Bath
brick hame with split bdrm
plan Cant HA, wall It wall
carpet, patig. large fenced
yard and mart. *41.4*4.

R E A L TO R

PRICED R EDUCED S1.4M New priced belew appraittl.
this I bdrm name w-beamed
ceilings A lavely. shaded let it
SanterB’s bast buy at aniy
&gt;33.44411
C O M P L E T E L Y ramadeled 3
unit apt house w larva rooms,
paddle Ians, smoke alarms +
positive cash Howl 147.44411
EVER Y PARENT'S OREAM A separata puett haws* tar
your leenaaer came* w this
tit* tg It 1 bdrm homo w eal la
kitchen, Dininf Rm, lirve
bdr ms. + lavely fenced yard
tar anly S47.t**lt
EASY ASSUMPTION an this A
|ty CB split plan w Can H A.
W W cpt. Drapes. Eg*.
Disposal, ter parch + fenced
censer tail Bast price in areal
Call quick at S44.7MII
CLEAN.
CLEAN,
C LE A N
describes this easy living
ham* and its neighborhood!
Panelled Fam Rm, tat in kit
• I p -f Ret. big bdrm*, I
utility bldgs ♦ *4 • 131 land
tcaptd tat tar *».***! t
N E ED PRIME EXPOSURBf
We have two separata parctls
with eicellent frontage.
RMOl toned 1 bdrm *n 114 i
344 parcel w passible owner
financing*1 S44.M4and* EC-1
toned 3 toned 1 bdrm w M ■
11) tat tar SM.4MII

CALL 329-5774

S ACRES. TALL PINES. SOME
PASTURE. ROAD FRONT
AGE. RIVER ACCESS. GEN
EVA S7S.000
30 ACRES WOODED ROLLING
HILLS IN G EN EVA AREA
&gt;3500 PER ACRE. SELLER
FINANCING. MAY DIVIOE
7'y AC R ES, T A L L PINES.
G EN EVA. 113.300. LOW IN
TER E S T
ASSUM ABLE
M ORTGAGE

5 CLEAR ED O U P LE x LOTS IN
SANFO RD $17,500 EA C H .
ZONED FOR QUADS OR OF
FICES
100 ON 17*3. NEAR NEW
WINN O IX IE C E N TE R COM
ING AT LAKE MARY BLVD
ZONED
C O M M E R C IA L .
1171.00
4 HOM ESlTES IN ORANGE
GROVE AT U M A TILLA 17500
e a c h , cr azy ter m s
*♦ ACRES WOODED LIK E A
PARK. ON TOP OF A HILL IN
G E N E V A &gt;40.000. TER M S
AVAILABLE
7'y ACRES WOOOEO ROAD
F R O N T A G E IN O S T E E N
S17.S00
SACRES WOODED JACKSON
BAY
AR EA.
O STEEN
SU.SOO. S E L L E R F IN A N
CING
SKIOLRR R IA L T Y BROKER
371-4*41
Looking For a New Home? —
Check trie Waal Ads for houses
of every sit* and price

322-2420

THlSIS NOMISPRINT
New 74 ■ *0 Royol Oaks J bdrm. 7
B. fireplace, cathedrel celling,
great room, gordon tub,
A many more eitras, only
&gt;77.750 delivered A set up
within 130 miles VA no money
down, conventional 10% down
Shop Uncle Roy’s Mobil*
Home Sale) in Leesburg, on
441 South 1*04) 7)7 0314 Open
weeknlghts 'til 7 30. Sundays
17 * p m
New 14 ■ 70 Royal Oak) 3 bdrm,
3 B. *14,443. or 14 • *4 3 bdrm.
IVy B. &gt;13.445 delivered A set
up within 150 miles W* have
VA linanclng. no money down
or conventional 10 \ down
Easy linanclng only at Unci*
Roys Mobil* Ham* Sales US.
441 Leesburg (4041 317 0134,
open weeknighls ’til 7:10
Sundays 13* p m,
ATLAS 10i4*
I Bdrm &gt;3500
34* 3350
See our baautllul new BROAD
MORE, front A rear BR )
G R EG OR YM O BILE HOMES
3*03 Orlando Dr
333 5300
VA A FHA FInaneinq

Executive Home In Beautiful
Idyllwllde. ) Bdrm*. 7 Bath, w
Cent. H A Screened Solar
Heated Pool 4 Patio Lovely
Tree Shaded Lot S74.500
Capr Cod 4 Bdrm. 3 Bath. Mint
Condition
Large Master
Bedrm Walk To Stores And
Fin* Restaurants Good Buy

sst.too
Country Home. 3 Bedrooms. 3
Baths 4 10 Acre. I Yrs Old,
Large
Fam ily
Room,
Fireplace. A Must To See
1*4.000
S A L E S A S S O C IA T E S
NEEDED
S opdfilnf* toft.
Call F ra n k

UM NO

7

W EST HWY 44

P H .H U 428

Good Used TV'S. &gt;75 A up
MILLERS
7*t*OrlandoFr.
Ph 377 0357

54— Garage Sales
7 FAM ILY sale antique frames,
collectibles, misc . plants 303
Woodmere Blvd , Sanlord
LAMPS, dishes, pols A pans,
good clolhinq. misc Sat A
Sun 9 till ?8 H S French Ave
TWO FAM ILY sale.
4 5 Saturday
70* Laurel Dr , Sanlord
A U TO parts, high chair,
glassware clothes. A misc
Sat 9 5 107 Bunker Lane.
Sanford
L A R G E garage salr aulos.
antiques, lots, lots more Sat
A Sun 10 » IS4 W Crystal Lk
A ve . Lake Mary
BACK yard salr Sat A Sun .
come make your choice 7907
S Park Ave 9 1
CNTY WIDE oar sale L M H S
Band New use. food, plants,
turn Lk Mary H S . Srpl 17,
9 3 Longwood Lk Mary Rd .
oil 477

German Shepherd Male 3 Yr*
Super with children eic
Watch dog 4300 333 5357

¥

¥

¥

¥

¥

¥

Farm equip and toots, two
Massey Ferquson tractors
w in Iron! end motors One
Ford tractor, one Bush Hog
mower 3 S It Bo« blades, one
d'SC. three pickup trucks, one
75 Fury 7 dr sedan one horse
trailer, one equip trailer, one
77 It sell contained camper,
very laroe assortment ot tools,
turmture. appliances, an
liqucs. qiass. nick nacks

VERY LAR GE
ESTATE
For In fo rm a tio n
call A A A
A U C T IO N IN C.

Animal Haven Kennels boarding
A grooming Needed Lhasa
Apso A small silver poodle lor
stud Male owners call 373
57S3
AKC REG Toy Poodle pups 4
wks. Irmale 7 blk. I erm 1173
A S773 M l 4434

¥

303-139-7020 305-339-2070
R AM SEY A SON

A U C TIO N E ER S,
L IQ U ID A TO R S ,
APPRAISERS

Wile* Sales N UTR EN A Feeds
Hwy 44 W. -3131170
Hog F misher Pellets
is «$
Layer C
S390
CallleFallrner Pellets
33 30
BeelKwik
sr 93

750 HONDA 73 eicellent con
d lion Windjammer SS many
e.tras 51500 373 1319
HONOA XL 350 74 In good
condition S500 Call alt 4 pm
430 7443_____________________
D O N T S T O R E lT SfcLL IT With
a low cost Classified Ad

7lA-Mopads
1971 MOTOBECANE 1 top ot the
line) S0CC Recently rebuilt
enq.ne Very good cond, In
eludes saddle baskets Askina
S400 All » p m 373 4553
Are you a lull time driver with*
part lime carl Our classilieds
are loaded with good buy tor
you

:1tOAYTONA AUTO AUCTION
Hwy 93. t mile west ot Speed
way. Daytona Beach, will hold
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at 1 p m It'S
me only one in Florida You set
the reserved price Call 904
353 4311 lor further details
73 T BIRD Loaded New Tiles.
Blue with While Top. or 74
Cutlass Supreme No money
down 175 mo 339 9100.434 4403
Dealer
1977 AMC SEDAN. Acyl,
autotrans. very clean
17130 377 IMI
1915 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille
Full power. A C. low mileage.
AM FM leather interior
3710171
71 VOLVO 147 4 Sp
cloth seats Good
Cond &gt;900 37) 4737
II M AVERICK * cyl eno
A C. radio, e.cellenl
condition S430 373 3M)

75— Recreational Vehicles

66— H o rse s
Appaloota rrgtifff rd stud. black
with white blanket Also 17
month old filly. Mme color
123 1714 alter 6

19(0 CHEVY Step Van 735 4 c y l.
4 sp. 10 000 lbs GVW $730
333 4174

76— Auto Parts

67— Livestock-Poultry
COWSANOHOGS
FOR SALE
349 S3S4

Used Car Parts all makes and
models 337 7497 We buy Used
Cars and Trucks
CASH FOR CARS
Running or not
339 1944

68— Wanted to Buy

7) FORD Grand Torino sports 7
dr lull powrr A C. oood
condition &gt;150 firm 37) 1504
7) P O N TIA C Catalina lull
powrr. A t mechanical, needs
hod* work &gt;350 37) 1504
nave a room to rent! Let a
classified ad lind a tenant tor
ynu*
t B &amp; H A u to

Antiques Diamonds Oil
Paintings Oriental Rugs
Bridges Antiques
333 7401

BUY JUNK CARS A TRUCKS
From 110 to ISO or mort

DROP LEAF table, paint, new
irwelry, Avon, novelties, misc
1319 Palmetto Ave F riS a tt?

Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass. Silver, gold Weekdays
1 4 30. Sat 9 I KOKOMO Tool
Co 911 W 1st St 333 1100

Top Dollar Paid for Junk A Uled
car*, truck* 1 heavy equip
ment 372 5990

c«u

4440

Sales

★

A - 3 3 9 -7 9 0 9 *

77—Ju n k C ars Rem oved

PORCH sale antiques, lurndure.
linens, kil ware A odds A
m dl Frl A Sal 9 4 401 W 1st
SI_________________________

73Volk% Elation won
74 Audi F ob
74 Butck 775 coupe
77 Thunderti.rd
77 Sunbird

SI90D0
&gt;7100
l ) t 00
utoo
&gt;3900

bank Imancinq available
33 N Hwy 17 97
Caisalbarry

'B m m p l

*20001

47A-Mortgage*
Bought

A Sold

Wt pay cash lor 1st A 7nd
mortgages Ray Legg. Lie.
Mortgage Broker 3)4 77*4

AND WE WILL MAKE
YOUR
FIRST 2 PAYMENTSUI

SO—Miscellaneous for Sale
RCA VIDEO Recorder lor your
Television Comes w in I I I ) *
hr Tapes and Storage case
377 4*11
M EN ’S. LADIES' AND CHIL­
DREN'S 3* % eft all Slut
Denim Jeans, Liberty Bibb
Overalls and bools Eorty bird
got* soloction of silos.
WILCO SALES HWY 44 W *
Ml W OF 14 SANFOEO 111
*47)

This is truly the time to buy
Smile your way back to schoollll
• ••

Sleeping B*gs Solo
114 44*#
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
310 Sanlord Ave
177S74I

RIGHT NOW WE ALSO HAVE SURER DEALS ON
PRE-OWNED CARS AND TRUCKS...

POOL TABLE lor salr 47»S7
inches Single Stale lop
Quarter type *350 333 0404

lob* put together SI50 Utility
trailer Ills 1 Haque water
conditioners complete 7 yrs
1500 Riding lawn mower. 5 HP
S73 177 4330 no Suns

King ilia bod (Mo tram*) W
Condition
ra itu .
Th* "Good Ota Oays” hova
never left th* Class Hied Ad
1 . . Th* Buys ar* still Th*
Basil
______
N IC E Twin Obi racondition
bedding 110 Set. Sanlord
Auction 1315 A French 333
3)40

___ 51—Appliances
LIK E NEW GE Refrigerator 14
cu. It. 1 yr eld S300 C E Gas
Oryar also I yr. old SIS0 Call
333 7M7.

r w r &lt;r •

/

ON
NEW CARS

DiscauHfs

We buy equity in Houses,
*p*rtments. vacant land and
Acreage LUCK Y INVEST
M ENTS. P O Bo i 7500. San
lord. Fla 17771 133 4141

WILSON M AlER FU R N ITU R E
311 U S E F IR S T S !
333 S473__________

DELL'S A U C TIO N
CENTER

53—TV Radio-Stereo

65— Pets-Supplies

¥

ESTATE A U C T IO N
S A T. SEPT. 12,
10 A .M . 3 2 2 -H w y
4 3 4 , Lo n g w o o d ,
Fla. B e tw e e n
4 2 7 -1 7 -9 2 o n 4 3 4
TH E ESTATE
O F THE LATE MR.
A N T H O N Y A U S TIN

XI 75 Honda
S77S
333 F’ l* alter*

W ANTEO to buy 3 Bdrm House
Sanlord Area 373 7**7 Aft t
pm .

*4 B S A W ITH 4* motor needs

■ abnet of ••tola. Kln« sn4 (wll aUb M s CBfitpbtE.
CBwekdt a chain. 14 O rst* r b w wpftt**rg4 itMfc. v b Iw m
I1SMM9. Matftm trip** ( n w r with mirror, M frame
anahM(fcearV. A M aitoW N *chain. CamgtoSg linkaa*
|4 i slava wait with cabinet lar malar heme er camper.
Dean, TV's, a t* all bines el ether hewieheto Hams, la rye
a small- A M el nice alas*wars Hams aatf bric-a-brac.
Bring Your Track — Cash Dear Prlits

14 t Harvest Gold Side bv side
Whirlpool Cost &gt;450 I 40 Will
lake &gt;393 Rrceipts available
333 7045

Don’t Despair Or Pull Your Hair
Use A Want Ad 377 7411 or
431 S993

II you aren't using your pool
table, take a cue. and sell it
with a Herald class.Fed ad
Call 377 7411

CASH FOR E Q U ITY
W* can do** in eg hr*
CallBart Real Estate 313 7441

M AK E ROOM *TO STORE
YOUR
W IN TE R
IT E M
S SELL "D O N ’T NEEDS”
FAST W ITH A WANT AD.
Phone 373 M il or 131 4443 and
' a friendly Ad Visor will help
you.

11-

Ken more parts, service, useo
washers MOONEY APPLI
ANCES 333 04*7

For Estate. Commercial or
’'Residential Auctions A Ap
praisai*. Call Dell’s .Auction
373 S470

47— Reai Estate Wanted

4 PIECE Antique Dmlng Rm
Suite, antique Oak high back
otllc* chair Wood chairs and a
lew other items 333 44$S

FRIDAY, SEPTEM BER
PM

52— Appliances

Tt-Mptorevctas

72— Auction

B E A U T Y SHOP, complete,
everything you need to open a
thop For detail! cell 377 3501

HUNTERS' SPECIAL, ready lor
this season 4a4S *1500 You
deliver 333 0171

A U C T IO N
SA LE

F IL L DIRT A TOP SOIL
YELLO W SAND
Call Clerk A Hlrt 333 7540
Lawn Mower Sales and Service
We Sell the Best and Service
the Rest Bob Ball Western
Auto Ml W 1st SI

•
■1■

OVIEDO let Cream Sandwich
Shop Fully equip 117.500 345
7144 or 345 7171

313-5774

HOUSE YOUR FAM ILY

43— Lots-Acreage

M AYFAIR VILLAS! t A 1
Bdrm.. &gt; Bath Cende Villas,
nail It Mayfair Country Club.
Select ytur tat, llaar plan A
interior docorl Quality con
ttructod by Shoomrttr for
S47.1M A upt

43— Mobile Homes

REALTY, INC.

UPP
yw t

46— Commercial Property

&gt;M&gt;
Port

62— Lawn Garden

HE A L L
WASHED

R EDUCED 4 Bdrm. 1 lath 3
story hame In Dreamwatd with
great rm and llreplact. wall t*
wall carpal, largt roams,
landscaping, convenient art*.
Haw lull *34,400.

C A L L A N Y T IM E

P.ano lor sale L'ndman A Sons
upright with bench, cir 1430
oood condition S750 Call 333
4704 alter 5 p m
I9f0 THOMAS Playmate
organ with bench
373 537*

a SN’T

3 ACRES C LEAR ED LAND IN
PAOLA 135.000

B E A U TIF U L L Y Appointed 4 Br,
7 B on If Acres. FPL. paof.
fenced, wooded. IMS.***.

I
—
59-Musical Instruments

50 trusses.
30' long
373 4714 alter a

322-7*43

C H A R M IN G
LANDM ARK
HOME 1430 Park Aye 4 b d r,
l ’ y bath, breakfast room,
formal dining room, garage
apt many amenities E i
cellent cond Call m to tee

_________ t _
.—
..
13 FT TRI HULL. 45 Johnson
motor A trailer SII50 Anyone
interested qo to Reddinq
Gardens Apt 45

61— Building Materials

SlA-Fum Hure
544 W Lake Mary Blvd
IN DRIFTW OOD VILLAGE

%

Like New 4 7 C A H. Carpeted,
screen
porch
Enclosed
garage Owner financing
Good Terms Asking &gt;51.500

321-0759

Friday, 5*pt. 11.1*91-11*

Evening Hora Id. Sanford. FI.

55-Boats A Accessories

NE*T WEEK:
V0U JAW I T AU.RXA5.THE LATEST
THE .
SETBACK IN OIK FALTERING CLIMB
W ORLDS
UPTNE EV0U)Ti0NART l APTER! THE
LEADING
5FECIAL PES5EET TO BRING PAINLESS
WEIGHT UM6 IS O U S T ANOTHER GAJNER! ' s c u lp to r
OF
Bu t PONT BE DISCOURAGED, MMOR!
SDAP.'
EDISON HAD THOUSANDS DF
FAILURES BE FDRE HIS
FIRST SUCCESSFUL
LIGHT BULB '
vTP

7 4 Acres I A 3 3 Br Home. 3 Br
Mobile Root cellar Fish tank.
300 Ft Watertront Terms
&gt;41.500

REAL ESTA TE
REALTOR . 377 74V*

When you place a Classified Ad
■n The Evening Herald, *tay
dose to your phone because
something wonderful is about
to happen

JVMI
potzic lum r

with Major Hoopla

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Lie Real Estate Broker
7*40 Sanford Ave
THE C E N TU R Y 31 SYSTEM
HELPS more people buy and sell
more real estate than anyone
else in America Call today
and let it work for you Call
371 3050
Hayes Real Estate
Services.Inc
*35 W 35th SI
Sanford
Each ofllce is independently
owned and operated

CHARMING 3 Br, 1 1 1 story,
pool, tame rm. Nico area
eitra let. 444,44*

K I(A

I . !.

B A TE M A N H E A L T Y

I!
Condo lor rent 3 bdr, I' &gt;bath
in Sanlord
Call 337 0*45

LABOR DAY SPECIALS
I Acre 3 G C 7 Sewer and water
Priced tor quick sale Terms
S77.S00

«

2

m o Z- I

T tag. law milas, avia,
laadrd. black

&lt;■
\

*8995
1071Cows*
Aula.. AC.
14.444 anginal milt*

1976Oiavrotat 4x4 1977Oitvy Mazer 1440Fw4MOO
SPECIAL AT

*«»• . AC
wftatt ftra*

*4695
1974VW

*3995
*2495
1979Buick 1979Caprice Classic
Rtvtara Landau

1Bear, law milas.
Shawream a.w

1 tana stlvae.qil the agtians.

..... *8995
1 *2895
1979Fori 4x4 1979Pontiac SvnMri
1
*5195
1 *W 5
E ilt* sJtarg.
lawmilaagt

%

Auta. AC. 44.0*4 milt*.
7 taps

~

I

Sugar Baafta
S
4 sgaad. lie. 11,0*4 mitat B

1 1* cheat* tram

*2595 I
I9
60Baick Regal 1f

*6995

*7295 1

*5795
1979Iraace

II I

FORD

.w

Limited, leaded
withhuilt in CB

4

�/

f t r

WA— gvtwlnj HtraId. Unford, FI.

Frkfay. 8opt, n , i n i

90 Year Sentence Possible

Zacke Found Guilty In Killer Hiring

FLORIDA

By DARLENE JENNINGS
Herald Staff Writer
It look a six member Jury just under an hour Thursday to
f ind Clai ence Albert Zacke, 43, guilty In his second solicitstionto-murder trial since April. Zacke now faces up to 90 years in
prison if he receives the maximum penalty for the second
conviction.
Zacke was found guilty of hu !n« Thomas Kiker of Rockledge
to find someone to kill Kenneth tourithew, a pilot who once
worked for him and testified against him in a marijuana
smuggling case. Merithew reportedly worked ss a police
undercr.er agent.
For now, Brevard-Semlnole Circuit Judge Stanley Wolfman,
has not handed down a sentence for Zacke.
“I'm not going to impose a sentence pending delivery of a
pre-sentence report. After the pre-sentence report, I will set a
date for sentencing," Wolfman said.
Zacke an auto parts dealer, from West Melbourne showed no
emotion ns the verdict was read about 4 p.m. Thursday in the
Seminole County Courthouse second-floor courtroom.
Zacke's trial had been moved to Sanford from Brevard
County after his attorney complained of excessive media
coverage.
Until he is sentenced, the accused will remain in the custody
of the Brevard County sheriff. Today Zacke is in Brevard
County Jail.
Zacke’s defense attorney, Joseph Mitchell, of Melbourne,
called no witnesses to testify on behalf of his client. Zacke,
himself, never took the stand.
However, the state attorney, Chris White, presented seven
witnesses against Zacke. White said he was “relieved and
happy to hear the guilty verdict.
"There was no doubt In my mind that Zacke was guilty of
soliciting murder,” White said. "It was a quicker trial than I

IN BRIEF
Utilities Customers To Pay
$100Million For Added Fuel
TAIJ.AHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) — Customers ol the
state’s major power companies will be paying more
than 1100 million in additional fuel charges because of
a Florida Supreme Court decision.
The charges — stemming from fuel costs during
February and March 1980 —are expected to be spread
out over 12 months.
The high court, in a 5-1 decision Thursday, sided with
the Public Service Commission and the state's in­
vestor-owned utilities in agreeing that the disputed fuel
costs had not been recovered as claimed by Public
Counsel Jack Shrcve.
Shreve, who represents consumers before the PSC,
had filed a suit challenging a commission order
authorizing the 1100 million in charges. The charges
then were delayed pending outcome of his suit

Puma Pegged As Godfather'
TORT LAUDERDA1.F, (UPI) - A six-month investigatlon of an organized crime ring officials say
sold stolen food stamps, credit cards, birth certificates
and pilot licenses has netted a man investigators
believe is south Florida's "godfather."
Joseph Puma. 67, and 10 other - Including some
believed connected with the Bonnana-Galante crime
family in New York - were arrested near the "IJltle
Italy" restaurant in Hallandale.
MaJ. Nick Navarro, head of Broward County’s
Organized Crime Unit, said Puma, a longtime reputed
crime figure, is believed to have become the major
figure in south Florida organized crime.

• M

budget are in the salary line at $25,774, up
from $23,052; FICA taxes $1,714, up from
$1,614; life and health insurance $1,117,
up from $933; workers' compensation
$1,699, up from $912; repair and main­
tenance motor vehicles $4,000, up from
$1,200; gas, oil and tires $5,000. up from
$3,280; road materials $12,000, up from
$7,000.

PANAMA CITY, Fla. (UPI) — A man who opened
fire in a convenience store where his ex-wife worked
will be charged today with one count of first degree
murder and several counts of assault with intent to kill
police said.

Increases in the fire department
budget include: utility services $1,000, up
from $800; insurance $6,913, up from
$3,126; repairs and maintenance motor
vehicles $5,000, up from $2,800; repair
radios $2,000, up from $1,000; small tools
and equipment $2,000, up from $1,000;
general $4,000, up from $2,500; gas, oil
and tires $3,000, up from $2,000. Under
capital outlay, the fire department fund
will make a $13,799 payment on the new
fire truck and purchase high pressure
slide-in pump and tank unit for $9,000.

I-arry Gurganus will be charged with the murder of
John Williams Davis. Gurganus' ex-wife, Jackie, was
critically wounded and three other people were Injured
in the shooting.
Gurganus was arrested by Bay County sheriff’s
deputies about 90 minutes after the shooting at a
"Sunshine Junior" store in Springfield, a Panama City
suburb.
He was walking along a nearby street and "offered
no reslstence," Sheriff luivelle Pitts said.

Major increases in the com­
munications department budget are:
regular salaries and wages $35,540, up
from $30,166; FICA taxes $2,496, up from
$2,252; life and health insurance $2,235,
up from $1,866.
Increases in building and zoning
department Include: mileage and travel
$400, up from $100; books, subscriptions
and memberships $100, up from $50.
Increases in the parks and summer
recreation department include: $5,500 to
purchase a new mower and summer
recreation program $1,750, up from
$1,000.
Major increases in the administration
department include: salaries $58,463, up
from $47,343; special pay $900, up from
$600; FICA taxes $3,888, up from $3,314;
life and health insurance $2,235, up from
$1,865; professional services $25,000, up
from $23,000; accounting and auditing
service $2,300, up from $1,850; travel
$2,000, up from $1,250; communications

AR EA DEATHS
ALFRED E BLAIR

Alfred Earl Blair, 56, of 1011
Pine Ave., SanTord, died
Sunday at the V eteran's
Hospital In Gainesville. He
was a member of St. James
African Methodist Episcopal
Church, Sanford.
Survivors Include a sister,
Mrs. Theola B. Merlhle;
niece,
Ms.
Earnestlne
Roberts; six grand-nieces,
Cecelia Fisher, Gwendolyn
Johnson, Sylvia Bodlson,
Yvonne
Lee,
Chatca
Williams, and Marion Smith;
three grand nephews, S-Sgl.
Alfred E. Roberta, Gregory

IN CREA SE

Bodlson and Frank Hicks Jr.;
11 great-grand nieces and
nephews.

County, Ga.
HENRY MeALISTER
Survivors Include her
Mr. Henry McAlister, 74, of
husband, Leroy Hampton Jr.; 1307 W. 13th St., Sanford, died
W i l s o n - E i c h e l b e r g e r son Leroy Hampton III; Thursday
at
Seminole
Mortuary is in charge of daughter, Derial J. Hampton, Memorial Hospital. Bom In
arrangements.
all of Altamonte Springs; Georgia, he was a well-known
three sisters, Mrs. Pauline local building contractor, and
MRS. KATHRYN HAMPTON Bryant of Savannah, Ga., came to Sanford from Ocala
Mrs. Kathryn Vernita Mrs. Essie M. Morris, in 1929. He had been on the
Hampton, 46, of 329 Depugh Jacksonville
and
Mrs. board of the Good Samaritan
Ave., Altamonte Springs, died Georgia L l/&gt;vett, Millen. Home, Sanford, for 48 years
Wednesday
at
Florida Ga.; brother, J. Walters and donated lumber for the
Hospital, Orlando. Born in Perkins, Philadelphta, Pa.; first facilities.
Sardis, Ga., she had been a and numerous aunts, uncles,
He Is survived by a wife,
resident of Altamonte Springs nieces, nephews and cousins. Mrs. Nellie McAlister; son,
for 20 years. She was a
W ils o n - E ic h e lb e r g e r Jerry Givens; brother, Jerry
member of Ihe First McCoy Mortuary, Sanford, is in Lee Givens of San Diego,
Baptist Church, Jenkins charge of arrangements.
Calif.; granddaughter, Ms.
Barbara J. Givens; grandson,
Jerol Givens, Altamonte
Springs;
one
greatYOUR HOME LEISU R E TIME
granddaughter, and several
nieces and nephews.

SWEEP LEAVES, TRASH FROM
Y,

MRS. FRANCES G. ROSE
Mrs. Frsnces Grace Rose,
84, of 240 Oxford Road, Fern
Park, died Monday at her
residence. Bom Aug. 17, 1897,
In New York, she moved to
Fern Park from Casselberry
in 1953. She was a licensed
practical nurse and a member
of
Community
United
Methodist
Church
of
Casselberry. She was a Red
Cross Gray I^dy at Orlando
Air Base for 13 years.
Survivors include a son,
Col. William H. Sprigg,
Wiscasset, Maine and four
grandchildren.

W EEDEATER
.Makes
Power
Broom
Yard &amp;Patio Clean up a Snap
Amazing now electric powered tool swoops away
leavos. grass, debns with a 125 MPH velocity air
stream. Sweep walks, cars, carports, lawns
flowerbeds Lightweight with excellent balance
The Weed Eater Home N Yard Power Broom
does for raking and sweeping what our line
trimmer did for trimming and edging

Senior an Funeral Home,
A ltam onte Springs, is in
charge of arrangements.

~J g &amp; Br

Funeral Notices
a ta ia , m m . a l f r s o s a r l Funeral sarvicas for Mr. Alfred
Earl Blair, ia. of 1011 Pina A v e .
Sanford. who died Sunday, in
Gainesville. will ba al J JO p m .
Saturday al SI James a m E
Church at Oif Cypress Ave.
Senfoid, with the Rar k D
While jr ., officiating Burial in
Resllawn Cemetery Wilton
Eichttbarger in charge

S A V t lO
30 o nly.

See II at These Dealers

LONGWOOD
Tucker's Farm A Garden
11$ N. Laurel Ave.
----* »&gt;WM

Kershaw's Bike a Mower
4M West SR 4)4

_•"* • " “ *
• »•*M K I W
.........MM.HMn.IIM4.4l

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i.

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l,m »n,ni|) Ml IHAI

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Defense attorney Mitchell attempted to show Zacke didn't
approach Kiker to find someone to "knock off" his former
pilot.
,

n

F e e l Better
Sleep Better
In Air Conditioned
Comlort

FOR TH E B EST

TV SERVICE
C A L I M IL L E R S
PH JJJ 0J5J
lilt Of Undo D&gt; III t|l

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Air Conditioning System

D IS C O U N T C A R P E T S
MAS M O V E D TO
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SANFORD
PH JJJ 4«tf

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1007 Sanford Ave

Sanford

D O N 'T G A M D L I
with your insurancel
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I

$2,500. up from $2,300; and legal ad­
vertising $2,000, up from $1,500.
Major increases in the police depart­
ment include the following: salaries and
wages $123,741. up from $102,009: FICA
taxes $8,375, up from $7,141; life and
health insurance $5,028, up from $4,197;
workers compensation $7,598, up from
$5,000; postage $60, up from $30; utility
senice $1,668, up from $1,200; rentals
$2,310, up from $2,225; insurance $3,900,
up from $3,668; general repair and
maintenance $800, up from $200; repair
and maintenance motor vehicles $4,500,
up from $3,000; repairs radios $1,400. up
from $300; general office supplies $750,
up from $150; small tools and equipment
$715, up from $325; general operating
supplies $1,500, up from $500; operating
supplies motor vehicles $23,707, up from
$21,644; a new car $8,818, up from $7,200;
and a new radar $2,223, up from $1,735.

TONY

m

f t

R U tS I

IN S U R A N C E

I

322 0283

B O A T IN SU R AN CE

ROBERT L. BEVIER, M.D.
Is Pleased to Announce
The Opening Of His
LAKE MARY OFFICE
For FAMILY PRACTICE
By Appointment Only

LAKE M ARY 321-0085
159 N. C O U N TR Y CLUB ROAD
ACROSS FROM T H E NEW
LA K E M A R Y C IT Y H A LL

- DONNA*ESTES

. We're
Meeting The New Season

W ilson-Eichelberger
Mortuary Is tn charge of
arrangements.

PATIO, YARD, DRIVE
IN MINUTES WITH

Through S ep t.

his end of the deal, Moss feared retribution and told his story to
a "friend" in the state attorney's office, according to detective
Rhuben McGee of the Melbourne Police Department.
Moss received immunity from prosecution for agreeing to
testify against Zacke.
The burden of proof rested on the state attorney to show
Zacke actually committed criminal solicitation.
T w o elements must he proved before a person may
convicted of such a crime, the judge said. First, it must
proven a person aided or hired someone to kill another human
being. Secondly, evidence must show the request was made in
earnest.

Lake Mary Eyes Tax Increase
(Continued from Page I A)

1 Dead After Shooting Spree

thought it would be, though," lie added.
The trial began Wednesday morning.
Zacke demonstrated very little emotion during the trial.
Only once, when he examined his hands to see if they were
shaking when the jury came back into the courtroom after 15
minutes of deliberation to ask the court a question, did Zacke
show any sign of concern.
The jury's question was a request for the Judge to reinterpret
criminal solicitation.
Criminal solicitation lias taken place when, whether the
crime is a felony or a misdemeanor, a person aids, abets,
counsels, hires, or otherwise procures an offense to be com­
mitted, the Judge said. If a person attempts to commit the
solicited crime and fails, he then may be guilty of attempted
solicitation, he added.
In July, Kiker approached Kerry Moss, ol Cocoa, for Zacke
and, at that time, Moss agreed to kill Merithew, Zacke's La­
mer employee, the prosecutor contended.
In April, Zacke was charged with ro'iciung another man,
Richard Hunt, to kill Merithew He received a 60 year sentence
in that trial.
Zacke wanted Merithew dead, according to Moss’ testimony,
because Merithew was a witness against Zacke in a drug­
smuggling trial last July.
Merithew is still alive and is under police protection, but
Hunt has been missing since January and is thought to be dead
by police officials.
Zacke was also charged with soliciting to kill Hunt and
Brevard-Seminole State Attorney Douglas Cheshire. He still
faces trial in those cases.
According to White, Moss receive Zacke's $2,500 and a note
describing Merithew and his life style habits from Kiker in
July.
However, when word got around that Moss didn’t complete

HAMPTON, MRS. KATH R VN
V SR N ITA — Funeral services
for M rs
Kathryn Vernila
Hampton, 44. of )j t Depu*
Aye. Altamonla Springs, who
, died Wednesday al Florida
Hospital. Orlando, will be al I
p m Seutrdey al Allan Chapat
AM E Church. U O Oliva A v e ,
Sanford, with the Rev John H
Woodard and the Rev j E
Hollis officiating Burial In
Restlawn Cemetery, Santoro
Wilson Eichetbargar in clvargt

,»

We brought you complete coverage throughout the baseball
season.Jocal and national, w e kept you posted.
Now that football's here, we ll bring you the some in-depth
coverage you've come to expect. The players, team standings
— we'll have it all.
Wo'ra mooting the new season HEAD ONI

E v e n in g H e ra ld
your

i

cpnpTc

I

paper

«••»• start My wkscriptiM
on
Ho m o

AMross
Gty

Phono

CALL 322-2411 or 931-9993

Evening Herald

For knmodioto Homo D d ivory

P.o. Box 1437, Sanford, FI. 32771

••+ *

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•

�I w ilin g ; I It'i'.iUi

LEISURE
Co m p le te W eek's T V Listings

+

Sanford, Florida — Friday, September It, 1981

Skating
It's
C o n

S o m e th in g
A ll

D o

W e

To g e th e r'

l'.\ M l 1(1 \ M V M i H

Herald stall W■iter
li t u re a l. sinmiili rink d a rk e n e d an d closed tot tin
xumiuct .ilteriiiNin is .1 tar i r \ from ' k a ti n c opporlunities
"I tin* I'.tJiK. I lien mil' iasli'iiril i a m a s sti ap&gt;. a ttach ed la
lieav&gt; sk ates, around mu 's ankles ami 1u:t&gt;t«-ioiI m rlai
■la m p s min tlie soles &gt;.| shoes with ,i -.kale k r \ Unl\ 'hen
•tut mil' take I&gt;lt down III! sidewalk
Fortunate indeed tin* skater who liail a iv e s s in a wide.

W

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Photo L * Tom Vm trnf

IVen-uHtT N a n o Downer of Sanford tries on a pair of skates at the Melodee
Skating Kink.

si......Ill eeinent driveway Almost as Inrlutiale. the skater
who lived nil a street with cement siilewalks Mail)
sidewalks in tlui.se days were n| hriek, which dipped and
ruse in inlerestnu’ i on volutions
The dangers were there The driveways led inevitably
min the street and traffic A twin nil the sidewalk, a loose
hriek, an unwary pedt'Strian einild mean a nasty fall and
a broken arm The skates Iheiuselves were a inennee
Straps broke, wheels lin ked and i lamps loosened
Today's parents have the immense advantage o| Ih i i i i
aide In take their eluldren to (lie skating rinks and put
them in shoe skates, under su|&gt;ervi.sinti
In Sanford there's the Melodee Skating Kink owned by
Chuck Best.
The rink is kepi h i tip top condition. accordmu to Best,
and the building will soon lie air-conditioned
Best watches the skatuii; action constantly and provides
uistructi&lt; n (or anyone who requires it. Classes ratine Iroin
toddlers to advanced Uneasy older |ienple may ask for
pointers, d lliey don't waul to stun up for a class
"Itriiu: me someone who lias never been on skates
lief ore, and I can have him nr her lialancinn and skutmu
williiu twenty minutes," Best brans
I.c Aline, l.'l, and l.isa, !l. pretty daughters o| Alice and
Harold Sundvall, have liecn skating at the rmk for five
years
"II occupies their leisure tune." Alice Sundvall said
"They look forward to the four muhLs a week here, it is
v ery uond exercise, and it is ureal for their (Mixture, lliey
come alone It is |ierfectly safe here with Mi Best walchinn over everytlimn The whole family skates Wed­
nesday and Thursday "
l-cAnne and l.isa swunu out onto die flmir and leaped
into the air in a double jump They took their falls with the
aplomb of die very vounn who fall loose and painlesslv
"No student ever nets hurt seriously as lon»; as he or slu­
ts under supervision," Best said
people who skate
should know their hunts and not try more than tliey can
handle Children aren't usually hurt unless they are
caui’ht off uuard All-m-all, I would say skatmi: is risktei
than shufflehoard. hut not as risky as mnloreyclmu •
"We |iut on two shows a year, one at Christmas and one
m May. IwAiine did a solo in the May show and l.isa took
|iari in a skit with my daughter It is rimmI discipline and
helps to huild character They learn to take their falls and
uet up and do on."
Althoiidb there is skatmu competition, it won't lead to
the Olympics, yet
Skaters are try mu to net the sjmrt included in Olympic
dames, but they haven't yet been accepted. And any way a
kid who wishes to no into competition needs a pushy
See SKAT IMS. I’URr 2

�I

7— Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.______Friday, Sept. n , m i

...Skating's
Fam ily Fun
(Continued From Page 11
mother and a workaholic father. I've known only ntxmt six
who stuck with it after ages 111 or 17."
The skating rink has been m Chuck llcsl's family for 21
years. It lias always been a family type rink anil caters to
yount; children, giving them a safe place to go, he said.
"I don't allow any flanging around die parking lot. When
1 cam e in the business, I got rid of the characters with
cigarette packages wrapped in their sleeves.
“We have 450 to 050 skaters here on weekends during Ihe
season and always pretty much the same crowd. People
who skated with me when they were teen-agers are
bringing their children in.
" It's one of the least expensive sports," he added. "You
can skate in shirt and shorts, or buy a skating suit if you
prefer. The same with skates. You can rent a pair or buy
them. We have adult groups on Thursday and Wednesday
is family night. But we welcome any group. Whatever
shows, goes."
" i t ’s something we can all do together,” Alice Sundvall
said. "And I believe It builds the children’s character."
"I Just enjoy it," liA n n e said. “ It's exciting and U'a
fun."
That says it all.

M n c - v c n r - u h l I .I s a S u n il v a i l
t i c e s h e r d o u b le j u m p s .

prac­

Photos By M erla Manor

Alice Sundvall and daughter I.eAnne, 1.1, take a break during
nni* of their frequent skating sessions.

O ne Man's Relentless Fight Against Apartheid
By CAROL FKI.SF.NTHAL
A m erican U b ra ry Asm

Donald Woods, a white South African newspaper editor,
calls his autobiography “ Asking for Trouble" (Athcneum,
.173 pages, 112.95). The title is a huge understatement.
As editor of (lie "Dally Dispatch," Woods was a relentless
critic of apartheid, the system that allows the country’s
four million whites total political control over 20 million
blacks. What led Wixxls — a fifth generation South African
ami editor for 12 years of one of the country's oldest,
newspapers — on this collision course with a government
tluil could close down any newspaper without a court
hearing and Jail any editor witlmut explanation makes
riveting rending.
Fquaily interesting is Woods' metamorphosis from
conservative to liberal to. by his country's standards,
radical.
Slowly, his opinions changed. As a cub reporter, he began
to question some of the apartheid laws — such as the Group
Areas Act, which makes it a crime for a person to live in tlx-

A B O U T BOOKS
Rovlows prepared by
tha Am arican U b ra ry Assn.
sam e suburb as a person of another race, or tlx; Suppression of Communism Act, which gives live sta le the
power to declare any citizen a com m unist and to define a s a
com m unist any person seeking to change th j rac e laws.
He was very young and very brash. When a new law
allowing im prisonm ent without tria l w as introduced, B.J.
V orster, the new M inister of Ju stice and Police, called a
press conference. Tradition dictated that questions be
asked according to seniority.
Woods was the m ost Junior m em ber of the press corps
present. Yet when V orster asked, "A re there any
questions?" and nodded to the m ost senior m em ber, a pro­

t
.

•

•
*
«
t

governm ent rep o rter, Woods blurted, "Y es, I've got a
question — how do you sq u are this bill with dem ocracy?”
T hat w as the first of sev eral encounters Woods describes
with the m an later to become South A frica's longest serving
prim e m inister.
Ju st a few y ea rs later, Woods was appointed editor of the
D ispatch. He began to hire black reporters, to put pictures
of blacks In the news pages, to throw out offensive
classifieds — "R eliable watchdogs — trained to bite
N atives” — to Integrate the sports pages and, horror of
horrors, the wedding page.
In August 1977, when Steve Blko, a very popular and
rad ical black leader w as Jailed without trial and died in his
cell, Woods fanned the public outcry on the front page of the
D ispatch. He suspected, a s did many others, that Blko had
been beaten to death by security police.
A couple of m onths after Blko’s funeral, Woods was
banned. Banning is a peculiarly South African practice
whereby llie governm ent, without court proceedings of any
kind, virtually house-arrests and silences its critics.

universal adult suffrage and nothing less. One-man, onevote will give blacks control of the country, a result whites
will never accept. Consequently, Woods claim s, an un­
declared civil w ar rages today In his country. "Only two
things can he said with certainty about the developing w ar
in South Africa — that the w hites will lose, and that the
m ore fiercely they fight the m ore com prehensively they
will lose."

Woods w as forbidden to w rite, to be quoted, to be will)
m ore than one person at a tim e, to en ter schools or
new spaper offices. The police, who tapped his phone and
could break into his home unannounced, sat sentry outside,
round the clock.
His c a re e r a s a Journalist w as obviously over. At great
risk, he decided to defy his ja ile rs and w rite a book about
Blko. ( In South Africa it Is a crim inal offense to have a copy
of "B lko," published In txxidon is 1978.) While writing the
last ch ap ter, he realised th a t he and his fam ily would have
to flee the country. In th at ch ap ter, he pleaded for economic
sanctions ag ain st the P re to ria regim e, a capital offense,
classed a s an a c t of terro rism and m eriting the death
penalty.
Ills account of hia escape from his country is gripping, as
exciting a scene a s any novelist could invent. H it escape
and his biography of Biko m ade Woods a cause in in­
ternational headlines. The irony, he say s is that the ban,
designed to silence him , has caused him to w rite m ore than
ever and to com m unicate with a g reater num ber of people
than would have been possible had he been left alone.
Wtxxls ends his book on a chilling note. Blacks want

Donald Woods, f o r me r South African
newspaper editor, w rote'A sking for Trouble"
about his metamorphosis from supporting
ap ar t h ei d to re le n tle ssly criticizing the
system.

�I

leaning Herald. Sanford, FI.

Friday, Sept. 11 , if t i —j

G o G u id e

E M M Y AWARDS

HOSTS
Shirley Miu.’l.niru* (left) and Kdwartl Asnor
(abovel will host the :t:inl animal K m m v
Awards ceremonies, to he broadens! live from
the Pasadena (C a lif.) Civic Am lUnriiim ,
Sunday. iK:(ll)-IW::il) P M , K T ) on CBS.

Young
Poets
T hese po em i a re by
Semiaole County students
kindergarten through 12th
grade. They resulted from
the Florida Poetry In the
Schools program taught by
poet Bob Wlshoff of Oviedo
and Evelyn M ants ol
DeLand.
p a p ili
a rc
provided with a general
theme, but are not told
what they should write.
GREEN
Green Is the sea
at the horizon line.
Green is the grass
at the beginning of spring.
Green is not the color of my
rug
when my brother tracks
mud in.
Tanya Mulberry
Ea it brook Elementary
The drum give me
the feeling of a real te a t
like another one bust a dust
I sit down on the couch
and let it blow my mind
away in space
out of this world
this m ushed doughnut
world

My heart te a ts fast and
fast and
fa st till it b u rsts out
laughing
Call the hospital!
Dwayne Karkard
Bear Izikc Elementary
I’ve got the blues
boo hoc boo hoo hoo
They’re in my ted
All around my head
When I get up
I taste them in my cup
Saddening by the hour
It makes my cereal sour
1 feel so blind
The world I’m trying to
find
I'm fighting the blues
But they're all over me
I can’t even see
Oh
I'm trying to find a way
But I’ve teen sad all day
The world goes blurry
All I do is worry
1 hope I can te a t It
|
I need my way to be lit
No place to go
The day moves so slow
Everyone has left me
The world goes sadly by
Until 1 find my way
The world will be so gray
If tomorrow Is as bad as
today
I'll Just look 1,000 miles
away
I've got the blues
j
My body aches
Worse Ilian nil the ear­
thquakes
Jeff Wells
Casselberry Elementary

If you're thinking of getting out of the house and are
looking for something to do this weekend, here are a
few suggestions:
Morse Gallery of Art, I-amps, windows, pottery and
vases from the personal collection of 1/iuis Comfort
Tiffany. 9 n.in. to 4 p.m., Tuesday through Sid unlay, 1
p.m. to t p.m. Sunday. 133 E. Welbome Ave.. off Park
Avenue, Winter Park. Continuous guided tours.
Arrangements in advance for groups of 12 or over, call
645-5311.
The Philippine Folk Art* Theatre Group presents
"KariUing’’ Fllipina i Philippine Beauty) variations in
Philippine Dance and Music, B p.m. Sept, to and 11; 2
p.m., Sept. 12, Valencia Community College East
Campus Theatre of the Performing Arts, 701 N.
E conlockhnlchee T rail, Orlando. Sponsored by
Filipino-Americon Club of Central Florida and the
Mid-Florida Council for International Visilors. For
reservations and information call the Mid-Florida CIV,
Molly Lind at 629-1746 or 859-9570.
••U m b rellas," 1981 M em ber’s Annual Juried
Exhibition, Maitland Art Center, 231 W. Pack wood
Ave., Maitland Sept. 13 through Oct. It. Tuesday
through Friday, 10 u.m. to 4 p.m.; Saturday, 10a.m. to
1 p.m. and Sunday, 1-4 p.m.
Central Florida Zoological Pork, open daily 9 a.in. to
5 p.m. U.S. Highway 17-92 between 1-4 and Sanford.
Picnic facilities.
G eneva G rn eo lu g iral and H istorical Society
Museum, First Avenue, Geneva. Open Sunday, 2-4 p.m.
or by appointment by calling 349-5205.
Fine art* program presenting Michael Heed in
concert at the Westminster United Presbyterian
Church, 2641 Itisl Bug Hoad, Casselberry, at 4 p.m..
Sept. 13. Heed is artist pianist at (lie Americana Hotel,
Fort Worth, Texas. Open to the public.
Galuctlrmi '81, science fiction-science (net con­
vention, w ill tie held Sept. 25-27 continual]) from 3 p.m.
Friday to 6 p.m. Sunday at the Desert Inn in Daytona
Bench. Sjieakcrs, films, displays, masquerade contest
and auction.

Movies From Comic Strips

Would You Believe Angie's 5 0 ?

DKAK DICK: f would like to know If they have made
any movies from comic strips besides “ Blondlc" and
"P opcyr." I am 9 years old and very Interested In making
a movie of my own. JUSTIN SHELTON, Ventura, Calif.
We need fresh blood in the movie-making business,
Justin, and I'm sure you are already sm arter than some of
the Jokers we have now. To answer your question, yes,
there luive teen many films made from comic strips.
They go way back to "Skippy" and "Little Orphan Annie"
and on to “Joe Palooku" and "L'U Abner" und "Prince
Valiant.” At Hie moment, Columbia has an option on
“Alley Oop" and Hay Stark is shooting “Annie,” which
comes from "Little Orphan Annie" via the Broadway
musical.
DEAR DICK: I have a personal te l with Tom Swenson,
managing editor of the Warsaw Timcs-Union, regarding
the very beautiful Angle Dickinson. I say she is 50 years
old. Tom says, "No way." He says sbe's not getting older,
Just better. Please help settle our friendly dispute. Tom
says to "ask Dick.” BRET W. WOIJ', WKSW Radio,
Warsaw, Ind.
I admire you gentlemen’s taste, but us to who wins the
bet, I suggest you call in some legal help. Angle will
celebrate, if that's the right word, her 50th birthday on
Sept. 30.

DEAR DICK: I’m a big fan of Humphrey Bogart and I
would like to know how many biographies were written
about him, and if you could possibly tell me a few of the
Itook titles and authors. AMY HENDRICK, Warren, Mich.
There have teen a slew of Bogie books, but I cannot give
you an exact count. I liave a bunch myself. My favorites
ure Joe Hyams’ "Bogie" and Nathaniel Benchley’s
"Humphrey Bogart." And. of course, there is u lot about
turn in the recent autobiography by his widow, 1-iurcri
Bacall.
DKAK DICK: Several months ago, you mentioned an
upcoming movie titled "All the M arbles." One ul the stars
is Peter Falk, whom I really enjoy very much. 1 haven’t

4

y

- J

A s k Dick

*

K leiner

mk

By DICK KLEINER

seen anything else un that Him. ROY WENTWORTH,
Memphis, Tenn.
"Tlie Earthling," starring Kicky and William Holden
lias pretty much come and gone. It was one ol those films
that came nut, was poorly received, did little business and
was quickly shelved. Falk's "All the M arbles," which
deals witli female wrestlers, is due (or release from MGM
this full.
DEAR DICK: Could you please tell me U Caroline
MrWilliams and Diana Canuva are related In any way.
They looked like twins In n picture on TV recently, "The
Death ol Ocean View P ark." KAY CULVER, Port
Salerno, Fla.
No relation, just a strong rcsemblunce.
DKAK DICK: Would you please answer a question
about Cissy King of laiwrenee Welk's show a few years
back? Was she part of the famous King family that we
used to see on TV? My wife and hrr sister und 1 have had
different opinions about this for years. N.McGI.ATIIERY,
Ventura, Calif.
Cissy is part of a King family, but not the King family —
not ttie family that had its own TV show.
DKAK DICK: I heard that the Beatles' film "A Hard
Day’s Night" was destroyed somehow. Pit-use say It Isn't
so! If It is, how and why did it happen? ANITA STKNGKK,
Ashtabula, Ohio
Not to worry. There are hundreds of copies of tliat film
around — hundreds of copies of most films — so while
prrhups one copy was destroyed, there are plenty left.

�Friday, Sept. 11, I 'l l

4— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

TELEVISIO N
Septem ber 11 thru 17

Labi* Ch

CaMt Ch.

CD O

(A B C ) Orlando

® o
CD O

(C BS) Orlando
Orlando

0

Indtpondonl
Orlando

( 35 )

(S&gt; ( 17 )
( 10) ©

Independent
Atlanta, Oo.
Orlando Public
Broodcattlng lytlem

may

In addition to tho chonnol* llttod. coblovitlon lubtcriber*
tuna In to Indtpondonl channel 44,
tt. Petersburg,
tuning to chonnol l i tuning to chonnol II, which carrlottport* ondtho Chrlillon
Broodcattlng Network (C B N I.

by

Specials
India it fold

S A TU R D A Y
EVENINQ
11 (17)

6:05
NASHVILLE ALIVE 'V

anti radio per tonality Ralph frn w y
hot It a country w«*Mt*n hour of live
muMt from Nashyillff i OpryMnd
MnlH tf.it ur ir mj to mu of the hottest
stars of the Grand Ole Opry mth
co host Jatby Ward

n u m w i compete for a
c to * n in Ih it annual
tie telecast live from
N J Mon f ly hosts

SUNDAY
AFTERNOON

2:00

CD (10) NEW CINEMA FROM
INDIA Ita. W h o l e Sky 1
The
ttnry of an arranged marriage and
Me at experienced try a typical lowet middle i last family of northern

W EDNESDAY
EVENING

EVEN IN G

Ama/ing and highly tpeciaii/ed
cam erat and imaging devices
uncover m icrotcopic life in minute
detail p e nftratf galaxies Iree/e
movement and unravel m ytte ne t
about ancient I gyptian mummies

(Si O
t h e FUTURE WHAT'S
NEXT? G e o rg * P lim p to n and

EVENINQ
T

O

7:00
TRUE LITE STORIES Thr,

stones of a prospector who strikes
it rich then Intet d all and an
alcoholic t search for her natural
mother are dramatized D*ck Van
Dyke and Marion M ott star

($1 O

8:00

EMMY AWARDS thw 33rd

edition of these awards honoring
eareltence in television veil t&gt;e tele
cast live from the Civic Center in
Pasadena

6:00

8:00
Caren Kaye host a look at techno­
logical innovations that will change
everyday Me by the year 2000

eD (10) PLIMPTON1

The Great
Quarterback Sneak George Plimp
ton |otnt the Baltimore Colt* team
tor a month and train* lor the
quarterback petition

fc:00

(Ml

I I I MISS AMEHICA PAGEANT

fifty young
title and a
pageant to
Atlantic City

TU E S D A Y

4:00
CD ( 10) NATIONAL OLOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL Tfw Invitible W o. Id

10:00
O

O f The W eek

(D

(1 0 )

9:0 0
UNDER

ffl (TO )
THIS

SKY

fh/abeth Cady Stanton In K a n ­
sas D ie story of Stanton and her
friend Susan 0 Anthony t experi­
ence* drumming up supporl tor
women % rights m the Kansas coun­
tryside in tB C Tis to ld |R|

(7)

O

fnizzn

filmmaker Frederick Wiseman caplures the energy, glamour and grind
of the modeling profession in a do c­
umentary profile of New York Cify *
/oli Agency

TH U R S D A Y
EVENINO

4:0 0
COME HEAR THE MUSIC

P L A Y D ie greatest to n g s of
Broadw ay are ftung by Julie
Andrews Robert Goulet and Joel
Grey in «i daz/ting hour of high spir­
ited music laughs and entertain­
ment

MOOEL Award winning

Handy Hamilton sin^s a special sweet Hi song
to Hronke Shields on Kids Are People To n ."
to air Sunday on A liC .

6:00

O

if ) NATIONAL OEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL The Voyage O l The Bri­
gantine Yankee With a ere* ol
young amateur tailor* Irving and
Electra Johnson course the globe in
Ihe* ship

Sports On The A ir
S A TU R D A Y

— i* teleca*t live tiom Luui*viue
Down* Louisville Kimtucky

M ONDAY

AFTERNOON
IS)

O

MORNING

U S OPEN TENNIS Mens

Semifinals and W om en a Singlet
f mats (live from f lushing Meadows
N V |

1:30
(7 1O WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS
IS round WBA World lightwergh!
Championship bout between
Claude Noel and Rodolfo Gato
(ion/ale/ (live from Atlantic City) a
look at the ufM.ormng writer weight
Itout between Sugar flay Leonard
and Ih onirtvilw in

11:00
O
(1) FLORIDA FOOTBALL
HIGHLIGHTS
8 ) (10) VIC BRADEN S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Playing Duu
!&gt;*«•* Vic Braden demonstrates the
key pomts of strategy and m o ve ­
ment that make doubt** a real
adventure (R )t J

AFTERNOON

12:00
0 14 1BOBBY BOWDEN

2:00
O *41 BASEBALL
LOOK

AN INSIDE

2 :0 5
I I (17) BASEBALL San Diego
Padre* at Allant.1 Bta»*i
2 :15
Q (4) BASEBALL Bo*lon Red Sor
.it New York Yankee*
3 :0 0
( I ) O NCAA FOOTBALL Stanford
at Purdue
4 :3 0
81 (10) VIC BRADEN S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE Playing Dou
Me* Vic Braden dtimon*liale» Ihe
key point* ol strategy and move­
ment that make double* a real
adventure JR|(J
5 :00
8 ) (10) SOCCER MADE IN GER­
MANY UEFA Cup final Altmaar
V * IptWtch
EVENINO
0:0 5
(III (17) FOOTBALL SATUROAY
Hoat Bob Neal Paul Hornung.
Alai Hawkmt. Norm Van Brocklm
aia teatured

11:00

12:30
i l i Q N F L TODAY
1 ?' O COLLEGE FOOTBALL 11
Wrekly highlight* o l key N C A A
cunlesl* aie ixesenled

IV O

TH U R S D A Y

9:0 0
NFL FOOTBALL Oakland

EVENINO

Raider * at Minnesota Viking* : j

10:25
11 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Biave* al San Francisco Giant*

6'30
(7)

O

NFL

FO O TB ALL

Philadelphia Eagle* al Buttalo Bill*

CJ

TU E S D A Y
EVENING

10:30
(1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Biave* al L o t Angeles Dodger*

11

10:30
91 (1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Braves al San Francisco Giant*

FR ID AY
EVENINO

W EDNESDAY
EVENINO
10:30

Sheree North stars as a form er burlesque
queen in
Portrait of a S trip p e r." to air
Tuesday on CBS.

41

(1 7 )

0:55
BASEBALL A tla nta

Braves at San Diego Padre*

1:00
O

(f&gt; NFL FOOTBALL Houston

Oiler* .11 Cleveland Blown*
i } I O NFL FEX3TBALL Tamp* Bay
Buccaneer* at Kansas City Chiel*

1:30
( 7 * 0 W R E S TL IN G

2:00
( 7 ) 0 BASEBALL Boston Red 5 m
al New York Yankee*

11 (17) BASEBALL San Cfcego
Padies al Atlanta Biave*
3:30
( 10) KENTUCKY PACING DER­
BY Ih e lourth annual Kentucky

8)

Pacing Derby
the |hed r**ef m
the 2 year old pacer*' Triple Crow n
•• i* telecast from loursviMe Downs
Louisville Kentucky

4:00
14) NFL FOOTBALL New Fug
land Palnols al Philadelphia Fogle*
(1) O U S OPEN TENNI8 live
0

coverage ol Ihe men s final* |lrom
1 lushing Meadow* N Y |

4:30

81 ( 10) KENTUCKY PACINO DER­

(D O SPORTKRPAT

The lourth annual Kentucky
Pacing Derby •• Ihe I bed jewel m
Ihe 7-yeer-oid pace.* Triple Crow n

5'30

BY

EVENING

SUNDAY

12:00

41) (1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Braves al Los Angeles Dodgers

99 (17) WRESTUNQ

duincy (Jack Klugman) appears on Dick
Wilcox’s (Iton Masak) T V talk show with the
author of a trendy diet book (Kathleen Nolan)
on guincy,*' to air Wednesday on NBC.

hlizubeth Montgomery stars as the widow of a
boat builder in Jennifer: A Woman's Story,"
to a ir Thursday on NBC. -

�Evening Herald, Sanford, El.

September 11

FRIDAY
E V EN IN O

Padres at Atlanta Graves

6:00

O

(J ) NATIONAL OEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL National Park* Play-

6:00
0

3 1 ( 1 ) O C 7 ) Q N EW S
fill (35) A N D Y G R IFFITH
CD (10) T H E A R T O F
HUM AN

BEING

ground Or Paradise?
Efforts by
the National Park Service to restrict

the public s access to America s
parks in hopes of putting a halt to

Gene Merctian,ts Sou til, mot at arid
economic issues fur rounding
genetic engineering are explored
,i I (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) SOUNDSTAOE Them- ol

10:05
32) (17) NEWS

5:05
1 2 (1 7 ) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

10:30
&lt;U) (35) CAR CARE CENTRAL

5:30
J ) O SUMMER SEMESTER

6 :30
O H I N B C NEW S
&lt; J )| J CBS NEWS
&gt; 7 ) 0 ABC NEWS
iiD (3 5 )CARTER COUNTRY
CD (1 0 ) THE ART OF BEING

Cl) O KEY TORTUGA Two framed
dolphins discover bounty from a
Spanish galleon
( I ) O A GIFT OF MUSIC Hosts
Lome Greene Natalie Wood. Don­

O t!)(e &lt; 3 (7 )O N E W 3
iTTl (35) BENNY HILL
CD 110) POSTSCRIPTS

ald O Connor. Greer G ar ton. Eve
Arden, Twiggy and Dionne Warwick
salute the genius ol American m usi­
cal composition Guests include
Andrao Crouch
C a b Calloway,
W oody Merman Liber ace Donna
Fargo and many more

11:25
(JI O HIOH SCHOOL FOOTBALL
ROUNDUP

6 :3 5
U 2(17)G O M ER P Y LE

7 :00
O 3 1 THE MUPPETS
ID
(3 5 )
W ORLD VISION
( i ) Q P . M MAGAZINE A profileo!
millionaire IasHton designer Pier re , TELETHON
Cardin, a mysterious pecan tree CD (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW
that tries mournfully
Joyce
Kulhawik looks at the science of
8:30
giving foods their flavors Dr
CD (101 WALL ITREET WEEK
Wasco has a way to prevents mfec
Stalking The Wall Street Bar­
lions in cuts
gain Guest Harris L Kernpnet Jr
'.7 ) Q JOKER'S WILD
chiel investment officer of the U S
|1 (35) BARNEY MILLER
National Rank of Galveston
CD (10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
9:0 0
REPORT
0 &lt; 4 MOVIE
Tentacles 11977)
7:05
John Huston Shelley Winters An
80 foot octopus enraged tiy the
12 (17) C A R O L B U R N E n AN D
FRIEND S
undersea activities ot an oceano­
grapher goes on the rampage near
7:30
a small California community tMj
0 31 TIC TAC DOUGH
V O THE DUKES OF HAZZARD
(II O
Y O U N G P E O P L E 'S S P E Boss Hogg gets gold lever (Ml
C1AL Su/y s War A black ghetto
girl fights to fid her neighborhood CD (10) MARTY ROBBINS

11:00

(11: (35) RHOOA
CD (10) DICK CAVETT G u p si
R o g « Moon* iPait 2 ol 2 1(Rl

7 :35
12 (1 7 ) B A S E B A L L San D&lt;pgo

CD (10) SUNSHINE MUSIC HALL
Rambo Street

10:00
( D O DALLAS Donna and Ray try
to reconcile Jock and Miss Elite |R)
l l ) O ABC NEWS CLOSEUP The

5:55
(21 O DAILY WORD

6:00
IJ 1 Q BRADY KIDS
( J ) 0 DR SNUGGLES

11:05
32 (1 7 ) ALL IN THE FAMILY

0

6:05
32 (1 7 ) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

6:20
0 (!)

11:30
TONIGHT M oll

(33

Carson G u m ls

11

(17)

635
12 117) INFINITY FACTORY

11:35
MOVIE

The flobo
f 19671 Peter Sellers Britt EMand

0
1

11:40
l&gt;r O U S OPEN HIOHLIOHTS
I Jotnt*tJ In Progress!

a1) 04

12:30
4 SCTV NETWORK BO
1 •o ST ARSKY AND HUTCH

7 a
MALS

a

a NEWS

O i O K W IC K Y K O A LA
1 7 ) 0 SUPER FUN HOUR
ill (35) PRAISE
CD (1 0 ) HERE'S TO
HEALTH Psoriasis (M|tj

Padres at Atlanta Braves

2:00
0

4* d a i l y

d e v o t io n a l

2:3 5
(? )O

M S

(7) O

BACIC-TO-SCHOOL

CHICKUP
FOR STUDENTS UP TO AGS 14

(1962)
Devi

3:0 5
MOVIE
Getommo
Chuck

Connors

4:3 5
32 (17) RAT PATROL

&gt;15

BUDGET
OPTICAL

T e q u i l a it o b t a i n e d
from
t he
heart-tap
of the mescal cactus.

11:00

SA N FO RD
2544

J j[

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o v i e l a

N

( S ) ( S BLAC KSTAR
(?J Q
G O L D IE O O L D / T H U N DARR .
CD H O ) A M E R IC A N G O V E R N ­
M ENT

^ L ,

FRENCH A V E .

(ACROSS FROM SAMBO'S)

LASH
S fitlTA N S

3 2 3 -8 0 8 0
Mon. T hru Fri.
f i . m. - S p. m.

S atu rd ay
9 A.M.-1 P.M .

.g v

HOUSE

Demohlion it rurally complete nod
Bob Vile lookt tit know ol the p ro b ­
lem* he * uncovered IR K J

a u B a g a a

ig ii

1

NfCHTW IW C-

|

11:30
l) SPIDER-MAN
*j TARZAN / LONE RANOER
The Hangman
tli) 35) MOVIE
|B/W) 119)9) Robert Taylor, Fess
Parker A federal lawman lace* the
ennuty ol an entire town by hr*
dogged pursuit ol a man he feel* i*
guilty ol robbery and murder
•
(10) AMERICAN GOVERN­

MENT

(10)

EVENING

AT

POPS

8:05
32

117) NASHVILLE ALIVE TV
and radio personality Ralph Emery
hosts a country western hour ot live
music from Nashville s Dpryl.ind
Hotel featuring some ol the hottest
st,*i s of Ihe G rand Ole O pry with
t o host Ja c k | Ward

9 00

4 O
M O VIE
High Midnight
tb round WBA World l ight weight 1 19791 Mike Conners David Birney
When
tun
wife
and
t
btld
are killed m
Championship boul between
, i mistaken drug m id -) constrm
Claude Noel and Mud olio Urdu
Gqnialejr (live from Atlantic City!. ■» * bon worker s*n*ks fustic e by faking
on Ihe &lt;a w h*s» »ia i c o tk , % sguad |H)
look at the tipc nming welterweight
f Q LOVE BOAT Captain Stub
Ih h j I tietw»*en Sugar Hay Leonard
inq
t]«*is hapfunt in a love triangle
and T human Hearns
and &lt;i model piefunds to be married
( D ( 101 FAMILY PORTRAIT
so trial men will leave her alone (M)

O

4

2:00

8ASFBAIL

AN INSIDE
IOOK
CD 1101 LIVINO ENVIRONMENT
2 :05
!&gt;J ( 171 BASEBALL Sun Drego
Padres .it Atlanta Braves

3 :0 0
17 O NCAA FOOTBALL Stanford
it Piirdue
(Hi (35) MOVIE
Terror Is A Man*
iB/W) 11960| I rarms l edere#. Greta
Thyssen A shipwreck survivor
encounters an insane scientist liv­
ing on an island retreat where he is
conducting tHforre experiments
that transform animals into human
beings
ED (10) PRESENTE The annu.il
affiliate convention «t the National
Convention of l a Ha/a
4 .0 0
ED (10) JUVENILE JUSTICE SYS­
TEM

4 :3 5
3 2 (1 7 ) THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL

10:30
O l i SPACE STARS
l ) l O LITTLE RASCAL
3 1, (35) SPACE. IBSS
CD (1 0 ) THIS OLD

©

1:30

9:3 0
Q 14 I KID SUPER POWER HOUR
(II; (35) LIFE BEGINS AT CAL­
VARY
CD( 10ICOOKIN CAJUN
(J i O RICHIE RICH / SCOOBY
DOO
CD (10) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL
PAINTING
10:05
32 (17) MOVIE
Red River
11048? John Wayne Montgomery
Clift A young man and his stepfa­
ther quarrel Over the route of then
cattle drive

■ ILL MURRAY

1:05
12 (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

4 :3 0
CD (1 0 ) VIC BRADENS TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE l'l.iyr»g Dorr
bles Vic Braden itifiwndiiltri fhtr
key pornt* of stratr-g, firrd mow
even! Ural maktr tloobles a trial
adventure (lli:j

10:00

A'Imhi C—wu i

1:00
0 1 * i WRESTLINO
111 (35) MOVIE My Metre* Ol The
Golden t ye
© ( 1 0 ) FAMILY PORTRAIT

9:0 0
(5 1 O
BUGS BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
(7) O FONZ / LAVERNE A SHIR­
LEY HOUR
(I I) (35) HERALD OF TRUTH
CD (1 0 ) FLORIDA HOME OROWN

rj

•

YOUR

8:3 5
32 (17) MOVIE
The Sword Ol
Monte Cristo ( 19b t) George Mont­
gomery Paula Corday A beautiful
woman and her hero swordsman
display then audacity by crossing a
wicked tyrant

• EXAMINATION
W ITH
TH IS AD • X-RAY
Oiler Good
• CLEANING
Thru Sept 10. I « ll • FLUORIDE TREATMENT|
Havre | y Appornimant
n M IH o r im ill
, s m H IA W A T H A A V K -S A N F O R D

C o m poser
arranger Leroy
Anderson (o*ns Arthur Fiedler and
the Boston Pops Orchestra (R )

2 :30
© (10) LIVINO ENVIRONMENT

8:3 0
0 1 4 SMURFS
J o TROLLKINS
CD (10) JULIA CHILD AN0 COM­
PANY

fCf

Kamala

12:3U
0 1 4) AMERICA'S TOP TEN
17 I Q AMERICAN BANOST AND
CD (10) THE OROWINO YEARS

2 :15

8:0 5
3 1 (1 7 ) THE PARTRIDGE FAMILY

NEW S

(Rl
&lt;111 (35) MOVIE

The Man Who
Had Power Over W omen
(C|
(1070? Rod Taylor Caro! While A
press agent caught »n the madden
mg orbit ol London % swinging
entertainment world suddenly hods
the glamourous life and its rewards
are not worth his loss of sett
respect

0 14 i B A S E B A L L Boston Med Sox
at New York Yankees

8:00

1:50
BASEBALL San On-go

(17)

7:30
THEFLINTSTONES
STAR TREK
ANIMALS ANIMALS ANI­
1lama ill)

7:35
12 117) ROMPER ROOM

1:30

32

a

7:05
12 ( 17) VEGETABLE SOUP

Tokyo lO W l l l N I I S (ji-n cw
Tracy Van Johnson

1 Ji

7:00
I NEW ZOO REVUE
THR EE
n o n O N IC

7 Q PLASTICMAN / DABY PLAS
ill 1351 j im b a k k e r

ln.fi, Second*

12:00
0 14 i DAFFY / SPEEDY SHOW
5 O U S OPEN TENNIS Mens
Semifinals and Women s Singles
finals (live from Flushing Meadows
Uv |
( l ) O WEEKEND SPECIAL The
Puppy Saves The Circus A lively
tiltie puppy saves the fortunes of a
small family circus
© ( 10) THE GROWING YEARS

I O WIDE WORLO OF SPORTS

S TO O G E S

12:00
1 O M -A -S -H
7, O MOVIE

d a il y d e v o t io n a l

6:3 0
O 141 2-COUNTRY FISHING
i ) l O MIGHTY MOUSE / HECKLE
A JECKLE
17 - 0 RAINBOW PATCH

Johnny
Morgan Fatrchrtd

P.ivrtl Strutting Jon Williams
17 O ABC NEWS NfQHTLINE
iff (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO

9:3 0

of violent crimes
&lt; J j O FAMILY FEUD

AFTERNOON

5:00
C7.1 O MARCUS WELBY. M D

environmental damage
pollution
and crime are examined (R|

September 12

MORNING

the greatest American guitar play­
ers • George Benson Chet Atkins
and Earl Klugh - perform an hour
of |a/i country and rock |R K J

6 :0 5
OH (17) A N D Y GRIFFITH

HUM AN

SATURDAY

F r id a y . Sepf, I I , 1 I B I -S
O n the Praine (C M 19741 Michael
tarntun Melissa Gif her I An Am»*n
can vni(Jtf*rt.*sc
atiem nH tn
survive in the Kansas ot the IS 70s
) O S O LID G O L D
7' O 240 R O B E R T Th v p.lol pi .1
h«*(tccrptf*1 Si,Mr-' s ,| hi-,lit dibit-*
and crashc* rtrlo a hiddfm carrytm

5 :0 0
O ' * EMERGENCY
II (35) GRIZZLY ADAMS
CD (10) SOCCER MADE IN GERM AN Y UEFA Cup Final Altmnnr
vs Ipswich
I I (17) COLLEGE SCOREBOARD
5 :05
1! ( 17) UNTOUCHABLES
EVENINO

6:00
O '* &gt;NEWS
11 (35) BIONIC WOMAN
CD (10) At l CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL II
12 (17) COLLEGE SCOREBOARD
605
3 2 (1 7 ) WRESTLING
6 :3 0
O '*) NBC NEWS
(llO N E W S
7 00
0 ( 4 ) PORTRAIT OF A LEGENO
l ) i Q HEEHAW
III Q LAWRENCE WELK
11 (35) WIL0, WILD WEST
CD (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JA C Q U E S C O U S TE A U

32 (17) COLLEGE SCOREBOARD
7:05
32 117 1WREST LING (CONT D)
O

(4)

7 :30
FLOR1DAS WATCHING

Cuban Exhibit At Daylona Beach
Museum Host John f Evans

8:00
o

(D MOVIE

The litlle itouu,

©

( 10) MySTERY Sergeant
Cntili
Swing
Swing: Togettier
While taking a midnight dip m the
Ttiames Harriet Stiaw ot Eltfida
C o llid e witnesses a m inder and is
whisfced off tiy Sergeant Cribb to
join in Ihe pursuit ot three men in a
boat (M lLJ

9:05
32 (17) FOOTBALL SATURDAY
Host Boti Neal Paul Hornung
Ai*-* Hawkins. Norm Van (Irocklin
are featured

10:00
0

&lt;*, M ISS A M E R IC A P A G E A N T
filly yming women i uinpele to# a
title and a crown in Ihis annual
pageant to tie tehn ast live from
Allanltc City. N J . Ron fly hosts
f O F A N T A S Y IS L A N D A tef«vt
smn star re creates Itie (light ot a
long-missing aviatm and a post
m an becomes a renowned ijaii
mu mi ran (H )£J

II (35) INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS
CD (10) F L A M B A R O S Wlr,n A m Servants for'* live new family al
t Ijtmbarcfs ceieiuates harvest tune
Dick and Christina rekindle then
ear her romance (Part H H H M J

10:05
32 (17)

new s

10:30
3ti (35) THE BAXTERS

11:00
U ) O I 710 NEWS
II (351 BENNY H ill
CD 110) KENTUCKY PACING DERBY 1tie fourth annual Kentucky
Pacing Derby
B»e Hurd jewel in
the 7-year old pacers Triple Crow n
is telecast live (rum LouiSviHe
Downs Louisville Kentucky

11:05
3 ) (1 7 ) MOVIE
Ur* t linnlonr Ot
The ()i&gt;era (196?) Herbert Lorn
Heather Sears A m ad disfigured
mu: reran wt&gt;o haunts the Paris
Opera House kidnaps a beautiful
young soprano and takes he# to his
iiliterr.mean lau

11:30
V O MOVIE
the Deadly Trap
(C f (197^) Frank langetla I aye
Dunaway A fn »n finds his own life
uuj that of hi*, t. irmly endangered
when he tries tn break (rivet o( his
association wdh » spy u#ganiiation
7 0
MOVIE
Twelve Angry
Men iB^W l (1967) Henry Fonda
1 i*e J C o b h A man holds out
against 11 6*4(0* jurors when they
decide an accused murderer s guilt
trefute he is proven innocent
n (35) MOVIE
Night And Day
(C l 11946) Car# Giant Eve Arden
Die Me of Cote Porter provides
some of the yieatesl muse, in
American history

12:00
0 ( 4 &gt;N E W S

12:30
O (41 S A T U R O A Y NIGHT UVE
Ho*! Mdry Kit, bKC* Gum! Wtl
It* Nelion |R|

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SUN D A Y

Septem ber 13
AFTERNOON

MOANING

12:00
5 :00
ax (17) HAT PATROL
5 :3 0
OX (17) SUNDAY MASS
5:55
DAILY WORD

O

®

0:00
( I ) © T H E LAWANO YOU
&lt;r) Q AQRICULTURE U S A.
I X ( T 7) BETWEEN THE LINES
6 :3 0
ffi o SPECTRUM
( I) a VIEWPOINT ON NUTRITION
,
6 :5 0
0 (3) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
7 :0 0
*) OPPORTUNITY LINE
1 ROBERT SCHULLER
I PICTURE OF HEALTH
(35) CHANGED LIVES
(17) JAMES ROBISON
7:30
0 ® MONTAGE: THE BLACK
PRESS
m D TODAY S BLACK WOMAN
(1f) (3 5 ) E.J. DANIELS
0 X ( 17) IT IS WRITTEN

6:00
) VOICE OF VICTORY
I REX HUUBARO
I SHOW MY PEOPLE
) JON NY QUEST
I SESAME STREET (R )Q
11) (17) THREE BTOOOES AND
FRIENDS
0 -30
) ® SUNDAY MASS
1 DAY OF DISCOVERY
I ORAL ROBERTS
35} JOSIE AND THE PUSSY*
CATS
9 :00
9 M ) J.J.'S CLUBHOUSE
(Tl O SUNDAY MORNINO
C7J O KID3 ARE PEOPLE TOO
Ouvtti rvetKX«li Hairy, David
Biatinar. Di Ham Holrar. RacPal
SwMl (fl|
HD (35) OIH.S BUNNY / ROAD
RUNNER
10} MISTER ROGERS (R)
17) LOST IN8PACE
9:15
0 (4) REAL ESTATE ACTION LINE
9 :3 0
0 ® MOVIE lady From Louisi­
ana ' (B/WI &lt;1041| John Wayna.
Ona Munaon A Louisiana lawyar's
lomance with Iha daughtar ol a
waa-known gam War comas lo a hall
ovar Iha quasi ion ol gamMng
HD (35) THE JCTSONS
0 (10) WORLD OF THE SEA

10:00
m O K JD B W O R L D
H i (3 5 )IMOVIE "Ahtwill And Co*.
laHo Maal Tha InvisiWa Man" (B/WI
( IBSl) Nancy OuM. William Frawlay Tha InvtsiNa Man hlras lha
•callarbramad duo as dalactivas
0
(10) NOVA "Linus Pauling
Crusading Scientist" Tha hie and
work ol lha ronliovarsial Nobel
Pure.winning scientist are Iracad

(RIO
OX (17) HAZEL
10:30
B BLACK AWARENESS
O FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(17) MOVIE "None Bui The
Lonely Heart" (1944) Cary Oranl.
Ethai Barrymora Accompanied by
hit undarslandmg mother, a wandenng Englishman Marches lor spir­
itual fulfillment

11:00

0

®
FLORIDA FOO IBALL
HIGH LIGHTS
( 1 ) 0 TMRTY MINUTES
0 (10) VIC BRADEN'S TENNIS
FOR THE FUTURE "Playing DouWas Vic bradan damonslialas Ilia
key points ol strategy and move­
ment that make doubles a real
adventure |R|CJ
11:30
0 ) 0 FACE THE NATION
( 7 1 Q O O N JONAS
Hj) (35) MOVIE
Blond* » Annlvmsary" |B/W| 1 19481 Penny Sin­
gleton. Ailhur Lake Blond*'* anni­
versary gift Irom Degwood causes
nothing but trouble
0 (1 O )V IK IN a S I Here King Har­
old Is K «ed" In 1068 A D . a liarca
thraa-way struggle tor England
milked tha and ol lha Viking Age

(RltJ

.

•

I

•

k. • • *

IB0B8Y BOWDEN
) JOHN MCKAY
I ISSUES ANO ANSWERS
(10) THE PRIME OF MISS
JEAN BROOIE Dorothy And
Juhel" Impressed by Dorothy AHsopp s natural grace. Miss Brodie
believes that her student may have
a gresl future as a dancer (R)
12:30
0 ® NFL 'SI
T i © NFL TODAY
(D O COLLEGE FOOTBALL 'SI
Weakly highlights ol key NCAA
contests are presented

1:00
O ® NFL FOOTBALL Houston
Oilers at Cleveland Browns
1 3 ) 0 NFL FOOTBALL Tampa Bay
Buccaneers at Kansas City Chiefs
(7) Q MORAL ISSUES
Hi) (35) MOVIE "The Hard Way"
(B/W) ( t§43| Ida Lupmo, Dennis
Morgan While pushing her younger
staler lo stardom, a girt wrecks her
own Ilia
0 (10) WASHINGTON WEEK IN
REVIEW (R)
IX (17) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
1:30
( n o WRESTLING
a
(10) WALL STREET WEEK
'Stalking Tha Wall Slieel Bar­
gain" Quasi Harris L Kempner J r ,
chief Investment officer ol the U S
National Bank ot Galveston (R|

2:00
7 ) 0 BASEBALL Boston Red So.
al New York Yankees
O
(1 0 ) NEW CINEMA FROM
INCXA The Whole Sky" (1969) The
story ol an arranged marriage and
tile as eipertenced by a typical low­
er middle-class family ol northern
India n told
HX (17) BASEBALL San Diego
Padres al AI tenia Braves
3:0 0
HD (35) MOVIE
Nightmare"
IB/W) f 1956) Edward G Robinson.
Kevin McCarthy A young musician
gels caughl up In a web ol murder
in New Orleans
3:30
0 ( 1 0 ) KENTUCKY PACING DER­
BY The lourlh annual Kentucky
Pacing Derby - the Ihird |ewet In
the 2-year-old pacers' Triple Crown
-• Is telecast Irom LoutaviMe Downs.
Louisvine. Kentucky
4:0 0
0 ( I ) NFL FOOTBALL New Eng­
land Pair tots at Philadelphia Eagles
CD 0
U S. OPEN TENMS Live
coverage of the men's finals (horn
Flushing Meadows. N Y.)
0 ( 1 0 ) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL "Tha Invisible World’'
Amazing and highly spedaUed
cameras and imaging davicea
uncover microscopic Me In minute
detail, penetrate galenas, frears
movement and unravel mysteries
about enctenl Egyptian mummies
IR)
4:3 0
BPORTSBEAT
) LAST OP THE WILD

6:00
( MONTE CARLO SHOW
J GRIZZLY ADAMS
[ 10) FIRMS LINE "A Strategy
For Cuba" Guest Anthony Navarro,
author of "TOCAYO A Cuban
Rearstance Leader's True Story "
HX( 17) RAT PATROL
5"30
1 X 0 7 ) WRESTLING
EVENING

6.-00

J NEWS
. 35) Mosaic WOMAN
(10) MAGIC METHOO O f OIL
PAJMTMa
6:3 0
I ABC NEWS
10) FLORIDA HOME GROWN
Host Tom MacCubbtn
HX (17) NICE PEOPLE Host Mery
Anna Loughlin
7:00
DISNEY'S WONDERFUL
WORLD "The Berelool Eiecullve"
Network executives become
involved m a wad scramble to keep
the public (torn finding out about a
chimpaniee who picks hit shows
(Pari 2IIHIIJ

0

(

0 SO MINUTES
0 TRUE LIFE STORKS The
•tones oI a prospector who strikes
II rich then loses H aU and an
•lcohokc'1 search for her natural
mother are dramatized. Dick Van
Dyke and Marlon Rosa alar
HD (35) WILD KINGDOM
0 (10) SOUNOBTAGE Three of
lha greatest American gutter play­
ers -• George Benson. Chet Atkins
end Earl Klugh — perform an hour
of (err. country and rock. (R) [J
HX (17) MOVIE "The Brats Bollie" &lt;1M4| Tony Randall, Boil Ives
A man buys a brats bottle lor hit
fiancee’s lillier. but trouble begins
when a genie appears
7:30
HD (35) IT'S YOUR BUSINESS

6:00

0 GD CHIPS Ponch discovers that
a boyhood friend is running a Fagin-llke burglary operation (R)
(3) O EMMY AWARDS Tha 33rd
edition ol these awards honoring
aicallenca in television win be Iele­
cts t live from lha Civic Center In
Pasadena
(Z) O MOVIE "Force 10 From
Navarone" (1978) Robert Shaw,
(lai bar a Bach Five Allied soldiers
and one woman plot lo blow up a
dam and destroy a strategic bridge
m the middle ot Nazi-occupied larillory (Rl
) DAY OF DISCOVERY
0) EVENING AT POPS The
gieel |azz pianist Oscar Paler ton
performs with lha Boston Pops
conducted by John Williams (R|
8 '3 0
OD (35) JERRY FALWELL
9 :0 0
0 (3) MOVIE "High lea" (1980)
David Janssen. Tony Mutant* Two
couples on a weekend mountain
climb In the Pacific Northwest are
caught m an avalanche (R|g
0 (10) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
F E S T IV A L
OF
F A V O R ITE S
"Sunset Song Seed Time" On
New Year's Eva. Chris marries
Ewan Tavendale. a foreman al a
nearby term (Parl4)(R|
HX (17) ATLANTIC CITY ALIVE
Host Bob Eubanks

Orm andy 80 Y ears Strong
O ctogenarian
Eugene
O rm andy re tu rn s to the
public television podium to
conduct the Philadelphia
O rch estra
in
R ach­
maninoff's "Symphony No.
2”
on
" G re a t
P e r­
formances," Sunday, Sept.
13, over PBS. (Local times
may vary; check listings.)
The encore presentation
was taped at Philadelphia's
Academy of Music In honor
of O m tandy's 80th birthday.
“ I think there's only one
m em ber still
in
the
Orchestra who started the
same year I did, in 1936,"
says the maestro.
"When you spend over 40
years — more than half your
life — in one orchestra, and
walk the same four blocks
every single day from home
to the Academy of Music,
and do nothing but study and
rehearse and conduct, you’re
part of that orchestra. And
they are a part of you — for
better or worse.
"I hope," he says, " it’s for
better."
Boyi and babies

Sixth-grade boys discover
th eir nurtu rin g in stin cts
when they take a course in
infant care using real babies
in their classroom.
“Oh, Boy! Babies!" — a

happened to him there.
Thom as,
who
has
published two books of
poetry, got Into a con­
versation with a young Czech
actress, who was working on
the picture for only the day.
She wantn) to read his
poetry so Thomas said he’d
send her a copy when he got
back to America.
Some time went by and an
unidentified man appeared
out of nowhere one day and
approached Richard. Had he
offered to send Miss So-andSo
a book of poetry?
EUGENE ORMANDY
Yes, said Richard.
Miss So-and-So was not the
special inspired by the
type
who would be interested
recent prize-winning book of
the same title — will be one in poetry, like unidentified
of the presentations for the man said.
And that was that.
second season of NBC’s
No. 2 fo r‘Hour*
Project Peacock prime-time •
"Hour Magazine," Group
series for younger viewers.
"The boys in our film will W Productions' natfpnally
be seen trying to feed in­ syndicated daytime series,
fants, diaper them, bathe will be entering its second
and burp th e m ," say s season this September.
The first week's broad­
executive producer Bruce
casts on Sept. 14 will present
Hart.
discussions on new treat­
Strange ito ry
Richard Thomas, who was ment of dyslexia, the lear­
in Czechoslovakia playing ning disability d isease;
Paul Raumer in "All Quiet c o u n s e lin g d e p r e s s e d
and
study
on the Western Front" to be children;
reb ro a d c ast W ednesday, programs for m ature women
Sept. 16 on CBS, told CBS of retu rn in g to college in
an unusual incident that preparation for new careers.

9 :3 0
HD (35) JIMMY 8WAGGART

Daytime Schedule

10:00
10) TO THE MANOR BORN
17) NEWS
10:30
(3) O ONE OAY AT A TIME The
wile ol Schneider’s best Inend
decides that threa t a crowd whan
Schneider's around (R)
&lt;D 0 BARNEY MILLER A local
community group alarli a M l scale
not m the 12th precinct In protest of
poor police protection. (RKJ
HD (35) JIM BARKER
0 110) THE GOOO NEIGHBORS

11:00
NIGHTS
Hn«ia Judy Gordon. Carlos
Conde Guests Governor of Puerto
Rico Carlos Romero Barcelo and
his wile, pianist Jesus Sanroma.
singers Nydla Caro and Trio Loa
Series
11:30
0 (D MOVIE "24 Hours Ol The
Rabat" (1978) Richard Thomas.
Susan TyraU The affect of ■ lean
Idol's death on a group ot college
students In a sma* Southern town
it drematired (A)
(D 0 THE NIGHT STALKER
Some people working for an
underground archive are found
dead and Kolchak suspects that ■
creature is responsible tor their
deaths (R)
~ 0 M O N TI CARLO SHOW
(35) IT S YOUR BUBP4ESS
(17) OPEN UP
12:30
CD 0 MOVIE "The Out tide Man"
|C) (1973) Ann-Margrel. Jean Trln1 orient
OX (17) MOVIE It * Men From
The Omars' Club'' |1983) Denny
Kaye. Cara WiMams

MORNING
4 :5 5
CD 0 CELERRITY REVUE (FRf)
5:0 0
CD 0 MARCUS W ILEY, M O
(TUE-THU)
OX (17) MISSION IMPOSSIBLE
(WED. THU)
5:15
ax(17) RAT PATROL (FRO
5:2 5
OX (17) RAT PATROL (TUE)
CD 0

5:4 5
OX (17) WORLD AT LARGE (MON.
FRO
5:55
) DAILY DEVOTIONAL
(DAILY WORD
7) WORLD AT LARGE (TUE)

6.-00
) TODAY M FLORIDA
THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
SPECTRUM (TUB)
•LACK AWARENESS (WED)
TM RTY MMUTES (THU)
I HEALTH FWLO (FRO
0 SUNRISE
(35)) JIM SAW
BARKER
117)) MOU.YW
MOUYWOOO REPORT
6 :3 0
(1)4 I BEWITCHED
6 :4 6
1(10) A.M. WEATHER
7.-00
) TODAY
I MORMNQ WITH CHARLES

12:40
(1) O MOVIE "Taste The Bfcx-d
Ol Dr acuta" (1970) Christopher Lee.
Ueoltray Keen

OOOO MORNINO AMERICA
» TOM ANO JERRY
10 V IU A ALEGRE (R)
17) FUNTIME

1:30
0 ID DAILY DEVOTIONAL.

CD

2:20
(D 0 N C W 8
2:3 0
OX (17) MOVIE China Verdure"
( 1953) Edmond O Bnen Barry Sulli­
van

5:3 0
SUMMER SEMESTER

^

7:3 0
j35| WOODY WOOOPECKER
SESAME STREET (R )Q

8:00
AM KANGAROO
CASPER
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1:00

8 :3 0
35) OREAT SPACE COASTER
10) MISTER ROGERS (R)

1

17) MY THREE SONS

9 :0 0
) HOUR MAGAZINE
iDONAHUE
I MOVIE
._ 5 ) QOMER PYLE
(10) SESAME STREET (R) g
(17) HAZEL
9 :3 0
35) ANOY GRIFFITH
17) GREEN ACRES

1

10:00

9 ) TIC TAG DOUGH
O RICHARD SIMMONS
(35) I LOVE LUCY
1 0 M A T H PATROL
(17) MOVIE
10:15
) (10) MATH PATROL
10:30
) BLOCKBUSTERS
I ALICE IR)
" j DICK VANDYKE
l) ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

1__

11:00

WHEEL OP FORTUNE
THE PRK* IE HOOT
LOVE BOAT (R|
B js u O B R g R E R

11:16
(10) MATHEMATICAL RELR11:30

0 (4) PASSWORD PLUS

D AYSOFOURUVES
&gt;ALL MY CHILDREN
(5) OX (17) MOVIE
1:30
® 0 AS THE WORLD TURNS

0®
® 0

2.00
ANOTHER WORLD
ONE U F I TO LIVE

2 :3 0
CD 0 SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
3 :0 0
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Q D U O N G UGHT
■ GENERAL HOSPITAL
1 3 5 ) BUGS BUNNY AND
FRIENDS
0 (t O ) FROM JUMPSTREET (fl)
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(10) PEOPLE OF THE FIRST
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AFTERNOON

4 :3 0
(35) TOM ANO JERRY
17) LEAVE IT TO SERVER

12.-00

GILUQAN'S ISLANO
HOGAN S HEROES
- J ) WONDER WOMAN
10) MISTER ROGERS (R)
17) THE BRAOY BUNCH

CARO SHARKS
r 1 ____ NEWS
J5 )T H E WORLD OP PEOPLE
17) FREEMAN REPORTS
12:30
® 0
THE YOUNG ANO THE
RESTLESS
CD 0 RYAN'S HOPE
(fl) (35) FAMILY AFFAIR

6:00

6:30
LAVERNE S SHIRLEY
M*A*8 ’ H
. NEWS
0) POSTSCRIPTS
BEVERLY HILUMLLIES

�F r id a y , S tp t. H , I W 1 - ;

E w ir in g H r * Id, Sanford, F I.

M ONDAY
EVENING

6:00
0 ® ( D 0 ( 1 ) 0 new s
(It) (3 5) 0X7 17) ANDY GRIFFITH
ffi (10) OCEAN US
6 :3 0
O ® NBC NEWS
1Jj O CBS NEWS
(J) p ABC NEWS
dll (351 CARTER COUNTRY
GD 10 OCEANUS
' l l 117) QOMER PYLE
7:0 0
O (T ) TH E M U P P ETS
1) 0 PM M A G A Z IN E A profile Ol
•cto* Alan Alda, tour civilian scien­
tists chosen lot a 1983 space shut
tie flight. Linda Harris discovers
Alaska t summer pleasures Chet
Tell prepares spaghetti squash

O JOKER S WILD
(35) BARNEY MILLER
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
(J® (1 7 ) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS

S

7:3 0
) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I YOU ASKED FOR IT
I FAMILY FEUD
IS ) RHODA
(1 0 ) DICK CAVETT Guekt
Jonathan Miller (Pail 1ol2)|R|
M (17) SANFORO ANO SON

e.-oo

Septem ber 14
CD O
ACE

8HOWOOWN AT THE PAL-

17) ANOY GRIFFITH
U N0ER8TAN 0INQ
V»OR
6 :3 0
l(£ )N 0 C N fW a
i Q cssncws
) B ABC NEWS
) (3 5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
‘
* ‘ U N D E R S T A N D IN G
HUMAN BEHAVIOR
0 ( 1 7 ) GOMER PYLE
7.-00
■ (4) THE MUPPETS
(D O P M MAOA2NC A look at
grizzly attacks m Glacier National
Park; a palanled antl-tnoring
device. Chef Tea preparet (rath
mackerel. Vicky Lantky discovert
"under a dollar" gadgets for par­
ents
WILD
g b g) JOKER'S
j
5) BARNEY MILLER
(10) MACNEIL / LEHRER
REPORT
O (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRKNOS

s ra

7 :3 0
) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
I YOU ASKED FOR rT
I FAMILY FIU O
3 5 ) RHOOA
(10) DICK CAVETT Quasi
Jonathan Muter (Pari 2 of 2) (R|
OX (17) SANFORO AND SON

6:00

■ GD CRASH ISLAND A plana
carrying a swim taam crashes on an
uncharted Pacific island &lt;R|
CD 0 THE FUTURE: WHAT'S
NEXTT Oaorga Plimpton and
Caran Kaye host a look at techno­
logical Innovations that wta change
everyday kfe by the year 2000
GD 0 HAPPY DAYS Fonzre d « covers a waitress m a roadtida din­
ar alio resembles rut long lost
mother (R )g
IU) (35) MOVIE "The modem " (C)
(1967) Beau Bndgaa. Ed McMahon
Tern drunken hoods terrorire sub­
way cart pasaangart
0 (10) NOVA "A I* For Atom. B
It For Bomb" Or Edward Tailar. the
"Father of the H-Bomb." acclaimed
as a scientific gamut and also
catad one ol the most dangerous
•csentwts m the country, it profiled

r

6:30
S O THE TWO OF US A genii*man s gentleman gets more than he
bargained for when he goes to work
for a woman |R|
9:0 0
O
(D
M O VIE
F »m ily Plot
(1976) William Devane Bruce Dern
A lorlune teller and her cab-driver
boyfriend tel out to locale a
wealthy widow a m iltin g heir and
collect a S 10 000 reward IRJ :j
(1 ) O
M ’ A ’ S 'H Hawkey# be lt
B J that he can go an entire day
without telling a |Oke (R)
( D O NFL F O O T B A L L Oakland
Raiders at Minnesota Vikings V)
ill) (35) C H ILD R EN O N T H E R UN
9:3 0
( D O H O U S E C A L L S Alter being
stood up twice by Charley. Ann
eyes a handsome patient (R)

Septem ber 15
(1966) Marlon Biando. Anianette
Comer A rare pony it stolen born a
cowboy and hidden in Meiico
8:30
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dinner IR ig
9 :0 0
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Hal Holbioot When hit Ismay it
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mghti
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poses es las own twin to romance
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By CINDY ADAMS
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said, "My squint, my capped
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have no interest in being a
com m ercial success and,
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arho abandoned bef yea&gt;» earlier farm workers and growers (R)
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�9— Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.______ Friday, Sept. 11, 1t»t

W EDNESD A Y

A Divergent Role
For Edward Herrmann
Wluit do Franklin Delano
Hoosevelt and b a se b a ll's
immortal l&gt;ou Gehrig, two o(
the most famous Americans
of this century, have in
com m on? E dw ard H e rr­
mann, the actor.
In television productions,
H errm an n
h as
played
H oosevelt, the w ealthy,
outgoing p o litician ; and
Gehrig, a shy athlete who
worked his way through
college before reaching the
Yankees.
“ Portraying FDR and Ism
Gehrig — those opportunities
are nn actor’s dream ," says
Herrmann, "certainly the
highlights nf an y o n e's
career. And yet, playing
such well-known gentlemen
had drawbacks that do not
ex ist In purely fictional
dm racters. An actor can
take lib e rtie s w ith an
author's creation, something
that is difficult to do with
someone who lived recently
and was revered, us were the
two gentlemen in question."
H errm an n
s ta r s
in
"P o rtrait of a Stripper," to
be rebroadcast on Tuesday,
Sept. 15 on CBS. He portrays
a photographer who accepts

EVENINO

Septem ber 16

( D O MOVIE
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Western Front' (1979) Richard
Thomas. Ernest Borgmne The terri­
fying events ol World War I are
seen through the eyes ol a young
German soldier |R|
CD o t h e QREATE8T AMERICAN
HERO Pam's life is threatened
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involved m a bribery scheme (R|
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George. Judy Came Through a
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Anthropologists discover valuable
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6:00
Q (JH1) Q (D O NEWS
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ANDY GRIFFITH
directing, lie brings an in­ SI ( 10) rrs EVERYBODY'S
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Herrmann says he was (1p (35} CARTER COUNTRY
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7:00
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O P M MAGAZINE Uni
"Not Just the roles," he (I)
Glenn Smyty who «4t eipUm the
explains, "but the caliber of rebirlhing piocett. pterviews with
the people I’ve been for­ grizzly attack survivors. Cathie
Mann m l how a flashy commmci.ll
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a Job he finds distasteful
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because he needs the money. Petrie, Fielder Cook, Jam es
FRIENDS
attempts to kill the rfal star (R|
"It's a different kind of Bridges and George Hoy
7:30
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O &gt;1) ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT
filmmaker Frederick Wiieman cap­
role for me, which is one Hill. T)iis only begins to
0 ) 0 YOU ASKEO FOR IT
tures the energy, glamour and grind
reason I found it appealing," mention those distinguished
( 7 ) 0 FAMILY FEUD
of the modeling profession m a doc­
(II) (35)RHOOA
says Herrmann.
umentary profile of New York City s
professionals I've not only
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CAVETT
Guest Bar­ /oil Agency
“ Another important factor enjoyed working with, but
onets de Rothschild (Part t ot ?l
10:00
involved in helping me learned a great deal from.
(Rl
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(JX
(17) SANFORD AND SON
decide was Hie fact that John To this list, I can confidently
a young woman s dealh was lh«
8:00
Alonzo was the director. We add Ix'sley Ann Warren, my
rasull ol a quick weight-lost induc­
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(3)
PEAL
PEOPLE
Featured a tion mnlhod prnsenbad by a ladhad never worked togetlier, co-star, and John Alonzo, for
policemen s' demolition derby, a dial author (Rl
but his reputation as a their work on 'P ortrait of a
man who uses lemons to power his CD O DYNASTY Blaka is put on
car
and appliances, an 1 1 -year-old trial lor (ha murder ot Steven s lov­
cinematographer was well- Stripper.’
stockbroker, a singing caterpillar
er Ted. and Fallon risks Steven s
known to me. I thought his
"W e all a re equally(Rl
love m an attempt lo convince the
c a m e ra
work
on ded icated to giving an
“ Chinatown," for example, audience our best shot. And,
was outstanding. Now that that's what we're all here
Septem ber 17
he has also branched out to for, isn't It?"

TH U R S D A Y
EVENING

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7.00

■ (D THE MUPPETS

1

3 ) O AM. MAGAZINE An inter­
view with actor Roger Moore, a man
who helps mhired see buds on Flor­
ida's coast. Dr Wasco has a stress
quo Rusen Weeeertlem tens how
lo plan for a flea market visit
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REPORT

MACNEIL / LEHRER

ID (17) CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRKN06

7:30

I &lt;T&gt; ENTERTAINMENT TOM OHT
) a YOU ASKEO FOR IT
) ■ FAMILY FEUO
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oness de Rothschild (Part 2 ol 2)

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8:00
a d ) NATIONAL OEOORARHIC
SPECIAL The Voyage Ot The Bri­
gantine Yankee" With a crew ot
young emeteur sartors. Irving end

Eleclia Johnson course Ihe globe In
Ihear ship
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MAGNUM. P.L Magnum
mvealigalee the suicide ol a glamo­
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BEST OF THE WEST
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brothers ol a mean and ornery out­
law who was caplurad by Sam
OX (35) MOVIE "Shake Hands
With Ths Devil - (B/W) (1959) James
Cagney. Don Murray. A student
from the U S attempts to raftam
horn getting involved m the under­
ground movement during the Irish

a
( 1 0 ) THE VOYAGE OF
CHARLES DARWIN Darwin reluc­
tantly publishes tus "The Origin Ot
Species By Means Ol Natural
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Wallace is about to publish a similar
theory (Part 7|(R)
OX (17) MOVIE Something For A
lonely Men" (19M) Den Blocker.
Susan Clark A young woman helps
a courageous man m his attempt to
recover a locomotive to bo used to
help thee town prosper.

8:30

®Philadelphia
a Eagles
NFL
FOOTBALL
al Buffalo Bats
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A Wornan a Story" (1979) Elizabeth Mont­
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her children becomes Involved m a
brlter tlruggie for control ol her Isle
husband's company (R)
CD 8 NURSE A friend of Mary’s

NEWS
IJX (1 7 ) NEWS

10:30
LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Braves al Los Angeles Dodgers

11:00
.
0® 0N EW S
5) BENNY HILL
11:30
O
®
TONIOHT Host Johnny
Carson Guesls Charles Nelson
Reilly. Al Jarreau. Pancho the singparrot
O M 'A 'B 'H
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_ (3 5 ) STREETS
8TREETS OF SAN FRAN­
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CISCO
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12:00
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don. Tab Hunter. “The Joker la
Mild Phil Foster (R)
12:30
a d ) TOMORROW Guest satirist
Dave Allen

1:00

111O

NEWS
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Shells*y Winter*

1:10

CD O

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Ge«*on. Chart** Gray

2:50
CD O NEWS

3:10
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la Mayo

3:20

® O

MOVIE "Machine Gun
McCain (Cl (1970) John Casta
vetes. Brill Ekland
makes shocking accusations about
Mary s lata husband (fl)
O (10) UNDERSEA WORLD OF
JACQUES COUSTEAU

10:00

® Q KNOTS LANDING Sid and
Karen's teen-age son rescues a girl
from drowning at a pot / pool party

sR)sM

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10:30

OX (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
B (1 0 UR POMPEII
OX ( 1 7 ) BASEBALL Atlanta
Braves at Loa Angelas Dodgers

11:00
5) BENNY HILL
10) POBTBCRIPTB
® 88 NEWS

11:18
11:30

•
d ) TONIGHT Host Johnny
Carson Guests Mel Titus. Franklyn
dx (35) STREETS OF SAN FRAN­
CISCO
11:46
® B ABC NEWS NKJHTUNE

12.-00
® O ST ARSKY ANO HUTCH

12:16
® O CHARLIE'S ANOELS The
Angels track down a killer preying
on young women at the beach |R)

12:30
• d&gt; TOMORROW Oueata actor
Charles Grodm. playwright Neil
Simon and hit arils, actress Marsha
Mason. Roberta Flack

1:00

SIZES from 4 x 4 to 12x50

1N % FINANCING
ON MOST

FREE SET-UP &amp; DELIVERY

|ury ol her lather a innocence (Rl
at) (3 5 ) INDEPENDENT NETWORK

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17) MOVIE ' Moulm Rouge
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3:20
® B

ORLANDO

LONQW OOD

830-8300

Ths firtt lion tamer wai “Manchester Jack," lion keeper at
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land during the first half of the nineteenth century. HI*
firit act, performed in 1836, consisted of aitting on the
295-3100
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. . . ______________________ xvx&amp;f&amp;mr/wmxi.....

4100 W Colonial Dr
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Casselberry. Fl 32707

^PE ^M O ^SA T
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news

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OX (1 7 ) MOVIE -Kiss Of EW"
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® O
MOVIE "ths Carnation
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Katharine Schofield

�</text>
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                    <text>7&lt;th Y ear. No. &gt;—Tuesday, August 23, 1981—Sanford, Florlda32771

E vening H era ld -(U $ P S 481 2 8 0 1 -P ric e 20 Cents

Crime Rate Continues To Climb In Sanford-Seminole
By BRITT SMITH
llrrald Stall Writer
The latest figures are out and u expected, the crime rate In
Florida and the Sanford-Seminole area continues to rise.
The only small concession In that rather gloomy news ti that
the local crime rate was lower than that statewide...but not by
much.
The Florida Department of law Enforcement's (FDLE)
statistics show violent crimes — murder, rape, robbery, and
aggravated assault — Increased 10.1 percent In Florida In the
first six months of this year.
The number of similar offenses in Sanford and the unin­
corporated area of Seminole County rose 1.1 percent during
the same period.
The local figures show that Sanford Is somewhat less violent
this year than last. While the number of murders during the
first halves of both years remained the same — I —

aggravated assaults dropped slightly from 94 re p rte d in­
cidents to U.
In the county, however, the murder rate Jumped 75 percent
from 1 in 1(60 to 4 so far this year. But like In the city, the
number of aggravated assaults dropped from 121 to 108.
Burglaries were up In both the city and the county. In San­
ford, there were 346 break-ins so far this year, up 29 from the
1960 figure of 319. Consequently, the value of property stolen
also rose — up to 9147,923 from $109,771.
In the unincorporated area of the county, burglars may be
getting more selective. While the number of burglaries rose —
1,07* to 1,220 — the value of property taken fell from 91,066,129
to 9720.649.
The largest percentage increased in the area of violent
crime locally came In the rape category. In Sanford, there
have been 12 rapes so far In 1961, compared to only 7 last year.
In the county, the figures were even worst —up from 11 to 23.

The figures, both local and statewide, caused state Attorney
General Jim Smith to predict that the next major thrust of the
Reagan administration will be in the area of crime, par­
ticularly on the narcotics front
Both Smith and DLE Commissioner James York attributed
much of the crime increase to drugs, with Smith saying as
much as one-third of the homicides In south Florida are drugrelated
Smith said the expenditure of $200 million a year for
spraying drug plants overseas would substantiaDy reduce the
drug trade and curb violent crime.
He said recommendations, released in Washington last week
by the Violent Crime Task Force formed by U.S. Attorney
General William French Smith, would include the funds for
spraying herbicides In Colombia and Jamaica.
They also called for handgun controls, use of military In­
telligence to secure our borders against smuggling, use of IKS

records in criminal prosecutions, substantial increases in
federal law enforcement manpower devoted to crime and drug
smuggling and allocation of $2 billion over a four year period
among the states for construction of Jails.
"Based on a meeting with Vice President George Bush and a
continuing dialogue with people In the Justice Department,"
Florida's Smith said, "I anticipate that the next major thrust
of the Reagan administration will be in the area of crime."
York reported that robbery alone was up 30 9 percent in
Florida, with the value of property taken skyrocketing to $307.3
million.
He said intra-family violence, drug abuse, population shifts
and the influx of Cuban and Haitain refugees are having a
major Impact on crime.
Murder increased 19.7 percent, aggravated assault r -e 4 1
percent, and forcible rape was up 6 6 percent.

No Longer All-Black

City Fills Out
Housing Board
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
J. Wain Cummings, a Seminole County
building inspector (or the p u t seven
years, has been appointed to the San­
ford Housing Authority Board of Com­
missioners.
The Sanford City Commission Monday
night on recommendation of one of the
city's Uack leaders, Alfred DeUttibeaudiere, voted unanimously to ap­
point Cummings to the five-member
board.
The board Is responsible for setting
policy In the administration of the city's
six public bousing projects containing 480
apartment units.
The housing authority board of commistioners will hold a work shop i
at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, at Redding
Gardena according to Chairman Joseph
Caldwell. Cummings win assume his new
office at that session.
The other members of the housing
authority board are: Mary Whitney,
Elite Pringle and Leroy Johnson.
DeUlUbeaudiere, who noted he w u
among thou who-#pearheaded placing
blacks on the housing authority In the
early 1970s, said he Is "disgusted" with
the housing authority today.
‘‘Some elements seem to think the
housing authority is a black organisation
and it'a not," DeLatlibeaudlere said. "It
la both black and white. I am disgusted
that it hat become an all-black board and
that persons are soliciting to get their
buddies on the board.
"I would like to see two whites on the
board," he said.
DcLsItibeaudiere said some years ago
tenants In the authority's housing had a
black-towhlte ratio of about 63 percent to

TAKE ME
HOME, PLEASE
111 is winsomr cuddly 4'*week-old kitten is one of 52
cats and kittens now available
for adoption at the Seminolr
County Animal Control Shel­
ter at Five Points in South
Sanford. There are also many
dogs and puppies at the shel­
ter. Prospective adoptive pa­
rents may look them over at
the shelter between the hours
of K a.in. and 4::t0 p.m. on
Monday through Saturday and
8 a.m. to 6 p.nt., Tuesday
through Friday. For further
information rail the shelter.

Income families, Cummings said "if
money (from some federal projects) had
been divided among the poor, some could
have retired."

J. WAIN CUMMINGS
17 percent. He said the statistics indicate
there should be three black board
members and two white.
“I have found Mr. Cummings has a
good knowledge of public housing and
with him the tenants and the d ty would
both be served," DeLattlbeaudiere said.
Del-atUbeaudiere Is also a Seminole
County building Inspector.
Cummings, during an Interview by the
city commission, said due to the work of
a board on which he served In the state of
Ohio. $31 million In federal funding w u
gained for public housing for senior
citizens and the poor. Without directly
referring to the problem the Sanford
Housing Authority had with a project
designed to purchase and renovate
dilapidated housing for resale to low

Longwood Sets

The city of Sanford withdrew spon­
sorship of the authority's federallyfunded project lu t spring after City
Manager W.E. "Pete" Knowles found
that while 1500,000 had been spent only
seven houses had been prepared for
m a le .
City Commissioner Milton Smith told
Cunumngs the authority needs members
who are dedicated and committed to
persons who need public housing He
added that federal money allocated to the
authority should be used to benefit u
many people as possible.
Commissioner David F arr, who two
weeks ago complained that he w u
having trouble finding qualified
who wished to serve on the authority,
said Monday night the d ty commission
" h u been Inundated with the persons
Interested In serving."
Three others, Including former
Sheriff's Deputy Oscar Redden, sent
resumes to the dty lor conslderstlon for
the appointment.
In his resume, Cummings said he w u
d irector of Community Action In
Delaware. Ohio from 1969-1973; had been
a high pressure steam engineer at a girls'
Industrial achool; a certified plumber;
service manager for a national depart­
ment store, an electrical contractor and
a UJL Navy veteran.
He w u also s member of the Council of
Social Agencies In Delaware County,
Ohio; member of the mayor's advisory
board on housing there; and consulting
technician to the Delaware County
Housing Development Corp.

A new slate law prohibiting children
who have not been immunized from
entering school has come in the wake of s
high rate of measles in Florida schools,
according to the Department of Health
and Rehabilitative services.
The new law, effective July 2, 1(61,
makes tt mandatory for students en­
tering any grade or attending any grade
from kindergarten to 12, to have on file
with the school proof of Immunization
against seven diseases. Since 1971, entry
students on any grade level were
required to show proof of Immunity to
measles, mumps, rubella, diphtheria,
whooping cough, tetanus and polio before
enrollment. Students already in at­
tendance were not required to comply.
According to Dr. Jorge Deju, Seminole

County Health Director, Florida acrounta for approximately 10 percent of
the m e u le s cases in the entire United
States.
"Florida has a high rate because of the
lack of Immunization in the population,"
Deju said. "Without immunization there
is more of a chance (or infectious
diseases to spread. The new law will
certainly help."
Exceptions will be nude for children
who have medical problems and a signed
request from their doctor to be excused
either temporarily or permanently and
children whose parents send a written
request to the school stating religious
conflicts.
School officials nuy issue temporary
exem ptions (or new students from

another county but they are not to exceed
30 school days
Dr. James T. Howell, state health
officer, said the new law should give
health officials and private physicians
the opportunity to control and poasibiy
eliminate the transmission oil com­
m unicable diseases In th e school
population.
Deju gave the following schedule for
pre-school Immunizations at the county's
health clinics:
In Izmgwood, at Wilma and Church
Streets, 6 a m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday and In Sanford, 900 French
Avenue, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday. No appointments are
needed.

Inflation Rebounds

TODAY

Sewer Rate Hike
Monthly sewage treatment fee* for customers of two cityowned package treatment plants were increased from 97JO
to $9 in a 3-2 vote by Longwood City Commissioners Monday
night
The new ordinance also Increases sewer connection feta
from $375 to $479. The two commercial customers who
utilize the sewage treatment service, but are not on the dty
water system. Post Time Lounge and SanfordOrlando
Kennel Club, are also slated for an Increase.
The ordinance calls for commercial customers with three
or teas water closets to pay 923 a month and businesses with
four or mare water doaeta and recreational facilities to pay
$750 a month during season and 925 off season. Other
businesses connected to the water system are billed a
percentage of their water bill as a sewer fee.
To encourage conservation of resources, the ordinance
offera an Incentive to developers and homeowners to Install
or convert to a “ p a y water" concept In residential
plumbing. The Incentive recommended by City
Administrator David Chacey Is a reduction in the monthly
arwer rate (or those using the new method to $6 a month and
an Initial hook-up fee of 9373
Instead of channeling all waste water from homes Into the
sewer systems, the "gray water" concept calls for water
from baths, showers, laundry facilities and sinks (except
garbage disposals) to be directed to a special tank and
drainfleld on site. It will then percolate into the ground,
purifying before reaching the water table, according to
Chacey. Gray water could also be used for lawn sprinkling.
Chacey said the fee Increases are necessary to provide
funds for necessary repairs to the city’s Columbus Harbour
aM Skylark sewer systems and to avoid a deficit The vote
on the ordinance w u Commissioners Steven Uakart end
June Lormann against and John Hepp, Timothy O’Leary
aad J.R. Grant in favor.
,
A public hearing on an ordinance Increasing water rates
and meter connections w u continued to Sept. 14 to allow
commissioners to hold a work session to consider possible
changes. The work session ti scheduled for Sept. 4 a t 3 pm .
at the city halL
- JANE CASSELBERRY

Immunization Rules Change

World Series
Finale Tonight
Seminole's pitcher Kelly llyseil
struck out live batters in a little
trver two Innings as the Broncos
kept their World Series hopes aUvr with a 3-2 victory over St.
Bernard Parish In Lafayette, t.a.
Today at 5 o'clock, Seminole
plays Richmond, Cal. lor the
championship. They must beat
Richmond twice In the double­
elim ination competition. D e­
tails, Page f A.
KELLY HY8ELL

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WASHINGTON ( U PI) - The Consumer Price Index ihot up
al an annual rate ol 15.2 percent In July, a sharp rebound of
inflation into double dlgita caused mainly by rising food prices,
the labor Department reported today.
The Increases more than offset the continuing good news
about moderating energy prices.
At the same fime, the government reported the real earnings
ol Americans plunged by more than it had in any month since
May of last year.
The Consumer Price Index (or July w u up 1.1 percent (or
the month stone alter seasonal adjustment Compounded (or 12
months, it was up 15.2 percent — more than any month since
the 17.5 Increase in March of last year.

!A
IA
IB
The major change for the month w u In food prices, up 01
2A penent for the month. The oversD inflation index had
SA bene fitted from several months of almost no Increase In food
IB prices and there were some indications the July peak may be
9A temporary.
IA-7A
Other factors that combined during July to the disadvantage
IB -of the consumer were transportation costs, particularly Ais
2A (ares and used car prices. The mass transit costs during the
_
.... 2A month were up an extraordinary 14.7 percent.

Will Humane Society G e t County Land At $1 A Year?
Cillztns m ay e i p r t u their
feelings about the proposal to lease
(or 91 per year county-owned land to
the Seminole County Humana
society i t a 7 p.m. public hearing of
the county ccmmiaaion today.
County com m lu io n era aav tral
months ago agreed on a vote of 3-io-2
to leaaa a parcel to the aodaty u the
site for lia proposed new 9200.000
animal shatter, pending tonight's
pajKIfr* } ^ y j a |

The lease agreement la to be lor a
30-year period. The two sites being
considered are both located at Fhre
Points In south Sanford.
The first rite and tha one preferred
by the humane society la located on
the c u t side of UB. 17-62 at County

Home Road and contains three
acres. The second site la located on
the west aide of the highway, ad­
jacent to tha county’a animal control
facility and contains about 1J acres.
Joanne Prather, president of (he
humane society, said today u far u
she knows tha offer made by
Thomas Van Zandt of Maitland to
donate 9200,009 (or the shelter's
construction is still good. But she
said Van Zandt put a time limit on
the donation of the end of Sep­
tember. "He said he neoded to have
the money spent by that time for tax
purposes," Mrs. Prather said.
C om m luionera, wbo opposed
leasing of the property on tha west
side of the highway, ware Robert

Feather and Bill Kirchhoff Feather city's zoning laws. The property had
said the Ume the three-acre tract been zoned (or apartment con­
is worth $100,000 and ehould be sold struction
John Percy, the county's director
If the county has no use for tl
Ktrchhoff and Feather both of public services, said the rezoning
preferred to offer lo least to the request was prompted by the
humane society a parcel on Dike humane society's quest for countyRoad at the alts of one of the coun­ owned property to lease for Its new
ty's water and sewer utility plants. animal shelter. Percy said (he
Both indicated they might com­ county commissioners agreed to
promise on tha rite adjacent to bring the other county operation*
- into a "m ore suitable ronlng
animal control.
M eanwhile, the Sanford City category."
Only one person appeared before
Commission Monday night voted
unanim ously to rezone county the city commission lo question the
property, including both sites, at rezoning — Edna Swignoskl, who
Five Points to general commercial lives near the county property.
“ I don't think that valuable land
The rezoning brings the county
properly into compliance with the should be used (or animals.” she

said. She also asked whether the city
could annex her property against
her will.
Mayor Lee P. Moore assured that
the city could not annex her property
if the does not wish tl annexed. He
also said that the d ty has no control
over what the county le a ie s
property (or. He ven tu red the
opinion, however, that with all the
opposition that has been generated
against the county leasing the site,
commissioners might change their
minds.
Those commissioners who favored
tf&lt;e lease were Bob Sturm, Barbara
Christensen and Sandra Glenn. —
DONNA ESTES

gB* « # •• -te( #

V

�2A-lv*nlng Bar* Id, ianford, FI.

Tuesday, Aug. H. m i

One Guilty, One Acquitted In Shooting

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
China's New Prem /er
Meefs Jimmy Carter
PEKING I UPI) -* Form er President Jimmy Carter
traded note* on peanuta and Jogging with Chinese
Premier Zhao Ziyang today and was praised (or his
"outstanding co n trib u tio n s" to Slno-American
relations.
Carter, making his first visit to China, met (or nearly
two hours with Zhao, who like himself was "governor"
ol a rural agricultural province.
Former While House Press Secretary Jody Powell
told reporters the two men discussed soybeans and
peanuts and their protein value. China Is now exporting
peanuts to the United States.
Zhao also confessed to Carter, who was up early
today to go Jogging, that he too was a Jogger and
suggested the two (A them have what Powell described
as a “Joint Jog.”
"The invitation was accepted in principle," said
Powell, who has lost little of his Georgian wit, "but no
dale was set."
Carter, also traveling with wife Kosalynn and
daughter Amy, arrived Monday to a firat-clasa
reception by Chinese officials, who are honoring him
(or his decision to normalize relations between the two
countries.

Begin In Alexandria
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt (U PI) - Isrsell Prime
Minister Menachem Begin arrived in Alexandria today
for a twodsy summit with Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat on their chief unresolved issue — self-rule for the
Palestinians
Begin arrived from Jerusalem at 5: OS a m. EDT and
was to metl with Sadat at his waterfront residence In
this Mediterranean resort city at 12:30 p m. EDT.
Israel's Foreign Ministry Indicated the Jewish stale
wanted a speedy resumption of the autonomy talks on
granting self-rule to 1.2 million Palestinians In the
occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. But Egypt ap­
peared in no hurry to resume the talks it broke off last
summer.
"We went an ongoing (autonomy) negotiating
process, not ministerial meetings every two months,"
David Klmche, director general of the Foreign
Ministry said Monday.
Egyptian officials Mid they would first like lo see a
relaxation in what Egypt considers an intransigent
Israeli negotiating position on limited administrative
self-rule for the Palestinians.
Foreign Minister Kama) llasaan All said, "Before
the resumption of any negotiations, there must be
adequate comprehensive p reparation to resolve
existing differences."

Khomeini: Spy On Each Other
Ualtcd Press International
Ayatollah Huhollah Khomeini, faced with
unrelenting attacks by his opponents, told Iranians it
was their "religious and national duty" lo spy on
members of their families opposed to the Islamic
Republic.
Khomeini’s order to turn In family members opposed
to his regime came amid a crackdown on guerrilla
groups and aisaulta by leftists that Included a Monday
attack on the home of Iran's prosecutor general.
Ayatollah Rabbanl Amlaahl, who became prosecutor
when Abothaasan Bani-Sadr was ousted from the
presidency In June, escaped Injury when hi* Tehran
home was ((lacked early In the morning with grenades
and automatic weapons.
Khomeini said at hla heavily guarded North Tehran
home Mortday that it was the "religious ami national
duly" of Iranians to counter plots against his regime
by spying on each other.
"(People) must counsel their offspring and siblings,
if they do not accept such advice then they must be
Identified," the ll-year-old leader of Iran said.
The aging cleric also renewed hla offer to pardon
opponents who repent their alleged crimes. "The way
of repentance Is open before they are caught," he said.

WEATHER
NATIONAL REPORT: Thunderstorms spread across the
Plains Into the Midwest and moat of the Mississippi Valley
today, Hooding streets and knocking out power tn northeastern
Illinois. Lightning bored a bole through a roof of a house In
Illinois late Monday. Heavy rains lashed the Dakotas,
Nebraska, northeastern Illinois and eastern Texas late
Monday. Showers and thunderstorms stretched from lower
M lchiun to Alabama, Georgia and the Carolines Monday
night. Thunders loom also were reported tn the Florida
Peninsula. Temperatures across the nation ranged from a low
X degree* at Weal Yellowstone, Mont., to 110 degrees In the
Southwestern deserts. Midwestern temperatures ranged In
th*upper Ms to mld-70s Monday, most of the South had higns
Ip SO*nnd 90s and Pacific Coast temperatures ranged in the
IQs and 70s.
AREA READINGS (I n .m .|: temperaturs: 71; overnight
low: 74; Monday'i high: *4; barometric prtaaurc: 30.01 l&gt;
r i l i ng- relative humidity: S3 percent; winds: North at S mph.
WEDNESDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs f;10
a.m., 4:44 p.m.; low 11:94 a.m .; PORT CANAVERAL: high*.
1:02a.m., 1:31 p.m.; low 11:49 a.m.; BAYPORT: high*. 12:0
a m , 11:29 p.m.; Iowa, !;4B a.m., 4:54 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST: SL Augustine lo Jupiter Inlet, Out
M Miles: Wind mostly east to southeast around 10 knots
through Wednesday. Seas 2 lo ) fe e t Winds and seas higher
m a r scattered thunderstorms
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Wednesday with
a chance of thunderstorms mainly during afternoon and
evening hours. Highs near 90 or low 90s. Lows tonight In the low
to mid 70s. Wind east to southeast 10 mph or leas but stronger
near thunderstorms. Rain probability 90 percent today, 20
percent tonight, 40 percent Wednesday.
EXTENDED FORECAST - Partly cloudy with scattered
afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Lows In low to mid 70s
north to m a r 40a south. Highs from mid 00a to lower 90s.

One Sanford man was acquitted and another convicted in
Circuit Court in Sanford Monday on attempted murder
charges tn connection with a March 1) shooting outside a
westatde bar.
Columbus Tyrone Shuler, 19, of 94 Lake Monroe Terrace,
was found innocent of the assault, but his codefendant Ieon
Pendleton. II, of 1019 Hickory Ave., was convicted by a sixmember Jury of aggravated assault and carrying a concealed
firearm.
The Jury relumed its verdicts on the lesser charges after 14
hours of deliberation. Sentencing for Pendleton w u deferred
pending completion of an investigation into his background. He
faces a mlxlmum of five years Imprisonment on each charge
and will have to serve a t least three years because a firearm
was used during the commission of a felony.
Shuler and Pendleton were accused of shooting Timothy
"Skip" McIntyre, 22, of 1QM Olive Way, Sanford, near the
Deluxe Bar. According to testimony during the twoday trial,
McIntyre was shot once in the stomach after he and some
friends had gotten Into a verbal battle with Shuler and Pen­
dleton who w n t reportedly dressed as women.
Punches were thrown and Pendleton pulled a gun out of his
purse and began shooting while Shuler encouraged him,
testimony revealed.
CYCUSTROBBED
It was a le u than routine Sunday evening bicycle ride for
Kenneth Gilliand. He waa assaulted by three thugs who at first

Action Reports
* Fires
* C ourts

* Police
demanded money, but settled for his bike and a bag of clothes.
Gilliand, 21, of 1334 Concord St., Casselberry, told Seminole
County sheriff’s deputies that he waa riding along County Road
427 near State Road 434 about 10 p.m. when he w u approached
by three males, one of whom grabbed him and demanded cash.
Gilliand refused and a fight ensued, deputies u id . The
bandits got away with no money, but they did take Gllliand'a
bike and a plastic bag containing 10 shirts and a pair of shoes.
GUESS WHO CAME DURING DINNER?
Thieves, that's who. They came to Charles Koppenhofer's
home tn Geneva Saturday night while Koppenhofer w u out for
dinner. And they left with over 12,000 worth of property.
According to a sheriffs report, the bandits entered the house
some time between 6 p m. and 11 p.m. by pushing In a window
tn a side door. Once inside, they stole a television, stereo, tape
deck, camera, two tape recorders, a tilde projector, adding
machine, and typewriter.

DEATH PROBE CONTINUES
Winter Park police were today continuing their investigation
into the Friday night death of a 39-year-old Chuluota man who
died under suspicious circumstances.
Daniel Shadron rf 1010 Hobson St. died of a head injury late
Friday evening at Winter Park Memorial Hospital, "but that’s
about all we know," according to Del. U . Diaries Sunning.
Shadron had apparently "not been beaten," Sunning said.
"T hen w en no other marks on the body, Just the head injury.
And we don't know how he got that. He was brought into the
hospital by a relative, I think it was his brother, but we haven't
been able to locate him,” he u id .
"So, at this point, we don't know if it was an accidental death
or what."
CONSTRUCTION HEISTS
Sheriff's deputies were continuing their investigation today
into two weekend construction site thefts in which an
estimated 21.475 worth of equipment, primarily copper wire
and pipe, was stolen.
About 300 feet of copper pipe valued at 2490 was taken from a
construction site at 3441 Oak Vista Lane In Maitland, according
to a sheriffs report.
The aecond theft occurred from a construction trailer at the
Crown Point condominiums, Weklva Springs Road, Altamonte
Springs. Deputies reported that someone cut a lock off the door
and made off with various piece* of electric equipmrn'. two
heaters, and 2,300 feet of copper wire.

600,000 W orkers Affected

Postal Unions Overwhelmingly
Approve $4.8 Billion Contract
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The bulk of
the nation'* nearly 400,000 postal workers
ore working today under a new |4 .4
billion contract overwhelm ingly ap­
proved by the two major postal unions.
In announcing ratification of the pact,
leaders of the American Postal Workers
Union and the National Association of
L etter C arriers, with a combined
membership of 420,000, denied their
members were Influenced by President
R eagan's hard-line stan d against
striking air traffic controllers.
The postal workers at one point also
had threatened a strike If their demands
were not met at the bargaining table.
The ratification voles were announced
early today by APWU general president
Moe Biller and L ette r C a rrie rs'
President Vincent Sombrollo.

They climaxed lengthy negotiations
marked by procedural dispuln, the
strike threat and a mix-up that almost
broke up the talks tn their final hours.
9ombrotto u id his ITf.OOtFmember
union approved the contract 124,314 to
20,494 — 43.4 percent acceptance — with
a turnout of O percent.
About three hours tater, Biller an­
nounced ratification by the 240,000member APWU. Of 144,900 ballots
received, he said 110,367 yea vote* had
been counted and estimated the final
tally woqld show approval by more than
a 44o-l margin.
"I'm very pleased," he said.
Both union leaders denied any fallout
from the m a u firing of 12,000 striking air
controllers, even though the adminlstratlai had vowed similar u nc­

tions in the event of a postal workers
walkout.
"Absolutely not," Biller u id when
asked if the controllers' situation had hod
any effect an the postal workers. "No
effect whatsoever."
Sombrolto termed Reagan's action
“ w rong" and said the president
“overreacted.” But he agreed it had no
effect on the postal workers' balloting.
The contract gives postal workers an
estimated 10.9 percent pay hike over
their current average annual salary of
119,919, with raises and bonuses of 22,100
over the three years plus cost-of-living
adjustment*.
It provide* a 2300 raise and 2390 bonus
each year, plus a special one-time 2190
bonus lor ratifying the agreement within
49 days.

Casselberry OKs Land Use Plan
By BARBARA FKAKN
Herald Stall Wri ter
The Casselberry City Council Monday
night adopted both a comprehensive land
use plan and a contract for the' new
2320.000 senior citizen's center.
The land use program goes Into effect
Immediately. The plan will control
growth In Casselberry for the next X
years but may be updated u needed.
City planner Dale MacMahon u id the
chapters of the ordinance on population,
housing, fire control and economic* will
be used as a tool to zone Casselberry.
Cities and counties are required to
have land use plans by state law pasted
In 1973.
The law requires that any new
buildings be in conformance with the
plan.
MacMahon u id that under th t law now
if a person wants to build a commercial

establishment in an area toned tor tingle
family housing, they must first amend
the plan and then h are the are* retorted.
"This is not to atop growth, it ta Just to
have growth In the right areas," he u id .
The Senior Center contract, which
spells out services to be provided by the
Federation of Senior Cltlxena Clubs and
the Seminole County Mental Health
Center, w u approved unanimously. The
center, which opens Saturday, will serve
u a senior citizen multipurpose center.
According to Leona Cadenhead, grant
coordinator, the center will fall under
federal Jurisdiction for X yean.
"The center w u built with 90 percent
federal monte* and 10 percent local
monies,” she said. “ It w u formed under
Title III, the Old Americans Act"
Both the Federation of Senior Citizens
and Seminole County Mental Health will
utilize the center. Other agencies will

slop by two to three times a week. For
example. Social Security will provide
Information for the senlcrt and Seminole
Community College will operate classes.
Committees such u trip* and tours,
financial, medicare and grievance have
been formed to help the center run
smoothly.
The services will be provided at no cost
to anyone over 40. The center will be open
Monday through Friday, • a.m. to 2 pm .
The council also appropriated 2900 for
minor tools and equipment at the center
and 2229 for the band to play at the grand
opening on Saturday at 4 p.m. a t 200
North Lake Triplett Drive. A dance will
follow.
Counci irnen also went on record as
supporting the drive for the stale's
Department of Transportation to install
sidewalks along State Road 434 in the
widening effort.

Bolivia
Prototype For National Chaos
By ARTHUR HERMAN
IA PAZ, Bolivia (UPI - Shortly before
midnight, pedestrians on the downtown
Pasco del Prado often hreak Into a run.
They are not Joggers out to take the
thin night air In this Imite-hlgh d ty . The
runners are Just trying to get home
before the midnight curfew and thus
avoid arrest by the feared "special
security" police in their ambulanceshaped paddy wagons.
These are not easy times for the 9
million proud Bolivians. 99 percent of
them of Indian or mixeo-blood descent.
With 194 coups tn its 196 y e a n u an
independent nation, Bolivia has become
an prototype (or national chaos.
It also la known the world over far Its
muUMlton dollar illicit export business
in cocaine, which find* its way to the
streets of New York and Miami.
“Once again qur society la lapsing into
the chronic sickness of political in­
stability," La Psz’ Roman Catholic
Archbishop Jorge Manrique u id recent­
ly“A long history of personal and group
egoisms, of greed, of overturned human
rights, of violations of human dignity and
natural freedoms have deepened a crisis
that now reaches levels of concern," the
prelate said.
In addition lo tht political confusion,
Bolivians now fact economic difficulties
"even we Bolivians do not yet reattxe,"
said editor Mariano Bapfrta Gumucto.
Said one tnftamed Bolivian, " It looks
impossible for the government lo coma
up with any more money, and they really
need operating cosh."'
One diplomat called the econom ic
situation "grim, a victory of bad
management over abundant natural
resources."

Short-term politics go back to Jvly 17,
1910, when Gen. Luis G a rd a Meza,
backed by paramilitary units, smashed

an effort to re*lore the electoral process
and seized power from Interim dvtllan
president Lidia Cue Her.
The artion was not unusual since the
armed forces have ruled Bolivia for 112
years against 44 y e a n for civilians.
But it w u not long before diplomats In
La Pat, particularly Americans, began
ta accuse the Meza government of
corruption and involvem ent in Ihs

ANALYSIS
cocaine business. The result w u a
boycott that served to isolate Bolivia.
Against this background five attempts
were made to unseat G arda Mesa. Th*
fifth try w u the moot successful On Aug.
2 army units ted by tha crack "ringers"
outfit took control of the eastern Bolivian
capital of Santa Crus da la Siena.
The next day G ard a Meza resigned,
handing the government lo the army,
navy and air force commanders who
formed a ruling Junta.
Th* rebate held out far three more
days, demanding the election of a new
military president. They said th* Junta
w u Just a front for Garcia Meza.
Th* dtutdsnti eventually gave In when
the government appeared ready to in­
vade Rants Crux.
A suaialbt Bolivian coup*, not robot
w u fired In anger. The two sides counted
up fo rm ; tha weaker tide threw In the
towel
And G arda M u a continued to live In
the president palace.
Tha solution to the rebellion might
have patched over differences between
mlUtery factions. But It gave little
uttefaction to Bolivian civilians.
Wages have been froten since July
im
Union official Gocxafe Guenan Eguex
said, “We are living from hand to mouth,

Improvising hideouts and trying to
continue our contacts. It's a struggle far
workers rights in th* face of the dic­
tatorship implanted July 17,1140.”
No love te teat between the public and
the arm ed forces.
“All the soldier* know how to do te
consume," cne La Paz ta il driver said.
"If the people had guns we would be rid
of them."
The problem of corruption and
faltering economy te sometimes a t­
tributed to the high degree of state
control over the economy, which one
diplomat put at 70 percent
The outspoken newspaper Hoy said,
“The fight for political power has
become sharper since the public sector
added transport, mines, oil, g u and
metallurgical industries. At th* same
lime th u s entities show losses. Thera te
alm ost no bureaucrat who passes
through their office* who does not win
unexplained prosperity."
One analyst said that two reasons (or
Bolivia's current economic problems are
relatively low International prices for tin
and silver - two of Bolivia's biggest
foreign currency makers —and th* debt
assumed during the rule of President
Hugo Bonier (1971-72) for "grandiose
projects that should never have been ap­
proved."
The analyst said the Bolivian economy
has been shrinking Tor tht test two years.
International banks h a rt reduced their
lines of credit to a point where the
International Monetary Fund is prac­
tically the Junta's last hope for cash.
D iplom atic sources cslculste the
Bolivian debt at $1.7 billion and inflation
at 43 percent
The Junta te trying to come to gripe
with the economy and has promised "a
new participatory model" In Bolivia,
however, the safest prediction te there
will be a new coup at any time.

ROBERT W. WALKO

Red Cross
Names Manager
For Seminole
Robert W. Walko has been named Manager of the Seminole
County Service Center, Central Florida Chapter, American
Red Cross.
A Red Cross volunteer worker lor over X years, he takes
over the Casselberry office from recently-resigned Beth
Hanson.
Walko waa born tn Cleveland, Ohio. He left Cleveland lo work
for the Martin Marietta Corporation in Denver, Colorado, as a
Public Relations Representative, and, after II yean In Den­
ver, was transferred to the company’s Orlando operation
where he continued for two more y ean before leaving the
company to go Into real estate. He is a licensed Realtor
Associate. Walko has lived tn the Orlando area (or about 13
years. In between his real estate work, Walko served for 34
years as Buiinns Manager of the Visiting Nurses Association,
serving Orange, Osceola and Seminole Counties, and, later,
w u also an Administrator of the Bay Area Home Health
Services In Sanford. He served on the Public Relation*
Committee of (he United Way of Orange County. He 1s still
active with Hospice of Central Florida, visiting patients and
families.
Walko lives in Maitland with hla wife Durothy and their son
Robert, a student at the University of Central Florida. A
daughter, Dtene, works at Holiday Hospital and Uvea In
Orlando.
The Red C rus ha* also
appointed William Wohlfarth
Jr. to serve u Director of
D isaster Services for the
Central Florida Chapter. In
addition to hla new duties tn
Disaster Services, Wohlfarth
1s A u istan t Executive
Director, Director of Public
Relations and Director of
Youth Services for the Red
Cross chapter which serves
Orange,
Seminole
and
Osceola Counties.
"This (new position) will
certainly be a great challenge
considering the rapid way this
area te growing and the (act
we have not had a hurricane
of any slit tn a good many
y e a rs ," Wohlfarth u i d .
"Moet people really have no
concept of what could happen
tn the event of a major
strike."
Coordinating the efforts of

W ILLIA M

WOHLFARTH
over IX Red Cross Disaster
Volunteers will be Wohlfarth's responsibility as the new
Director.

HOSPITAL NOTES
ADMItSIOM
HonrMIte Ottanay

J.Q Otlkiwar
Waflw OriHm
Bom M I k lton
vtrsm ia ■ e tc*

Adam C SAlSSlW. AlUmonf*
lorkigi
i V. ingnam . Deltona
Carman Osmmauti. DaOona
Dorothy P Landman. Del’on* A
F a m e la A. D tar iota, ta k a

Mary
Gloria P Ptaitor, I a lt Mary
MUdrtd V. H a jrr i. Iilu tv illa

oischaiosi

Sanlore.
Mawtom M Soli.ngar
Mamla l Bradlay
Aou La* Oliver
Adam C. MaiaMy, nltamonla
Seringa
Vivian L Burtord, Dalian*
Fruit* OMdtaretr. Dalton*
Timothy Said Brooklyn. Laka
Mary

�Evening Herltd. Sanlord. F I_____ Tuesday. Aug. IS. 1H1-

Victim Describes Shark Attack

'He Looked M e In The Eyes - I’ll Never Forget That'
PENSACOLA, Fid (UI’I) — Ted Best
says he'll never forget the eyes of the
wounded MaVo shark when it took his leg
In its jaws — and he figures he's lucky to
be alive with the memory.
"I was pretty scared because t knew
what they can do to you," Best said
Monday, a few hours alter surviving the
attack. "Wtien he hit my leg I didn't know
how bad it was.
"I Just remember looking at his eyes.
He looked me in the eyes. I'll never forget
that."
He came out of the encounter with a
clean wound on his thigh that will keep

him on crutches for at least four days,
and the shark departed with a spear
wound.
Best’s was the second attack in Florida
waters in two weeks. A 19-year-old girl
was killed by a shark on the Atlantic side
of the peninsula.
Best was sncrkeling in 12 feet of water
Monday afternoon off tile Gull bland
National Seashore Park, looking for
shells about SO yards offshore, when two
sharks approached.
"They went out of sight for about 10 or
IS seconds and I came up lor some air
and went back down," Best said. "No

CALENDAR

Loogwood Rotary Club, 7 :30p.m„ bmgwnod Village
Inn.

no more — definitely.
Christi Wapniarski, 19, anil three
sailing companions attempted to swim
the three miles to shore Aug. Ifl alter
their catamaran capsized and partially
sank in the Atlantic off Ormond Beach
Miss Wapniarski was about 100 yards
behind her friends when a shark, never
clearly seen, attacked her. ripping a
massive wound in her thigh. She ap­
parently bled to death within moments,
and her boyfriend had to abandon her
body to save himself.
Miss Wapniarski's remains le n t never
been found.

Save $4

TOPS Chaplrr 378, 7 p m., First United Methodist
Church. Sanford.
Siuiuuit

dred — all small ones." The deepest, he
said, were about three-quarters of an
Inch. The Important thing was that the
shark let go cteanly, rather than ripping
flesh from his leg.
The Mako shark, generally believed to
rank below only the great white and the
tiger sharks in attacks on man, ts one of
the few sharks considered a game fish.
Best said the doctor who treated him at
Baptist Hospital told him he'd be «n the
crutches for about lour days unless there
were complications.
Best said he snorkels or scuba dives at
least twice a week, but "1 won’t go alone

9.99

Winter Springs Sertoma. 7:30 a m., Big Cypress

7 pin.,

Best said the shark released his leg and
moved away and he struck out for shore,
lie said one of the sharks followed him
and he saw "a black form" behind him in
about seven feet of water, but it disap­
peared.
Breaking his facemask on a piling in
his haste to get out of the water. Best
limped to his car and drove to the park
ranger's station half a mile from the
beach. From there, he was flown by
helicopter to the hospital at Pensacola.
He said his wound was "about filw by 7
inches across. 1 don't know how many
punctures. I guess there's about a hun­

Sale

TUESDAY, AUGUST «
Seminole AA. 8 p in., open discussion, 591 lake
Minnie Iirive, Crossroads, Sanford.

Weight Watchers,
Casselberry.

sooner had 1 found a shell and turned
around and here he was a-coinin'. He was
putting it on pretty good.
"The nest thing I knew — I guess It was
a Mako—he was right up on me. I hadn't
provoked him. 1 hadn't shot a fish to
make blood or anything.
"They’ve always minded their own
business, but these two looked like they
were out for revenge or something," Best
said.
" t always carry a spear gun and 1 shot
him. I pulled the spear out of him, but
before I could get It back in the gun, he
hit me."

Orlg. *14. Out classic shut Long
Sleeve styling that s versatile enough
to west with stmts or slacks
Assorted stripes and prints in
polyesler/colton Sues 5 to 15

Apts.,

O verratrrs Anonymous, 7:30pm,, Florida Power &amp;
light. Sanford.

Orlg. tM , Top oil the season with a
great looking blouse in solids with
two different cottar treatments' Easy
earo polyester pongee in |uniors sires

Sanford Toastmasters. 7:30 p in., Hit ti Plan offices
second Hoof, Third ami Magnolia, Sanford.
Heart ol Florida African Violet Huh, 7:30 p in.,
home of Jo Wormington, 3008 Grandview, Sanford.

Sale

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST I*
Sanford-Brraklnst Kolnry Club. 7 a.m., Sanford
Airport Restaurant.
Casselberry Rotary,
7:30 a m ., Casselberry
Woman’s Club, 250 Overbrook Drive, Casselberry.

14.99

Oviedo Rotary, 7:30 a m., the Town House
Sanford Klwanis, noon. Sanford Civic Center.

Save $4 to $5

Sanford Serena den senior rltlicns dance. 2:30 p.m..
Civic Center.

Reg $19. Fashions favorite pleated
pants, tailored with bell loops, two
front pockets and back pockets 17"
wide leg Poty/colton Sires 5 to 15

Sanford Optimist Club, noon. Holiday Inn.
Recovery, Ine., 12:30 p.m., Sears Altamonte Mall.

Reg $70. Sleek man laitored slacks
designed with matching belt
Assorted tall colors in polyester/
cotton Juniors'sites 5 lo 15

Sanford AA Beginners, 8:30 pm ., 1201 W. First St.
Starlight Prom enadm , Sp in., Deltary Community
Center, Shell Road

Reg $19 Our Grtano* denim skirt Is
a sure fashion base. Col Ion denim
with embroidered back pockets and
back sM Sizes 5 to 15

O vereaten Anonymous, 7:30 p.m,, Altamonte Mall,
Sears.
Alcoholics Anonymous, 8 p.m., Altamonte Springs
Community Church, State Road 436 at Hermits Trail.
Closed.
ilorn to Win AA group, 8 p m , Ravenna Park Baptist
Church. 2743 Country Hub Road, Sanford. Closed.

Special 4.99
Shirt up In super soil llannell
Butlon-lfont styling with two Iron!
pockets tOOS cgtlon in assorted
colorful (Maids Juntora Sizes

Casselberry AA, 8p.m„ Ascension laitheran Church,
Overbrook Drive, Casselberry, Closed csccpl second
and last Wednesdays when open.
Ilrbos and Uve Oak Itrbos d u b AA, 220 Uvc Oak
Center. Casselberry, noon and 8 p in.
Wrdorsday Step AA. 8 p.m.. Penguin Building,
Mental Health Center, Crane's Roust, Altamonte
Springs. Closed.
THURSDAY. AUGUST 17
Sanlord AA. 8 p in., 1201 W. First St . Sanford. Open

Sale

Friends ol the library ol Semlnolr County quarterly
m eeting, 7 p.m ., County A gricultural Center
Auditorium, Highway 17-92, Sanlord, County librarian
Jean Rbetm will speak on the county library system
and future plans. New members welcome.
Senior Citizens lour to St. Augustine for "Cross and
Sword," bus leaves U-eds at Seminole Plats,
Casselberry, 3 p.m.; pick up Sanford Civic Center, 3:30
p m. Call 323-7434 for reservations

25 %

off

Sound-of-Sunsbinr Chapter Swrrt Adrllnrs. 8 p.m.
SI. Andrews Presbyterian Church, Bear Like Road,
Forest City.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 28
17-92 Big Book AA, 8 p.m. Messiah faitheran Church,
17-92 and Dog Track Road. Closed.
Tsoglrwood AA, 8 p.m., Si. Richard's Church, lake
Howell Rd. Closed

Back to school
shoes for young
men and women.

Special
The lin t w btw y wet opened in Botton in 1897.

Pack-up values
for back to school.

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE -

Special 6.44

P R IC E S
SM A SH ED
ON ALL
CONCORDS

W A G O N E IR S

E A G LES

CH ERO KEES

SC R A M B LER S
S P IR IT S

CJ’s
P IC K U P S

COME SEE • DRIVE ONE A W A Y !

SANFORD MOTOR CO.
AMC

JEEP

5j08 S. FRENCH A V.

322'4382

Feather weight nylon knapsack has a
front pocket and top upper closure
Dual adjustable padded shoulder
straps Washable and water repellent
15“ a t r » r

Special 8.88
lightweight backpacks and ton begs
make travelling a breeze! Constructed ol
tough nylon with a urethane coating lor
eitta strength Choree of handsome

HImd all your lavorttt looks In this terrific
assortment ol casual shoes We ve got styles
lot men and women, like loafers, oilords,
boat shoes and more Fashion Hals lor
women too So smart lor left M oll eta
constructed ol a line grimed leather or
suede In mens and womens sizes Take a
look i t whit we ve got lor you*
For man
Heg
Sale
(1 Leather toaler
$37 24 00
C Casual suede lace-up
$72 1» 50
D Leather boat lhoa
$27 2025
E Sunbacker* suede casual
$30 22 50
F Leather sport o«!ord
$34 2550
G Leather hall-boot
$25 1175
Not shown
leather oilord
$27 20 25
For women
$25 1875
A Leather loaler
$27 20 2$
H Leather casual
J leather ballerina Style
$76 1950
$71 15 75
K Leather Hats
L Casual leather lace-up
$26 19 50
$17 12 75
M Urethtne Hat
$27 20 25
N Leather boat shoe

colors,

Special 16.99
JOT tool locket with an enamel like metal
finish Over plywood veneers Top snap
locks and handles Measures
30&lt;t6Wkt2W Choose Irom a wide
range ol colon______________________
Ol course you can charga it
OPEN lla.m .-f p.m.
MOH. THRU IAT.
SUN. II K I:H

SANFORD PLAZA

�Evening Herald
iusps

a u io t

300 N. FRENCH AVE., SANFORD. FI A. 22771
Art* Code 30M2J-28I1 or *31-9993
Tuesday, A ugust 25, 1961—aA
Wayne D Doyle. Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 11.00; Month, M S ; I Months, 124.00;
Year, MS 00 By Mall: Week. f l . S ; Month, 55 25; 6 Months.
$30.00; Year. 557.00.

Governments Suffer
c

Regulation, Too
When Vice President George Bush announced
that the President's Task Force on Regulatory
Belief had found another 39 federal regulations
which the country probably could do without, he
didn't mention that more than half of them were
(Hit on the target list at the urging of state and
local governments.
The fact that complaints from states, counties,
cities and school districts accounted for 23 items
on the new list helps correct the impression that
the Reagan administration's drive for regulatory
relief is aimed primarily at getting government
off the back of American business
True, over-regulation is a burden to business,
and indirectly to the consumer because it drives
up the cost of goods and services. But the private
sector is not alone in bearing this yoke. Super­
fluous federal regulations also are driving up the
cost of public services provided at the state and
locnl level.
The regulatory task force notes, for instance,
that it takes 46 million hours of paperwork in
school districts across the nation to satisfy the
Department of Agriculture's demand for an ac­
counting of federal funds provided under the
National School Lunch Program.
Now, it is important that these funds arc not
misused. But it is important for the school cook to
fill out a form declaring how much flour and yeast
is contained in the bread served at each meal?
The task force suggests that random audits and
quality control checks could be as effective in
watchdogging the school lunch program as the
reporting requirements now eating up payroll
time in the schools.
State highway officials say they are wasting
money complying with needless regulations at­
tached to federal aid for streets nnd highways.
People administering the Food Stamp program at
the county level say the federally-mandated
procedure for verifying the eligibility of Food
Stamp applicants costs more to follow than what
is saved by weeding out ineligible applicants.
Welfare officials have declared that the Work
Incentive Progrutn lo help welt arc client! become

self-supporting has had only limited success, not
because of a flaw in the concept, but because a
maze of federal guidelines, rules, exclusions and
limitations makes it so difficult to implement.
Ivocal planning officials have complained that a
supposed
stream lining" of federal en­
vironmental permit procedures resulted in a
system more complex than the one it replaced.
Productivity in the private sector measures the
cost of labor, tools and other overhead against the
value of goods or services being produced.
Since it is hard to fix a market value on the
services provided by a government agency, it is
hard to calculate the productivity of its work
force.
But the labor required to satisfy federal
regulations of doubtful value suggests how much
the productivity of government could be Improved
by the President's program for regulatory relief.
City, county and school officials, in California,
for example, are not necessarily passing the buck
when they blame Washington for their failure to
make more dramatic cuts in their budgets since
the passage of Proposition 13.
Mr. Bush's latest hit-list of federal regulations
directly affecting the cost of local government
suggests they have a legitimate beef.

Please Write
U tters to the editor are welcomed for
publication. All letters must be signed, with
a mailing address and, If possible, a
telephone number so the identity of tbe
writer may be verified. The Evening Herald
will respect the wishes of writers who do not
want their names In print. The Evening
Herald also reserves the right to edit letters'
to eliminate libel or to conform to space
requirements.

Jeff Munson, the man named to replace the
late Harry Smith as superintendent of parks and
recreaUon, already has the wheels In motion (or
Sanford's (all recreation program.
Munson and Parks and Recreation Director
Jim Jem lgsn stopped by the Evening Herald
Monday morning while making the rounds to
emphasise the importance of this fall's sctlvlties.
"H arry will be tough to replace, but I think we
have a good man in Jeff,” said Jem igan earlier
this summer about Munson. The department's
first priority is kicking off its flag footbaD
campaign.
"We're expanding this year, so we'll really
need a big push," pointed out Jemigan. The
program will enlarge to two division — midgets
(boys, ages I and I) and juniors (boys, ages 1012) for the faD.
Boys must be eight before Nov. 15 and cannot
turn 13 before the same date. Tryouts will be held
Sept. 12at I a.m. at Randall Chase Parked Jacent
to the Seminote County School Board building.
All games will be played at Chase and the first

9 p.m. If there is enough Interest, billiards and
table tennis tournaments will be run Par­
ticipants in billiards and table tennis must be in
the 6th grade or above.

ROBERT WALTERS

Housing
O f The
Future
SMITHVILLE, N.J. (NEA) - Amid the
pine and oak stands of southern New Jersey,
homes to meet the nation's future housing
needs are being developed under such un­
familiar names u "double masters" and
"swingles."
The traditional three-bedrootn, two-bath
ranch house is rapidly becoming an
anachronism u a result of shifting population
patterns, high construction costs and soaring
interest rate*.

Fleiachman is an eye surgeon, and his
power over operating room equipment is not
limited to the microscope. He speaks and the
room lighta obey. He commands and a radio
In the operating room turns on or off.
Fleiachm an, assistant professor of
ophthalmology at St. Louis University and
director of retina-vitreous service at Betheada Eye Institute, has devised a unique
voice-actuated computer system. The system
eliminates cumbersome foot pedals needed to
operate most equipment used in eye or other
types of delicate surgery.

The 32-year-old doctor, who was a computer
science major as an undergraduate at Co­
lumbia University, said he devised the voice
system because he was tired of the growing
clutter of foot pedals.
In moat operations, the surgeon sits in a
chair and must have both hands free to
manipulate the various probes and cutting
tools used in eye surgery. At his feet, the
u r g r o i can find a bewildering array of loot
pedals needed lo operate the mtcroacope and
other electronic equipment
"With each new instrument, a new foot
pedal emerges," Fleiachman said. "Another
foot pedal? That w u craxy."
learning to make operating room equiment
Jump to a doctor's voice commands is easy
and the cost of the voice-actuated system is
about the same as the foot pedals, Fleiach­
man said.
"They might as well have the pixazz of
voice actuation," the young doctor said.
Someone using the sy stem becomes
acquainted with the computer, which Fleiach­
man can roll around on a cart, by speaking
the commands It is trained to accept The
commands are recorded on a magnetic disc
and remembered by the computer.
In the operating room, the doctor wears a
tiny microphone under his surgical mask. The
computer hears the doctor speak the coded
commands and sends electrical signals
through existing wtrine to obey them.
Fleiachman said his voice-activated com­
puter will be available commercially to doc­
tors this faD. But he Is most exdted about Its
non-medical possibilities.
"Consider it for blind people." he said.
"They can hive one of these In their homes. It
can control the lights and dial the phone by
just telling it the number."
Because the voice system requires little
special wiring, it can easily be installed in
most homes, Fleiachman said.
" I think it's going to pervade our Uvea," be

Medfly To Tower

ROBERT WAGMAN

On The Battle Of Friends
WASHINGTON (NEA) • Some at this city's
biggest names were pitted against one
another in a friend vs. friend battle during the
Senate-House conference on the tax cut.
Just before the bill cleared the Senate, Sen.
Droits DwConcint, D-Arix., Introduced an
obscure amendment concerning the Issuing of
corporate stock to employees under brnefit
plans. Only later did the amendment's true
purpose emerge.
DtConcini's brother-in-law Is a pilot for
Continental Airlines, which has been issuing
stock to its employees in a desperate effort to
fight off a takeover by upstart Texas Inter­
national. DeConctni's amendment sought to
eUminale the technical objections to this
tactic expressed by the New York Stock
Exchange and the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Because the House version of the tax cut
contained no such provision, the amendment
had to be (ought out in conference. Overnight
the two airUnes readied their big guns to do
battle behind the scenes.
leading Texas International's fight to drop
the amendment was James Corman, a former
Democratic representative from California.
Oorman la a member of the law firm of
Charles Manatt and Robert Strauss who are
respectively the current and former chair­
men of the Democratic National Committee.
They also took part in the lobbying.
On Continental's side were Stuart Etzerv
stat, President C arter's domestic adviser;
Susan Williams, a former assistant secretary
of transportation; and Simon Laxarus, a
former White House aide (or domestic policy.
The battle was short but furious. The vic­
tory went to Texas International as the
amendment was dropped from the final
version of the bill.
Here's one for the "do as I say, not as I do"
department:
Howard Davie has exposed much govern­
ment waste as chief auditor for the General
Services Administration. In a recent report to

Congress, he blasted a GSA official who held a
winter conference in warm San Antonio. The
event could have taken place in Washington
at a much lower cost.
Now congressional investigators have
become interested in a 170.000-plus series of
conferences that Davis held during 19(0 In the
resort cities of San Diego, Calif.; Virginia
Beach. Va., and Myrtle Beach. S.C.
Congress asked the GSA to look into the
m atter, and the GSA turned the Investigation
over to the Inspector general of the Depart­
ment of Housing and Urban Development.
Davis has reportedly refused to answer
questions and to turn over records to the
inspector generaL His uncooperativeness
seems to stem from his belief that the charges
against him were politlcaDy motivated as
part of a long-standing and rather Byzantine
feud between officials in the scandal-ridden
GSA.
The HUD investigation has been completed
without Davis's cooperation A report is
expected soon.
The administration's lobbyists on Capitol
Hill have received high m arks for steering
President Reagan's tax and budget proposals
through Congress. But their record is not
perfect.
Recently a congressional-relations
specialist (that is, a government lobbyist)
from the Commerce Department telephoned
Rep. Tim Wirth, D-Culo , a key member of the
House Appropriations Committee. His pur­
pose w u to ask Wtrth to support the
restoration of funds for 211 pod lions in
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrige's
office.
The call went weU. Wirth agreed not to
oppose the restoration of funds and the jobs
appeared to have been saved. Then the lobbyist decided that while he had Wtrth on the
line and in an agreeable mood he would push
for one of Baldrige's favorite efforts: cutting
l i t million from the Public Telecom­
munications Facilities program.

The decline of the "standard" American
family — mom, dad and the kids living
together, usually in a single-family detached
house —is reflected in a series of striking I960
Census Bureau figures:
There were slightly more than 79.1 million
households counted in the nation last year,
but fewer than 25 6 million were composed of
a married couple and one or more children.
In other w ords, fewer than one-third (31.06
percent) of all households consisted of the
once-conventlonal parents-and-chlldren f
family unit.
Young adults are postponing marriage and
pregnancy, the number of unmarried couples
living together has almost tripled in the p ad
decade, many married couples are choosing
to remain childless, the divorce rate con­
tinues to increase and older couples with
"empty nests" are living longer because of
.
advances in gerontological medicine
At the sam e time, the average cost of a new
home In the country's major metropolitan
areas Is rapidly approaching 1100,000 and
mortgage Interest rates already have
climbed to the 16 percent to II percent range.
In that environment, real-estate developers
such as the Historic Smilhvllle Development
Co. believe the "swingles" and "double
master" concepts may be the most logical
approach to satisfying the housing demands
of the future.
The "swingles" approach is an updated
variation of the efficiency apartment —a unit
designed (or a young, unmarried man or
woman just entering the housing market with
limited ca p ita l and modest living
reauirements.
For M3,000 to 550,000, the buyer gets a small
(about 600 square feet) but efficient living
unit that is fully equipped with all the
necessary furniture. Those moving in need to
provide only linens, towels and dishes.
Far more intriguing is the “double master"
approach that is being promoted not only here
but also in housing developments financed by
other firms In such disparate locations as
Upland. Calif.; Lake Charles, La.; and
Marathon. Fla.
Homes in that category are distinguished
by dual m aster bedroom suites, each con­
taining a full private bathroom, walk-in
closets and other amenities.
The co-owning individuals or couples thus
enjoy the privacy of their own living quarters
while sharing the living room, kitchen, dining
room and other common areas of the house.
Those who share ownership oi the house
could be indlvuals or couples, of the same or
different sex. They might - or might not — be
romantically attached. A divorced parent
with a child might share a house with an
unmarried couple.

JA C K ANDERSON

Rickover Accused O f Nearly Sinking Sub

Now the sharks are circling the crusty old
admiral once again. At II, he is long past
retirement age, but h e ll "reactivated" every
two years by apodal nomination of the
president and approval from Congress. His
current tw o?aar hitch ends next January,
and pressure is building to get him beached
permanently this lime around.

••...But enough about the risks of nudear prolif­
eration — ht's talk about guacamote dips!"

open every evening from 7 p.m.—9 p.m. A
variety of games may be played including
billiards, table tennis and basketball. The Youth
Wing of the Civic Center wlD also be open
Monday and Wednesday evenings from 7 p.m. —

By TIM BRYANT
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - When Jay Fleiachman
talks, his microscope listens.
It not only listens, it does what he tells It to
do.

“It has an applicability to any surgeon who
uses an operating microscope with multiple
functions." Fleiachman said.

The latest immunition provided to a llie s of
the old sea dog has come from one of the
nation's biggest defense contractors, Genera!

Dynamics C orp., whose Electric Boat
Division manufactures our nudear sub­
marines. Rickover has never been shy about
criUcixing contractor* who don't meet hia
exacting standards.
In a private letter to Adm. Thornes
Hayward, chW of naval operaUonx, Electric
Boat's general manager, P.T. Vdiotia has
now accused Rickover of ncklcsa see manship while a t the controls of the new nudear
sub La Jolla last month.
Every submarine delivered lo the Navy is
given a personal lest run by Rickover. A
routine part of each shakedown cnilse la a
maneuver called the "crashbeck" —a means
of braking the sub quickly by throwing the
engine info reverse.
Once the sub is stopped deed In the water,
the "crashbeck" exercise is over - or at least
it should be. But according to VtUotls,
Kickover left the engine in reverse loo long.
For a full three minutes, the La Jolla went
backwards a t 11.1 knots, plunging down at a
tbdegree angle. It sank 241 feet before

a
' • • %* m ~

I

A supervised program is available every day
- Monday through Friday - from 2 p.m. -4 p m.
at the Westside Center —919 Persimmon Avenue
and from 3 p.m.-5:p.m. at the Civic Center — 401
Seminole Boulevard. The Westside Center is also

Doctor
Talks To
Equipment

Rickover is an acerbic man who doesn't
suffer fools gladly. He knows how to cultivate
the media and how to use hti political clout In
Congress. In the process, he h as made a lot of
enemies, both Inside and outside the Pen­
tagon.

c—

For further InformaUon call 221-31(1, Ext. 2(0.
Supervisor, Robert Robinson, '.s Tying to
organise a parent advisory group. where parents
may get involved in the planning and suggestions
of programs and improvements at the Westside
Center. Anyone wishing to Join should contact
Mr. Robinson at the Westside Center or call 2223111, Ext. 292.

SCIENCE WORLD

WASHINGTON - Adm. Hyman Rickover
la the father of the nudear Navy. He fought
long, hard and succestfully to drag his
bertbboned Pentagon colleagues into the
nuclear age. Now, it Is alleged, ho almost
sank a nudear sub during a test run.

BERRYS WORLD

encounter will begin Sept 26. All players must
register and bring verification of their birth
certificate. There is a 53 material fee.
Munson and Jem igan plan to Incorporate the
following programs into the plan beginning the
week of Oct. 11 Classes in archery, weight lif­
ting. baton and ceramics will be offered.
Registration for all the fall programs can be
done a t any one of the following three (3)
places.:
1. RecreaUon Department at City Hall, 300 N.
Park Avenue.
2. Youth Wing of the Sanford Civic Center, 401
E. Seminole Bhd.
3. Westside Recreation Center, 919 Persimmon
Avenue.
Non-residents will be permitted to register ona
space available basis only in programs with
class limits. Non-resident fees must be paid prior
to class. Proof of birth must be presented when
registering. (Adults are excepUofi.) All in­
structor fees and material fees must be paid
when registering. No registraUons will be ac­
cepted over the telephone.

*1 w -

Rickover finally took It out of reverse.
"At the time of the incident," Veliotls
wrote, "the ship's basic safety system had not
been tested under at-sea conditions and a
large percentage of the crew had not had
experience in operating a submarine at sea.
Given these circumstances, a relatively
minor personnel error under what can only be
described as a highly stressful xitutioa could
have resulted in disastrous consequences."
Despite an untested safety system and s
green crew, there were no disastrous con­
sequences. Buts source at Genera] Dynamics
told my associate John Dillon, "This is not the
first time ■ sub has gone out of control during
this maneuver" with Rickover at the he bn.
A big part of the problem, apparently, It
that no junior officer Is going to challenge the
faarsom e Rickover. L ast January,
Kickover's tea-trial coordinator gathered
sh ip 's officers together and explicitly
authorised them to countermand the admiral
if the sub w u going out of control

He very dearly advised the skipper and
the executive officer if they had any concern
relative to sa fe ty .. .then (hey should feel no
hesitation in giving an order prior to or
countermanding Rlckover's," an internal
Electric Boat memo its tea
But overruling Rickover Is easier advised
then done. One Navy officer told a company
official that "nobody can contml Rickover "
according to the memo. By (hr time someone
did summon enough courage lo countermand
the old admiral, "the time available for
recovery may be insufficient," the memo
slates.
Fear of Rickover’s wrath apparently ex­
tendi to the upper echelons of the Navy as
well Adm. Hayward's response to Electric
Boat's complaint said only that the Navy la
"taking steps to Insure Improved communications In future sen trials whereby
•Np’s speed will be more closely monitored."
That hardly addressed the company's
complaint.

�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Sanford Building Fees Increase OK'd

NATION

By DONNA ESTES
Herald Staff Writer
Sanford Building Official Gary
Winn's plea to the Sanford City
Commission Monday night to help
nuke his department sell-sustaining
financially was successful.
Building permit fees will be in­
creased, but it will be about a month
before an ordinance can be adopted
and the new fees become effective.
City
com m issioners
voted
unanimously to Instruct City
Attorney William Colbert to prepare
an ordinance authorizing the in­
crease. Under the new ordinance.

IN BRIEF
Chapman Gets 20 Years
In John Lennon Slaying
NF.W YORK (UPI) — Mark David Chapman, the
sell-proc la uned “Catcher in the Rye," « u in a heavily
guarded solitary cell today, awaiting transfer to the
state prison system where he will serve a minimum 20year sentence for killing ex-Beatle John I-ennon.
Chapman, 26, who pleaded guilty in June saying God
had ordered him to confess, was kept under 24-hour
guard after his sentencing Monday. He was held in the
same isolated Rikers Island cell where he has been
since the Dec. 8 slaying —a lone inmate in a unit meant
to hold up to 18 prisoners.
The one-time Beatles fan was to be transferred today
to the Ossining Correctional Facility, a prison that
serves as an entry point tor all inmates beginning
sentences in the slate system.

the base upon which lees are
charged will be increased from |13
per square foot in single family
homes to 123 per square foot. The
base for fees in commercial con­
struction will go from 413 per square
loot up to 425 and the base (or con­
struction ot warehouses will go from
410 per square foot up to 413.

Winn said it is costing taxpayers
money to subsidize ihe service
currently, adding the persons
receiving the service from the city’s
building departm ent should be
paying for i t "We are trying to
break even," he said.

Under the current schedule, Winn,
in a written report to the com­
Iteinspectlon lees will be in­
missioners, said It's costing the
creased from 43 to 43 in ail areas.
general taxpayers of the city a
The new fees will bring the city minimum of 412.49 tor every
128,687 In additional revenues, from building permit issued lor a single
the 469.466 expected to be received lamily home containing 1,000 square
feel. While the current permit fees
during this fiscal year to 498,133.

PASADENA. Calif. (UPI I— Voyager 2
gunned into Ihe homestretch today for its
closest approach to Saturn, sending
bemused scientists more data that left
them pondering the mysteries ol the
ringed planet's missing moonlrts and
“hockey puck," or "hamburger" moon.
The spacecraft makes Its closest a p
proach to the planet, almost 1 billion
miles away, at 11:24 p.m. EOT,
climaxing a four-year Journey.
Voyager beamed bark pictures
Monday revealing S aturn's moon
Hyperion is not only very oddly shaped —
like a battered beer can or a hockey puck
— but also orbits in an unlikely attitude,
perhaps knocked askew by a collision.
The spacecraft found no sign of the

WASHINGTON I UPI) - Sen. Harrison A. Williams
Jr., D-N J., snared in the government's Abscam in­
vestigation, vows to fight a committee recom­
mendation that he be the first senator since the Civil
War to be expelled.
“ I certainly feel in my heart and I know in my heart 1
have not done anything that warrants resignation or
expulsion," Williams said Monday after the Senate
Select Committee on Ethics unanimously recom­
mended his expulsion..
Williams, 61, a member of the Senate (or 21 yean,
was dejected tor the vote, but heartened by the panel's
call to delay a vote by the full Senate pending com­
pletion of his trial appeal.

“ lost m oonleti" researchers had
theorized must exist within Saturn’s
spectacular rings, adding a new mystery
for scientists already puzzled by the
giant planet's (amity ol quirky satellites.
"We now find ourselves at a point
where we had hoped not to be and arc
looking desperately for some other ex­
planation," Dr. Bradford Smith, head of
the spacecraft imaging team, said of the
missing moanlets.
Scientists had theorized some of the
gaps separating the many rings — which
are formed by bands of Icy chunks or­
biting Die planet — must have been
created by unseen mooolela, sweeping
d e a r paths like snowplows.
But Voyager's cameras surveyed two

Reapportionment Hearings Set
WINTER HAVEN. Fla. (U PII - Residents
of Die Polk County area get a chance today to
voice their views on reapportioning the
Florida
Legislature anil realigning
congressional districts
The House Selection Committee on reapportion men! opened a series of 21 public
hearings around the state in Tampa Monday,
brought the hearing to Winter Haven today
and will be in Orlando Wednesday.
At Tampa, the members heard Die same
trend of Diought —the reapportionment should
provide single-member legislative districts
which would mccl the "one man, one vole”
mandate and give a voice in government to
minorlUes.
Morris Milton of St. Petersburg,
representing Die NACCP, didn’l mime words
when lie told the legislators at Die hearing If
blacks are excluded from the political process
by Die final rrdlstrlcUng plan, Dwy will seek to

Contestants File Suit
U1S ANGKIJCS (U PIi — Two losers in this year s
Mrs. America Pageant have filed a 41 million suit
against pageant officials charging the contest was
rigged and officials had selected the winner in ad­
vance.
Famed attorney Marvin Mitchelson filed the
Superior Court civil suit Monday on behalf of Denise
Ames, 29, who competed as Mrs. Nevada, and Vickie
Vidoni, 28, Mrs. Maryland.
Mrs. Vidoni said about half of the JO contestants go*
together to compare notes in a luis Vegas hotel room
the morning after the pageant finals April 3.
She said some of the women were convinced the
winner — Patty Boyd, 33, of Baton Rouge, par­
ticipating as Mrs. lamiaiana —had been (licked before
the week-long contest.

Hinckley Defense Undecided
WASHINGTON tUPI) - Attorneys for John W.
Hinckley Jr. have nut decided what type of defense
they will use in behalf of the 26-ycar-uld drifter Indicted
on charges of attempting to assassinate President
Reagan.
"No decision has been made regarding the basts of
Mr. Hinckley’s defense," Hinckley’s lawyers said
Monday after a federal grand Jury returned a 13-count
indictment against the son of a wealthy Colorado
oilman.
In addition to the attempted assassination of
Reagan, the indictment charged Hinckley with
xhootlng White House press secretary Jam es Brady,
Secret Service agent Timothy McCarthy and city
policeman Thomas Delahanty.
All were wounded In the halt of bullets that erupted
March 30 outside a Washington hotel Hinckley Im­
mediately was grabbed by a swarm of Secret Service
agents and taken into custody.

Keith said when a person builds a
house in Sanford, the city ultimately
benefits through property tax
revenue. "We need to encourage
building more rather than hindering
it," Keith said. Yancey agreed with
Keith.

Commissioner Milton Smith asked
if the fee couldn't be flexible and
each builder charged exactly what it
costs the city. Winn said the
paperwork involved in such a
practice would be costly and a great
deal ot trouble. Com m issioners
Eddie Keith and Ned Yancey op­
posed increasing the fees while

Winn said the city's permit fees,
last increased in 1974, are so far out
of line that it’s costing uU other tax­
payers for the city to perform a
[unction for builders.

Prostitutes At Church
NASIIVIU.E, Tenn. (UPI) — A priest says prostitutes
are soliciting on the very steps of his North Nashville
church, but Police Chief Joe Casey says there isn't much he
can do about it.
* "We've made numerous arrests in Diis area and other
areas," Casey said Monday. "I'm not making excuses. The
problem ts these people put up 461 50 and are right back out
turning another trick. Sometimes, we arrest the same
person two or three times a night."

of Die gaps —including Die 300-mile-wide
Cassini division, visible through
telescopes from EarDi — and found no
mocnlets,
“For the moment, we have to rule out
the possibility those two gaps are created
by a single embedded satellite," Smith
said.
Voyager 2 did, however, return Die
lirsl good pictures of Hyperion, one of
Saturn's 17 known moons, which got little
attention from Voyager 1 when it passed
Saturn last November.
It discovered an object Dial looked
initially like an irregular cylinder, a
lumpy potato or a battered beer can,
measuring 220 miles long by 130 miles
wide.

r

Mayor lee P. Moore, David Farr
and Smith supported the idea after
Winn’s explanation.

charged for the house would be 465,
minimum costs for inspeclions,
review of plans, discussions with the
builder and costs of other services
for the same house Iota) a minimum
of 477.49.

Voyager Find Puzzles Scientists

Williams To Fight Expulsion

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defeat Die legislators involved at the polls.
"That’s not a threat, It's a promise," Milton
said. “The black community is coming of age.
No longer are we going to be Die loyal friend.
We no longer (eel obligated to cast our vote
blind."

ANNOUNCES
the relocation of his office
for the practice of Cardiology

Among others calling for single-member
districts were Ruth Ann Brantson, president o(
Die League o( Women Voters ol Florida; Dr.
Robert Gatlin, chairman ol the Department of
Political Science at Die University of South
Florida; and Dr. Ann Kelly, professor of
political science at USF.

and Internal Medicine

L0NGW00D MEDICAL ARTS BLDG.

Mrs. Brantson called not only for singlemember districts, but districts drawn up along
political subdivision lines such as cities and
counties, rather than strictly on population.
“ F lorida's population is shifting and
growing very rapidly," she said "One stable
(actor is Jurisdiction lines."

1385 WEST HWY. 434
SUITE 206 LONGWOOD, Ft..
For Appointment Call 831-2222 or 323-5360 “"'J

AREA DEATHS
THEODORE CHRISTMAN
Theodore Christman, 79. ot
rural Apopka, dirt) Sunday at
Florida Hospital Apopka.
Born August 23,1902, at New
York City, N.Y.. he moved
here in 1970 from W'uudclHf
U kes, N.J. He was a finance
ollicer
tor
Worldwide
Distributers, un automobile
firm, and was a member of
the Church of Our Savior,
laiDieran, in Manhasaet, N.Y.
Survivors include his wilr,
t/mise, Apopka; sons. Nell
Christman, Atlanta and Theo
Christman, California; seven
grandchildren.
Cm-Parktr Funeral Home,
Winter Park, ts in charge o(
arrangements

FLORIDA

Columbia, S.C.
Bakiwin-Fatrchild Funeral
Home, G oldrnrod, is in
charge of arrangements.

EDWARDG. MAYER
Edward George Mayer, 78,
of 896 Rich Drive, Oviedo,
died Mnnday at his residence.
Born Feb. 24. 1903 in Pitt­
sburgh, he moved to Oviedo
from Maryland in 1974. He
was an electrical engineer
with Die U.S. Government and
a Catholic.
Survivora include his wile,
Madeline Mayer, of Oviedo:
daughters, Mrs. Madeline It.
itihtarchik, Orlando and Mrs.
Shirley Kadlecik, Oviedo;
three grandchildren; two
great-grandchildren
and
sister, Elizabeth Johnston,

IN BRIEF
Space Shuttle Columbia
Plagued With Problems
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) - Astronauts Joe Engle
and Richard Truly completed a d re u rehearsal of the
launch of the space shuttle Columbia Monday night
following an eight-hour delay.
The current series of lefts continues today when
backup astronauts Thomas Mattingly and Henry
llartsfield repeat the launch rehearsal, and before
dawn Wednesday when Engle and Truly perform a
simulated re-entry,
The delay Monday was another in a long series of
minor problems plaguing preparations for D* aecond
launch of the Columbia set lor Sept. 30. Officials said
they still weren’t sure whethrr the launch would have
to be postponed.
"We may not know the answer until alter the rollout
Aug. 31, whether we can make the Sept. 30 launch
date," said Dick Young, spokesman for the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The simulated launch test was originally scheduled
lor 10 a m. EOT, but wasn't completed until 6:35 p.m.
The problem was traced to a computer program
designed to fool the shuttle Into thinking it wax actually
flying.

REUBEN MASON
Hruben M. Mason, 79, of
Adel, Ga., died Monday night
in Adel Memorial Hospital
alter a long illness. Born in
Sanford he grew up here and
lived in Orlando for a number
of years before retiring in
Adel.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. EliubeDi G airett Ma­
son, Adel; sister, Mrs. Ned
Smith, Sanford; broUier, Bob
Mason Tallahassee; sister-inlaw, Mrs. C.L. Powell, Sanlord. Boone Funeral Home,
Adel, Ga., is in charge ol
arrangements.

MASON. MS M lU a lN M. F u n w .ltffv N ttfo r Mr Rtuban
M M sun. I . , o( A d d. G« . »ho
d.*d Mond.r. w.li W s i 1 p m .
W td n n d if .
.1
In *
A dd
Mathodltt
Church
Boone
fu n d el Mom*, Adel, in (hare*

M o c T A V IS H
DISCOUNTCARPETS
HAS MOVED TO
10J MAGNOLIA AVE
SANFORD
PH ]11 4404

W AGO N EERS

E A G LES

CH EROKEES '

SCR A M B LER S

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Air Crash Cause Confirmed
EG UN AIR FORCE BASE (UPI) - The Air Force
has confirmed that an F-4 Phantom Jet that craahed
into the Gull of Mexico April 15 was shot down by
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The mishap was reported by the Air Force at the
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down by another pilot.
No one was injured in the Incident because the
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The tonfirmation was made by a report obtained by
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SPORTS
Evans, Coffey Help Perish Parish, 3-2

Sem inole Survives With Suicide
By SAM COOK
Herald Sport* Editor
Seminole Bronco Manager Richard
Coffey lives by suicide and dies by
suicide. Impossible? Not at all.
Sunday evening Coffey, whose Bronco
team is competing in the 11 and 12 yearold World Series in Ufayette, l-a . ad­
m ittedly botched several suicide,
squeeze bunt attempts which he felt ted
to his 11-10 demise to Richmond, Cal.
Monday evening, however, the suicide
lived. Seminole converted three crucial,
bunt attempts which paved the way for a
3-2 victory over St. Bernard Parish and a
shot at Richmond for a chance at the
World Bronco championship today.
Coffey will send Sanford righthander
Terry 'T h e Cat" Miller against Rich­
mond In the S p.m. ballgame. Seminole
must win game one to force game two at
B p in. since Richmond Is undefeated.
"Our bunting was picture perfect
tonight," raved Colfey about the Ilroncoh
stay-alive effort. " It was baseball
executed at its best."
Coffety used three pitchers to hold St.
Bernard to Just five hits. Eleven-year-old
lefthander Greg Ebberl started for
Seminole and went three innings.
"We wan ted to throw a bunch of Junk at
them," explained Coffey about his pit-

TRACYTURNER
,,. pinch hit (Imibte
citing choice, "flreg kept them off
balance fir three innings."
While Elbert kept St. Bernard incur
New Orleans l off balance, he didn’t keep
thrm off the scoreboard. U-ad-off hitter
George Haley rapped a double to right
center, moved to third on a passed ball

Bronco World Series
Lafayette, La.
Tuesday

5 p.m. Seminole
vt. Richmond, Cal.
8 p.m. Seminole
vs. Richmond, Caf.

If necessary

SEAN FLAHERTY
. . . retired five In a row

MARKCOFFEY
. . . gamMylng bunt
and stole hnnte when Wally Juan missed
n squeeze bunt attempt.
St. Bernard upped Us margin to M in
the third. Ray Wisneski opened the frame
with a walk, but Ebberl fanned Shawn
Mcl-aughlto for the first out.
Hsley, though, slapped a single to right
field, sending Wisneski to third base.
Juan Ihenlatd down a perfect bunt on the
first base line to score Wisneski for a 2-0
advantage.
"It was like that all night." pointed out
Coffey. "It was a battle of suicide bunts.
St. Bernard was a very, well-coached
tram. We Just started out guessing them
later In the game.”
Colley's first good guess was the in­
sertion of righthander Kelly By sell in the
fourth inning. Rysell, a hard throwing 12yenr-old, was a perfect contrast to
Ebberl's slow stuff on the mound.
Rysell pitched two and one-third In­
nings during which he fanned five of the
seven out*. The outfielder-pitcher limited
I’artsh to two hits and walked Just one
hitler.
'Rysell did a beautiful Job ” exclaimed

Coffey. *'Those five strike outs were quite
a change of pace for them."
Another change of pace came in the lop
of the sixth inning when Seminole finally
got In Bernard starter P it C anity, who
had stifled the Five Points entry on two
hits during the first five frames.
Rysell continued his hero's role by
slamming a triple over the first bace bag,
down the right-field line. Shortstop Kirk
Rorek walked, and then the twosome
pulled a nifty double steal with Rysell
scoring on the front end.
“I didn't even tell him to go," said
Coffey abouty Ryielt'a alert move. “We
were setting up the suicide, but Kelly got
■ good lead and broke perfectly."
Center fielder Jimmy Waring then
moved Rozek to third base with an expertly-placed bunt down the first base
line. Coffey then went into the family
vault when his son, Mark, dropped
another bunt to score Roiek and tie the
game at 2-2.
"Mark grounded it perfectly, about a
foot off the ground," said Coffey. "All our
bunts were very squared tonight. Right

STEADY EDDIE" EVANS
. . . game-winning bunt
in the midd’e of the bat."
In the lop of the seventh, Coffey turned
to his bench strength. He summoned
former Paola lJtlle league standout
Tracy Turner to pinch hit.
Turner, a nigged outfielder, ripped a
shot into right-center field and wound up
on second base with a double.
Casselberry's Mickey Helms then moved
Turner to third base as he was thrown out
by the pitcher.
Everybody In the park had an inkling
what was coming nest, but it didn't stop
Sanford's Eddie Evans from scoring
Turner with the game-winning run batted
in.
"Steady Eddie" dropped a beauUful
roller that the pitcher fielded and had no
choice but to go to first base as Turner
stormed home with the game-winner. "It
was Just about as perfect as you could
bunt U," complimented Coffey about
Evans' masterpiece.
In the meantime, Sean Flaherty had
taken over the Seminole mound duties in
the sixth inning. The "Irishman" came
on with runners at first and second base

and Just one out.
He induced catcher Chet Nunex to hit a
ground ball to third base which Dale
Stevens flagged down, tagged third for
one out and Just missed a double play
with his return throw to first base.
Flaherty promptly concluded the rally
by whitting Ryan Gab for the third out
In the bottom of the seventh, Flaherty
breezed on three pop flies. Shortstop
Rozek corralled the first one, while the
second and the third went to Helms In left
field and Turner in right field.
"Our pinch hitter (Turner) did a good
Job again. He really creamed the ball,"
praised Coffey. "We can smell the
championship.
"Richmond will probably throw (Eric)
Cooper tonight. He's a big kid, but he
doesn't throw nothing. I think their best
pitcher is that girl (Charlotte Wiley).
"Anyway, it'd down to the curtain call
tonight," concluded Coffey.
No doubt the Seminole cast wants not
one, but two encores.
A6 R H I I
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Cook Cut Loose By Redskins; Bucs
Waive Bye-Bye To Berns, Brown
PRETTY BOY?'

By Halted Press lnlrmailunal
the severity of Gifford Nielsen’s shoulder
Under George Allen’s regime, ex­ injury, said they will keep quarterback
perience often meant a certain spot on Kenny Stabler on the roster for at least
the Washington Redskins’ roster. another week In hopes he would come out
Unfortunately for Fred Cook, these ire of retirement.
the Joe Gibbs ytsrt.
The Oilers trimmed their roster to 52,
Gibbs sppsrently has decided to go placing linebacker Art Stringer on the
with youth snd Monday waived three physically unable to pert arm list.
players, including the 22-year-old Cook.
—The Cowboys reduced their roster to
A seven-year veteran obtained July 11 S3 by cutting punter Curt Carton. U ap­
In a trade vriih Baltimore, Cook played pears quarterback Danny White will pun!
)M consecutive games with the Colts once again for the Cowboys.
—Kansas City released veteran center
since 1974. The Redskins tried him at
both left snd right defensive end in pre- Charlie Ane and three others to reduce its
roster to 33.
season play.
—Tampa Bay cut Its roster to 31 by
The 28 teams must trim their rosters to
SO players by 4 pm . EDT today.
waiving nine players, including fourth-B ill Lee, a backup quarterback for year linebacker Aaron Brown and
most of his 12 seasons, was another
victim of the youth movement and was
ore of aeven players waived by the tan
Angeles Rams.
By waiving te e , IS, the Rams are still
MIAMI (UPl I - The Miami Dolphins
left with three quarterbacks — starter
waived five drift choices Monday,
Pal Hadrn, Jeff Rutledge and rookie Jeff
including quarterback Brad Wright,
Kemp.
and four free agents.
The Hams also announced rookie
The Dolphins also placed veteran
running back Robert Alexander would be
reserve safety Doug Beaudoin on In­
lost for the year after undergoing knee
jured reserve with an Injured a chilies
surgery.
tendon, to bring the roster count down
—The Houston Oilers, uncertain about
to the required 30 players 24 hours

If there was any doubt vthul day
it was Saturday morning at
Seminole High School, Fighting
S e m in o le Frank Howe took care
of that as hr safely dutches his
e u itth and mouthpiece (in that
order) prior to the Tribe photo
day" session. Howe Is being
counted on by Coach Jerry
1 'osey as one o( hit top receivers.
The
Evening
H erald's
Seminole County Football
Preview begins with the
Fighting Srminolrt in Sunday’s
paper.

H ir iie

im m

Fourcade's ’Break' Unnerves, Sloan, M ississippi

.

• '•* —

*

-

— Minnesota reduced us roster to 33
by cutting five players, including running
back Garry White and wide receiver
James Murphy.
— Pittsburgh placed five players,
including wide receiver Robbie Martin,
on waivers, trimming the roster to 33
—The Denver Broncos acquired kick
returner Wade Manning from Buffalo for
an undisclosed draft choice. Denver also
waived Alvin lewis.
—The Cleveland Browns acquired
defensive end Thomas Brown from
Philadelphia and linebacker Bruce
Huther from Dallas (or two undisclosed
draft choices.

D o lp h in s R e le a s e W rig h t

kr T*m Vine till

OXFORD, Miss. (UPI) - Steve
Sloan usually keeps his emotions
pretty well under control, but the Ole
Miss coach admits It hit him pretty
hard when he learned Rebels quar­
terb ack
John Fourcade
Southeastern Conference total of­
fense champ the past two seasons —
broke his pasting hand playing
intramural softball.
"I was speaking to an alumni
meeting in Tupelo (Miss.) when it
happened (three) weeks ago)," said
SVuan.
didn’t hear about It until
my wife told me when I got home.
My first question was *which hand?',
aa calmly as that. Then my wife
picked me up and put me on the
couch."
Fourcade, a senior who gained
2,014 yards a t a sophomore and 2.299
a t a Junior, had a c u t removed from
his hand just 12 days before the Ole
Miss opener (Sept. 31 against Tulanc
and Sloan said three pins probably
won't come out until after that
game.
“ H looks like John won't be able to
play In our opener," said Sloan.
“I’m just thankful he didn’t break
his hand the first game and into*

running-back Rick Bern*.

seven or eight games."
If Fourcade doesn’t play,
sophomore Kelly Rowell will open at
quarterback for the Rebels "With
Kelly (who didn't aee any game
action last season I we don't give up
a lot in pasting because he*i a pretty
good passer," said Sloan. "But it
might make a difference in &lt;mr
running game,"
Fourcade told a visiting group of
writers and broadcasters he still had
some pain alter the c u t was
removed. "It probably will be
another week before I can throw
good,” he said. "If coach Sloan
needs me and I’m 100 percent. I'd
play in that first game "
Fourcade la anxious about the 1931
season because although he has
gained 3,001 yards — only 373 short
of Archie Manning's school record the Rebels, who were J-8 bu t year,
haven’t had a winning season since
he and Sloan have been at Ole Mus
"I'd give up all records if we could
go 12-0 o r even 9-J," said Fuurvode.
"When you don't win and they pick
you all-SKC t he w u the quarterback
on the 1930 UPl All-SEU team) U
doesn't mean much. Statistics are

Ur losers. |
“ I I 1 cut my Interceptions to half
I he had 2D last fall) and don't turn
the ball over, we could win a lot
more ball games," said Fourcade.
"Our defmse is going to be a lot
better this year, We shouldn't have
lu score 4030 points to win."
That may sound strange, but Ole
Miss scored 20 or more points in all
of Its first six games last season —
and lost five of them.
"We realized we had to do
something drastic," said Sloan. "We
moved three qu arterb acks to
defensive backs, moved Kinny
Hooper (the Rebels' leading rusher
last season) to linebacker, and
loaded up on defensive players to
our recruiting. We finally got the
personnel we needed on defense."
Sloan says one of the problems
was that Ole Miss had a set'or
defensive team when he took over
prior to the 1973 season "We sUrted
seven freshmen on defense to 1979
and three last year," he said.
"Three y ean of recruiting lias
finally got us enough people who can
play defense.”
Sloan and Fourcade both say that

the took of defense last season
forced Ole Miss, and especially
Fourcade, to do some things on
offense that got the Rebels to
trouble.
"1 tried to do some things I
shouldn't have done,” said Four­
cade. "I tried to take up some slack
while trying to help us win. I tried to
throw while scrambling and got Into
trouble. Moat of It w u my own fault
I hope this year we can Just carry
the ball to rather than scrambling
and throwing the bomb."
Sloan hopes that tailback Buford
McGee can regain the running
ability he displayed before a series
of Injuries slowed hbn down last
SC&amp;MJO.
“If Buford stays healthy, hell get
his yards," said Sloan. "He's no
Herichel Walker, but he's a good
back Ukt that kid a t Auburn (James

Brooks). He can take a lot ot
pressure off our quarterback, but he
has to stay stay well."
"There's no question this !s far
and away the best team we've had to
the four years we've been here,"
said Sloan. "Our big problem here is
youth. We have more depth, more
ability, more speed, more ex­
perience. Our biggest concern is
Injuries. When our team Is
reasonably well, we can play anyone
on our schedule dose."
Fourcade (eels, snd Sloan agrees.
Ole Miss needs to win Its lin t three
games — against Tulane, South
Carolina and Memphis Slate — "to
build confidence for the nest four”
- against A rkansas, Alabama,
Georgia and Florida.
“That's a tough stretch," said
Sloan. “ We'U need all the confidence
we can get."

Softball Meets Wednesday
sollbal] I,, S u fc rd &lt;nU b ,
-B - k v b llto J d U lf P d .T lw k a c w
Wednesday night at 7 a t the Sanford plan to start the second week of
Recreation Deportment.
September.

before the deadline today.
Besides Wrtghl, a fourth round pick,
the draft choices cut were wide
receiver Sam Greene, No. 4 , Nevadafa s Vegas; defensive tackle Ray Webb,
No. 7, Texts Arlington; receiver John
Noonan, No. 9 Nebraska; snd nose
tackle Jon Alford. No. 12, South
Carolina State.

AT HOME ON THE RANGE.
Introducing
Bridgestone
'Desert Duelers'
604V Steel-Belted
On and Off-Road
Radial Ttres

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�Evening H»r«ld. Sanlord. FI.

Umpire Steams

Perfect Came' Larsen Remains
An Uncomplicated Tom Sawyer

G reen, Trillo Tips
Braves In 13, 7-5
By United P r m International
Dallas Green's volatile temper may
have finally gotten the best of him.
The Phillies' manager faces a possible
fine and suspension from National
la-ague President Charles Feeney today
after he Jostled umpire Steve Fields
Monday night, then knocked Fields' hat
off with a wild swing and kicked it. Green
and Larry Bowa both were ejected and
Bowa, too, could face a fine and
suspension for his part in the episode.
"Both Bowa and Green bumped him
tFields)," said umpire Nick Colosi, the
crew chief who also may be in hot water
(or allegedly breaking a 110,000 hand­
held camera belonging to local telecaster
Mike Forrest during a post-game in­
terview.
Monday night's incident occured In the
ninth inning of a game with Atlanta and
was triggered by a controversial call at
second base made by Fields against
Bowa. Fields claimed Bowa did n&lt;X touch
second base while completing a double-

play and pinch-runner Eddie Miller
scored to put the Braves temporarily
ahead, 5-4.
Philadelphia came back to tie the scon
in the ninth on a throwing error by
shortstop Rafael Ramirez then won it, T5, In the 13th on a two-run homer by
Manny Trillo.
"Bowa missed the bag by S inches,"
said Fields. "I ran him (out of the game)
because he threw his glove. I ran Green
because he threw my hat to the ground."
"Bowa touched the base with his heel,"
said Green. "In 25 years of baseball, I've
seen Dial play 10,000 times. I've never
seen it called."
"I've never had that called when I
make the tag myself," said Bowa. "11
was a routine double play. He i Fields) Is
Just plain incompetent."
Tug McGraw, who equaled his longest
pitching assignment since July 7, 1979,
said the incident fired up the world
champions.

Umpire Smashes Cam era
(PHILADELPHIA &lt;UPI&gt; - An
um pire smashed a
television
crew m an's camera Monday night
during an Interview with another
umpire about the ouster of Philadelphia
Phillies’ manager Dallas Green and
shortstop louty Bowa during a game

with the Atlanta Braves, according to
KYW-TV reporter Mike Forrest.
Forrest claimed that umpire Nick
Colosi knocked a 140,000 camera from a
crewman's hands, shattering it on the
pavement of a tunnel from the field
during an interview with second base
umpire Steve Fields. _____________

D A LLA S G R EEN
. . . e x c it a b le

boy

"After the outbreak, I didn't want to
lose," said McGraw, who picked up his
second victory in six decisions. "I didn't
want any excuses."
Reds 2, Met* 0
At Cincinnati, rookie Bruce Berenyi
tossed a two-hitter and struck out I I in
notching his third shutout. Berenyi, M ,
said, "The control was the key thing,
slaying ahead of the hitters."
Dodgers 3, Pirates 0
In Pittsburgh, Dusty Baker and Steve
Yeager each cracked solo home runs and
Burt llooton pitched his second con­
secutive four-hit shutout In leading the
Dodgers to victory, llooton, 9-4. also
collected a single and double.
Cardinals Z, Giants I
Tom Herr, at St. I/mis. singled through
a drawn-in Infield with one out in the 10th
inning to score Tito I j ml rum from third
and give the Cardinals their triumph.
Cobs I, Padres t
Mike Tyson doubled home Ivan
DeJesus with none out in the 11th Inning
to lilt the Cubs to victory over the
Padres, In Chicago. DeJesus also had
doubled home three runs In the first
inning.

NEW YORK (UPIl - Casey Stengel,
his old manager, u ~ d to call him
"America'l guest" because whenever
Don I-nr sen was having a good time he
Insisted everybody else have one, too —
on him — and with the passing of a
quarter century he hasn't changed that
much.
Nor is it ever likely to for the only
man in baseball history to pitch a
perfect World Series game.
Oh, sure, his hair Is iron gray now, his
face is fuller and he has put on some
weight since Out Indelible October
afternoon In 1954 when he set down
every one of the Brooklyn Dodgers in
order for the New York Yankees, but at
heart, 52-yearold Don Larsen remains
what he always was — simply a big,
generous, uncomplicated kid straight
out of the pages of Tom Sawyer.
He still has so much little boy in him
that one of his favorite pastimes is (mg
hunting. The pressures of every day
living don’t change his attitude or his
course.
Take Saturday's Old Timers Day at
Yankee Stadium. A chartered bus took
most of the Yankee and Dodger oldtimers from a midtown hotel to the
ballpark and Ia r sen had planned to be
on it. But he overslept and had to catch
a taxi to the park. How would It look for
him to be late for his own shindig? He
made It In plenty of time, Uvough, and
found himself surrounded by newsmen
as soon as he got to his locker.
Naturally, they began asking him
about Thai Day. What were his feelings
on the mound and on the bench?
Larsen has explained that so many
times to so many people In the past 25

Home Runs? Orioles' Dauer Socks Seattle;
Otis Grabs Tigers' Nine-Day Tale O f Terror
By United Press International
Rich Dauer owes his former
batting Instructor an eiplanatlon.
' "Frank Robinson gave me a
bitting tip last year,” said Dauer of
fhe current San F rancisco
m anager
who coached
at
Baltimore tost season. "He said,
;Vou can’t hit home runs.’”
Dauer, nol one to dispute
Robinson, nevertheless socked two
home runs and drove tn (Ive other
runs Monday lo power the Orioles to
a 12-8 victory over the SeatUe Mari­
ners.
"If I played here In Seattle," said
the second baseman who is noted
more for his fielding, “ 1 might be
able to hit five In a season."
"It's someDiing I’ll never forget,"
he said. "I equaled last year'a total
In one game. With (Kcm Singleton
and tEddle) Murray behind me in
Die batting order, they're Just not
going to walk me."
However, the Mariners didn't
escape Die power of Singleton or
Murray as they both socked home
runs and totaled aix hits in nine atbats for five RBI.

Vuckovich, 9-3, picked up the win
and Rich Dotson, W, took the loss.
Twins 3, Yankees I
Kent Hrbek celebrated ptoytng In
his first major-league game with a
Ulb-inning homer to give Minnesota
Its victory, tn New York,
R a n g r r s 3 , B lu e J a y s I

Doc Medich scattered six hits,
Buddy Bell drove tn two runs and At
Oliver scored a run and collected an
RBI to pace Texas al Toronto. Juan
Berengucr, 3-3, took the lost.

AM OS O H S
. . . la m e s T ig e r s

In the National League, it was:
Cincinnati 2, New York 0; los
Angeles I, Pittsburgh 0; St. 1/tuls 2,
San Francisco I in 10 Innings;
Philadelphia 7, Atlanta 5 tn 13 in­
nings and Chicago 9, San Diego in 11
innings.
Royals 4, Tigers I
Al Detroit, Amos Otis personally

DOC MEDICII
. . . Texas mrdlceinr
put an end to Die Tigers’ nine-game
winning streak with a solo home run
tn the second and a tte-breaklng,
two-run double tn the eighth.
Brewers 5, White Sox 4
In Milwaukee, Cecil Cooper drove
In three runs with a tworun homer
and a double to pace the Brewers to
their third straight victory. Pete

A's U . Indians 4
Ricky Henderson went 4-(or-4,
including a home run, scored three
runs and drove In two to spearhead a
KVhlt attack Diat powered Oakland
al home. Malt Keough, 3-3, pitched a
complete game.
Angels I, Red Sot I
In Anaheim, Calif., B rian
Downing doubled tn two runs and
Bobby Clark socked a tworun homer
to highlight a sixrun sixth Inning as
the
Angels bombed form er
team m ate Frank Tatiana.

Major-League Roundup
Standing^

r

By Unites P r m lattrnatteaal
ttetens Halt)
rear twTSI hi
IV
lis t
w L re t
OB
SI LOV'4
• 4 44/ —
New York
1 4 sn
1
Montreal
4 4 »0 1
Chicago
t
7
soo 3
i PHJU
4 7 443 r s
Pittsburgh
4 t 400 * *
West
_
AfUnt*
9
t 4 400
LOB Ang
1 4 111
w
Hogston
7 4 431 i
O ocl
f 4 S3! i
San Fran
7 7 SOO u *
iS lh Diego
3 13 300 4
Mender's hetvltt
Chi t. San Diego X It mnt.
'Cincinnati Z Nam York S
Lo t Ang Z. Pittsburgh 0
Pn.ia 7, Atlanta )
St Lout* Z. San Fran l
Today i erakakta Pitchers
(Alt Timet fO T I
(Ia n O n to do llar IS ) at

Mendsi i Rrtutlt
Tend! 1. Toronto 0
Minn ). New York Z. I! Inn*
Kansas City 4. Ootroit Z
Milwaukee L Chirago 4
Cailtornl* I. Boston 0
Oakland 14. Clev(land 4
Baltimore H. Seattle 1

Heed (FI. McGrow (H I and
Moreland W -M cGraw (141 L
-M renosay (O il
MBs—Allan
la. Chambliss ( I I .
Phiiedri
p ile. Schm&gt;di (111, Trillo (SI.

Today's Prekatie Pitchers
(All Timas ID T )
Tenet 1Jena ms 44) 41 Tor on
to iSlieb 41). 1 pm
Ctevetend 1Barker 4 4)
et
Oakland (McCarty 111. I D
pm
Kernel City (Leonard 7 4) tt
Detroit &lt;Morr,t H I . 1 pm
Minnesota (Jackson 111 at
New York IMay 4 71, I p m
Chicago
(Lamp
Ml
•*
Milwaukee (Slaton a SI. I'M
pm
Baltimore (Palmar H I
at
Seattle (Abbott 14), 10 ZB p m
Boston
(Ccktrttey
••
Calitornio
(John I I I .
M) JO
pm
W idntidar't G l« t*(
Mmnaaolj ol Hew York, night
lean C ltf at Deiron, night
Chicago ol MltwowSao. night

(Mcaga (Krevac * 11. 1 M p.m
•Lot Angelas (Gotti Z It at
datSBurgh
(Tianl (11.
&gt;10

U n e s c o re s

dim

■Atlanta
INlekro
ta )
at
PfUledelpnie
I Iw .n o 14
111,
P"&gt;
fO n
t nr
mcmneti
ILaCooo la )
at
itroat (Sanderson 441. 7 1*

dm

• Ho-von lO .en &gt;1) at Neat
York [Harris 111. • p m
j Son Francises iGritlm 41) al
||
Low s (Marlin 41), 111
Wednesdays Oamai
Jltlncm natl al Monlraal
»! Bout ton at New York
^Atlanta al Philadetpn'a
Angeles at P.lHhurgn
O'ego at Chicago
bn f fe n o u o al St Lhwit
American Laager
■ait
W L Pet
10 4 X U
Irgil
10 • I h
jw auie
1 4 471
t 7 SOO
if on
1 7 M0
fordo
t * 411
York
S II JU
vtfend
Wtasl
FIS
I
bland
01
I
kaoo

kina

&gt;
1

in City
•at

a

lil

t
i

u

40

44)
441
7 441
n in

Meier league ■•torts
• y United Press InterMltaaol
Nattend! Laagoo
|11 InningsI
*0
H I t il 0 0 0 1 *-I HO
cm
400 000 007 4 1 - 1 11 0
E.chflOergtf, Boone O l. Lit
uetirid O l. Curtis II), llrraa
(FI, Lucas ttl and Kennedy.
Krukow. Mtrnandti (II. Cdpllte
(&gt;|, Smith 1)01 and I lac Swell.
W—Smith 111). L - L u c as (XT).
H R—San Diago. Turner (I) .
M V.
000 000 0 0 * - t 11
Cm tl
010 00 1 004- 1 1 0
Scott. Leach (II and Stearns.
Berenyi and Notan W -Bergnyl
(41) L-S c o tt (J 71

Ol
*T1
I
3
1

Lot Ang

g t lW IM * - ]

ptsbgh

e a sm o ss-o u

111 MS
Atlanta

Vi

71

Hooton ond Yeager, Janet.
Tekulve IF) end Pena
W—
Hooton IF a)
l- J o n e s (1 11.
H R k - L o t Angelas Baker (41.
Yreger 111

000 100001000* -S II J

Z

Philadelphia

1
1
1
4

lOO000 111 0001— 7 II J
Boggs.
Camp (It ,
C areer
(101, Hrabotky ( t il and Banc
did,'
Christenson. Lyle
(1).

Tuesday, Aug. 11. I tli—7A

( I I Innings)
SF
000 000 0)0 * - I I I
St L
000 001 000 l - 1 F 1
A l e n e n d t r , Holland |7|,
Minton (FI and May. Brand
IT), Martino). Sutter II I , Kaat
(H I and Brummtr, Porter |J)
W—Kaat t i l l L —Morton (141.
American Ltagea
taxes
000 101 0 i» - 1 It 0
Toronto
000 000 00* 0 4 I
Medtch and Sunobero. Barm
guer and Martina). Whitt II)
W -M edich O i l L —Barangwee
(1 SI

Bait
701 HO 010-11 U |
Seattle
000 400 N I - I « z
D Martinet. Stoddard 171 and
Dempsty. Gleaton. Gate to (l) ,
Stem (41, Andersen (II and
Herron W -O M ertirw i I F 4). L
- Gitalon 147) HRs - Bel
timore. Sing Irion (111, Dauer 1
111.
Murray
H i).
Seattle.
Burroughs (tl, j , u (111

L e a d e rs

Malar League Leaden
By united P rist lareraetienal
•4 mag
I keyed on I I tppeeraecet a
tack team's gamts played)
NilMeel league
t ab k pet.
Mad lock. PH
M tel 4* leg
Dawson. Mil
41141 •o n&gt;
111 inmngsl
Rosa,
Phil
44177
•1 111
Mnn
IFF F I F I I I M l - I I I I
Gutrrera. LA
44 &gt;17 77 MS
H
IM M F IM M F - I F I
Grltley. Cm
•4 1SJ 74 M
Hasans. C o r b a I t IT).
41144 i) a&gt;
Fo liar, cm
O'Connor
(II)
and
Birtara.
47 7J4 71 .1*7
Howe.
Hou
John. Fra ile r HOI and Csrone
Brooks. NY
t i n e 1* XX
W—O'Connor (111. L - F r a it t r
4)111 &gt;4 Ml
Kennedy, SD
HU
HR -Minnesota.
Hreak
TV IS* 71 Ml
Seteiar. SD
III
Amartcaa Letfue
1 t‘
11 pel.
Kan City
Cl* 100 M O - 4 S I
Zita, Sea
9 m 71 XM
Detroit
•
0M NO 00 0 -1 10
Pecwrek. Sea
•F 141 m n i
Jones. Martin IT), K Brett
•7141 a . m
S.nglln. Bel
(T),
Qultsnberry
HI
and
1tender Vn. Ok
71 Tit 14 XII
wet hen.
Schaliedar.
Saucier
Olivar.
Ten
M a s F4 .110
H I. ToCxk ( l i and Parrish W Almon. CM
4)114 77 m
K Brett l i t ) L - S c hat latter (S
Mmphr y. NY
m i d 74 114
41 H R s—Kansas City. Otis (Tl.
Carrw. Cal
7i a ? t l M l
Aikans (F)
Lens ford. Bos
79 a s I I 111
U 7 J I 71 I I I
Hargrove, Cle
Chi
OOOQW 1H-4HO
Heme B uks
Mltw
701 090 00k — S I I
Mattenal League — Schmidt,
Dotson. M c O l o t h t n
II I ,
Phi 11;
Kingman. NY
IF;
Hickey 171, Farmer (II and
Foster. cm U ;
F is k i Veckevich, Cleveland (71 Dawson. M il 17.
Hendrick. Stl 11
and
Simmons
W—Vuckovich
American Laagea — Thomas.
I F )). l-O o tse n 1141
HBMil and Armas. Oak 17; (vane.
MHwaukae. Cooper (FIi C h iu
Bat. Murray. Bdl and Ford. Cal
9 , Bernaiard (41.
14
■ tel Belted la
Boston
JOt 100O t l- 4 F I
Hatwaal league — rosier,
Cant
n o 004 ita — a i l o
Cm
and
Schmidt.
Phi
Ml
Tenene. Stanley II) . Camp
K mg man, NY aa. Buckner. Chi
bell (7). Crawford I I I
and
and Concepcion. Cm at
Gedmen, Ranke. Jtrttrson IS),
American league — Armas.
H auler
III.
Aast IF)
and
Downing W -Jatltrssn (14). L Oak Si. Ball. T n and Oglteie.
II;
Thomai,
Mil
47;
-T enan t
( M l. H R s-B oslcn. MU
Patloeek. Sea 44
Grdman
(11.
Stapleton
I III
State* (a sat
California. Clark
141. Grlch
Nahenal Leagae — kernes.
111), am ,duel &lt;11.
Mil S4: North. SP. Moreno. Pll
Cieva
N l 100 000- 4 I I
Oeklnd
lOS 1JB « • —14 M 4
w ails. Garland IS), La cty (71
and Bendo; Keowgh and Heath
W -Keough (111. L -W e llF IS
7)
H R s—O 4k Itnd, Henderson
IS), Niwmtrs 111. JOnnsan 111).

14; Scon. Mil I I . Collins. Cm

n.
American league — Hander
ton. Oak It, Crui. tee IS ;
Diteng. Clo Mi LaFtera. Chi IF;
Bumbry. Bel IS.
PiKhutg
Victerus

Matienel laagea - Carlton.
Pnl H I . Valeniuela. LA 104;
Hoof an, LA F 4, Ruth van. Phi F
S; Soever. Cm 11. Rogers. Mil
and Solo, O n I t
American Leasee - Fcrsch.
Cel 101; Vuckovich. Mil F 1; D.
Martinet. Bel. Horns Oak and
Morns Oet » 4
(anted Run Avar eta
Ikaidd aw I late** ear each
I earn'! fames pitied)
Nattawal Laaiet R yen.
How 1 1F. Revu, LA
IB S'
Knepoer. Hou I F I; llwa, SF
I I I , Hooton. LA 111
American Laatea - Stewart,
Bel 111. McCarty. Oak 1 at.
Burns, Chi 1 S4. Honeycutt, Ten
1 41, Blyleven. CM 111
Itrlkeedtt
Matienel league V a lm
mala. LA 111; Canton. Phi 111)
Soto. Cm 101. Ryan. Hou 47|
Gwlllklon. Mon 44
American League — Barker,
Cle
14. Biytevm.
Cla
II;
Leonard, KC 44; Burns. Chi and
Flanagan. Bel 4)
Saves
Nahenal Stages Suiter,
SIL I L Minton. IP 14; Camp.
Art I); Alim. NY and Lucas.
SD tt
American Laagea - Cottage.
NY
and
Fmgtrs. Mil
17;
Ouisenberry, KC and Saucier.
Del I I ; Parmer. Chi N

Deals
By Uncled Pratt Inter eel tenet
Baseball
New York (A ll — Placed out
ttetder Lou Plntelie on the IS day
disabled llkti recalled autltetder
hobby Brown of Columbus ol the
Inter net tonal league
Philadelphia — Recalled pitcher
Mark Oaelt front Oklahoma City
ol the Am erican Association,
waived u tility m tltldtr John
Vukovich

tim er al Saturday** get-together. He
was in right field for 1-arson's classic.

Milton
Richman
UPl Sports Editor
years, he can do it by heart.
"After the seventh inning, it got kindn
quiet on the bench," he wns saying.
"Everybody was dam m ing up.”
"Same damn thing," toughed Tom
Sturdivant, another former Yankee
pitcher. "They put me right next to him
again Just like I was 25 years ago. I
couldn't get into my locker then and I
still cant."
In Die middle of Die clubhouse,
Mickey Mantle was sitting at a big tabic
signing baseballs when an over eager
young Interviewer slid up to him and
made him move over.
"I'm nol crowding you loo much, am
I?" Mantle Inquired solicitously.
Imagining his visitor would get the hint.
"Oh, no," cam s the innocent answer.
"I've got plenty of room."
Mantle continued autographing the
balls, happy that most everybody was
congregated around l-arsen and not
him, His thoughts went bock to That
Day, too.
"Along about the seventh Inning, he,"
Mantle said, meaning lairsen, "came
Into the dugout and said to me, ‘What
the hell is everybody so quiet about —
Just because l'in pitching a no-hitter?' I
didn't answer him. I jusl got up and
moved away."
Hank Bauer was another Yankee old-

Monday nigni results
At Semineit
First race —*14,1 11 17
1 Autumn Breeie 4 SO i n
100
IT r it n o
4 40 4 00
4 Two Eyed Vlllian
1140
0(1 It I I H i T il 141 4FS M
Second r e t e - l IIO I I IF
I How A Whll
It « I N 4 00
tH ow dyPrincs
&gt;40 140
i oo
4M'SSRyder
Q (I4 I 11 Mi e t l l l 1)44*1
Til-441 J44 141 o o im «i«e
Third race —S ll.M I I II
* Precious Peb
bias
1 10 4 40 1 to
5 Judy Able
S 40 1 40
a Pepper Scramble
140
O IS4I 14 44; P(U&gt; tt M i T it
V II 111 M
Feuritirace —Stt-O ilt t l
t Money Problem
I
I N I 10 140
1 Courageous Lit
4 JO IPO
I Scotch Sharon
7 40
0(7 41 IS M i P ll II 41 M i TI47 II IIS M.
Filth r a c e - V 14.4111:11 I I
IK I Mole
140 J 40 140
V Double O Seven
J 40 110
IC K te Hulty Buddy
140
GO II 11 44; Pll-H U N i T it
l i t 144 »
4 1 h r e c t- H .I t i l t
1 T's Laura
4 M ) at) 110
• RapidFun
4 40 a to
I Lacy's Bell
100
0(1 «S M Ml P ll tl IS M l T (X
I I I 4MM
Seventh reel —S I4 .C ill.IF
I Spur On
I M 1 N 1 00
SK I Begone
4 00 4 40
4 Ge-| Delta Gold
F eo
0(1 II I I M i P ll I) IS M i T ( |.
a «i m a t .
Eighth reel —l|.D ill I I
lUnderlwl
100 I N 110
I O u nn 'lE menus
V CD J 40
I Dainty Ring
140
O il 717 t t i P I I T i l l 111 TIT 7
4) I I M.
N in th ra c « -S -1 L I:ll I I
I Antonio's II
m ill
SI JO ♦ &lt;0 400
4 10 3 00
1 Kansas Joe T
7 O n e Spwmonl
3 20
O I14I F4M i PC4-11 1M 44*
t | 4 l 7| bo I IMS M
l l t h r a c i —S II.A IT ) I I 17
IK 'lM i
II M I H
S 10
4 Kimmy Baby
11 M l 40
J Flowering
S ag

"When I went uui lo my position in
the ninth inning, 1 said I hoped nobody
hit any line drives to m e," he
rem em bered. "So what happens?
I Carl t Furillo, the first man up. hits me
a fly ball and I caught il. I was happy
(or Don when he got his perfect game. It
couldn't happen lo a better guy."
tairsen is proud of his a c ­
complishment although he never brings
tt up in his conversations with other
players nr fans.
"They can never 'break' my record,"
he says sometimes "The best they can
ever do is lie it."
1-arson never derived much from his
perfect game in terms of money.
Som ething like 115,000 In e n ­
dorsements. But be lias made a great
deal of his life. He and tits vivacious
wife, Corvine, are Die proud parents of
a fine looking 15-&gt;cur-old son. Scott,
and all three received a glowing ovation
Saturday os they stood on Die first base
line amt Mrs. I-nr sen was presented
with a bouquet of long-stenuned roses,
courtsey of the Yankees.
Now working for the Btokc Moffit amt
Towne Paper Company in California as
a senior salesman, larsen evoked
memories of 25 years ago when lie got
up there on the mound again Saturday
and pitched for Du- Yankees in their
one-tnning tun contest with th e
Dodgers.
He wasn't quite ns perfect as lie was
Hint Day tn 1954. though
Pee Wee Hrese, Die leadotf hitter,
stuck a pin in the fantasy with n banjo
double to left.

O il II 111 Mi P (M ) Ml 44;
1(7 411 M i TH IS
I lih r a c e - V I I .D l i l t
1 Hot Political
140 I K
7 40
1 High Dice
1100 &gt;00
1 H g Hunter
a 70
O il II Jl Mi T I I H I lee M.
Super I 1 1 1 1 7 a s e a t Ho
Winners

tttnracs-'e.E el 14

tip sy Doodle
tOO ISO 710
SO erkCereer
IN
a 10
( H E Y Boss
a 10
O M II II Ml I I I &gt;11 toe N ;
Big O ( I I with I I I &gt;11 M
A—1,144 j Handle &gt;144.41*
A LL D ISIA N C i
K E N N E L CHAMPIONSHIP!
(L iste d inordtr oil &gt;14,&gt;*.7 14.)
Strong — Olympeid World (74
41 I I ; hediscavery l i t } H D ,

loose Spmdey (It t a l l long
Dusty Prince OOI I I I
Nor
tons Queen |*0 11 X01 A llas
Anaora ( N i l e )
tcheefe —
Beavers Bomber ( N l ) 1 0 ? l ,
Flesh t.gnel IK IS • a l; O H G's
M 'chief H I 7 J el Jerden
Consul General i T I J e t O I .
CMO S Healff I I I ) H | , Iso n
( t i l I I I Alderien — P a in e
Webber (II tX II HI t Gym N
Trim H l l t e i O r,Is Chrysler
111 F • 41 w,n,im t — Orient
King i n 1 1 11 Something Howl
111 I I I I . Charming Mona I I t t
) Jl l e e ' llem - Or Doom ( I t
4 l J ); Pctenl Motion (74 4 J 6 ).
Bashful Secret D O i l e i M F —
Quantum
Jump D O S a a t.
Robbia Mope ( i l l s 11. Ml
Yankee 114 M II

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE.

n

n

^

s

ON A LL

IE

CONCORDS

W AGONEERS

EAGLES

CNEROKEES

SC RA M B LERS

C J ’s

SPIR ITS

PICKUPS

COME SEE • D R IV E ONE A W A Y !

SANFQRD MOTOR CO.
JEEP

AMC
508 S. FRENCH A V .

321*4382

IF YOUR BRAKES
ARE GO IN G BAD,
TRY TO STOP AT
GOODYEAR
B ra k e S e r v ic e -Y o u r C h o ic e
2-W HEEL
M,
4-W H EEL
FRONT 0 I8 C :
S I
DRUM:
In s ta ll n o w
^
I o al a II now
fro n t b ro k e
Atdilianel parts brako lining all
and se n n e t
pads
and
4 w h e e ls *
title It needed
rease seals •
N e w fro n t
8,'
R osurtaco front rotors • R e ­
grease s e a ls • Resurface
d ru m s • R e p a c k from
pack front wheol bearings •
Inspoct calipers and hydraulic OR bearings • Inspect hydraulic
system • Add fluid (does nol
system • Add fluid
Include rear w heels)
• M o tl U S c a rs , m any imports an d lig h t ir o c k t

G O O D pYEAR

Basket bah
Lea Angeiet — Signed forward
Darrell Allgmt to a multiyear
contract.

SERVICE^STORES

K o lt lr a — Nemed G e ra ld
R &gt;tberg and Jga Hearing ataJMani
football coaches
Dallas — Released punter C t r l
C arla n . running sack W orley
Teytar. receiver M,ke yy.iton end
'•ont wvd Joey Hoc kart, traded
m M dk linebacker Bruce Huther to
Cleveland tar a a n il chok»

e e w p g w .e y p ^ - • * 9

JIM HEMPHILL, M anager
SANFORD

322-2821

�'f r

•A—Evening Htrald. Sanford. FI.

Ttwsday. AuflJJ^IMt

JO

X

PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
'Jingle Bells' Is Tops
On Chinese Hit Parade
By I sited P rrtf International
"Jingle Belli" It li* n~*t popular American tune
among the Chinese, even on a blistering summer day in
Canton, sayi conducter Legh Bums of the Oklahoma
Youth Orchestra, Just ba*&gt; from a two-week tour of
China. At each stop, audiences asked for the Christmas
favorite, he said.
"If you can imagine, in Canton when it was 102
degrees they came up with a request to play ‘Jingle
Bells' and through some miracle we had it in the
library. We had to play it everywhere.”

On Hunger, Divorce

Fired Up Over Beards
Three brothers suspended from the volunteer fire
department in Franklin, l&lt;a„ for refusing to shave
their beards will ask the City Council to reinstate them.
"As far as we know, there's no other volunteer fire
department in the state that prohibits the wearing of
beards," said Herman Adams. "Even the 15U firemen
training school teaches you that with a coat of vaseline
on your beard you can wear an atrpack and be safe."
Fire Chief Carroll Barrllleaus suspended Herman,
Rodney and Jody Adams for repeatedly refustri', to
shave their beards.

Names In The News
Mickey Rooney, starring on Broadway in "Sugar
Rabies," is concurrently taping "One of the Boys,"
an NBC-TV series in which he plays a senior citlien
sharing an apartment with his grandson and another
collegian__ Puppetteer Bill Baird celebrated his 77th
birthday by doing his SOOth TV commercial, for Chock
Full o' Nuts coffee___Rita Moreno will headline at the
Sands Theater in Atlantic City Aug 26-29, backed by
ventriloquist Wayland Flowers and Madame.

Beyond The Empire
Mark Hamill, known as laike Skywalkrr to fans of
"Star Wars" and "The Empire Strikes Back," has
reached the goals he wanted before turning X. He
starred in a movie that was nominated for an Oscar,
he's made a million dollars and he's appeared on
Broadway ("The Elephant Man” ). But he tells People
magazine he is still not satisfied.
"But having done all that, it's not what you
imagined,” tie said. "I must still prove myself as an
actor." He's auditioning now until shooting begins in
January on his final Star Wars episode —"Revenge of
the Jedt."

Quote Of The Day
Comedian Tom Dreesen told TV host John Davidson
why he never uses drugs: "My Dad told me that
marijuana causes brain damage. He said dial if I ever
smoked it he would bash my head in.”

Glimpses
Sean Connery and (iene Hackman are among liie
film stars scheduled to attend (he Deauville Film
Festival In September.. .Rons Jaffe has a new novel
coming oiii for Delacorte — "Mares and Mon­
sters". . . ABC's "Fantasy Island" is back in
production after taking a summer vacation, with
Dennis Cole, Kike Sommer, Jayne Meadows, (Mrs.
Steve Allen) and Paul Williams among the first guest
s ta rs .. . John Hurt and Jane Alexander have pul the
finishing touches on their new Itlin, "Night Creasing’’. .

QUOli/UNQUOTE
What people are saying...
“ As far as I know, I think I
am the only Cuban in exile
who proclaims he would like
to rule his country one day.”
— Jorge Batista. 31, a
Fort l.auderdalr. F la.,
fashion model, lie Is the son
of the late Cuban dictator.
Fulgrnrlo Batista. (Tim e
M agadan
"Making them, yes Seeing
them, no.”
— Marcello MastroiannL
artor, sa)tng he likes to
make Hints but doesn't like
to go to the movies.
(Attenilone Magadnr)
"When 1 took this Job I
promised our Ians I'd show
them a Rose Bowl team ."
— I.ee Carso, Indiana
coarh, explaining why his
lootball team Is scheduled
this season to pis) Southern
CaL (Sports Illustrated)

Contest

VA1.KHIE IIARPEIl

Valerie Harper
All
NEW YORK (Ill’l l - For Valerie Harper, light years
removed now from the "R hula" role that made her famous,
“positive” Is more than Just a word. It’s a way of life that
blows like a mountain breeze across subjects as divrrse as
hunger, divorce, puppets, Broadway shows and movies for
television.
She was bark in her old home town, being very positive about
all those things.
She had Just finished taping a segment of the syndicated
children's show, "The Great Space Coaster," with its cast of
Muppet-like creatures.
"They're magic," she said. "It was an amazing acting ex­
perience. Those little creatures are real. It's like a child's eyes
looking at you. There I am with Goriddle Gorilla —at ey e level
with the puppeteer down below making him work — and you
forget the guy's there.
"They Joke around off camera, between takes ... It’s
amazing when I'm dealing with a puppet and he gives me a
belter reaction on a line than some actors I've worked with.
"Boy , did I huve a good time.”
Her latest vrhicle for television —a dramatic look at divorce
and its effect upon the children involved — is In the ABC fall
line-up under the title of "When the loving Slopped.”
"The title is really a misnomer,” she said, "but it is what
people allow to happen in divorce. It can have a devastating
effect on the offspring if a man and woman keep their bit­
terness."
But even with so bitter a topic, the Harper viewpoint
prevailed.
"We're getting into a new wave now of human conscious­
ness," she said. "The divorce rate is about SO per cent and
when something’s st that level, we'd better do something about
it. We can’t look at divorce as a disease any more. We must
change our attitude. Even ihe term ‘broken home' is injurious
to little people.
"In California, they don't even call It divorce any more. It's
‘dissolution of marriage.' Divorce can be a positive factor.”
She has t«» more television movie* in the pipeline — one for
CBS and another (or ABC. Because they're still in the scripting
stage, she wasn't willing to reveal the nuts and bolts, saying
only that (he ABC effort will consist of "people getting rid ol
the garbage in their lives through exploration."
The CBS film will be “ an Odyssey picture" involving a threedecker bus
Add to that the tentative offer of "a very enticing scries" and
talk of a couple of Broadway plays and you have enough to
keep even Valerie Harper busy, right?
Wrong.
Her passion is world hunger and the campaign, largely
through Save the Children, (o end it. She said the organiza­
tion's director, David Guyer, is out to raise 1700,000 to blunt the
(amine in Somalia and lo help him with the cilort she'll be
celebrity chairman next year at a White House celebration of
Ihe group's 10th birthday.
And how - apart from fundraising —does one fight (amine?
The Harper method is to raise consciousness as well as cash.
"It starts with visualization," she said. "Everyone ui unison,
all over the world, has been visualizing starvation and that's
why we have ll. We Just have to change our vision in the con­
text of willingness and sufficiency.”
OK — how about ever beleaguered New York, with Its
crumbling subways, its dirty streets, Ita graffiti and its urban
rot? Surely that's a downer for anybody.
“ I sense something this trip back," she said. "I sense
renewal. Back in the 'SOs, I thought, my God, New York's
decaying. Bui it's not now. I guess what I sense is hope.”
If you're a pessimist or a professional malcontent, never get
on Valerie Harper's hit list. In five nunutes, she's capable of
wrecking a hoard of gloom It look a lifetime to acquire.

BETTS DAVIS
"Now, when I look back, I
see that then I was the best
looking thing that ever lived.
Why ail Ihoiie years 1 haled
my face, I don't know,”
— Bette Davis, recalling
that she was ram laced as a
young actress in the 1930s
that she was natltractlve.
(Family Circle)
"My Job is simply to eat.”
— Ed Koch, mayor of New
Yark City, saying h r

Special Edition of the

Heritage COOKBOOK
* SEVENTH WEEK’S C O N T E S T *
Recipes for...

ONLY 2 WEEKS...2 CATEGORIES LEFT
Don’t Delay...One of YOUR Recipes Could

1st - 2nd • 3rd Prizes Each Week
Weekly winners are eligible for the GRAND PRIZE
NO LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED

IN THE SERVICE
ED KOCH
wvulda'I gel latched la Ihe
hiring of another rook at
Grade Mission, his offtrial
residence.
Four
have
resigned la ibe past three
years.
" I’ve never been criticized
like this publicly and il didn't
fil well with me."
— Jayne Kennedy, no­
ire*i, riling rrgrets about
the rev rating photo layout
she did with her husband.
I-eon, la I’layboy Magazine
to promote "Body and Sool,"
their new film. (Je t
Magazine i

J f S IS • C A a M IC H A lL
Pvt H i m a Cermithoel. sen *1
M&gt; and Mrs James a Car
m tn e rl ol i l l t u r p i* Dm *
Orange C.t* has completed Ora
Station Un,l T(a&gt;nmg IO SU TI at
1ho U S A r m Inlentr* School.
Fori Oemmg. Ga
OSUT • a 11 wrv* period »Mcti
comixnt* basic compel training
ana advanced individual training

YOU MAY ENTER AS MANY WEEKS AS YO U LIKE

th e framing included weapons
Q u alificatio n s, squad t a c t ic s ,
petrolling landmeio w art a r t . Iietd
com m u n ication * and co m b at
operations
Void ecs were taught to perform
an* ol me duties M a rift* dr
rroelar squad
Carmichael is a ISM graduate ol
C e ttlid f High School. Gainesville.
Fla

— Ms urine Vaughan, a 79year-old Richmond, Va..
g ra n d m o th e r
w h o se
"Eggs'otic SpeeUI' - eggs,
baroa and applrs on an
English mnflin — was No. 1
at the 1M1 " Breadwinners
National Sandwich Idea
lo o test" la New York.
"It Is a good thing this
n u tter is being settled "
— Bent Rosenthal ol ibr
Danish Embassy in Madrid
oa efforts to rescind a Nov.
II, 1M9, declaration ol nar
on Denmark by llursear. a
(lay mountain village la
southeast Sputa.

• V i’ **

Food Categories Coming Up In The Next 2 Weeks Of The Contest:

DESSERTS — MICROWAVE
So send In that special reelpo your family and friends like so well
...It could be a wlnnerl
•

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

P R IC E S
SM A SH ED
ON ALL

"Sandwiches are the food
of the future.”

I
I

for the EVENING HERALD'S 1st Annual

CONCORDS

W AGONEERS

EAGLES

CHEROKEES

SCRA M B LER S

C J’s

SPIRITS

PICKUPS

RULES:
No limit to num ber of recipes subm illed but each
recipe m ust Include your name, address and
telephone.

JEEP

AM C
5 0 8 S . FRENCH A V .

a)1

All raclpes received w ill be published In October
tor the Evening H e ra ld 's first annual cookbook
contest.

Anyone can e n te r except Evening H erald e m ­
ployees and th eir Im m ediate family.

Or Drop OH At Our Office)
IN N . FRENCH AVE.
(By the lakefront In dewntown Sanford)
MON.-FRI. 1:19-1:30 - SAT. l;»NOON

Mall Entries to: EVENINO HERALD
c-o COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX 1617
SANFORD. FLA. 32771

DEADLINE FOR
MEATS*..

Entries must ba postmarked by midnight

SUNDAY, AUGUST 30

VCd-vt;

NEXT FOOD CATEGORY — DESSERTS

3 2 2 -4 3 8 2

4 'JIM / / d 'r f at i v. ,

A panel of three e x p e rt lodges will ravlew all
entries and winners w ill be notified at the and of
the contest In S eptem ber tor a taste oH" to
select the Grand P rize w inner. Decision ot the
judges Is final.

TYPE or P R lriT your recipe giving full in­
structions for p rep aratio n , cooking tim e and
tam paratura. (A pproxim ate number of serv in g s
also helpful.)

COME SEE - D R I V E ONE A W A Y !

SANFORD MOTOR CO.

F irst, Second and T hird p r i m will ba sw arded In
each of the nine food categ o ries. You m ay in te r
a s many of the w eekly categ o ries as you Ilka.

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OURSELVES
Tuetdey. Aug. IJ. I t l l - I B

Evening Herald. Saniord, Ft.

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I JOKER S WILD
51 BARNEY MILLER
(1 0 ) MACNEIL / IE H R ER
REPORT

John lleickrrt, assistant principal o( l.akr
Mary IliRh School, conducts a tour of the
school auditorium for several members of the
board of directors of Seminole Mutual Concert

7 :0 5
B (1 7 ) AU. W THE FAMILY

Association, from left: Mrs. Italph Austin
Smith, Dr. Sara In-gang, Hetty (iramkow and
Fenny Mergo.

7 :3 0
B (T )T IC T A C O O U O M
3 ) O JOTH c e n t u r y w it h w a i ­
t e r CRONKITE
(7) Q f a m il y f e u o
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CMWIopRar R a n * |R|

Concert Association In
Throes Of New Beginning
By DORIS DIETRICH
OURSELVES Editor
"A new beginning" is how Dr. Sara Irrgang eiplalned
the 1911-12 season tor Seminole Mutual Concert
Association.
In the reorganization oi the association. Dr. Irrgang.
president, upturned that at the end of the 1NM1 season in
the spring "people and finances were depleted."
But no more.
"The concert association is alive and well," Jan
Freeman, the retiring president who remains on the board
said. A decline in membership nearly caused bankruptcy
of SMCA during the past season.
Over 30 interested people are on this year’s board of
directors, including some familiar faces who served on

7 :3 5
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the board several years ago.
A new beginning.
And a new concert hall — the auditorium of the new
ultra-modern lake Mary High School.
Ur. lregang said the auditorium seats about u u patrons,
lias a grand piano and padded seats. Special engineering
affords desirable sound effects.
Four high calibre concerts have been scheduled for the
year with admission by season's subscriptions. In addition
to the concerts, a September membership blitz is planned
followed by an October reception and the December
Champagne Ball
Dr. Irrgang Is optimistic about the community sup­
porting the concert association this season. “We will put
our best effort forward," she said.

ISffl (A)

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Nobody Owes' A Wedding Gift
DEAR ABBY: Bill and I were married
June 1 ,19(0. We received many gilts of
money from relatives, but we never got
anything from my mother’s sister, Aunt
Jenny, who is usually pretty generous.
We thought It was rather strange, but of
course we didn't say anything.
Well, we Just found out that the May
before our wedding, my mother
burrowed WOOfrom Aunt Jenny with the
understanding that starting June 1 she
would give Aunt Jenny tlOO a month to
pay back the loan. Since our wedding was
June 1, Aunt Jenny told my mother to
give the first 1100 to Btll and me as her
(Aunt Jenny’s) wedding present.
It’s been over a year now, and Mom
• still hasn't given us the $100. My mother
ts always crying "poor mouth," but she
rats out with her friends nearly every
night, plays bingo three nights a week
and works two jobs. The money would
come In handy now as we have a baby.
Bill says we should skip it. 1 say my
mother owes us $100, and If she doesn’t
pay it. Aunt Jenny should because she
committed herself for that amount as our
wedding present
Abby, who owes who what? And what
do you think of this whole family m en?
HOI DING THE BAG
DEAR HOLDING: A» I see It, the owly
prnoa whe"ewe«” anybody anything U
your mother, who owes Aunt Jenny $5M
because she borrowed tt. Aunt Jenny
doesn't “ ewe" yon anything because a
gilt Is never "ewed." It's voluntary- •
think your molhrr’s word Isn't worth
very much, and your Aunt Jenny's style
of glftghtag is tacky. I to te with Bill
Skip It
DEAR ABBY: Recently you had an
article regarding children answering the
telephone. I hive something I would like
to add th i l l think ts worthy of printing

because it would save thousands of

We've asked a number of people, and
nobody we spoke to has ever heard of it.
The ornament that topped our wedding
rake has sentimental value to us, and of
course we hope to get it back, but we'd
like to know il you or any of your readers
have ever heard of such a custom.
SUSIE IN WAUKEGAN. ILL.
DEAR SUSIE: It's news to mr. But If
turh a custom ralata. I'll aurely bear
about II allrr this hits print Readers?
DEAR ABBY: I Just read the letter
from the woman whose husband goes out
to fetch lh« morning paper in the nude.
She said. "I can hardly look my neigh­
bors In the face, wondering If they’ve
seen my husband picking up our morning
paper."
Please tell her I’ve seen her husband,
and I can understand why she can hardly
look her neighbors In the (ace.
STHAWBEHRY BIDNDE IN CHERRY

MO
G

Th* challenge handed to them by ■ team of faculty teacheradvisers was to develop a comprehensive growth plan for
* Orange, Osceola and Seminole counties, Incorporating what
they learned from classes and research.

-

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AFTERNOON

U i l DAILY DEVOTIONAL
Q DAILY WORD

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QAANO OLE OPRY

1100

Peter Ratray. F J . O'Neil,
Gary Bayer and Jim
Rebhom are the four New
York actors. Ratry will play
White House counsel John
Dean. O'Neil will play
Howtrd Hunt, Bayer will
portray Jeb Magruder and
Rebhom will be Uddy's
attorney and friend Peter
Maroulis.

CARO SHARKS
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WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

5:15
12117) MT PATROL(TUC)
5:20
O H 7) RAT PATROL (THU)

® O

m o v ie

805

1105
1 2 (1 7 )N IO H T a A lU R T

12 (1 7 ) MISSION
(WED)

freem a n r e p o r t s

O i NEWS
J i o t h e YOUNO ANO THE
RESTLESS
(7 O RYAN SHORE
li t (351 FAMILY AFFAIR
(C (101 THIS OLO MOUSE |R) CJ
(MON)
| B 110) SLIM CUISINE (TUC)
t c 110) ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
(WED)
(C 110) FAST FORWARO (FRn

( C l 10) AM WEATHER

} Q CAPTAIN KANGAROO
11 735) FRIO F l i NTSTONE ANO
FRiENOS

( f l J O 7 0 NEWS
I t (35fBENNY FULL
CD110) POSTSCRIPTS

j; o

12:00

600
B U TOOAV IN FLOAlOA
( ) O THE LAW ANO YOU (MON)
( ) ( 0 SPECTRUM (TUE)
(
SLACK AWARENESS IWEDI
; ) O THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
O HEALTH FIELD (FRl)
0 SUNRISE
(35) j m s a k k e r

7:30

1005
Q (1 7 ) NEWS

G

1 1 :4 5
( 0 ( 101 STORY BOUNO (TUC-FRO

0 * TOOAT

B 3 ) NEROWOLFE T b aa rfao fa
formar d air c l altornay it bumad to
daatb in a car craafi ngbl abar i*omg Naro bar butband a M* it bamg
tbraalanad |R)
D O HART TO HART Tba Hart*
lavyar baaavat mat bra plan lo u n t dar Jonathan bat baan auccaaaful
and procaadt a-tb pnat* la p Of Nt
daftard*. tebam* |R)
a t (3 5 ) WOEPENOCNT NETWORK
NEWS
&lt;C (1 0 ) PAUL SIMON Compotar
pof* Mid antarlatnar Paul Simon
oRora a naarty nonalop coaacuon of
lut g ra fta l N it and currant favor.
naa bom tbo Toaar Tbaaira m
Uppor Darby. Pa

blu es

WATERGATESTARS
Four New York actors will
portray Washington, D.C.,
figures In (he upcoming
"Will, G. Gordon Uddy." a
drama on NBC inspired by
th e
b e s t-te llin g
autobiography Of Ihe con­
victed W atergate con­
spirator.
Robert Conrad star* u
Uddy in the production,
which recently completed
principal photography on
location In Illinois and
Washington, D.C.

5:25

MOLIVWOOO ANO THE
STARS (WED1

530
(1) O

SUMMER SEM ESTER

5:40
12 (17) WORLD AT I A R G i IFRII

AHA7A TW W K
ALL SHO W S

ftA IA l

JJ

J »M ONLY

S uperman ii

BURNS'CHRISTMAS
George
Burns
will
definitely not be late for
.Christmas this year.
He's the host of the
"George B urns' E arly,
Early , Early Christnuu
Special" on NBC this fall.

FAMOUS REC IPE'! REOUUR DINNER
1 sweet honay dipp*4 frtsd thickin. math
pauioai md gravy, ctie tlsw tsd 1 hot buBar
tsiSa' Biscuits. Heaey vg*n rsguett.

Burns will be Joined by
Bob Hope, who Is seen as he
entertained the troops
through the y ears, AnnM argrtl, who h as a
production number, and five
Playboy P laym ates who
perform an act called "My
Body."

The students were divided into three Interdisciplinary
teams, and approached the problem by breaking down (acto n
affecting growth Into (our general areas: economy, pollution,
resources and population.
They subsequently came up with projections for the year
2001 which they labeled "pessimistic," "nominal," and "op­
timistic."
“In some ways, the pessimistic outlook is the best lor Cen­
tral Florida residents," said Andy Nestor, a Lake Brantley
high school senior. “With a greater influx of people, there will
be more crowding. With each 1,000 people coming Into an area,
you hare s certain number of social misfits. You also have leas
land (or agriculture.”
Seminole students participating in the program with Neater
are: Stephanie Yvonne Baker, Seminole High; Michele
Parish, Seminole High; Brent Robert Hifner, Seminole High;
Steve W. Mitchell, la k e Brantley High; and Charles Huber
Wilson, Lake Brantley High.

% % t

str eet

TV
TATTLE

Students In Governor's Program
Central Florida could be a pretty nice place to live in 30
_ if we build enough fadllllea, such as water treatm ent
and utility plants, to support a growing population — Is the
conclusion by t t a rts high sehool students who spent this
summer wsduig through &gt;ulkstics, computers and systems
models.
. As participants in the Governor’s Honors Program lor
'Gifted Students, U* teenagers spent »u weeks at the
- University of Central Florida studying computer science,
•m ath and engineering. They also got a taste of college We
.including cafeteria food, dorm living and pulling "aB­
; oighten" In truer to complete their alignments. As a bonus,
'; aU received college credit for their work.

fu ll

,*« urd acMIopRrwvc conFmad m
a mart* nabtwten abuggw* ISbaa
haraad bom bar paycXouc lantaa**
abb lb* b*&lt;p of a gantw payefuamat

5:50
t f ( T / | WORLD AT LARUE IMON.
THU)

a (1) OAAY DEVOTIONAL

people hours of wasted time: Have paper
and pencil handy to wTite down any
message or phone number.
B is astonishing to me that only about 1
in JO people answering the telephone
(other than business establishments)
havo anything available to wtIIc on or
write with. And (he person nuking the
call has to sit and wait while the other
person hunts up something to write
with—and 1 am talking about adults.
El AA IN FOItT MYEKS
DEAR ELSA: Hear, heir! Now If only HILL
DEAR ABBY; I went with a married
somrooe would perfect a pencil that ran
be rhataed to the telephone so the kids man for If years and I never looked at
another man in all that time.
couldn't carry It off.
HU wile died alter a very short Illness
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I were
and I thought for sure he would m arry
married a few months ago, and since
me, bu' do you know what happened? He
then we’ve had a bit of a mystery on our
married a young girl he had known only
hands.
At our reception, shortly after our three months!
I asked him why he didn't m arry me,
wedding cake was disassembled, il was
discovered that the decoration piece and he said he could never respect a
woman who wrnt with a married man for
from the top of the cake was missing.
Someone then informed us that tt was a If y e a rs.
KICKING MYSELF IN WINNETKA
customary wedding prank. Someone
DEAR KICKING: ThU should be a
"steals" the decoration, and the bride
and gtooen then have until their first lesson la women who date married men.
Everybody need* friends. Far some
anniversary to figure out who has i t If
they find out who's holding it. a party is practical Ups on how to be popular, get
given for them by this person. II not, the Abby's Popularity booklet. Send $1 pins a
newlyweds must give a party In order to long, self-addressed stamped (IS rents)
envelope ta Abby, Popularity, 1XB6
get bark the decoration.
I have never in my life heard of such a Hawthorne Blvd., Salle MM, Hawthorne,
Calif. M J6.
custom.

;

(3)

l Navar Ptoovaad

CT o t h r e e s c o m p a n y (Ri
I t (35) LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE
( 0 110) BOCKBIRD (TUE-FRO

5:45
a (17) WORLD AT LARGE (TU G

W &gt;1 •» *

ALL FOR ONLY $ 2 «

* L« ■ * * » •

VALUE «2.«t
Good AIIDar Wrdni*4*»
—

tCMpyiLLANDi.
»»«i \t %n iu »j»#

'mhousR&amp;c/jpe

TUESDAY CARLOAD
NITE

FRKDCHICKEN

Bercar
•w

The conitructkm ol the
U J. Capitol Building took
ever 150 years to eomplett.

*

I I M I t T SOaSNlRI

"IT'S HONEY DIPPED"
OFIN it:M * .« . - II y a li» F » F r i A U 1. Ctostog M:M ».«.

DEADLY BUSSING

IM S F re w c B A v a .

(Hwy. 17 fl)
teatord

* “ FINAL E X A M .

^ ^

1

IIN

H **y. 17 F

Ciivrwarry

*

* * * -.-* e B e m w B 4

1

�—Evntrtq Htrald. Ssntord, FI._____ Tuesday, Aug, 11, I f 1
COM PLETE LINE

BusinessReview

Art Supplies
IIA M H l I A i n

n IT E M S

■;-* r &gt;J

Otcorallng Ideal With A
Country Touch. , . Spoctolltlng
InOAK 4 PINE FURNITURE
Q U ILT S -D O LLS
COLLECTORS ITEMS

on-* • a c r y lic s

P

-\
*-*

w colors

Everything lor the
im it fjr Or proftllienil
preftitionsl

^

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

CUSTOM F R A M IN G

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

OVER 1» MOLDINGS

The COUNTRY CORNER

ScwJto^ufe

M»n» Sit k m . Own.r
PM |MSI &gt;» JIM
T U tlA N T O R O A V E ___________________________ IA H F0B
D
f U " »

110MAGNOLIA

GLASS 4 PAINT
COMPANY, INC

SANFORD

PH.122-4III

I' M,

J

PUT YOUR BUSINESS ON THE M OVE •
A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

A D V E R T IS IN G

323-6522

Call 322-2611 How!

OWN FOR LESS
THAN RENT
M O B ILE HOME MODEL I ON 011 P LA Y
C O M P A R E T H E If F E A T U R E !

•
•
•
•

F t r m .r if
H»ir C t rt
Junction

Driftwood Village
Lake Mary Blvd

Mon Sat 9 1
Thun 9-8

LARGE POOL • ADULT CLUB HOUSE
TEEN CENTER • LAUNDRY FACILITIES
CITY WATER AND SEWER INCLUDED
ADULT ONLY A N r FAM ILY SECTIONS
S R lir SANFORO, 1 Ml. E. OF tMJ
MON S A T .f B . n v J p m . J 1U U 0

DEEP Steam
CARPET CLEANERS

V O LK SH O ^
S p ed aliiin g In S e rv le t A P ir ti For
V .W .'i. Toyota and Datum
(Corntr Ind 4 Pxlmtfto)

LIVING ROOM
DINING ROOM
AND MAIL

Special!

214 S. Palmetto Ave.
SAN FO R D
PHONE

H I M E t c h Add I M oral Room

2 1 Hour Service :i:i 1 .0 0 5 1
C A R P ET SALES -

321-0120

INSTALLATION - REPA IR

CLEARANCE
50% OH

MADAME KATHERINE
HAIM . IAH I1
P a il -

C R Y S T A L HAH HI APING
P re se n t

-

F u tu re

iSL

l l U m H ADVICE ON A ll A/MfHV
• I I I ! *LO V L • M A R RIA G E • BU M N IW
B E E N IN B U S I N E S S F O R SO Y E A R S

HOURS 8 A M - 9 P M Clow-d Sunday
8 3 1 -4 4 0 5

O F IN VEN TO RY
MASTER CHARGE VISA

Happy youngster* at the Gingerbread House are
shown with Barbara I’flukr (seated), ownerdirector of the child care center, and Nancy

NEW l U J F O CONSIGNM ENT JH O P
O P lN M ON. T H R U IA T I I I
PH 111 MM
1 IFI OrUntfa O r , Uftfortf

I 81 IK KV M IRTH OF D O G IR A lH RU
OR leUW Atl 19 Hd 41
tOM If Mi (HI Btll MM I Hmu

fM •
»*•«Vi m f k*4W H «*«*
IIIBIfbH ^ ItHBA Is*.t -4

The Salt House

^

Twice 9a Mice

IN P R I V A C Y O F M Y H O M E

(3 0 5 )

$250 0

till Fllfwif Pin*

G R O O M IN G

Gingerbread House Has
Quality Pre-School Program

DOES YOUR DOG HAVE DRV,
FLA KEY SKIN, HAIR LOSS,
SUMMER ITCH, ETC.F

A Unlqui
U n iq u e Country
C o u n try E
m p o r iu m
A
Emporium
O t k » you Lite iMoueh ou* doors, you’ll turpmieett
to u rtX I In • droom oorid of Notlaiglo
Hand trolled sWIIrr furnitufo b» a Twinotwo cr.tH m .iv dri,
w ails Id brcom , a M ora m lire lor s firm
Hand mad# bums, dolls, sitdian a trrs
I sondt, and baby &gt;t«m» from "atandmotbrys
| tro aiiv r " i t j n ,i.u i

flrw

TRY OUR HOT O il TfiM TAUNTI
CALL FOR A PPO IN TM EN T

323 4635

Pet Animal Supply

Step Into Tha Salt House. . .
And Feel At Horn*

Quality Services for Ihe Concerned Parent.”
That’s the slogan of The Gingerbread House,
which operates on a policy of limited enrollment.
This allows for a personal involvement with
each and every child and an awareness of his
development and needs.” said Barbara Pfluke,
owner-director of the child care center in Sanford.
1jocatcd at 2336 Elm Ave. next to (he School of
Dance, the state-licensed Gingerbread House is
now accepting applications for fall enrollment of
children 2 years old and up.
'Ihe pre-school program for 3 and 4-year-olds
runs from September to June and is taught by
certified teachers. All children enrolled in child
care” at Gingerbread House are included in its
educational program.
A kindergarten program for 5-year-olds will
begin Aug. 31.
This program, which is designed to prepare
the child for first grade, includes language
development, mathematical concepts, social
development, arts and crafts and music,” said
Mrs. Pfluke. Special emphasis will be placed on
reading readiness and phonetics," she added.
Gingerbread House is oppen II hours a day

SANFORD PLA ZA

IS B Hwy. 17-93, DtBary

THE GINGERBREAD HOUSE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Aik About Our SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT
HEATING
FINANCINU AVAILABLE
AIR CONDITIONING
If PCT. DOWN
REFRIGERATION
At Long At M Mo. Tb Pay

C h ild C f r t — P ro-School — K in d er p e r i, a
Duality I w y lt * r o f Tha Concwnad Parants ”

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS
FOR EN ROLLM EN T

Wtffl Af-prOvOd 0*1*

A G E II Y E A R S 4 U P
AM odtrn D ata 1 &lt;msad F a c ility
C a ttilia d T a a cb a rt

Save Moneyl
Save Energy!

1

PH. 322-8547
J5J* ELM AVE.

C A R R IE R
A IR C O N D ITIO N IN G

SANFORO

SOUTHERN AIR O F SANFORD
EtlabllthBd IN I
If f North Map It Av m m
Ph d O D J IM lll

S P E C IA L
Oaod Thru t«F&lt; &gt;

FROSTING
indudas Tanat

an
ti* it

IOR®®
»

(Lane Hair l . t r a l

Ph. 322-7684

flin g s of ^ ia ir

PH. 322-8991
G U YS &amp; GALS
HAIR STYLING STUDIO
Rick CMlttch -Owner Operator
3117 S. PARK DRIVE
SANFORO

C a r p e t C le a n in g
"Which Method is Best?"
SHAMPOO METHOD
Hat AglUtloa Bill
L lltli or Ho IxIracUiM

STYUNO SALON

1911 French Ave.

1

• IUM4M.I BMX

$ 2 9 "

LA. DR, A HALL
ANY SIZE
SAVE 33%

on upholstery
cleaning white
we dean your
carpels

* 5 9 "

ANY 3 BR HOUSE
LR. DR, 8 HALL
BR BR Bit

THIS WEEK
A jt llf H i

1 i f 11 l t d

CARPETDOCTORS339m

• R n p r t t o r y Trwr.pv
Eewipmmt

• BM.m.ng MeiMnet

M ED IC A R E A P P R O V ED

Everything for home patient care
"WE D E L IV E R "

THE VIBBA VAC METHOD
COMBINES THE BEST OF BOTH
• Hoi watar and cleaning solution fata into tha ca/ptt
• Vibra Brush (likt electric tooth brush) agitates
carpet back and forth 3.400 times each minute Thu
breaks toil loose and polishes each carpet fiber to
a dean, brilliant finish This type of brush don not
distort pilt
• Powerful suction extracts hot watar and loosened
soil back up to waste lank

Sanford

f V . l l r i . 1om, Suppiwt « 0 .y « m
* C rV K * M

STEAM METHOD
Raw Walar Extrectiaa
flirt No Agitillan

J

Med-Care Surgical
and
Respiratory Clinic
,’J RENTALS &amp; SALES
• WAm U M iM
OCMMiwny Sure1'**

Phone (MS) 3114415
IBS E. First Street
Senferd, Fla. 33771

NEW YORK (UP!) - Cities and states have had a rough
time raising needed money in the bond market and the new tax
laws could hare a further devastating Impact on the taxexempt sector.
The new lew lowers the tax on unearned income from a
maximum of TO percent to 50 percent "making tax exempt
municipals at least 20 percent less attractive,” said Vincent
Tese, tax counsel for Century Securities, a bond trading firm.
High interest rates and the depressed bond market already
have hit the municipal sector especially hard.
Henry Kaufman, chief economist at Salomon Brothers In­
vestment banking firm, noted recently that cities as large as
Chicago hare had to pull back planned Issues to wait for a drop
in interest rates and smaller local bond Issues are being
crowded out completely.
"There has been a two-year bear market for municipals,
which In itself has created difficult conditions," Tese said.
"Many Investors and speculators hare been burned and aren’t
anxious to repeat the experience."
Although yields are at record levels and seemingly at­
tractive despite Ihe new tax law, a sharp drop In price takes a
further toll.
Jam es bebcnlhil, who heads a municipal bond firm bearing
hia name, used a hypothetical twodneome couple with an

leelorCmien Dey

Da you Hove A Ctsi*?
• FREE CONFERENCE
• NO RECOVERY, NO FEE

WALLACE W. HARDY
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Designated Parteiul Injury And

T*

MENTION THI1AD

y \ A-

SAVE *IJ
* E O .S »

-••&amp;

HM w

L w .H it f E .t f .

(---- -

’ [ L e
I MAKE OVft
-----ITUISDAVI ONLY

iPam fie.xzd Jlo o fi
PHONE
4 2 5i -6
134
*
’fw? J' ■; •

Monday through Friday for the convenience of
working parents. A hot balanced lunch is served
as well as two nutritional morning and afternoon
snacks. Other services include after-school”
child care and pickup from area schools. Daily
and weekly rates are available.
Recreation as well as quality education is
stressed at Gingerbread House, which features a
spacious fenced-in playground where a variety of
planned outdoor activities are conducted.
We want to introduce pre-school as a happy
place,' " said Mrs. Pfluke, who owned and
operated a child care service in upstate New York
before opening The Gingerbread House in June
of 1ST79.
It gets in your blood," she smiled, commenting
on her personal interest in children and their
mental, physical and cultural development.
In addition to Mrs. Pfluke, Gingerbread House
has n friendly, well-qualified staff consisting of
three certified teachers and one teacher's aide
Parents who are looking for quality services”
are Invited to visit TTie Gingerbread House or call
322-8547 for more information.

Tax Law Hurts M unicipal Bonds

ACCIDENT or INJURY

117 N. Cola Dr,

Erickson, teacher's aide. Gingerbread House is
open It hours a day Munday through Friday for
the convenience of working parents.

HOuas
SAMCWO

323-7530

]

annual Income of 150,000 to figure that a II percent New Yorl
state tax-exempt bond, now yielding around 28 percent for i
New York CUy resident, will yield the equivalent of 28 percen
In 190.
For a resident of a state with no state tax, such as Comsec
tlcut, the same 150,000 income couple now gels an effectiv
yield of 0.5 percent on a II percent Issue and would see thi
drop to 21.4 percent.
To Illustrate the effect ol the price drop, Tese noted, fo
example, one tax-exempt Issue that sold last week at 97 (100 i
par or 11,000) with a 12 percent coupon was going for 90 earl
this week. That means an Investor had lost almost 1100 o
every 11,000 of the initial Investment, if he could even find
market.
The withdrawal of speculators and investors from th
municipal market has made It extremely Illiquid," Tese salt
"That coupled with the fact the new tax program severe!
curtails the rationale for being in municipals In the first plac
makes an illiquid market even more so."
An official with a large bond firm said "ll'a gotten to tf
point where even triple-A rated municipals are having to ps
12 percent to borrow and even at that yield every band brougl
out recently is worth less than it was.

BLAIR AGENCY
SPECIALISTS IN
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
SR ll'a FIL E D
0 IMMEDIATE TAO
INSURANCE
o SPECIAL PACKAGE RATE
FOR PEOPLE OVER M
Sarvlng Sanford for IS Yoors

0 .0

acAia

PHONE

323-7710 or 323-3166
U1IAOAK AVE.
SANFORD
tCwrer w t. Put are. a o*t&gt;

nova

olam

�Evening Herald. Senford. FI.

-BusinessReview
CofC

D IS C O U N T S

GcmondST

Evening Herald
Herald Advertiser

• PUT YOUR BUSINESS O N THE M O VE

A D V E R T IS IN G

■Q[ SJ

MON E I I .H I . S 1 T .1 B 1 . SUN I S

A D V E R T IS IN G

CoopcR’s
o*\d

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

L o u n g e

BRING THIS AD
For 1 FREE Drink

322-

1

2807

M »! P A R K OR. * * * IM 1

J

IA N FO R D

BA CK-TO SCH O O L
SPECIALS
CUTS.............................$4

fM

SHAMPOO &amp; $ET..*5°°

KONA ADAMS

SHEAR DEL I MI T
BEAUTY SALON
Z1M F rench Av».
PH .372 3530
Sanford
____________________________________________________________J

S

eco n d
CONSIGNMENTCLOTHING
F a n ta stic Saving* On
Woman's A Children's Fashions

Wt

o pk n tu u

V
M rs . H elen C h a m b e rla in , a lo c a l r e s id e n t, d e m o n s tra te * th e E-Z
H ire r r e c lin e r w hile A nn M im s, o w n e r of M e d -C a re , In c ., o p e ra te s
th e p u sh -b u tto n c o n tro ls . T h e M e d ic a re -a p p ro v e d c h a i r is Ihe
la te s t a d d itio n to M r d -C a re ’s lin e o f e q u ip m e n t.

S '-M

p o r ta b l e
oxygen
equipment, ultrasonic
n e b u liz e rs , suction
machines, pulmonary
functions, air filtration
units
and
IPPB
breathing machines.
A certified fitter, Ann
Mims can fit mastec­
tomy patients with a
protheses.
Med-Care
also has supplies for the
ileostomy
and
colostomy patients, and
incontinent appliances.
M e d -C a re ,
con­
veniently located next
to Bram Towers near

with a reference to the page of
the newspaper on which the
entire story appears.
"Our audience reaction has
been very positive,” said
William H. Phillips, area
general manager for Tele­
prompter Cable Television

Osngsr Signili il FmcfuS Nerves

1 MtttUKn

the Seminole Memorial
Hospital, also has a
supply of medical in­
dent ificat ion jewelry.
A free hearing clinic
is conducted at MedCare from 10 a m. to 1
p.m. each Friday by u
hearing aid specialist
from Orange City.
Another member of
the staff is Maryan
F a rn sw o rth .
The
friendly staff will be
glad to work with
patients and help them
with any problems they
might have.
Med-Care is open
Monday through Friday
from 9 a m. to 5 p.m.
Come in or call 322-8855.
-ADV.

i The Purchase Of A

IM Amp Deep Cycle Trolling Motor

BATTERY

*

A 1101.14 Value

HURRICANE BATTERIES
PH. 322-IIM

201 N. PARK A VE.
SANFORD

*

*

il

FOR RENT
WEDDINO DOWNS
WEDDING EQUIPMENT
:
•

Gaynelio’s
Antiques J
,

•

tth A laniard Ave., Sefilers. 'tr ~

f V r T r r r m i n i n T T T ni iTTTrnnr

F*e ewewwwm

4»

v:

SANFORD PAIN
CONTROL CLINIC
Mil »

.M

IMrm *#• HPAWVD

lAMffMKO Q A Q
tat fata Um

F

m r 1 1m

v hwmmt .

SXX X*
SWSWBSSHWStmSBSWKtWOHtSSSnE

Jon n's Sew 'N '-V o c
Geart, 09, Adjust Your dewing t C 0 0
Machine Or Vacuum daanar
J
FREEH PAIR OF SCISSORS SHARPENED FREEI
A M 9J0
Vocuem Cleaner
Value

A *21.50
Sawing Machine
Value
»« im i T m w l i t * M * »«"■■!
t n &gt; im Ottu* Of X i rtlM
CIMX NMS MW f u f »MHt»»
CtM l WVMO I t t MtrtU

C M . 0 4 Afiaei Agttafwr
CUM 04 M in t «***•
Cteoa. 0 4 A4|vet KetgM Ceelrel
C l N t
wheel tag Hwmwf
Check Mem rnd Irnhei

I C LIP AN D C A L L

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CARPET
PROFESSIONALLY*
CLEANED.

SiMitiMil Heiring
Aid Costs P iiiiii
Par Year To Operate
hM coma M M kaanng
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« d Km 6m n OMWoem

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Tim a • Ur cry 6wa M

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t te n p iM M o a *

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or family room and hall.
Limited Time Oiler.

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HEAAIN6 UO CENTERS
MEDCO DISCOUNT

PH. 322 304*

r m i Dora l i f t

TRADES ACCEPTED-FINAN CING AVAILABLE
HOURS: Monday Friday* 3:30- Saturday* 1:00
20 Years Experience— t Day Service- Free Estimate*

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RECHARGEABLE

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S.MAONOLIA A VENUE-SANFOnO-222 77*2
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4 Amp

BATTERY CHARGER

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. IU P I»- City bus riders are seeing
something new these rUyi — a form of advertising *°
engrossing it s taking their minds off the trip to and from work.
Noisy teen-agers going to achoo! are keeping quiet for a
change, turning their attention to public servlet messages.
Some riders ire even missing their stops.
The sell Isn’t sex. And they don’t do it with mirrors.
It’s done with lights — the kind that create t digital message
that rolls across a display screen. And the 0-lnch by 4-inch
screens offer commuters more than advertising.
Riders get the time, jokes, poems, contests and transit in­
formation from the digital dtsplayi being tested on the Grand
Rapids Area Transit Authority.
Digital message displays giving the time, temperature and
other messages are common in Grand Rapids, as in most
cities. They a rt usually found outdoors. More often than not,
they are ignored by all except those who are late for an ap­
pointment.
Put one In a bus and It’s another story.
’’I Just sort of look at i t ... even though I’ve read it to many
times I know all the messages," ssid Rosalie Bush, who rides
the bus to and from her job at a local medical center. "It really
attracts &gt;our attention because it’s going around in front of
you."
Tom Pacific rides the bus six days a week, lie likes the
digital readout because "you can see more" and "they're Just
a lot better than the billboard-type signs.”
One bus driver sayi he spends some of his layover time
reading the signs. Another tells the story of a rider who misted
her stop because she was so interested In the rolling red
messages at the head of the bus.
Thoae words are music to the ears of Tom Wayne, a 34-yearold Vietnam veteran who put his interest in outdoor advertis­
ing and all of his energy into the signs, which he believes are
the first of (heir kind ever used (or mass transit advertising.
He calls the signs Transitron. During the first week of
testing, each used several of Its 30 messages and 4,000
characters to promote Transitron and Wayne's firm —
Michigan Electronic Digital.
Rut it is the entertainment, such as the following advice to
lovers, that lures the riders:
"Say it with flowers
“Say It with sweets
"Say it with Jewelry
"Say it with drink
"Rut whatever you do
"Be careful not to say it with ink."
Or quizzes: "Who waa the only U.S. President to serve
without a vice president? ... Ulysses S. Grsnt."
The initial success of Transitron — not only in compliments
from riders and bus drivers, but in the form of inquiries from a
half dozen cities and one foreign country - Is gratifying for
Wayne, who conceived of the Idea about three years ago and
has worked on It full time for the past year and a half.
"I have a great commitment to mass transit — I really think
that's our future in transportation," Wayne says.
"My real interest Is not only to sell advertising — obviously
we want to sell advertising — but to provide information and
promote rider participation ... people get on the bus and they
don't have anything to do.
‘‘il I can In some way give them something in the way ol
facta or humor, then lhal'U be great."

Best O f Ideas
Not Flaw less

I OtfliCtlft ((rafting
S I m « b e t F ix

111

which carries the service to
more than 19,000 homes in and
around Worcester.
Ms. Abbott Mid newspaper
officials think cable will be
used to supplement, not sup­
plant, the paper and may even
Increase circulation.

Digital Ads
ReallyAttract

F R E E S P IN A L E X A M I N A T I O N
7 Sk a F a x

w a lk e rs ,
b e d s id e
com m odes,
can es,
crutches, bed pans,
urinals and sick room
supplies.
Mcd-Carc has a 24hour answering service
which can be used when
emergency supplies arc
needed, and home
delivery service is
available.
The business also has
a respiratory clinic that
offers home care for
r e s p ir a to r y needs.
Some of the things
available are oxygen,
oxygen concentrators,

V.

3104 S. SANFORD AVE. P H .a i-f U lW
Cerntrat Airport Bhrd. A laniard Ave.
SANFORD
.&lt;.)

.

T M R U tA T .

Electronic Publishing:
A Wave O f The Future?
By BRAD LARSCHAN
W ORCESTER,
M ass.
(UPI) - Residents of this
cen tral M assachusetts In­
dustrial town may not realize
it yet — but they are in the
forefront of the revolution In
electronic publishing.
Cable television subscribers
can tune into local, national
and international news 24
hours a day on a channel
provided free by the Wor­
cester Telegram and Gazette
Inc.
The company owns a
morning and afternoon
newspaper and Is one of some
two dozen
newspapers
nationwide currently ex­
perimenting with local cable
news delivery.
The emphasis Is on local
news, with national and inter­
national news provided by the
cable TV service of United
Press International
"We are presenting news
which is important to readers
of our newspapers who ere
now watching our cable news
se rv ice," said Sharen M.
Abbott, the newspaper's coor­
dinator
of
telecom­
munications.
Individual news store* are
presented in an eight-line
synopsis dashed oq the televi­
sion screen every 11 geconds.

FURNITURE
»» t*tt

m s LAKEVIEW In FERN PARK
I S*kme Bsrmtri ui*d A„ii«nc*t&gt;

Med-Care To Celebrate
Two Years Of Progress
Med-Care, Inc., of
Sanford, will celebrate
its second anniversary
Sept. 10.
I’m very happy with
the way the business
has progresses! in the
last two years," said
Ann Mims, the owner.
We'd like to thank all
of our customers and
the doctors in the area
for making our second
year successful. We
really appreciate their
patronage and con­
tinuing support."
The latest addition to
Med-Care’s complete
line of home patient
care equipment is the EZ llizer recliner. a
stylish, multi-purpose
chair that offers push­
button independence
and e x tra o rd in a ry
com fort. The most
advanced chair design
of its type, it is
m a n u fa c tu re d
in
DeBary and Medicareapproved.
The E-Z llizer is also
designed to help those
who have trouble get­
ting up and down out of
chairs on their own.
With the touch of a
button, one is slowly
lowered to a seated
position or gently lifted
to an angle which safely
transfers weight to the
feet.
E-Z llizer chairs are
individually designed so
their height is correct in
relation to the persons
using them. They are
available in a variety of
fabric
and
color
choices.
Located at 505 E.
First St., next to Bram
Towers, Med-Care, Inc.
sells or rents any
supplies and equipment
the convalescing patient
may need at home, and
will bill Medicare for
approved items.
Among Ihe Items
available are hospital
beds, w h e e lch a irs,

£3

For Any
Room In Your House

Prepared by Advertising Dept, of

322-2611 Houd

A D V E R T IN G

Tuesday. Aug. 21, t r t t - J B

BIG SAVINGS

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The carpet (leaning company
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jffF H V

By LeROY POPK
UPI Iluiioris Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
•»0" telephone line system ts
a wonderful aid to marketing
but, like everything else
revolutionary, It has produced
some unforeseen problems.
For one, says C harles
Ruppman, head of Kupptnan
Marketing Services of Peoria,
111.. If you advertise an 900
number on radio or televiaion,
the roof may fall In on you.
"You Just never know how
many people are going to pick
up their phones In the nest few
minutes and try to call the
number," he said. "You may
have 0 clerks on duty but
enough calls to swamp 200 will
come within ten minutes. It
can be a nightmare.”
Ruppman says this makes
planning tough on the budget
and the marketer's blood
pressure, but It also proves
something tmportanL People
still do a lot of impulse buying
even tf they don't want to
bother to go to stores where
they encounter the point-ofpurchase sign* and displays
that for decades have been the
marketers' tools (or Inspiring
impulse buying.
" I t 's clearly observable
that the overwhelming share
of responses to KXVnumbcr
broadcast advertising comes
within minutes altar the
commercials a rt broadcast,"
Ruppman said. Thera la no
such easy way to measure the
Impulse response to 100
num bers In printed ad­
vertising but Ruppman said It
must be substantial
He said the use of 900
numbers In marketing (till is
growing at an astonishing
pact despite softness In the
general economic citm ata.
His company alona will
handle two million such tollfree calls (or information
about specific products or
services this year and thou­
sands of companies a rt using
906-number lines.
Nevertheless, be said he la
to doubt that 900
and other home

shopping methods
a rt
responsible for any decline In
retail store traffic. These
methods usually are linked to
stores, he said, and give
shoppers information on
where to find what they are
interested in most con­
veniently and at the beat
prices.
He said the burgeoning
process of cable television
twoway shopping com ­
munications also will do that,
so he doesn't expect electgonic marketing to have any
really serious Impact on the
business ol tho n atio n 's
rets tiers.
Ruppman and similar (Irma
use 900 numbers, direct mail,
expert placement of Yellow
Page ads, sales literature
distribution and other com­
puter-aided services to help
m anufacturers and larg e
wholesalers m a rk tt and
service their goods. Ruppman
does not seQ products of Its
own.
Kuppman’s 24-hour 900num ber system Is called
Dialogue Marketing. When a
call comes In the clerk first
asks, "What is your postal tip
number?"
When that num ber la
punched into the computer the
names and addresses of ths
d o i a i l dealers (or the
products or s trv lc ta the
customer asked about appear
on the dark's video screen,
perhaps with other pertinent
Information.
The d a rt then puts tbs
caller's name and nddraae In
ths computer. Later In the
day, the Ruppman computer
sends out dealer alert cards
an th t call and adds the
caller's name and address to
mailing prospect lists lor
other relevant Ruppm an
clients.
"Everybody b o n ellta,"
Ruppman s a i l "The caller
gats Information quickly and
f r e t, m a n u f a c tu r e and
retailers get a direct sales
lead an lbs Immediate inquiry
and a mailing proapact for
future order*."

�•* f 9

« 8 -E v tw lr&gt; g Hat-Rid, SBnfgrd, f I.

I

T iw g d B y .A g g .M . i t i i

legal Notice

Legal Notice

Legal Notice

18—Hefp Wanted

CLASSIFIED ADS

legal Notice

C IT Y OF L A K E M ARY,
F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S ITT 14*
FLO RID A
N o lilt ef Applicetien ter T s t Deed
NOTICE OP P U B L IC HS ABINO
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN ,
C IT Y OF L A R I M ARY,
TO WHOM IT MAV CONCERN
that CO B Either V Wildw th*
FLO RIO A
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
homer of the toiiow.ng certificates
NOTICE OF P U B L IC H IA B IN O
by th* Planning and Zoning Board has tiled said cartitlcatrs ter a lev
TO WHOM IT M AY CONCERN
et th* City of L f k * M ary, Floeldt,
deed to bo issued lb w eon Tho
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that said Board will hold a Public
certificate numbers and years of
by the City Council of Iht C&gt;ly ot
Hearing at l M P M . on Sop
issuance, th* description »l th*
Lake Mary. Florida, that said
property, and th* names Mi which
Irmoer I I . IN I. to
Council will hold a Public Hear.ng
Considrr a Petition lo ctosr, it was assessed are as follows
on Thursday, Set*ember It . itgi.
Certificate No IM4
yacafr, abandon, discontinue,
at I M P M . or at soon Iherealler
Year ot issuance ig il
declaim, and Id renounce any
as post.We. lo consider an Or
Description of Propwly Let
right ol ih* City of Lake Mery, a
dm*ncr ml died as fallows
political lubdtvlkion. and tht I I Blk A Grave Tw rece P B I Pg 41
A N O R D IN A N CeO F TH E C IT Y
N an* in svwen l u n u a
cubtit **« —n to th* tcHgwing
r-T L A K E M A R Y , F L O R ID A
Hoskins Ruth S et al
drier,bed right *4 way. I* wit
ME ZONING C E R T A IN LANDS
All of le d propwly being in the
That port cm of the te tool read
WITHIN THE C IT Y OF L - ' . E
right ol way at Sum Street lying County of Seminol*. Stele of
L A ItR Y W IL C O X
MARY. AS H E R E IN O E F IN E O
between Block IS end Block SO. Florida
FROM THE P R E S E N T ZONING
Unless such cw l.llc a t* or cw
Amended Plat cd Crystal Lake
CLASSIFICATION OF A I TO L
Shores, as recorded in Plat Book A MM Net shall be redeemed *c
I AAA W ITH S P E C I A L
EX
cording
tg law the property
Pag* II. ot lit* public records of
CEPTIONS PURSUAN T TO TH E
described us such certificate or
Seminol* County. Florida. LE SS
TER M SO F C H A P T E R ISA 041 OF
mat portion ol th* 44 loot road certificates will be sold to th*
TH E F L O R ID A S T A T U T E S ;
highest bidder et th* co w l house
right or way ter Srmmol* Avm u*.
P R O V IO IN G
FO R
TH E
ALSO that portion lying between deer on the um day of Sep t. IN I
1-RfTy Wilcox, who per- A M EN D M EN T OF TH E O F
at It oo A M
lot I. Block a) and Lot G. Block 14.
FlC lA L ZONING M AP ANO THE
lr&gt;y&gt; a motorcycle-riding
Dated this 1th day ot August,
amended Plat ef Crystal Lake
AMENDMENT TO TH E LAND
IN I
Snorri as recorded Mi Plat Book A
California Highway
USE E L E M E N T OF TH E C IT Y 'S
L)
Patrolman In the TV aeries C O M PR EH EN SIV E PLAN FROM P»g* II. and lo t IA Block 41 and (SEASignature
Arthur H Beck
Lot 1. Blocs 44. Crystal Lakr
"CHIP*," will be riding a
with,
Jr
low d e n s it y r e s id e n t ia l
Winter Homes as r worded m Plat
to
m e o iu m
d e n s it y
Ctwk ot Circuit Courl
motorcycle for a different
Book |. Pages 114
1)4. of the
at Seminol* County. Fior.de
R E S I D E N T IA L ; P R O V IO IN G
puttier words of Seminole County,
cause.
By Cheryl Greer.
S E V E R A B IL IT Y ;
CO N FLICTS
Florida. L E S S Inal portion of th*
Wilcox ha* been named
AND E F F E C T I V E D A T E ;
Deputy Clerk
S4 toot road right or way for
chairman of the Motorcycle changing me coning and amend.ng Lakeyitw Avenue. ALSO that Publish August It, IA i s A Sep
D E L SO
Safety Foundation’s "Ride tho land uso element ot the unction lying between Block 14 and tember I. IN I 1
Com prehensive P lan on the
Smart" campaign. He will following described property Block is ol Crystal Lake Wuiiw
H o m es as recorded in Plat Book I
COMMISSION H EARING
siluata in the City ol Lake Mary,
tour the country to promote
Peon 114 114; L E S S mat portion
D O C K iT NO IIN 1J-TP
Florida
motorcycle rider training
el th# w teof road r gn t of way ter
FLO RID A P U R LIC S E R V IC E
LOIS Mard It. Cauntrytd* It. at
Crystal
Lake
Avenue,
ALSO
met
COMMISSION
and the use of helmet* and
recorded in Plat Book It . Paget 41 portion tying Writ of Block 11
TO
other protective gear.
and 4] ol the Public Records os
Crystal Lake W&gt;r4w Homes at
SOUTHERN ( I L L TE L EP H O N E
Seminole
County,
Florida,
ANO
rw erdrdlnPlat Bookl. Pages IU
A motorcycle enthusiast in
A N D T E LIO R A P H C O M P A N Y
that portion ol Lott 14, t l, la and
IIS
AND
private life, Wilcox will visit
II, Sanford Substantial Farm s, at
Also commonly known as Slain
A L L IN T E R E S T ID P A N T III
recorded .n r ia l Boo* S. Page I ] of
Motorcycle R ider Course
Street tram Lake Mary Boulevard
ISSU ED ; M i l t
me Public Records at Seminole
sites around the country to
running North through lo but not
NOTICE Ishw eby given that the
County, Pier d o .
including Wilbur Avenue
hearings in this docket scheduled
build awareness of these
Sad property located North of
Th* Public Hearing will b* held
lor the week ot July N. IN I, have
courses and of their Im­
County Road 4!f and East of
been postponed Hearings will be
at the City Halt, City ol Lek*
Country Club Road, containing
portance in helping to cut
Mary, Florid*, on in* nnd day ot
held in accordance with Ih*
IS tl plu, minus acres
following schedule
Srplrmbw, IN I. at a 00 P M . or
down accidents.
A copy ot said Ordinance snail
as soon Ihertaller as poitible at
• M o m , Tuesday. October I,
be available at the office of the
IN I
which Urn* interested parties tor
City Clerk of the Clip of Lake
and against th* recommended
tgt East Games Street
The Movie Channel has Mary, Florida, lor all persons request will be heard Said hearing
Fletchw Building. Room tag
desiring i t tiam in e same
Tallahassee. Florid*
may be continued trom time to
announced a giveaway
All mieresled persons are Mi
October g. y , 14, IS ond IS are
time until Hnal action is takan bv
contest.
vltsd lo attend and be heard
*H0 reserved
me Planning and Ztning Board of
THIS NOTICE Shall be polled tn the City ol Lake Mary. Florida
The "Rrhtnd the Scenes"
By Direction or Iht Florida
three (SI public placet within the
Public Servlet Commission this
THIS N O TICE Shall be posted in
Ulvcsway, announced to City ol Lake M ary, Florida, at the
Iltn day 1X July. IN I
mre* 111 public puces within th*
subscribers in the July TMC City Hall, and published Mi the
(SEA L)
City of Lake Mary. Fleride. *1 th*
monthly guide, will lake five Evening Herald, a newspaper of City Hall within |*M! City, and
Steve Tribble
general circulation in I he City of published in the Evening HtreML a
COMMISSION
CLER K
winners (and Ihetr guests) to Lake M iry one lime at least SO
Publish August n end Seotembw
newspaper
ol
general
circulation
movie capitals around the days prior to lha a lp rrta ld
IS. tN I
in me City of Laka Mary, two
world. Eligibility requires hearMig in addition, nolle* then limes at least IS days prior tg in* D EL te
be
potted
In
I
he
area
to
be
con
aforesaid hearing In addition,
only that a name and ad­
sderedat least SO days prior loth*
P laa id* Statutes l«M44
dress on a post card be sent dale of the Public Hearing Any nolle* shall be posted in th* area lo
be considered at least IS days prior
NOTICE OF APPLICATIO N
to the Movie Channel by prrtan deciding to appeal a lo Ih* date of Public Hearing
FOR TAX D I E D
Any person dec Id. eg to appeal a
Srpt. 1,1981. Winner* will be decision made by this body at to
NOTICE IS H E R B V G IVEN ,
any matter considered at this decision mad* by IMS body as to
that
John
J, L fitter the bo lore of
announced Oct. IS.
meeting or hearMig will need a
lb* following cerfillcoles has tiled
any matter conildwrd al this
record
ol
the
proceedings,
and
lor
The grand prize is a sevenmeei.ng or hearing will need a
said certificates tor a tea deed lo
day tour to Lind on, Parts such purpose you must ensure Ihet rword of the proceed mgs. and tor be issued theeaon Th* cwtillcat*
a verbatim reco rd ol the Such purpose you mutt ensure that
numbers and years ot issuance,
and Rome and (2,000 proceedings It made, which record
the description of tho propwly,
a verbatim record ot the
■pending money. Second includes the testim ony and proceedings it mad*, wtilch rword end th* names In which it was
evidence
upon
which
tho
appeal
is
esses led are as lollcrws
prize Is an island vacation In
Includes the testimony and
based
evidence upon which th* rppeal Is
Certificate No 177 Yoar ot
Honolulu. Including 11,000
DATED August It, ITtl
istutneo Iff*
to be based
spending money. Third prire
Cit y
of
la k e
m ary.
Description ol Propwly Lot It}
C IT Y
OF
LA Kt
M ARY,
is a trip to New York City for FLO RID A
Son lonto Ird Sw PB I I PG IS
FLORIDA
t Connie Malar
Name in which assesed Austin
s Connie Me lor
five days of touring In a
Cltr Clerk
Dev Cof p
City Clerk
chauffeur-driven limousine.
Pubiitn August IS. toil
DATED August 11. I*tt
All of u id propwly being m the
Fourth prize is a trip to DEl IIS
County ol Sem inol* Stole ot
Publish August IS, September 1.
Floe ido
1*01
N O T I c a O F S H E R IF F S
Nashville, including a pair
Unless such cwtiftcol* or cw
1ALR
D
E
L
114
ill tickets to the G r a n d O le
tlliceies shall be redeemed ec
NOTICE I I H S R R I V G IV EN
Opry. One hundred ad­ that by virtue ot that certain Writ
Caunty Cetie I cordmg te law the properly
Pinellas County. described in such cwtificat* or
ditional winners will receive of f.eeulion issued out of and
Fiend* cml ifHales will be sold to the
wider the leal ot tho COUNTY
TMC duffle begs.
CeseNn
l e l s i l f f highest buldw at the court house
Court of Orange County. Florida,
—Edited by Ana F r w r
Landmark Union Trust Bank ot St
is» n a final lodgement rendered
door on the 10th day ot September.
Petersburg. N A . PU.nt.lt
m the aforesaid court on me fm
IN I at IS 00 AM
vs
Dated this lasts day ot August.
day ol May, A D . IN I. In that
IN I
certain case enllttad, Tho Florida
Jorge L V e in
County
Court
(S
EA L)
National
Bank
at
Orlando,
a
FICTITIO U S NAME
Srmmol* County,
Arthur H Bw kwilh Jr.
Nellie It hereby given Ihel I *m national banking asso clallon .
FM»U*
Pi*.mill, vs Edward J, Prlmaau,
Clwk ol Circuit Court
engaged in business et No Slilan d
Case He N lis t I P a)
01 Seminole County. F lor ido
Of la ke Mery, rig . Seminole III and Lois L Prlmeeu. Defan
Household
Finance
Corporation.
danl,
which
alortsaM)
Writ
of
By Chwyl Grow.
Cninty. Honda under lit# tic
Pletnlifl
Eatcuiion wai delivered lo me as
Deputy Clwk
IWows nam# of D ESIGN DER O T,
Sheriff of Sominolo County,
vs
Publish August IS. Septembw I.
end that I Intend to rogliler u id
Jorge L v e in
Florida, and I have lev led upon the
A IA IN I
nemo with the Clefk ol the Circuit
NOTICE
OF
1
H
IO
IF
P
'S
D EL 101
lollowlng
describ
ed
properly
Cartl. Seminole County, Florida in
SA LI
accordance with the provliiom ol owned by E d w ard and L a is
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IVEN
Prlmeau. Slid property being
the Flclitiout Nemo Slotutet. To
mat by virtu* et mo** ewtem
N O T IC IO F S H E R IF F 'S SA LE
locoteo In Seminolg County.
Wit: Section U S B * Florida
Writs
of Esw ufion as styled above
n o t i c e is h e r e b y g i v e n
Florida,
more
p
a
rticu
larly
Statute, lest
end more particularly that CWUin
mat by virtu* ol that cwtaln Writ
described as follows
sig Sylvie M Me Nutty
Of Cc wution Issued out sf ond
Writ el E ■w ul ion issued out at and
One lfio Ford Pick up Truck.
Publish Augutl It, IS, IS S Sep
under the seal ol the County Court,
under in* teal at the C ircult Court
Green mi Color
temper I. lis t
D E I at
Semmol* County, Florid*, upon a
of Semmotr County. FtoekM. upon
ID No FIOYNJM740
0 Imal lodgement rendered in Ih*
t,nal ludgmenl rendered m Ih*
storing same at Seminole Wrecker
FICTITIO U S NAME
atorward
court
on
th*
nth
day
ol
ft or elf-d courl on tho Jnd day of
Service
Nonce n horror given that I am
October. A D Ittg. Mi that cwtam
Feb
ru
aryA
D
IN
I.
M
i
that
cerUWi
and
the
undersigned
os
Sheriff
of
engaged inbwimeu at SMW lane
case
ml
.tied
Household
Finance
Seminole
County,
Florida,
will
at
c a st entitled. C re d llh rltt at
Mary tiled Lake Mary, FI a i t *
Corporation. Ptainlill v* Jorge l
tl 00 A M on the Mth dry ot
Am erica, Inc P lam tltt.
vs
Seminole County. Florida under
Vein.
Defendant.
which
aforesaid
September. A O , I t lt . oiler tor
Randolph Maawell. Jr and Vic
the lltllllg u k nam e at T H E
Writ
ol
E
l
Wution
wet
delivered
lo
sale
end
sell
lo
the
highest
bidder,
tori*
Maawefl.
Defendant,
which
PERM ANENT SOLUTION, end
me at Shwilt of Semmol* County,
tor cash, subtect tg any and all
atcMfiaid Writ of EiWMlion was
tnel I intend to ream er lent name
Florida, and t h * ,e levied upon th*
mating liens, at the Front iw e sll
delivered lo me os Sherill ot
with the Clerk ot the Circuit Court.
fallowing
described
property
Door ot the Seminole County
Semmol* County, Floe Id*, and I
Seminole County, F lor .da in ec
ewned by Jerg* L VM n. seid
Courthouse on the steps m San
have levied upon Ih* I oflowing
cordance With the provisions of tht
pr eper 1y be mg loc* ltd m St m mole
ford.
Florida,
the
above
described
described
properly owned by
Fictitious Neme Statutes, To Wit
County, Flo rid *, mete par
personal property
Victoria Maawell, u&gt;d propwly
Section l* S 0* Florida Statutes
tlcularly
described
t
l
follows
That said sal* Is being meda lo
being located in Seminol* Count*.
ITS!
On* Ittg Suiukt Dirt B.se,
satisfy the terms ot said Writ of
Florida,
more
p articu larly
s.g Diane Burton
Orange m Color. VIN No
Eaecvlwn
described
as follows
Rvelitn August «, It, l a It, logs
DSNIIigaO
John E Polk.
All lh a rg n i, liile and Mifwesl mi
D EI N
being stored el Dave Jon**
Shaeill
and l* lha following described
W rwkw in Fern Park. Florida
Semuial* County,
properly
belonging
lo
tht
FICTITIO U S N AM I
end me undersigned as Ihreitl ol
Florida
Oeiend*nl, Victoria JMaawell
Notice is hereby given that I am
Srmmol* County, FtorMla, will *1
Publish Augusl IS. Sepiember I, I.
Lof 11, Te e n Green fe ttle s,
engaged in but met, at 40) w |Ith
It 00 A M on me use, day of
accord mg the plat (hereof et
It. witn the sal* on September tA
SI. Sanford Fla W.’ t I Seminole
September A D IN I. etfw tor sole recorded ui Pial book II. Page a),
10*1,
County. Florida in te r the tic
end sell lb In* highest biddw. tor of Ih* public Records of Seminol*
d e l no
llllo u t name 01 S A N F O R D
cosh. SuOlWl lo any end all
County. F lor Ida
R E A L T Y , and that I Intend to
NOTICE OF S H E R IF F 'S
ranting i.ens. at th* Front iWesl)
Actual physical address of the
teg.tier said name with the Clerk
SA LE
Door let th* stepti at the Jem Mu** propwly ,t II I Bunser Lanr
e* the Circuit Cdufl. Seminole
NOTICE I t H E R E B Y GIVCN
County Courthouse m Sanford.
Sanford. Florida
County. Florida Mi accordance mat by virtu*01 thol certain Writ
Flo rid *, the above described
and Ih t u n d e rs z e d as Shwitl of
with the proyluans of tho Fit
of Elocution ittuod out of and
perso n a l p r o p e r t y .
Seminole County, Florid* will at
lilw m Name Sletufet. ToWit
under the teal ol Ih* COUNTY
Thai said sale is being mad* te
II SO A M on ih* tain day ol
lection IAS Of H o rd e statutes Court of Semmol* County. Florid*,
satiety th* terms of toid Writ of Septembw. A D IN I. offer Nr
ItSf.
upon 0 final ludgtmont rendered
I , wution
u l* and soil lo Ih* highest bidder,
in the atorrsaid court on the l lie,
S-g Wesley L Burks
John E Polk,
tor cash, lubtw l to any and all
Publish August tS, IS. Seat ember day ot February, A O . toil. Mi that
Shwitl
eatllMig liens, al Ih* From IWetti
certain cate m ulled, Elu ab rih
t. *. tag i
Semmol* County,
Door ol tho Seminol* County
Ann Williamson P U n i.it,
vs
O E l Ml
Tier Ml*
Courthouse on Iht slept Mi San
Cheryl L . Hartley. Defendant,
Publish August IV September I. A lord. Florida, m* above described
NOTICE OP P U B LIC H lA R IN O which atorosau Writ of Elocution
II, With lit* sal* on Srpitmbw IA
R EA L property
TO CONSIDER A CONDITIONAL was delivered to me as Sheriff of
IN I
That u id sat* It boirg mad* to
USB
Seminole County, Florida, and l
D EL TIT
u lit ly the tw m t of said Writ of
Nofico rs hereby given that a have levied upon me following
Elocution
Public Hearing will be held by Ih* described properly pwned by
n o t ic e o p p u h i c h x a b in o
John E Polk. Shwilt
Planning and Zoning Commigslcn Chaeyl L Hartley, said property
to c o n s id e r a c o n d it io n a l
Seminet* County, Florid*
.nineCU t Commission Room. City being located in Seminole County,
USI
Publish Augutl » . September I,
Hall. Santgrd. Florida at F 10 P M Florida,
more
p a rticu larly
Nolice is hwaby given'that O 1 IA Wim the u l * on September
on Thursday. September ). IN I. to described as tallows’
Public Hear mg will be held by th* IA IN I
consider a rsguest toe a Con On* IN fFe rd Falcon, redln color,
Planning and Zoning Commission D E L t il
dittwtal U&gt;* m a MR I, Multiple
ID NO STITUKDJt!
mlh* City Commission Room, City
Fa m ily Residential Dwelling storing lam * at Jack Pro uer
Holt. Sanford. F tong* at l N P M .
Wrecker Service
PICTITIO U S NAME
District
an Thursday. Srpitm bw A TNI, to
le g * 1description Lots A S and 0 end the undersized as Shoe ill of
Notice it hwaby given that w*
consider a request to* a Con
ness me North II leefl ol Block 0 Seminole County, Florida, will al
Oil tonal Use Mi a GC t. Osnoeal art engaged Mi busMiost at USO SI
Rd 41A Suit* No 1, longwoed
ol Tier 14of Seminole P ark, P I I. It (0 A M on Ih* lath day ol
Com m ercial D istrict.
Legal
September,
A
0.
IN
I.
otter
lor
duscrigfign. S WIT of lo f T and S- Springs P ro -ts s ig n il Centre.
Pg is
Address. Between Avocado sal* end sail to Ihe tugfwtt bidder,
11 ft of lo t » , Blk T. Te. I. Town Semmol* County. Florida under
th* Hctittout name gf TH E UP
Avenue ond Pecan Avenue on Well tor cash, Subtect to any and all
ot Sanlord. PB I. P C 41
PER CUT. and that wo intend to
raiding liens, at the Freed iw e sll
Address I I I French Avenue
tin Stieef
rag'Sfw
u id name with the Clwk
Door of I he Semmolo County
conditional U s* Requested
Conditional US* Requested
of
tho Circuit Court. Seminol*
Courthouse
on
in*
steps
in
San
Church
Used Automotive Salts
All p e ilm t In mler e ll and ford. FleeMa. the above described
All parties In Inlerett and County. Florida In accordance
cilitang Shall ha, • an opportunity personal properly
(linens snail hay* an opportunity win the pcMtsgns ef in* F it
litiout Nam* H atul**, To Wit
Thai said salt is being mad* lb
re be hoard at s**d hearing
te be heard *1 said hearing
By order *1 the Planking A Swlion tasoe Florida Stotottt
By order ol the Punning A satisfy the terms of s a d Writ of
Zoning Commission of the C.ly of Elocution
Zoning Commission of th* Llty Of
KAREN M A R IE D tP IE R R O
John E Polk.
. yaniord Florida mis IJfh day of
See lord. Ftaelda tlus ISlh day of
SANDRA JEAN S M E R D E L L
She*
ill
August. IN I
Augusl. IN I.
I E T H E L IZ A B E T H MATHIS
Semmol* County,
j g Galloway. Chairman
J O Galloway, Chairman
CARL E R IC CIC H N ER
F la id l
City ol laniard Planning
City ef Sanford Planning
Publish
Augutl II. 10. &gt;1 &amp; Sep
••.-rv-th August ) L September I, A
and Zorung Commission
and toning Commission
twnbw I. IN I
K f l l - e . th the sat* on September LA
Publish Augusl IS. toil
Publish August IS. IN I
D «L a t,'
O EL 111
O E L MS

'Ride Smart'
Wilcox Says

Cable Contest

Legal Notice

It r rnsat*on1

1

■

*T ” *

NOTICE OF NAMES O F F E E
SONS A F P IA N IM G TO I B
O W N ERS O F A B A N O O N EO
P R O P ER TY
Pursuant to S*c1ion I) Chipffr
NT* Flo rid * SfRtufe*. entitled
"FlortdA O iposition of Unclaimed
Property Act", notice tt hereby
Riven thot tho pertont tutrd below
opptor to be tht o w n tn of un
ettimtd penontl or mtinQ.btt
property prtfvmed ebondontd
TH IS D O ES NOT IN V O L V E
R E A L ESTA TE
• A t u i l Jt» U " C *
m c iM ie e t - u l
(• im ir t a v . ri m o ?
it n * it iu - o o o «
HM »s I •
C lJI-ltlO -O P O !
»Cl H i t , 0 »
P 0 If ll
i n r M etg t i
OI/I-|0*S«OGQI
• O tllRg i o n
n o * • im m n
r i IJ f M
itt IM t ia -f lO O f
HOHi NM t I
P 0 101 I H f
M U CH * 9L
M Jt-ltlO -C O O ?
MOHO, I ■
p e to i i i f
H lf H O s ' L
10091000-0001
• t C f lC l, t o t l l f
101 •v re tc *0
HTIPO tfK
fk
;il| - | M C * C C 0 f
C U M , fo«i»o
;oc m m m o n r
AUAMM I t n t . Ft
o u r - iv « a * o f is
CUkPtPMR "0a I s P
P 0 101 401
t i n M i s fk H i l o
C 1 .4 - I f 09-QS I i
00UCI f I f » F n CRT
l i t 10118 10
•IfM O A ft I M lR f t l, Fk JifO l
oiro-i«aa*ooo«
F o u n t , momcc
101 m o m 1
Off IDO. Fk l i f t s
7113* IMJ-OOCf
(•IM M . M R U
100 Sg l i t Mf
SlRfORO* Fk
0341-1000-01/4
( • I l l s MIROt
■f I . H i f l l
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0101-1000-01/V
m i n s . 0 MSO c
f f 1 V| ( &gt;tT • • CO
C IS tlk lfR R V s Fk S jfO f
I ICO* I I0O-OOC0
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p 0 M i I0 ti
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C t t l- I« l3 * 0 f t 0
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IktM O M t V M |« |. f t
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101

Seminole
3 2 2 -2 6 1 1

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT

RATES
I time
50c a
) consecutive tim e s
50c a
I consecutive llm gg
10 consecutive tim e s 17c a

HOURS
I Of) A M - 5 1 0 P M
M O N D A Y th ru F R I D A Y
SATURD AY t
Noon

DEADLINES
Noon The Day Before Publication

•V—P ersonals
* H Y B t L O N E L Y ! Write "Get
A Mate" Dating Sw vic*. All
•get n o B o. *0M. Clear
W*IW, FI lists
Lonely Cnrlttlan Singles
Meet Christian S-ngiei in T*ur
are* Writ* Southwn Cnriilian
Smglet Club. 1 0 t o HIS
Summerville. S C la a a or
call t (01*11 NSO la net
Lonely, writ* "Bringing People
Together Deling Service!" All
eg** A Senior Citiiant P O
14SI Winter H ew n. F I* THOO
Unattached! L o n e u m *! Stan
Trial Membenhip. iutt 110
Contidenlial Dignided On
fleet O iiler.n l Countrywide
Litwalure Datmg at Pretlge.
W ilham itown. M a n 011*7
Th a n a s* saai
I W ILL NOT B e BESPO N
SIB LE FO X ANV D EB T S IN
CU XXEO
BY
A N YO N E
OTHEN THAN M Y S E L F AS
OF I IS It
Gary Lucas

♦ -C h ild C are
Child care m my home all
school. I I a p m School pickup
a.ailabla tor pro schoolers al
noon X schools or* centrally
located H I IMS

W—H&gt;lpVWnRd
RN O R L P N
f t ! and 111 Shift Full lime
Apply m person Sanlord
hurting Convalescent Center.
ISO M-I'env&gt;ll* Avr

R SS Denial Hygen.si It I f
Great opp Start at |* Mr
AAA E M P L O Y M E N T
LOW EST F « k - T E R M S
Itlt French Ave__________ H I SHI

21—Situations Wanted

LPN II 7 pan time, l It pan
i,me Apply Lakeview Nursing
C en tw .ttl E m i l l . Sanford
An opportunity tg earn money as
Most Hostess Fleaibte hours
Equal Opportunity Employer
Cor required Coll Welcome
Wagon t i l 1011 Thursday.
Augusl Iflh l a m S p in
i f w a itre sse s 4
good money S tart imm ediately
AAA IM P LO Y M B N T
LOWLOW F E E — TEAMS
lilt French A .*
11)1114

w ill in wmi
tick or Shut ins
I I I )tes
I wilt do housekeeping, wrands
and cook.ng tor the disabled

m om

&gt;4—Business
Opportunitie*
Twq Qvttttqn*
W4) you bf
iMJHClAllY fnd^pYTHltnt .n 1 to

I (run! Ar# row pi Id vfcbat
you 0 ft rvof fft? If AOf Cklt 123

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS 27 Investment Opportunitie
Evening Hour*
E.perienced R e a l E state In v rs
Hourly Wage plus Bonus

lor otters Joint Participation
to sm all investors sat a r t ? '

Col 322-2411
Evening Herald

79—Rooms

A A A IM P L O Y M IN T
LOW EST F E B — T IX M 1
H it French Ave
m in t

Babysitting in my home Lots ot
love, meals, day hours only
Good ret 111 toss

Eipw iencrd Cooks all snilts,
needed f o il,r e Restaurant
tfwy If t l Sanlord

SPUN OF TH E MOMENT
BA B YSITTIN G
U l T144

* Maintenance Mwi 10
Apartment t Hog Week and up.

M—In stru ctio n s
Tennis Instruction - U S P T A.
Certified Group or Private
lessona Children a tore lari y
Drug MaiieMwtbi it s not
Music Lessons Plano. Guitar,
bass ban)*, drums, brass,
woodwind H l l t l l

4 Cooks W
Soma u p .r ie n c . preferred Srv
posillens. 14 hr up
AAA IM P LO Y M B N T
LOW LOW M l — T U M I
MIT French Ava
H FS Ita

BOYS l GIRLS
AGES 13-17
EARN EXTRA $$
AFTER SCHOOL
C A U 322-2411
CIRCU LA TIO N D I P T .

Evening Herald
Dei ivery man warned tile ^tuf
own truck Colt United Fur
future Sales 111 71M
Security guard tor nignts A
weekends Apply a l Cob,* Boat
Co 100 S ilv w L a k e Xd
Sanford
AVON K ( F X E t c NT ATI VCS
The Part T im * Career
i f f 10/T - Collect OSS 1)00
J F Security Guards J F
Will tram Sav Positions
A A A IM P L O Y M IN T
LO w aST F B I — T I I M S
It lt French A r t
H SSIta

N O T IC I OP APPLICA TIO N
FOX TAX 0 1 ( 0
FLO RID A ST A TU TES Itt MA
F tor (da SI* lotos Mf la*
Naf tee of Application h r T a i Deed
NOTICE It H E X E B Y G IV EN ,
NOTICE IS H E R E B Y G IV EN
that Paul N Somerville or then*
thol C D 4 Either V Wilder IN
B Somerville th* hotdw et the
holder of the following certiticotei
following c w lillc *1*4 has tiled laid
ho% filed to d certificate* for a tai
carlllicales toe a laa dead lo be
deed to be tuwed thereon The
issued Ihweon
Th* cw llflcal*
Cert ifNate number* ond year* of
"umbers end y e a n *4 issuance,
tuuonce* the de*c*tp*H&gt;n ot the
the description ef th* pcopwty.
prop* ty* and the nome* m which
and th* names m which It was
If wot atieu ed are ot follow*
assessed are as follows
Certificote No W
Cw illteal* No. I l l
Year ot
Yeor of luuonco 1077
issuance ISIS
Description ot Property Lot 11?
Description at Propw ly E 1*4 Ft
M.d«ey PB I PG 41
at L it A Amended Piet Einora
Nome in which on etted Hittery
Squer* OB H I PG 4*1 •
Herbert L. 4 Alice M
Name In which assessed FI*
All of * 0 4 property being in the
Urban Dev Cwp
County of Seminole. Stole of
AH *4 u id propwly being in Hw
Florida
County ol Seminole. Slat* ol
Union tuch coriiiicote or cer
Florid*
Hfkafe* thou be redeemed ec
Unless such c a r lit lc a l* or
cording to low the properly
cwiificaias shall be redeemed
deter «bed «n tuch c erf ttic ole or
according to law Ihe properly
cortificotet will be to*d to the
deter ibed In such cw tillcat* or
h'ghetl bidder ot tho court houtt
cwtlftcates will be s*M to the
door on the Uth day of September,
highest bidder at the court house
I0A1 at 11:01 A M
d u ie a n tlw llsl day gl Seplambw.
Dated Ih«t Hh day of Augutl.
M il t l I I M A M .
m i
Dated Hid lath day ol Sep
(S EA L)
Iember. 11*1
llo all
S&lt;gnoture Arthur H Beckwith.
A ll tore M Beckwith Je, '
Jr.
Clwk ot Circuit Court
Clerk of Circuit Court
ot Semmolo Couniy. Florida
of Seminote County, Florida
By: O iw yi Grew
By: Cheryl Greer,
Deputy Clerk
Deputy Clerk
Publish August it . a.
Publish August 11. It. 25 L Sep4 L I- IN )
temper I. 1011
D € L J0
O E L 1*4

V 1

** v - r f . * 7 f t r s i X * :

SANFORD
Reas wkly i
mcnlhlf fiC tt Util IfK. KW
500 0 *4 Adwltr 041 lit )

R-SS hooters I I ♦
Sey Paslions la Mr up

Weekly,day Babysitting in
my home Have
References H I Oil*

Legal Notice

W

»N Full Time 7 1 ShiH Apply at
L4 k rv;cw N ursing Cant*, i l l
E Ind Sf . Sanford

CIN CULATIQ N O l PT.

Coo* mg Pears
I l l s per
bushel You pick *11 Summit
St, L * M Helen 10041 H I l i l t

SCIRCS. FM llk lF 0 a
•f« 1 001 ItO
iit r e R o . Fi»
Q|f 0 • I MO *tiOCt
iMURM I • . C J
fQf • • t i l l St
StRiCRO* Fk l i t Y |
ItOf-IM O-OOiO
it t t U M s I I I . mk
C/0 J«H1 I C 0 LIM R . i . o *
kORIfROO* FI
flt»f-|*0O-OOOt
IM0RFSOR. •(■ fi
1*0! • lit * , i f
SlRffitOi fk
0 |tr*|« R 0 *0 1t!
«IR LO U R . Hi R if
•Ol ! 12
10M .0CC, fk i n t o
n » t* 1t*o -u o n
« IR |IC « 0 . SCOIV
/00 m itk IR O Aft
U IM O R U k F f e llt l. Fk
Ol/l-1900-COOf
RIR0. B IT , k
A il I f M IC R O APtS
»C»* i A l l , Fk I I I 1 0
01/0-1000*0011
• &lt; • !. J0MR C
l i t I ROOOkARO OR
SARI 0 *0 . Fk
O ltO M tIO -O at!
• I l l Itg I .
J0IR I P F I K P i
|ARf0tO# Fk
o t w -t t iQ -o o e i
inter met too &lt;onctrn»no tho
•mount or doocrtpiipn of Iht
property ond tht nom tt ond od
(frtti ot the holder moy be ob
tt'iwd by Any p r r w pot m u too An
inlerttt in the property by od
drrtfinQ on inquiry to G E R A L D A
L E W IS .
S lit *
C om ptroller.
Abandoned Property Section.
ATTN Horry B C o n e *, uoi SUte
Copilot. Totiohotwo, Florida n » i
(004J 41/ /SAT Be lure to mention
the account' number B E F O R E the
noine a i publuhed In thlt notice
U nleu proof of ownerihtp to
presented to the holder by October
7f, 1H1. the property wi*l be
delivered tor cuttody to the
Com pirollar
ot
Flo rid a
Ther to tier, all further ciaim i
muit be dirntod to the Comp
trotter of Florida
G E R A L D A LEW IS
C O M PTRO LLER OF FL O R ID A
Publith August 11* IS. I R I
O I L 00

C L A S S IF IE D s a l e s p e r s o n
inside Phone sale s solicitation
Full lim e permanent petition
Full company benefits P a d
va catio n E a c e lle n t ca re e r
opportunity Apply in person •
a m t * S p m or call toe oppi
Eve n in g Herald
J00N F ren ch Ave
Sanlord____
m H ) lilt

Housewives. Grandm others tor
part tim e end l u ll lim e
tHrphm e sale s No n p * * ,* n c *
necessary Harbor Lighting,
Ml Cornw all Rd H I 441)

Sunday-Noon Friday

V-Good Things
To Eat

1010- 1100*0010

lint
lln*
ale
line

11.00 M in im um
J l ift* * M in im u m

—

f if

M tlfO oO . FI
Q IJt-ltIQ -O O If
•c io * f i r r i c
010 t*|O 00f i t
liR f c t o . n
G it t - m o - o m
• 1tm *ctO R * • r
tor LRCC0RV Ct
UtM QRtC IM lR C lg f i

Oflondo- Winter Pork

Carpel M ech an ic or Helper
wanted No phone calls apply
laniard Carpel 111 S Pirk
Ave in pwsan

A A A IM P L O Y M IN T
LOW LOW F l i t — TCKMS
Mil French A ft
m in t
- - ’■ "■■
“
Needed Shop loremnn Oiesei
But mechanic
Mutt have
wmplete knowledge *1 CMC
Eaglet, and M CI buses Only
gualllied per too with tek*
charge ability need apply For
Apoomtmen! Call 111 111* Aik
lor AM Grorge Kan*
R - SS Electrician St
Basic Know I Several Positions
GOOD money
AAA IM P L O Y M B N T
L O W IS T F E I - T I I M S
Itlt French Ave
m ilf l
Equipment Opwator tv
sf acting salary 1110 wkly tin
grade and 1 yrs eapwience.
opwnling heavy construction
equipment
M utt possets
t.p e rie n ce
in
operating
dragline and n tv * valid
Florida C h a u llu t r license
Apply
Sem inole
County
Personnel. Courthouse. N
Park A r t . Sanlord by August
IS, IN I Applications accepted
Monday thru Friday ( N a m
till Noon Equal Opportunity
Employw. M F , H V
Work ot homo Jobs ovailobfel
Substantial earnings possible
Cell SO, tel lODS E e l Mf for
info* melon
E X E C U T IV E O IX E C T O X
BetpOfWBto toe adminmralion
ot oil phatos ot public housing
including planning, tiscgl
management, tupwvition. c*
ordinal ion ol fa0 com m l ion, I
units Im plem ent policies
adopted by II* # member
board Menaoemenl eapwl
me* Collage degree peeler
red. IM M . certificate re
bored within In* tiesl year,
lam,lardy with govwnment
regulaiwns helpful Salary n*
goliabie Send resume tg P O
Bo. IBIS. Sanford. Fla U t il
2011 Companion Housekeeper u 10
E.ceflm t Position L ie * m I M
WE
ASA EM P LO Y M E N T
LOW L O W F 1 IS — T IX M S
Mil French A .e
1)11114
E v E K Y DAY IS BARGAIN
DAV IN THE WANT AOS H I
Mil or IH m i

30-Aparrmenii
Unfurnished
We have apartments to rent
June Poriig Realty
Realtor H IM ta
B«|*y coenfry livingt 2 Bdrm
Apts
O lym pic s i. Pool
Shenandoah V illa**. Open • I

using

M e llo n v lll*
T ra ce
A p is
Spacious, modern 1 Bdrm . 1
Bath apt.
C a rp e te d , kit
equipped.
CHBA
N ear
nespdai L lake Adults, no
pen }ito j » n si
Sanlord — 1 bdrm r den.
ce ram ic
b a in ,
lu r n ilu r e
available. a d u ltL U l l mo 1
a il T N I
F R O M ! It*
1 Btdrodm Apft AvallA bif.
5^o«vn by Appi Only 333 1)40
ON ? 4TOAE I I . S E L L IT *ft»i
• Rw (Od C lo u if M Ad
3 M rm , 1 S, clqvr to Uhoppir^j
MS * • . 4 1200 dApot^f 477
Palmetto Ay* J7J 1441

l Mrm Amt irom t m I F i

*

Bdrm alto Avail Pool, teraiif
roorl W lArtA

♦

(ktauf iirf Largo 1 Bdrm Un
tvrnitfied Privata p«tio m city
1730 Call 1 MA 4071

D E L T O N A V IL L A S
H I Carr mean St ) Deltona. I mile
eft I 4 I bdrm. I B. adutls only,
appliances 1 laundry laciiiH n
turn,shed, CH BA, WW Car
paling, monthly rent trom
LIT1 For further infocell I JOS)

mesas
1 Bdrm a p t , carpel, drapes,
slave.refrig .dishwasher uso
mo includes w alw . ge-bag*.
sewer t it ) W Ind St U l apt)

NOTICE

K N IG H T S O F
C O LU M B U S
1104 Oak A v t ,
Sanlord

Thursday 7:30
Sunday 7:30
W in S 2 5 - $ 1 0 0

Th* wealhw is pec leer lor *
backyard
s a le
—
sail
everything last with • want ad
Can H I 1411 or I I I m i
Part lim e m an icu rist tw
progress,.* salon in Laks
AAary 111 kin. a r t s as* *711
* *in le r
— p referred
ta
pr''anted get coat sprayw.
but w ill consider training
someone with oltwe iprgy
painting e a p e rle n c* Must
hav* a good work record
Eicrfieni banelitt k pay tor
reel producer
Night shin
Coll* Boat Co Silv w le k * Rd.
Sanford. Fla
^ ISA A ed Twituneiiglsl SI R
E x e lle n l Opp Great salary
AAA EM P LO Y M EN T
LOWLOW F « « - T I B M S
M lt French A it .
H I S ill

COH VCNIINa
STORE
CASHIERS
Goad salary, twspilaiitation. I
we-.k paw vacation evert I
months.
E ip o e lo n co
not
necessary
Foe interview
phone me manage* a*;

Mrpeel •)««

&gt;11*111

(fS M » X T |
Ceitry A .•
lake Mary

m am
I114M1

ii*. ms

DM you know that yo
dub or argamiatton c
appear In nut lilting M
week lor only U » c
week! This ig on ideol w
to inform the public ot ye
club aetivtiles

0 &gt; S A *lE O
AM ERICA N
V ETERA N S
Chaidee
X
: Mery If f t
jb r l^ ^ a n t o r d
General Meeting

iii Tu*s f jg
C*cklail Lrvn g* open Mm
thru Sal UNoontlHT
Bmqo
Early B&lt;rd
ever y Wed 4 Sal
turning*1 f H P M
It your dub or organ i tenon
•quid like to bo Included m lh.*
listing coll
v

Evening Herald
C L A S S IF IE D
D EP A R TM EN T
IH M il

�30-Apartment!
Unfurnished
M ertnar-i v ilia g e o n L e k e a m 1
M r m from l ) t t j barm from
1110 Located 17*7 just South
0* Airport Bird &lt;n Sanford All
a o u ih i m m
s .- u * t r » t
r p a r t m in V b.
r o m llf i
A dults ttctloo
Poototot I BOrmi M e tie rs
Co*# Apt* i n rtoo Open on

W iit io r d r y e r connottion
Ranch style J bdrm a.i.iab w
v r p u . t r design with m»n,
(wilt n m » ro . &lt;»vr-i cat!
m i x t llt p n

TTApertmenh Fumishad
Atilt storage
p#rt#d tor
t in g le s , r n r r q y •M lcivnt
studios. r#«dy to mo»t In. ( ill
111 1101 110 pm
Sanford I Bdrm Kids. Pv'c |I00
Down 1100 Mo l i t tfOQ
1AV ON R E N T A L ! REALTOR
SANFORD
1 rm. air. vtit me *
IIOO dn t n o mo li t rioo
SAV ON R E N T A LS R IA L IO R
Furnished apartments tor Steuor
Citiiens 111 Paimatto A«a , j
Cowan No phont calls
SANF PK A V E
1 harm tpl.
WOO nd. t i l l mo 11* f?W
SAV ON R E N T A LS REALTOR
Completely turn 1 bdrm apt
Hardwood floors. Iirtpiac*.
no pats S i l l mo * WOO the
l*« U H ,
Apartment for rent WOO
per montn 1st
A last 111 1411
Looking For a New Moma?
Chech in# Want Ads tor houses
id every tit# and prlca

31A—ftjplexos
LONGWOOD L K FRNT
1 rm.
hHJt.SIOOdn. WOO mo 11*1X0
SAV ON R E N T A LS REALTOR
Duplt ■for r m t J bdrmr
1 B. C«rp*1inq, vppJIarxf!
Coll 171 3909
Don » Jiid no fenotr rwtd«d
‘t#mt hi oh * i on tltph*nt *
tr« P ' « t • ci*%».ft#d *&lt;j ,
plo »h* moot* In your wxitrtt
SANF OW'D —&gt; I bdrm, cirp o rl.
k-flt. U i wfc 3)9 7)00
SA VO N R K N T A Lf REALTOR
Nr# 7 bdrm, 1 B * air Av«'1*btt
no*
lit . latf ♦ lKufi(|f
Shown by appf 3&lt;th Pi*c#,
Unford t i l
9 p m II
p m . 737 a IBS 10 a m 1 p m ,
« u for David

"p Houwe Unfurnished
fo r rant - nic# ref irvmtwf homt
w ith a n c lo tfd g ara g t in
d tlig h tfu l O c B a ry A lio 3
bdrm, 7 B mobifa homt m
MracfowHa B y lft t ftiv tr Four
TtMrrvn R ra tty tnc B rcarr
Ail 4730
C an etb trry
1 bdrm, im
macula?#, CM A, d m , taper
location No prfv vacant1, IMS
mo , tra it, advancr. drpoiif
17)0104

U H D IO R D S
Ouahlied I anants walling
No Ira 11* 1100
SAV ON R EN TA LS. REALTOR
1 B r. In Ground Pool Counter
Chib Manor Sanford Fenced
! ) » mo 1st. last and SIM
D*pos.1 S4F $400
1 bdrm . 18 with
double c a r garaga. in
Deltona Call W4 1411
W E MANAOE RENTALS
C A L L N A LL R E A LT Y . INC.
REA LTO R m tft4
SANFORD
1 bdrm. porch,
kids. pats, i l l ! mo 11* IX 0
SAV ON R E N T A LS REALTOR

U —Houses Furnished
R ria y e s ore. A I bedroom dorr
home with large living and
family rooms, eat In kitchen,
iron* porch, and carport Attn
tan Located near grocery,
laundromat, and restaurant
Owner m am tl.ni yard Othyf
ranters on properly * '•
retired Write Bos im l l l . c o
the E*en,ng Herald P 0 Bln
USf. Sanford. Fla HIM.

11-Houses
111,JOB
Soectous 1 BR 1U| Bath FR
New Roof. Newfy pa.ntwf
near P .necrrtl School, large
lmeet) back yard
A A M cCLANAHAN
Lie. R e iiE t t a t t Broker
171 S»*l
New ] bdrm, 1 Q home in
OeRary CHSA, carpet, appi.
nssumy mhs* Johnny Wsiker
Reel E siafe inc Broarr m
u n » « * r I M l I’ l l
* loer and Pond Realty Inc
l««W Lake Mary Bl«d
Proparty Managemmt H I tail
A id s gene, but fne swing Ir* m
the back yard ism ? Sell if w.th
e went ed Call H l l t l t

HAL COLBERT REALTY

G E N E V A — Secret. 1 bdrm. air.
k« s, pats. SIM 11*1X0
SAV ON fl EN TA LS REALTOR
Get lu ll esposute
!*«• •***
"For Sale ' sign down A fin e
class.I ltd ad Call 1111**1 w
n im i

1.000

H«V« *• room fo font! It * *
(i***.f.vd s d t*nd s ivn^nt »cr
vow'l

JUNE

NEW LIS TIN G 1414 Elm Avt
simply lovely This 1 Bdrm
home has Central H1A and
screened porch Greet neigh
tofhood too Posable owner
Imencing tasew

A L L FLO RIDA R EA LTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR
E ic e tlm t Bus nets opportunity
in good location Complete
stock included In this price of
S1TOO
1S44 S. Frrnch H I k ill
Alter Heurt: 14* **M. H I Sfl*
By owner - 1 bdrm, | B. fully
CArpefrd. low down paymmt.
only 111.000 114 lilt

S T E M P E R A G EN C Y
EN JO Y
A
LA K E
VIEW
Beautiful wooded tot. &gt;n ei
c rit t n l location and easy
terms Only SI*.MO
b u s in e s s

L O C A T IO N Smalt building
Ktuntrd m high Irattlc area
lotted GC 1 only S7I.000
A T TEN TIO N INVESTORS IF *
Acres with frontage on Hwy 4t
W Owner financing eyOilatle
Only W* *00
R E A L T O R H l l t s t Dey or Night

Harold Hall Realty
IN C . R E A L T O R S , MLS
323 5774 Day or Night

STEN STROM
REALTY - REALTORS
Sanfo rd's Sales Leader
W l LIS T AND S I L L
M O RE HOMES THAN
AN YO N E IN THE
SANFORD AREA
LO TS OF POTENTIAL Otdtr 1
Stofy, 7 fidrm, 2 Btth Home
with m in t unique future*
Special commercial toning
SM.SN
L O V E L Y 1 Bdrm &gt; Both homt.
in All Sprgt tn corner lot
CHAAC equipped e l! in K«t
chen . Pam Rm, Sftn# FP L.
Sp lit B r plan ond more
S74.SM
MINI RANCH on 4*i Acre*
Fonced ond cleared. J Idrm, 3
Both, home Stable* and much
more 3* a Acrot in improved
p atlu ro 173,M l
B E A U T IF U L Cmlom Built )
Bfdrm 1 Baih homt in Loch
Arbor on wooded lot Energy
towing ItAViirvft, Slone F P L
ond m art 119,999
M A Y FA IR V ILLA S! I A |
Bdrm . 7 Balk Condo Villoi.
n o il fo May loir Country Club
W ltcf your lot. Hoor plan A
inferior decor* Qu«My con
tlr'jcftd by Shoemahtr lor
•47.700 A up!
A SSO CIATES NCCOEOf New
or experienced Coll Herb
Sltntfrom or Let Albright
today A ditcowtr ioccetil

C A L L A N Y T IM E

_

322-2420

BATEM AN R EA LTY
L'C Real Isfa'a Broker
7M0 Sanford Ayr

WAY WAY UN DE*
M A R K ET PRICE
B E S T P R IC E IN TOWN* Would
you btbovt enlf SIMM lor * 1
bdr m M d rip tii f«x, rtf +
h u ft ftncod yord w Irtttf
Owritr will hold ml* tr itlf
FMA VAft

321-0759
to k o M ary
Lot iO OillO', f
d uple• W ill trade IU M 0
Homly M o ii't Parod»it , Apart
iner»» B M | E xtra iof Priced
under today % marketf IM.*00

THE P R IC E IS RIGHT! t bdrm
nr brick PiftplAct, Dimri* Im ,
wood Moon, lor ft tcrrvntd
porch + ftnitd f*rd in qrta!
a r ia for only I79.9HM
P R IC E D TO S E L L ! B t t lw a n t
vrtth ff#at growth potfnttal m
m iddlo
of
m vikrttm tiif
downfewn buitntuti Super
for met 110.001! t
P R IC E D BELOW MARKET! )
bdrm CB homt only ) yrv old
in good neighborhood trsetd
thoucondt It t i than morbat tor
O Q u i c k K l f Unheard of it
• 11,90011
CO M PA RE P R IC E S ! Ov«r 1940
iq ft in iiu i 4 bdrm ,) both » Ig
Pom Rm , Dinmg Rm, b»«
icrttfw d porch, Cfh h ttl +
now roof! Owner will http w
thtt oa«v Aiiumption Only
•44.m u

C A L L 333-1774
1 Br Pool 10* Country Chib
Drive VA. FMA Com 114 000
New Root M l MOO Broker
Owner

r o o b iis

R IA L T Y
R IA L T O * . MLS
t i l l I Frrnck
Suite 4
tewterd

24 HOUR [B 322-9283
•3 B D R M - POOL*
• F IR E P L A C E *
•A S SU M A B LE
•FIN A N C IN G *'
Veceni 1 Bdrm. 1 Beth Neet m
Ground Pool 17*0 Sd Ft
Liv in g A rre Firtptaco in
Fam ily Room e L*rge Game
Room. With Bar. and screened
porch P rice Sat.tSO

SYSTEMS FOUR INC.
U4 4S44

K js ir
Hi \ i i ’s i \ 11

Co *11 W 1st St H) HOC

4S—Petv Supplies

THIS IS NO MISPRINT
New 74 i M Royal Oaks) bdrm, 1
B. fireplace, camedral calling,
great room, garden tub.
completely furnished A many
m ore e ilr e * . gnly IJJ.TSO
delivered A set up w&lt;fh!n ISO
miles VA no money down,
convtnl lonai 10 *• down Shop
Uncle Roy's Mobile Home
Sales m Leesburg, on 441
South 1*01) 711 0371 Opm
weeknighls -til f lO, Sundays
17 a p m

43—Lot v Acreage
s a c r e s . t a l l p in e s so m e
p a s t l ir e
ROAD TRO N I
a g e . r i v e r ACCESS G C h
eva
n s ooo

X A C R E S WOODED BOLLING
M ILLS IN GEN EV A AREA
1)100 P E R a c r e s e l l e r
I i n a n c i n g . m at d iv id e
7&gt;i a c r e s , t a l l p i n e s ,
G E N E V A SIS TOO LOW IN
IE R E S T
A SSU M A B LE
m ortgage

]

a cres

clea red

l a n d in

71-Antiques

S C L E A R E D D U P LEX LO IS IN
S A N F O R D *17 SCO EACH,
TO N ED r o u UUADSOR OF
F IC E S

BU Y JUNk. CkHS i IRUCkS
From *10 to IW or more
C all 333 I U I . D I 4*40

Mowing to a newer hgmg.
Apartm ent’ Sen • don t need*”
fatt with a want ad

CASH FOR CARS
Nunningor net
339 IN I

CASH FOR EQUITY
WoconeUao&lt;n4lhr%
Coil B art R i i t E tta tt 377 7491

A k C Ala% kanM atam utn Large
boned t wk% ok! m a in Shot!
4 wormed, e ir marking%
1700 37J 9411

79—Trucks-Traile 5

47-A—Mortgages Bought
&amp; Sold

AKC fem ale Ch^tVihiNI pupi lor
M le | why old 1140 I4«0)«5
a lte r | p m week da y%

47—Real Estate Wanted

w&gt; p ar eatti tor t i l h Imd1
mortgaged « ty Ltgg Lie
M o rigago Broker. 119 7719
Wo buy uggity In Homo*,
apArtmcptt. vacant land and
Acreage
LU C K Y INVE*1
M IN T S . P O ftci, ISM San
ford. Fla Tit71 377 4141

Mu«I I t f I Pony ureal with K id v
Laddie and Rrsdte 4100 177
3911 or 177 M U

7

P IG S FOR SA LE
H ) 1911

Booktmer
w ill Hugger
roclm eri tan fabric, tH k |)0
Monarch Sewing Mach ne US
All oood cond 177 H j O

«• A C R E S WOOOE0 L IR E A
P A R K . ON T OP OF A HILL IN
G E N E V A 140 000. TERMS
A V A IL A B L E
r . a c r e s w o o o eo road
F R O N T A G E IN O ST EEN
111.100
S A C R E S WOODED JACKSON
BAY
A R EA.
O ST EEN
n o m o . s e l l e r j in a n
CIN G

74 Pacer fa^ condition
4195
77 Alport Station Wagon
||§9 4
37) Iff* or 127)170

1141 f ord FpiftAntiport coup#. #
cylinder Automatic, runt
good 4W0 372 1474

197* CM C 't Ton wdh Fiat brd
Eicetlefit condition i cylin
dvr, 3 ipeed 11310 gr bait
otter W ill tradf 371 7)97
w in d l t v f » 177-734)
19)9 Pord P'Ck Up Ranger lariat
F 7JO Deluxe luper cab Fully
eguipped, heavy duly towing
package Deluxe Scorpion
camper top no window* 17,000
w th top 1*500 withoutfop 77)
5454 eve* t )0 1394

CONCORDS
EAGLES

W A C O N IER S

SCRA M B LER S

CJ's

SP IR IT S

PICKU PS

CHEROKCES

COME SEE • DRIVE ONE AWAY!

SANFORD MOTOR CO.
JEEP

AMC

73 T B ird Loaded New tire *
Blue with White Top No
moddy dLiwn. |7 | mo 3)9 9100,
9)4 4*0) Dealer

508 S. FRENCH A V .

321-4382

CONSULT OUR

M E N ’S, LADiCS* AND CHIL
O R E N S I I * , vtf i l l giya
Denim j t a n i . Liberty Ribs
Over aut and Seats B arly bird
g«tt t tie chan ef u ret
W ILCO S A LE S HWY «4 W 4 Ml
W OF «-4 IA N F O E O m I f f !

AND LET AN EXPERT DO TH E JOB
To List Your Business Dial 322-2611 or 831-9993

31A-Fumitur«
WILSON M AlEftrUftN tTU N E
111 J H E f INST ST
337 S477
King tire bed (No framgt u o
Good tandihbn

Air Conditioning

Maid Service

Ekctricxl

Remodeling

______________W 7 II4 ,______________
E a rly A m erican cofa i cha&lt;r,
| l 71 Unit khe!ve%. S40 Alto
m d tablet 37) H i9 or 17) SM0

Chfik Mill service AC's, rehlg.
If» # l» n . M a la r coolers, mile
C all ) ) ) 4 l) f

Completa twin bed w voi-d oak
frame, new double bed w box
%pr&gt;ng% nfvar vtvd. cofftt
table, 7 %wag lamp* a j oc
CiiM n ii chairt 777 4307
Ciakkififd Ad% w&lt;M alwayk give
»ou more
Much
Mvth
More ff'ifl ymi expect

Beauty Care
TOW ER S b e a u t y s a l o n
F O R M E R L Y M irritll « Beauly
Nook S it E lit SI , H I 1347

S3—A p p liances

Boarding* Grooming
Kenmor* parts saryitt. used
wasnen
MOONEY APPU
A N C ES 711 0S»

S 3 —T V R a d io S Ic re o
Good used TV s 131A up
M ILL ER S
H I*O rla n d o F r
Ph HJOISt

54—Garage Sales
V-IC turn

to yrs e,p ah
types of eiecfnai wort ai lair
prices 17)4)34

e l e c t r ic ia n

Eaperiencad mam wi!i do all
your housaclaaning work
Courteous Prompt Service
C all Leu it* 11* m i

Quality electrical work 7) yrs
eap arian ca Minor repairs lo
comply!# wiring 17)0111

Nursing Canter

Faddla tans installed
residential electrical wort,
ceil 1)3 S3, s

Remodeling Specialist
OUR R A TES AlrE LOWER
LA tyyirw Nursing Cenlyr
» I» E Second I I .Sanlord
H I Slot

Handyman

Yard Sale ) Family Corner
Shannon Dr and P-necrtsf Or
a a Saturday only B cycles
aluminum grill, boat motor
and Mailer and more

Snow Hill Kynnel offers Cat A
Dog Flea Bains S) up )*
Hour. Fu ll ServKt MSS3II

Building Contractor
B ill C arso. Slate C trlilie d
B u ild in g
C o n tra cto r
Residential or Cammardai,
Haw or Remodeftd 73) Set,

55-Boxtt JfAccxtsoriti
Ceramic Til#

14’ fiberglass boat Fully ad
lustabia Trainer *7so 70S
Bradshaw Ave 31) SSI*

57 A-Gum 4 Ammo
Gun Auci-wt Shotguns. Rifles A
Handguns Sunday Augutl X I
PM Sanford Auction n ) ! M

’ •&gt; » - - f f l - T -

Compiaie Ctram ic Tile Sere,
walls. Moors, countertops, re
modal, repair Fr ett H * » llt
M l IN t / E R T IL E
N rw o r rep air, leek y shower lo u r
spat lAIty. IS yet Eap M *(S 41

41—Building M ile n ilt
Building Sd&lt;* All staei (tear
span buildings Big lasings
from m aior manufacturers
Farm A Com-nerciel from
17 71 V) Ff Call 171 4441

Painting, carpentry, an types of
Tome repairs Call for Iroa
estimate 77)1*3)

Odd Jobs
J A B Home Impfovemant Carpentry work or any type
Rcmf rep o rt, guitar work,
painting (interior or aalarior).
plumbing, tpeciellll in mobile
home fepAirt A tool coaling,
and wood patio decks Fro *
estim ate )&gt;• &gt;441

Hauling*
Yard Work
Hauling A Yard Work II \ a f l
w.th Ad I I I t i l l no ant H I
74*7 La rry . JOrct layer*

Law n M ow er salts and Seeylct
wa Sell the Bell and Sam e*
me Rest Dob Ball Western
Auto H I W Ilf si

45—Pett-Supplies
G*vm *n ih fp N rd M ilt ] YriSuptr w»lh (tiiitfrin N C
WQfCfidOQ IXiO 177 4713

S T . , ; A * % 4 &gt; % Y- ■* &gt;

Horn* Improvement

Painting
Hallman Pamling i Repo rt
Quality wort F r tr E tl, Disc
to Senior* 1)4 *4X Rftar.

C IN T B A L FLO RID A HOMl
IM P A O V lM iN T I
Painting. Roofing. Carpentry
Lie Bonded A fruaranleed
Free Iif t m a it t 11111*1

T E R R Y SIN IE R IO R S
W allpaperihB, aginling Loer
prices Guar wart H7M74

Horn* Repairs

Painting 4 or
Pressure Cleaning

q u a l i t y a t A FAIR P R IC II
Gan Repairs A Improy II yrs
fatally Senior O sc H I 7X1

No 10b too large cr small
Qualify a mutt Call H I OOF I
References Fr Etl

Hypnosis

B. E . Link Const.
322-7029

Concrete Work
Concrete W ort, loot m l floors A
pools Landscaping A tod
work Fraw est H7 7N)

C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
BOARDS ARE G R E A T C L A S S IF IE D
AOS A l l
EVEN lE T T E l

Clock Regal'’
G W A LT N E V j E w E l I R
» * S Peek Aye
H7 *30*

Somebody Ik loo* mg for your
bargain Offer it today m In#
Classified Ads
MAN q u a l i t y O FE R A IlO N
* j * s t ip Palwt. D riirn eyt.
rlc Wayne Aral H r t )7,

&gt;■'

c l a s s if ie d ads a re fu n
ads
r e a d a use t h e m

OF TEN YOU I L L IX E THE
RESU LTS

Roofing
b il l E vans
SSytArteepenenca
H7 4I71

Write War Rooting and Pam
I mg Gueraniaad work Fraa
Estimates Ph H ) 4 * ll
RO O FS, leaks rapaired. Replace
rattenaaeat end tkcagle work.
■ican ttd , tatartd, kanded
Mika 111 *1)7
Christian Roofing 17 yrs t ip
Si* SfSA. fr** tst R*eoo4mg&lt;
tpaclol‘7* m rtp a r work A
new tooling
SOUTH ERN ROOFING I) yrs
t i p . retooling, trek tpeciol
itl
Dtpendtbi* A honest
price Day or night H ) IH1

Sandblasting
MYPNOVJStt
Slop Smoking. Lose WaigFil.
Build Confidences. Improve
iir ia iio n 'n pt. and muen
m oral I
Altar
years of
research. Dr Catty, one of Ihe
lald ars in hypeiest. hat won
the Evans Award lor his
oroean techniques O lllc t
downtown Sanlord S a m )
pm
Call H7ISO* for ap
pomtment or m4*rmelon

42—Lawn- Garden
' P I L E D IR T A TOPSOIL
Y E LLO W SAND
Call C lark A N d tH lJlM

Wa handle ihe
Whole Balt of Was

Financing Available
Animal H a.an Boarding and
C re am in g Xennitt Shady,
-muiefed, screened, fly proof
imtdr. ouftide funs Fans
Also AC cages We catff to
your pets
Starling tlv d
registry Ph H i SfS7

Moving tale 10 be

I I I Wynn Or . Union)

Any king of M Jlonry work —
*!bftt. brick, block! 4 coo
crvfv 377 1411 JbN! M**oory
11 * 94*y to pl*C v * C l*Uif ifO Ad
Wv'll w tn hvip you «vord
il Coll 177 7411

held from now unlit Thursday

See our beautiful new (ROAD
M O R E , front A lia r BR s
G R E G O R Y M O BILE HOMES
IM ) Orlando Or
377 )300
VA A F E A Financing

ia

C L A J5 IF IC O AOS OO A JOB
WHICH CAN BE DONE NO
O TH ER WAY CALL 177 2*11

U tility tra ile r S M .I0 tKnetl
heavy ayfy frame, aium baa,
%mgte a x le . USQ 17) 1947

W AN TEO — 100 *cre» or more
with good eapoture. dote tear
on a lake M Sentwofa Caunly
Coniacl June P o n g Rtatfr
Realtors. H I B4fl

New 14 a 70 Royal Oaks 3 bdrm.
7 B. H4.WS. oe 14 • *4 1 bdrm.
I' ■ B. s i) x s daliywad A id*
up wilhm IBB miles Wt hare
VA financing, no money down
or convonl lOfMl 10% down
E a s y financing only at Uncle
Roy s Mobile Home Sales U ,l
*41 Leesburg 1*0*1 1*1 OHA
open weebnigM i ' l l 7 )0.
Sundays 11* p m

'74Old* CufU tl PS. PB
r w AT a-r I I 150or
bett offer 37)17)0

t Pinfa* Pinto* Pintei t
77 Automatic
4795
37 Automatic, air
41)95
7) Automatic
4995
7* 4 Speed air
41995
79 Auto, a ir
43*95
1)1 t i l l

ON ALL

FO O T tO C K E Q S
|I9 99Up
AH M Y N A V YS U M PiU S
310 Santgrd Avt
777 1791

S I I O L I R R IA L T Y BROKER
H I -044*

Sanford Prim e I* X Acres w
options for lowing 111 100 a
Term s W M jliuowtk! H I
T fU E v e s 177 3)17

V*\3AYTONA A U lO i-JC T lO N
Hwy 97 I mil# w nt el Speed
way. Day tona Beach, will hold
a pubic AUTO AUCTION
every Wednetdir a* ( p m I f *
the only one tn Florida You *•♦
the rneryed pnet Call 904
7551)11 for further detail*

P R IC E S
SM A SH ED

47-Livestock Poultry

SO - M isc e lla n e o u s lor S.sle

1 MOVE S IT E S IN ORANGE
G R O V E AT UM ATILLA S7I00
EA C H C R A ZY TERMS

ASSUME MTOt I lien . ■ la
Saisara Lge rms. iaf la kink,
many ulrk L S71.SH

' RIALTO!

44-Horses

37 * ^nte Carlo Etc con Low
mileage Acting 54000 c a l)
between 9 4 7 p m 377 40M

1981 AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE

77—Junk Cars Removed

f r e e to proper home Young te
mote Keethond %hot», iove%
children 37) 43S7 aft • »

1*7) Luv 7 bdrm I D mobile
tom e S44XW H ) ISSt etlfr 7
eves, all dev Sat A Sun

300■ ON 17*7 NEAR n e w
WINN D IX IE CEN TER COM
IN C AT L A K E MART BLVD
70N 7D
C O M M E R C IA L .
1171 00 •

SA N FOR0
rag M
it it industrial er
Commercial Buim n* m If *1
i poo H in ottici space Call
H I SSIO or BJ44141

A her Ars H I 4*11 and 711 IIS*

4 G7IX11 belled w h itrw iil tires
Like new,:ifQ firm
•)1 1774

P A O LA STS OOO

If r* u aren I v u g your pool
table, laae a cue and sail if
w ith’ a Her did clabSildd ed
C all H7 1«M

M em . I B L b * dtsafs. big
yaid. SI*.*00

74—Auto Parts

Top Dollar Belttfor Junk A Used
Cirly truck! 4 htavy W P
m art. 322 3990 .

42—-Mobile Homes

M O T M A N V L IF Ie ltS M ip ric e )

Kitten 1 BrAutitul «ncf bltiyful
htl bihek. 1 m«ltr I ftm il*
f r e t '0 * oood l loving home
C«tl After 7 00 p m 37) t ilt

Collector t dam
mint tell *9 Karm ann Ghia E s c cond
47750 E y e * only )49 J79J

★ B i H Auto Sales *y
★ 339 7989*
•0
B o n n v v iiir
Brougham
D e*et, loaded 1*999
77 Pontiac Swnb-rd Like new
41791
79 Ford Van *« ton. UM I
*♦ Pontiac Firtb-rd. a &lt;ia**&gt;c.
I I Ml
• Bank fmarxtnq 4»x&lt;i«oUr •
$1N Hwy 17 9)
Ciiw lberry

)TI 744* ¥

¥

1975 Cad illac CoupeOeVdie F u ll
power, A C low mileage AM
PM leather interior 37)0479

tttO Fo rd Van Custom iitd,
rtbullf engine SUM or best
offer c all 371 47X S a m 11

A n im al Mdvtn Kennel* boarding
L grooming Needed lh*%*
Apto 4 %m«M tilvef poodle for
itvid Malg ownery call 777
S3 47

M LS

“ THI OAKS" a* laafard 4 Br.
7&gt;i B PPL, allamiaiiia*. peal,
ftwmt. SI7S.M0

A K C Dwbff man Pvm iik e k »nd&lt;
Thrii • W'M ,. ww m«3 4fmJ !« it i
OOckrO 1100
t 904 775 7099
57 4 1791

^ 74Hr Arecker S e re ic e T
HigneM p r K n pad foe funk or
u\ed car* 4 truck*

Dune Buggy
f&gt;
berg Iam body,
till I top. 1100 VW mg , II7Q0 o r
b e lt offer 173 2M4

Picku p camper
deep* 4
adult!, te ll contained gai or
Hec r r f r * g , I77SO 37) 54)4
E v e s DO t394

i:

111-0041

f l Capnce AM power Equipped
tor NV 17 000 m fet 1714117
11751

7S—Recreational Vehicles

a f l . h r s . 322.7*41

CONVBNiINT Naigabar head 1
B4. Ds B, Fenced, afifify im.
freed Her lev »X.*M

Classiliaslad slarvethebu yex A
vailing commut'dr every day
Read A use them d u n

»&gt;3»l

Aluminum, cans, copper, lead,
brass, silver, gold Weekdays
I 4 30. Sat * I KOKOMo Tool

• A.tha
part time c a r ’ Qyr dauifiedi
are loaded w«fh good buy lor
row

Sanford
Attractive 77 yr old
home on ISO- of Lake Onore 1
bdrm. I B 7 porches Property
can be split SIS 000 tivm i.
low interest Br owner 1 X I
*7»f

IMS
Park

HIGH RA TES GOT
YOU DOfth*
Cali lit for Qwntr
Financed Ham#*

311-0041

Bridges Anligur*

lu-Autos

lO -A u to x

Oiamcmgs
Oil
Dhtnlal Rugs

75-A—Vans

p o B z iG t u r n
Rsg R ie l I Stale B re k tfb ^
i l l 1st*
E ya H S ltM

e x c e l l e n t

Anllgues
Paintings

Tutsd ae, ~ug IS, 1*11—SB

Evening H trald. Sanford, F I.

48—Wrinled 1o Buy

Fo r E i f a f f Commercial or
NeiidrfitiAl Auction* 4 Ap
praitatk Call Den 4 Auction
j ; i 5070

Large fram e homt m Lake Mary
on beautiful wooded acre 1
te rm . T u r n . ui -Hiinlin«, ■■
y
B. CM A. carpet, drapes,
garage carport si* too t )|
1174

O tic# Space
For L f i u
*7071)1

Commercial M W o S for fmt
ISCOtq « 1*0 0 m a.
1st A last H I l i l t

1

r e a l ESTATE
R E A L T O R ,H I Tit*

47-Mobile Homes

R E A LT O R S

SANFORD
1.000 so ft If indiAtriet or
Commercial Ruitemg on II *1
n M O'f.cr space Call
H I S S II or B14 4I41

------------------- T A F I N J T ?

E»es H I Ml*
107 E lim it

JT— Business Property
Fo r r*n» or lease - I0.1X so If
indutlrlal or warehouse t i l
W 1st S I . Sanford H I IW8

CallBart

I'VE HAP W ienT^ ATAk E dARE HJW v y ^
WHu3 (15UIPHT PlET KFJKE, TALK T0 A PATIENT.
BUT I NEVER HAF FNE
FR. AXENkNTE 3H
I L L REPO RT y ju
TH E
(SAIN SO MUCH.'SHARE
*3UR SECRET ANF VsflL ETIQUETTE COMMITTEE.'
T H E A M E R IC A N M E F IC A L
SELL IT TO THE
H F (S F A R M E R S
^SSJClATlFN Vi ants t f
KNOW WHY PEjne SUIT

lac

1 Single Bedrooms SMweek and
1 Bdrm suite S IX mo H I
nx

Sm I bdrm moo le homt Near
Shopping, adults, no pets, see
at P ark Avenue Mco.it Park

TH E m e a t
Speciou* 1
bdrm I B w Ig game room,
formal dining A living room.
C M * attractive fireplace.
PrWC. screened pafla • lovely
pool on 4 lots i n WO

beat

with Major Hoopto

333 7813

SANFORD -■ coty cottage. aV.
kds. no dep . S ill U* 1X0
SAV O N P B N T A LlR E A LT O R

M—Mobile Homes

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

•H—Houses

Plumbing
Fre d d ie Robinson Plumbing
R t p o ir t.' lau rels. W
C.
Sprinklers 7)7 1)10. H7A7M
P O N SEC A PLUMBING Con
struclw n. Rypa-n Emergen
cy L K . Bonded. Ins H ) *07)
Plumbing repair -auirpa*
wafer heaters A pumps
H 7I47I

TrxxSxrvIcx
H A R P E R 'S T R I I S IR V IC B
Trimming, removing A Land
scoping Fraa E tl U lt M )

UpholsttfY

PrtssuriClMning

Lxndscaping

Mobife Hi-met H o u te a ._______
Trucks. .'tBilar, Etc Pgr fa b it
Unit Harold I ant in H I77SS

LA S rG I T A X I I N I T l l l f ■
Langs raping Old Lawns I *
placed MS S S I

* s T -

SA N O IL ASTINQ
DAVIS W ILDINO
H I * X t. SANFORD

i

*

When you p in * a ciassiiiad Ad
in The leaning Herald. May
clove Ig your phone because
something wonderful it eooul
fo l

• — r - | sig i ■

�' f t
I B —Evening Herald. Sjnlord. F I.

B L O N D IE
T "

f

T u t K U y .A u g .l5 , t*6l

by Chic Young

ACRO SS

Aniwer to Previous Putile

49 Tmy
5 0 Doctnns

BO Y. T H A T ’S

I Doctrine

S O M £ SH IW CI?

edherent

(lutti)
4 Alphebet
• Touch
12 Spy group
(Ibtor)
13 (mile _ _
author
14 Hewintn root
15 For hetnng
I t Random
I I Sully
20 Haraidic croaa
21 Chmttt
philotophy
22 lighted
24 Uu&lt;u&lt; i .* r
26 Of planet a
path
20 Grain ttsrara
34 Paper of
indebtedness
IS Sgueeied out
37 Mother
31 Nononttent
40 Organa of
haanng
42 Tavern
43 Skewered
draft
45 Inaect
47 Sorrow

1

2

3

12

by Art Sansom

T H E BORN L O S E R

ttnER.THEfgS/kH.'/

'|F TtU iWMJTtlCR1

IS
II

RDPTUI06 Y X V , 6 0
SEE A

26

27

21

38
43

SI
"

by Bob Montana

A R C H IE

THSRfc W AS A TEENAGER
AT T h e b u s s t o p w it h
A lC u O R A P O '
_______

59

Actraaa Gabor
Makaa money
Of numbers
Cold cubea
G&gt;vt oft fumes
Grant
Have the

D E A R D R . L A M B - I am a

ability

62-year-old male and retired.
I do not get a lot o( exercise.
My temperature varies from
96 to 98 F. I would Uke to know
what makes It vary that much
DOWN
48 Put out a
23 Arrogata
and If there Is any danger
25 Palt
lanant
1 Giaiet
from the variation. What can
26 Barnyard
Thailand
50 Concerning (2
h* done for It!
B.U .c*l w u d
iv v lv
w di. lat
Copper ore
27 Cad
DEAR READER - That
abtr)
Good (Fr |
28 Globa
does sound a little low. Tike
51
Petition!
Thick.**
29 Hoia in a pan
txxiy temperature varies a
52 Metdamai
Actreti
31 Sat
great deal more than most
8 ernhard1
(Ibtor |
32 All Iprafu)
I 8roke bread 33 Seaahort
people realise. It may vary
54 Genu! of
9 SF tranait
three degrees In a 24-hour
faatura
mapltt
lyttsm
period. The low level Is In the
56 Ctraal gram
10 Animal watta 36 Stalemata
39 Bmdmg
early morning hours when
57 Coiiega
chamical
cuatom
I I Hubbub
athittic group very few people take their
41 Strengthentd
(comp wd)
temperature and the high
44 South African S I Oiipatchad
17 Two*
60 Stratch out
point Is In the late afternoon
19 Son-inlaw of 46 Cry of
61 Hubbub
affirmation
or early evening. This cycUcal
Mohammad
change Is the diurnal cycle
10 11
4
7
9
6
1
5
and Is related to our sleep
cycle and hormone secretion.
14
13
We usually say that body
temperature may vary from
17
16
96.6 to 100 F and sUll be
normal. But It depends a lot
19
on the Individual and also on
■
■
”
how the temperature Is taken.
25
22
Even the thermometer may
"
”
31 32 33
30
not be entirely accurate. Skin
” ■
temperature Is lower than
mouth temperature and that
"
i
may be why you have given
39
me a relatively low reading.
■
You could hare a bad ther­
46
mometer, or, If you're taking
1
"
"
your temperature by mouth,
41
47
you may not be leaving it In
1
long enough.
56 57 56

■

■
60

■

■

■
■

■
61

u

“
62

63

64

65

II

17

68
_fcl

HOROSCOPE
By B E R N IC E B E D E OSOL

For Wednesday, August 26, 1981
Your Birthday
A u (u il2 &lt; , m t

by Howie Schneider

EEK A M EEK

HI.THERE! THE PFOWE

IORD. HOUJI HATE
THAT 5LOGAU1

COMPANY1/UAWTSVCUID
Reach oar and touch
SOMEONE

Things may break tor you at
a very fast pace this coming
year, so be prepared to move
swiftly when opportunity
knocks. Too much dawdling
could let success slip by.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) It
you c in ’t be nesr a telephone
today. Imavo word where vou

can be reached. Someone
you're anxloua to hear (rom
may try to get In touch with
you. Romance, travel, luck,
resources, possible pitfalls
and career (or the coming
months are all discussed in
your A stro-G raph which
begins with your birthday.
Stall (1 (or each to AstroGraph, Bos 469, Radio City
Station, N.Y. 10019. Be sure to
specify birth date.

P K I b U L L A S K U ri
^ MV M O T H E R 1—
ANP FA TH ER HAVE
B E E N IN V I T E P T O A
M A S O O ER A C E F fc R T Y '

T V C lR C O S T U M E S
A R E S U P P O S E ! ? TO
R E P R E S E N T HOW
T H E V P IC T U R E
TH EM SELV E5

M 5i

by Stoffel A Heimdahl

BUGS BUNNY

LA LA U lalA
W

w

r

PLEASED BECHET
HONORABLE C A T /

T H E JA P A N E S E A P E SUCH
P O T T S PEO PLE

Body Temperature
May Vary Greatly

66 (nuance
I le t I
67 Walked
68 Contume

■

34

50

S3
S5
59
62
63
64
65

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Ocl 23)
Today could be a blend of
unique happenings. Before It
is over you m ight add
something you'll prise to your
list of possessions.
SCORPIO (O ct. 24-Nov.
22)Don't be discouraged
today If you run Into
som ething unlike anything
you've ev er encountered
before. Your fast, bright mind
will come up with ingenious
solutions.
SAGrrrARIL'S (Nov. 21Dec. 21) Commercial dealings
you have today with male
irtenda should work out
profitably for all concerned,
especially If some new type of
Item Is Involved.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jsn.
II) It's always pleasant when
we discover that persons who

we thought weren't too fond of
us truly care. Such a surprise
may await you today,
ARC ARILS (Jan. 20-Keb
16) Inherently you possess
talent (or Innovation or in­
ventiveness and you might
have to call upon such skills
today to solve ■ problem at
work.
PISCES ( Feb. 20-March 20)
il iuu m uch ruuliiw lu s M « i
tying you down lately, break
away today and do something
different. The change will
greatly Improve your a l­
titude.
ARIES (March 2I-Aprltit9)
Essential facts could surface
today In a situation that has
kept you off balance. Once
you're more knowledgeable
you'll handle It effectively.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Usually you Uke to take ample
time to deliberate, but an­
swers could come to you In a
flash today. Don't fall to act
upon them because they came
quickly.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Before calling in espenstve
craftsmen to perform small
tasks for you today, check
with some of your handy
friends to see If they could do
It cheaper.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Keep your social schedule as
flexible aa possible today.
Something more Interesting
could pop up and you may
want to be free to attend.
LEO (Ju ly 23-Aug. 22)
Others may loae their heads
over unexpected develop­
ments today, but not you. In
fact, you perform best when
faced with uncertainties.

I have discussed the various
things that affect taking body
tem p eratu re by in The
'Health fitte r number 7-6.
Body T em perature and
Fever, which 1 am sending
you. Others who want this
issue ran send 73 cents wltha
a long, stam ped, selfaddressed envelope (or It to
me. In care of this newspaper,
P.O. Bos 1351, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
These factors Include whether
you have Just taken a hot bath
or even what you have eaten.
The body temperature Is a
good Indicator of general
health. But it is important to
know that It can be above the
magical 96.6 F and still be
entirely normal, particularly
In active young children In the
evening. The low tem­
peratures are more often
associated
with
low

Dr.
Lamb

metabolism. Check out your
method with the information I
am sending you snd If your
temperature persists on the
low side, tee your doctor. A
low thyroid condition or being
totally inactive may be the
reason. But it could be Just
normal for you.
DEAR DR. IAMB - 1 am
an 18-year-old girl who has
never been in the hospital and
am what you might call sort of
a hypochondriac. Every once
in a while I get a slight pain
where my appendix Is. What
do you think I should do?
When I get the pain 1 don't
double over or anything,
although sometimes it almost
gets to that point. 1 am
deathly afraid of my appendix
bursting or having to be taken
out.
DEAR READER - II
probably ts not your appendix
but the next time you have
such a pain you may want to
see your doctor. The typical
pain of appendicitis is
preceded by fullness or loss of
appetite and discomfort in the
middle of Ihc abdomen. The
pain moves to the right lower
side later. But all cases are
not typicaL
Your discomfort could be
from gas. Gas pains can be so
severe that they cause people
to double up, and the cecum,
the blind pouch at the end of
the colon, Is one place where
gas Is trapped.
If the pain occurs midway
between your periods. It could
be the pain associated with
ovulation. Since it occurs
midway In the cycle, It ts often
c a ll e d m l t t e l s c h m e r i ,
meaning middle pain. But no
none can tell you what your
pain la without a more
detailed
history
and
examination.

W IN A T B R ID G E

SOUTH

US ||

♦ II

♦ KI 42

♦ KQI07I
WEST

EAST

♦»TI1

♦!

• Q JM

♦AQIII1J
♦ III

♦ 666 4

♦ AJ SI

SOUTH
♦ AIQJIII

TPK7I4
♦ A71

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer North
* n l S ulk Call
Pass ITT
Psss

Psss

P su

Ses th

(♦

Opening lead V9

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Soslsg
South was tempted to
of hearts

when East led It at trick
two But he would have (tli
rather silly if East had only
been dealt a five-card »uit,
so East played his king and
West ruffed
Now West led the queen of
diamonds to South's ace
South's lin t thought was to
run off (rumps and pray for
rain In the form o( some
really bad discarding by
East and West Then South
derided that wouldn't work
As he explained later on.
he looked ai thet players
i
and
they didn't look
&gt;k like they
were unable to play cards
Now South worked out a
sure-thing play That ts. It
would be a sure thing as long
as East held the see of club*
South led another heart
West ruffed with the nine
and led a trump South woo
and ruffed his last heart
with dummy's eight
Nest came the king of
clubs play. East played hit
ace. South ruffed and drew
trumna Finally, he led a dia­
mond to dummy's king and
discarded his last diamond
on the queen of dubs
(newsi*Am

D fT tn m u

ash i

k s.n ./

by Leonard Starr

1

' »v.

r r r r -*

—— V I

&lt;• r ? • ^ • •

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                    <text>Evening H erald— (USPS 481 2801—Price 20 Cen»»

73rd Y ear. No. 292 —W ednesday, July 29,1981—Sanford. Florida 32771

Sheriff W ants $422,096 M o re

PoIk W ill Appeal To State
To Grant Budget Request
By DONNA ESTES
Herald Stall Writer
Sheriff John Polk will be taking hti
case for more money to operate his
department to the ktate capital.
After county commissioners
Tuesday night unanimously approved
little more than half the $973,000
budget increase he had requested,
Polk said he will be filing an appeal
with Oov. Bob Graham and the
cabinet. He said he would have tried
to operate under a compromise
suggested by Commissioner Sandra
Glenn, but qpuldn't do with less than
the compromise offered.

additional funds — the difference
between the $8,197,096 he requested
and the $3,773,000 approved by the
commission.
Polk said he will be calling
T allahassee to advise the slate
Department of Administration of his
decision to appeal He then has X
days to file formal notice of the ap­
peal. After that the county com­
mission will have five days to answer

Polk: I Decided To
Appeal Before I
Came Here Tonight'...

• Mrs. Glenn understands my
department and Its needs," said the
sheriff. "I won t try to tool anyone by
saying, ‘I'm going to think about an
appeal.1 I decided to appeal before I
came here tonight, if the compromise
wasn't accepted."

his notice of appeal.
A hearing with Polk and county
commission representatives will then
be set In Tallahassee by a hearing
officer of the Department of
Administration. A hearing before the
governor and the cabinet will follow
that.

Mrs. Glenn's compromise proposal,
which would have given the sheriff
$661,621 in additional revenue during
the 1981-83 budget year, was defeated
when no support was voiced by other
commissioners.

The decision of the governor and
cabinet will be final with no further
recourse allowed far either the county
or the sheriff.
This will be the third time Polk has
appealed a budget to Tallahassee.

Polk will be appealing for $422,096 in

Winfer Springs Charter
Change May Be Revised
Winter Springs voters may not gel to voice their opinion
on pru|»scd changes to the city's charter. By a narrow J-2
vote, city council members Tuesday agreed to do away with
the ordinance encompassing the change* which they had
adopted July 14.
But that doesn't mean the planned November referendum
on the charter revisions ts canceled. City Attorney Wally
Stalnakrr pointed out, "You have to rescind an ordinance
by another ordinance. This vote won't do It."
The council instructed Stalnaker to draw up a new or­
dinance which may be voted on possibly at the council's
next meeting Aug. 11.
Tuesday's move was unexpected. It was made In the
closing minutes of the council meeting and came up only
when one of the 13 members of the charter revision com­
mission, which drafted the reworded charter after months
of study, complained about the council's "tinkering" with
the (Inal product.
In May, the commission presented council members with
four major changes in the city's charter — changing the
name of the city council to a commission, extending
counctlmen's terms from two to three years, switching the
method of electing councilmen from the present at-large
system to a series o( five single-member districts, and
mandating that Winter Springs have a city manager In­
stead of leaving It up to the council to decide whether the
See Charter, Page 2A

2A
4A
IB
IB
HB-1IB
IB
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Dear Abb)
Death*
l)r. lam b
Editorial
Florida
Horoscope
Ho*pUal

IB
2A
IB
IA
9A
IB
2A

Nail**
Ourselvrs
People
Sports

2A

HA-HA-1

Television
N e it h e r
W o r ld

It’s A Hard Life
GREEN BAY, Wls. (UPI) - A couple
accused of stealing $21,000 in Jewelry
from a department store had to borrow a
ring from a public defender to get
married In jail.
Michael Carter, 21, and Shashona
McKelver. 23, both of Los Angeles, were
married Thursday in the county jail.

i

On his second appeal, for the 1976-77
budget year, he received six of seven
votes of approval from the cabinet.
But former Gov. Reubin Askew
vetoed the cabinet's decision.
However Polk was able to obtain an
additional $80,000 from the county
commissioners that year.
"So I actually won both times,"
Polk said today,
Polk originally requested for this
year an operating budget of $6,233,241,
but cut the proposal at the request of
County
Administrator
Roger
N eiswender some weeks ago to
$6,197,000.

of the fail "if you think you can do it
more efficiently than I can and
without needing manpower.”
He said if state mandates on
operating the fail are not complied
with It he will be sued. He pointed to
the jails which are operated by county
commissions in Alachua. Volusia and
Escambia. Polk said the sheriff of
Pinellas County, was sued about the
county jail operation there and was
fined punitive damages of $88,000.
"If the court fines me, 111 have to
cut my wrists and sec how much blue
blood is worth," he said, adding his
proposed budget had the lowest
percentage of increase requested in
the state.

The sheriff’s department, during
the current fiscal year, has operated
on a budget of $$.223,808 The total
increase requested was $973,291.

Commission Chairman Bob Sturm
said the commission in its effort to
hold the line on taxes at $3 24 per
$1,000 assessed value has had to
violate several state mandates.
"We'll all go to Raiford together," he
said.

During the lengthy hearing Tuesday
night Polk said the commissioners by
not giving what he asked for were
"putting me in a box on Jail
operation." He offered to sponsor
legislation to perm it the com­
missioners to take over the operation

Kirchhoff said this is the year when
everyone — all county departments —
is sacrificing something. He added
that despite what is approved by the
commission, Polk, under the law, has
the sole discretion in how he spends
the money allocated by the county.

.

Her' cell was decorated with toilet
tissue and called the bridal suite. A sign
lamented "There ain't no groom there."
The newlyweds received no special
privileges and had to be content with
looking at rach other through the glass
plate separating their cells.
Alter the ceremony. Carter returned
the ring to public defender John Brown

. . .

M»r«ia P h o t* b r J»i*» C t i t r t t t r r r

BRING DOW N THE HOUSE
K r is ti C a rro ll and K ddie K u rg a n o f th e S an fo rd -S em in o le P a lle t (lu ild
h rm ig h l dow n th e house a s th ey ta p p e d th e ir wav to th e " H o n e y m o o n H o te l"
a s th e y e n te r ta in e d at th e S a lv a tio n A r m y ’s a n n u a l b a n q u e t h e ld T u e s d a y
n ig h t a t th e S anford Civic C e n te r . F o r m o r e photos se e P . XV

Winter Springs May Turn Off Sprinklers
By BRITT SMITH
Herald Staff Writer
Restrictions on residential lawn
sprinkling were tentatively ap­
proved by the Winter Springs City
Council Tuesday night.
The Imposition of restrictions on
watering of lawns is a t the request of
the St. John's River Water
Management District due to present
drought conditions.
The Winter Springs councilmen,
however, chose not to follow all of
the Water Management District's

recommendations for conserving
water use.
District officials have requested
all municipalities within the region
to order a 1$ percent curtailment of
water usage by golf courses,
cemeteries, plant nurseries, farina,
all commercial and industrial
establishments and homeogmers
The Winter Springs Council ob­
jected, saying there is no way to
enforce such a broad undertaking.
They Instead opted to prohibit only
residential lawn sprinkling between

9 a m. and 6 p in.
Councilman Hap Arnold said, "I
know what the district is trying to do
and I agree we have a problem, but
it looks to me like there's a hell of an
enforcement problem here
"Who's going to monitor usage?
Who's going to look for violators? If
we pass this we'll be biting off so
dam much we can't possibly chew
it," Arnold said, referring to a
sample ordinance submitted by the
District.
Other cities, including Sanford,

have reduced the pressure in water
lines as a way of cutting water
usage, but city engineer Jack
Cooper said he would not recom­
mend similar reductions for Winter
Springs "because while you would
be cutting water to homes and
businesses, yov would also be cut­
ting pressure l&gt; the fire hydrants."
The re strictio n s on lawn
sprinkling will not take effect unless
they are approved at a public
hearing on Aug. 23.
City Manager Richard Roiansky

said the police force would be
charged with enforcing the ban and
residents caught defying the connervation measure would be warned
cave* and then ticketed. Violalan
muld be jailed tor up to 90 days,
fined as much as $800 or both.
The council also Tuesday:
— Appointed local resident Al
langraf as the city's volunteer
recreation director (or on* year and
as his fust duty Instructed him to
prepare a detailed plan for spending
the $14,000

County Expects $200,000 From New User-Fees
County Commissioners have adopted an ordinance, setting
user-fees expected to bring $200,000 more revenue Into the
county coffers In the new fiscal year.
The fees are on a myriad of activities such as appeals before
the Board of Adjustment, requests for variances to subdivision
regulations, utility line inspections, inspections (or use of the
county right-of-way by water and sewer utilities, electric
power companies and telephone companies and for various
permits
Commission Chalrmsn Bob Sturm said these services, which

in the past have been paid for from the county's general fund,
will now be funded by fees collected from those who us* the
services.
County Engineer Bill Bush said today the new fees taken in
will be used to pay the u Isties of four inspectors currently on
the payroll. If additional Inspectors are needed, two currently
vacant positions will be filled and paid (or with money from the
fees. County Administrator Roger Neiswender said Tuesday,
but only with permission of the county commission.
County Commissioner Barbara Christensen voted for the
ordinance, but she expressed concerns that the program be

M arriag e Goes Smoothly For

TODAY
Action Reports
Around The Clock
Bridge
Calendar
CUisttled Ads
Comic*
Crossword

Polk, who was first elected sheriff In
1968, was successful in an appeal of
his 1969-70 budget.

t /

carefully monitored so that the inspections will not become a
profit producing service.
She said she doesn't want the fees levied to be used as an
excuse to raise costs to consumers by utility companies.
"I support the user fee concept, but I would also like to see a
break for the consumer," she said.
Commissioner Robert Feather said he also shares Mrs.
Christensen's concern.
Neiswender is to present a report to the commission on the
costs of the program and revenues as the new fees are being
charged. - DONNA ESTES

County Official
Jailed Over
Shooting Spree

^

Prince Charles And Lady Di
I jONDON (UPI) - Prince Charles
married a dazxlingly radiant lady Diana
Spencer today in a ceremony of such
splendor that the archbishop who
married them called it "the stuff of
which fairy tales are made."
Cheered to the cloudy skies by at least
900,000 flag-wavtng people and watched
and heard throughout the world on televi­
sion by an estimated 1 billion others, the
32-year-old heir to the throne made a
beaming and joyous Diana, X, princess
of Wales and the nation's future queen.
"Here is the stuff of which fairy tales
are made — the prince and princess on
their wedding day,” Archbishop of
Canterbury Robert Runcle said In his
sermon to a St. Paul's Cathedral
congregation 2,800 guests. Including
crowned heads and statesmen from
around the world.
Unfazcd by a last-nunut* security
scare involving Buckingham Palace
footmen, urban riots thst claimed their
first fatality on the wedding eve and the
hunger-strike tragedy of Northern
Ireland — and in spite of dangers which
forced the most intensive security screen
in British history — a spirit of joy and
happiness reigned from coast to coast.
London exploded with color as It did
with fireworks on the wedding eve.
Neighborhood celebrations blanketed the
country like the wedding-eve spider's
web of 101 beacon fires.
Charles and Diana spoke their sacred
vows firmly, though the bride mixed up
the order of her husband's (our Christian
names.
Diana, barely repressing her smiles for

the cerem ony's solemnity, stole a
sideways look at Charles and (lashed him
an impish grin as he vowed "I will" to the
charge to “love, comfort, honor and keep
her."
Tears welled in the groom's eyes and
he brushed an eye with his fingers as
magnificent music filled the cathedral
Diana, crowned by the Spencer family
tiara, gowned in voluminous and ultraromanuc ivory-shaded silk, clasped his
hand tightly as they spoke their vows.
Bride and groom rode to the cathedral
through a 2‘» mile canyon of color in a
triple carriage procession from Buck­
ingham Palace which typified the pomp
and pageantry (or which Britain is
renowned.
All the cheering, all the celebrations
great and small, focused on the Church of
England marriage service beneath the
great dome of the third largest church in
Christendom — a service m ade
magnificent by music chosen by the
groom.
t^ h o tc who are married live happily
ever after the wedding day if they per­
severe in the real adventure, which is the
royal task of creating each other and
creating a more loving world," preached
Runcie, 60.
“That is true of every man and every
woman undertaking marriage. It must
be specially true of this marriage in
which are placed so many hopes."
America's first lady, a cool and elegant
Nancy Reagan, listened to the sermon
hall a do ten rows from the altar. Her
fellow American, Princess Crac* of
Monaco, was among downs r,f VIPs and

international "royals” inside the vast
church.
An Intensity of hope focused on the
newlyweds, even though Charles may not
be king and Diana queen until the 21st
century — and even then will have no
power but influence and example. The
public outpouring of joy and affection
demonstrated the fervor of those hopes
Neighborhood celebrations blanketed
the land. GUIs and congratulations
poured into Buckingham Palace in an
avalanche Charles himself called "just
incredible." This was a genuinely
popular match.
Even io , the biggest security operation
ever mounted In Britain cast a (me-mesh
security net over the whole of I/undon —
protecting both the royal couple and the
high and mighty, British and foreign,
who gathered to witness their union.
St. Paul's Cathedral became virtually
an armed fortress. Hundreds of normally
unarmed British policemen carried wea­
pons. Dogs sriffed buildings — including
the cathedra! itself bare hours before the
wedding — (or explosives Sewers were
searched and sharpshooleri positioned
not only on roofs, but in a biimp hired by
a B ritish television company to
augument its coverage.
For millions of Britons, thousands of
whom camped overnight along the route,
security worries caused by the weddingeve revelation that two Buckingham
Palace lootmen were arrested two weeks
ago about t t miles (ran lin d e n on
charges connected with explosives
formed just one more anxiety set aside
lor the day.

LADY DIANA

— -J

PIUNCE CHARLES

The director of Seminole County's
animal control office was jailed early
this morning (oilowing a Tuesday night
shooting spree at a Sanford area mobile
home park that left one man badly In­
jured.
.
Ralph lee Willis, 39, of 99 Exeter
Court, Sanford, was being held in the
county jail under $10,000 bond on charges
of aggravated battery, use of a firearm
during the commission of a felony, and
discharging a firearm in public
Willis Is accused of shooting Roger L
McDonnough, 19. of 170 Windsor Court,
Sanford, ooce in the neck with a .22caliber pistol while McDonnough w u
swimming in the pool at the Carriage
Cove trailer park In Sanford
McDonnough was listed in satisfactory
condition this morning at Seminole
Memorial HoapitaL
Sanford police laid several other
people luckily escaped Injury when Willis
allegedly began firing indiscriminately
at swimmers in the pool around 9 p m. He
then reportedly fled alter McDonnough
was shot.
"Several people Jumped In their cars
and chased him, but they quickly lost the
thrill of the pursuit when he began
shooting at their cars,” said Sgt. Herb
Shea. "Nobody w u hurt. T V car wasn't
even h it"
Shea said an alert (or Willis and a
description of his car w u broadcast
shortly alter the shooting. His car w u
spotted at the Holiday Inn on lak e
Monroe around midnight and he w u
arrested In Room 102.
Shea said no motive h u been
established for the shooting. — BRITT
SMITH
I *

i
,L
’WW*.

-W-JV-t**

�lA -E v a n ln g Herald, Sanford, Ft.

Wed n tid iy , July I t , I f l l

Bomb Threats Made At Two Stores

W ORLD
IN BRIEF
M ajo r Earthquake Rocks
Iran, Killing 5 ,0 0 0
ANKARA, Turkey lU PIl — A major earthquake
rocked southeastern Iran Tuesday evening, killing as
many as 1,000 people, Iran's oil Ida I Pars news agency
said today.
Pars said preliminary figures showed 400 people
were Injured and 90 percent of the villages In the quake
area were destroyed.
Pars said the quake, measuring 8.1 to 7 on the
Richter scale, was centered In the town of Anduhjerd,
110 miles southeast of Tehran and 30 miles east of the
d ty of Kerman and In the Shahdad district.
Quoting the governor general of Kerman province
Abolhelsen Saveh, Pars said "4,000 to 1,000 people are
predicted to have lost their Uvea."
The U. S. Geological Survey In Golden, Colo
reported the quake measured 7.1 on the Richter scale
and occurred near the border with Afghanistan in the
same region where a quake with a magnitude of 7.7 In
1971 killed about 11,000 people,
Pars did not detail the areas hit, but Tehran Radio,
monitored In Ankara, said there were "heavy losses"
of life In the Anduhjerd, Shaba 2 and Golbat regions.

Liverpool Rioter Killed
LIVERPOOL, England (U PlI — A police personnel
carrier rammed and killed a rioter In the third straight
night of pitched street fighting In the Toileh ghetto,
marring the royal wedding day with Britain’s first
death In urban violence.
Police said David Moore, 22, died early this morning
only hours after a police personnel carrier ran over
him during riots In Liverpool's Toxtelh ghetto
Hundreds of youths rampaged through the ghetto
unUI dawn today, hurling Letcks, bottles and limestone
slabs at riot police In the third and fiercest night of
riots. Police said 12 police officers were Injured.
'They are throwing everything they can gel their
hands on at police," a police spokesman said.
Mobs of youths looted and torched several stores and
hurled objects including a pickax al riot police hunched
behind plastic shields.

Banl-Sadr Is In Paris
PARIS lU PI) — Ousted Iranian President
Abolhassan Banl-Sadr flew Into a French military
airport outside Paris early uday and was quickly
granted political asylum.
Foreign Office sources said Banl-Sadr landed In an
Iranian aircraft at 4:30 a.m. but did not offer any ex­
planation on how the Iranian craft came to be used by
the Impeached chief of state.

...Charter C h an ge
(Continued From Page IA)
d ty has a chief executive officer.
Ultimately, the roundl scrapped the final two proposals
and agreed to submit to the voters In a November
referendum only the name change and extension of counoilmen's terms.
Charter revision commission member Gary Massey
chided the council as doing a "disservice to the 13 people
who worked so hard on that commission and to all the
citizens of this ritv. 1 think it was a personal Insult."
Counrtlinen Wilfred "Hap" Arnold, Maureen Boyd, and
Mayor Troy Ptlnnd agreed that the commission's changes
should have been submitted directly to the electorate
without first being screened by council members and voted
to scrap the proposed revisions and cancel the referendum.
Councilmen Jim Hartman and John Torcaso disagreed,
saying the council had a right to review the commission's
work. Councilman Martin Trencher was absent.
What happens next was left up In the air. There was some
talk of funning a new commission and starting all over
again, or submitting all of the commission's original
recommendations to the voters for their approval.
"One thing Is certain," Ptland said, "this thing is not
over." - Bit ITT SMITH

Dozens of shoppers were evacuated from the K-Mart
department store on Hwy. 17-92 In Sanfurd Tuesday af­
ternoon following a telephoned bomb threat, the second such
threat ol the day.
A similar bomb scare occurred at the TOLY store, 413 E. 1st
St., about 2 p.m a hall-hour prior to the K-Mart Incident.
Shoppers and store employees were evacuated, but no bomb
was found.
Sgt. Herb Shea n( the .Sanford Police Department said the
lin t threat was phoned In by what a store employee described
os a male believed to be 10-15 years old. "He said, 'A bomb Is
going to blow up In live minutes,' then hung up." Shea
reported.
City policemen, firemen, and the sheriff’s bomb expert LI.
Marty 1-aBruxciano responded to the scene, but found no ex­
plosives, he said.
"About 20 minutes later tney hod to go to the K-Mart where a
female had called In another bomb scare," Shea said. "No
bomb was found, but people were asked to leave the store Just
In case. How many people there were, I don’t know," he added.
CRIMINALS SENTENCED
Eight persons were sentenced In Seminole Circuit Court
Tuesday lie crimes In which they had earlier either pleaded
guilty nr been convicted. None received extended Jail terms.
Judge Kenneth lelfler Instead ordered probation and fines for
all eight. They are:
-W illie l-ee Harris, 30, William Clark Court, Sanford, at­
tempted burglary, five years probation. 20 weekends In the

Action Reports
★

Fires
*

Courts
★

Sem:nole County Jail, $300 for his public defender, and $78 for
the rust of prosecution. Harris was charged with breaking
down the door at 1213 W. 9th SL, Sanford, on Dec. 28 and
striking the tenant Edna Mae Harris In the (ace. An original
charge of battery was dropped In return for the guilty plea.
-D ean Allen Middleton, 20, of Orlando, battery on a law
enforcement officer and resisting arrest with violence, one
year probation, 20 weekends in the county Jail, and $490 costs.
Middleton was convicted on March 25 In connection with an
Oct. 5 incident during which he hit, kicked, and bit sherriff's
deputy Frank Ambrose, who was investigation a domestic
disturbance.
-C harles Stopford HI, 19,248 lewfield Circle, Winter Park,
criminal mischief, five years probalitn, $330 public defender
fee, and the $112 cost of prosecution. Stopford was accused of
detonating a homemade firebomb In a car belonging to Scott
Vasatka. fillfi Fortrose Drive, Winter Springs
—Karen J. len t, 18,1418 Ash Circle, Casselberry, obtaining
a controlled substance by fraud, three yean probation and a
$200 fine. On Oct 23, le n t was arrested at Eckerd Drugs In the

Moratorium Against Signs Lifted In Longwood
Ixingwood's moratorium on the Issuance of
sign permit! lias been bfted due lo the passage
ol comprehensive sign regulations Monday
night.
An amendment to the city's zoning or­
dinance (hat Usta numerous specifications for
various signs was passed by the Longwood
Commission.
The commission found the zoning ordinance,
passed several months ago, did not provide
litem with sufficient control! over all signs In
the d ty , and so they prepared the new
regulations,
which
they
approved

unanunously.
The prim ary concern Is with the
proliferation of mobile type temporary signs
and large billboards.
The monthly fee for a permit for a tem­
porary sign has been doubled to $10 a month.
The permit extends lor 2 months.
At the insistence ol Commissioner Steve
Uskert a minimum of $23 of the actual costs
was incorporated in the amendment as a fee to
be assessed if the dty has to remove and store
delinquent temporary signs

The amendment also spells out size, location
and slacking sped (lea Iions.
Maximum height lo the top ol a freestanding
co-sile sign must not exceed 23 feet. Billboard!
in excess of 300 square feel must be 36 feel
high at the base or floor of the sign. Maximum
area for on-site signs cannot exceed 200 square
(eel. A distance of 300 feet ts required between
billboards.
Monday night the Commission also ap­
proved a site plan for Meadow Ridge to be
built on the east side of Range lin e Road by
Galllmore Homes. Inc.

Action on the site plan was tabled last week
to give the developer time to work out on
agreement with City Administrator David
Chacey on plans lo wtdr;i Range line Road (0
three lanes for 650 feet In front of the
development.
On Chacey's request, Galllmore has agreed
to pay 110,300 of the $12,300 Chacey estimated
the pro Jed will cost. The dty will furnish the
balance through excavation, traffic control,
stripping the roadside, and painting strlp e s JANE CASSELBERRY

AR EA DEATHS
MRS. MINNIE G. AN- Sheila Marshall, Sorrento;
sisters, Mrs. Beverly Cook
DEttSON
Mrs. Minnie G. Anderson, and Mrs. Mamie lawney, both
91, of 1001 Esplanade Way, ol Roanoke, Va.; brothers,
Casselberry, died Tuesday at Olaf, Pulaski, V a„ F .J..
Va.,
Raymond,
Florida Hospltal-Altamunte. Floyd,
Randolf,
Horn in Marion, Iowa, she Roanoke, and
moved to Casselberry from Sanford; four grandchildren;
,
Cedar Rapids, Iowa In 1933. two stepgrandchlldren.
Baldw In-Fairchild Funeral
She was a homemaker and a
m em ber of Rolling Hills Rome, Altamonte Springs, Is
in charge of arrangements.
Moravian Church.
Survive** Include u son,
MRS. JANICE GOODWIN
W.A., Altamonte Springs;
Mrs.
Ja n ic e
Pauline
d au g h ter, Mrs. Annaballe Goodwin, 33, ot 702 E. 29lh S t,
Stevenson, S tu art; sister. Sonlord died Saturday In
Miss Murgarel Coquillette, lak elan d . A native of
Orlando; five grandchildren; MeHuberts, Ky., she came to
nine great-gramkCildren and Sanford In 1972 from Cocoa
two g reat-g reat grand­ Reach. She was co-owner and
children.
operator ol Jan and Bill's
Semoran Funeral Home, lounge and Bar, Sanford, and
A ltam onle Springs. Is In a Baptist.
charge of arrangements.
Survivors Include her
husband, William I . "Bill",
Sonlord; two sons, Gary L
CLARENCE J. MAXWELL
C larence Jennings Max­ Campbell, F airfield , Ohio,
Glen
Campbell,
well, 36, ol 204 O'Brien Road, and
Fern Dark, died Sunday at his Melbourne; two daughters,
residence, Born in Roanoke, Mrs. K arla Saylor, and
Va.. he moved to Fern Park Janice, ol Sanford; live
(rum there in 1938. He was a brothers, Herbert and Roger
sanitation maintenance nun Baker, ol Melbourne, Bonnie
and a member of the Church Baker. Jacksonvdle, R. C.
of God, l/&gt;ngwood.
Baker, Oldsmar and BUly
He is survived by sons, Baker, Mount Rainier,
lairry S r. and C. Eddie Wash.; two sisters, Mrs.
Maxwell, both of Orlando; Margie Williams, Melbourne,
daughter, Mrs Carole Setzer, and Mrs. Wanda Reynolds,
Orlando; step-daughter, Mrs. Caeca: and six grandchildren.

Davis F uneral Home,
Melbourne, was in charge of
arrangements.
MRS. ETHEL MAY SMITH
Mrs. Ethel May Smith, 37,
of 397 Gams boro St., Deltona,
died Tuesday al Seminole
Memorial Hospital. Born In
Philadelphia. Pa . she moved
to Deltona from Miami two
months ago. She waa a retired
insurance underwriter and a
member of the Advent
Lutheran Church, Miami
Shores.
Survive*! Include husband.
Robert Edward Sr.; sons,
Robert Edward Jr., Charlotte
N.C., Gary L , Miami, Stacey
U, langley Air Force Base.
Va.; sisters, Lillian K. Aebey,
Evelyn G. Waterson, North
Miami; six grandchildren
Alien-Summer hill Funeral
Home, Orange City, is in
charge of arrangements.
IIAKLKY D. CHAAPEL
Harley D. Chaapel. 86, ol
808
Grandview
Ave.,
Altamonte Springs, died
Tuesday at Florida Hospital,
Orlando. Born in Bradford
County, Pa., he moved to
Altamonte Springs from
Leroy, Pa., in 1962. lie was an
automobile m echanic, a
member of the Veterans of
World War 1 and a Mason.
Survivors Include sons.

Figures Were Wrong
It was Incorrectly reported In Sunday's edition of the Herald
that the city of lake Mary has spent 13,000 in matching funds
for a $33,337 federal grant to study the feasibility of Installing
sewers In the dty.
A total of 19,940 has been spent to date, not $20,000 os
previously reported. Of that $9,940, $2,736 came (rom city
coffers. The remaining $7,194 was federal money.
The d ty council recently canceled the unfinished sewer
study. The Herald regrets t&gt;* error.

Police

Seminole Plaza after she tried to use a forged prescription lo
obtain valium
—Douglas C. Sutton, 19. 113 Academy Ave., Sanford, live
y ean probation, 20 weekends in the county Jail, a $720 public
defender fee, and the $88 cost ol prosecution. Sutton pleaded
guilty on March 19 to a charge ol burglary in connection with
the Dec. 3 break-in at 1019 Old Lake Mary Road in which guns.
Jewelry, and clothing were stolen
—Bradford Kelly Ward. 2S. 133 Canal St., Sanford, battery of)
a law enforcement officer, one year probation, 13 weekends in
the county Jail, and a $500 fine. On Feb. 5, Ward was stopped
for driving with an expired inspection sticker and a suspended
driver's license. While being Jailed, he threw a ticket book at
Casselberry police officer Jtrfrn Card, striking him in the head,
according to police.
-Nelson Dale Scott, 49. Oviedo, petty theft, one year
probation. 10 weekends in Jail, and $230 fine. Scot! was con­
victed of stealing several tape measures with a total value of
$63 from Scotty's on State Road 436 in Altamonte Springs
-M ichael Wells, 23,15 Basewood Lane. Altamonte Springs,
disorderly conduct and battery on a police officer, five years
probation, a $1,000 public defender fee, and the $328 cost of
prosecution. Wells was convirtcd of punching a Seminole
County lherifl’i deputy in the mouth.
Also Tuesday, Kathleen Anne Irrgang, the 24-year-old
stepdaughter of Assistant Seminole County Medical Examiner
Dr. Sarah Irrgang, pleaded guilty to a charge of grand theft in
connection with the the!! earlier this year of 10 of her step­
mother'* rings valued at $2,240 Sentencing was deferred
pending completion of an investigation into Irrgang'x
background. She could receive up to 5 years in prison.

k ^ C h e c k usl

C hecking
w ith In te re s t

WEATHER
AREA HEADINGS (9 a.m .|: temperature: II; overnight
low: 73; Tuesday's high: 93; barometric pressure: 3009 and
rising, relative humidity. $3 percent; winds: South al i llipii.
THURSDAY'S TIDES: DAYTONA BEACH: highs. 9:12
a.m., 1:43 pin. lows, 1:33 a.m., 1:34 p in .;
PORT
CANAVERAL: highs, 1:04 a.m., 9:33 p.m.; lows, 1:44 a.m.,
1:43 p.m.; BAYPORT: highs, 2:23 a.m., 1:14 p m ; lows, 7:39
a.m., 9:39 p.m.
BOATING FORECAST; SL Augustine la Jupiter Inkl, (hit
50 Miles: Winds variable around 10 knots through Thursday.
Seas 3 feet or leu. A tew thunderstorms.
AREA FORECAST: Partly cloudy through Thursday. A
chance ol afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Highs in the
mid 90s. Lows In the mid 70s. Winds variable mostly southerly
near 10 mph. Rain probability 40 percent today and 30 percent
Thursday.
EXTENDED FORECAST: Partly cloudy and continued hoi
with scattered thunderstorms more numerous during alternoon and evening hours. Lows mostly in (he 70s except
around M along the southeastern beaches and keys. Ibghs
mostly In the 90s.

O u r In te r e s t E a r n in g C h e e k in g A c t u u n l re a lty p u ts yo u r Money t o w o r k !

*{&amp; a

FIRST FEDERAEH.OF SEM INOLE
S o u th -H a s t O r la n d o / O v l c d o / D c B a r y / L o n g w o o d
A p o p k a / W i n t e r P a r k / J’o r e a t C i t y / O r a n g e C i t y / S a n f o r d

•(

Robert, I j s Cruces, N.M.,
William. E lm ira. N.Y.,
Richard T.. Glendale. Calif.;
daughter. Phyllis C. Jolley,
Orlando and eight grand­
children.
Baldwin-Fairchild Funeral
Home, Altamonte Springs, is
in charge of arrangementa.

Mrs. Eunice Lallree. ol
Sanford; sons John and
Michael LaBree, Sanford;
two brothers. Bill, Sanford,
and Robert, of Rockford, III.;
six listers, Mrs. Betty
Klegxns,
Mrs. - Violet
McElreth and Mrs. Barbara
Hawkins, all of 1/mgwood;
Mrs. Gladys Rummer and
JOHNNY RAY KELLEY
Johnny Ray Kelley, 34, of Mrs. laila Hamilton, both of
356
Redwing
Way, Hoxie, Ark. and Mrs. Susie
Casselberry, died Sunday In Johnson ot Sanford.
Brisson Funeral Home-PA
Orlando. Born In Tifton, Ga..
la in charge ot arrangement!.
he moved lo Casselberry from
there In 1931. lie was a
HICHARD J. GRAHOWSKI
ceramic tile setter and a
Richard J. Grabuwski, 38,
fVotestant.
of 664 Alton Road, Winter
Survivors include hix wife, Springs, died Monday In
Diane; daughter, Becky; son,
Winter Park Born In New
Matthew, all of Casselberry;
York, he moved to Winter
mother, Euia Mae Jernigan,
Springs (ran l«ng Island,
Tifton, Ga.; brothers, Ronnie,
N.Y. in 1979. He was an air
Baton Rouge, Is ., Cory T.,
conditioning repairman.
Tifton, Ga.; sister, Jenny
S u r v iv o r s in c lu d e
Smith, Apopka.
daughters, Mrs. P atricia
Colonial Funeral Home,
Bush, Selden, N.Y.. Mrs.
Orlando, is in charge of
Kathle
Vlolano,
North
arrangements.
M aisapequa, N.Y.; son,
Richard, Winter Springs; six
JOHNLaBREE
John "Jack" IsB rec, 47, of grandchildren.
Carev
Rand
Chapel,
2940 Central Drive, Sanford,
died Monday night at
Seminole Memorial Hospital.
Born In Joplin, Mo., he had
lived in Sanford for the past
seven years. He was a veteran
ol the Korean War.
He U survived by hti wife,

OAKIAWN
MONUMENT CO
R f 4. Boa 344, S a n fo rd

Ph )33 434)
•
•

A ll f | p * \ Vorigme-nt*
C a m rte iy le tte r 1*9

• Brortft W ifk m

Orlando, is In charge of
arrangements.
JOHN DELBERT BENNETT
John Delbert Bennett, 90, of
711 Mellonville Ave., Sanford,
died Monday al Sanford
Convalescent Center. Born in
Kentucky he had lived in
Sanford for two years. He was
a retired railroad wurker and
was a member of the
Brotherhood of Railroad
Car Men. He was a Baptist.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Jean Henneti, &lt;■&lt; San­
ford; son, Tom Bennett,
Sanford; two sisters, Mrs.
Elizabeth Kuntz, Carson City.
Nev. and Mrs. Ida Shelton,
Oregon.
Brisson Funeral Ikme-PA
is in charge of arrangements.

Funorol Notices
L a IM C C , MM JO HN "J A C K ”
F v n rrs t
fo r M f John
"JAC K” L A f lr f *
4). Of 3440

C-pfutfAl Dnvtr S«nlord; *N&gt; died
Monday nivQiitt a! Scml nolo
M o m o r iA l M o tp ita l, w ill bo At 10

A m F rid a y at B fi.to *. * u n t r * l
H o m o w ltfc P n l o r
E
A
M o u K h o r offtOAt.rvg B u rial in
E ver green C o m tlo ry
Bf n o n
Fvjnof al Homer PA .n (Bargo

Hunt Monument Co.

Display Yard
Hwy. 1 M I -P e rn Park
Ph. 239-9H I
Gena Hunt. Owner
•renie, Marti* iO ranlte.

�Evening Herald. S«n(ord, FI.

Wednesday. July W. IF II—1A

n e t li d I’ h e io i O r J * » . C A tw Ib e rry

SOLD* O N THE SALVATION ARMY

NATION
IN BRIEF
Highway Patrol Flies
'Shotgun' For Sprayers

from their bedroom window as the Infant,
Jennifer Deul, worked open the screen door
and edged tier way toward the end of the
balcony.
When Jennifer attem pted to crawl
through the slats, Deal ran across the
parking lot and rang the door buzzer of the
apartment, hoping to woke someone inside.
Alter five minutes he gave up
"When both feet went through the
sparing, I just went to the corner and
waited," he said. "There wasn't a thing I
could do.

I jOS (IATOS, Calif. lU P li - Texas Inspecters vowed to halt cars ami trucks at
the border today to check California
produce for Mediterranean fruit fly larvae
— die target of aenal spraying in the Santa
Clara Valley now aided by a police
helicopter to protect against snipers.
A California Highway Patrol helicopter
was assigned Monday to fly "shotgun" for
the civilian spraying choppers after
someone apparently fired at one of the
aircraft during a flight over Cupertino
Saturday,
Authorities found what appeared to be a
bullet hole in the craft on Sunday. No one
was injured and the aircraft was not badly
damaged.
Pilots reported during their Monday
predawn flights they saw lights pointed at
them and heard "popping noises" while
spraying Palo Alto. None of the helicopters
was hit and investigators speculated the
noises may have come from an air rifle.

Fight ‘Nip And Tuck'
WASHINGTON lU P I) - President
Reagan ts going down to the wire In a
Capitol Hill horse race for votes, try ing to
persuade members of Congress to support
his tax-cut plan over the alternative being
pushed by Democrats.
Reagan, who met Tuesday with 31
congressmen and telephoned scores of
others, cleared his calendar to provide time
for additional lobbying in the final count­
down to today's expected House vote.
House Speaker Thomas O'Neill has
predicted narrow passage ol the
Democrats' 21-month, IS percent tax-cut
plan. Rut the White House said supper! was
mounting for Heagan's 33-month, 2S per­
cent across-the-board package.
In a telephone interview with radio
station KTBB In Tyler, Texas, the home
distrirt of uncommitted Rep. Ralph Hall,
[VTeias, Reagan termed the lax fight the
“toughest battle" he has encountered on
Capitol Hill.
"This is nip and tuck," Reagan said. "I
don’t think anyone can predict" tM out­
come.

"She bounced her rear end off the second
floor railing bar and did a little flop into my
arms. I Just guided her to the ground. She
was crying, but she wasn't hurl. All she
needed was a diaper change,” he said.

TAKE A F L O R ID A

ORANGEJUICE
BREAK

Twtcgttt* Prints .« Get m e .i'A set ot pr-nts w in every roll ol
color or black end nn&lt;te print film developed and primed

ECKE

T O D A Y A N D E V ER YD A Y

Twtcd ttie Film .... Get UO rout ol print film lor Ihe puce ot one
Kodacoior or black and while when you have your Mm proceswd
at Eckerd s TODAY AND EVERYDAY
Twice ttie Guarantee . Buy only the p rihli you want No
hetsie-even a (he gool was in the picture taking

m

SAN DIEGO i UP11 — The captain of the
USS Ranger and 27 of his men face
disciplinary actions in the death of a sailor
ahn collapsed during punishment
calisthenics that followed a brig diet nt
bread and water.
Airman Recruit Paul E. Trerice, 21,
Algonac, Mich., collapsed aboard the Navy
carrier and died of heat stroke April !&lt; In
Subic Bay, Philippines. He had served
three ilays of a 30-day sentence in the ship's
brig for sleeping on duty and leaving live
ship twice without permission.
An autopsy alsu showed he may leave
been beaten. Trerice** parents, who
brought a M l million wrongful death suit
against the Navy, approved the Navy’s
actions Tuesday,
"It's about lime," said Irene Trerice. "I
finally feel we may are some Justice for my
son."
The Navy ordered disciplinary
proceedings (or three officers and 23
enlisted men, four of them charged with
manslaughter in Trerice’* death.

Personna
Double Edge

a ll f a b r ic b le » ic h

A IM o r
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ENEMA

Wedding O f Century?
NEW YORK ( UP! I - New York's public
television station oflered viewers an
alternative to the "wedding of the century"
— the movie, “ Bride of Frankenstein "
Channel 13, unable to offer a live
broadcast of the marriage of Prince
Charles and laidy Diana Spencer,
presented "The Wedding of the Century but
not the One You Think" — ilk* 1933 movie
film starring Elsa 1-inchestrr and Boris
Karloff.

CLOROX2

CAMS

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or TAB

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TERRY ar
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ROMPERS

M YLANTA
L IQ U ID

Dec/s/on Upheld
PHOENIX, Anz. (U PI| - An appeals
court decision written by Supreme Court
nominee Judge Sandra O'Connor upholds
workman's compensation benefits for a
reputed Mafia figure doing time in Jail.
The three-judge Arizona Court of
Appeals, in a unanimous decision Tuesday
writtenby Mrs. O’Connor, said Charles
"Balts" Battaglia's incarceration on a
mail-fraud charge after his Injury' did not
prevent him from receiving benefits
"The aw ard (of workmen's com­
pensation benefits) has compensated the
employee for his tosses attributable to his
industrial Injury rather than for any loss
attributable to his incarceration,'' the
Appeals Court said.

CLOROX
m' * - *. &lt;m

• ** OUMCI

Calif lU PIl - Stanford's
third heart-lung transplant patltnt this
year, Karen Wilson, 28, was reported in
critical condition today after undergoing a
12-hour operation.
A team of three doctors performed the
surgery on the Mill Valley woman Tuesday.
She then was removed to the Stanford
Hospital's intensive-care unit
"This u my only chance," she said before
the surgery Another heart-lime transplant
patient kept her company in the tense hours
right before the operation.
"It's what I wanted," Miss Wilson said.

You're going to like Eckerd's
fam ous Photo
Offer.
\

Navy Justice

Patient Critical
STANFORD,

S a lv a tio n A rm y A d v iso ry H o a rd m e m b e r, (rig h t
photo) p re s e n ts a c h e r k fo r $1,500 d o n a te d by
S chilke E n te r p r is e ! fo r th e lo c a l fund driv e d u rin g
W ed n esd ay n ig h t's b a n q u e t. M rs. S m ith not only
sold Ihe m o st tic k e ts I I I of th e 157 sold fo r th e
event U n it w a s a u c tio n e d o ff to m e n d su ck s. H oard
C h a irm a n C lyde l ong trig liD is h e a d in g Ihe fund
ra is in g d riv e , w hich c o n tin u e s th ro u g h A ugust.

D r. V in cent K u b rrts M eals u k iss fro m ( i r r a l d i n r
W eldon H eft |ilio to i a fte r o u tb id d in g h e r fo r Iter
h u sb a n d K a r l's s e r v ic e s in th e s la v e a u c tio n " fn
b en e fit th e S a lv a tio n A rm y . H u b e rts b id 1500.
W eldon a n d H u b e rts ' w ife S h eila look on. T h ro u g h
th e e ffo rts of ti e n r g e S tiffey , a u c tio n e e r, m e m h e rs of th e S a lv a tio n A rm y ad v iso ry b o a rd
b ro u g h t in $1,191 a t a u c tio n . C h a rlo tte S m ith ,

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SCHAUMBURG, 111. &lt;UH&gt; - Tom Deal
says he’s always been a better pitcher than
a catcher but he made no m o r s in catching
a 10-monlh-bsby that fell from a third-floor
balcony.
"It was the most nervous catch I've ever
made," Deal said. "I've always been told
I'm a better thrower than 1 am a catcher.
The Saturday before 1 dropped a fly ball (In
a softball game) over my head that cost us
five runs."
Deal and his wife, Lorri, were awakened
by a baby crying that morning and watched

WASHINGTON (UPI) - CIA Director
William Casey, apparently gaining ground
In the fight to keep his Job, says he is ready
to (act a Senate committee and answer
questions about past business dealings and
hu stewardship of the CIA.
"They haven't laid a glove on him," Sen.
IJoyd Bentsen, D-Tesas, said Tuesday
after he and other Senate Intelligence
Committee members were presented the
findings of a staff investigation of Casey.
“I have yet to hear any credible evidence
that would lead me to believe Mr. Casey
should resign," Bensten said.

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Evening Herald
iu s p j

Bring In the clowns: A proclamation by
longwood Mayor John Hepp designating August
, 1*7as National Clown Week in the d ty brought on
laughter from the audience at Monday night's
commission meeting.

4 ii n o t

300 N. FRENCH AYE., SANFORD, FLA, 37771
A m Code 335-322-261 I or 831-9993

"We don't have a meeting that week," he
hastily added, lest they think the commissioners
were the 'clowns’ to whom he was referring.

W ednesday, July 29, 1981—4A
Wayne D Doyle, Publisher
Thomas Giordano. Managing Editor
Robert Lovenbury, Advertising and Circulation Director
Home Delivery: Week, 1100; Month, *4.25; 6 Months, *2400;
Year. *45.00. By Mai): Week, *1.25; Month, IS S ; 6 Months.
*30.00; Year. *57 00.

RY JANE CASSELBERRY

Life-Support
Equipment Needed
There's a certain danger in the south end of
Seminole County which county commissioners
can help correct quite easily. As a m atter of fact
it’ll take only $17,000 to $20,000 to do it.
The danger is trying to transport seriously ill or
injured patients from those now congested areas
west of lnlcrstatc-4, especially during peak traffic
hours, to nearby medical facilities with an
inadequately equipped ambulance.
Herndon Ambulance Service, which currently
serves Seminole County and receives an annual
subsidy of $107,000, has three ambulances
operating fulltime. One is in Sanford, one in
Casselberry and the other at Florida HospitalAltamonte.
both the Sanford and Casselberry ambulances
are fully equipped with the latest in life-support
equipment. They have devices which are attached
to the patient being transported to a hospital
which monitor vital signs and transmit that
information to (he hospital while the ambulance is
en route. Hie ambulance operating out of Florida
Hospital Altamonte has no such equipment.
The life-support equipment and datatransmitting devices are vital because if the
patient's condition worsens while en route to the
hospital, ambulance attendants can be instructed
by doctors on the proper procedure to keep the
patient alive.
Gary Kaiser, Seminole County's public safety
director, says it’s taking ambulances much longer
to gel to patients in those congested areas west of
Interstatc-4 and just as long to transport them to
nearby hospitals because &lt;&gt;l the increased growth
and heavier traffic.
Herndon Ambulance S ervice's general
manager, Herbert Perry, said the increased
subsidy sought from the county will go to equip
that third down-county ambulance with the
modern devices.
The $17,000 to $20,000 it would take to do that is
already budgeted hv the countv for fiscal 1981-82
This is where the county commissioners come
in. They can leave the money for that equipment
in the budget. We think it’s a good idea.

Italian Example
A tale of two cities:
In Home on May 13, a Turkish terrorist named
Melimct AH Agcashot Pope John Paul II and two
bystanders in St. Peter’s Square. The other day,
at the end of a trial that look only two days to lay
out the undisputed facts, he was convicted and
sentenced to life imprisonment.
Flapsed time: two months and todays.
In Washington on March 30, Jam es W, Hin­
ckley, Jr. was arrested for shooting President
Keagnn and three others as they left a Washington
hotel. The government was given 90 days to
conduct psychiatric examinations of Mr. Hin­
ckley, and has since requested and received an
extension of time for the tests. Meanwhile a
federal grand jury looking at the evidence in the
case has returned no indictment, and no day has
been set for a trial.
Elapsed time: nearly four months with the
clock still running.
Tlie Italian government is no model o( ef­
ficiency, but it knows how to handle a criminal
case.

Recent accidents and near misses on State
Road 434 in l/mgwood have caused the dty
commission to request d ty police to crack down
on speeders and motorists running red lights.
City Commissioner June lorm ann also wants
the Department of Transportation to do a
feasibility study on whether the 45 rnph speed
limit should be lowered to 35 niph as it is in the
area of t/ingwnod Village. One of the problems,
it was pointed out, Is that heavy trucks, such as

ready-mlx concrete trucks, take a half block to
stop at 45 mph and thus go sailing on through red
lights.
Applications from two groups seeking to build
hospitals in the Longwood area and Florida
Hospjtal-Allamonte which wants additional beds
for cancer care, are being reviewed by' the
Health Sy stems Agency of East Central Florida.
The Seminole County HSA board will consider
the applications on Sept. 14 when it meets at the
county’s Agricultural-Center auditorium. The
HSA-Regional Project Review Committee will
meet and a public hearing will be held on Sept. 17
al the Florida Hospital Association Conference
Room on Highland at Park lak e In Orlando.
The HSA-ECF will decide on its final recom­
mendation on Sept. 24 before forwarding all
three applications to the state Department of
Health and Rehabilitation for the final decision

The Young Republicans and Young Democrats
will be butting heads again, but this time it will
be on the playing field. The University of Central
Florida alhlellc field will be the site of Ihe First
Annual Young Republican-Young Democrat All
Star Sports Competition and Field Day on
August 15.
Believed to be the first of its kind in the area, it
will feature the Central Florida YRs vs. the
Orange County YDs in softball, flag football,
volleyball and an obstacle course. And in sports
as In politics, both groups will attempt to "drag
each other through the mud” with a tug-of-war
contest.
The event, which Is open to the public will be
held between 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. Slate and local
public officials have been Invited and there will
be refreshments on hand.

JEFFREY HART

BUSINESS WORLD

Sports
And
College

A Way
Out For
S&amp;Ls?
Ily MARY TOBIN
DPI Business Writer
NEW YORK ill PI | — Savings and loan
associations now have permission to hedge
virtually all ot their assets in financial futures
markets and that could help the troubled
industry. But the new rule will do nothing to
erase current losses and has the potential at
adding to the S&amp;L's woes.
Richard P ratt, head ot the Federal Hume
I/ian Bank Board, told Congress last week
mure than 363 ot the nation's 4,542 savings and
loan institutions are on the regulatory
agency's troubled list.
The S&amp;L's losses stern from their portfolios
of long-term, low-interest mortgage loans —
some still hold mortgages at 6 percent —
while they are being forced to pay record
interest on new money, such as the siimonth
money market certificates.
But Pratt believes Ihey can minimize future
losses by (lodging and he said the industry
might be profitable today if the new rule had
been In effect a few years earlier,
"Certainly over time as thrift institutions
become accustomed to commodity markets it
should limit their interest rate risk," Hobert
Hatcher, senior vice president of the New
York Commodity Exchange, said. "It will
tie Ip them today lo deal with the future."
Indeed the potential for profitability Is
there but so Is the risk of new losses.
Under the new regulations, when thrift
institutions must pay I4l» percent interest on
*500,00(1 in six-month CDs, for example, they
can take a short position for an equal amount
in Uiree-inonth Treasury bill futures — that
1s, sell contracts hoping to buy them back at a
lower price, tl interest rates rise the increase
in (heir interest costs would be offset by a
profit in the futures contracts.
However, if interest rales fall, any gains
they would realize from the drop in their costs
would be offset by losses on their futures
positions.
In an effort to inhibit speculation, live
Kill JIB rules prohibit S&amp;L's front Liking long
positions In futures, except in certain rases
connected with mortgage banking activity.
It allows only the traditional hedge vehicle
ot short positions.
"The restrictions force the S&amp;la to set up a
plan (or operation In futures with the intent ot
reducing Interest rate risk," Hatcher said.
Susan Kelsey, a stall member of (lie
FHIJ1B, admitted ilwre Is no effective way to
prohibit speculation. "We can pronounce
•thou shall not speculate' but there is no way
to prevent it," she said.
S&amp;L's arc expected to be slow in taking
advantage ot their new Ireedom and llalcher
said while the Contex has had "numerous
Inquiries," he didn’t expect a buildup ot
business right away.
James Sinclair, head at a commodities
trading tirm and a Convex member, said,
however, "there is an army of commodity
salesmen headin« out lo get some of this
business. Some thrifts undoubtedly will suc­
cumb lo sales pitches and hedge al precisely
the wrong time."
13w wrong time would be to sell futures
when contract prices are at or near a low,
thereby locking in their historically high cost
of money.
Sinclair noted that S&amp;L's “ don't have the
expertise or background in futures to make a
proper decision and they'll be dependent on
commodities traders, many of whom have
very little experience 4n the economics of
intern! rales "

W hat

A F o u n d a tio n !

D O N GRAFF

Some Political Dead Ends
The riots in Britain's racially and
economically troubled cities have bren
making the headlines, but it could be that the
rrul news out of the island these days is being
made elsewhere.
Or so history, with all Die advantages of
hindsight, may see it.

Viewed with Justified alarm In both labor
and Conservative headquarters, for what
their success may portend is a major reor­
dering of the British political balance com­
parable lo labor’s displacement ot the
liberal Party early In the 20th century. If so,
it would mean that a possibly decisive portion
of the British public is buying the Social
"Elsewhere" at the moment is an obscure
Democratic message of moderation to the
conslttutcncy in the north of England where a
detriment of the ideologues of left and right.
by-election to fill a vacant parliamentary seat
All very Interesting, you say. That may be
hasbeenw onbylhc toibor Party candidate.
what's new with the British, but what par­
To absolutely no one’s surprise since the
ticular significance does it have for
district, Warrington, is a labor stronghold.
Americans?
But he won by only a slim percentage of the
Possibly a great deal, as an instructive
total vote over the candidate ot the Social example. American politics are not immune
Democratic Party, who had been expected to to polarization. In fact, according to some in­
do well but nowhere near as well as he ac­ terpretations of recent trends, we may be in
tually did.
the process ot polarizing right now.
Thai was a surprise, and therein is the
At least some on the New Right appear to
news.
tvope that we are. That is the message lathe
This was the first election contested by the opposition to the nomination of Sandra Day
Social Democrats, a party formed only six O'Connor to the Supreme Court, evidence of
months earlier by four dissident labor Party the Reagan adm inistration’s pragm atic
leaders. That move formalized a split Dial willingness to accommodate a variety of
had been widening in labor ranks (or years interests and attitudes that has brought some
as left-wing ideologues with the support of of its single-Interest zealots out fighting.
militant trade unionists took control of the They don’t want a politics of accommodation
party machinery, displacing the pragmatic- and moderation, the practice of which In the
political professionals.
long run has been the strength of the major
Meanwhile, the Conservative Party has American parties.
taken a hard right turn under Prime Minister
The disadvantage in reaching a political
Margaret Tliatctier, with the result that
pole Is that once there, there’s really nowhere
British politics are polarized between ex­
else to go. And the distance between poles has
tremes of left and right as they have not been
become too great for effective com­
in modem times.
munication.
The Social Democrats are seeking to pre­
empt the vacated center, presenting them­
The politics of polarization can easily
selves as a moderate and practical alter­ become that of political dead ends, as British
native to the two extremes. Although losers voters may be about to demonstrate to their
their first time out in a local election, they are major pariiea.
now being viewed as potential winners on a
That la not saying that precisely the same
national scale as a consequence of having thing could happen hert. But a dead end is a
come to close.
dead end, British or American.

i
Some college professors are arid sports
fans, but most are not; most, indeed, seem to
regard athletics as the enemy of teaming, as
the enemy of intelligence.
T?» former prcsldenl of Dartmouth, John
G. Keqieny, even professed to find a
"negative co rrelatio n " between college
sports and academic achievement.
All this would have come as quite a surprise
to Homer and Virgil, Platg and Aristotle, all
of whom had very definite ideas about the
relationship of athletics to intellect and lo a
full humanity.
Most of our major colleges and universities
today have large and expensive in- !
tercollegiate athletic programs. What they do '■
not have is an educational rationale (or them
A certain de-legltlmation of college athletics •
is taking place, wholly mistaken in my view. •
First of all, the experience of athletics ;
differs greatly from most other campus ;
pursuits. Athletics possess a sense of finality. ;
The clock runs out. The last inning Is played. I
The last point is scored.
And, at that point, you have either won or
lost. The thing is over.
That experience is very different from ihe •
lecture-room experience, where more can
always be said and further work done, it
differs from the long conversation of a college
seminar, where the conversation can go on in ;
the student's mind long after class. In j
athletics, you have to deal with endings, and
with definite success and failure, Just as you |
must In life.
Intellectual activity requires discipline and )
occasionally courage, but athletics place a j
high premium on those qualities. In athletics
there comes a point where you have to., . do It |
- or else fail. Again, that is a useful
educational experience.
But, even if that be admitted, why do we
need intercollegiate sports, those expensive
programs’
Of course it is true that some institutions
place an inordinate stress on sports, on
television contracts and state politics and all
the rest of it. Corruption.
Bui It Is also educationally useful for a
college sludenl to see a sport play ed very well «
by students "Uke him." The same would be ?
true of ballet, chess or painting.
Examples near at hand of superior achievement increase one's sense of what is
possible. Those figures on the television
screen are remote and larger than life, but if jl
the quarterback lives down the hall and you
see the baseball captain at dinner, that is
something else again.
R seems to me that we in America are)*
entering upon a period in which we will re- !*
think the liberal arts education.
And, as we do that, if we attend to the!;
people who thought up the liberal arts
education in the first place — Homer, Virgil, -j
Plato and Aristotle — we will understand that ‘j
sports have a central place in It.
__
----------------------------------------------------d

PLEASE WRITE
L rilrri to the editor are welcomed lor
publication. All Utters must be signed,
with a mailing address and, II possible, a
trlrphonr number so the Identity of ihe
writer may be verified. The Evening
Herald will reaped Ihe wishes ol writen
who do not want their names In print The
Evening Herald also reserves the right lo
edit letters lo eliminate Ubtl or to conform
to spare requirement*.

JACK ANDERSON

BERRYS WORLD

All That Glitters May Not Be Gold

Mt

3 « 4 ^ _

/

"You're from — ah — California, I lake If!?"

WASHINGTON - Shockingly, some ol the
gold in the nation's bank vaults may not be as
pure as it is certified lo be.
Even a trifle of impurity would reduce the
value of o 1,000-ounce gold bar by thousands
of dollars. If it turns out that there has been
widespread dilution of the gold content, it
would rock the world'a monetary system.
My associates Indy Badhwar and Jack
Mitchell have teamed that gold from at least
one bank ta s allegedly tested out below
standard.
What la even more disturbing, this bank —
the Kliode Island Hospital Trust National
Rank — is a big dealer In precious metals. Its
impure supply apparently came from one of
the giants in ihe world of gold mining and
refining — Engelhard Industries of New
Jersey.
There la no evidence of foul play. Both the
Rhode Island bank and Engelhard Industries
appear to be vkttm a of faulty testing
methods.

•w. «»*•#» es

Inside the Reagan administration, top
officials are agitating (or a return to the gold
standard. A congressional Gold Commission
will report in October on Ihe precious metal's
effect on our money system.
So the allegation that gold bullion from the
Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank
didn't measure up to the 99.9 percent purity
standard will send shock waves throughout
Ihe world of gold mining and refining.
The bank, using industry methods, had
certified Ihe ingots as pure gold. Ytt this was
disputed by a new testing machine, called the
lletra machine, which ihowed some
adulteration.
For verification, the ingots were sent to
independent assayers — Photometries, Inc.,
and Jarrell-Ash. Both confirmed the startling
findings; they reported traces of silver,
nitrate, copper, zinc, iron and other elements.
Some gold b an varied from Ihe certified
purity standard by .06 percent to .8 percent
One ingot was also shipped to England to be

Yet they are the victims ol a system of their
own nuking. For gold trading and testing is
controlled by a tight, little circle of pinstriped
bankers. The Investigation by my reporters
indicates that industry test standards are
arbitrary and archaic.
Most of the gold trading on the New York
Commodities Exchange is controlled by only
six banks. Incredibly, Ihe industry empowers
only three assayers to be official testers, and
they work at the pleasure of the corporations
whose gold they are testing.
Because of this inadequate quality control,
there Is no telling whether defective gold bars
have escaped detection. But the Implications
are staggering.
The traffic in gold bullion and gold futures
has been bullish. Since 1975, when Anvericons
were permitted In own gold again, billions
worth of gold have changed hands. Once in
1910, the price passed *100 a ounce — an In­
credible 8 times higher than the $35 an ounce
of lest than a decade ago.

V

A

* tm og

melted down by Her Majesty's assay office.^
This most prestigious of tests confirmed that;the ingot did not contain the purity that was*"
represented.
®
Bank executive Carl Peterson refused
request tor an interview, but Englehard &lt;
president Joe Feldstein said he
"shocked" at the test results. “We can mi
mistakes in other areas," he said, “but in tl
case, we have to be purer than Caesa
wife." He promised a thorough lnvesitgatii
Other sources have raised the frighten
possibility that the loose testing itandai
may permit (he Malta to wash its Ulei
profits in adulterated gold.
It la also possible, of course, that the belt
standard ingots a r t rare exceptions. But
testing procedures a rt so lax that the phr.
"good as gold" may lose in meaning.
Footnote: lo future columns, we'll exam
Ihe controversy over the gold industr
testing methods.

�PEOPLE
IN BRIEF
Pierre Has Plans,
But Not Reconciliation
Canada's Pi -rre Trudeau wants to spend more lime
with his children, which "fuels rumors” he is "about to
resign'' as prime minister, according to People
magazine. The magazine says Trudeau's estranged
wife, Maggie, is accompanying him to London this
week and they’ll take turns looking after their three
children —while he attends the royal wedding and she
promotes a new book. A reconciliation is not in the
cards, however.
According to People, Mrs. Trudeau, 32, is currently
living with a wealthy lawyer-businessman, James
Johnson, two blocks from the prime minister's Ottawa
mansion.
"Maggie is typically open about the arrangement,"
the magarine said. "When asked whether news reports
of the live-in liaison would bother her, she said. Well,
it's true."

lik e the mystery of the
Mona l i s a 's appeal, the
magic ol a winning smile is an
elusive blend of facial har­
mony. Cyrus J . Amato,
D.D.S., a m axillofacial
surgeon in Caldwell, N.J., has
observed that "a beautiful
smile is much more than a
perfect set ol teeth. It Is the
aesthetic balance of four main
points in facial composition —
the two cheek bones, the tip of
the nose and the chin."
Based on Dr. Amato's
criteria, his selection of the 10
most beautiful smiles in the
world are that of: Mikhail
Baryshnikov. Sophia Liren.

Prince O f Whales?
Prince Charles and lady Diana weren't even invited
but a wedding reception was held lor the royal couple
last weekend in Peekskill, N Y. Some SO people in
format attire gathered for tea and hohiemade wedding
cake in the backyard of Eric Greenberg, a senior at
Hendrick Hudson High School. Greenberg, 17, says his
invitations brought apologies from the offices of
Secretary of Stale Alexander Haig and Vice President
George Bush, and Nacy Iteagan wrote to say she was
going to the real thing Greenberg said the invitations
were redone at the last minute when it was found they
referred to the "Prince of Whales" instead of Wales.

Royal Kin
Interest in Britain's royal wedding swept into
Communist East Europe Monday. Poland’s official
news agency reported a professor at the University of
Poznan lias proved Britain's Prince Charles is a direct
descendant of the Polish King Casimir IV, who died in
1492. Oneof Casmir's seven daughters, Sophy, married
Frederick of Brandenburg, and one of their direct
descendants was Britain's King Geroge I, the agencyreported. "In fact," it said “all European kings still
living" arc related to King Casimir.

Princess Geronim o
Actress Came Fisher, who reigns over the rocketships as I*rincess I.eia in the "Star Wars” films, took to
the sky Sunday with a slower form of transportation —
parachute. Miss Fisher, 14, daughter of entertainer
Debbie Reynolds and singer Eddie F isher, made her
first parachute Jump at the California City Parachute
School in die Mojave Desert about 100 miles north of
L&gt;s Angeles. Hrr landing form was a little rough, but
she walked away unhurt Her reaction: "Wow!"

Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

The 10 Most Beautiful
Smiles In The World...

MIKHAIL
H A H Y S IIM K O V

M a jo rs

M ay

Ed And M arie lte?

It's A Hollywood-Style Friendship

Pope John-Paul, Luciano
P avarotti, Lady
Diana
Spencer,
P ierre
Elliot
Trudeau, P au l Newman,
Bonald Iteagan, Beverly Sills
and Tom Seaver.
"In each of their faces, the
‘total g e sta lt' is what
produces the beauty and
warmth of the smile," says
Dr. Amato,
During his many years In
private practice and as an
essential member of hospital
surgical teams. Dr. Amato
has given hundreds C people
beautiful smiles. Often, the
patients who have come to
him have spent much of their
lives holding hack smiles fir
fear that they would reveal
unattractive teeth, Jaw or
gum abnormallies.
A pioneer In this surgical
specialty. Dr. Amato is a
leader of the revolutionary'
'Jaw-splitting' techniques of
acclaimed Swiss surgeon l)r
Hugo Obwegeser. Amato's
wife, Lola, is a professional
model whose smite has
brightened many
com ­
mercials, including those for
toothpaste.

H a v e

A

Wednesday, July IS, t fs l—; A

H it

NEW YORK tU Pli - As "The Fall Guy" for ABC, Ix t
Majors is a far cry from the steel-sinewed "Six Million Dollar
Man" of old He can't even win a fist fight in this one, which
gives his world-weary Hollywood stuntman character the suet
of appeal that just might cause a Nielsen stampede this fall.
Certainly Douglas Barr, his eager young costar, is betting in
a win, because if Majors wins, so does Barr, and with two
strikeouts in series television he cuukl use a hit.
"The affiliates like It and the sponsors are pleased with it so I
think we've got a good shot," Barr said last week. "The big
difference is for the first time, Majors is going to play comedy,
and he's damned good at It. 1 think It's going to do great things
for him."
If Majors' role in Ihe two-hour pilot cm which the primetime
series will be based isn't exarlly comedy of Marx Brothers
persuasion, it is at irast as funny as anything ever affected by
Burt Reynolds, who wuuld (cel right al home in the role.
Majors pertrays a Hollywood stuntman whose working
hours aren't exactly constant. In order to pay the rent, he
therefore moonlights as a bounty hunter, tracking down bailjumpers with the dubious aid of his klutzy young tagalong
cousin.
Barr, of course, is cousin llowte, and his open-faced Jack
Armstrong type is a perfect counterpoint to Majors' craggy
veteran of car crash and hrroic leap, both of which play
lieavily in the pilot.
For Barr, "The F all Guy" Is a third-llme-charin proposition
He had been working as a model when lie made his series
debut in a stillborn pilot based on die movie version of "SemiTough."

By DICK KLEINER
HOI J,W O O D — Actors have a will-o-the-w isp quality,
Their work forces them u&gt; make friends quickly when they
work closely, even intimately, lor the duration of a show.
Then they each go their separate ways and may not work
together again for decades,
That was how it was for co-stars Ed Asner and Mariette
Hartley, who were shooting a movie called ‘‘O'Hara's
Wife." They play a married couple who are devoted and
loving The wife dies, and she comes back In spirit, to
oversee things with her husband and their children i the
daughter is being played by Jodie Foster).
Asner and M issllartley are old friends. Bjck in the 1950s,
they worked together in Stratford, Conn,, in a
Shakespearean production. In the Intervening years they
have seen each other a few times, at various [unctions, bul
haven't worked, together since that Stratford experience
"1 was only 16 then," Mariette says, as they relaxed in a
trailer between set-ups.
Asner looks at her strangely and then. In his best Lou
Grant voice, he barks, "You (old me you were 18 "
"No. I was only 16," she says
Whatever her age, they got along famously at the lime,
and they are enjoying working together on Hits project.
Their old friendship permitted them to be nice to each
other and catty about other people — mutual friends or.
perhaps more properly, mutual enemies
Marielte talked about one actor she called "Henl-o-Jaw."
They mentioned another big name, an actress, and they
agreed she was terrible until she had had her third martini
— and from then on she was a delight to be with.
William Bartman, the director, came in. Tins is his first
feature film. When he wrote the script — based mostly on
his own family, their relationships and experiences — he
had Asner in mind all along to play (tie lead,
He finally got the script to Asner by accident, when they
were both on a plane going from Lis Angeles In Hartford
i Bartman to attend a Trinity College reunion, Asner to visit
his In-lawsl. A mutual friend on the plane asked Asner to
accept Hartman's script.
"Ed was so excited about it when he read it," Bartman
says, "that he called me In the middle of the night to tell
me,"
"Not true," says Asner. "I waited until morning."
Mariette complains to Bartman that he lias made lier too
old in the picture.
"Do you have to make me 45?" she says " I’m only 41."
"You have to t&gt;e 45," Bartman says "You have a 20-yearold son, and you didn't have a child until you'd finished
college ami been a teacher for a lew years "
Marirlle also complains about her wardrobe. In most of
tlie picture, she is a spirit and she thinks it would be logical
for her lo be wearing, tliroughoul her spiritual portion of tfie
film, what she was wearing when she died

m u : »V»*.y

L tl A sner and M a r ie lte H artley c o -s ta r in
O 'H a ra 's W ile.” T hey p lay a d e v o te d
m a r rie d co uple. After th e w ife d ie s, h e r sp irit
re tu rn s to o v e rs e e th in g s a ro u n d Ihe h o u se
w ith h e r h u sb a n d and c h ild re n .
"I want something funky,” she says, “to it would be fun
— in ihe jogging scene, it would be fun if 1 was wearing
something incongruous "
Hut she says Die director i Hartman) ami producers
decided tliat she would wear wluit is appropriate in each
scene In the scene they arc currently shooting (Ed
cleaning out the house after her death, with her helping) she
has overalls and a blue shirt
It is a sore spot w ith Iter, and site and Hartman snipe al
each oilier about it - in a friendly way, bul with a note of
seriousness underneath the smites ami banter.
Ed and Mariette Joke, loo F.d teases her about her lack of
lxivmi ishe joins in with some self-deprecating jokes, as
well i, and she shoots back with v&gt;mc remarks about his
lack of hair.
Then it's time lo go back lo work. For as long as
"O'Hara's Wife" is shooting, Ed ami Marielte will be veryclose friends.
Then, as atways happens In lids odd business, they will go
their own ways

T H £

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71.11 55.88

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Our Rog
17 88 19 88

2-ton H y d ra u lic J a c k

H.D. Muffler In s ta lle d

Bottle tack with handle

Zinc-coated, fits many U.S
cars, light trucks Save

4-ton J a c k .......... 10.88

H 6 0 I4 /H 6 0 S 3 H i-lo w le a rn

All Tiros Plus FET Each

Front brakes only For
many U.S cars Savings!

1 0 . 0 0

It 88

H 4 S 8 I/H 4 6 3 6 R e cta n g u la r

ll/fttlS leUeUMf Sxeet,

Olio Brake Special

Top or slcie terminals, fit
many U.S. cars. It trucks.

&amp; ; p* °

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O u tR o o

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60-m onth B attery

‘KM* S p ecial — Fiberglass Belted
W hitew all Radails

Our Reg. 45.88 — P155-80R13

L -J

A M FM 8-tr. O r C assette S toreo

g | | _ _ _ J JP

AM f M cassette or 8-track player
Fits many cars. Save more today

Front Cartridges Only

Sale Price

Sale Price

Front-end Alignment,

5 0 -w a tt 3 -w a y Stereo S p e a k e rs

For Many U.S. Cars

5 V V d o o r or 6x9 ' ie a r - d e c k
speakers Quality and low price

For
MacPherson ‘ C a rtrid g e s H.D. Shocks Installed
S e rvice fo r m a n y
Heavy-duty shocks tor
Toyotas. Dotsons. VW s
many U S cars Save.

P i

Plus F.E.T. 1.52 Each
M ounting In clu d e d — No Ttade-ln Roqulrod

INSTALLATION
AVAILABLE

K mart LIMITED
WARRANTY
l y i l i d u u b it ily w u i i n t i l w t m i
• p p ln tj o « i p r e p t ily p i r p u t d
t u t f i x t a t K m t i t ' t o b lip h o n
d u l l b* itm ittd u l i l y la u lu n d
o l I h t p u id H w p i R t ___________

[Faucets
of Included!
j
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9 x 1 2 V in y l Rug
D u rab le v in y l In a
v a rie ty of p a tte r n s .
No a d h e s iv e n e e d e d .
16x22
Kitchen Faucet

8 ' or 6" center
With S p ra y ... 2*.W
Birch Veneer
Composition

Sale Price

6 ' S to p L a d d e r
T ype II, a lu m in u m .
D uty ra tin g ZOO lb s.

White or Custom
Tint Colors
At No Extra Cost

1-door, 2-drawer
Bathroom Vanity

Birch voneor com­
position with walnut
finish 19x25” cultured
marbie top

Y ou r C h o ic e
~

Gol
Latex House Paint Or House A Trim Gloss Latex
One coat covers similar color on wood, stucco or
masonry Fade- and blister-resistant 8-yr durability

1 6 ' E x to n s io n L a d d e r

«

A lu m in u m T y p e III.
225 lbs. d u ty r a tin g .

C o lo rV * iP
C h o ic e
_
. _ O ur Re
9 , 4 4 13.97
Soft Toilet Seat

4” center sets

Podded vinyl

Wtth Pop-up, 17.M

Bathroom Fauoet

3
Your
Choice

11-oz * rubber or latex
c a u lk in g . M etal
caulking gun
'lia« art
Quo Wft All C aulking C a rtrid g e ! _

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M A T ES
lo ve

■

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IHO

Ty l e n o l :
•

Aim* Toothpaste
Fluoride protecHon. mint taste

H

Pair
H T Special Purchase

k r . t im A- r N p r .lib U U

Sweet n' Low’
250 packets of
sugar substitute

Reach' Brush
Adults'toothbrush
Youths', UmH 2, Bis

tOO Tylenol*
Extra strength,
no aspirin Save

Summer's Ive*

Dry Idea*

Regular scent or
v ln e g a r/w a te r

Choose scented
or unscented.

----------—"

Casual Canvas Sneakers For In Town Or Dockside
Women's deck shoe In rugged white or navy canvas
Fantastic with any casual, summer outfit you have

■ H

§3

(Application

i Pair

Spoclal Purchase

Free-spirited fashion tor women. Satiny strips on tatoml
look Insole Available in full sizes only. Save now

W EST O R LAN DO
IIS! WIST COLONIAL
H IAR TIXAS AVI.

m

Your Choice

R a v e ’ S o ft P e r m

1

M o u th w a s h .
mint fresh taste

Choose regular
or extra curly.

For shiny, healthy, tangle-free hair.
Shampoo or finishing rinse.

K IS S IM M E E
• u.s. hwv. in- v in i
ST. AT THACKIR AVI

LEESBURG

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NORTH CITRUS ftlVO
AT U.S HWV H I 4 IT

\

S.E. O R L A N D O
1MI SOUTHSIMORAM
AT CURRVPORO

EAST C O L O N IA L
HIRNDOM PLAZAACROSS
PROM FASHION SQUARE

* * %*

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2 4 - 0 1 . ‘ S ig n a l'

Cool Thongs For Sensational Summertime Wear

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S A N FO R D
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AIRPORT ILVO.
S. O R L A N D O
Tills ORANSI ILOI.
TRAIL AT SAND LARI RD

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limit 2 Each
Vidal Sassoon* Hair Products

DELAND
not SOUTH
WOODLAND ILVO
C A S S ELB ER R Y
US HWT IM1NIXT
TOiAl ALAI FRONTON

\ /

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Revlon* Flex*

Final NeC

16-oz.* Instant
hair conditioner.

M ist c o n tro l
hair spray. 8 oz.*
-X u

•Rex.

P IN E H IL L S
HIAWASSII RD AT
SILVIR STAR RD.

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�Evening Herald, Sanford. FI.

Wtdnasday, July 1», I t l l —7A

Shop Sanford and Orlando daily 9:30-9:30, Sun. 12-6

t.S a \e

____...

Not AM Stylet
In All Stores

K m erl* ADVERTISED
MERCHANDISE POLICY
CM k m mumitaan &gt;t tg h s .»

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79 d

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Infants', Tots’, Jr.
Boys’ ’N Girls’ Jeans

Boys' And Girls
Denim Blue Jeans

M en’s an d Misses’
C o m fo rtable Jeans

Infants' cotton or polyes­
te r/co tto n twill tots', |r
b o y s ’ p o ly e s te r/c o tto n
a n d little girls' c o tto n
denim blue jeans

Polyester/cotton. Girls 4pocket jeans with embroi­
dery and o th e r styles
7-14 Western-look jeans
tor boys 8 14 Save now

1raditlonal denim blue jeans,
made ot quality cotton Se­
lection of lavonte styles at a
te rritic K m a tt savings

2-4 $4

MONTH-END SAVINGS ON OUR LOW PRICES
C h ln e t
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H H i i t * - ‘J

/y t7 /* y V r w //
NATURE
LEMON
.FLAVOR,

Chinet
P icnic Plates
1

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1 05 /8 ". 8 3/4 "or 101/4
' com partm ent plote '

Big Plastic 1
D rinking Cups

2 4 -p c . Plastic *3
Flatw are Set

6 8 °»

&gt;

1Pkg. Of C apri *
Fam ily Napkins

$ 1 °^

■■ For
I 68C Set
Includes 8 forks 8
knives. 8 spoons J

Pkg of 2 0 .12-oz
drinking cups

O u r 3 2 -o r *
Ic e d Tea M ix

I

Pkg of 140,1-ply,
13*12'/." napkins

y
g Sale
■ ■ ■ ■ Price

Natural lemon fla v ­
or. sugar added

Limit 2 Pkgs.

t * P lasticw are %
[Household H e lp e r

•QQc g?

. % #% #
62 2 It
r ’ Laundry basket,
j
dish pan. pail

Time-Zero
Supercolor

USTERINE

Polaroid
5 8 -6 0 " n
Polyester
D o u b le Knits

“

$ 1

Ban Roll on
D eodorant

Handi-W rap'
Bonus Roll

63's

&amp;

■ 1,57
Choose basic or
last »on colors

12” xl25' Total' roll
Cloar plastic

Usterine'
Antiseptic

2 5 - o i' unscent

i

Mouthwash ana
gargle 32-oz *

e d o r le g u lu r

'ft Ot

Efferdent'
*
Denture C le a n e r

F Tim e-Zero’ T
SX-70 C o lor Film

Extra-strength
Box ot 96 tablets

2-pack contains
20 exposures

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QUAKER
STATE
S ave! 4 9 -o x .’ ^
Fab* D eterg en t

5 0 Plastic *
Trash C an Liners

3.33%

1.7QB

30x37” sue

Soft Scrub'
,
Liquid C lean er

Shouf Aerosol
Laundry S pray

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1.17 s

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Sale
Price
All-season, allweather motor oil

■

I 5vTVl-th*ck

Gets ctothes clean
No phosphates

Q u a k e r State
10W 30 Oil

i

Mildly abrasive
26-oz * bottle

Removes soil and
stains 19-oz*
1

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K IS S IM M E E

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Wednetdayo Jvty 2f, lttl

Palestinians Critical Of
Reagan's Mideast Stance
BEIRUT. Ubanon (UP!) — Relations.
between the United States and the
Palestinians a r t at their lowest point In
years and some Palestinian leaden
blame President Reagan Irr failing to
Initiate a new policy In the Middle East.
“There la no doubt that our relations
are at an all-time low,” said Challc al
Rout, a Central Committee member o(
the Palestine liberation Organization
Al Rout, who calla Reagan's election
a giant step In the wrong direction, said,
"The lin t thing he (Reagan) does is to
send the Secretary o( State (Alexander
Haig) to the Middle East to call us a
bunch ol terrorists. Again.”
The Palestinian leadership Is par­
ticularly concerned with the ad­
m inistration's decision to take a
"strategic" view ol the Middle East and
Its efforts to convince the Arabs that the
Soviet Union and not Israel Is their main
enemy.
"II there Is a threat to stability and
peace In the Middle East, It comes
directly from Israel, not the Soviet
Union," al flout said. "And since the
United Slates Is Israel's main ally, then
by proxy the threat comes from the
United States.
"II the United States does not
recognize this and stop perceiving Its
interests as going hand In hand with
those of the Israelis, then it will be hard
for any Arab regime to view the United
States and Israel as anything else but
Siamese twins."
Al I lout spoke In his Beirut office. Its
walls covered with views of Jerusalem
and his desk decorated with a sculpture
of young Araba In army fatigues and the
kafiya desert headdress, brandishing
automatic rides.
Before 1941 and the establishment of
the state of Israel, U.S. dealings with the
Palestinians were limited, but the United
States was generally held In high rrgard.
"We had no past conflicts with the
Americans." al llout said. "They had no
colonial history In the Middle East and

many Palestinians wanted the United contacts do take place and at "suf­
States to administer the mandate In ficiently high levels" to be meaningful.
Palestine Instead of the British.
But where are these contacts leading?
"But since 1948 It has been a bad and
Nowhere In any great hurry, according
sad story."
to Bassam Abu Shrrif, a member of the
Between 1948 and 1987, American leadership of the Popular Front for the
foreign policy viewed the Palestinian Uberatlon of Palestine, one of eight
Issue as a refugee problem. The United Palestinian groups under the P U ) um­
Nations estimates there are I f million brella.
Palestinian refugees In the Middle East.
But Abu Sheri! sees 1982 as a water­
But the Arab defeat In 1967 gave birth shed year.
to the radical elements in the PU) and
* In 1962, In June to be precise, Israel Is
led to the string of terrorist acts ranging supposed to be totally withdrawn from
from triple plane hijackings to the the Sinai," he said. "The big question Is:
Munich massacre of Israeli Olympic What happens next?"
athletes.
"So far all three parties to Camp David
The terrorism, designed to draw at­ (the United Slates. Egypt and Israel)
tention to the plight of the Palestinians, have taken a clearly antagonistic stance
hardenrd Israeli and UJi. opinion against toward the Palestinians and the P l;0,"
the PU).
he said.
"To America, the PU) has been
Abu Sherd says a triumvirate of sorts
nothing but a band of terrorists, or for la forming among Palestinians, leftist
those who were nicer to us, simply a lebanesc who support the Palestinian
bunch of Communists," al llout said.
cause and Syria. Through their treaty of
But between 1970 and 1976, American friendship and cooperation with Syria,
policy toward the Palestinians began to the Soviets are giving de facto support to
take account of their "right to self- the alliance, he said.
determination."
A new president, Jimmy Carter,
More moderate elements In the PU )
declared there had to be a Palestinian take a slightly less gloomy view.
homeland, and In October 1977 the United
"The balance of power in this area is
States and the Soviet Union Issued a Joint very fluid," said one Palestinian leader
declaration which called for a com­ who asked not to be identified. “If Is a
prehensive settlement of the problem to most strategic area and things can
be worked out within the context of change quickly. Both the Americans and
Geneva negotiations with "participation the Russians are well aware of this and
in Its work of the representatives of all neither want another war here.”
the parties Involved, Including those of
The leader said he saw too little
the Palestinian people."
momentum within the process and too
In November 1977, Egyptian President much opposition from other Arab powers
Anwar Sadat went to Jerusalem. Ills to keep Camp David going after 1982 and
break from the Arab ranks and the predicted the United States and Soviet
subsequent negotiations that led to the Union would agree an a reconvening of a
Camp David accords ended Carter's Middle East conference In Geneva where
flirtation with the PU ) and sent U5.- the United States would present a
Palestinian relations Into a tailspin from political proposal that might lead to the
which they have yet to recover.
establishment of a Palestinian state on
There are no official contacts between the West Bank.
the United States and the PU), but
"But this will take between eight and 10
Palestinian leaders admit privately that years to finalize," he said.

X j

Jrd

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VEGETABLES
AND

Cities And Counties Disagree
On Distribution Of Tax Funds
TAIJ.AIIASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Gov. Bob Graham has about
given up on another special legislative session this year
because dty and county officials are deadlocked on how to
distribute lands from a local option sales tax hike.
Graham has given Uw Florida league ol UUaa and Stale

Association of County Commissioners until Aug. 4 to agree on a
distribution formula, but an aide to the governor said today he
doubts any deal will be worked out.
“At this lime they still cannot agree. We are not going to go
any further if the cities and counties can't agree on distri­
bution,” said Dr. Charlie Reed, Graham's chief legislative lob­
byist.
"We are not going to go to the legislature until we know we
tiave a formula they both support and which they, the cities
and counties, would also go to the legislature and help sell."
Graham tried unsuccessfully to push several proposals past
the legislature during the recent regular session and a short
special one that would generate more money (or local law
enforcement.
Tlie last plan he settled on was a ha if-cent sales tax increase
to be tmpbnented by county commissions on an optional basis.
lie said alter the legislature adjourned in June he would call
a special session later this year if he became convinced he
finally had the votes In the Rouse and Senate to do what he
couldn't do In the spring.
But Graham doesn't believe he ran prod legislators Into the
politically difficult action of raising taxes without a united
lobbying effort from local governments.
The problem right now Is over distribution of the $2J0 million
a year that would be generated if all 67 counties raised the
sales tax from four cenIson-l&gt;w-doliar to four-and-a-half
cents.
The county commissioners want 70 percent of the money, but
the league of Cities is holding out (or 43 percent with the
counties getting 17 percent. The difference between the two
positions is $44.1 million.
Gruhain also wanta Florida Sheriffs Association agreement
on the distribution formula, but Reed says the sheriffs aren't
part of the problem.
"The sheriffs are going to gain under either kind of (or-

Insurance Rates
Ordered Decreased

■

TAIJ.ARASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - Insurance Commissioner
Bill Gunter today ordered a 1116 million reduction in worker's
compensation insurance rates, almost double the decrease
proposed by Industrial Insurance companies.
Tlie National Council of Compensation Insurance proposed a
$78 million reduction last month. Gunter said he is rejecting
that proposal and ordering the higher one.
"I am not accepting it because, in plain English, it Is far too
little," he said at a news conference.
The New York-based council, which represents Industrial
insurance Insurers In Florida and most other states, proposed
an average I I percent rate decrease und 7.1 percent premium
level reduction, but under IU plan, some classes of high-risk
employers would (ace rate Increases.
Gunter ordered a 116 percent reduction In both rates and
premium levels and said the decrease must apply to all
categories of employers. The typical employ er in Florida pays
$700 a year in on-the-job Injury Insurance rates and will see a
$109 savings, the Department of Insurance said.
The compensation insurance council will meet Aug. 21 to
decide whether to comply with Gunter's order, said Dave
Fountlon, director ol the Florida Insurance News Service.
It could decide to ignore Gunter and force the commissioner
to sue the Insurance Industry to get the lower rates. But more
likely, It will agree to tlie reductions or prepow an alternative,
something greater than its $71 million plan and less than the
$116 million proposal.
One thing that probably needs to be kept In mind l» that it
really Is a pleasant situation to be debating over how much of a
rate reduction Is going to take place," Fountain Mid
“Regardless of how this comes out, It's going to mean a rate
reduction."

k

tr

•

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♦

Week

SALADS

m ula," he Mid.

County commission association officials told the St.
Petersburg Times they are holding out for a 70 percent cut of
the m Iss tax hike revenues because they are toeing money
Ir a n other stale sources and also losing federal hinds under
President Resgsn's drive to balance (he national budget.
At the u m e time their revenues are dropping, the state has
imposed new programs on counties that will cost money, these
officials Mid.

In addition, county commissions would be stuck with the
difficult Job of raising the sales tax, not city councils or
commissions.
Cities have been getting slighted fur years In the distribution
of state revenue-sharing dollars, Mys Ray Sittig, league of
cities director. Rut city problems are Just as severe s i county
problems, especially crime because most ol the serious crime
Is occurring in big metropilitan areas.

Uy\n

If

Don't Delay...One of YO UR Recipes Could

DON'T O A M B L I
with your insurance)
- C A L l-

T

TONY R U S H
INSURANC8

If
LOW

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f

COST

AUTO

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3 2 2 -0 3 8 3

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a

IN S U R A N C E

1st • 2nd - 3rd Prizes Each Week

My oHlc* will bo

CLOSED

W eekly w in n ers a re e lig ib le fo r th e GRAND PRIZE

August 16 and will

NO LIMIT TO NUMBER OF RECIPES SUBMITTED
YOU M AY ENTER AS MANY WEEKS AS YOU LIKE

ro-opon August 31

DR. R.L. BASS

Food Categories Coming Up In The N ext 7 Weeks Of The Contest:
S A L A D S &amp; V E G E T A B L E S — C A S S E R O L E S — SEAFO O D

1548 PARK DR.

P O U L T R Y -M E A T S -D E S S E R T S -M IC R O W A V E

So send In that special recipe your family and friends like so well

...It could be a w Innerl
Ph. i n m i
211 Magnolia Ave., Sanford

la d o s e d f o r vaca tio n *...
U « til A w o v tl IS o . u n i H

w r v i.t &gt;

c m

.■Oil) w.rfemM.ktp. Out if .. icc MO C S f f r lf l

w in w v l . . .
&lt; it » f t llw «

W. V IN C E N T ROBERTS, M D
and

•

RULES:
No limit to number of racipes submitted but each
recipe mutt Induda your namg. address and
telephone
TYPE or PRINT your recipe giving full in­
structions lor preparation, cooking time end
temperature. (Approximate number ol servings
also helpful.)

1

Anyone can enter except Evening Herald cm
ployees end their Immediate family.

S TEPHEN R PHILLIPS, M D

First, Second and Third prizes will be awarded In
each of the nine food categories. You may enter
as many of the weekly categories as you Ilka.
A panel of three expert lodges will review all
entries and winners will be notified at the end of
the contest In September for e taste off" to
select the Grand Prize winner Decision of the
ludges Is final.
All recipes received will be published In October
for the Evening Herald's first annual cookbook
contest.

lik e pleasure in announcing the allocution of

Mall Entries to: EVENINO HERALD
c-o COOKBOOK
P.O. BOX 1417
SANFORD. FLA. 22771

JU A N L R A V E L O . M D .
and

Or Drop Off At Our Office:
100 N. FRENCH AVE.

(By the lakefrent In dewntown Sanford)
MON.-FRI. 1:20-5:21 - SAT. I:20-NOON

D A V ID C M O W E R t, M O

in the practice o f Obstetrics and Gynecology
at

DEADLINE FOR
Vegetables &amp; Salads...

Entries must be postmarked by midnight

SUNDAY, AUGUST 2

Medical A m Building. 1301 East Second Street

— Last Date for BREAD B ROLLS...5unday. July 26 —

Sanfcrd, Florida 32771
(3 0 5 ) 322 5313

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- -

�Evening Herald. Sanford. FI.

Search On For 6-^ear-Old Boy
Who Disappeared In Sears Store

FLORIDA
IN BRIEF

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. ( UPI I - John and
Reva Walsh consulted a psychic Tuesday
and heard details about their lamily "he
couldn’t have known," but they didn't
leam the whereabouts of their missing 6year-old son.
Blond, haiel-eycd Adam Walsh
vanished Monday noon from the toy
department of Hollywood's Sears store
while his mother shopped for lamps.
More than SO off-duty police and
civilian volunteers from a Citizens Crime
Watch organization have searched back
and freth through the area ever since the
boy disappeared. The search continued

State Rep. Arnett G irard eau
Freed A fter 24 Hours In Jail
IAKF. BUTLER, Fla, (UPI) — Slate Rep. Arnett
Girardeau, (reed after nearly 24 hours In the Union
County Jail (or refusing to testify before a grand Jury,
says he will meet with Gov. Bob Graham and House
Speaker Ralph Haben to discuss the principle of
legislative privilege.
The 1st District Court of Appeal in Tallahassee or­
dered the release of Girardeau. DJacksonville, late
Tuesday afternoon after the legislator’s attorney. Bill
Sheppard, appealed Circuit Judfe Wayne Carlisle’s
ruling Monday finding Girardeau in contempt
1/»king clean-shaven and wearing the same grey
suit and stale of Florida blue tie he had on when he was
booked Monday afternoon, Girardeau talked briefly
with reporters before driving away in his late-model,
beige Mereedes-Bcni,
1 He accused State Attorney Eugene Whitworth, of
Gainesville, of wanting "to discredit me and em­
barrass me as a public figure." It was Whitworth who
subpoenaed him to appear before the grand Jury and
then moved that he be found in contempt when he
refused to answer questions.
The grand Jury is investigating the still unsolved
murder of Union Correctional Institution inmate Vertis
Graham, whose skull was crushed on Dec. 7,1979, as he
lay sleeping in a UCI dormitory,

today.
The psychic told the vice president of a
Nassau, Bahamas hotel corporation and
his wife their only child "headed south.”
Police were attempting to check out
reports that a child about the size of
Adam — 3 'i feet tall, weighing 43 pounds
— may have entered a white car with a
citizen's hand radio antenna.
Several custom ers and store
employees recalled seeing Adam playing
with an electronic game In the toy
department. None saw him leave.
Police spokesman Fred Barbetta said
the boy had never before run away from

Wedneidjy, July I f , 1*11—*A

Moonlight
Sale!

home and had a “normal, happy family”
life.

We are having our spectacular Moonlight Sale
starting Friday. 4:00 untlt 10:00 p m I

Mrs. Walsh said she had often in the
past left Adam in the toy department
while she shopped in other sections of the
store. She said he preferred that to going
with her and always remained there until
she came for him.

Watch tomorrow's paper for our Moonlight Sale
advertisement then come shop Friday. 4:40
until 10 p.m. for even more unadveriised
specials throughout the store I

JCPenney

At 12:13 p m Monday, she told police,
she left the boy with (he toys and told him
she would look for lamps, Just a short
distance away. “ I know where you'll be,
mommy,” she said he told her. When she
retumwl at 12:30 p m., he was gone.

SANFORD
SANFORD PLAZA

M«y 17-92 8 State Rd

The Space Shuff/e

Cargo Crane
Problems
Delay Tests

County Votes To Stay Dry
CH1PLEY, Fla. fUlMi - Washington County’s 96ycar-old ban on boore stands. Residents voted 1,393 to
2,011 Tuesday to retain a prohibition on hard liquor that
was first imposed in 1883. Tuesday was the first time
they had a chance to vote on the issue.
“ I consider this a victory even for those who lost,
because we all know they are much better off without
tt." said the Rev. Richard Bloodworlh, the leader of the
untl-llquor forces.
The balloting left Florida Panhandle county as one of
seven Florida Counties in which alcohol sales are
banned by local option.
Florida’s other dry counties are Hardee. Liberty,
Madison, Suwanee, Lafayette and Santa Rosa. Each
has had at least one wet-dry election.

P riso n Su/f Settlement Se e n
TAliJVHASSEE, Fla. (UPI) - A settlement of the
eight-year-old civil rights suit brought by Florida
prison inmates is in sight, according to Attorney
General Jim Smith.
Smith said all sides hare agreed to a plan that la
"Just" and will improve health care and food for in­
mates.
He forwarded the agreement to retired U-S. District
Judge Charles R. Scott of Jacksonville Monday. If
Scott approves, tt would resolve — at least for three
years — the final issues in a 1972 class action suit
claiming that tack of minimal health care, over­
crowding and poor food violated the prisoners’ Eighth
Amendment protection against cruel and unusual
punishment.
The settlement calls for appointment of a single
director of health services and a food services coor­
dinator for the entire prison system. They must file
plans for improvements with the court

S/a/n Police Officer Burled
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - law enforcement officers
from throughout the state Joined family, friends and
city officials Tuesday in mourning slain Tampa police
detective Gerald A. Rauft.
Rauft, 38, was fatally shot Friday night as police
officers moved in lo arrest suspects in an undercover
marijuana purchase operation.
An estimated 1,000 persons Jammed Into The
Catholic Church of The Incarnation — which normally
seats 7SO— and between 300 and 400 more people stood
outside during the funeral mass.
An estimated 700 law enforcement officers from
municipal, county, stale and federal agencies attended
the services.
Police officers formed an aisle on either side of the
church entrance and saluted as the flag-draped
casket was carried past by six Tampa police officers
serv ing as pallbearers.
Rauft, an eight-year veteran of the force, la survived
by his wife, Vanessa, and too daughters, Patty, 12, and
Kim, 11.

2413 ORLANDO DR. (HWY. 17-92) SANFORD

PH. 322-6417
'R AD IAT O R S CLEANED A REPAIRED • COMPLETE MECHANICAL REPAIRS
A M E R IC A N C A R S - R . V . S — T R U C K S - A N D D IE S E L S
W A T C H FOR O U R M O N T H L Y S P E C IA L S

G E T A Q U A IN T E D

REOISTER FOR

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No Pvrchttt Necetury
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ind PRIZE - I Now Tiro* To Fit Your Car
14 — Oil, Flltor A Lubo Job
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Stop tn Anil R t f u t t r — P r i m Far A rn tric tn C an A Pick Ups Only No Truck* — AllU S frlln Wtll Be Redeemed
By Appointment Only And M o il to Claimed By Dec 11. I f I I — P r lt f Winners Names W illie Published

' M W

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Tha faitwtt bud all** u u lltd, tpproprlately, «kt *r tft.
It it capable of iptedt of more then 200 milts per hour.

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F R E E S P IN A L
E X A M IN A T IO N -

room air conditioners

D a n g tr S ig n a ls o f
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I. luitdMS toziMU. Las a Pm*

l M h A T Ip IM a

1 Fit. M*N* a. StooUn
M w rh O W » .o » n n .fO iln « U p
Why FREE? Thousands of art# residents havt spina
related problems which usually respond to chiropractic
car*.
This Is our way of encouraging you to find out It you have «
problem that could be helped by chiropractic car*. It Is
also our way of acquainting you with our staff and
facilities.
Examination Includes e minimum of 10 itenderd tests tor
evaluating the spine and a contour analysis photo as
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Whila we are accepting new pellents. no one need feel any
obligation.
Most Insurances Accepted

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Handsomely styled portables. Ideal tor bedrooms.
They're engineered 11 ways for greater quiet. You'll
awaken well rested no matter how hot Ihe weather.
Energy efficient models, i.000 to P.100 Btu hr. Three
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savings now on the room e lr conditioners that put noise
lo t i f f p,

H

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t

JSITI French A*S (AcrWS (rent Plus Hut) Jentenl

Oil prices have dropped somewhat
recently, but this summer we’ll he using
even more* oil than usual because one
of our nuclear plants that generates
lower-cost electricity is being repaired.
During months of moderate tempera­
tures, overall use of electricity decreases,
and we burn less oil. This could mean a
lower fuel adjustment. A lot will defend
on tlie weather, tlie price ofoil and Ivow
much generation we can get from other
fuel sources.

Michael C. Gxtk, Vice President, Riel
Resources and Girnuratc Development at
f\»rt Everglades Oil Storage Facilities.

What is FPL doing to fight high
oil prices? Everything we can. We
shop for bargains in the oil market, both
in contract fuel supplies and in open
market purchases, we’re not building
any more oil-powered generating facil­
ities. And beftne we use th e tines we
hive, we use all our other less-costly gen­
erating sources-nuclear, natural gas,
and coal-generated power from other
utilities brought into the state by trans­
mission lines. We’ve also been mixing
coal and oil at one plant, and we’re
pursuing opportunities far converting
our oil plants to coal use.

Why is there a fuel adjustment
in the first place? Customers are
understandably annoyed by high summer
bilb, and particularly the size of the fuel
adjustment. Rut fuel represents about
45% of the total cost o f generating elec­
tricity, so tlie cost of fuel does have a
big impact o n the bill. Since fuel costs
change frequently; iti important to have
a timely and fair way to cope with these
enormous, fluctuating costs. The fuel
adjustment allows us to pay our fuel bilb
so that we can continue generating
electricity, and to pass on any savings
directly to our customers.

Doesn’t the fuel adjustment
destroy the incentive to buy
fuel economically? N u First of all,
our own performance standards are
extremely high. In addition, there are
efficiency incentives built into the
fuel .adjustment regulatory proceedings,
and FPL must prove that all fuel was
bought and used wisely when its case
on trie fuel adjustment is presented.

fuel nas gone up, especially residual oil,
the kind we use most. About half of
our electricity is generated by oil; even
more in the summer So oil prices have a
dramatic effect o n the fuel adjustment.

Does FPL make a profit on the
fuel adjustment? Nix Not a cent of
the fuel adjustment goes to profit. All
of it goes directly to pay for the cost
of fuel.

• FINANCINO AVAILABLE - I I PCT. DOWN
• AS LONO AS » MONTHS TO FAY

SOUTHERN A IR

323 -57 63

•

OF SANFORD INC.
Dotng Business In Sanford Area Since 1*41

PH. 322-8321

-

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14*- *m* 4^'#*'*

‘ Artrag* Sumnwr pnca-Juty August, SopUmt*

FLO R ID A POWER &amp; LIGHT COMPANY

100 N. MAPLE AVE.
SANFORD

Free f i a m 0 » » H j* Include X R s v i o r T r e a fn e " 1

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1 7

I've heard that oil prices
were dropping. Will the fuel
adjustment go down as a result?

X * i » Saweoea Creae

SANFORD PAIN CONTROL
CLINIC

|
to

Prices have risen so much in th e past
few years that we now spend $4 million
a day on oil.

Why does it always seem to
keep going up? Because the cost of

1 fin l*w i Ira t Storiftr N *

4 aw*MM ISl a * m ft*

TW X-

ft

W h y is F P L ’s
fu e l ad ju stm en t
so h ig h ?

'Space Works' To Offer
Space Flight Simulation
NEW YORK ( U PI) — Simulated space travel complete with
physical effects of G-forces, zero gravity and other sensations
experienced by astronauts wilt be available lo the public In
1962, a communication company says.
The theatrical attraction, called 'The Space Works,” has
been licensed to Japan, Australia and New Zealand, the first
overseas markets, Trans-Iaix Multimedia Corporation said
Tuesday In a release.
Richard Brandt, chairman of Trans-l/ix Corporation, of
whichTrans-laix Multimedia Isa subsidiary, said some 20 U.S.
and international firms will be licensed separately.
Brandt said the 73-minute show, In four Integral parts,
begins when a visitor steps into an oversized version of the
flight simulators designed as a space-port tn Ihe year 2010. The
theater rises, (alls, pitches and rolls and simulates conditions
of an accelerating and orbiting rocket.
The theater will take 380 persons for each simulated flight.

1=1

*+&gt; «#4 # # 0Mb A

« * * -u

f A.

'

A'

0A4

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. &lt;U PI) - More problems with ihe
space shuttle’s cargo crane — already responsible for two
postponements earlier — Interrupted the Columbia's simulat­
ed maneuvers Tuesday, but scientists expected to complete
the testa today.
Engineers working on the reusable rocket ship, scheduled to
begin Its second live mission Sept. 30, said problems with the
"bionic a im ” crane putlhe 20 hours of testing about six hours
behind schedule,
Kennedy Space Center spokesman Dick Young said the
problems had been corrected and were caused by difficulty in
loading one of the Columbia's five flight computers with a
program.
It Is designed to testlhe Remote Manipulating Ann, a crane­
like mechanism that will be used in space to handle the
Columbia's cargo. Faulty wiring in the arm caused two delays
of the tests Friday and Monday morning and testing didn't
begin until around midnight Tuesday morning.
Space shuttle engineers said Tuesday a torrent of water
released before Ignition of liw solid rocket boosters that carry
the shuttle into orbit will reduce severe shock and vibrations
discovered during a review of movies and data from the
shuttle's maiden flight In April.
Technicians found the shock was four times higher than
expected and felt the problem was loo severe to Ignore, said
Robert Gray, manager of the shuttle project office at Kennedy
Space Center.
Despite Its severity, however, Gray said the astronauts
probably didn't notice the Jolt because of Ihe normal vibrations
of liftoff.
At a status briefing Tuesday, Gray said olficials are con­
vinced the necessary modifications to install a water Jet spray
system to dampen the shock can be made in the launch pad
area in time for the scheduled Sept. X flight.
"The water system is the easiest for us to use tn the long
run," said Gray, estimating it would cost about 92 million.
"Right now we would plan to have tt done about the middle of
September.”
Engineers say the water, some 30,000 gallons flooded Into
exhaust pits under the booster rockets In about 20 seconds, wtU
absorb the pressure pulse and limit the chance of damaging
vibrations.
Gray said aside from the pressure problem, preparations for
the launch are going very smoothly. Engineers have nearly
completed repair work on the orbiier's delicate thermal tile
system and have solved on icing problem on Ihe external tank.
Late Tuesday officials at the space center reported as­
tronauts Joe Engte and Richard Truly had completed opening
and closing the payload bay doors tn a critical pre-flight lest of
ihe Columbia's electrical ami computer systems.
Gray said the three-day delay of the test would not set back
the scheduled rollout of the Columbia to the Vehicle Assembly
Building next week.

AUTOM OTIVE REPAIRS

�SPORTS
10A—EvtnlngHtrild,Sanford,Ft.

Wednesday, July}*, t i ll

Schmit A Hit,
Majors Romp
By I1F.NTON WOOD
Herald Sports Writer
Everyone in attendance Tuesday
evening at Ocoee for the Major
League Regional nightcap would
agree with Altamonte coach Gene
Iitterlo that, "It waa Mike Schmit
night."
The hard-throwing right-hander did
it all by hurling a one-hitter and
chipping in three hits with two nbbies
as iitlerio 'i squad captured its sixth
straight tournament victory W over
Inverness In first round regional
action.
Altamonte advances Into tonight’s 8
p.m. winner’s bracket contest ag-lnst
San MateoJncksonville who was a 3-0
victor over Northwest Escambia In
the opener.
"I'm not making any predictions,”
[.ettrrio said afterwards, "but If
anybody's gonna beat us they better
come ready to play."
Inverness, who had won ill previous
; two tournament games by 13-1 and 200 scores, seemed ready for Letterio's
bunch early. But Altamonte proved
too strong In the late innings with fourrun outbursts in the fourth and sixth
frames.
In the meantime, Inverness was
simply overmatched by Schmit. The
13-year-old hurler retired 14 o( the
first 13 via strike outs and allowed Just
an infield hi’ by shortstop Rick Grice
with two out in the bottom of the sixth.
For Ihe evening Schmit fanned 15
while walking Just three. It was the
fourth straight game Schmit whiffed
13.
The game had signs of turning into a
pitching duel between Schmit and
Inverness rlghly C raig Goosley.
Goosley (ought out of a bases-loaded,
one-out Jam In the top of the first and
retired the side in order In the second
and third Innings.
"I'm always concerned with a
nothing-nothing game and especially
when we haven’t seen the pitcher
betore," bellerto said. “It’s easy to
say you can till a certain pitcher tail
It'* another thing to | » out and do It.
"But we were hitting the ball hard,
and when you do that It's only a

Tournament
Pairings
Wec/nesday

I'm not making any

A t O c o e e 8 p.m. A lta m o n te

predictions, but If
M a jo rs vs. San M o te o -J a c k s o n v ille

anybody's gonna beat us
they better come ready

1■
1 “
JEFF Mcll KATII '
Altamonte outfielder

A t Eustis 7 p.m . O v ie d o

to play.'—Altamonte
vs. N ic e v ille -V a lp a ra is o

Skipper Gene Letterio
matter of time before you break
things open.”
The breaking point occurred In the
top of the fourth. Schmit lined his
second straight hit to center starting
the frame and left fielder Ryan lisle
hit a deep shot over the left center fie Id
wall to break the ice.
Right fielder Jeff McGeath drew a
walk and moved to second when the
Inverness second baseman dropped a
double play ball. Anthony Lassalc
looped a single to right loading the
bases for lead-off hitter Shane Leiterio, who took a two strike Goosley
fastball off the wrisl to force home
McGeath. Another Inverness error
gave Altamonte a 4-0 cushion.
"Ryan's home run was the big
blow," Ijetlerio replied. "It got us
going, and it was good for him
because he hadn't hit the ball well
since his homer In our first (tour­
nament! game.”
Altamonte piled on four more runs
In its final at bat. With one out, Bret
Marshall reached on a bunt tingle and
I^tlerio tingled off the second
baseman’s glove to start the rally.
A walk to Jimmy Fox loaded the
bases for Schmit and the left-handed
swinging pitcher blasted a shot off the
wall In right center for a stand up
double and two more Altamonte runs.
It was his third "shot" off Goosley in
(our trips to the plate,
"Mike's got a sweet, smooth swing;
he's In a groove," smiled Letterio.
"Whcnhewalks to the plate and we
need ■ Mg hit, he torgeta that he's a
pitcher and turns into a hitter."
Infield singles by Neal Harris and

uto Center

H *ea lS P h o t* St S « *ll

Altamonte
right-hander
Mike Schmit firrri a onehitter and struck nut IS as the
catcher Dan Beaty pushed in the other
two runs In the sisth to give Altamonte
ila final 80 margin of victory.
Sctunit's only trouble spot came In
the sixth when It was Just a matter of
how much Altamonte would win by.
He gave up two of his three walks and
Grice spoiled the no-hit bid to load the
bases with two out. But Schmit
whiffed Goosley to preserve the shut
out. Everyone In the Inverness lineup
was a Schmit strike out victim.
letterio will send leiu aic lo the
mound with the ball tonight against
San Mateo hoping that his lone 11year-old on the club will be able to
match Schmil's performance.
In fact, Jacksonville pitcher Cliff
Gaines may have topped Schmil’s
perlormance In Ihe tournam ent
opener. Not only did Gaines one-hit
Northwest Escambia, but tie drove in
■U live of Ms d u b 's runs with s tworun homer to left and a three-run blast
over the 200-foat sign In center.

Altamonte Majors whipped
Inverness, K-n Tuesday at
Ocoee.
O V IID O
D iy tW o o d .il
RoyC# Moor*. If
R *f*y f er gutan. 10
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Coast To Coast Effort To Settle
IS THE BILL DUE?

by A la n M o v e r

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Two representatives from each club
are expected to attend the PRC meeting
with Grebey.
AL spokesman Bob Fishel described
the latter meeting as "an overall review
and report on the status of the negotia­
tions."
"The only reason we're having thia
meeting lifer the PRC to provide us with
Information," said Toronto club
President Peter Bavasi.
Hal Middletwofth, spokesman for the
PRC, said he had "no Idea" If the owners
might propose a change on their stand of
free-agent compensation.
Federal mediator Ken Moffett is trying

HOT He'S
T)WH6

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TUT
"HAWS."
WTH TH£
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to get both sides back to the bargaining
table. Talks broke off last Thursday In
Washing ton.
"I'm still talking to them (both
sidesi," Moffett said Tuesday night
"Nothing 1s set right now. Ultimately
they'll get back together, but 1 don't
know when."
Player representatives met lor nearly
S&gt;, hours in Chicago Monday night and
reaffirmed their support of Miller and
the bargaining committee.
New York Yankees' player rep Reggie
Jackson, attending ihe National Sports
Festival at Syracuse, N.Y. Tuesday, Hid
some positive things came out of the
meeting.
“We had a lot of discussions over
exactly what proposals were on the table.
Hying, What are your feelings on It?'
and generally good talk,” he said.
Jackson look exception lo stories
written shout players criticising the
union.
"They I the players) were misquoted,"
Jackson said. “I have heard something
(rum Dairy I.opes, Steve Kemp and Dan
SchaUeder, and all three were
misquoted. Kemp Mid to me, 'I will sell
my car and sell my house If I have lo."'
But Boston Rod Sox pitcher Dennis
Eckersley told a Boston newspaper not
all players are solidly behind the union.
"i'll bet you’d be surprised *1 unme of
the guys who'd say, ‘Screw the strike,
let's ptay ball,"' EckenJey H id in an
interview published Tuesday in the
Boston Herald American.

Punches O u t Split-Decision Victory

SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UP!) - Hlchard
Savage and Steve CTui, old friends
Iroru way back, punched each other
mercilessly for nearly 10 minute*
Tuesday night.
"WeW both 100 percent good
frtends"u tilde the ring, but once we
climb into the ring friendship is the
Iasi thing on our minds," said Savage,
after he defeated arch-rival C nu in a
split decision to win the gold medal in
the Ill-pound division at the National
Sports Festival.
Savage, 21. a laborer from West
Monroe, L a, had lost to Crus in the
finals ef the National Golden Gloves
Championship in April, but won the
U-f. Amateur Busing Federation title
over him May 13.
Both fighters said during their

Wgt

While Msrvln Miller, executive
director of the Players Association, holds
a regional meeting in Io s Angeles for
area players (beginning al 11:30 a.tn.
PDT), major-league owners meet
separately and as a group in New York to
discuss recent developments In the strike
that hat canceled 383 games —more than
a quarter of the season.
Ray Grebey, head ol the Player
Relations Committee, will brief the 26
owners at 3:30 p.m. EDT alter the
American and National league owner*
hold separate m eetings two hours
earlier

iro tsz

Savage

NEW YORK (Ul’l) - AdmitU g lime
Is running out on the 1981 baseball
season, major league players and owners
scheduled at separate meetings on
separate coasts today to discuss efforts
to bring about a settlement in the 48-day
baseball strike.

semifinal victories they were looking
ahead to meeting one another In their
rubber match.
Their bout was close throughout,
with Savage finishing strongly at the
end of the first round. The two traded
blows ui the second round, with
Savage landing an effective uppercut.
"Thts was the hardest fight ever,"
Savage said “Even when 1 lost to him
It wasi't this hard."
Crus, a 17-year-old from Fort
Worth, Texas, Insisted he won the
fight.
“I feel I won every round. I think 1
finished strong. He was throwing
flurries, but I was catching them on
my arms," Cruz s a id
In other bouts, in the 133-pound
division, B enjam in M arques of

Denver outpointed Amateur Boxing
Federation featherw eight champ
Guadalupe Suarez of Corpus Christ!,
Texas; National Golden Gloves and
Federation champ Jesse Benrvides of
Corpus Christ! stopped Inocendo
Ventura at 37 seconds of the second
round in the 106-pound class, and U.S.
Army and F ed eratio n fly weight
champ Fred Perkins outpointed Mark
Harrison of Pontiac, Mich., in the Illpound di vialon.
In an upset, Mark Breland of New
York defeated Federation welter­
weight champion Darryl Robinson of
Houston in the first round of the 117pound class, and the heavyweight gold
went to U.S. Navy champ Mark
Mshone, who stopped Johnny Keys in
the second round.

In what may have been the most
popular victory of the Festival,
hometown favorite Mark Cato,
temporarily paralyied from the neck
down a year and a half ago, completed
a heart-w arm ing comeback by
capturing the gold medal in still rings
with 11.73 points. He also had three
bronrn to go with the ail ver he earned
Saturday in team competition, for a
total of five medals, one short of the
NSF record.
“ I don't have any goals anymore,"
Caso said.
Soon alter Caso'i victory, Brian
Meeker of Edina, Minn., slammed
into the lcr.j horse on a vaulting at­
tempt and was taken to Crouse-lrvtng
Memorial H ospital.

R eg. *49 ea. plus led. la x ', S ize P 15 5/B 0 R 12 . blackm ail. T h e
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S * l* p rice * effective through Saturday

Sale
4 for $1 44
Reg. *41 ea. plus fed. tax*.
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M ile a g e m a k e r* II is our
fin e st 4 ply polyester cord
tire .
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Sale 109.99
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stereo with auto-reverse
cassette, pushbutton tuning
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2-w ay door mount speakers,
R sg. 34.99 S a le 2 4 . 9 9 pr.

S A N F O R D PLA ZA
H wy. 17-91 l S t« t« S t.
O pen M onday th r u S a tu r d a y • a . m . 4 p.m .
Open S u n d a y 13:30-3 p .m .

�Evtning

Fernandina Knocks Wood,
Oviedo For Sectional Win
By SAM COOK
Herald Snorti Editor
EUSTIS — Fernandina Beach knocked
tm Oviedo's Dave Wood (or three rum in
She third inning here Tuesday and then
Withstood a last-inning District 14 rally to
remain undefeated with a 4-2 victory in
the Sectional Tournament for 11-yearolds at the Stewart Cottrell Baseball
Complex.
Tonight, Oviedo takes on NicevilleValparatso at 7. Niceville nudged District
IS West Hernando from the tournament,
4-3, on a two-hitter by Donald Tennant
Tennant fanned six and didn't allow a run
after the third frame in besting Rocco
Cirocco, who fanned nine in a losing
effort.
David Sweeney, Tracy Crain and
Harold Tennant all rapped singles as
Niceville pushed across three runs in the
second inning. Donald Tennant ac­
counted for the first Inning RBI with a
single.
Tonight's game will be a rematch of
Monday night. Harold Tennant will
probably pitch again for Niceville, while
right-hander Craig Duncan, who beat
Niceville with a four-hitter, 9-2, will
probably gel the nod for Manager
Tommy Ferguson's crew.
District 11 Fernandina Beach, which is
located 30 m iles northeast o(
Jacksonville, will play the winner
Thursday at 7 p.m. The winner must beat
Fernandina twice for the championship.
If necessary, a second game will be
played at 7 p.m. Friday.
Fernandina look command of the
tournament with three runs in the third
which turned around a 1-0 Oviedo edge.
The Seminole County entry tallied its run
In the second when center-fielder Terry
Gammons reached on an error, but In­
jured his leg running to first base.
"It might be his hamstring," said a
worried Coach Charlie Beasley. "We
don't know if he’ll be able to play Wed­
nesday or not"
Despite the injury, Gammons moved to
second when Duncan lined a Ron Veal
fastball to left field. Veal, however,
whiffed Ellis Bell and Mark Coleman for
two of his eight strike outs and seemed on
the verge of getting out of the Inning.
But first-bsseman Doug Powell tapped
a soft roller to shortstop John Shave,
whose throw to first was not in time to gel
Powell for an infield hit. The toss,
though, skipped past Mike Peters
allowing Gammons, who had stopped at
third base, to score for a 1-0 lead.
Fernandina struck back quickly in the
third with three runs, but could have
added at least one m ire to the total. Chris

TE R R Y GAMMONS

. . . in ju r e d w h eel
Spence walked and was moved to second
on a nice bunt by Peters.
With one out,- Spence broke for the
plate as Shave turned to bunt Wood,
however, pitching from the stretch,
alertly threw to third base from where
Duncan heaved the ball to Hofmann who
easily tagged Spence.
Shave, nevertheless, kept the now twoout rally alive by coaxing a walk. Then as
Shave broke for second, left-fielder
Dennis Beck hit a sharp ground ball at
Ferguson at second who took one step
with Shave on the attempted steal, but
then moved back in front o( the ball.
The ball got past Ferguson for an error
as Shave rambled to third and Reck
cruised into second, Veal then helped
himself by slamming a Wood pitch into
deep right center for a double and a 2-1
Fernandina lead.
Catcher Byron F elder, Monday's
pitching and hitting hero against West
Hernando, then set Gammons to the
fence with a Wood changeup which Terry
couldn't flag down. Felder held at first
base with a long single as Veal scored the
eventual winning run.
After tlie third inning, Wood settled
down. The young right-hander mixed his
curve ball with his fastball to retire eight
baiters in a row until Felder cracked
another double, but was thrown out
Jimmy
Wllliams-to-Ferguson-to-lXincan, while trying for a three-bagger.
With two outa in the sixth, Tony Barfield followed Felder's double with one of
his own and wisely stayed at second base.
Kenneth Durrance then dribbled a slow
roller through Bell's glove at shortstop on
which Barfield brat Buyer Moore's

Arta m o u lt
Inver ness

AB
3
3
4
4
3
1

Cook
Sports Editor

I
If

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Umps Blew This One
That's a manager's job,

to Influence fhe umpire.’

Normally I'm one of the staunchest
defenders of umpires. Not that I think
ihcse funny-capped fellows in blue are
infallible, but that they have a
thankless and unrewarding Job of
policing kids and adults.
I've umpired j t different levels of
amateur baseball (or pieces of five
years and I've always felt the umpires
Job was tough enough without a sportswriter trying to tell them what to do
That is. until last night at the 11-yearold Seclional Tournament at Eustis
between Fernandina Beach and
Oviedo.
It's no mystery to me that these four
fellows requested to be announced as
being from West Volusia by the public
address man. If I pulled the boner they
did. I'd request anonymity too..
H ere's the situation. Oviedo is
trailing, 4-2 in the lop of the seventh
inning with runners on first and second
base and nobody out.
Itoyce Moore, Oviedo’s second-place
hitter, lilts a short pop fly over Fernandina's first baseman's bead which
Ialls fair on the clay Just short of the
outfield, then crazily bounces into foul
territory.
The runner at second, Jimmy
Williams, scampers to third and makes
a wide turn, but holds as first baseman
Mike Peters hastily throws the ball into
catcher Byron Felder.
Oviedo apparently has the bases
loaded with no one out and the meal 134-3 hitters) of the order coming to the
plate. At that point, however, Fer­

C im e W&gt;nmng RBI
L iiif
E - B-dwell M a rlo n * 7. Mabor. Gooiley LOB
— Altamonte t. ln v * rn e *i i f §
Schmri JtH
-- t i l l # SB
H a rris
ALTAMONTE
IP H R EH BB SO
Scorn,1 (W. IT 01
* 1 0 0 3 IS
INVERNESS
G o o s lty ( L )
4 10 • S 4 *
HOP
I by G ootleyl t e lle r to

-F L O R ID A - i i

ARRIVEALIVE
• sow n*

INBRIEF

O-Tw/ns 'Double Dipper'
Proves Very Unappetizing
A "Double Dipper" at any ice cream shop is usually
a very delightful treat. Tuesday evening's doubleheader In Chattanooga, however, left a bad taste for
the Orlarelo Twins as they savored defeat In both ends
of their Ice cream cone Southern League twtobiU.
The I/nkoula' Tom Owens fired a four-hit shutout In
the second game as Chattanooga dropped Orlando Into
third place with the sweep. In the first game, Randy
Bush provided a three-run home run, but Orlando
succumbed again, 7-2.
Scott Ullger, Andre David and Gary Gaetll added
doubles during Inc two game i - the only extra bare
hits betides Bush's homer. The series continues tonight
at Chattanooga.

Rebels Blast Mltchos, 20-0
It was a Royal evening for the Rebels of the
Casselberry Men's Tuesday Night Softball League at
Summerset Park.
D. Royal and W. Royal both whacked homers as (he
Rebels blew away Mitches, 20-0. E. Lee and W. Roberts
also had circuit clouta for the Rebels.
AmeriFtrst downed Lu Rae, W and Power Drill
whipped Baird-Ray. IB-2.

Allison Is N ot Looking Back
TALLADEGA, Ala. (IIP!) - Veteran slock car
driver Bobby Allison, one of the [svorilet in Sunday’s
4294,000 Talladega S00, says he is "no4 looking back" in
his bid for his first Winston Cup national cham­
pionship.
Allison, of nearby lfueytown, told reporters Tuesday
he wasn’t going to look to see how his nearest
challengers were doing.
"If you’re looking over your shoulder, you aren't
looking where you're going," Allison said. "I'm looking
where I'm going.”
Allison, the older brother of driver Donnie Allison,
has won four races this year, including the Winston 300
in May. He leads the current point standings by 104
points over Darrell Wallrip.
Allision's lead was nearly 200 points over Waltrip
before the Mounlstn Dew 300 at Pocooo last week, but
Allison had problems and finished 23th, while Waltrip
took the checkered (lag.

McCutcheon Rejoins Buffalo
By United Press to to rsi U ou]
Lawrence McCutcheon has become reunited with an
old friend.
Hie Buffalo Bills signed the veteran running back, a
fivetime A11-Pro who enjoyed his best years under
current Bills’ Coach Chuck Knoi when they were both
with the Los Angeles Rams.
McCutcheon still bolds the distinction as the Rams'
atllime rushing leader.

state

m

OFFICIAL REGULATIONS
AND FLAYING RULES
FOR SENIOR AND BIG
LEAGUE BASEBALL

2.00
An IN F IE L D FLY .&gt; . I t .r tly ta ll (not
'rtcloding a line drive nor an attempted bunt
which t eo be caught by
ini*elder w rih
ordinary effort, when t i n t and second or
t- n l, second and Itnrd bait-* are octupmd.
before two are ogi The pitcher, catcher and
any outfielder who station themselves «n the
Inf (tiff cm the play shall be to rn sorted its
t*eider* for the purpose of this rule
When «t seems apparent that « betted bail
w ill be an Infield Fly, the um pire shall tm
m ediately declare "Inf i f Id t ly '* lo r the
benefit o f the runner* If the ball i* near the
twmHInev the um pire than declare "in fie ld
Fly &lt;1 Fair
The ball i l alive and runner $ may advance
at fhe r
of the ball being caught or retouch
and advance after the bad a touched the
fame a* on any fly bail if in t n r become* a
lout ball, ft i* treated the lim e a t any toy I

As you can see by the aforentenliored
rule, "when il Is apparent that a tutted
ball will be an Infield Fly, the umpire
shall immediately declare ‘Infield Fly*
for the benefit of the runners.”
Not only did none of die four umpires
not Immrdlalrly declare "Infield Fly,"
but they did no! declare lint all. At irast
not until Alvarez pointed out the
possibility, well after the ptay ended
Could It be that since Uiey didn't call
an "Infield Fly," dial maybe die)
didn't think there was reic’’ "Well die
ball hit on the clay," one pointed out,
"and we’ve been calling the clay
'Infield Fly’ territory all year."
Thai may very well be true, but the
first baseman was holding die runner
on first. He did not come within 10 feet

anything that was exclusive to one race. What
people didn't know Is that all through college,
when 1 was Bobby Moore, I was practicing
Muslim who Just happened to be black.
44
"When I Joined the Cardinals I as No. 1 draft
choice in 1971), my neighbor by chance was a
guy from Cairo, Egypt, named Rashad
Khalifah. I studied Arabic with him fur about
a year and at that point I decided to change
my name."
Why Ahmad Rashad?
"Ahmad m eans 'ad m irable one’ and
Rashad means led to truth.' It has a pretty
nice ring to It. But everybody had a hard time
saying It, They were calling me Ramada,
Ashmad, everything."
Rashad is a handsome, articulate, outgoing
person who hasn't the slightest inclination to
be outside the main stream of society.
With Buffalo In 1974, he began to capitalize
on his considerable talents as a wide receiver
and runner, but he hurt his knee severely. He
sat out ‘73, his option year, and became a free
agent because the Bills were 110,000 short of
his contract demands. He signed with Seattle
—he is a native of nearby Tacoma — but the
Scahawks, Icary of his knee problems,
quickly traded him to Minnesota.

The oilier part where the "blue"
goofed was in the wording "ordinary
effort." It was pretty obvious die first
baseman did not make an ordinary
effort i&gt;r be would have gotten closer to
the ball than 10 feet.
An "Infield Fly" rule usually deals
with a pop fly the player is positioned
underneath. The reason you have the
rule is to avert simple double plays If
the ball is dropped In die infield.
But my main contention still
remains, why wasn't it called im­
mediately’ Why did Alvarez have to
influence the um pire's decision.
"That's u manager's Job to influence
the umpires," was the reply after die
game during ti IP minute discussion
when the umpires tried to explain the
ruling to this reporter and some In­
terested fans.
Thai's strange 1 always thought the
umpires were supposed to do die In­
fluencing. Hut the best is yet to come.
The man who made the final decision
was the home plate umpire named
Kickllghter.
And he's the one umpire who didn't
see die play. "That's right, after 1
tnlkid to the other umpires I ruled that
it was an Infield Fly."
As the foursome walked away one
muttered. "The game's over — dial's
tlie end of i t . '
Well, not ju. t yet You sec when you
finally escapes! the "interrogation,"
you left me holding the rule book. That
was a nice gill, but I’ll gel II back to you
tonight.
I know die rules. It's pretty apparent
that you need it more than I do.

DEALS
Sports Transactions
By United P u n In i e m it te n t l
Tuesday
Vet tib at I
Seattle
F ir e d e tU tte n t
d*r*ctor of player development
Steve Schr yvev
Basketball
New York
IZ atended Coach

wed Hoffman-■ contract tor two

STATELINE. Nev. (NEAl - The
phenomenon is no longer eye-raising. The
world of sports has become conditioned to
athletes with names such as Kareem Abdul*
Jabbar, Abdul Salaam, Muhammad and
Mahdi Abdul-Rahman - even'll they're not
all easily Identified.
Bui when Ihe funner Bobby Moore decided
in the spring of 1973 to change his name to
Ahmad Rashad. to conform with his Muslim
beliefs, all hell broke loose.
In St. Louis, where he was employed then as
a wide receiver with the football Cardinals, lie
received sinister phone calls and death
threats through the mill. "They made me
very nervous,” he says.
He'll never forget the first night his name
change was announced publicly. The Car­
dinals were playing a pre-season Saturday
night game, and during the player in­
troductions the public address sy stem blared,
"In the program, there will be a change. No.
28, Bobby Moore, has changed his n am e.. . . "
That's as far as It got. Boos drowned out the
rest.
During the game — when the loudspeaker
carried, "Pass Intended for. . . " — catcalls
obliterated the name of Ahmad Rashad.
"Il was so uncommon then," recalls
Rashad. now a respected 10-ytar veteran In
the National Football league, "that they put
me down as a trouble maker. *17113 guy's no
good — let's get rid of him.' On the practice
field, I was like a leper. T his guy’s weird.'
They said I didn't have my mind on football. I
was a flake. At one point, I tat on the bench
behind a guy named Walker Gillette. That
was the all-time Insult to my career.
"The Cardinals were very much against my
name change. I could see tlie point They had
drafted me as a commodity, Bobby Moore,
All-American from Ckegon. And that's who
(owner) Bill Bidwell wanted on his football
team. So there had to be a compromise. The
compromise was me going to Buffalo.”
He was traded for a non-descript quar­
terback named Dennis Shaw who soon faded
from the NFL At Buffalo, Ahmad roomed
with O.J. Simpson and began to experience
the freedom of his beliefs.
"The feeling was," he says, "that 11 It was
OK with O J., it was OK with everybody. 1
grew up Pentecostal, which Is a very rtricl
religion. In college, ! met Islamic students
who showed me a religion which
corresponded to the way I thought. I ex­
plained to my mother that il wai tlie same
God we believed in. We Just got to him in
different ways.”
Thus it had nothing to do with the former
Cassius Clay becoming Muhammad Alt and
espousing the Black Muslim sect.
“As fer s i I was concerned," continues
Rashad, "the Black Muslims were a racist
sect, the same to me as the KJu K hu Klan, or

2 victory.

I Divisions at IJttle
league Baseball! —IM1
lief ini tlon of Irmis
Infield Ml

RashIt's

M oore Than Just A N am e

of the fly ball. The umpire must
remember these players are 13-yearolds and their reaction to the ball is not
that of a major leaguer, much less n
high school baseball player.
Subsequently, Fernandina Beach
retired Oviedo with Just one run for a 4-

nandina Manager Benny Alvarez, a
pretty astute fellow in his own right,
appealed to the umpires that an infield
fly should have been called.

— West Volusia Umpire

To A hm ad

SPORTS

W4dnt»d»y. July It. t t l t —11A

Sam

throw- to the plate easily tor a 4-2 ad­
vantage. All four runs off Wood were
unearned.
Oviedo's final rally and the game's
most controversial call came, fittingly,
in the final inning. Diminutive Andrews
walked to open the frame and Wood
drilled a single for runners at first and
second.
Moore then delivered a short popup
over Peters' head at first base which hit
the back of the infield clay and spun
crazily into foul territory allowing
Andrews to race to third base, Wood to
second and Moore to first base.
But hold everything.
Fernandina Bench Manager Benny
Alvarez contended the ball should have
been ruled an infield fly. First-baseman
Peters had been holding Wood on first
and made a futile attempt to cntch the
ball, coining within 10 feet of it.
After a meeting of the minds, the
umpires, indeed, ruled Moore was out
lSee related story on HA.) Instead o[
having Die bases loaded and no one out,
runners were at second and third Iad­
vancement is possible on an infield fly at
Uve runners' risk I and one out,
Ferguson followed with a ground ball
to shortstop which scored Andrews and
moved Wood to third base as "Fergy"
was tossed out by Shave. Gammons then
lifted a medium-range fly to right field
which Durrance grasped to ensure the 4-2
victory.
ALTAMONTE
Shan* L e tte r-iol ?t&gt;
jim m y Fo « Jti
M.ke Sthrnit. p
Neal H arris, ss
Ryan LtSle. If
Jeff Me Death. Ft
Bruce Car non. c l
D *n B *« ty .(
Anthony Lastaic. 7b
Steve Shakar, cf
Bfef Marshall, *%
TOTALS
INVCRNE IS
Steve Haber, lb
Rick Langley, rf
R&gt;ckGrice t l
c r c g Goalie y, e
Jett Southall, c
Penny L tflltl# f* If
Clarence W n hington. cf
Ci&lt;rit M e rto n.. 16
Keith B dwell Jb
TOTALS

Sanford, FI.

year*
Philadelphia
Stoned General
Manager Pat W illia m * to a m ulti
year contract, named Jon.i Nath
a it i l l aml general manager and
bu*in«f* manager
Washington - Signed iwingm an
Ron Dayt* of A n io n a
Football
OnonnaH
Released free a gent
wide receiver Frank GorplesM of
C ortla n d Stale a nd del t r u ly *
tackle Joe V e rna of Bridgewater
Slate
Houston
tteleaied tree agent
kicker D avid Posey
Id * Angeles — Signed line
packer Mel Owen*, the club t No I
d raft c h o ic e , to a threevear con
tr a d with a one ye ar option
M ontreal (C FLI - Head Coach
l o t Scanneiia signed a contract
ei t e n i(on through 1*13
New York G iant*
Placed
running back C liff Chatman and
linebacker K erw in Wyatt on n
lured re lie v e

New York Jet*
R*tea*ed
guard Scott Fang and linebacker
Todd Renvan, both of M aryland
Philadelphia
Retraced tree
agent running back L*dd&gt;e K ick*
and ro o k ie fre e a ge n t w ide
receiver Tom w t*e of Penn State
and ce n te r Tony B ubniak of
Colgate
*an F ra n ciico
Cut line
(tucker* Karl Broom ot Northwest
L o u 'lia n a . W ilb e rt M a ilip of
Hawaii and A rt Aker* of UCLA
and defensive tackle Don Drake of
Cal Poly Pomona
Tampa Bay - Signed I retagent
defensive I mem an Alva L ilr * and
defensive back AAarcene Em m ett

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�I1A—Evtnlns Hart Id, Sanford, FI.

Wednasday, July it , IISl

Orlando, Altamonte Decide League At Sanford

Explosive Legion Combatants Collide Friday
__

Rumor has it Sanford Stadium will be
the site of a series of land explosions this
weekend.
American I.*glon baseball returns to
Sanford for a brief stay when Altamonte
and Orlando exchange blows for the
C entral Florida league crown this
Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
However, when the two clubs meet a
war is always in store.
Orlando finished with a 13-1 league
mark, and it outblasted Post 183 three of
the four times the two met. In the (our
games, Orlando averaged 12 runs while
Altamonte blasted out 35 runs against the
defending league champs during the
regular season
Post 286 sports five players from
Boone's 19814A state baseball champion

club. Leadoff hitter Johnny Pleicones
had nine hits and seven stolen bases
against Altam onte this sum m er.
Pleicones will be at short while Brave
teammate Ronnie I.amktn will be his
double-play mate at second. I-amkin,
who will bat third, can also fill In behind
the plate and in the outfield.
Another Boone product. Jon Lumbcrt
will bat fifth and man leftfield The hard­
hitting outfielder hit over .400 two con­
secutive seasons as a Brave including a
Metro conference batting title two years
ago.
The other two off the state titlists are
rlghhanders Jerry Ryder and Dave
McCorkle. Ryder, who beat Post 183 8-4
last Sunday, will get the starting nod in
game two while McCorkle will probably

be sent to the mound if a game three Is
necessary.
Uke Altamonte, Orlando has a pair of
Jack Pantehas’ Seminole Community
College R aiders. Centerfielder Jeff
O'Dell will tie down the clean-up spot
while slider specialist Kevin Smith will
start on the lull Friday.
O'Dell and Smith are two of Post 286's
three starters off last year's third place
state legion finishers. lefty Dan Hayes
also returns at first base. Orlando picked
up the Stetson-bound Hayes off the
Winter Park roster at midseason. He will
bat second behind Pleicones.
Rightfielder Phil Burgess, who will
swing from the six slot in the lineup, has
totally destroyed Altamonte pitching in

_. .

__

.

M . •

•

&gt; l . _____ t .

I.

The other Raider for Altamonte is
the first four encounters. The Bishop
Moore outfielder-pitcher hit at a .714 dip leadoff shortstop Bob Parker who leads
against the second place regular season the club with 22 hits and a perfect 25-fnrleague finishers with 10 hits in 14 at bats 25 in stolen bases. Parker, like Marcello,
including two doubles, two triples, a was 5-1 on the mound and will be the first
home run, seven runs batted in, seven in relief for coach Bob McCullough
Post 183’s strength is up the middle
runs and four stolen bases.
He will be followed in the lineup by Along with Parker at short, Jim
designated hitter Bobby Hepburn, who Chlckowski logs down second. He has
bats seventh, Terry Revels at third and pounded the ball at a .423 dip since
eighth, and catcher John Israel in the moving front Michigan.
Behind the plate. SCC bound Bryan
ninth position.
Altamonte knuckleballer Rick Mar­ Holzworth is hitting .364 for Altamonte.
cello will be thrown to the lions in game The strong-armed backstop is tied with
one opposite college-teammate Smith. rightfielder Doug Chiodtnl with four
Marcello worked 7-and two-thirds in­ game-winning hits and has hit safely In
nings in Post I83's lone win over Orlando, his last 10 games.
Rob Reich will roam center and bat
but the right hander was roughed un for
clean up. Reich, who is transferring to
seven earned runs and 10 hits.

t r . l. x i.

m t a k a 11 ( / • M a P t h in h » t
Valencia on &gt;a tbaseball
scholarship, has
gunned down six would-be runs al home
this summer.
Surrounding Reich in the outfield will
be a pair of U k e Howell seniors-to-be
lefthanded Dave Martinez (20 hits) will
be in left while Chlodini takes his 396
average to right.

Hounding out Die starling Altamonte
lineup is smoolh-fieldlns Jerry Win­
terhalter (.315) at third. John Reich at
first and either Benton Wood i .406, 17
stolen bases) or Mike Andriano i ,3401
hitting for the pitcher.
(lame one is slated for a t p in. starting
time with games two and three (if
necessary I on S .lurilay and Sunday at 11
am .

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�OURSELVES
Evening Herald, S m brt). FL

Wednesday. July }f. I N I — IB

Cook Of The Week: Tracey Wight

CALENDAR

Artist Splashes Foods
Secretary's Job:
Ally To Boss
At All Times
DEAR ARBY: Re wile M arching husband'! desk at office:
Sorry, Abby, but It is the consensus of every single (or
married!) secretary with whom I discussed the letter that you
are wrong.
As a confidential secretary to a corporate vice president of a
major oil company, and as a wife of an executive with the
largest automobile manufacturer In the world, I would no
more expect my husband's secretary to permit me to go
through his desk than I would expect her to Jump into hls I and
my!) bed In fart, I've never even been to my husband's office;
nor has my bass's wife been to his. I would not even think of
going through my husband's brlefcaM In our home. This would
be violating pot only hls privacy, but hls company’s.
My suggestion to a secretary put In such a spot would be
Simply to offer to find whatever It Is the wife is looking for. If
the wife la persistent. I'd stand boldly at the desk watching
every move, stating that she should know that I would. Indeed,
feel obligated to Inform her husband of this.
A secretary works (or her bou and his company. If a wife
has the audacity to intrude, for whatever reason, the marriage
Is already in trouble, obviously; and the secretary's alliance is
to her boss at all times. Your Job, Abby, may be saving
marriages (lots of luck!); mine, in this particular instance,
would be to protect my Job.
IjOYAL SECRETARY
DEAR SECRETARY: Your answer was better than mine.
Thank you. I learned something today.
DEAR ABBY: I am 23 and my fiancee is 22. We've been
engaged (or a year and went together (or three years before
that. A Chrtstmas-aeason wedding Is scheduled. My problem is
I don't want to m arry this woman. We are not happy together
and we fight and argue every time we see each other.
I have tried to break the engagement several times, but she
cries and carries on and I get nowhere, so I give up.
She said she couldn’t consider breaking the engagement
because she would be humiliated before her friends.
Another complication: About six months ago, I fell in love
with one of her best friends. (This friend was asked to be a
bridesmaid.) She loves me, too, and we feel terrible having to
sneak around to see each other.
I know I have to break this engagement, but how?
NO NAMES. NATURA1J.Y
CEAR NO NAMES: Tell your fiancee that you cannot marry
her imowtng that the marriage will not be based on m u tu a l
love, le t her know that If It's humiliation she's dreading, she
may tell her Iriendt that the broke It all. And don't mention
your present love nllnlr. One blow nt a time Is enough. Good
luck. You'll need It.
DEAR ABBY: 1 have worked 14 years In sn office where no
smoking was permitted. Six months ago we got a new super­
visor who smoke*, and now two-thirds of my co-workers have
cigarettes going all the lime.
My clothes smell terrible, my eyes are red and sore, and l
am concerned about (he damage second-hand smoke can
csum to my health.
How can I gel clean air where I work? If I bug my supervisor
about It, 1 could lose my Job to a smoker.
SMOKEDOUT
DEAR SMOKED OUT: Sorry, there Is nothing you enn do
about IL I know It's unlslr. But who ever said life was fair?
I P.&amp; Our rouatry, for aD IU advantages. Is lagging In citizens'
rights. A law was recently passed In Swltierland making It
Illegal lo smoke In a public telephone booth. Ilooray (or the
Swiss!)

IOWA
MEATS
Wo toll Only
U S D.A. Choice
Naturally Aged
Western Beet
OLD FASHION BUTCHER SHOP 1EBVICE A QUALITY
U S 0 A Choice

CHUCK
ROAST

*i

69

With Visual Sparkle'
By EARS SMITH
Herald Correspondent
Whether you call them hors d’oeuvres, canapes or ap­
petizers, almost all cooks, at one time or another, are called
upon to serve them.
What are they?
They are any number of foods served hot or cold in bite sized
amounts. Most often they are served before dinner to whet the
appetite.
Appetizers ire served around the world and many countries
have developed their own ethnic names: Spanish topas,
Japanese zatsuki and of course French hors d oeuvres.
In Sanford, Tracey Wight Is the person many people seek for
appetizer ideas.
Tracey and her husband, Ralph, Uve with their two children,
Jennifer, 7, and Jessica, 5 4 , on Marquette Road.
Ralph la employed by Jim Lash Blue Book Can and Tracey
Is an arts and crafts Instructor with the Adult High School
Diploma Program at Seminole Community College. She is a
member of the Sanford-Seminole Art Association and Beta
Sigma Phi.
“ Art Is a visual means c( communicating Ideas and
thoughts,'' says Tracey. Therefore, cooking rniufaD into the
category of art. Certainly a dish can be a work of art,
especially when care Is given to food arrangement and eye
appeal," Tracey explains "I use parsley, carrot curls and
radish roses for color and eye appeal. They give what I like to
call "visual sparkle" to most foods."
Tracey added, "1 enjoy preparing hors d'oeuvns because of
the variety of things that can be done with them to create a
completely different recipe. For Instance, you can substitute
the types of cheeses or vegetables and In some Instances even
the meats. It gives you an opportunity to be creative and to
express any artistic talent you might have.”
OLIVE CHEESE BALL
1 1 ox. package cream cheese, softened
1 8 ox. package blue cheese
1&lt; cup butter
two-thirds cup drained, chopped olives
1 tablespoon snipped chives
Blend cream cheese, blue cheese and butter together. Stir tn
olives and chives. Chill slightly, form Into balL Chill well.
Press one-third cup chopped walnuts over ball. Serve with
assorted crackers.
Yield: 3 cups
CHEESE STUFFED APPLES
1 3 ox. package softened cream cheese
1 and one-third ox. Camenbert cheese
1 tablespoon dry white wine
4 medium apples, cored
Best cream cheese, Camenbert cheese and wine until
smooth. Scoop out cored apples leaving shells 4 Inch thick.
Fill with cheese mixture. ChlU 2 lo 3 hours. Cut In wedges.
COCKTAIL WINNERS
1 t oi. Jar I‘4 cup) prepared mustard
1 10 ox. Jar (1 cup) currant Jelly
1 pound (I to 10 frankfurters
Six mustard and Jelly In saucepan over low heat. Slice frank­
furters diagmaOy Into bite size pieces. Add to sauce and heat
through. Serve hot. Variation: use sausage.
SHRIMP DIP
4 pound cooked, peeled and deveined shrimp, fresh or
frozen
1 package 11*4 oz.) onion soup mix
2 cups sour cream
*4 cup catsup
1 tablespoon parsley, chopped, for garnish
Chop shrimp Combine all Ingredients except parsley. Mis
thoroughly and chill. Garnish and serve with cTackers. Yield:
approximately 3*4 cups.
c_
BIL E CHEESE BITES
1 a ox. package refrigerated biscuits
*4 cup butter
3 tablespoons crumbled blue cheese
Cut the package of refrigerated biscuits In quarters.
Arrange tn two 8 Inch round baking dishes. Melt together
butter and crumbled blue cheese. Pour mixture over biscuit
pieces, costing well. Bake at 400 degrees for 12 to 13 minutes.
Yield: 40.
APPETIZER HAM BALL
2 44 at. cans deviled ham
3 tablespoons chopped pimento stuffed olives
1 tablespoon prepared mustard
bottled hot pepper sauce (to taste)

A u t o m a t ic ic e m a k e r i n
1 7 A cu . ft. n o -fro st
r e f r ig e r a t o r

Weight Watchers, 7 p m., Quality Inn, lotigwood; 7
p m . Good Shepherd Lutheran Church, 2917 Highway
17-92, Sanford.
South Srminolr AA. noon, mental Hralth Center,
Kobin Hoad, Altamonte Springs.
O vrrraters Anonymous, 7:30 p m . Community
United Methodist Church, Casselberry.
Sanford AA, 8 p.m., 1201 W. First St.
ALAnan, 8 p in., Crossroads Halfway House, la k e
Minnie Drive, Sanford
Sanford-lirrakfast Rotary (Tub. 7 a .m , Sanford
Airport restaurant.
Retirement dinner in honor of Casselberry Police
Chief George Knrcher. 8 p.m , la r d Chumley’s
Restaurant, Altamonte Springs.
FRIDAY, JULY 31
Seminole Sunrise Klwnnls, 7 a.m , Jerry's Airport
Restaurant.
Seminole South Rotary, 7:50 am , Lord Chumlry's
Pub, Altamonte Springs
South Volusia Scrioma, 7:30 a.m , Deltona Inn.
Wright Watchers, 10 a.m , Sears Altamonte Mall.
Free blood pressure screening, 10-11 a m. and 3-4
p .m , Deltona Public library, 1691 Providence
Boulevard, Deltona.
Deltona Public library Summer Program. 10 a .m ,
children 4-12. Program by Caryl’s School of Dance.
Mf, 4 id one 4* Of 1014 Smut

Tracey Wight likes lo prepare colorful eyrappealing and taste-appealing foods.
1 3 ox. package cream cheese, soltened
2 teaspoons milk
Blend ham, olives, mustard and pepper sauce. Form in ball
on serving dish — chill. Combine cream cheese and milk, frost
ham ball. ChlU. Remove and add parsley to garnish before
serving.
TINY QUICHES
pie crust for 2-9 Inch pies
2 tablespoons butter, melted
1 10 oz. package broccoli, thawed and weU drained
2 oz. Swiss cheese, shredded
4 of a 4 ounce package sliced cooked ham minced l about 4
cup)
2 eggs
4 cup heavy or whipping cream
*« teaspoon salt.
Prepare piecrust (a ml* can be used or use your favorite
recipe.) RoU out crust 4 Inch thick and cut 32 circles out of It.
Press into bottom of muffin cup pan. Brush melted butter over
bottom of each pastry. Stir the broccoli with a fork, add cheese
and ham until mixed. Spoon Into each pastry. Whisk best eggs,
cream pnd salt. Spoon over broccoli mix. Rake 25 minutes at
373 degrees. Variation: Substitute brussel sprout* for broccoli,
any favorite cheese (or Swiss.
BRAUNSCHWEIGER PATE
1 pound braunschweiger
2 packages green onion dip mix
1 teaspoon sugar
1 tablespoon garlic spread
1 tablespoon milk
4 teaspoon hot pepper sauce
Mash braunschweiger. Combine dip mix, sugar and 2
teaspoons water. Add to braunschweiger: blend thoroughly.
Shape mixture Into a mound; place on serving plate. Chill.
Melt garlic spread. Whip cream cheese with milk and hot
pepper sauce Blend In melted spread. Spread Cream cheese
mixture over braunschweiger; chill. Garnish with parsley and
radlah slices.
TAKE A FLOAIOA

0RANGEJUICE
B R EAK

P rescribed
R e a d in g
By M EDCO

*1 ?

U.S.D.A. Choice

ENGLISH
ROAST
U.S.D.A. Choice

SWISS
STEAK

$ 189

Fresh Daily

LEAN GROUND
1 Lb*.
CHUCK

. Factory tnaullod
loomasar replace* lo*

Or Mare

asliaujod.
. Removable but hold* up
to 7 3 lb* of too. about
IP'* cubs*

Our Own

A ll MEAT
WIENERS

2108S . FREN C H

• Two utueubi# wire
s h o lv a *

A VE.

(17-9&amp;T

NEXT TO MR. C*S FRIED CHICKEN

PHONE OROER AHEAD
Its Rsady Whan Yeu're Ready

LIMIT!0 QUANTITY
• Btg 4 73 cu ft. fl-owor

Rtfl. &lt;699.95

ModornnttTVB
• Coveted moat pan.
» Twin vegetable Un#
. Rolls out on wheel*
• Energy saver ewttch to
normal position halpa out
operating coal
• 3 0 4 * wide. 04* high.

*649«

It's always nattering when
medical science m ulls in a
major success. Only t»el&lt;e
yezis ago, hcail surgeons
began to bypass coionary
arm ies, which were clogged
up, with the hope of restoring
good circulation lo ihc
patient's heart. It has long
been established a bypass
operation could relieve heart
pain bui it wasn't known how
cffcctivt li would be for
prolonging life. However,
reports hase been coming in
from some of ihc major
bypass hospitals such as the
Texas Heart Institute and the
U n iv ersity
of
Alabama
Medical Center which gisc
reason lo be glad. The lengthy
studies hast closely followed
bypass palients lo determine
the long-term results of Ihc
operations. Indications point
to a 15 percent betm charter of
surviving five or more years
with ihc bypass operation than
with medical treatment only.

MEDCO DRUGS
17-tl AT 37th ST.
SANFORD

323-4528

THURSDAY, JULY 30
ta k e Mary Rotary. 8 a.m.. The Club at the
Crossings, i formerly Frogg’s).
South Seminole Optimist, 7.30a.m., Holiday Inn. Wy­
mote Hoad, Altamonte Springs.

U.S.O.A. Choice

CHUCK STEAK
CENTER CUT

WEDNESDAY, JULY »
Oviedo Rotary, 7:30 am ., the Town House
Restaurant.
Sanford Kiwanis, noon, Sanford Civic Center.
Sanford Optimise noon, Holiday Inn.

Tiffany A rt On Display
Barbara Tiffany | Hunt), formerly of Sanford, is displaying
her works of art this week at Colony Gardena, Park Avenue,
Winter Park.
Exhibition hours are from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

�1R—Evening Here to, Sanford, FI.

Wtdnetdiy. July I f . n i l

Ah-So Delicious Salads
Ideal Approach To Authentic Oriental Dinner
When friends come by to share a sunny afternoon, treat them
to an Oriental inspired salad buffet. The refreshing buffet
combines a variety of basic salad ingredients nude deliriously
different by adding bean sproutj, water chestnuts, chow mein
noodles and soy sauce.
TUNA SAIj VD lIF.I.IGIfT
2 packages ramen noodle soup mix, any flavor
1 can (I o i.| water chestnuts, sliced
1 8 4 at. can tuna
1&lt; cup onions, chopped
11 cup celery, chopped
2 tablespoons chives, snipped
2 tablespoons parsley, snipped
1• cup soy sauce
4 cup oil
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
l » cup sour cream
salt and pepper to taste
1 1 ox. can chow mein noodles
Prepare the 2 packages of Hamm Noodles according to

directions. Reserve the seasoning packets. Drain and rinse
with cold water. In a large bowl combine the noodles with tuna,
water chestnuts, onions, celery, chives, parsley, seasoning
packets and if It needs It, the salt and pepper.
Toss lightly. Add the oil, lemon Juice, soy sauce and sour
cream. Toss lightly to coat with dressing.
Chill for 30 minutes and serve over Chow Mein Noodles.
Garnish with cherry tomato halves.
ORIENTALVEGETABLESALAD
1 4 cups cottage cheese
4 cup sour cream
1 tablespoon soy sauce
t can 114 ox.) bean sprouts, rinsed and drained
2 cans (8 ox. each) water chestnuts, sliced
3 cups finely shredded cabbage
4 cup sliced celery
4 cup thinly sliced green pepper
4 cup sliced green onions
2 teaspoons seasoned salt
4 teaspoon pepper

Combine cottage cheese, sour cream and soy sauce. Add
remaining ingredients; toss lightly. ChilL Serve on crisp salad
greens. Serves 8.
CHOY FRITT SALAD
1 can ( 14 ox.) bean sprouts, rinsed and well drained
1 can (8 ox.) water chestnuts, drained and sliced
2 cups apples, chopped
2 cups celery, chopped
1 cup pineapple tidbits, drained
2 cups mayonnaise
4 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons pineapple juice Iunsweetened)
4 cup maraschino cherries
4 cup pimentos
4 cup shopped nuts
Mix bean sprouts, water chestnuts, celery, apples and
pineapple tidbits. Mix mayonnsise, lemon juice and pineapple
Juice. Then blend into vegetable-fruit mix. Refrigerate and
allow to marinate for several hours. Garnish with cherries,
pimentos and nuts before serving. Serves 8.

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delight l foreground! made heart) with rumen
noodles and tunu; a light and creamy Oriental
Vegetable Salad; and a perfect finishing touch,
(hoy fruit Salad.

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It will take about two pounds o( chicken breasts with rtbs,
pouched or toasted, to make about three cups ol shredded
chicken.
Also, prepare the crunchy topping ahead and store It In the
relrlgrtalnr to use lor a repeat ol your paradise salad, or with
other fruit und meat or poultry salads. It will keep tor up to
three months.
You may use canned pineapple chunks Instead of fresh and
your (avurilr null, rattier than cashews.
t’AHADLSKCHICKEN SALAD
Curry Add-A t ram h
1 cups quick or uld tashioned oats, uncooked
1-3 cup butter or margarine, melted
4 cup chopped cashews
2 tablespoons shredded or flaked coconut
2 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
4 teaspoon curry powder
1* teaspoon salt
Chlrkrn Salad:
I fresh pineapple
1 cup fresh pineapple chunks
1 cups sliredded cooked chicken
cup celery slices
&gt;i cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons chutney
For Curry Add-A-Crunch, best oven to 3M degrees. Combine
all Ingredients; mix well. Hake In ungreased lfby-10-lnch jelly
roll pan ut 350 degrees lor II to II minutes or until light golden.
Cool, Will keep in llghlly covered container In refrigerator up
to three months. This kitchen tested recipe makes about 24
cups
For chicken salad, cut pineapple lengthwise through leaves
Into quarters. Slice out trull, leaving shells intact to form
boats; set aside. Hemovc core from fruit; cut fruit to make 1
cup chunks. Combine with remaining ingredients; teas lightly,
Chill. To serve, mound chicken salad Into pineapple boats;
sprinkle each serving with I tablespoon Curry Add-A-Crunch;
serve with additional crunch, It desired. This kitchen tested
recipe nukes 4 servings
VARIATION: Substitute lettuce leaves (or fresh pineapple
and 1 84-ounce can pineapple chunks, drained (or fresh
pineapple chunks, If desired.

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when It Is served In a fresh pineapple boat and topped with a
curry a&lt;td-a-crunch mixture.

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1100 West 13th St.
Sanford

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SUGAR 7 7

Quality! ServiceI Savings!
FOOD STAMPS WELCOME
|

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�Evening Hersld.Ssniord.fi.

Making The
Chinese
Connection
Classic Chinese cuisine is an old as Its culture and con*
sidered by many to rival the finest cooking in the world. As
most of us know from reading the ads fee Chinese restaurants,
there are certain basic styles: Cantonese, Peking Szechwan,
Henan and Fukien.
And then there is Shanghai. Shanghai is also characteristic,
but doesn't rate among the classics as a regional Chinese
cooking style of its own since it represents an integration of
Chinese cooking with many other ethnic ideas. This, because
Shanghai is a great cosmopolitan dty, and in cooking, as in
everything else, people borrow customs and concepts from the
people they live with.
So perhaps it would be fair to say that Chinese dishes most
people prepare at home in this country are Shanghai style. We
have adopted and adapted — and made the Chinese con­
nection.
One of the best of the connections is the Shanghai Rock
lobster pictured here. It Is Chinese in concept, but it has some
definite Occidental culinary viewpoints. It Is suited to current
American ta ste s, needs and importantly, av ailab le
ingredients. The sweet, easy to handle seafood used in the
recipe is South African rock lobster. The tail contains a solid
piece of meat that ts easily cooked, as easily removed from the
shell in one piece, sliced and put Into the recipe. What makes
this meat so desirable is Its texture and taste, which are due to
the icy current &lt;that comes up the western coast ol Africa from
the Antarctic) from which Use South African rock lobster is
fished.
If there was ever a "Shanghai" recipe, this has to be It, Two
of the ingredients are apple Juice and catsup. Whoever but an
American would think that these particular flavors would
especially enhance a Chinese dish? They do. Rock lobster from
South Africa, catsup from the pantry shelf, and apple Juice
from New York or Michigan combine with the Oriental
culinary technique of Sweet and Sour.
The rock lobster dish will, naturally, be served with rice, In
this case, Rickshaw Rice, a deliciously different way with the
Chinese staple. It has an ingredient that unquestionably makes
the dish Shanghai-style. That's Angostura an italic bitters,
the venerable liquid blend of herbs and spices. A taste for this
flavoring and seasoning was carried by seafaring men of the
19th century to every- port of the world. Certainly to Shanghai,
the single gateway to China in those days, and one of the
world's largest seaports .
SHANGHAI ROCK LOBSTER
16 oz. froten South African rock lobster tails
14 cups apple Juice
4 cup vinegar
4 cup brown sugar
*4 cup catsup
1 tablespoon soy sauce
4 cup sliced carrots
4 cup diced green pepper
1 cup pineapple chunks, drained
2 tablespoons corn starch
4 cup apple Juice
Drop frozen South African rock lobster tails into boiling
salted water. Boil for 3 minutes alter water reboils. Drain
Immediately and drench with cold water. With scissors cut
away underside membrane and remove meat In one piece and
cut into chunks. Combine next live ingredients and bnng to a
boil. Add Carrots, green pepper and simmer 10 minules Add
pineapple and simmer 3 minutes. Dissolve corn starch In 4
cup apple Juice and stir into hot sauce. Cook until thickened,
stirring constantly. Add lobster chunks and heat for 5 minutes.
Serve over Rickshaw Rice. Yield: 6 servings.
KICKSHAW RICE
4 Cups steamed rice
1 tablespoons of rendered chicken fat
1 clove garlic, finely minced
4 lb. fresh mushrooms, thinly sliced
1 ran (19 ox.) water chestnuts, drained and sliced
4 teaspoon Angostura aromatic bitters
Salt and pepper to luste
Heat chicken fat over medium heal In a heavy pot or large
skillet. Stir in garlic. Add mushrooms and water chestnuts and
stir-fry for 3 minutes. Add Angostura bitters and salt and
pepper to taste. Combine this mixture with rice until grains
are evenly coated. Place In casserole and heat in moderate
oven (350 degrees F.) for 20 minutes. Yield: 6 servings.

And ForDessert...
The Chinese are not high on desserts. But Americans are
• Again we'U go the “Shanghai" route. When the Chinese serve
dessert It is usually fruit. Any classic sweets in Chinese
culture, and there are a number ol them, are served during the
meal - not after it.
The dessert, then, for an Oriental-Occidental connection
should be fruit-based. And this Blueberry-Mandarin Pie is an
• Ideal solution.
As most people know, mandarin oranges come from a small,
spiny Chinese citrus tree. It beers loose-skinned fruit, In a
color that ranges from yellow to reddish orange. There is
speculation that the name "mandarin" came from the color of
a Mandarin's robes. If you want to know, the fruit is also called
kid-glove orange or, here we have it, tangerine.
But for our Oriental-type dinner, we'U rail them mandarin.
Blueberries we always call blueberries. Americans know
Ihem very well indeed, and know that the name came from the
beautiful blue color of the berry Itself - a color that reflects
the summer sky. It Is. during the blue sky summer months that
the fresh blueberries are available. And that's when
Americans are always looking (or one more way to put them or
the table.
BLUEBERRY MANDARIN PIE
1 can (11 o i.) mandarin orange segments, weU drained
1 qt. fresh blueberries, rinsed and drained
1 cup sugar
2 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca
4 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 pkg pie crust mix
2 tablespoons butter or margarine
•: 2 tablespoons cream
Reserve some orange segments and blueberries for garnish.
In large bowl combine retroining orange segments and
.‘ blueberries. Sprinkle with augur, tapioca, salt and nutmeg.
Toss lightly unUl well mixed. Prepare pie crust mix according
-' to packxge directions (or use your favorite recipe for tc ru s l
: pastry). Roll out half of dough on lightly floured board or doth
'• to a 13-inch circle. Fit gently into a deep Much pie plate; trim
, paitry overhang to 4 inch. Spoon fruit mixture into shell; dot
’* with butter. Roil remaining dough into an 11-lnch round. O il 4
.- or 3 alila near center to let steam escape. Place over filled pie
' shell. Trim overhang to 4 Inch. Turn edges under together
flush with rim. Flute edges. Brush lop with cream. Bake in a
• pnheated hot oven (400 degrees F. 143 minutes or until crust is
golden and Juice bubbles up. Cogl an wire rack at least two
• hour*. Just before serving garnish with reserved mandarin
' orange segments and blueberries. Yield: One 9-inch pie.
.• NOTE: Dry-pack frozen blueberries can be used.

Wednesday. JvlylS, H l l—IB

The comb/riaf/on of Oriental-Occidental

culinary ideas comes up tasty and in
good taste. Shantfiai Rock Lobster, left,
Is Chinese in concept, but it has some
definite Occidental culinary viewpoints.

YOUR

S A V IN G S

YOCI D O N ’T HAVE TO TAKE IN F L A T IO N W ITH O U T A FIGHT.
WE’RE NOT!
PANTRY PRIDE HAS BEEN FLO R ID A ’S LOW PRICE LEADER FOR
15 YEARS. WE’RE GO ING TO C O N TIN U E TO SAVE FLORIDA
SHOPPERS M O NEY ON TH EIR TO TA L FOOD BILL. WE T H IN K
EVERYDAY LOW PEN NY PINCHER PRICES ARE M O RE IM PO RTAN T
TH A N A FEW W EEKLY SPECIALS.

Count on us

Count on us

Count on us

S T O P W O R R Y IN G W H E T H E R O R
N O T YO G G O T TH E BEST DEA L.
W E L L G IV E Y O U T H O U S A N D S O F
E V E R Y D A Y L O W P E N N Y P IN C H E R
P R IC E S ... E V E R Y D A Y .

W E V E G O T G E N E R IC B R A N D S ,

F O R A L O W E R F O O D B IL L .
EVER YD A Y LOW ER PENN Y

G O O D Q U A L IT Y D E P E N D A B L E
F O O D S A N D N O N F O O D S IN
P L A IN W R A P P E R S F O R E V E N
G R E A T E R S A V IN G S .

Count on us * Count on us

P IN C H E R P R IC E S A R E L O W E R
TH A N M O ST SUPERM ARKETS
W E E K L Y S P E C IA L S ,

Count on us

F O R B O N U S BUYS, T O O L -

NO STAM PS. NO G A M ES. NO

Y O U D O N 'T H A V E T O W A IT F O R

L I M I T E D T IM E O F F E R S F R O M

G IM M IC K S . W E R E G O IN G T O

W E E K L Y S P E C IA L S . W E L L G IV E

O U R S U P P L IE R S T H A T W E P A S S

C O N T IN U E T O G IV E Y O U U . S .D .A .

Y O U L O W P R IC E S A N Y D A Y

O N TO YOU. WE MAKE THE

C H O IC E B E E F . T O P Q U A L IT Y

O F TH E W EEK . EVERYDAY O F

B U Y - YOU G ET THE BONUS.

G R O C E R IE S A N D F R E S H

TH E W EEK.

PRODUCE.

LOTS OF
CHICKEN

FRESH FLA OH C.A PREMIUM GRADE
1 BREAST L LEG QTRS WITH BACKS
1 NECKS J G llll F I PACK AGFS

FRESH

OPEN PIT
SAUCE
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SWEET
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?28*

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BTL.

OVER
5 LBS

ELSEWHERE 19' PER 111 •

I l SI WHERE 92

ELSEWHERE 78 PI K IB

GREAT
GROUND

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NO RTHERN

SODAS

TISSUE

B E E F PA TT IE MIX

98

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BATHROOM

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225

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Items!
Count the
Savings!

ELSEWHERE SI IJ

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�&lt;B—Evening Hersid, Sanlord, FI.

Wednstdiy, July I t, I t l l

'Fatproof A Child From Birth

NUTRITION

PRIZE WINNING

By GAYNOR MADDOX
:
Special To The Herald
It may startle many parents who think fatness in an Infant is
a sign of God's favor. However, doctors and nutritionists say
this Is not true.
Doting parents', and relatives, in fact, do a child a favor if
they do not insist on “ fattening" him up from infancy
throughout adolescence.
One way, according to a leading pediatrician, not to blight
their lives with pyschological, physical and social problems
that often come with excessive overweight, is not to let a child
get truly fat in the first place.
It has been learned In the last few years that fat adults
learned to be fat when they were children.
Pediatrician Alvin Eden, M.D., who wrote “Growing Up
Thin,” points out that certain children are destined to grow up
fat.
These are children who are overstuffed with milk and are fed
solid foods much too early, for example.
Pediatricians say that a baby who is kept in a play-pen or a
stroller and not encouraged to crawl or scoot around getting
exercise also may face later weight problems, especially if
they are encoura ged In stop crying by laving a cookie or bottle

FLORIDA
COOK-OFF

The Florida Beef Cook-Off was sponsored by the Flon a
CowHeHej for the purpose of featuring beef recipes and un­
derstanding the various cuts and proper treatment of them.
The INI contest was held at the On nge County Agricultural
Center in Orlando. This year’s winner, Donna Kay Downs, will
represent Florida In the National Beef O dt-C u in Sioux Falls.
S D.. Sept. 23-25, 1961.
If you have a favorite beef recipe that you would like to enter
in the February, 1582 Florida Beef Cook-Off, contact your local
County Extension Agricultural Center or watch for details of
the contest in your local newspaper.
FIRST PLACE WINNER:
lioana Kay Downs, Hillsborough County
MEXICAN BOAST WITH (IKANOE
5 lb. Eye of Bound Roast
•« teaspoon pepper
3 teaspoons salt
3 cups orange juice
2 tablespoon* grated orange rind
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tablespoon flour
2 cups boiling water
- '« cup orange marmalade
2 teaspoons prepared mustard
Garnish: orange rind roses
Bub roast with salt and pepper. Place In shallow roasting
pan; roast at 373 degrees for 30 minutes. Pour off fat. Mis
orange juice, rind, garlic and 4 teaspoon salt. Pour over roast
Boast lor two hours longer, basting frequently. Transfer to
serving platter and skim off fat. Place roasting pan over direct
twal and blend la flour. Add water, stirring and scraping
both in of pso. Ccuk over .low boat five minutes. Mix in marinalit'fe andhiustard. Carve ns many slices as needed to serve,
place on platter. Serve with fried rice fiesta, or mushroom
enchilada*. Pour sauce Into a hollowed orange and plate on
' platter. As a final garnish, place orange rind roses around
platter.
8ECOND I’l ACE WINNER!
Dnrli Ellis, Brevard County
BEEF ENCHIUDAS WITH GREEN SAUCE
Sauce:
1 package (ruten, chopped spinach
2 cups water
2 cans Cream of Chicken soup
2 bundles green onions
2 ru n s green chili peppers
l « teaspoon salt
2 cups sour cream
Enthllodii:
2 packages fresh tortillas (21)
2 pounds ground round
2 packages taco seasoning
2 chopped onions
Oil for Iriying tortillas
2 packages Monterey Jack cheese
1 to 14 cups water
Cook splnath in 2 cups water fur 3 minutes; idd soup, salt,
chili peppersand onluns.Blend 4 at a time In blender; add sour
cream and mis well.
Saute ground bee!, add taco seasonings and 1 to 14 cups
water; rook for 3 minutes. Soften tortillas in hot oil, blot on
paper towels to remove extra oil, fill with meat mixture, roll
up and put seam side down in baking dish. Four sauce over all;
bake, emend, 20 minutes at 330 degrees F. Sprinkle with
grated cheese and lots of chopped onions. Return to oven until
cheese is melted and enchiladas are heated through. Serve
garnished with parsley and cherry tomatoes.

THIRD t’LACE WINNER:
Dv Ire Velstiergi. Marion County
CHIU UPSIDE-DOWN PIE
2 I tup, olive oil or lalad oil
2 lbs, ground chuck
4 cup chopped onions

I clove crushed garlic
14 Tbsp. cliill powser
14 tap dried oregano leaves
I tsp. dried basil leaves
l ‘i cups chopped tomatoes, fresh or canned
14 tsp. salt
1 can 113‘&gt; ox,| kidney beans, undralnrd
4 cup lawny port wine
I lemon, juiced
I pkg. (12 oi. I corn muffin mix
I can Il*i oi.) cream style cum
1 egg, slightly beaten
1c cup milk
1 cup grated cheddar cheese
l c cup chopped parsley
Catsup (optional)
In a 10 Inch iron skillet, saute beef, onioni and garlic In hot
utl until beef is browned.
Add chill puwder, oregano, basil, tomatoes and salt. Mix
well. Cook over low heal, covered, 30 minutes.
Stir in kidney beans, wine and lemon juice and cook un­
covered 10 minutes.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
In a medium bowl, mix the corn muffin mix, com. rgg and
milk until moistened. Skim fat from meat mixture and
discard. Spread muffin mixture over meat making sure It
touches side ol pan. Bake 23 minutes. Let stand In skillet 3
minutes and then Invert onto serving platter.
Sprinkle generously with grated cheese and finely chopped
parsley. Sene ringed with finely chopped parsley. Offer ad­
ditional condiments of grated cheese, parsley and catsup.

stuffed in thett mouths. A preschooler who Is bribed with
sweets so he will finish his meal or constantly snacks in front of
the TV also may face a weight problem In later life.
Some children get less exercise than they really shoild have,
pediatricians agree. For example, the adolescent who is
driven to and from school rather than walking or riding a
bicycle. And the child who never walks when he can sit and
never runs when he can walk.
It is up to the parents to encourage some form of physical
activity from infancy on. Of course, the problem may well be
that the adults also are slothful, and probably fat.
Doctors further explain that usually a thin child will grow up
to be a thin adult, not skinny but within the normal weight
range. A fat child almost always grows up to be a fat adult and
studies show that a person does not lose the fat tissue built up
as t child.
II may sound anti-parent, but don’t insist your child finish
everything on his plate. He may not truly be hungry. He may
not need the full portions served him. By forcing him to eat you
may start him on the path to putting on extra weight.
To avoid conflict at the table, s e n e smaller portions.
An infant or toddler knows how much fond he actuslly wants.
And. no a ink diets or special diets are needed, unless
medically required.
Again, help your child to avoid being an overweight adult
from infancy on.

OUR PENNY PINCHER

TOTAL BILL...

cPiide

CHECK

G tr ir m c

LUX
LIQUID

MAYON­
NAISE

mQ
Q
C
if if
NATIONAL BRAND PRICE S I 67

SWEET

SWEET JUICY

m

DETERGENT

5 FRESH
PEACHES

99

©28:

NEW CROP
BLUEBERRIES

88

ELSEWHERE 39’ PER LB

ELSEWHERE *1 .0 9

ELSEWHERE 99&lt;

LARGE FANCY

FRESH U.S. NO. 1

®

GREEN
PEPPERS

WHITE
POTATOES

10

n 78

LB BAO

ELSEWHERE *2.2*

COMPARE

.KANO

n«f

E.ICt

Ginraic i».icA n

,-----.

Tom ato S a u c e _ 3 7 * 0
_53&lt;

oenraic Iui «.iiio
u io
VUEIWHIC
l LIUUIU

Kraft DRESSING____ * 1 19

G tN K K lC )1«4 JAR M U D

f—

0

Tomato S o u p _ 4 / * l

IO*i RIDOilQ ORAIRI

p—,

M arshm allow s_39*

0

.--- .
0

.

&gt;

0
.

K osher D ills___8 9 * 0
Conditioner___ 9 9 c 0

KILLER ^ $ 1 3 9
r™ ]

JR i

••99*

1

0

S w e e t C o r n _ 5 /7 8 * 0

Glad B ags_____ ? 2 19 0

Green C u k e s 5 /9 8 * 0

IRISH LARGE

I l N CAR PANTRY PRIDE

------ -

,----- -

Nl«f CROP LOOSE RIO BUSS

0

P o ta to e s____ l b 2

I4*t PANTRY PRIDE SLICED. WHOIE OR

.

------ -

3 *

0

PACKED IRESH DAILY

59*

,----- .

JUICY

t----- ,

0

Fla. Lim es 1 2 / 5 8 *

0

4*s JAR INSTANT COPPEE

.-----.

LARGE SRI IT

------ -

0

C antaloupes

f— 9

LARGE BUNCH CALIPORNIA

Team Flakes__ 9 9 *
)2«&gt; RMITENOUS!

li*SB
itAM
fl.lill
VA
tPIO
tMH
tun
till
ini M
A'*I06

0
0

-__|
[— 1

Mellow R o a s t _ *175

0

Folger’scoFFEE.^33 0

2 2

drip

*
*

SUNSHINE
i o o x box
CH EEZIT
C A C
crackers
ra Q r f

CLOROX
BLEACH
O NE

GALLON

9

ELSEWHERE *7*

BOR

IRISHLYPACKAGED

Mellow R o a s t _ #2 9!

0

R a d ish es___ p k g . 2

11 SI • Ml RI 41 01

ig e n e a io _

QUAKER

8 9 &lt;
IL M SHI RI I I 44
5 LB BAG

|7 l$ 1 2 9
GRITS
1

NESCAFE
INSTANT
COFFEE

$3 59
ELSEWHERE *3.99

20' O F F

3 *

0

13oi HAG

iii ^

$ 4 9 5

CO FFEE^
W H ITE h o u s e

apple

SA U C E

1LSIRHI I f 44

m

25ot

6 9 *

PANTRY PRIDE

CHARCOAL
BRIQUETTES

10 |

I I 49

LB BAG |
ELSEWHERE 11.19

15* O F F

«

PAMPERS
DIAPERS
OYTRNITC

12 COUNT

w m t THIS COUPON GOOD
THSU 1 I O .W W t . n e t

SANFORD 2944 ORLANDO ROAD. ZATRE PLAZA AT THE CORNER OF 17-92

0

1SI If HI RI »J OO

FO LG ER’S

UU'CK

JAR

! 1 29

----- -

FLAKED

“

0

88*

Broccoli
R aisins

pp S

8 *

7 8 *

|------

lOox
7

ea.

l * i JAR INSTANT COPPEE

1 LB BAG

$ * fl7 Q
r^a^ 1 •

Cole S law ___b a q 4

M e ste a _ iil i i _ # 27 S

IlS t WHIRI I I 44

PANTRY P R I D E

GENERIC
TEA BAGS

COUNT
NATIONAL BRAND PRICE 2.39

0
»

Green C elery__ 4 8 * 0

0

I i t CAR DRIP COPPEE

1 LSI R HI RI Rt

A N T G ROACH

14*

LB

IRISH STALK

Mellow R o a s t _ $2 09

mu

GENLRIC

1

0

OR 111C IRK PI RA

JAR

C abbage tc a tx n i

0

1

r—

Hershey S y r u p j l 39

COFFEE

iio
i

IRISH

Cut B eets___3 / 8 9 * 0

R .c .C o i* ___ 8 / ‘ l M

, 'KttONAI R.ANO

CO FFEE^
CREAMER

M ushroom s__ l b # 1 7 8

|

* Ml Nt

0

Apple Ju ice___ 6 9 * 0

------- ,

*AHf

Apple J u ic e ___ ?139

AJaX DETERGENT____*1®9

liM ja a

riMMta

0

I IB CAN E.r.. REQ OR DRIP

N o o d le s ______ 7 7 * 0

IblA
WttA* a.L'S
....C
Af Mif

.— ,

Sw eet P e a s____3 8 *

«—— *

P o ta to e s______ 6 5 c 0

GENERIC

K raftM u stard _69*

• IIKAIit M(IMJl *•&lt;?■MAIUAAI

Deodorizer____ 7 9 * 0

11.1 S A L S A A fS O ttIM

M e a t _ 4 / #1

P otted

Kosher Spears 9 9 *

r— i

D etergen t_____ ’ l 69

,------ .

I R liH BNOttHlTP

1—

0

24*1 JAR JUNf ROTIRflH

r— i

lit «* ■H |: l . | lMK.6A.tlM C76U *4 10*1»

COMPARE |

lOTi.i. PANiav rnoe

Cat F ood______ 8 9 * 0
14*4 RUG ROO*

6 9 *

99c

i

Dog Burgers__ ! 2 29 0
o r n r iic

/ * l

.D 6
w4&lt;
- PABADIlt
1) ,?S
PARAUiaC

Bucket O lives

0

W HIR!

1*4 HUNGRY JACK M A SH ID

P o ta to es_____ 5
1 . . H o a n ti

Carpet S c e n t

0

D ressing_______9 9 c 0

M o« c a m

■»

0

|---------v

D etergen t_____ 4 9 *

G t n t a iC

l«H RIWSUIMI
!*•#
M M U K I I Ml?
*11 POU
M i M UA II*
O. I• f• (111
IT

COMPARE

1Am*U fRAIS ItUUS 1(0*1*41OiCAlAliM* - .

M u stard _

G t n e s ic

r ite
wneat

Vlaslc Relishes 5 8 c

C IM R ic U *iJAR

G tN IR tC

hUT.'.

COMPARE

V ORLANDO ROAD

« . . . . » -

�Evening Herald, Sanford FI.

Wednesday. July J», t f l l —ID

Doggie s-ln-The-Window
A Unique Pastry Entree
Nutritious vegetables and slices of wholesome hot dogs are
ideal go-togethers (or creating the puffed pastry entree —
Doggies-m-the-Window.
The National Hot Dog &amp; Sausage Council suggests giving
Iresh garden or fam utand veggies a ralatouille seasoning
that's sure to add interest and appetite appeal to this unique
and economical dish.
As an economical buy, a pound of hot dogs yield a pound of
edible food, with virtually no weight loss during preparation.
During the summer special pricings are generally available.
Hot dogs may be frozen for up to tw o months and should be left
in the protective vacuum packaging.

m
mKm

d o g g ie s -in -t i ie -w inihiw

&gt;t cup olive or vegetable oil
I small eggplant, cut tn 'z-inch cubes Iabout
1 medium onion, sliced
1 | l'-ouncel package frozen puff pastry
2 medium tomatoes, chopped

.M

Vegetables and hot dogs are wrapped in puff pastry.

PRICES MAKE YOUR

cE rid e

i t OUT!
4 8
b

s LBS

#

■

PORK RIBS

LB

SLICED

STEAKS

?1 38

Ci
FAMILY PKQ.
OVER 3 LBS
ELSEWHERE S2.9B PER LB

8frVBilH8.il

H it

p►***•
iw a i*

«rHrae
rf „

li 'M P lf lt lU lH 't ll

—

Sausage "'iKiT"*! 48

0

Ofrf* i l i a V l D t CM04CI f»»W I s u it
K N IlftM IM H lK l

via 8m i a,t i i v 8 b •

1

|

0

o v e a 5 ia »

___

m e s h v alley ebeshly

&gt; lbs B ert

8 *

Pork Bones__Lii68* 01
*««

IO*i B ETTY JA N E HALE LAYEB

Fudge Cake___ 9

,

0
0
-

9 *

S PACA PAATBV PBlDt

Twirls tC INNAM ON)_ 6

9

'

12 PACK LUNCHEON

.

---- ,

Hard R olls____ 9

3 *

1

„

&gt;«"»«
8SicI

** ___
^
° ^

S an d w ich es___ !!149

l* M

g

g

^

:

CHIPS

,-- -

8m W M lffc Jltt 41180 Milo MQ C&gt;« 111118

r*i i i m a

0

wardi o

note *uPi8oac«tt

| jut'VROEEN

m b*

m aears

8 c

)2 e i CUP A X K L B O D S PLAIN

,------- .

8 *

0

C O M P A R E t - L g U il '.H 'V

me
WHiae

0

/ 9 7 *

,

MKI

| IB JA R IV N E IA S IC

Grape J elly ____ 9
I2«&lt; n r a a

I

2

D ressin g s____

M O . O B Win I

A

A

P

8 9 *

*•8 D IB IN E E C IA N I

Lysol Spray___! 1 19
18Of MAIM r * l 8

,

0

g
H

It 4*18PI (&gt;• If *8*81 •*»

Punch (HAWAIIAN) J 2 37 0
IEXIZE

TOR

9 *

m agic

riarW H E R E i 11 ja

CREST

,

7 ^ - E la iB H lB I 41 11
22o i

GREASE

I A

r elief
7

9

*

18/201

JOLLY
POPS

.

C ricket_____2

I I S ( * H | Bl 19

ja r

29

VO-5 HAIRSPRAY___^ l29 0

iLaiwHtai ar

tiatw H iat i i 11

,

0
2179 0

NO B M ALO B Y O B O llY

Pert SHAMPOO.

0

..

t o p p i n g

2 2 OI

I

Sure S o lid _____ ! 1

.

PANIRY P R ID t

0

pag

Y ogurt________ 9

0

PiaCl

DISPOSABLE LIG H TEB

WHIPPED

i 6o i i o a f

S W E E J ifflY

j

8 c

41 „ N H P .^ , . . rj ,»•u . w , . . . •

0
0

. 3 9 '

,-----.

fl&lt;H h i ■ B fM tit

COMPARE

---

12 PACA ra O / C N P A N IB Y P B ID I

---------

mi

nat

2 / 8 8 *

HALP G A LLO N C A B fQ N P ANIBY PBIDI

O range J u ic e _ ? 1 M
Qtr’s. O le o ____ 5

‘ l 28 0

Great D o g s ____ 9

w h iie

*•» r a o ic N PAN iav Paine

r— — t

IS h s PAG GWAlINtYCHICAPN PAAflK*

0

ram ae Ppride
h aa
*«*i
.8 rtaoztis
A O / IN PANTRY
AlO f M

W affles______

Lunch M eat.
.

-------- -

4 PACA t « l P ANIBY P B ID I

net

0

0

P A N IB Y PBIDf

B iscuits,*aiLL*!^i."88c 0

,

.

Fish S tic k s ____ * 1 4 8

i i » f » mi a r 11 i i

BREAD «£, $ - 1 1 9
JUNE BOY

18*4 PR4 f ASIA' f UORl'WiQ t 18 » * Kt8f1**0*1 •

|------- 1

8 c

Cream C heese 6 8 *

------.

S au sage moto*«u»4l 78 ill..I

------ I

BreadJ=r_2/*l“ 0
HOM E8TYLE
or SANDWICH

I f A STAB f B it 0

Fudge B ars____! 1 19

0

! * • ! ICMP r u n A »A B t

0

|

••I P AG

0

Roll S a u sa g e __ 9 8 c 0

N«t

!*•• CUP P A N IB Y P B lD t

.

I*o i PAG CABOIINA PBIDC

0

Dinners_IKet"—? !58

.

L u n ch eon _____ ?168

0

litr#811*
1ID81 t i l t
wHtar
ipimi mt*

co m pa re!

Sour C ream ___ 9

0

_____ .

.— .

JuiCe (ORANGE)

r— I

liw M D I4RIRI P U N *M1» M K IO

T Y S O N S CH IC A I N

COMPARE

- 'H I At

PMC|

1*01 PAG
|84l
PRU EYNE
U N I TASTE
[ R 8 I E 8SLICED
U V IU

t A ll lC V B BA N p

2 L B P K G E B O IE N ANY VABIETV

l*o&lt; PAG

n i t *t«i

Meat B ologn a__?1M

0

Fried C h ic k e n _ !2 48

0

COMPARE

,

9 8 c

ziapito itaona

— -

p a t t ic mix

COMPARE C flH D

I IB PAG

m

BUBS

W H EBt

Corn D o g s_____ ! 1 18

Ground BeeL-LB*!48 0
oveb

H u MQ f * ' i 88(8 8 1 8 1 ■•■ar.l 8 k m ft

l* o i PAG

Chuck Steak-LB5! 88

nww i

Sliced B acon __ #138

0

ir o k i

Great Ground l b 9

iiva'frtM.t

COMPARE!

Cornish H ens

|i

Cubed Steak_LB#2 78
i • in par ■

tu n

ELSEWHERE 68' PER LB

CUBED CHUCK

ELSEWHERE * 1 .7 8 PER LB

COMPARE I

INSPECTED

BONELESS BEEF

"^QUARTER
PORK LOIN
OVER
3 LBS

79*

r

0 -

, ™

GREEN
GIANT

$

m

MUSHROOMS
SUM S L PIIC IS

3

°

°

I ! M S H I Nt I T

4 L M WIH M l B l’

PACKER LABEL

4 0 ! CAN

HARCOAL
LtQHIER
FLUID

59*

I 601 CAN

69*

D TE

6 PACK

i.s u T U c a u u iin i

Calif. Cellars
1.1 U T ia BOM OB BHIIM

Calif. Cellars
I • IJTtS BURCt UMSSU1

Celia Wine
750 ML

Real Sangria

Black Cookery:
’The Way Mama
Cooked It'
“The Way Mama Cooked It" is a new cookbook featuring
traditional Black Cookery. The recipes In this 32-page color
book were prize winners in a National Hodpe Contest spon­
sored by the Reynolds Metals Company In Richmond, Va,
The contest was promoted in 16 major cities across the
nation and Judged at a cook off held at one of America's oldest
Black Colleges, Hampton Institute, Hampton, Va.
At Hampton, the panel of food experts who represented
Black culinary expertise were Venezuela Newborn, Food
Editor for Essence Magazine; Chef Fred Crawford, Master
Chef and cookbook author, and Juanita S train , mother, wife
and Director ol Hampton’s Human Ecology Department
These Judges taste tested the entries and selected the out­
standing recipes. From these a grand prize winner and 25
second place recipes were designated.

PECAN TARTS

I 2 oi C A N

■81
if*«fr»
up8V rue
' j ; ; 1 BHfii

Cover of the cookbook.

Ruble Jamrrson of Memphis, Tcnn., was the grand prize
winner wllh her recipe "Sunday Pot Roast." Mri. Jamerson
was the happy recipient of $1,000, a lifetime supply of Reynolds
Wrap 25 (L household aluminum foil, and a deluxe General
Electric freezer.

MILLER
BEER
$ |9 9

C O M PA R EISQ

Note; all zucchini or all eggplant i about 1 pound) can be
used in the vegetable mixture.
For Individual Servings: Cut each pastry sheet into1is Roll
out on lightly floured surface lo increase size by 1 inch in each
direction. Place 2 wiener strips in center of each pastry piece
Top with about l-3rd cup vegetable mixture, then 2 or 3 ad­
ditional wiener strips. Fold edges of pastry over filling I edges
may not meet in center I, lhnch ends and corners to seal
Place on lightly greased baking sheets. Hake at 375 degrees F
for about 20 minutes, until golden.

OVER
5 LBS

ELSEWHERE (1 .3 8 PER LB

ELSEWHERE * 1 .( 8 PER LB

ELSEWHERE 7S' PER LB

g o v e r n m e .i t

Unfold pastry. Place each sheet on lightly greased baking
sheet. Place I cut wieners 11 strips) dow n center of each sheet.
Spoon half (about l-&gt;t cups, vegetable mixture over wieners
on each sheet. &lt;Do not spread out the vegetable mixture.. Top
each with half the remaining wiener strips. For each sheet of
pastry with filling: brush edges of pastry with water. Cut
pastry on an angle on each side of filling into **-inch strips
Then fold strips over filling, alternating l strip from rich
side. Pinch ends to seal. Hake ut 375 degrees F for 30 to 40
minutes, until golden. Cut Into thick slices to serve. Makes 8
servings.

TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS

M M
^ ^ L l

O VE R

2 LBS

■

m

u .s.

SLICED
BACON
® Q O i

COUNTRY STYLE

ra e tH r iA o a q a par mium c b a o e
S Bar AST QTBS WITH BACKS 1 IEGUMIA
WITH BACAS ] M C A * ] GIBIET PACKAGES

O VE R

MARKET STYLE

EXCELLENT FOR COOKOOT

pound!

PT

TOTAL LESS!
LOTS OF
CHICKEN

1 small grwn pepppr. chopped
l small zucchini, sliced
I teaspoon seasoned salt
I I teaspoon garlic powder
1 pound wieners, cut lengthwise into &gt;.s
In large skillet heat oil. Stir in eggplant and onion. Cook over
medium heal, stirring frequently, for 15 muiutes. Meanwhile
set out pastry to thaw as directed on package. Add tomatoes,
green pepper, zucchini, seasoned salt and garlic pjwdcr to
eggplant mixture; stir to mix well. Cover; cook 10 minutes,
stirring occasionally. II necessary cook and stir over high heat
to reduce any remaining liquid. (Vegetable mixture should bo
moist but not have runny liquid, t

m10

PABiTBf

pbidi

uU3r&amp;IIt6610 m\

w iu a m you

mom

on to u t t o t a l

pood b iu ob

• t w iu

Double the Difference in Cash!
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THE BTOBC OPPKE

EFFECTIVE JULY 30 THRU AUG. 6. 1881.

I package (3 oz.) cream cheese, softened
4 cup butter or margarine, softened
1 cup sifted flour
1 vgg
*« cup brown sugar, firmly packed
1 teaspoon vanilla
Dash salt
1 tablespoon butter or margarine, softened
Two-thirds cup chopped pecans, divided
Combine cream cheese, 4 cup butler and flour in mediumslpe mixing bowl, chill, covered, I hour. Shape into 24 1-inch
balls. Press each dough ball over bottom and up sides ol
ungreased miniature muffin pans. Preheat oven to 325 degrees
F. Combine tgg, brown sugar, vanilla, salt and 1 tablespoon
butter in small mixing bowl; best until smooth Divide onethird cup pecans among tarts. Pour egg mixture into muffin
cups. Top with remaining one-third cup pecans. Bake 25
minutes or until lightly browned. Cool slightly; remove from
pan with fork.
M akra: 24 larti.

�*S—Evening Herald, i n t e n t FI,

Wednesday, July 2t, H I)

Rice: Infemotional Favorites
A Prize Collection O f Rice D ish e s From A rou n d The W orld
Whether you're dining at a buffet In the South Pacific, an
elegant restaurant in F.urope or at the kitchen table at home,
American grown rice is served and enjoyed the world over.
Most Americans don't reabie the high quality rice they
enjoy Is actuatly grown and processed In the U.S. Or that this
same preferred U S. grain is rn|oyed by people in over 100
rotintries.
dice Is grown in Arkansas, California, Louisiana,
Mississippi. Missouri and Texas and is one of the most modem
and htghly-mechanlxed forms of food production today.
dice producers and processors exercise quality control from
Die field to the table to give consumers In the UJ», — and
throughout Die world — a convenient, nutritious, economical
and easy-to-prepare food.
In recent years, the United States has been the world's
leading exporter of rice and It Is known worldwide for Its
superior quality. It is in demand in International rice markets
because of its quality, uniform grain size and dependable
cooking characteristics.
So, whether you are in Barcelona, Baghdad or preparing
something special for the family, US. rice goes great with
everything. From risottos to curries to pllafs — American
grown rice Is truly an international food.
HOW TO PHEPARE RICE
Presented here is a collection of international rice dishes
from around the world. Ttiey have all been kitchen tested, use
familiar Ingredients and are easy to prepare. Bon appetit!
When a recipe calla for cooked rice, any type or form of rice
may be used successfully (regular-milled, parboiled, brown,
or precooked). Just follow package directions to obtain the
quantity needed for the recipe. In recipes which specify un­
cooked rice, adjustment of the amount of liquid and cooking
time may be necessary if you prefer to use parboiled rice or
brown rice.
Most rice packages have easy-to-follow directions for
preparing perfect rice. In the absence of package directions,
the same high quality product can be obtained by using the
following method! s):
1 cup uncooked rice
2 cups liquid for regular-milled white rice I for drier rice use
2 tablespoons less liquid) (2 4 cups liquid for parboiled and
brown rice; for drier rice use 4 cup less liquid)
I tablespoon butler or margarine
1 teaspoon salt

SHEW S CHICKEN SALAD
2 cooked chicken breasts, skinned, boned and cut Into strips
1 cup chopped red or green p epptu
3 cups cooled cooked rice
4 head lettuce, tom into bite-size pieces
4 cup sliced almonds
2 hard-cooked eggs, sliced
1 cup mayonnaise
2 teaspoons prepared mustard
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon green peppercorns or 4 teaspoon seasoned
pepper
Combine chicken, red peppers, rice, lettuce, almonds, and
eggs. Blend mayonnaise, mustard, and seasonings. Pour over
rice mixture; toss lightly.
Makes 6 servings.
FRANCE:
A standard In many ISth Century cookbooks, this classic
French dessert actually originated In England as "burnt

RICE CREME BRULEE
2 cups cooked rice
3 cups milk
14 cups light cream
4 cup sugar
9 egg yolks
1 4 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 teaspoon almond extract
4 teaspoon salt
4 cup sliced blanched almonds
4 cup light brown sugar

POLYNESIAN MEAT BAI LS WITH RICE
pour hot water around It. Bake at 300 degrees for 1 hour or until
a knife inserted near center of custard comes out clean. Cool;
then chill throughly. Sprinkle with abntnds and top with brown
sugar. Placi; under the broiler for a few minutes or until sugar
melts and runs together. Serve immediately or chill again and
se n e cold. Just before serving, shatter the glaze by tapping
lightly with a knife.
Makes S servings.

Put race In a 7 4 x 12 x 1-inch baking dish. Scald milk and
cream, but do not boil. Add sugar and stir to dissolve. Beat egg
yolks until light In color; add extracts and salt. Stir hoi milk
gradually into egg mixture. Pour over rice; stir. The custard
should be about 14 inches deep Place dish In a larger pan;

See RICE, Page JB

I I l l l l H

McCalls

Thisweek’s feature
FlthVFowl

The Show-Off

lit I ** E*

Publix

i i i i i i i y

* 1 09

Z esty -F lav o re d

Potato S a la d ........... 7 8 9 e
R e a d y -lo -ta k e -o u t S o u th e rn

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Hot from th e Dell!

Beef S t e w ...................* *2 49
M acaroni &amp;
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SUMMER REFRESHMENT
Instant T e a .........
Tea Mix with
Lemon.................

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Unsweetened Tea Mix
with Lem on............ *2

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•SNO-WHfTE* WESTERN
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THE PLACE FOR
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Funshine Orange. Grape or Frud
Punch

Juice B a rs ..............

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89*

Cauliflower

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Whole Hog
Sausage................. ',3 *14#
Gwaltney (Chicken Frank)

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99*

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U.S.D.A. Choice Beef
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Rib Eye..............

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3
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SWIFT PREMIUM
TURKEY ROAST

2-lb. pkg.
(W hite Meat ............................ $ 3 .7 9 )
(W hite $ Dark Meat ...............$ 3 .1 9 )
(Dark Meat ...............................$ 2 .8 9 ) J

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Oscar Mayer Chubs

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Braunschweiger.... l.\'
Lykes Sliced

10-u

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Polish Sausage ....

V

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"Sun W orld" (2 Bunches per pkg.)

Green Onions....- i t

Sunnyland Mild or Hot

*1

90s

Bell Peppers....... 9 *

*3 »

Rich's Chocolate Cream Puffs,
Bavarian Cream Puffs, or

2”

For Relieh Trays, Fresh Green

89*

Banquet Chicken. Beef or Turkey

33*

Serve with Hollendalse Sauce

Chel Saluto

Great Dog............... mV

Avocados........... *£* 69*

89*

ftysngA* JO**

Marjon Brand (Soybean Curd)

Ham .......................... 7

TofU ................................

*2»»

Cod Fillets................ 35* , 1T*
High Liner FJtetc

Frozen Fillets

T ro u t....................... 7

Treasure Isle Breaded

Hickory Smoked

Fantail Shrimp......... SV * 4 "

Mullet...................... 7

Kitchenware

FreshUm ss.... 12 &gt;« 09*

Armour Star Boneless (3 to 5 lb a v g )

P e rfh ..........................3V *1™

49*

For Salad or Dipe,
Florida Large Size
Florida "Full of Juice"

(Plus 100 Citra SAH Green Stomps
with Coupon Elsewhere tv Ad)

i

99°

Yellow Squash... 7

59*

Bread Dough......... WV

Dinner Fries............mV

per
lb.

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THE PLACE FOR
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

Freeh Tender

BrxJgtord

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Cherries

Orange Juice..... ‘VS? *1”

Fruit C u p s .............. ' X *1 »

Chocolate Eclairs..

Beef Cubed
Steak..........

NORTHWEST RIPE

Good Anytime, Hood's Brand

Apple J u ic e ............99*

Pot Pies............... 3 AV.

N
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White
Potatoes......... 10 3* • I 7*

Bki Valley

Party P izza............. ” V

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Boil, Fry or Mash These

Tree Top Concentrate

Toastees................

Cucumbers....... 9 ... *1

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Howard Johnson's Blueberry or Corn

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C h e e s e ....................... ? »14»

tike i break from kitcnen flutes and put Putkii n cnarge1
Stan * ma oetoous Dek lied chcken dinner or
real up trie grid (or a quck n easy hamburger flmnet

BEETCURRY
14 pounds boneless beef round steak
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
'l cup each chopped onions and celery
1 tablespoon each flour and curry powder
I teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon each ground ginger and turmeric
4 teaspoon each paprika and black pepper
4 cup golden raisins
14 cups boiling beef bruth
&gt;« cup yogurt
3 cups hot ctoked rice

8AIDI ARABIA:
Shifting sands and beautiful, yet mobile, lent villages a n
slowly fading from the landscape, but the culxine Ira n this
part of the world continues to grow In popularity.

y

Flavortul

WITH DELI TAKEOUTS AND HEARTY COOKOUT FAVORITES

PAKISTAN:
Over 5,000 years of successive Invaders resulted in a legacy
ol culinary habits. Tlic Pakistani pulso dishes made of fruit,
meat and rice have become standards throughout the world.

4 cup grated Parmesan cheese, optional
Saute chicken livers and onions in butler until tender. Add
mushrooms, salt, and wine; ilminer about 2 minutes. Tots
lightly with rice. Heal. Sprinkle with parsley and Parmesan
cheese.
Makes 6 servings.

y

G erm an B ologna .

RiMixgetsyou
outoftheKjfchefi

Cook bacon until Iransparcal Stir In meat ond onions; cook
until brown. Add lomalo Juice, 4 cup broth, wine, and
seasonings . Cover; simmer l hour or until meat Is almost
lender. Stir In carrots and cook 30 minutes longer. Add corn­
starch which has been blended with remaining broth. Cook 2
to 3 minutes. Remove bay leaf and cloves. Stir In tomatoes.
Serve with fluffy rice.
Makes 6 servings

3 tablespoons white wine or chicken broth
3 cups cooked rice, cooked in chicken broth
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley

n y

T asty Old F a sh io n Loaf or

I cup beef broth
4 cup dry red wine
1 tablespoon paprika
Salt and pepper to taste
I bay leaf
I or 2 doves
1 cup sliced carrots
2 tablespoons cornstarch
3 cups hot cooked rice

CHICK ENUVER RISOTTO
6 chicken livers (about 4 pound) cul In eighths
4 cup chopped onions
4 cup butter or margarine
1 can (4 ounces) sliced mushrooms, drained
4 teaspoon tall

p er pound

ll-.% H A«J Me%*J«

1 can &lt;144 to 16 ounces) tomatoes (2 cups) (drain; reserve
juice)
j .

Swiss cuisine can be divided into three basic culinary areas
according to the vtdnlty of its three major neighbors —
France, Germany and Italy. Northern Italian influence is
obvious In this dish.

N
*

99°

i i i i x1i m

T T T T III1 1 T X

I •** I »•A•‘* *4

mJ

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Smoked
Hams

: $499
NEXT WEEK S FEATURES

i T T i m

SWIFT PREMIUM FULLY
COOKED, END OR WHOLE

28-og. pkg.

Cookbook

2 cups chopped onions

SWITZERLAND;

«
M

3 Dutch-Frye f
Chicken

BEEFGULYAS
1 slices bacon, diced
14 pounds beef chuck, cut In 1-Inch cubes

Have meatman tenderlie steak oe pound meal thoroughly.
Cut Into 1-inch cubes. Brown In oil. Add onions and celery;
continue cooking until vegetables are tender crisp. Blend flour
and seasonings; sprinkle over meat and vegetables. Stir well.
Add raisins and broth. Bring to a boll; reduce the heal, cover,
and simmer I hour or until meat Is tender. Just before serving
stir In yogurt. Adjust seasonings, If necessary. Serve over beds
of fluffy rice.
Makes 6 servings.

&amp;

SAVE $ 1 .2 0 , W EAVERS
FROZEN THIGHS AND
DRUMSTICKS

SAVE 3 0 c , ASSORTED
FLAVORS, DAIRI-FRESH

C O O K B O O K C O L L E C T IO N

Combine Ingredients In a 2 to (Pquart saurepan. Bring to a
boil. Stir once or twice. Lower heal to simmer. Cover wllh a
light-fitting lid or heavy-duty foil. Cook, without removing lid,
Ik minutes 120 to t t minutes for parboiled rice; 41 minutes for
brown rtde). If the rice ts not quite tender or liquid is not ab­
sorbed, replace lid and rook 2 to 4 minutes longer.
HUNGARY]
The nation Hungarian dish, Gulyas (Goulash in English)
means •'cowherd", . . named for the nomadic cowherd ol
Eastern Europe who Invented the dish.

creme” and was made popular by Trinity College in Cam­
bridge.

*1 «
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*1”

Thisweek'sfeature
only W

Colorful Freeh-Cut

Daisies................ *2**
Select Your Favorite Summer Thirst
Quencher From Our Excellent "Publix"
Brand Juices: Oronge, Lemonade,
Grapetrult, and Apple.

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TOUMT

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�Evening Herald, Ssnford.FI.

• • •

R ic e

Wednesday, July H . l f l l —ZB

Sou/eed chicken livers combined with

onions, mushrooms and subtle white

Continued From Page IB

wine add a touch of Switzerland to

GERMANY:
. The French influence is unmistakable in Baden, the region of
Germany where the cooking can be ranked as "huate
crutsine" and rice, not spatzle, Is used to absorb the rich
gravies.
WINEGROWER’S CHICKEN
2 slices bacon, diced
2 cloves garlic, halved
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
I chicken legs i thighs and drumsticks)
1 cup chopped onions
4 cup dry white wine
2 tablespoons each chopped parsley and chives
14 teaspoons salt
4 teaspoon pepper
1 bay leaf
1 can (4 ounces) sliced mushrooms with liquid
1 cup chicken broth
2 tablespoons flour
3 cups hot cooked rice
4 cup sour cream
Saute bacon and garlic in butter until bacon is partially

Chicken Liver Risotto, left. Fish Fillets
with Green Rice, right, Is typical
of Spanish Cuisine.

cooked. Discard garlic. Add chicken and brown on all sides.
Stir in onions and saute until transparent. Add 4 cup nine and
cook a few minutes, stirTing to loosen browned particles. Add
parsley, chives, seasonings, mushrooms, and broth. Cover and
cook over low heat for 30 minutes or until chicken is lender.
Remove chicken and keep warm. Discard bay leaf. Blend flour
with remaining wine. Stir into sauce and cook until thickened.
Serve chicken on beds of fluffy rice. Top with sauce and dollops
of sour cream. Garnish with chopped parsley, If desired,
Makes I servings

OOZ BREAKFAST CLUB
FLORIOA g r a d e a

1LB PKG .RATH
REGULAR OR THICK
SLICED BIACKHAWK

Coronet
Towels

Fruit
Drinks

M u Wit&gt; M tw i

►v • l« t&gt; (*AW I

(Pi i m

Taster’s Choice Regular or
Decaffeinated Freeze-Dried

C offee ................. *4 ”

SAVE 14«, IN WATER
OR OIL, STAR-KIST

V e g e ta b le S h o rte n in g

C ris c o .................... Z

*1”

or M o tt E aetudmg ail Tobacco U tm *)

1lb
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N e stle’s Quik

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Coffee

C ookies................ »'• * 1 19
Sparky Briquettes

Charcoal................ VS *2 ”

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SAVE 7 0 c . Chablis Blanc.
Rhinelleur. Vin Rose. Pink Chablis

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Pizxa S a u c e .... ...
S a la d D re ssin g

£

Crem ora.............*2".'

...

OR O U T C I N G I R A L B

(1 5 c OH Label). Fabric Softener

Johnson Disposable

Diapers...................Vm

Toasted Corn Chips, Nacho
Cheese, Sour Cream 4 Onion,
or Taco Tortilla Chips
(7 to 8-oz. size)

Doritos.................

Yogurt.............. 3 &amp;

99‘

Cheddar................ 58 *189
Wisconsin Cheese Bar Sharp or
Medium

Lemon Juice.... .. beltie 8 9 c

Cheddar................ ’£V *1”
Sealtest Light n' Lively Lowtat Small
Curd

69*
14 oi
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Cottage C h eese....

59*

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WELCH'S DELICIOUS

Grape Jam
or Jelly

99*

Libby's (Mix with Gelatin)

tr-««
can

Fruit Cocktail,,.
Libby's Chunky

59*

if oi
can

Mixed Fruit......

69* L

Libby’s Sliced or Cut

29*

Bests................
Libby's Cream Style or W hole
Kamel Golden ( 1 6 4 or 17-o&lt;.)

Corn...................2 *0, 08*
Libby's (Serve with C rackers)

IZ

2

88*

Van Camp

Pork A Beans..... \ m

69*

SAVE30c
BLUEBONNET

im u iiii &amp;

Spread

THIS AD EFFECTIVE
THURSDAY, JULY 30
THRU WEDNESDAY
AUGUSTS, 1 9 0 1
,
CLOSED SUNDAY . . .

2*lb. bowl

99

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Kosher S pears...

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HEALTH &amp; BEAUTY AIDS
SAVE 30c, Regular or Mint

Crest Toothpaste . VbV * 1 19
SAVE 80C, Normal to D ry or Oily

Pert Shampoo..... ... loni * 179
SAVE SI 00. (50C O tt Label) Regular
or Unscenled And Per spirant

Sure Solid............... UY * 1 ’®
(Limit 2, Please)

CHICKEN AND PEAS PIMV
2 large onions, sliced
14 cups uncooked rice
3 tablespoons butter or margarine
1 cups chicken broth
1 package (10 ounces) frozen green peas
2 tups coarsely chopped cooked chicken or turkey
Salt, pepper and a pinch ol saffron
Saute unions and rice in butler until anions are transparent.
Stir in broth, peas and chicken. Season with salt, pepper and
saffron. Bring to a boil. Stir once or twice. Inwer heat to
simmer. Cover; cook IS minutes or until rice is tender and
liquid is absorbed. Fluff lightly with a fork.
Makrs 6 servings.
SPAIN;
The flamboyant dishes made from basic ingredients and the
artful mixing of unrelated ingredients into one dish are
typically Spanish.
FISH F ll J ETS WITH GREEN RICE
2 pounds fish fillets (cod, haddock or sole)
Salt and pepper
2 cups chopped onions
14 cups clipped green peppers

THIS AD
EFFECTIVE IN
THf FOLLOWING
COUNTIES
ChartotU.
ClllUt. ColllAI.
Hainando, Highlanda. Hiiiaboio.

2 tablespoons butter or margarine

Manala*. 0&lt;*ng*.
Gicaoia Paaco.
Pmallaa. Polk.
Saiaaola. 1
Sam,»ola uniaaa
olMtoit* nolad

Publix

SANFORD PLAZA, SANFORD
L0N G W 00D VILLAGE CTR.,
LONGWOOD

11iTH^WGreei Stampsf g l 111111

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1 can US ounces) tomato sauce
2 cups dry while wine
2 bay leaves
2 teaspoons oregano
3 cups cooked rice
1 cup cooked green peas
I cup cooked green peas
4 cup chopped parsley
Cut fillets In 14-tnch pieces. Season with salt and pepper. Set
aside. In Urge ikiUel saute onions and green peppers In butter
until tender. Add tomato sauce, wine, bay leaves, oregano, 2
teaspoon salt, and 4 teaspoon pepper, Cook 20 minutes. Add

I R 5

11-41. Cm ,

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IO &lt; l Pkg ,

Syfo Saltier Wafer

Hefty Tail Kitchen Bags

Hafty Traah Can Unara

M n H h i M , N u , . i i i iaau

Hot Shot Roach A
Ant Killer

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cok&gt;r print film Crum
Publix with nil
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print rods.

Enhances the Flavor of Maats

a

(Limit 2, Please)

32-oz. jar

79*

PiUv, pda I, pilau no m atter how you say it or spell it, "the
king of dishes" is extremely popular, whether served as a side
dish or with meat us a mam course.

- Drinks

m ini

Saute onions and green pepper in butter until soft Add
chicken; rook 2 minutes longer. Stir in remsining ingredients
except rice. Cover and simmer 20 minutes Serve over Onion
Bice.
ONION HICE
4 cup finely chopped onion
1 cup uncooked rice
1 tablespoon butter or margarine
2 cups chicken broth
1 teaspoon salt
Saute onion and rice in butter until golden. Add broth and
salt. Bring to u boll, stir once, cover, reduce heat and simmer
IS minutes or until rice Is tender and liquid Is absorbed. Makes
S to 6 servings.
TURKEY:

Shasta

Bowl Cleaner •!#«• boititf 59*

K ralt's Coon Brand Cheese, Extra
Sharp

Libby's Halved or Sliced

Peaches..............

Lysol Toilet

Lysol S pray.........’?i* *259

Swiss.......................

SAVE 10«. REGULAR COLA
OR ASST. DICT FLAVORS

S-J29

Love My Carpet , . 'A?

Regular or Scent II Dismlectant

Golden Crown

Pears...................

Regular o r Floral

M uenster.................. ?*.* *1 19

S ^ 19

»**

Libby's Halved Bartlett

*1

Kraft's Sliced Cheese. Big Eye

J* M

Fudge B ars.......

Bathroom Tissue. . MV *1 79

Kraft's Casmo Brand Cheese
Mozzarella. Brick, Monlerey Jack or

Kids Lovs ’Em! Bordsn's
Frosty Pops or Frosty

Holiday F o g g e r... * 8 *2J®

Aluminum F o il.......T.i2 *3*®

Dam Fresh

89*

THE PLACE FOR
HOUSEHOLD ITEMS

Coronet W hile or Assorted

Dam Fresh Assorted Swiss Style

Half &amp; H a lf.............. VX'

*4”

two-thirds cup chopped onions
two-thirds cup diced green pepper
2 tablespoons buller or margarine
2-3 cups cooked chicken, cut in large pieces
l can 1114 to 16 ounces! tomatoes It cup*I
1 ran (1 ounces) tomato sauce
4 cup chicken broth or water
14 teaspoons each salt and garlic salt
4 teaspoon each pepper and thyme
4 to 4 teaspoon crushed red pepper
I traspmn ground ginger
Onion rice

Pubiu

Biscuits .............. 2 '««{ 89*

Town House
Crackers............. ‘.V *1°®

I

Get Rul ol Household Pests the Easy
W ay'

D o w n y ....................99»

Pdlsbury's Big Country Buttermilk
or Buttery

Keablar

i-ia«&gt;$ •€ 0 9

ketll*

88*

(2 7 c OH Label), Dishwashing
Detergent

*209

M argarine............... J.* 49*

39*

Soft Drinks

69*

b e lli#

Dog F o o d ........... 4

Economy Size Borden's

Breaklast Club Soft or Soft Whipped

White Bread..

O R A H C ICR U SH . R 1 C U LA R OR
SUGAR F R I t H |R SS ROOT B l t R
OR CANADA b R V i C IN G IR
A l l , TAHITIAN T R IA T ,

Henny Pen Beel, Regular or Chicken

THE PLACE FOR
DAIRY FRESHNESS*

tCM&amp;f
ioai

JOI.I jOK RICE

79*

b o th .

Ivory Liq u id ........... iin i *1ifl

Breakfast Club

WEST AFRICA:
The diet of West Africans varies somewhat from
country
to country but this dish transcends borders and is a special
meal enjoyed from Senegal to Gabon.

THf h ig h ?

Krolt Cucumber Celery or
Cucum ber Green Pepper

4 8 -o z . can

Vienna
Sausage......

PU BIU

Mf s i« v f 4

Ragu Traditional, with
M ushroom s, Pepperom Flavored,
or Sausage Flavored

in n iiii

T om ato ^
Juice

*| 8 9

B - p k .tin .

Franxia Wine .... U l* *3 ”

I t M f M M M jV W

DELICIOUS PUBLIX

13-of. cans $

79 *

a

SAVE 3 0 I.P U B IIX
AUTO DRIP OR ALL
PURPOSE 100*4 PURE

Sunshine Sugar W afers,
Chocolate W afers or Peanut
Butter Wafers (1 t fo 12-oz. Pkg.)

L ig h t T u n a

S ^ 29

1*b

N estle's Quik

Chips A h o y !........ V*V *1 79

Pabst Blue
Ribbon B eer

6Vi-oz. can

Chocolate

Everyone's Favorite! Nabisco

1

Orange, Lake, Sem ino le,
A Osceola Counties! O nly!

Ts 5^

Chunk

(Limit I P i e t t e W ith O tht# P u rc h a tM of 15

Strawberry

u i ir

14 cups chicken broth
2 tablespoons cornstarch
3 tablespoons soy sauce
2 large fresh tomatoes, cut In eighths
3 cups hot cooked rice
Remove skin and bones from chicken. Cut meat In thin strips
. Sprinkle with seasonings. Saute chicken in oil 1 to 2 minutes.
Add onion, green peppers, celery, and 4 cup broth. Cover;
steam 2 minutes. Blend remaining broth with cornstarch and
soy sauce, Stir into chicken mixture. Add tomatoes; cook and
stir 2 minutes or until sauce is slightly thickened. Serve over
beds of fluffy rice.
Makes S servings.
POLYNESIA:
Romance and beautiful beaches are trademarks of
Polynesia, a group of 130 islands in Uie South Pacific, where
Oriental and French culstnes are often combined to make
delicious Polynesian dishes.
POLYNESIAN MEAT RAI LS WITH RICE
14 pounds lean ground beet
3 slices bread , crumbled
2teaspoons each dry m u s ta r d , garlic sail, and ground ginger
1 can 134 ounccsi pineapple tidbits (drain; reserve syrup)
one-third cup soy sauce
one-third cup cornstarch
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 can (16 ounces) bean sprouts, rinsed and drained
2 green peppers, cut In 4 Inch strips
14 cups beet broth
3 tablespoons brown sugar
3 cups hot cooked rice
Combine ground bt*cf» bread, l teaspoon each dry mustard,
garlic salt and ginger, pineapple syrup, and 2 tablespoons soy
sauce Form Into 21 meat balls about 14-inches In diameter.
Hoi) in 3 tablespoons cornstarch. Brown meal balls In oil. Add
bean sprouts, peppers, and pineapple. Cover and cook 2 to 3
minutes. Blend broth, brown sugar, and remaining seasonings,
cornstarch, and soy sauce. Pour over meat balls Cook,
stirring about 3 minutes or until sauce thickens. While cooking,
spoon sauce over meat and vrgetable vegetables to glare.
Serve over lieds of Bully rice
Makes 6 servings.

LARGE ROLL
PAPER

Cream
Cheese

Bacon

CHINA:
From the land of birds nest soup and seaweed salad come
many great dishes more suited to Western states — Cantonese
cuisine is among the most popular around the globe.
CHICKEN CANTONESE
2 pounds choice chicken pieces
1 teaspoon each garlic salt and paprika
4 teaspoon pepper
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 large onion, sliced
14 large green jieppers, cut in thin strips
1 cup diagonally sliced celery

fish and cook 10 minutes or until Itsh flakes easily. Remove bay
leaves. Combine rice, peas, and 2 tablespoons parsley. Heat.
Tost lightly. Furm into a border on putter, fpoon fish fillets in
the renter. Sprinkle with remaining parsley.

�IB—Evening Herald, Sanford, FI.

B L Q N D IE

Wednesday, July IT, m i

by Chic Young

ACROSS

Answer to Previout Purrie

*5l* cunou*

49 A ttu n e d
I Group at
manner
W tittm l l l i u 50 Mmyen
S New Dell
51 Fence timber
proiect lib b r | 52 Animal inaiie
I CMuten
chemical
12 from (7 wds) 53 Colorado
13 Egypt (obiu I
Indian
H U rged
54 Outer Iprefn)
continent
55 Small duck
15 Nine (Fr|
66 Double c u rt*
16 Bridle pert
S7 Which thing
17 O.erlook
16 (tower
DOWN
30 Southpaw
21 Printer*
1 One billionth
menu re |p l)
Iprahif
27 Set
2 Bewildered
23 Kind ol breed
3 Junket
26 Having more

Induces Big Sleep

22 Adhetivt
tubtlanct
23 Cunning
24 Wmch
7S Women *
4 Printing
name
City
procttt
26 Police
30 Author
5
B
r
u
t
(coMoq I
Fleming
intlrumenl*
27 Now* article
31 Subbed of
6
Conceited
78 On* |G*r)
verb
7 Technique
29 Cincinnati ball
32 Neckpiece
6
That
it
to
tey
dub (ebbt)
33 Pull
9 Suppoitng |7 3 1 Spy employed
34 Strutt
wdtl
by police
35 Conclude
36 Severe critic* 10 Water vapor 34 Cottlal
protection
11 Child * play
38 Appoint*
19 Madam*
37 Of the loot
40 Prey
labbr |
38 Convent
4 1 Wine b tir tl
inmate
4 7 Come* do** 20 Slim
1

2

3

4

S

7

6

S

17

13

14

IS

16

17

11

Quaalude Habit

39 On* of the
Twelve
41 Tint*
42 Of lh * tea
labbr)
43 itiand
republic
44 Land meaiure
45 Antiprohibi
tionutt
46 Apiece
47 Actrett
Hayworth
46 Narrow
opening
SO Day of week
|«bbi|
9

10

it

27

28

29

47

46

19
■
21
■
24

23

"

25
_

■

■

31

30

"
J

33

33
1
37

38

”

■

1
39

■
*0
_

■
“

49

■
50

57

S3

5*

55

56

57

43

42

by Bob M o n ta n a
— 'St?'

A R C H IE

"

44

46
SI

f*

H O RO SCO PE
By BERNICE REDE OSOL

For Thursday, July 30, 1981

by Howie S ch n eid er

E E K a MEEK
W L M L ire ’10 LIVE
CVLE AGWU, M OfJlCUE, UjCULD
SC U DO fT lH E SAME WAV T

y

YOUIt BIRTHDAY
July 30,I9S1
This com Inn year there is a
strain possibility you may
develop a promisinn venture
on the side. It may start
small, but it could fulfill a
secret ambition you've been
harfaortnn.
I.EO (July tt-Auu 22) You
have a talent today (or taking
up causes others can't quite
net off the ground and making
litem mirk. Your skill will
p a t*

iC * * * * —* "

*W«*H »» »a« &gt;m

by Ed Sullivan

P R IS C IL L A ’S PO P
7 I WCNPCft IF
EVERVONE MAS PO
MUCH TTOURlf WIPH
HANGERS AO I DO

l W O JtE R IF

F,

E V E R t r O t E MAO A

MUCH TROUCT.E WITH
HANGERS AO I CO

7
I WONPEF? IF ^
EVERVONE MAO AO
MUCH TROUBLE WITH
HANGERS AS t CO
a j ----------

I

W O N D E R IF

EVERVONE MAS AO
MUCH TROUBLE WTH
hangers ao

r

po

-o l^ 1

BUGS BUNNY

by S to lM &amp; H c im d a h l

FRANK AND ERNEST

by Bob Thaves

th e

te s t

llo m a n c e .

travel, luck, resources,
possible pitfalls and career
lie the coming months are all
discussed in your Astro*
Graph which begins with your
birthduy. Mull II for each to
Astro-Graph Bos 469, Radio
City Station, N.Y. 10019. lie
sure to specify birth date,
VIRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 12)
You may prefer staying in the
background today,
but
another’s success will be due
to your guidance. You’ll
partake of the substance, but
not the glory.
t.lllltA (Sept. 230rt, 23)
Developments of an unusual
nature could occur today and
gain you access to something
for which you've been hoping.
Keep the faith.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
Competitive or challenging
situations serve to awaken
your resourcefulness today.
Majte accomplishments are
possible, regardless of the
obstacles.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov, 23Dec. 21) Something which
you’ve teamed from bitter
esperience can be put to a
constructive use today when

I V $

A

HAPPENEDAT WttBUCKS’
CICRICAL aAftr THAN

R E V O L V IN G C R E D 'T
p l a n - - F v Ep y
T IM E

Mi

m

Y ^U TUKN

Lamb

stam ped,
self-addressed
envelope (cr It to me, in care
of this newspaper. P.0. Box
1551, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Hy the way, you can become
dependent upon Quaalude Just
as you can on many other
drugs, regardless of what you
may have been told. It is a bad
scene.
DEAR DR. LAMB Members of my family take
natural vitamins —at least 15
a day to cure or inhibit
everything from the aging
process to acne and to keep
warm in the winter. They are
constantly on me since I drifts
at least six to 10 cups of coffee
a day in cold weather to keep
warm. They say I'm losing a
special vitamin that helps
keep the body warm. Does
smoking rob the body of this
vitamin? They insist an herb
pill will clear my romplexion.
1 tried it and It literally made
me feel crampish so 1 stop­
ped I don't take vitamins
because no mailer how I take
them they repeat on me all
day or all night
DEAR
READER
Vitamins are important, but I
prefer people to get their
"natural" vitamins in a wellbalanced wliolesome diet so
they won’t miss the other
things
good
nutrition
provides, If you get enough
vitam ins that way it Is
unlikely you will need any
more. The same applies to
important minerals.
You feel cold or hoi ac­
cording to blood flow through
your skin. Cigarette smoking
will diminish circulation to
the skin in sensitive people
and cause the skin tem­
perature to drop. There are
studies that report one
cigarette will destroy the
amount of vitamin C in one
orange.

W IN A T B R ID G E
NORTH

710*1

O Q 7311

»K»0
OAK!
♦ 7J
W EST

EAST

06

0»
*1051
OIS43
0 101112

O AJ I 74
0 J 1 0 (7
OKJI

SOUTH

Ol KJUII
*U7
*Qt
OAQI
Vulnerable; North-South
D ealer East
South
Witt
Nor IS Kui!
10
Pas*
«0
1*
30
Pass
50
Pass
40
Pas*
Pass
Pus
40
Pus
Pus
Opening lead 0.1

By Oswald Jacob)
and AlanSoalag
There is an easy way to
play today * hand Declarer
plays a few rounds of
trumps and takes the club
finesse West wins the king
of clubs and rashes the ace

of hearts and on to the next
hand
Can South do any belter’
There is a book play to gain
one trick which will produce
the slam
It is a book play In other
words, it is similar to one
that continually appears in
bridge writings
It ts up to South to decide
which opponent holds the
ace of hearts It would be a
tough problem If it hadn t
been (or West's unfortunate
decision to bid two hearts It
is the sort of bid that is real­
ly pointless. Once in a blue
moon It he!pa V est Most ol
the time it doesn't affect the
final result in any way;
shape or form Thu time it
gives an alert declarer a
sure thing play for the slam
that might well have failed
without Weal’s ovrrcall
South knows where the
ace of hearts Is He takes his
queen of diamonds, drawl
trumps and leads hu deud*
of hearts
I’oor West is on the toast­
ing fork. If he rises with hid
ace of hesrU. South will got
to discard one club on the
king of hesrU and the otho
on s high diamond If West
ducks. South wilt get to diecard his queen of hearts on a
high diamond
NEWS i'cltR ENTERPRISE CMMl

by Ltonard Starr

horse about whut
CALW EO

Dr.

ANNIE

3 -tlO&amp;W FEELS

CREDIT
DEPT.

you point out a similar pitfall
io a pal.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
191 Re a good listener today.
You could receive a valuable
lip from a least-expected
source. It might come from a
person who has never aided
you M ore
AUI AHUS (Jan 20-Feb.
19) This is a good day to
dlacusa production problems
with coworkers. Each will
Inspire the o th er's in­
ventiveness. Progressive
ideas could result.
PISCES I Keb. 20-March 20)
Tasks which challenge your
creallveness will be the ones
you handle best today. You’re
especially good at tr a n ­
sforming the unprofitable Into
the profitable.
ARIES I March 21-Aprtl 191
Normally il's unwise to
gamble in areas where you
have little say over the
happenings, but today you
could tie lucky with something
another controls.
TAURUS I April 20-May 201
Innovating can save time and
energy inlay and also in­
crease your productivity.
Think of new ways to improve'
your present methods of
work.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20f
There is opportunity around
you today that could adf to
your income or resources. It
may be fleeting, so you'll have
to act promptly.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Your material prospects look
encouraging both today and
tomorrow. Focus your efforts
on enterprises that can make
the cadi register ring.

DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 am
very worried about my
boyfriend. Re is using drugs
and he wants me to use them,
too. He says that it is not the
same thing as a drug habit but
Just a sleeping pill. He uses
Quaalude. I don't think he
should use these at all but he
does — he goes out with me
and has several drinks and
finally uses Quaalude. He
claims it makes him feel
better and that he enjoys sex
more. He also claims 1 would
enjoy sex more If I would use
them, too, but 1 don't really
have any problem in that
department anyway. 1 really
love this guy and don’t want
anything to happen to him.
Can you say something that
might wake him up 7
DEAR HEADER - It
might be hard to wake him up
if he's using alcohol and
Quaalude. It is a sedative and
certainly should not be used
with alcohol. In fad, none of
' the drugs commonly used as
tranquilirers or sleeping pills
should be used with alcohol.
He shouldn’t drive after
drinking or after Quaalude
and certainly not a lu r Lc'-h.
Quaalude cun Induce sleep
within 10 minutes after taking
it. That is why it should never
be taken M ice driving or any
ether activity that requires
normal mental alertness.
It got a big boost because it
was rumored to have an
aphrodisiac quality That is
why your boyfriend thinks it is
good for sex. It was billed by
live drug culture as fostering
“ u n r e s e r v e d p e rs o n a l
relationships.” It doesn't.
Whatever effect a person gets
in that department is purely
in the mind.
I wish there were some way
to convince all young people
that real pleasure comes front
being in good health with a
mind unconfused by drugs.
Pleasure in this instance
Includes sex. I am sending
you The Health Letter
number 12-2, Sedatives,
Hypnotics and Tranqutlliers:
The Pill Problem, which I
hope your boyfriend will read.
Otheis who want this issue
can send 75 cents with a lonu.

-BUT Y’ WHNA
KNOWHOW
VHCVER MAKE
A W5TAKE,
SONNY? NEVER
TRY T’ W
ANYTHING/.

-HAN CAN’T EXPECT
THIS TEENY PlANET
VKtEP SUPPORT!"'
HIM WITHOUT GOlff
INTO UHCIMTEC),
TERRITORY/

MAYBE IT’S
TERRITORY
HAfi HASN’T

HEYr-HEY,l I - I HEW Y’ TELL
NOW*
T
H* ASP HOWYTXIU
TH’
TWIT’S PROB’IY GO SROKE-M'
ALL
IT’S ALL MY FAULT FOR

supposed

ID VENICE
INTO/

THIS? J^INTROOUCm’ YOU T’

■\*T%

AB°uNp you HAVE
TO PAY.
&lt;«*.n 1*1}

TUMBLEWEEDS

by T. K. Ryan

F L E T C H E R 'S L A N D IN G

_______________ by PouQlai Cof
C DO SOU L H O U IE 6HEJS LfctRsg
---------- ^ HtR. HVhiDtU NA M t-

tir&amp;r.

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H W * J W M M m S ’V -

, • - a** *—• *-*
•

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�Evening Hers Id, Sanford FI.

Wednenlay. July 11. 1H 1—♦&gt;

T O N IG H T 'S TV
—

7:30

W EDNF^DAY m

O

8:05

4 TTC TAC OOUOM

H ( t 7 ) MOVIE
F « M in |IM « I
Bun R *,n o id i Baiba, • Lodan A

} I o WILDLIFE in CRISIS
(710 family feuo

EVENING

6:00

man accutlomed to many thaftow
romantic conquett* dtcover* a
tout touimala m a lovefy Mm ad.id*
who g#t« him a fob with a move

IT ( 3 5 ) RHOOA
Q ) ( 10) O C X CAVETT

O 'f iJ iO d lo m
I t (3 5 ) AHOY GRIFFITH
f f l ( 10) ROMAQNOU s TABLE

7:35

StmdAr Dmnar' (R)

company

1 1 11 71GET saaART

605

800

0 ( 1 7 ) f A TWER KNOWS BEST

0

6:30

®

d)

o

Twc

ROYAL WfOOlMO

of the wadding ot Brit­
ain * Prince Charia* lo Lady Diana
Spencer which toot piaca ta&lt;‘«K
lodar af Si Fa u lt Cathedral In
London. *iH c# praeentad
( D O CHARLIC S ANGIL 8 Th#
Anger* go undercover m a •w*ng&gt;ng
rwghlciubi l o n a i li murdarout f * r
chcpath preying on tingle women,

635
t t( 1 7 |T H A T 0 IR L

7:00
O CC n e w s
, j j O P U MAGAZINE Loot &gt;1
tN» 1M I InlarnaltonH iN m * Clown
* 'Companion, * Hupp* ano mahat
; M ib o a tt taco tan a# ChaT Tan
, p«taa tTutKan Km . 0* Waaco on
• corractng |&lt;« piotiam t Cattaa
Mann maata a
tnoTogia-

(RJ
III:

{3 5 )

MOVIE

f lecuhve

Action (11731 Burl Lane attar W«H
G#*f Dttlurhwd about lh# eogrte
that A*tvrw*can torwgn pokey It fa t­
ing. a teeret right *mg group plot*
1h# attata&gt;nat&gt;on of Pra**den1 John

V * 0 JOKER S WILD
a j l ( 3 5 1BARNEY MILLER
f f l (1 0 ) MACNEIL &gt; LEHRER
, REPORT

B

(I)

O IFFRENT

905

STROKES

1 1 117) FAMILY AFFAIR

Arnold it butad to • prtMoysty at,
whit«_»ub4«rban uchocH1(IV) a
&gt;5 O MOM. THE WOl TUAN AH0
ME A femirwtt photograph## ! precoooua young daughter contpya*
to chang# h#r molhar t imgi# tie
tu t Patty Out a AtUn. David Barney
and Dant#ii# Br&gt;M»bo&gt;t ttar
(J O CHARLES ANO DIANA THE
ROYAL WEDOINO P#tar Jenrwngt
and Barbara Warier* report on tha
wadding of Bfftatn t Prince Charm
to Lady Dtana Spancar. which toot
piaca earlier today at St Paul i
Caihadrai m London;

9:30
11 (3 5 ) ANDY QRtFFlTH

a
4 BULLSFYE (MON. TUC.
THU FRI)
5 q ACMARO SIMMONS
1| ( 3 5 11LOVE LUCY
(D ( 10 ) m u t e r r o o e r s i r &gt;

10:05

11:00
1000

( X ( 1 7 | ALL IN THE FAMILY

REALTY TRANSFERS
^ Goebel E n t r , Inc to Jam#* G
(tra c k &amp; * f Rota Ann, Lot 10 Bik
%: Sar##t#ratff Data Sac ig.
W -®00

n Homri) C onilr to Muchar I 0
S a rrrft A n f Svf» A . Lot f t Pr&gt;p&gt;
Cfr WyftdHtim
Ph Or#

u y to o

Auatlh Oaw to N'chard W
Codmai. %gi . E’ i of Loti I 4 7.
Id * # Sylvan l i t ) . Df.TOO
. felva r ilio t t 4 hp Homer to
Dofigtat G Voorhead 4 a t Irene.
lfct '60 Trallwood E m Sac One,
ifilO Q

Jeaiie Cham barn &amp; a f B e sik 4
Georgia A to WtlliA H B a il 4 * f
Alberta 1.., commence af pipe, on
t|a t pf Waihingion Heighfi, 1'tiXI
W‘N«am H B a il 4 n f A&gt;berta L
14Jack Shubert. Lot I I 4 N‘ j of 13
WMhinglon Height*, etc, HOC
Jack Shobert is Jem# Cham
t# f^ 4 * f B e lli# 4 Georg.# A .
beg p.pe on plat of Weih«nqton
H f^ jh tv etc 1100
fQ avid B Lane Jr 4 Dan e! S to
i|c k Shubert, S‘ 1 of Lot JS 4 alt ol
11‘I b f t, Waihtngteei h i * , 1100
D a v ’d H Lane Sr to Jack
Shwbert, J ty of Lot fS 4 *M of 1% 4
77, Washington Hi* , *100
Th# M uikey Co to B J Simon*
Ua*ie&lt; C Simon* 4 B J S&gt;mon%
M k Lot f l , Btk C. Sneetwaler
Oak*. Sec II . 17*000
1 ,6 c 0 1 Randolph M Smith 4 wt
Jd Ann W to Jo Ann W Smith,
ihrfiv , Lot S3I. Spring Oak* Un 3
HW

S h e ritl * Deed to
O f B ary
A t*o c t*'f*. Inc . N 13" i ’ It of16 J*'
rtMzol I). etc , Btk A, *i John*
B iv ff I i t * . *3.100
W illiam J L yfKh 4 Valent G to
Scdtt Sower* II 4 *1 Nancy C . Lot
If. Blk ) Sabal Point, Amended
tIOJ 000
yLQCDl jan.ee H Warren (form
f &gt;kri* 4 hb Vihcenf lo V iixe n l A
Warren 4 w t Jamce. Lot 7. b ia D.
Charter Oak*. Un On#, 1)00
M ichael W (loRfert 4 *•# Bonnie
tg k o h n C * .ther 4 wt Dorothy,
l o t i ) . Blk B. North Orl Ranch**
Wc. Eighi. U ) *00

0
4 (WHEEL OF FORTUNE
(MON. TUE. THU, FRI)
1 O THE PRICE IS RIGHT
) Q THREE S COMPANY |R|
I I (3 5 )0 1 IN N ARNETTE
f f i ( 10) STU04O SEE (YUC-FRI)

Realty Inc . Un 171 Sandy Cove.
Dan Way Inc to D aU il F
Han*berger 4 w f M a n o r* , SW 3?‘ *100
Equity Realty Inc to Pamela p
of Lot If . 0,1k C , Wepf. Sanora Un t
BArthelt. *gt „ Un 171 Sandy Cove,
4 ? *44.100
*77,900
Edna Jacob*, *.d to Ma# G
Samuel J e ll etc
fb Equity
Hedrick 4 wf Norma G , N US' of S
le a lly Inc , Un I I I Sandy Cove,
J7t) ol W - . of E' 1 of Sec )* 3 I 37
*100
*17*00
Equity Realty Inc to Ra*fl
C f t r i i f i n t C a lle r.
*&gt;d
to
Barthei* White. *gt Un l i l Sandy
Theodore t» Salford 4 n f Mabel
A . Un t t . Sheoah. Sec 3 *4# 000
Cove. *77.900
F RC L ending* A**qc to John R
W illiam H Baker 4 wt Nancy to
fh o m .i* J Payne 4 wt Suian J , Cftvallo 4 wt P atricia , Lt 47. The
Landing*, (correct 1, *100
Lot ?*#. W«nfef Spring* Uh 4,
Roger R Stewart 4 wt G aylf tq
*97,000
Thomai m a ye* 4 wt Carole. Lot 71
per and Equity Grp Inc to
Blk t , Dr #amwo id, *69,700
Raymofid: V B L aw*on, ig l , Un
»oger w Stewart 4 wf Gayl# to
E 1 Lake K at hr yn V 1HIage *31.900
Thoma* Ha y e* 4 wf C arolt. Lt 37,
Dan Way Inc to Cameron J
Blk
9 Dr earn wold. HOO
Mag ill 4 wt Betty L , L* L Sanora
Roger Slew arl 4 wt Gayle iq
So Un One. *44.900
Thoma* Haye* 4 wf Carqle, Lot 7?
Wm M B a rg l;t, *gt to Ahmad
Alt Shahabuddin, Lot 1*7 Bel A re
Blk 9 D ream wold. *100
H dl*. Un Two *47.400
Aubrey B Ead* Jr 4 wt Mary
Apple Real E *t A**oc to Jcnepn E to M a ria Steven*. *gt , Let 4
W Bray 4 wt M ildred N . Lot 17. Btk 11, Tier *. E R Trafford*M ap
D o m m e n th Wood*, Un One, of Sanford U 100
S H I 000
L a rry D Key. IQl to M arvm B
P erry Jr 4 wt Diane M , Apt 177,
M etro Elec , Inc to Pena id R
Schmitt, Rt
Lot 7. Blk B
C api*tr#no, 1 4,2,900
S p o rlim a m Parad *#, *100
F 4 R B uilder*. Inc to Todd A
Bel A ire Home* Inc to Chf l* R
Owen* 4 w l Janet S , Lot 44, The
Muni 4 w l P o le Mane, l o i 79*. V ila * c f C a **e ib rfry . Ph On#
Bel A&lt;re M ill*. Un ). **0 *00
447 000
Clare Balm er Jr 4 Wallace
P e rm a B lit H om e* Inc
to
Balmer to A lbe rt D G uitation 4 Cnarle* K H ick*cn Jr . Lot 7, Btk
wf M a rge ry! A Lot* 1 2 * 4 7 Blk
I, Unrec Plat of Wit*on Place.
M. Ti«r f, E R Tralford 1 Map ol *17 000
Sant ef at 3 parcel*. *11*000
Robert E Sneryili 4 wl Babefle
Joieph B Rerun 4 w t Pauline fg to Richard1 P Staff 4 wt Sharon
J u liu l J Blavko 4 w l Irene,, Lot Lee. Lot 71, Howell E li* * d r« p t,
790 Woodcreat, Un F lv*. *70 000
*64.*00
f C McGee 4 wt Delore* to
Spol*ki Con*tr , Inc to John H
M a ria n p C h e tln u l. Lot ]*.
M c M rn a m y 4 wf Donna L , Lot *1
Midw ay near Oviedo, m il M
Cardinal O ak*. *110 000
Home, *7,000
Fa rw a y O ak* Dev to f fed cink
‘ QCD1 Irene Palmer 4 Clitton
E N a ** il 4 wt D em *e J . Lot 61,
M lo Leafer C Buddenhagen. Lot
F airw ay O ak*, Un One, *109.400
97. Suniand K tt* « HI Adn . *100
D E In v e tlm r n t* Colorado, Inc
W inter Spg* Dev to B G Aakin*
to P a n a y r* John Dikeou Trm t.
C on ilr 4 LJ I I . Tu u ftw lla . U«t f,
etc . part ot N 1 i d S E 1* of Sec 74
*71 000
71 JO, £ of Tukkaw illa Rd, le t* part
Wichard H Rearc« 4 wt Janet to ^♦t , *100
.Huh# N Got# Lot S, Bilk G,
W illie f H am ilton &amp; wf Joan to
Oakland H il f t , f i t Sec *46,100
Cecil E C arlton 4 wt Ruih G , Lot
Samuel Jell etc
to ta u t *
7 Blk to. Tier D *J OOO

i«n » Prince Char tea !o Lady Dana
Spencer, which loo* place eart#r
today at St Paul a Cathedral tn
London «v&lt;il L# pr#««nt*d
7 o
DYNASTY The threat of
financial d«aatlar ditrupt* Oak*
And KryiTle • global hcKneymoon
HI
IE (351 INDEPENDENT NETWORK
NEWS

1 0 :3 0
I t (3 5 ) NASHVILLE MUS»C

1 1 :0 5
1 1 (1 7 ) NIOMT O A U lR y
1 1 :3 0
o
d ) TONIQHT Mott Johnny
Carton G u e*ti
Rob##) Klein
Johnny Mathi*
) O M *A *S *H
7 0 ABC NEWS NIGHT LINE
11 ( 3 5 1WANTEO DEAD OR ALIVE
11 3 5
MOVIE

One M.men

Year* B C " (1007) John Rkchard•on Raquet Welch

1200
i

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starsky ano hutch

1:00

6:05

Ihm

04

nobm Hood [C)(1A34) Erto, I Vwi
O w u d * HtvKiand

1 :3 5
11 (1 7 ) MOVIE
£« ■ « K m ,
(1844) RotKlmd Ito.»,H
Da«n

) O ED ALLEN (MON. TUE. THU.
FFVt

, 1 1 O OOOO MORNING FLORIDA
(MON, TUE, THU, FRI)
( ] 4 TODAY
; Q MORNING (WITH CHARLES
KURALT (MON. TUE, THU. FRI)
I O OOOO MORNING AMERICA
I I I (35) FANTASTIC FOUR (THU)
(I 35lHERCUlOtDS(FRO
ED ( 10 i VILLA ALEGRE

705
7:25
M 4 TODAY IN FLORIDA (MON,
TUE. THU, FRI)
I C) OOOO MORNING FLORIDA
(MON. TUE. THU. FRI)
( I * TODAY (MON, TUt. THU.
FRI)
I O GOOD MORNING AMERICA
(MON, TUI. THU, FRI)
l) I' (.15) BANANA SPLITB
t D i 10) SESAME BTRECT(R|g

300

: THURSDAY
MOANING

(7) O MARCUS WflBY. MD
(TUE. THU. FRI)

U
4 TODAY (MON. T U I. THU.
FRI)
I a OOOO MORNING AMERICA
|MON. TUE. THU. ERR
1) 435) GREAT SPACE COASTER
(C ( to) MISTER ROGERS |R|

6 35
I I (1 7 ) MY THREE SONS

WEDNESDAY
IS CHICKEN DAY

242

Each p la llt r c o n i i i t * o l tw o N orth
A lla n llc w hltefiah lille ta . chips, cola
aiaw and two hush puppies
E s p ir t» 9*11

I ■

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C L IP C O U P O N

S C H IC K E N
5 H a lle rs
■ For T W O ...

f
s

3

®

fa m o u s r e c ip e ' s regular d in n e r

1 p ite tt hon»r dipptd trud ihitkin. m*ih
p o tslH i tn d g rtv y , col* tUw and I Iwl bull or
ta ilin ' biscuits. Honor upon Focvotl.

E a c h p la lt a r c o n s is ts o l t w o b a t t a r
d ip p a d b o n e le s s b r a s s I s o l c h i c k e n ,
c h ip s , c o la s la w a n d t w o h u s h p u p p ie s .
iB#«#rig# and la* not
iurt#dt l i p i r a t t 1 * 1 1
Not *a d •» !* an* ot^ei A K O v iit otter
&amp;

■

■

■

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■

■

■

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ALL FOR ONLY t y 09

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VA LU E Sl.*»

C L IP C O U P O N

a 2 1 0 7 W Colonial D&lt;

a 2 2 1 S S S a m e ,a n

a 8 * 0 N OHanOo A .a
W tn t.i P irK

a 7 1 4 5 S O ra n fla B lo aio m
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a 4 0 0 7 E Colonial O,

a 5 5 0 1 W C o lo n ial O
P in a HMI A raa

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Good All Dor Wodnosdor
a 400 W S l a l o R I * J *
A J tam o n la Spcinga

fa m

^

o u s R $c/ p e

FRIEDCHICKEN
"IT'S HONEY DIPPED"

OPEN 11:20 a m. - 1» p.m. Eicopf Frl, 6 Sol. Oo»in| ll:M t-M.

SEAFOOD

505
.11 (1 7) OZDE AND HARRIET

5:30

2:30

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5 O SEARCH FOR TOMORROW
tD(tO |C K C K CAVETT

300
( 3 '4

(f ! G i LUGAN S ISLANO
O U 'A 'f 'H
o hew s
(10) ELECTRIC COMPANY (RJ

535

TFKAS

i O GUIOiHQ lig h t

1 2 (1 7 ) BEVERLY H H IS IU 4 U

FOR

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A ll MATS
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STUDENTS U P TO AGE 14

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— T T f M ________________

t A N N O N llA L L

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I M ONLY

H

&gt;( L M O V I L l A ^ 6 1 ^
H#f t i l l *

)JJ lj« l

J ," FRIDAY U tti II
MY BLOODY VALENTINE

3200 S, Orlando Dr.
(Hwy. 17-92) Sanford
(ON LAKE ADA)
(30S) 311 0410

HEY! KIDS!

M A D A M E K A T H E K IN E
TAJ M ( MU * t RV51AI BAU HtADING

Cati -

• t i l l . M O V E • MAHMIAbE • BUWINtM

BtLN IN BUMNESS FOR 50 YEARS
IN FKFVACY OF MY HOME

LUN9ROOU

- 9 P M Clowwl Sunday
S BIO L k » NORTH O f C lO b lR A l N Rl&gt;
i»a niuH stt i 11 i d tc
I i 4h i« rtia im a t i i leen: a. # * #
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HOI IRS B A M

(3 0 !&gt; )
tre t w l m i

Fraaenl - Future

l l t m I I ADUI I ON All AIIAIMS

Klddio S h o w s
Al

• #o eoo* Peel
• M aid *trv ic a
# 1 # Hear Ph«r»e Irrv ic e
• n Chann#l Cabl# TV
• Live Enter film merit
7 N ight* in Lounge
• f am ity itftta u ra n t
E fficiency A g t* Aveitable
At (lig h tly Higher Hate
• Ipectal Ducount On
M onthly Rale*

CAVALIER
MOTOR INN

Don't Fofgel To
Clip The Ad In Each
Mondays' Herald For
The

mi»»

W EEKLY
F U R N IS H E D BED RO O M

8 3 1 -4 1 0 5

11«m a••iihwgk&gt;. i *no wi«a Hr# i »&gt;s

Tu e s d a y

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP

8:25
f l 4 TODAY IN FLORIDA (MON.
TUE. THU. FRI)
) O GOOD MORNING FLORIDA
(MON, TUE. THU. FRI)

i F IS H P la lle rs V Q f i

iB«v#ra9# ard tia 'M 1 .n&lt; udedi
Not v#M w in an» otng*
»unt

200
Q 4 ANOTHER WORLD
l O ONE LIFE TO LIVE
CX&gt; &lt;TO) FOOTSTEPS

KANGAROO

6 30

11(171 MISSION IMPOSSIBLE

J

i O AS the (WORLD TURNS

111 17) LASSIE

4 05
11 (17) RAT RATROL
4 35

S

500

605

ncws

( 7 : 0 m o v ie
m i«no \C ( (i» M i
Ho ter 1 Ryan.. Rhonda Fleming.

C L IP C O U P O N

([PLAZA T * ? j ^ R

every

600

3:30

The Meal You Can't Make at Home.

i Jl P MOG*7rS HEROES
1 r (3 5 ) WOHOCR (WOMAN
ED 110) MISTER ROGERS (R)

I MON TUE. THU. FRI)
(1 (35) FRED FlINTSTOMC ANO
FRIENDS

4 DAILY DEVOTIONAL

at a

1:30

I I S

655

CA P TAIN

4:35
i1 I(1 7 |K A Z E L

[ r jO g p l T h e a tre s 1

( D ( ) 0 |A M w e a t h e r

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4:30
I t (3 5 | I DREAM O f JEANNIE

4 CARO SHARKS

6 45

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11 117) THE ADOAMS FAE4K.T

1:05

-

7:30

1:10
(7) O MOVIE

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630

11 O N tW S

lU (351 SUPERMAN
ED 1 10) SESAME STREET &lt;R)g

12:00

1 2 (1 7 ) HOLLYVIOOO RE PORT

U (J) touonnow Ounit 1,1m
mak#r Roger Corman Wathington
Poat cok*mm*i MaiifW Chethu#
the Altman Btother* Band

200

IF o r lW Q . . .

100
4 DAYS OF OUR LIVES
’ Q A l l MY CHILDREN
I I 135) MOVIE
( D (1 0 ) EVENING AT POPS (R)
(THU)
a ) (1 0 ) JAMES MICMENERS
WORLD (FRI1

11 45

555

U (17IFUNT1ME

1 2 :3 0

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Q i C M O v ie
,J q JOHN OAVIOSON
l7 o UEPV GRIFFIN

AFTERNOON

I I 117) WORLD AT LARGE |7RI)

7:00

LZJ
O
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BOAT
Computerman Franke Avaion
Carole Ha While
Panel Vou*
Barbi Ben ion Jam # Farr. M#mon#« Ot Tow” Petty Duke Aitm. Rick
Helton |RJ
ill (3 5 ) JIM BAKKEH

3:35
12 117) THE FLINTS TONES

( D 1 10) STORY BOUND (TUE-FRI)

545

o
i TOOAr IN FLORIDA (MON.
TUC. THU, 7R1)
} O THIRTY MINUTES (THU)
) O HEALTH FIELD (FRI)
’ Q SUNRISE I MON. TUC. THU.
4RI)
I t 135) AM BAKKIR

IT ( 3 5 1BENNY HILL
(D (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

(1 7 )

535

800

11 00
U 4 S O 7 ONEWS

()

A rth u rT te a c h e r&amp;

0
4 NEWS
ij
a
the y o u n g a n o th e
RESTLESS
1 &gt; O RYAN S HOPE
1 1 (3 5 ) FAMILY AFFAIR

1 1 :3 0
o
4 PASSWORO PLUS (MON.
TUE. THU.7RII
) O THREE S COMPANY (R)
(D ( 10| BOO«BIRO(TU€-FRl|

11 (1 7 ) LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE

O 4 DAILY DEVOTIONAL |MON,
TU«. THU, ERl)
I U OAKY WORD (MON. TUC.
THU. ERI)

1005
U (17 ) NEWS

11

5:30
)
O
SUMMER SEMESTER
(MON TUC. THU. ERIJ

U (3 5 ) t h e f u n t s t o n m

£6 (1 0 ) OVER EAST

1 l(1 7 |M O V IE

I)
4 BLOCKBUSTERS IU O N
TUE, TI4U. FRI)
) Q ALICE |R)
I I (351 DICK VAN DYKE
6D 1101 ELECTRIC COMPANY (R)

O
C4 t h e ROYAL WEDOINO
W‘0hk8M t ol 1h» oM dm g ol Bill

3:30

12 30

1 1 1 1 7 ) MOVIE

Th# wadding ol Britain i Prince
retatad fMtiDilia# niN tt# teiecail
from London

3:05
Q ( 17) FUNTIME

12D5
11 ( 1 7 1FRf I MAN REPORTS

O

10 00

10:30

O ar''#* to Lady Dtana Spancar and

f f i ( 1 0 1SOUTMBOUNO (THU)
f f l ( 1 0 ) ERICA (FRI)

a 3 l1 0 )S P C K n O 'l1 (T H U )
(D I 10) FAST FO4TWAR0 (FRII

9:35

O CD THE FACTS O f LIFE Jo
Narn» h#r father .« about to b#
r#t#aaad from pnton and want! to
vttR her at achool (Rj

C71 O GENERAL HOSPITAL
j 1 T 5 ) LEAVE rr TO OEAVfR
E£) (1 0 ) POSTSCRIPTS

s q &lt; i O NEWS
1) (351 THE (WOfltD O f PEOP1E

11 ( 17) I DREAM O f JEANNiE

030

F Kannwdy
flD (1 0 ) THE ROYAL WEDOINO

7:05

I

9 00
O i l HOUR MAGAZINE (MON,
TUC, THU. FRI)
3) O
DONAHUE | MON. TUE.
THU. FRI)
i j O “ OV1E (MON TUC. THU.
FRfl
,11 3 5 IO O M E R P U E
Q3 ( 10) SESAME STREET(R)p

BOO

REAL PEOPLE Faatiaad a

haunted
a *!■ museum. in#
1 otfciai witch o* Salem M att art
aaxiftiDrt to# CMcut Ckowrtt flWj

, O r HOC NEWS
® O C R S NEWS
(7) Q ABC NEWS
J
5 |t ( (3
3 !5 ) CARTER COUNTRY
(1 0 ) JULIA CHILD a n o c o m S (1
lO-C«l B»n(ju*1 (R)
pI n y

by Larry Wright

KIT N’ CARLYLE

tMf Fronch A t * .
(Hwr. 17-tl)
Sonbrd

41 N.

Hwr-17 M
C*IMa*rrr

•m M M M W

■ B C f lM l
WE ACCEPT FO O DSTAM PS
O P E N M O H T H U R S . I JO 7. F R I . I i M I
S A T. 1 7 S U N 1 11
P R IC E S G O O D T H R U
Q U A N T IT Y

C O O K IN G G O O D

TU ESD A Y, AU 0. 4

R IG H T S R E S E R V E D

�10B— Evening Herald, wnEord, FI.

Wednesday. July W. 1911

le ga l Notice

Legal Notice

n o t ic e o f p u b l i c h e a r i n g
the

or

b o a r d

J
BRUCE
W A LS T O N
tn d
J A C K IE W A LS TO N , his w it*.
D e tendentt
N O T IC E OF SALE
N O T IC E 14 h e reby 9'ven pur
coant to th e F m at Judo men! ol
F o re c S o s x t d a te d the l l r d da*
04 J u l* . 1*11. entered In Casa No
I ) 4*4 C A 0* P. the C irc u it Court
o l th e E i f p it t t n lh Ju d ic ia l C ircu it,
in and F o r Seminole Count*,
F lo r id * ,
w h t r a in
ANNE
B
STAR N ES and H A R LE Y R
S T A R N E S , h e r son. o re th e
P l a in t i f f s
and
J
BR U C E
W ALSTO N
and
J A C K IE
W A LS T O N , m s w it* , are the
D efendants. I w ill salt to th *
h ig h ts t and best bidder fo r cash at
th * W est fro n t door ol the Semmole
C o u n t* C o u rth o u s e . S a n lo rd .
F lo r id * , a t 11 ;00 A M on the 17th
d a * ot A u g u s t, A D 1411. th *
fo llo w in g d e scrib ed te a l p ro p e rl*
located. S itu a te and b *‘ng Ml
Sem inole C o u n t*, F lo rid a , to w n
EVy ot W est 4) and on* th ird
le e lo lN 170H o«S 179*1 o t N E '.
o l L o t 70. M M S m ith's 3rd Sub
d iv is io n , as recorded in P la t Book
I. P a g * I t . ot t h * Public Records ot
Sam m o t* C o u n t*, F lo rid a ,
sa-d p r o p e r l* being the same as
sal fo rth in t h * F in a l Judgment ot
F ore clo su re os eteremeohoned
IS S A L I
A R T H U R H BE C K W ITH . JR.
C L E R K OF THE C IRC UIT
COURT
B * P a tric io Robinson
D e p u t* C lark
P u blish J u l* 74 A August S. I N I
D E K 1)1

N O T IC E O F P U B L IC H E AR IN G S
the
s E m in o l e
county
B O A R D OF
C O M M ISS IO NER S
w ilt h o ld a p u b lic h e a rin g in Room
700 o l I h t S e m in o t# C o u n t*
C o u rlh o u t* . S e n to rd . F lo rid * on
A U G U S T 7S, 1401 a t T 00 P M . or
as soon th e r e a fte r as possible to
c o n s id e r th e fo llo w in g
P U B L IC
H E A R IN G
FOR
CHANGE
OF
T O N IN G
r e g u l a t io n s

S ID V I H L E n . JR
r e io n e
FR O M A I a g r ic u l t u r e to r
ia a a

s in g l e

use

111 4*

lo w

r e s id e n t ia l

io

CLASSIFIED
ADV. DEPT.

322-2611

T m m t In s tru c tio n — U S P T A
C t*M &lt; *d G rou p X P r iv e t*
lessons C h ild re n a tp e c ia ltj
D oug M a lic te w H I 777 IMF

t Urn*
50c • line
J consecutive times SOciline
I ttPM
7 consecutive timet
«lc
I 00 A M
MONOAY thru FRIDAY to consecutive times ircolin*
5ATURDAY t Noon
SI 00 Minimum

HO U RS

DEADLINES

11 A-Arts

Noon The Day Before Publication

fro m

Sunday - Noon Friday

o e n s it y

r e s t r ic t e d
c o m m e r c ia l

Arthur H Beckwith. Jt
C ix k X lh * Circuit Court
By Eve Craofre*
Deputy Cleek
IA copy ot th* Compialnl x
Petition tiled herein it attached lo
this Nolle e which it mailed lo eten
Defendant for wham tho residence
mure specific then a ttX a X
country was given in lh# sworn
statement Med herem by the
piam titf. hit agent, or atrocity.)
Publish July I t 4 August 1 1). II.

has

been

S U B M IT T E D
BY
CONDEV
P R O P E R T IE S . INC
F u r m tr . in * P L A N N IN G AN O
T O N IN G
C O M M IS S IO N
OF
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y * i: hold a
public h a a n n g in R oom 700 o I the
S e m in a l* C o u n t * C o u r lh o u t * .
Sanford, F lo rid a , on A U G U S T S,
I0B1. o r a t soon lh a re a lte r a t
possible. to reyiaw. h e a r com

m enu
and
m akt
retom
mmdatiom to th* Board ot County
Commissioners on in * above
capnoned ordinance and reionmg
Additional in lx m a lio n may be
obtained by contacting tn« Land
Management Manager at 77) 4)10.

4-Personals
W H / B E L O N E L Y ) W r it * " G e t
A M e te " D ating S e rvice A ll
ages P O Bo« *471. C le a r
w a trr. FI l i s t *
U n attached’ lo n e s o m t) S l i r l
T ria l M em bership. iusl *70
C onfidentiet O 'g n .fie d
DiS
creel D ifferent c o u n try w id e
L ite ra tu re D ating o f P re s tig e .
W illla m s to w n . M ass 01117
Tef 41)41* 5447

BARBS
Phil Pastoret
No, Gwendolyn. you don’t
have to tie a drinker to enjoy
Beethoven* Fifth.
IN TH E C IR C U IT C O U R T , IN
ANO FOR S E M IN O L E C O U N TY,
FLO R ID A
CASE NO t l 14*7 CA-17K
JE N N IFE R K E L L E Y .
P ia m l ill.

I’roplr who take sugar
with Ihrlr lea are in lor a
double rap for shoplifting.

D H e n d a ru t

A N D TR UST C O M P A N Y O F
L O U IS V IL L E . K E N T U C K Y
(MSI O llie r Boa 1)000
L o u isville. K e n tu c k y 407)7
B A R T L E S V IL L E
PARTNERS
, MR P H IL L IP flE C T O N ,

general pa r tn er

Our favorite bum says he
benefits from inflation
he'i gelling 50 rent cigar
butts rather than those of
the 10-cent variety.

I’roplr who shape others’
rods litrludr political power
broken and m angfarlurrn
ol hlp-haggiag jean*.

Building Contractor

Date o l I he t i r t i p u b lic a tio n ol
ih itF a o liC iir f A d m in is tra tio n July

11. 1411
E th e l L C o llin s
As P e rs o n a l R e p re s e n ta tiv e
X t h * E s ta te o l
DeOxaTs K a y * S c h is ll*
Deceased
A T T O R N E Y FOR p e r s o n a l

0 A T E 0 this » lh day of July,
A D . 1441
W IL L IA M L C O L B E R T .
City A ltx n e y

WILLIAM L. COLBERT. Esq
P O Bat D M
Sanlord. F lx id a )IF/&lt;
Pubnsh July 79. I N I

r e p r e s e n t a t iv e

Susan A E n g la n d
L E G A L C L IN IC O F E N G L A N D
i CHEEK, p a .
1X7 Cast H ig h w a y 4)4
A lta m o n te S p rings. F L 11704

DEK 44

R N OR LPN

COMPAT A DA TE
Taka I m inute to liste n to
reel rd e d message - 110) 171
N S ) N S I or w rite C om pel A
Oata 4 0 Bot 1171 S um m er
v ill* . S C m u

18-H elp Wanted
★

★

★

★

★

★

★

★

AAA EMPLOYMENT
1917 FRENCH AVE.
CALL 323-5176

L o n ely C h ristian Singles
Meet C n nstian Singles In *o u r
area w r i t * Southern C h ris tia n
Singles Club. P .0 Bo* t i l )
S u m m e rville , S C 744*1 or
call I * 0 ) 171 NSO 74 v i
L o n e lv T w n te ""B r in g ng People
Together Dating S e rv ic e !" A ll
ages L S e n ix C itilw n P O
14S1. W in te r Haven, F la 1)N 0

ASSOCIATES. IN C . REALTORS*
t lO t llc e s Throughout
C e n tra l F lo rid a

LAKE MARY
311-4940

CO RNER OF 14th
ANOFRENCH

5*4 W L a k r M a r * Blvd
|N OR IF TW OOD V IL L A G E '
I*
♦
B t a u iilw M * w o o d ,a
A c f ts 19 M m F rom Down
I w f b la n ia r d . G iant Oafct,
P a tfu r tla n d M l F I On Paved
Road VV A r f f i ia n W ell U M M
m it a o

S-Lost A Found

n«.autt1i#l Country Home, Pool,
t P N I t 7 p a r t tim e ) I t p a rt
Time Aped* Lakevlew N u n in g

Lost
Carron T e r r ix
Lea*
M a r* area Sm all te m a le w
lo n g b la c k is h b ro w n h o le
R e w ard 1 1 1 1 m a i i x a

8-Child Cara

MrekOded A f r v t .

n s f is a
B a b y s ittin g in m y horn# M on
F r l Fenced yard to r p lay
N e ar H ig h School 177 101*

Fenced, 1

Cent**. 414 E Jnd St. Sanlord

8 firm 7 Rain Paneled Den W
F ire p la c e , VA I 11 Pet A ttu m

L a b o re rs A heavy eguipm ent
o p e ra to r w e ed'd P'tase a pp l*
4 a m S P m 17) W .W arren
A ye , Longw ood City X Long
wood,
F la .
an
COP
A f fir m a tiv e A c tio n em ployer

able. One Y e ar F u ll W arranty
m m #
New L u t in g Spanish Style, 1
S te fy N ew C e n tra l M att A A ir,
1 B e dro om * J B jth s Fam
R o o m . F ir e p la c e . B e a u tifu l
KH, W aid D ow ntow n 14M M

SALES
ASSOCIATES
NEEDED
» opening! 1*11
Call Frank

CONSULT OUR

AND LET AN EXPERT DO THE JOB
To List Vouf Business...
Dial 322-2611 ot 831-9993

Law n &amp; Garden
Service

Etectrical
electrician

to *rs *&gt;p aii

typ e * X e factn ai w o rk a f fa ir

pr-COt ) » 47)4

P lu m b in g

M o w in g ,
e d g in g ,
ru b b is h
re m o ve d
Scheduled to suit
y o u r needs a l l 7*44

Tamar row ffiftf be IN d«y you
veil tb#* ro ll a « « f t* d you'w*
frvjttN rrt to ro ll iftA f
It you
pt** e § GlftftMNl M fodAv
Lawn M o w iftf
H T LACK I Y

S u m m ef Mood Fence Sale 25.000

it ol woq&amp; lu x e eng putts
mutt be ftofcjf Can be teen et
Senlfy F t f x n 7 || H * y 17 f2

Longwood Wide ftelecflgn
Come ta rt* Sale continues till
merchendne it ell laid
H u rry * M v rfy l 1)0 4722

PO NSECA P L U M B IN G
Con
S truct Ion. Repo Ir a E m x g t n
cy L ie , Bonded. Ins » ) 407)
P lu m b in g re p a ir - a ll I yp-rft

tidtuf* re plactmtfTl
iiwaier h « a im l p u m p i
hj m m

Pressure C toning

UNCLUTTER YOUR CLOSEl
Sell tnos# tn ngi mat are jusl
tas.og upifiactMiiinaniant ad
,n th e H r f i ' d 1272*11 o r O l

Mailing Labels

M o b le M am et, M o u rn . Root*.
T ra c k s . T r e iie f. Etc P o rlebie
U n d H a ro ld R a n k i n m i / I L

Remodeling

C o m p u te r P fuO edM ailing
Lab els Call

R em odeling Specialist

Busy Be*Labels 17)*8 )I

W t h « n d lf th t
Who i t B t i l o t A n

Mini-Ik Lock

B. E. L in k Const.
NEW

C oncrete
tilts SIB A up

Buildings,

At l a A SR *4

I a Industrial Pais

EVERY DAY IS BARGAIN
OAV IN THE WANT AOS 177
7*11 or 4)1 4447

a ll

332-7029
F in a n c in g Av a H abit

USBMl

B r ic k , b lo ck, fireplace, patios,
b arbecu e x d i s and re p a irs
F re e E stim a te s 77)1:50

W id e W ay R oofing and Pam
t 'n g G u x s n fa e d w x k Free
E flim s ie s Ph 733 4413

Nursing Center
Home Improvement

o u r ratesarelo w er

L k k e v irw f lu 's m * center
414 E S x u n d i l , Sanlord
m ow

C IN T R A L FLORIDA HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Free l i n a i i t t t 33)1444

Home Repairs
L a ll phase d o es
an
installation,
repairs, stucco,
f t screening

♦
•■ la tlg r
t * teal,

it a l l

J I B
H om e im provem ent —
C a rp e n try a x e X any type
R o x re p a irs , gytte r w x k .
p a in tin g (in te rio r x t i t e r i x ) ,
p lu m b in g , spec .e lite n m obile
hom e re p a irs 4 to X coating,
a n d wood patio flecks Free
e s tim a te ) ) * |*a )

HARPER'S T R I B t l R V I C * &lt;

Upholstery

A PAIR P R IC ll

Gen R epairs 1 in p t o v 17 yes
l o c i ' l l Sen x Disc 1U37CLS

Me.imsn Pamting A Repairs.
C Xaldr wgrk F t t t Est O s:
IP Sxitors I N 1440 Aster.
A i s O lts a m tn ta l W rought iro n
W indow B x t and S e cu rity
D oors 47) 7444. O rlando

r ta s o n a b i*

e ip

p t'C ts

Kenneth Hon

W allpapering, gginting. Low
X 'C rs G u x w x k M l ggjs

Plumbing
LARGO t r i e in s t a l l e r
Landscaping. ON Lawns R *
placed MS 1301

IN F L A T IO N F IG H T E R
S P E C IA L

g
ft

10 D a ys o n ly la b o r on t x a and
c h a ir |1 f t P lu s our M a ie r 't l
A ll w x k guaranteed J37 7 * )l
fo r I r e * **1 p ic k up* A de&lt;|V.
R O O B iy e n i

a n y tim e a lte r S
T E R R Y S i n I E r io r s

■Concrete work, loot re i lioors A
Pools Ltndscsplng A sod
w x k F rs tes t 177 I N I

Tree Service
T r im m in g , re m o v in g a L a v
s ta p in g F ree Esi n i t l f t

ALL PHASE CONTRACTORS
♦ n till X 411) 1)5 4L
q u a l it y at

C h ris tia n R ooting )7 i t s t i p
W4 S7S0. fre e t e l R tro X m g .
s p e iia t lj* in re p a ir w x k &amp;
new ro o tin g

Sandblasting

P a in tin g . Roofing. C a rp e n try
L i t . Bonded A G uaranteed

Landscaping

SUNSHINE STATE

I

C ash ie r w anted to r o u t e
w orking in ) departments 70
40 h ours per week, at
m in im u m
wage
Cashier
e a p a rl.n c e p re fe rre d , c a ll
Sharon lor apt* at

spur of the m o m e n t

GWAL1NEY JEWELER
)0* S P x k A te
3)7 4504

17 and 17 I S h it! F u ll I 'm *
A p p ly m p e rs o n S a n lo rd
N u ts m g C o nvaie scm t Center,
450 M e ilo n v .li* A v *

H rip th e H um ane Society Com *
S titc h w lt n C r e a tiv e £ •
x e s s io n s a t P iA lii
n the
B u tle r P la ta Jul* li s t and
A u g 1st C a ll Ann 1)0 4175

i f you d o n l 6 * n * v * tn e t w a nt ads

FLORIDA

(M SI U P 4400

J u ry Z&gt;. 7*. I N I

T r te p n x i* S o lic ito rs needed tor
ja y te e s p r t n e t t 4 I p m or 1 4
p m J77 ISIS

12-Special Notices

b a b y s it t in g

U40 P eachtree Road
A tla nta. G eorgia M OO
YOU ARE N O T IF IE D m at an
action l x d e c la ra to ry , m iu n c flv #
and X h x retie* In v o lv in g p r o p e rly
in S e m in o t* C o u n ty . F l o r i d * ,
nam ei*. le tte r X c r e d it no 7*
issued b * in * S tale B a n k o t F orest
C it*. F lo rid * t x c u s t o m x , Jen
n ite r
K e lle y ,
10
p u t a t iv e
b e n e fic ia ry , C l l l l t n s F id e lit y
Bank and T ru s t C o m pa ny o l
Lou isville. K e n tu c k y " t x
The
Account X B x t t e s v ii i* P a rtn e r s ."
has been fife d a g a m s t you and you
x * regutred lo servo a copy o l
your w r iff m defenses, if a n * , lo It
on T S cX I F f a l t e r . I squire ,
P i* IN i l l ’s a lt x n e y . w hen* ad
dress i t M a g u ire V norm s A W rits .
trifim o n y And tv id tn c * upflft •&gt; A . Post O ffic e Boa 44), Tw o
w*»«tn ftm tipf*#*! i t fa a* b « tM
South O range P la c e . O rla n d o .
liOtArd G* County
F lo rida 17407. o n o r b e fo re A u gust
fc tflitn o lt Count y* f It t «dft
17,1441, and I I I * the x ig m a l w ith
B y Bober 1 Itu r m . C hi if man the Clerk X th is C o u rt e ith e r
A lie n A rth u r H B rO w .th , Jr
before t x v i c * on P la 'is M t 4 at
Pub fifth Ju ly 2t if&gt;d Aouutt !?* l x nay o f Im m e d ia ia l* th e r e a fte r ,
Air Conditioning
1MI
X h e rw 't* a d e fa u lt w ill be entered
DC A IM
t g s in t t
you
to r
th *
r e lle l
Chris w ill s e tv ic t AC 's, r e fr ig
demanded in t h * C o m p la .n l o f
IN T H E C IR C U IT CO URT FOR
( re a m s , w a rn coo lees, m it e
petition
S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y . F L O R IO A
C a ll 77) *771
D
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on
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PROBATE D IV IS IO N
HEAD
File N um ber 11141 CP
AR THU R H B E C K W IT H JR
D ivisten
Bed uty Care
Clerk X lh * C ir c u it Court
IN H E . E S T A T E O F
By. Susan E T abor
D E B O R A H K A T E SC H IS TLE
As
D
r
p
u
t*
C
le
ft
Deceased
TOMER S B E A U T Y SA LO N
Publish July IS. 73. 74, &amp; A ugust S.
NO TICE OP A D M IN IS T R A T IO N
F O R M E R LY H a r r i f t r t B e a u ty
1441
1 0 A L L P E R S O N S H A V IN G
Nooik SI* E 111 SI . m SJ4J
DEK
44
C L A IM S
OR
DEMANDS
AG AINST T H E A B O V E E S TA TE
AND A L L O T H E R
PERSONS
Boarding &amp; Grooming
IN T E R E S T E D IN T H E E S TA TE
YOU
ARE
HEREBY
N O T IP ltD
th a t
th e
ad
A n im a l Haven B o arding and
m in is tr a t io n o l i h t a s la t * o l
O fo a m in Q K tn n e lft S h a d y ,
Deborah K a y * SchislN i. Ok eased
in sulated, tcreened, fly p ro o f
F ,1* N u m be r I t 111 C P . It pending
lm &gt;dt. o u itkfe r u n i
Fanft
m th * C irc u it C ourt t x S e m m x e
Also AC cage* We c a te r lo
C ount*. F l x id a . P roba te D iv is io n . ’
ydur p d i- Starving s tu d
the address X w h ic h is P O
r e g s lr y Ph 172 9712________
D raw er C. S a n lx d . F I 1)711
Snow Hill Kennel o«#rt Cal t
t h e p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e ot
Dog Flea Baths SS up 74
the estate i t E th e l L C o llin s whose
LAWS OF F L O R IO A . S P E C IA L
Hour. Full Strvlc*. 1*5 S3U
address is 7)04 Savoy D riv e .
ACTS OF 1447. AS A M E N D E D .
O rlando. F lo r id * 77401 The nam e
b e in g t h e c h a r t e r o f t h e
Brush Cutting
and a d d re s s a t t h * p e r s o n * '
CITY OF O V IE O O . F L O R ID A .
re p re s e n ta tiv e s a ltx n e y a re M il RE VISIN G TH E C H A R T E R AS
fo rth batow
P R O V ID ED B Y C H A P T E R 144.
CUSTOM W ORK
A ll persons h a v in g c la im s x
LA W S
OF
F L O R IO A .
BY
R ta s a n a b i*
R a te s .
F re e
dem and* a g a in s t th # estate a re
A M E N D IN G S E C T IO N 7 TO
E stim ate Call E a rly A. M or
ttautred.
w it h i n
ih r e e
PROVIDE FO R A F U L L T IM E
Eva ) l ) l i 7 l a r IN S ) 7*4 J7A4
M AYO R E F F E C T IV E W IT H T H E
g e n e r a l e l e c t i o n in i * * )
TH IS N O T IC E , lo M * w ith t h .
P R O V ID IN G
FO R
A
c ix k o l l he a b o v t c o x t a w ritte n
R E F E R E N D U M ON Q U E S TIO N
statem ent o f a n y c la im or dam and
OF
APPROVAI
OF
TH E
they m ay h a v * E a ch c la im m u tt
B ill C a rs*. Stale C ertified
R E V I S E D
C H A R T E R
Or m w r itin g a n d m u s t in d ic a te the P R O V IS IO N
B u ild in g
C o n tr a c to r
P R O V ID IN G
basis fo r t n * c la im , lh * nam e and
Residential X C o m m x c la l.
OF
BALLO T.
FO R M
address o l th e c r e d d x x M agent
New
X
k
m
o
d
e le d 773 04*4
P R O V ID IN G
POR
F IL IN G
x
a tto rn e y , and lh * am ount
R E V I S E D
C H A R T E R
c la im e d I I th e c la im i t rw t yet
Car Repair
P R O V IS IO N W IT H F L O R IO A
due, th e d a le when d w ill becom e
DEPARTM ENT
OP
STATE.
o u t s h a ll be s ta te d It the c la m i*
R E P E A L IN G A L L O R D IN A N C E S
M .n x x M a ix R e pairs
contingent o r u n liq u id a te d , tn *
IN
C O N F L IC T
AND
Less w x r y 1 in convenience —
n ature X th e u n c x la m ty s h a ll be
We ll came to you 717 740a
P R O V ID IN G A N E F F E C T IV E
staled It tn o c la im is secured, the
Htbby’S Mekiiy A rt* Service
DATE
s e c u rity s h a ll Or desc rib e d . The
Said O rdinance w a s placed on
c la im a n t s h a ll d a t iv x s X Ilc ie n t
lira ! tead ng or* J u ly )7, I N I . and
Carpel Cleaning
copies o l lh * c la im lo tn * c i x k to
too City C o uncil w i ll conSrdar
s n a b i* th * c i x k to m a il o n * copy
s t m t lo r I m a l p a s s a g e a n d
lo te c h p e rs o n a l re p re s e n ta tiv e
ado X io n a lte r p u b lic h e a rin g ,
A ll p r is o n s in t x r s le d In lh *
which w ill be h e ld in t h * C d y H a ll
estate to w h o m e copy X th is
m O yiedoon T h u rs d a y . I h a t ih d a y
Notice of A d m in is tra tio n has been
X August. I f i l . at 7 ID p m o r as
m a ile d a r * re q u ire d . W IT H IN
toon
t h x a a l t x a t p o a s ib lt A t lh *
TH R E E M O N T H S F R O M THE
m eeting in te re s te d p a rlie s m a y
date
of
th e
F IR S T
appear and be h e a rd w ith respect
P U B L IC A T IO N
OF
T H IS
to Pc* proposed O rd in a n c e This
N O T IC E , lo t i l * a n y oM ections
CeremlcTUe
hearing m ay be c o n H w ie d fro m
they m a y h a v * that challenges lh *
tu
n
*
to
lim
e
u
X
il
tlesal
a
c
tio
n
is
v a lid ity X l h * d e c e o m r v w i i . th *
taken by lh a C tly C o u n c il
q u a n tis a tio n s o l th o p e ls o h e l
A copy o l H i* peoposod O r
rv p re v e n ta ilv e . or th e venue x
Omanc* is posted a t C ity M all.
ju ris d ic tio n o l I h t c o u rt
Oviado. F lo rid a , and copies m o on
A L L C L A IM S . O E M A N D S . AN O
l i l t w ith the C le rk o f in * C d y and
O B J E C T IO N S NOT SO F IL E D
ta m e m ay be in sp e c te d b y lh *
W IL L BE F O R E V E R B A R R E D

Publish

4- Persona Is

Found Fem ale P itt B u ll Sun land
Ests A p p ro ' S m o t o ld C all
Judy 17) 4i(X}

STATE BANK OF F O R E S T C IT Y ,
FLO R ID A , C IT IZ E N S F ID E L IT Y
BANK AN D TR UST C O M P A N Y
OF L O U IS V IL L E
KENTUCKY
and B A R T L E S V IL L E
PART

B it 140
Persons u n a b le to a tte n d the
hearing who w is h to c o m m e n t on
th * proposed a c tio n s m a y s u b m it
w ritte n s ta te m e n ts lo the L a n d
M anagem ent D iv is io n prior t o the
scheduled p u b lic h e a rin g Persons
app earing a t th e h e x in g * m ay
Subm it w r itte n s ta te m e n ts to be
heard v a l l y
Persons a r e ad vise d th a t. II they
decide 10 a p p e a l an y decision
m ad* a t these m e e tin g s , th e y w ill
need a re c o rd o l t n * proceedings,
and t x such purpoaa. th e * m ay
reed to e n s u re th a t a v e rb a tim
record o t t h * pro c e e d in g s r* m ade,
•m e n
ro e x d
includes t h *

Telephone

A Crafts

771 4117 X 11* 5)43

O S a c re s ). TH E

a p p l ic a t io n

E le c tric ia n s C o m m e rcia l r*P
re g S em inole Count* licanse
h e lp fu l A p p l* i t icb m e Red
Bug A T u sca w itte Rat

C E R A M IC CLASSES
A v a ila b le d a *s A r v t n n g i
F o r n w re tn lo rm a 'to n ce il

n e ig h b o r h o o d

F O L L O W IN G
d e s c r ib e d
P R O P E R TY
C N P a rc e l
E 1jo M h e N W ' • X l h * N W ' . X
S I I . T I I S . N 7* E . le s t th e
X O p e rly b e g in n in g 740 E a t ' X
Douglas A v e n u a on N o rth Street,
then fo rm in g *00’ W est on N o rth
Street, then r u n n in g South 1170',
then ru n n in g E a st aaO' back to
Douglas A ve nue then N o rth 7RF
siono O o u g le t A yenuo, then Eost
740. then N o rth *00 lee* lo the
Point o l B e g in n in g (C o n ta in in g ) s
acres m o re o r less)
u &gt;A P a rc e l
E ' t o t H i* N W 't O l lh e N W 'iO l
S I I , T 71 S . R T IE , less the
c ro p e rl* b e g in n in g m the SW
corner o l N o rth Street and Douglas
A v tn u e . then ru n n in g W est 7Ad,
then n a m in g South 4 0 0 . m en
running E a s t 740', th e n ru n n in g
North 400 lo t h * P o in t o l B egin
lung (C o n ta in in g M S a c re * m ore
or le u )
(F u rth e r d e s c rib e d a t being
Situated on t h * SW c o m e r o(
Douglas A v e n u e and N o rth SI )
ID ItT R IC T N o &gt;1

AVO N R E P R E S E N T A T IV E S
T h * P a rt T im * Career
4*4 7074
Collect US 170#

P lano lessons
S a nlord A re * siudents
C a ll 44* 1*71

) L in e s M in im u m

FO R
the
PUR POSE O F R E Z O N IN G FR O M
A t A G R IC U L T U R E
TO R 1 A
m u l t i f a m il y
O W lL L IN G
D IS T R IC T I I * S A C R E S ) A N O CN

NOTICE OP ACTION

E v e n i n g I l e n t Id

m e d iu m

i t — Instructions

RATES

r e s id e n t ia l

need a r e e x d o l th e proceedings,
and to r Such purpose, they may
need 10 W itu re th a l a verbatim
re c o rd X th e p e x e e d in g * i t mode,
w h ic h
re c o rd
In c lu d e s
the
t e s tim o n y a n d a v id e n c t upon
w h ic h in * app eal is la be made
B o x d X C o unty Com m issioners
Sem m oie C ounty. F l x id a
By
Robeei S tu rm . Chairm an
A tte s t A r th u r H B eckw ith. J r
P u b lis h J u ly 74 and Aug 17, 1411
OEK IX

F IC T IT IO U S N A M E
4401 is# i* h t r * b y g iven l h | i I am
tn g a g td &lt;n business a t Cranes
Roost. A ila m g n l* S x L s g k Fla
1)7)0 S e m inole C o unly, F l x id *
und er lh # (K liH d u s nam e ol
A M E R IC A N
OREAM
IN
T E R N A T IO N A L IN C and Ih a i (
.X e n d lo r e g , s ix s a d nam e m lh
lh * C i x k o l l h * C irc u it C o x l.
S em inole C o u n ty , F l x id a In ac
t x d a n t t w ills t u t p e n s io n s X th *
F ic lth o u s N a m e Statutes. T o W ill
Sect on gas 04 F l x id a Statutes
ItSJ
S.g Steven H Love
P u b i.sn J u ly 74 A August 5 I ) A
14. I N I
D E K 1)1

d e n s it y

8 3 1 -9 9 9 3

CLASSIFIED DEPT

the

p la n

r ip w a n te d im m e d a lX r C x k t a i l w e .lre sse s P * f * ,lm *
dm ,n g ro o m addresses. P*r '
t.m e m a m lrn a n c e m an
A
m X x e ( ) ) x e ld e r ' security
g u * r d A b o u rv tff A pply X In *
C a v a lie r M o to r In n

SH AKLEE h e r b t a b l e t s
W E D E LIV E R
m te e i

Orlando-W inter Park

3 2 2 -2 6 1 1 _________

COM

p r e h e n s iv e

0 1 S T R IC T PT I I S
The p ro p e r!*d e s c rib e d * t

TO
J x l S D e lla V a lla
IJ7BI e x i le C o urt
S ilve r S p rings. M a ry la n d 7040a
You ar e n o t,lie d m a t an action lo
e s ta b lis h
and
Ix e d o s *
an
• q u ila b io lio n on in * x o p e rty m
Sem m oie C o unty. F lx &gt; d * 4 f t
c n b e d on E s h ib it A attached
h e r x o has been H ied e g a in tl you,
and you a re re q u ire d lo i x y * a
copy o l y o u r w ritte n defenses, il
any. to s a id a c lio n on Thomas C
T u rn e r, T u r n * , 1 F x d
PA.
P la m lilt's a ltx n e y
whose ad
X e s t is I l i a G X I H I * T o w x .
J a c k s o n v ille , F lo rid a S270F on x
before A u g u s t SI, (441 and l i l t th *
x ig m a l w i i h l h * C le f s o l Inis c o x l
e ith e r b e io r t s e rv ic e en P la in lill's
a tto r n e y
or
im m e d ia te ly
I h x e e r i e r . X n x w is e , lh * x la u ll
w i ll be e n te re d a g a tn tt you lo r the
re b e l dem and ed m tn * Com pie m l
X P e iilio n
W IT N E S S m y hand and In * seal
X i n i ! C o u rt on J u ly 74. I N I
(S E A L )

to whan it comas to shop
png ha turns to th* Want
A ik, wh#.a h« can find a
l*tg* selection lo choose
from
!( you have some
thing lor sal# thal ha may
b* looking lot. you should
NFrvitiig what* hg'U see it
. , , M (he Want Ads.

of

CO UNTY

d w e l l in g

J A M E S R D E L L A V A L L E and
JER I I . D E L L A V A LLE .
DXendaXt

H# spends ■ lo t o l i n * on
lh * goH tu u is #
A n d In
x iW ) lo im p itrv e tus gem#,
he s t l x i i o n ly the I d "
eu u ip m e tn

e le m e n t

S E M IN O L E

F ro m t h * Southeast Comer ot
th * SW 'v ot S ection )S, Township
14 South, R a n g * 74 E ast, Seminot*
C o unty, F k if t d * ; r u n N 14 degrees
0 ) ' 74 " W , alo n g t h * S c X h i.n t o l
s aid SW ' a. a d is ta n t * X IS tre t to a
p o in t on t h * W est R ig h t X Way
lin e o l M a rk h a m Woods Road and
th * P O IN T
OF
B E G IN N IN G
th a n e * c o n tin u e N I t degrees 07‘
74" W . a p in g t a u t South l i n t X th *
SW’ a, a d is ta n c e X 177* *0 teat:
I h a n c t r u n N 00 degrees O r 5*' E .
A long th * ce n te r lin o o t a too toot
w id e F t x id a Pow er C orporation
E a sem e nt, a d istan ce o l 7*0 04
ta e l: th e n c e ru n S *4 degrees 07’
74 " E ,700 00 I t e t , thence run N 77
degrees ST" ) 1 " 6 .. 177 71 teet.
th e n c e r u n N SI degrees S*’ OS' E ,
TO OOIeetj th e n c e ru n S 14 degrees
01115 • E . *0 47 te e t to th * Point of
C u rv e lu r * o l a c u rv e concave lo
th e
N o r th e a s t,
th a n e *
ru n
Southeaster i* along th * a rc X sa d
c u rv e h a v in g a ra d ,u s X 77100
te e t, a c e n tra l an g le at S* degrees
00’ 0 0 ". l x an a rc d is ta n c t ot
714 41 te e t. thence ru n N 44
degrees M OS" E , Its I t le X to
th o P o int x C u rv a tu r* o t a curve
concave to t h * N o rth w e s t, thence
r u n N o rth e a s te rly along th * ere ol
s aid c u rv e h a v in g a r e d .u s X IS 00
te e t. a t e n lt a t a n g le ol 40 degrees
00' 0 0 ", to r e n a rc d is ta n c t o t 14.77
F IC T IT IO U S NAM E
te e t. th a n e * ru n N I f degrees 5*
N o tice Is h e re b y given thet I am
OS” E . IS 00 teet to a point on I h t
engaged in business a t W Mw* 44
W o it
R ig h t o l W t y
lin t
ol
H i* 4 Boa HO. Sanlord F I 77771
M X k horn Woods Rood; thenco
S e m in a l, C o unty, F lo rid a under
in * Ilc tltlo u S nam e ot E U LA
r u n S 00 deg ree s O f ) ) " E . eleng
S A L V A G E , and m a t I '"te n d to
sold R ig h t o t W oy lino, a distance
r e g is t x SAid n a m # w ith th * Clerk
X 4 * 4 * 0 ta e l to t h * PO IN T OF
X t h * C ir c u it Court. Seminole
B E O IN N IN O
County, F lo r id * In accordance
C o n ta in in g I t 447 acres, m ore or
w ith in # p r o * 1* “on* X th * Fic
le u
litlo u s N a m * S te lX ts . T o W it
(F u r th e r
d e s c r ib e d i s on
Section I t s 04 F lorida S ta lu ta i
M o r k h im W o o d s R o o d , thre e
m ile s n o rth X L a k e M a ry Blvd )
1417
ID IS T R IC T N o s i
S o E uta Broca
F u r t h e r , th e P la n n in * and
Publish J u ly 74, A August J .1 7 .14,
Zoning C o m m is s io n w ill hold t
IN I
p u b lic n e a r.n g on AUGUST S. I N I
DEK 1)0
AT
&gt;00
PM
x
os to o n
l
her r o lle r os possible, in Room 700
n o t ic e
of
in t e n t
to
ol th # Sem .nol# C ounty Cour
R E G IS T E R F IC T IT IO U S NAME
(house. S a n lo rd . F i x id *, in order
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y G IV E N
that th * understoned, desiring to to re v ie w , h e a r com m ents and
m a k e re c o m m e n d * ! Ions to th e
enoaue m business under the
B oard a! C o u n ty C om m isskm ers o l
HC titlous nam e o l A B IL IT Y IRON
Sem inole C o unty on the above
W ORKS, at l i s t L JSth Street.
A p plication
Sanlord. F i x id * . 1)771. intend* to
Those in atte n d a n c e w ill b *
re g is te r (ha said nam e w ith (h*
hea rd and w r itt e n com m ents m ay
t ie r s X t h * CltCU't Court X
be
t ile d
w it h
th *
Land
S e m in o t* C o unty, F t x id a
M a n a g e m e n t M anage r H e x ln g s
DA T E D th is )4th day o t July. A
m
ay
be
c
o
n
tin
u
e
d
tra
m
f
lm
* to
O 1441
A C C U R A TE
FA B R IC A TIN G . lim e a t fo u n d necessary F x t h e r
d e ta ils a v a ila b le b y c a llin g l l )
INC
47)0, E i le n llo n IIP
B * Chip Crenshaw
P u b lish Ju ly 14, Aug A 11. 14.
P e rs o n ! X * advised (net II they
d ecide to app eal any decision
lilt

T h o lo y g ly c a m e llia i t n am ed
a l t e r G e o r g * J o M p h K im a l,
a m im o n a t y w h o f i t i l
b io iig h t
th *
s h r u b Ir o m
I h t C lie n t to
E u ro p t.

o f

S E M IN O LE C O U N T Y w ill h o ld *
puti'C h e * t in g In Room 100 o f I he
S e m inote C o u n t* C o u rth o u s e .
Santord. F lo r id * , on A U O U S T IS,
1*11 * t 7 00 P M . o r M M o n
th e re a fte r n p o s i e l* . lo c o nsider
• vxc it It la n d u u e m e n d m e n l to
th *
S e m in o le
C o u n t*
Com
X th e n s iv * P la n and R E Z O N iN G
rt th * d e s c rib e d p r o p e r '*
AN O R D IN A N C E A M E N D IN G
O R D IN A N C E
77 75
W H IC H
a m e n d s t h e o e t a il E d l a n o

f a m il y

CLASSIFIED ADS
Seminole

c o u nty

c o m m is s io n e r s

IN T H E C IR C U IT COURT O f
T H E E IG H T E E N T H JU D IC IA L
C IR C U IT
IN
S I M IN O L B
C O U N T Y . F L O R ID A
CASE NO I I M A C A e t P
ANNE
B STARNES AND
H A R L E Y R S T A R N E S , her son.
P ltm tiM .

6A-Health &amp; Beauty

F rs d d i* Robinson Plum bing
R epairs, (auceis. w
c
Sprinklers 11) U N . p ig jg g

W ill U p h o ls ie r O n t l i e and
O ccasion al C h airs, plus sm jM
d e rm C a ll m 0714
V

Window Repair*

�9

IS—Halp W » n *d
MEEO a s e c o n d INCOME?
No mv . no H ill, no le t fig
monoy »n %port i m t n ) M l
C O NVENIENCE s t o n e c a s h
IE R S Good l i t v y hospital!
ra tion . I M f l p a d vacation
every A month? Now too? no
tor e.penenced people re*a,
to w ork F o r interview phono
Itt* m o n o o rr *t:
A irpo rt B ird
u n t il
Cassell e rry
J it It } )
C r tr r j A y*
JJJ t n )
Lake M e ry
J!) IMS
C O M M U N IT Y
B U L L E T IN
B O A R O l ARE GREAT
C L A S S IF IE D
AOS
ARE
even

better

SALESLADY - E.perenced n
lid to s ' reedy to wear Applr .n
person No phono to m Ro
jo y . I l l E H I SI . Sontgrd
H N 't to LB SO, LPt&lt;
' '■
par? lim e o r lu ll tim e Mrd col
;.C o n c rp it. sol (toll
^
i.
---* ■1■
■’
e. « m money
** w ilft *hur hobby Call Ann 113
*475

71—Situations Wanted
D *y A N ight M b yvttm g
in m y home Reetonebi#
131 OIOS________

37—Business Property

Do yey need storage space*
Modern 2 fkfrm ranch apart
men* w ith etftc and pantry and
huge linen closet 22) 2X1

28—Apts. &amp; Houses
To Share

W ill share my Duple n
Reasonable
32IOBOS
Fem ale wants to Share
3 bdrm house SITS mo
377 4531

29-Rooms
e • • a u tiim clean a ll new steeping
t
rooms Lmen and m a d service
provided Available now Call
C; 373 1*41 or inquire at 477
2 P a!m etlc Ave
V K N F ty iD — R e tt, w tty 4
m onthly rates U til ln&lt; Kit 100
Oak Aouits 141 744J

3a Apartments
Unfurnished
J.A K E JE N N IE APTS 1. I 11 A 2
h Bdrm on Lake Jennie m
S anford Pool, rec room.
- outdoor (1 B O. tennis courts A
K disposals. Walk to shopping
Adults only Sorry no pets
___________011*74?__________

Nice 1b dfm A C.
AAC 1220 Month
221 90 tc No pets

a p p lia nces

1200 u p

1 B drm Apts from 171S 7 A 1
Bdrm also ava l Pool, tennis
court 121*420
M e iio n v ill*
‘ Trace
Apes
Spacious, modem 7 Bdrm. t
B ath a p t
Carpeted, k it
e quipped
CMAA
Near
hospital A lake Adults, no
pets •1770 322 *25)
4 n it y c iu n lr f living? 3 Bdrm
A p ts
O ly m p ic 11. Peal
• Shenandoah Village Oped * S
M i m s _______________
T .tr X U ItT
APARTM ENT*
F a m ily 1 A d u lts i . t t t j n
Poolside 1 B d rm t M attie's
C m * Apt? i n TWO Open on
V * f n *. * V. UOyT o n i 4»f A J. I
b drm tra m t i l l 1 b F « iron.
11M Located 17 97 lu ll South
u. A .,p o rt B l.d . n H " lo i1 All

Adi.it? m i n i ________
■ ilM it n . I B. mu.pp«14.l(h«A.
WWC. J .f. no p«l»
ir a m o n fl. M l 1410
AJ

m.

home

h ig h

e l e v a t io n

CLASSY PROPERTY,
EVA AREA SSS.dX)

SANFORD
t b drm a If, kids,
u til Inc. i l l an l ie 1200
SAV ON r e n t a l s r e a l t o r
SINGLE AN D ON THE GOT Put
ypur Ik i f m ypuf private Attic
Modern Slud o E fffc lent v with
t w it m bookcaie and energy
efficien t design 1211301

gen

r iv e r

access, g e n

PRIM E LOCATION

1 Bedroom all utiM m s JL cede
pa d c o illy furnished 5250
mo 122 204#

For la la b r o w n rr 1 bdrm . I B.
living rm , d.nlng rm A kJIrbrn
CMA. c a rpo rt, W i l l i ' g a r.g r
w all, im c r d ,d 1*SOO on A
« itu m t m tga )&gt;1 M?4

31A-Duplexes
New Duple*
equipped kitchen 117$ mg
Call 323 5*50
LJ?&lt; V a t , 141 Ruskin SI New
J Bdrm , CMA, WWC. LUO Mo
H I * loot }») )79» or JOASTS1
Orlando

P 0X 1IG R fA lT T
Hag R a il i t l a t a BraA .r _
n iM T i
Iitn n w ^
JUST REOUCFO
S pacnui 4
M rm , I B I i lo r r noma Ld
eat tn kit eft * lots ot 'built Iwn.
paddle tan. close in
2 Bdrm 2 Bath Bloch Name on
m et Street In Sanford Owner
says 110,000 Down and lake
over mortgage or tr y VA or
FHA 137.000
M ovm g

to

a

new er

hom e.

Brand New Wood and Stone
Executive Unfurnished Nome
I Bdrm . J Bath Lk Mary,,
Winter Sprgs Area 1471 Mo
* Sec *71 ISM
_________
2 bdrm near Cardinal tn d ,
remodeled, lg fenced yard,
kids. 12*5 mo + dep 172 W2I
N EED A SERVICEMAN? You'll
tmd Mm listed in our BuSinass
Service D irectory
Clean 3 Borm , 2 Bath Cent HA
Large Y a rd 1st last and dep
SJ75 mo 1101113
SaMurd 2 Bdrm, C B home | | f
* S IX sec
W ill accept I
*m a ll ch ild S74 271* after «
pm
references
SANFORD
4 b r a-r. kids,
pets. S200 dn. 137$ 31* 2200
SAV ON RENTALS REALTOR

LANDLORDS
Q ualified tenants waiting
No fee 11* 7200
SAV ON RENTALS. REALTOR
3 bdrm 2 ft fa m ily room.
I car oarage in
Deltona Call SJ4 t*37

4 bdr m, l B «n Chyluofa
1st H a s t
Cad a lte r * p m 3*SSS3I
I Sunland 101 Fairm ont 3 Bdrm, 1
Bath. Fla rm SJOO mo ♦ S2V0
Sec Dep 377 7454
1 bdrm , 1* 1 B lamely room,
game room. N repiac* No pets
S3SO mo , l i t , last ♦ ISO dep
J77I4S0
We Hantfia Rant*Is
H ara fd H a ll Realty Inc
Realtor 231 1*24
M edw ayJBdrm Good
Condition Large Fenced
Y ard 122S 321021*

U

Houses Furnished

D d to n j

A llr it llv t.

d . j n A C, no p»H
u » i m ™ tn o

n » J t,

1 M rm

5 7 4 -1 0 4 0
1AN F O B D - } M rm , j ^ i « n
p *H (W »k ) ) • ?300
1AV OH BENTALS H i A L IO *
VANFOHO
AIRPORT BLVO
J M r m D H mo 111 ItM
&gt; A V « H RENTALS RCALTOR

34—Mobile Homes
SANFORD CANAL FRONT
t
b drm a.r U ?J » * JJ*?J0#
LAV ON R E N T A L) REALTOR
LA N F O R O
I b d rm . tu rn . a ir.
SILO dn. LTD m o ) ) * 7T00
LA V ON r E n T A L S R R A L T O R

fast with a want ad
Assume FHA Mortgage Cofv 7
Bdrm Home. Fireplace Huge
Living Rm Cent A .r Asking
u * *00 Call 30S 74* T377
— } For 1
Income Property
One is a 2 Bd IB . CB A.r 7
ftdrm. t Bath Rented for I ITS
mo Both SSY.000 37) 117*. 1)1

n it
Owner Real Estate Associate

ALL FLORIDA REALTY
OF SANFORD REALTOR

V/

41—Houses

RO B B IE'S
REALTY
REALTOR. MLS
7201 1 French
Suite 4
Sanford

24 HOUR [B 322-9283

f\K \ l, E S T V T F -

REALTOR 321 4**1
E *« t 34* *4*0. 112 1*1*. I l l M Jf
M u ltiple L iltin g Service
Home For Safe By Owners 1010
WMtow A d m v *. G«ifo*fo»*in
Section P ric e 121.*00 Down
12.500 M tg |l* « 0 0 Terms
1747 47 m ofy 20 yrs e fl4 % N o
closing costs Call 1210*37

Harold Hall Realty
INC. REALTORS, MLS
333 5774 Day o r N ight
V*E h a v e m a n, m a n , ham*?
undrr i l l *00111
Call u? belare ,o u b u ,
IT CAN'T * E t A large 1 bdrm on
i l l . H i tre e d la l * pl*?R
c a rp e tin g
fe rm a l D in ing
Ream e aaik in p a n lr, tor
ent, t i f *0*'
M IN T CONDITION 1 bdrm e nl,
l i ,r? eid « Central M A. » •
cp iln g , a a l in a u c tio n e
?cr**ned »*tm Toned QC I.
T ail L44,Ldil
modern

ouest

house

come? w n u t ipanaw? 1 bdrm,
■ eal ,n k .lc h tn , le p a ra t*
Dining deem cedar trim e
lavet* , * i d value 4 at
MT.LMt
COUNTRY ACRE — I bdtm . «
urallpapar. panelling. POOL *
lire p le c * an a p p ra i I acre
Fenced n i g barn. lil.L M M
OMNEE W ILL HOLO Jnd mtg
an ta n tg 1 b d rm t Laualy
POOL « tlid * e wrapareund
J e ttin g tgr cool tun Tug
neigbbarhaad t l ) W it
OVER t?gg SO PT in ta n tu tiu m
built 1 bdtm tp lil plan »
l ir t p l a c * . la m rm . Rug*
u re tn e d percb * R e a ., m
tulalU R lor le v . Ian u lillH tl
A I area M I.*M

C A L L 323-5774

HAL COLBERT REALTY
tnc

It

333-7833

331-0041

Evm JTT 04.4
TO? E . ISttt St.______ .

M Lb

CHARMING 3 Bdrm . 7 Beth. 2
Story, peat screened fe m e
roem. Uf.fOO.
LOCH ARBOR Nice Cleared
Hem esifts t i l . 1*0 t» 110 *00
WOODMCRE PARK ) Bdrm. 3
Beth Urge kitchen Owner
mehveted w ill held mortgage
I4M00
. ,
Don't w ait to BUY Reel Bstate
'B U Y Reel E state end w e itltt
LAW AN AKISH
REALTOR

33) 0041
A l t t r b r i 1JJ f i n ana JlItT T J
O A N IO M IL L FINANCE
Largr 1 B« TB F a m ily Mom* in
1o*n but vary p r.v a tr E .
&lt; t l l m l co n d itio n in c lu d in g
brand n*«, root A pamt.no
Your? tor l i * *00 Mu?l ?**

CallBart
heal estate
h e a l TON, ITT ? « *

Deltona Corner Lol I Harm, t
B rin Cent MA F u ll* cafpdtM ,
a??umabl* m tg * ?,
HH

DOLL HOUSE
This cute 7
b d rm 't
home i t what you "re
looking fo r Excellent starter
home w ith assumable mor
tgage Only S37.SOQ
t ACRE
M obile home okay
with p e rm it i a t y term s, low
down payment, only 1*000

'

K js iC

STEMPER AGENCY

ft

,l- '

JEALC U 5'
7 -1 1

1 M fc fM b iw a

L ik e
L o c k h a rt
re du ce d !
C ountry liv in g , fire p la c e s ,
fruit. 7 bdrm , l l i B Owner
U1 000 *44 7011 or l i t 7*00

3V44S French 177 0711
After Hours 7r* *000. 772 077*

DON T WAIT
This I bdrm 1 B
home has room to expand K
good toe alig n W o n t fast at
only 123.500

'

OPEN HOUSE
THE TFttHACC
7550 BifJuvwhoq A v t
Mpqr* Op«m Tues
Thru Sun 10 JOto *
2 Bdrm. 7 't bath. Central a ir L
heat, fully fqu&lt;p(*q kitchen
with m icrowave FHA, VA A
Cony Low (town payment, low
m onthly
p aym e n t
w ith
graduated m ortgage 377 )9f2
I m *t i7 i IM A _________

52—Appliances

in g e n
l ik e
a

3 bdrm hduSf, Assume VA mtge
of i*»
CMA
fenced, in
Sunung Estates 14} *00 373
57*t
FINAN C IN G - 1 7
y s , split pun? i ski.no SiS.iOO

ow ner

OWNER f i n a n c i n g
home
w income 7 1. dining rm . eat
in k ifchen, corner w ■ let. *
separate J tjr lyrnrshed rental
coMage All this 15* .500

BATEM AN R E A LTY

321-075*
,i

WE L IL T AN O SE LL
M O R E H O M E S TH AN
A N Y O N E IN TH E
LANFO RO AR EA
SURE R J id r m . t R a iti an targ e
treed le t P a ne lle d Hying rm
• it R lir t p la c * . F I Rm D in in g
Rm, E a t in RttcRen. Palm .
F e n ce d y a r d , a n d m a m
A itu m a R la M a r t g a g t la a
lll. M t
MOVE R IG H T IN F u rn itR e d I
I d r m I l a i n R a m i in Lunland
« la rg e 1*11 Good le c a lm n l
L e tt e l t t t r e t t L 4 l. il*
COOL O F F . TR it t u m m ir in
your i n n PO O L A N D P A T IO t
I I d r m . ) ' i l a i n C u llim B u ilt
Ram* an c a rn e t 1*11 R e tr y
l i i t u r i y a u c a n im a g in e
E t la g iit R e d n tig H R e rR te g
114. M i
• A R O A IN O A Y ) A R E H i N i l I
( a r m . 1 R ath. &gt; t le r y CB la
D r t jm n o ld
L p a c itu t G rea t
ream m in lir t p la c * . L a rg e
In tc e d y a rd . parcR. t e lt t l
ream and m aeet t o M i

,

M A Y F A IR
V IL L A S ! I A t
( d im
) B e rn Cende V illa v
n a il la M e y le lr C ountry C M
Select y o u r le t. Hear p la n »
in te rio r d e c t r l O v a lity can.
t tr a d e d b y L M e m a it r ter
L4?.]M 4 wpt
ASSO CIATES N I E O E O I N e n
or t t p e n e n e t d
C all H erb
S ttm lre m a r Lee AlbetgRl
taday i d itc a t u r t u c c e tt l

CALLANYTIME
IMS
PirR

322-2420

2#tf OfUhd0"Df

s c l E a r e d d u p l e x lo t s in

SANFORD 1IT.SO0 EACH
JONEO FOR QUADS OR OF
FICES

54—Garage Sales
J U m jy c*rpoM i * i * Sa I 1 lu n ,
Aug I Jk 2 Lof%of g r*4 l ilfm%
457 P klm Dr . S«nford

a HOMESITE S IN ORANGE
GROVE AT U M A TILLA S7SO0
EACH, CRATY TERMS

G * r i$ t « il« fto u tth old Hipm* 1
p U n ti l a m i p m Friday.
Ju ly 31 121 A ld *a n D r ,

a c r e w o o d e d l o t in e n
t e r p r is e
siooo s e l l e r

Sanford

TERMS

M oving
la l#
W rd Sat
E verything mut? go. Fur
n ltu r*. g*ri % dofhe% t i i * *.
odd* k r n d l * lot* of junk I
m il* off 25th St on Up*aU Nd

)*•

ACRES w o o d e d r o a d
fro ntage
in O STE E N

si? soo
S ACRES WOODED JACKSON
BAY
AREA.
OSTEEN
tii-s o o
seller
f in a n
CING

Moving ta f*
antique ch ain ,
b ra n Ump«, tu r n . wrought
iron patio fu rn , ml*c T h u n ,
F r l , Sat «S. 24» P afm ftto

SEIOLER RE A L IY BROKER
111 4444
Shadow Lk Woods L g needed
lot.-owner w ill I,nance below
current fate, lew down JTT
&gt;4TO

62—Lawn Garden
F ILL DIRT IT O P SDlV
YELLOW SAND
Call Clark I H i r t JTT TJB0

43B-Lots A Acreage
Wanted

Lawn Mower S alt* and Servic*
nYfl Sttf Ih * lle il and S tfv ic *
th * O r it Bob Ball lA n iff h
Auto I 0 I A I l f SI

N f h J lot or i*n&lt;j fon+d
for mob*!* homo
377 0211

65—

A r* vow 4 fu ll Urn* d rive r w ith *
t\.»r! nm * c* r * Owr cut«*f&gt;*d«
* r * lo«d*d w-!h good boy for
row

---------------------------- 1--------^
J tt our b e a u tifu l new BR OAG

M ORE, fto n l A ra a r BR |
G REG ORY M O B IL E HO M ES
1 * 0 O rlando O f
m s jo o
VA 1 F H A F mane Ing

u 1 1 li t h is t u r n E
T l.tl
Cgncord or T 4 iJ T
Hartford Both 1 bdrm . T It «*
shingle re a l, n s o d s id in g ,
d*lu&lt;* carpet, drape? 1 * p
p tia n c i?
Y o u r tR o ic a at
S li.i* ) Only a t Uncle Roy ?
M obile
H em *
Sale?
m
Leesburg No d e *n payment,
VA, all other tinancmg &lt;4%
dean
snap u n c i* R e y s
Mobile Home S t it t . US 441 S
Leesburg 1*041 71? 0JT4, Sun
days l l l p * •k n ,g M ? / ; »
JUST THINK IF CLASSIFIED
ADS DIDN'T WORK, T h e r e •
WOULDN'T BE ANY I *
Concord II . o r Ter ) bdrm H r*
resistant n a ils wood sui ng A
sningit tool only i l ! **s
14 o S4'.onlySII.**S
14 .to . only s i) m
No money down VA 1 0 / down,
f h a Srwp Uncle Roy-* M o bil*
Hem * Seles US 441 S
Leesburg l*G I] 717 UT4 Open
Sundeys I) i p m .w e t* n.ghty
III 7.SO

1*11

46—Commercial Proper*/

68—Wanted to Buy
/,nf ig u t l
D iam ond*
OH
P dinfm gi Oriental ftug t
I
ftf?dg** Antique*
323 2101

47 -Real Estate Wanted

Aluminum, i# n * ( copper* la id ,
'bran, t l l v t f , gold. W r* * d * y i
• 4 )0. Sal * t FonoMo Tool
pan ted to buy 3 ftrdrm , Jf1
ftcwi* no broker*. prir« lp w ti ]
Co *i« * in st mnoo
only include p flC f, tlfic rlp
fton, a d d r* n , l trie No Send

72—Auction

ftp ly to *!&amp;■ No 107 c o
tv rn -n g Hvrald. F'O Box 1451
Sanford. F L 17171
buy

* q u lt y

tn

Auction Every Monday Night, ?
P M Sanford Auction, 1215 S
Fr*nch 173 734a Daily 141

H o w l* * ,

a p a rfm tn tt, vacant land .and
LU C KY
IN
Acr r a g *
V E S T M E N T S . P O Box 2500.
Sanford. F la

AUCTION
SATURDAY. AUG. 114A M

37771. 177 4/41

Dig storage tots 4711 Edge w a ter
Dr , O rlando Several storage
tots m oved' to this, location
P lan fo spend day A buy Cash
only. G rass i t Greener *44 4*2*
or 2*5 00*4
Colonel J im Gras*

FOB Y O U * FARM
OR BUILOINO L O l S
lute* Corporation Inc 1)11144
111 M il
'Whatever th * occetkon. thee* i t a
eta** tied ad lo lo iv e it Try

Don t w an le rt What hav* you?
Need 7 3 Bdrm Home P rico
and ter m» negotiable 373 4 a I
. . * ! ! . i __________________

CASH FOR EQUITY
Wecan close in 4 lh r»
CauBarf Rcsl Estate JTT Te*i

47-A—Mortgages Bought
1 Sold
W* pay c a s in o # " T il L JruJ
mortgages R iy Legg. Ltc
Mcotgag* Brpkyr )J* T ;u .

jO-Mtscellaneous for Sale
) p ie c e C o rn e r C o u ch %*t
ftfa u t.ly t b**g» V a ry good
cond t.on S IM 377 354*

Animal M avfft K ng i l l * bed.
good condition 750 M a ftrt ? l
bb« *pring 177 5752

JO acres tu e tle b it o il MarRham
Woods Rd. on l i t S acre
parcels ITT Dee I I t deity.
Sanford P rim e l i Si Ac re t &lt;u
opthons lor toning StT.SOO *
Terms w M entiow sR i ) ) )
?*«) Eyes ITT JM?

When you place a C le s tifte d Ad
■n The E ve ning H e ra ld , slay
d o s t to your phona because
som ething w o n d e rfu l is about
to happen

,

M ust cle an nut build ing to m ake
ro o m lo r in c o m in g m a t
ih a n d . tr Lots ot good fur
fu tu re to be sold a t barg a in
p ric e s
T h is I t a tp a c la l
A uction not a lunk A uction
IS CASH VISA MC L I

lik e n *w

JEEPS. CAPS PICKUPS
from SJS Available at total
G ir l Aucoons For Directory
call Surplus Data Center 4IS
DO IBM
D e n t p iif fig long*r nawded
7i t m i high a t an •typhani i
r» * Ptac* a c ta ttifi* q ad, and
p ii* th * m o w * tn your w a ltttf

* B &amp; H AulOSales a
*3 3 9 7989*
?*
'71
71
7)

Chevy Van Seal
pinto Hatchback. IIW 0
B unk Skylark 4 dr, SJ’ M
Volkswagen Station Wagon.

H IM

71 M onia Waoon t ) » i i
• B auk f,,.anciR | ayailadM »
ILN Hwy. 17 FT
Castelbefry
Don't p a* no longer needed
items high as an elephant s
eye Ptac* a cltS K lie d ad. end
pa* the money tn your wallet I
1 D r . PS. A C .
radio, heater, automatic, tuns
good IMS 371 4071

71 M a v e ric k

. &gt;

DAY TON A AUTO AUCTION
etwy FT, I m il* west of Speed
way, Daytona Beach, w ill hole
a public AUTO AUCTION
every Wednesday at I p m I t 'i
tM only one In Florida You s*v
the re t weed price Call *0i
M A U I I L « J u rlh rr details.

ITOP D O LLA R !
For your ta r ar Iro ck,
diess ot cond P rrta r running
F re t towing i l l 14)4 Agent.
Top D ollar P aid tor Junk k Used
ca rt, trucks L heavy equip
m in i ) » tw o
NO m o n T v" DOWN Payments
L?S month M ont* Certo. PL.
PB, Auto, A M FM stereo, a ir l
many othar e it r a t ))♦ (100 a:
n r aaOL Dealer
7i Toyota Corolla Cold A ir. Nrw
Radial Tires. Sacrifice I I I
Laurel Ave JTT 1741
J4 Plym outh Grand Seda" all
power w a ir . I7W
JJI 0741
days. JJ) 114) a llt f L
71 Chevy C 10 ' i Ton Pick up,
Long wheel base V I Auto. PS
Body taugn but dean Inside
Runs •■ c tlle n l While spoke
wheels and good lire? I t t l
H I ITT4____________________
A m e ric a n M o to rs R am bler
Rebel IM J 4 dr teden. a cy ,
auto, P ) Good Slicker, runs
good UJO Ceth M l m e

GARAGE

SALE
1975 Dodge Wogon

« *1495
1975 Hornet

rsr *2195
1971 Ply. Volar.

... *3395
1964 Volks Bug

*1495
SANFORD
MOTOR CO

* S A N F O R D A U C T IO N *

A M C JEEP

• 1215 S. FR E N C H AVE.«
223-7340

P a id tlQOO.

F urniture

aHO 3710405

Tire* 4 H7|a!S W hit* wall** 4
plus 2 B *ti*d t i r n l i t ngw
S IX 131 1774
Brown Riyre Rock, D tlf Box
Grease Trap*, D ry Wans.
Car Stop*. Cement. Sand
M ira c le Concrete Co

» 9 Elm Ave

7JCh#vy l)?5
33* m i

m a m l h ic a n e x p h e l l l l

U&gt;x s p rin g 372 5 717

w iji »*tl for 1700

, i ..■
i o m m o rcta l »'
Ret-denKai Auctions k Ap
pea it * It Call Dell'S Auction

P A U C T IO N •
T O N IG H T J U L Y 29.7 P M

K irq t&lt; |* b*d. good
condition S359 M a ttr m

S t ff t g

43—Lots-Acreage

Pets Supplies

k if lt n t
B ta ufituf *nd playful
Black *nd W hit* F r * * to a
Hood and kwmQ horn* 123

mavbcasm

42—Mobile Homes

Ph 3710117

W« htfvi* a Ifw m o ff Color T V l
for 17S H t f b i TV 75*7 S .
Sonforg Av« J7J 1?H
•

TOO ON 17*7 NEAR NEW
WINN D IX IE c e n t e r COM
ING AT LA K E MARY BLVO
toned
c o m m e r c ia l .
SITS 000

h i

C r a n r i Nuost. Io w n h o u ft* &lt;
detuie 3 bdrm , r * II, lake
v?ew, tennis, sw im m ing, all
appt * more 2 yrs o ld like
new, astum fe.lg J1J ? ) j|

Good Used TVS, S 3 t up
m il l e r s

ForSalt

S o n fo rd 's S a le s L e a d e r

ft f f b i t f f * * (
Orig S57*. now 1705 o f I t * mo
A g tn t 33* IMA

SJ- TV RadiaSIcreo

J chair Harbor Shop
I l k * Mary
Calf 377 5237

*7 C hrvy 1725

H tr

PAOLA IIS . o n

41&amp;—Condominiums

REALTY - REALTORS

s

m ortgage

,

1 0 -A u fo i

K m m p rt p g rtt. S ffv ct. ui«J
w»»h* t\ MOONEY APPLI
AMCES 173 0**7

) ACRES riC A R E O LAND IN

Have a room to rent? Let a
(U n ifie d ad find a tenant for
you!

L it teal Estate BroRer
TUgSantord Ave

STENSTROM

makes

TooU ctiar Pa d tor Juna A Used
c m t. trucks k heavy eduip
W . JITSW0

d iv id e

) | | ACRES, t a l l P IN E S .
GENEVA IDSOC LOW IN
TER EST
ASSU M ABLE

D U S T E R
\
Iff J U &amp; T

C LA S S IF IE D
ADS
MOVE
MOUNTAINS o&lt; merchandrse
every day

a p a rtm e n t? Sell " u o n i needs"

SANFORD
7 Pdrm. kids pool,
SITS down $150 mo JJf 2200
SAV*ON RENTALS REALTOR

'

41—Houses

Pat'HP end Screened Porch
UTS mo 2210123
F ufh ifn ed apertmanfs tor Smtflr
C itlie n t I I I Palmetto Ave . J
Cowan No phone cam

J J I U S E FIR ST ST , JTT 541^

? home
SITES 140,000 TERMS

park

4)—Houses

1 Bedroom Furnished Apt with

may

74 p l a t t e o l o t s
Ev a
aoooed

iQ L k fflt

re

From SIO toSJOorm oro
C ^ll ITT I4T4. JTT 4*40
Running or not
)W t * * l

TVILSOD M AIER FU RNITURE

» ACRES WOOCEO ROLLING
H ILLS IN GENEVA AREA
sjsoo p e r a c r e , s e l l e r

370 Industrial

r urn o r uetlyrft. t p t 1100 mo *
1100 dn&gt; * U ' i F a d Ave 122
4130 I S p m , 321 I t l

BUY J U N E CARS 1 (RU CKS

51A —Fum lhirv

t a l l Pi n e s , s o m e
PASTURE
road
front

i f

I M l I II F u ll, A .r c F ffp
itjn p 'n g m j ip n r , build mg, on
bui« H ig h w j. It t] 1; x tl m
oil .cm i d r j l m u lti p v rp m f
facility, loading oo&lt;k Call
Sanford » 1 SSIO

77—Junk G irs Removed

Levi L Wrangler Jems
ARMY NAVY SURPLUS
TI0 Sanford A ,e
ITTST*1

.

acres

f in a n c i n g

k

W o d n a sd A Y , J u l y I f , 1 W 1 - I 1 B

CASH FO R CARS

s

J i

[ u

m

222 IQ It

2 Bdrm . shed, carport 1225
month * i 1V0 dep A ft I l i t
14*1 Of 121 417*

, com for tab la 2 bdrm . I be ih. Stove
’ and re frige ra to r . Large screen
porch. W ail to wall carpet near
Downtown Bus stop. US Wk •
U tilitie s. 1730 Sec Dep No
Pets children welcome, Avail,
• * Aug 1st Inquire 422 Palmetto
Ave or Call 173 1*41

THEY PE
, MARWEP

SO— M is c e lla n e o u s l o r S a k
ST JOHNS FRONTAGE
W IT H ) OORM M O B IL E

age

V inio fd No children or p e fi I
fid rm A&gt;r, Carpet all eiecfric

JO- A partm ents
Unfurnished

I B drm Garage Apartment S27S
• Isf last and dep Call E m 372
* 3*11

WHV

LlKEm*AT*iHlBT TiWCT I Eih&amp;TfciNl / W U :
WJMAN3 FIV E / V3ULL WHO M E N
13 BESIDE THE
/ UP IN THE BE 6 0
5TOVE75HE (TLM.lV 1 FRVlN'PAN PUMB
7
WITH THE
£NJ£»$ COCKIN5.'
.OTHER FAT.'

37-B— Rental Offices

DELTONA » rm s. a»r s k iu
washer, SJOO mo 11* TIM
SAV ON RENTALSREALTOR

f ROMS 1*0
I B edroom A pts A vailable
Srvown by Appt Only 121.114*.

THAT?

H A ^T &lt;?. f ^ A N

EVA ITS 000

Apt tot rent, uniurn 1 bdrm, t
B. A C. SJOO mo * 1100 sec
171117*or 111 t i l l

• •

E v e n in g M a r i Id , S a n fo r d . F I.

43—Lot v Acreage

HEI7E6 AN ^BUT HJT IF V rtflV /
IT E A M A R T H A W U L O W H E

HI A Hit m 1411

31 Apartments Furnished

32-Houses IfifluTnlihed
M iddle aged woman wants to
share her house A expenses in
Lake M ary w ith same 323 QUi

iix« 1on m o m

Comm ercial Bu &gt;ld&gt;ng tor r m t,
ILCOw If LaOOmo.

Opportunities

I r f a Classified Ad help you tied
m o re ro om lo r storage
J Classified Ad% find buyers
I fast

GARAGE fpr I t t l r
potential
lor bodr shop, used t i r lot,
* a t o rig in a lly a q r t star on
L a rg e c o r n r r
1st
Good

“

wilh Major Hoople

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

30- Apx
u rm h ed
Unlur

34—Business

Two flu e itio m
tViil .ou be
*mane tatty -ndependeht in 2 to
s yewrt? Are you p a d what
you are worth? If not call 123

*

IM S

F rg n c h A v e
ITT D l l

GET BETTER MILEAGE
Computtr Engine Anelyili On The
FUTORESCOPE
1000
Pinpolnlt
Problgmi Thai Cauig Poor O i l
Mlkagg.

SPECIAL

$995

JIM LASH'S

BLUE BOOK SERVICE CENTER
111* Hwy. IT 9» R .tw etb Lentgrd A Langwaad. Pkant 111 (741
New Open Lal I a Rk-I P »
H a u rtIM a m
yW *S
* artel Cars
It I Mg m
A ttila b ia

377 5751

L o A Q W u b d L in c o ln - M e r c u r y
C x n U a l Florida * » I Volum e L in c o ln M ercu ry Dealer

5 5 S 5 M IO H W A V 1 7- 9 J, L O N O W O O D • B 31 BOBO • 3J J ABBA • O P E N H I Q M T L y T I L 9 OO S A T X S U N

T IL 6 P M

■ OPEN SUN

1?-B

8ALEEND8 A

FACTORY AUTHORIZED

8 -4 -8 1

LIQUIDATION SALE
PUBLIC NOTICE
ALL INVENTORY
MUST GO!!

FMCC A bank financing avaiiabla bdom prtma tala.

�I 1 B—Evnlwg H fald. tenferd. FI.

Wtdn«td«y. July if, lttl

s; m
S3
-V .

V VA

TH RI F T Y MAID

!i SUGAR

TOWELS

COCA COLA

SUGAR

LARGE EGGS &gt;}***

JUMBO
ROLL

2-LITER
BT L.
WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JULT SO • AUGUST 1, IBSI

cormom - i9t i

ALL GRINDS ASTOR

H O R M E IS

MRS. FILBERT S

COFFEE

SPAM

MARGARINE

, $129

1-LB.
BAG

*

©

©

Q U A N TITY R IG H TS
R ESER V ED
WINN OlTJf STOWS INC

j

* «• •*/—

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
SOOO JULT JO • AUOUST I , IB B I

■

©

M

-

12-ox.

,,,

CAN

PKG.

jr— -i r

1 c

SLICED BACON

H

■

I

TQ c
I

PKG.

|

WITH ORE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JULT SO'- AUOUST I . IBBI

.'

IE M M J S S H K B O M S

7

/7 s

Here’s how it works!

si n a

&amp;

HUM S ST\M I‘ !

b l

I

the

" . ^ U S i A ^ e o W o tlV
Jb u V w« «
‘ i « u OSd«■‘ V,V EOU«« III

P ic k up free Super Bonus Certificates

at our checkout counters
'

©

111 «“*NH'OH
„V«l ciw
jjgn'„1 c o u h t«“
"n
« “ l{
ie s

ttou ge l 1Super Bonus Stam p lor every
*1 you spend Paste 36 Super Bonus
Stam ps on each certificate

©

USD A CHOICE U N T R IM M ID
W HO LE BONELESS

W-D BRAND USDA CHOICE
BONELESS BOTTOM

BOTTOM ROUND

ROUND ROAST

$179

H
IC K O R Y S W E E T
--------------

u t -w i

WITH ONE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
0000 JU LT SO • AUGUST I , I N I

c

\\

WITH ONE FILLEO SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JULY SO ■AUGUST I , I S II

WITH ONE FILLED SUPER BONUS CERTIFICATE
GOOD JU LT SO • AUGUST 1, I N I

PRICES
GOOD
JULY 30 -

W hen you check out. present one fBled
Super Bonus Certificate tor each Super
Bonus Special you select.

ESB

iu * il2 iJ

AUGUST 1
1981

'

HICKORY SWEET
BONELESS SMOKED
FULLY COOKED

SNOW H ill

I BAKING HENS

BUFFET H AM

N .Y . STRIP

$189
LB.

4 TO I
LB. AVQ.

W-D BRAND HUBS 10 0 * 10-lB MANDIPAK

GROUND BEEF

TURKEY WINGS

19

L |

OQc
^

SIA PRIME
ROILED AAAINI
D IN N II

PINKY PIO ECONOMY IRISH OR IMOKIO
(S BUDS A S SIRLOIN)

LOBSTER

PORK CHOPS

$i 19

w B

i

- \- J

to

m

U . AVO

PABST
BLUE RIBBON

DETERGENT

CHEER

BEER

lim it 1 w ith I S . 0 0 er
• r e B u rth a tf •■«!. ilea

lim it tw e 9 * ^ t . w ith 9 1 .0 0 er
mere a t in k a ie ee cl. i l a i .

BLUB PLATE

T HR I F T Y MAI D

&lt;m i SHORTENING
lim it I w ith 95 00 er
m ere p e rcke te ee cl. d f i

D IX IE D A R L IN G
LARGE F A M IL Y

MAYONNAISE

BREAD

lim it I w ltk 9 1 .0 0 er
m # ft p a rsK a ia a u l . t l f t

PACK

49 -0 1

1 2 « o i.

PKG.

CANS
TM1IFTY BRAID

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THRIPTY BRAID

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                <text>&lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald&lt;/em&gt; issue published on July 29, 1981.  One of the oldest newspapers in Florida, &lt;em&gt;The Sanford Herald &lt;/em&gt; printed their first issue on August 22, 1908.</text>
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